This is the third in teh Narey & Winter series. Rachel Narey's father is a retired detective, now living in a retirement home with alzheimer's. Narey is full of guilt and wants, somehow, to makes things right for him. In 1992, her father was the lead detective on a unsolved case; that of a young woman whose body was found on an island, during a cold winter when the lake around it froze over. The woman remained unnamed, her killer never found, justice never done.
Filled with zeal, Narey decides to resurrect the case that has haunted her father and drags police photographer, Tony Winter, to the Lake of Monteith for a snowy weekend away. Her relationship with Winter has always remained hidden from their colleagues and, before long, he is beginning to doubt that this promised romantic getaway has a different agenda. Once Narey comes clean, Winter and his uncle Danny are pulled into the investigation. Years ago, Rachel Narey's father had a suspect. When he is found dead, it appears that her resurrecting of the case has reawoken fear in whoever was responsible, all those years ago and, before long, there will be more murders to solve and guilt to carry.
I really like this series. Rachel Narey is a driven and intelligent detective, and she cares about people. Tony Winter, with his obsession with death and violence, is an interesting and often disquieting observer. However, I enjoy their relationship and the other characters around the force in a cold and snowy Scotland. I look forward to reading on and intend not to leave it too long before I visit Glasgow again in the company of these characters.