This is the latest in Lindsey Davis's historical mystery series, set in AD 90 in Rome, featuring the feisty Private Informer, Flavia Albia, happily married to Tiberius, living in a raather over crowded chaortic home, including the bringing of 2 young orphans. This is the most personal of Flavia's case with the return of the brutal Florius from Britain, responsible for the most traumatic of her memories, wanting revenge, but will she be able to rise above this desire? It all begins with the discovery of a murdered woman in the Tiber, a river with a long association with death and killing. The woman turns out to be Claudia Deiana, who has followed Florius from Britain, having lived with him and had children with him.
In a action packed narrative, a grandiose, a over indulgent funeral with outrageous levels of fawning has been organised for the violent mobster, Old Rabirius, attended by Flavia in the hope of spotting Florius, who she believes might possibly be residing with his wife, Balbina Milva, whose been running the criminal empire in his long absence, hiding from arrest for tax evasion. After the funeral, a crime warlord's conclave is meant to result in a period of quiet as demarcation, leadership, and territorial disputes are settled, with the gang's regrouped to continue their nefarious activities, oiled by corrupt public officials. However, this does not pan out with bitter rivalries played out amidst vicious internal feuds and battles.
You might think this is a male only affair, but you would be wrong, there are strong criminal women, and other independent women like Flavia flourish, whose husband sighs but does not prevent her presence at dangerous scenarios, and relatives, such as Maia and Marcia, show bold, strong women proliferate in the family. Amidst the bleak darkness of numerous deaths, including by ostrich, Flavia seeks Florius and the truth of what happened to Claudia. The gripping storytelling is alleviated with the trademark humour and comic touches, making the protagonist and this series such an irresistible read. Many thanks to the publisher for an ARC.