Many thanks to NetGalley and Harper Collins Canada for an advance copy of this audiobook.
This is the third entry in the Billie Walker series, featuring Sydney’s ‘most famous—or infamous—private investigator’. You don’t have to have read the previous two in order to enjoy Billie’s escapades in this one. The author ensures that just enough context is covered to explain Billie’s earlier overseas adventures as a war reporter, war widow, and return to Australia to take up her deceased father’s investigative work. Once again, important support roles are played by Shyla Davis, her Aboriginal junior agent, her assistant, Sam, wounded war vet and possible romantic interest, DI Hank Cooper of the Sydney police, a potential rival for Sam. and her intrepid mother, the Baronness Ella. Her ex-husband, Jack Rake, long presumed to have died as a Nazi prisoner, makes a disturbing appearance. There is plenty going on, much of it in the books second half, but the slow build up to the action makes it all come together effectively.
I find Tara Moss particularly adept at setting the scene for a desperate to return to ‘normal’ world in the immediate postwar years. Billie, and especially Shyla, who has race as well as gender barriers to overcome, are constantly dealing with antagonistic men who want to see all women ‘back in the kitchen,’ or, just as bad, those who take working women to be ‘ladies of the night.’ One hilarious early scene, just outside the police headquarters where Billie has gone to dig up background on a current client’s husband, shows exactly how she handles that kind of attention with a few quick and painful moves on the predator. Meanwhile, as the free world increasingly fears advancing communism, there are still Nazis on the loose. The mere announcement of an Italian cruise ship from Naples, the Luxor, docking in Aussie waters fascinates Billie and horrifies Sam, who lost a hand to an Italian bomb. You can really sense how Australians are both eager to get on with their own plans for the new order, but are still tangled up in the alliances and enmities of only a few years past.
Billie’s case is also a fairly straightforward one: her client, an insurance office secretary, married her employer during a time when uncertainty and anxiety saw many unsuited couples rush to wed. She suspects him of cheating, and with the team searching for evidence, that simple case turns ugly as people are killed. Then, when Billie finally works herself up to sort her father’s files, she unwittingly uncovers a secret that will take her to Naples via the Luxor, with her mother and her mother’s companion, to find the truth about two women and their connection to her family.
I really enjoy historical mysteries where the story builds slowly through links between past and present, memory and contemporary reality, and Tara Moss carries it off beautifully. I also really enjoyed the reading by Corinne Davis, with her wonderful Aussie accent!