I received a free electronic ARC copy of this British police procedural from Netgalley, Matt Brolly, and Amazon Publishing UK. Thank you all for sharing your hard work with me. I have read this novel of my own volition, and this review reflects my honest opinion of this work. I will happily add Detective Inspector Louise Blackwell to my must-reads list. This is the first of this series by Brolly - I can't wait for number 2.
DI Louise Blackwell is thirty-something, has one brother, a recent widower, and the father of a five-year-old daughter, Emily. Her brother Paul isn't handling life well at all, and Louise and their parents are often required to step into the breach at the home of Paul and Emily. Louise is historically not catching many breaks.
Two years ago Louise's partner at MIT in Bristol and surrounds, is DI Finch. Together they worked the case of serial killer Max Walton, a trail they had been investigating for over a year. It is at last solved, but Finch has placed Louise in a career-killing position. Knowing they are at the scene of a fresh kill and they are finally closing in on their serial killer, Finch indicates Walton is carrying and asks Louise for cover as he moves in to restrain him. Tripping and falling, Finch shouts that Walton is holding, and as the killer's hand comes up from the shadows Louise shoots him. These were the facts, details that later Finch will deny. Under Oath. Of course, Louise takes the hit for killing an unarmed suspect and is lucky to be allowed to stay on in the police force at all. She gets transferred to the small rural coastal precinct of Weston-super-Mare and will most likely be stalled as a DI for the next twenty years. Her friend Tracey Pugh gets a job advancement to DI and takes Louise's place at MIT, and Finch receives accolades and advancement to DCI for his part in capturing Walton. And he is currently texting her most evenings with snips and challenges and signing them 'a friend'.
But Louise has to get past all that. Eighteen months later and despite its size and level of obscurity, Weston has its own killer running amuck. And he is vicious as he brutalizes his elderly victims for days before he finally kills them.
We know our bad guy fairly early into this tale. Geoff was a bullied and abused child who worshiped his father and was exposed to and leaned heavily upon the ceremony and rituals of Saint Bernadette's Church to comfort himself. Geoff goes off his rocker when his father commits suicide. Suicides never get to heaven, they are in purgatory forever... This is unacceptable. Knowing they will eventually be back together is all that kept Geoff sane.
Geoff's obsession with the stations of the cross is not apparent during the investigation of the first and second victims, Veronica Lloyd and Father Mulligan. Veronica was a single retired school teacher. Father Mulligan, formerly the priest of St. Barts, was semi-retired and assisted Father Riley, the current priest at the second Catholic place of worship in Weston, St. Michael's. Father Riley is young, green and new to the area, but Monsignor Ashley was more helpful, as he had been working in the Weston area for many years, and as Louise uncovers the only fact that their two victims seem to have in common was their place of worship, St. Bernadette's, back in the 1980s, Monsignor Ashley brings into play other possible witnesses/or/victims from that era. Father Lanegan, who was the young priest at St. Barts in the 1980s had subsequently left the priesthood and settled into civilian life in the nearby community of St. Ives. But he has been missing for some time - a couple of weeks anyway, according to his elderly cleaner who reported him as a missing person. And it was rumored, Louise is told by older, mostly widowed parishioners, that Father Lanegan and Veronica Lloyd were involved in an affair back then.
And Finch, now a DCI with the Major Investigation Team in Bristol, comes calling, undermining Louise at every turn and attempting to squeeze her out of the investigation altogether. Because this will be a headline-grabbing criminal case and those headlines should be all his...
Parts of this story relies on a bit of back knowledge of the workings of the Catholic Church 40 years ago. It is all explained well but it helps if you understand the Stations of the Cross and the process of bringing children into the pageantry of traditional Catholic services. It is not, however necessary, nor is it a religious book per se.
pub date Feb 15, 2020
Thomas & Mercer
REviewed on February 24, 2020, on Goodreads, Netgalley, AmazonSmile, Barnes&Noble, and BookBub. Not available to review at Kobo or GooglePlay.