Sad to See This Magical Series End
I’ve loved all seven books in the Firebrand series by Helen Harper. Her heroine, DC Emma Bellamy, is a sheer delight, and her handsome vampire lover, Lord Lukas Horvath is properly edgy and yet utterly devoted to his Sup Squad police woman.
From the beginning, when Emma is the newest member of the sup squad, she is thrust into a world of intrigue and danger, dealing with the sudden death of her supervisor and inheriting Talulah, his suspiciously sentient automobile, and making herself the best investigator she can be, all while working against the rampant, anti-Sup-Squad prejudice from both London’s human and supernatural communities.
Emma’s tragic past impinges upon every aspect of her life. She needs to find out how she came to be found as a young child, the lone survivor of terrible violence that made her an orphan. Her present depends on her past. The mystery there, unexamined and dormant for years, must be reopened like the cold case it is.
The first several novels explore Emma’s past as it connects to the present, and with her first sudden death, Emma learns she is as supernatural as the citizens she serves and protects. How? She rises again twelve hours after her own murder. She is a phoenix, the only one on Earth. In the next novels,
Interesting cases land at Emma’s desk, and intriguing evil-doers find that going up against a law-enforcing Phoenix with a lord-of-vampires boyfriend is a woeful mistake. Every case she tackles gives readers more insight into the world of supernatural London, and each book gives us a few additional characters with which the author fleshes out Emma’s world.
Book seven in the series, Fortune’s Ashes, starts off with a bang: Emma’s very identity is challenged in two ways: first, there is a man who very publicly plans to sue her for identity theft(!), because he claims to be the world’s only phoenix. And then, second, there the even more distressing issue of Emma’s new supernatural “gift”: she is now living through flashes of shocking, obscure, confusing, and frightening prophecies. She has, it seems, inherited the Cassandra talent from a dead seer—and Cassandras are the one type of sup that Lukas cannot abide. She cannot bear to see his devotion shift to revulsion. She tells him their relationship is over.
Things in Emma’s life often go sideways, and soon there are accidents, fires, and malfeasance that she must unravel and put to rest in order, alongside her erstwhile boyfriend and a coterie of quirky coworkers and werewolves and vampires, to solve the case, which is all intertwined, and secure her own happily ever after.
These novels are truly fun to read, fast-paced, amusing, suspenseful, and full of likable (and a few exasperating) characters. I heartily recommend this series—books one through seven— to anyone looking for an enjoyable fantasy-in-the-real-world reading experience.