Iona Whishaw writes one of my very favorite series. I saved The Cost of a Hostage, the most recent Lane Winslow Mystery, to read on my summer vacation because I knew that it would be ideal for occupying my thoughts while waiting in the airport and on the long flight. It was perfect.
In this story, Lane’s husband, Inspector Frederick Darling’s brother, Robert, an engineer working for an American oil company deep in the Mexican desert, has been kidnapped by a notorious bandit. They contact the British consulate in Mexico City and arrange for them to help with the language and the procedure for paying the ransom. Lane and Darling quickly take off for Mexico with the money leaving Sargeant Ames and Constable Terrell with their own kidnapping case that the Nelson police must solve. Meanwhile, Lane, who had served as a British spy during WWII, is plagued by disturbing memories that resurface of a betrayal from one of her assignments early in the war.
An adventure and a mystery, this book is both cinematic and exciting. Told from multiple viewpoints, the reader is privy to the experiences and thought processes of most of the recurring characters. I really love Whishaw’s characters. I love the way that all of her characters have developed and grown from book to book. In each tale she creates memorable newcomers, dastardly villains and surprising heroes. In this book I thoroughly love the bandit. I dare you to not love him too. I also love that women can be both heroes and villains in her stories. And I love the history that comes alive even though this fiction.