Superintendent Horace Harker is transferred and DI Angels hope for a better superintendent, one with whom he can actually be friendly. But for him it is from frying pan and straight into fire. Superintendent Strawbridge wants Angels to magically make it possible to get the most notorious family of criminals behind the bar but isn't willing to listen to any of his suggestions.
Of course, along with dealing with his super, he has to deal with a double homicide without any clue and a car that magically appeared from nowhere in the midst of nowhere. And when everything seems to be going down the drain, his new super decides to go AWOL and is replaced by his old one.
The best part of the story isn't how DI angels solves all three crimes and gets the whole family of criminals behind bars. The best part is the office debacles, the ones we all know. We are continually suggesting our superior that something might not be in the best of interest but they due to their position are continually disregarding our suggestions and then, when the ball rolls out of hand, they are shouting their heart out on us as to why we couldn't prevent 'that' from happening.
If we dare point out that all this happened because they failed to heed to our suggestions, we all know what happens. And that's where Silverhood makes Angels real. It could be you and me there, doing a great job looking for a pat from the superior and instead being shouted at. You do the job, you get the criminal, you solve the crime and your superior takes the credit - we have all been there, done that, in some way or the other.
For a man who breathes and lives for solving crimes and putting criminals behind bars, and has made it his job, DI Angels is an awfully close-to-the-heart kind of a character.