Lee Morris is the kind of guy you’d want for a friend. He’s self-assured in many ways, physically strong and mentally at the top of his game. Lee makes a living by prowling around Britain scouting out old ruined buildings and businesses he can remodel, restore, and revitalize.
Lee shares his house with his wife, Amanda, and six boys. He’s a good dad despite the coldness and apathetic distance of the marriage, which is crumbling and dying not from verbal abuse so much as from a lack of love and compassion.
As this book opens, Lee has just finished restoration of an old barn, turning it into the house he, Amanda, and the boys now share. It’s a remarkable structure, a real attention getter to any visitor. And Lee indeed has some visitors as this book begins. Too officials from a nearby racetrack come to beg for his help. It seems the track’s owner has died, leaving in his wake a family tearing itself apart over what should be done with the aging track and grandstands. But why would the visitors come to Lee Morris? Because many years ago, before Lee was born, his mother was married briefly to one of the hyper-abusive sons of the wealthy racetrack owner. He regularly beat Lee’s mother and once impregnated her against her will. So traumatized was she by that event that she couldn’t raise the resulting child—a girl. She left the home, but the family quickly closed ranks around the son, and she agreed to never mention the abuse and marital rape as long as she could simply be left alone. The racetrack owner, a kindly enough man, recognized that his son was inherently evil, and gave Lee’s mom several shares in the track, assuming she could sell them to gain enough money to start anew. Instead, she kept the shares, and they eventually reverted to her son, Lee, upon her death. He’s paid little attention to them over the years, simply going about his business remodeling old buildings and selling them. But on a particular spring day just before Easter, two gentlemen from the track arrive at Lee’s home to plead with him to assist in preserving the track and its grandstands. His eight votes, they feel, could make a difference in terms of the track’s preservation.
Lee initially declines their offer, but a series of events cause him to change his mind and actually show up at a board of directors meeting wherein all of the family factions with their naked hatred for one another are in full bloom.
Amanda wants Lee and the boys out of the house for a week, so she insists they go with him to the track during the boys’ spring break. While there, they witness a horrible racing accident that kills a rider and horse. And on Good Friday, one of Lee’s sons notices what look to be wires connecting plastic explosive charges together running throughout the grandstands. He quickly alerts his father, and the boy and his father must now rescue the other boys who are playing in the grandstands. All but one boy leaves the area, and while Lee searches for his 9-year-old son, the stands explode in a horrific manner. Lee and the boy are reunited just seconds before the grandstands blow, and while the boy is spared, Lee sustains injuries on his back and legs as some of the structure falls in on him.
The remainder of this book focuses on Lee’s efforts at revealing some of the destructive family secrets that prevent its members from working together. Lee is in constant danger from family members who want him dead, including his half sister, the girl born as a result of the forced sexual assault and the man once briefly married to his mother.
You may be able to predict how this one turns out, but it’s a thrilling action-packed mystery just the same. Dick Francis does a magnificent job as usual with this plot. You’ll learn fascinating things about British architecture, but not to such a degree that you will glaze over and lose interest.
What singularly strikes me about this book is Francis’s way of developing his characters. Even Lee’s sons are beautifully developed and super-realistic. Their differences and strengths and weaknesses are used by this author to move the plot along nicely. So vivid is the description of Lee and Amanda’s crumbling atrophying marriage that your very heart hurts for both of them.
The Stratton family, who are so hateful to one another and so divided as to the future of the racetrack, are also masterfully developed. This book ends very satisfactorily in one sense, and somewhat sadly in another, but I won’t go into that here lest by some means I spoil it for you.
If you’re looking for that perfect action mystery thriller to serve as the soundtrack for your spring cleaning efforts or even to hang onto for that first trip to the beach or the mountains, this one really fills that niche. There aren’t so many characters that you’ll get confused trying to figure out who’s who. The plot is consistently fast and constantly interesting. You’ll marvel at Francis’s economy of words—saying so much with so little. This is a rather short book, but long on character development and excitement. You’ll see the basic decency in both Lee and Amanda and yearn for them both to find the best solution that works for them. You’ll cheer for those boys, too. So detailed are their descriptions that you feel as if you know each one of them individually.