Poor little Charlotte Bowen. She's 10 years old, but her mother, Eve Bowen, Undersecretary of State for the Home Office, is a narcissistic conservative politician who always thinks 'it's all about her.' Charlotte is kidnapped, but despite all of the evidence mommy dearest thinks her one-week ex-fling, Dennis Luxford, the far left newspaper The Source editor-in-chief, is pulling a con of some type.
When they met eleven years ago, both were newspaper reporters. Now, they each married other people and carry on with their lives in separate realms - she in politics, he in journalism. There is no reason for either to ever interact socially; however, the nature of their work naturally bring the two into conflict. Bowen lives in a world where her every statement and even whether her makeup is correctly applied is on the front page of newspapers, plus she has to watch her back when with her fellow party members, who are jealous, ambitious, and looking to take her down so that they can move up over her. She is incapable of seeing anything happen without seeing only conspiracies to get her fired. When she decided to have Charlotte, the accidental pregnancy with Luxford, she had already decided to cut Luxford completely out of her life. But until the delivery, she did not know she would hate being a mother.
Bowen is not abusive in the sense of physically striking out. While she provides for Charlotte completely, she feels indifferent to her daughter's life and concerns. Her husband, Alexander Stone, loves the little girl, so their reactions when learning Charlotte has been kidnapped from Luxford are quite different. Luxford received a note demanding that he place on the front page of the newspaper the story that he and Bowen had a child together, publicly exposing their brief relationship. Stone is frightened for the little girl, but Bowen angrily accuses Luxford of being behind the taking of Charlotte in order to embarrass Bowen. She refuses to accept that Luxford is not holding their child somewhere, and that this entire kidnap story is a lie. She refuses to cooperate with any front page story revealing their affair. Luxford, who doesn't want to destroy Bowen, his child Charlotte's mother regardless of her hostile and irrational response, and not knowing if Charlotte will really be hurt, decides to ignore the kidnap threat. After all, he has a legitimate child, Leo, 8 years old, along with an oblivious wife, Fiona, neither of whom know about his fling with Bowen or the fact of Charlotte being his illegitimate child.
The kidnapper, who is real and who is NOT working with Luxford, decides to punish Luxford and Bowen when his demand is not met.
A little girl's body is discovered floating in a canal. The threat is delivered again in a note. And Leo is now missing.
Now, gentle reader, what follows is a data dump of my opinions:
I wasn't sure I was liking this book at first.
Charlotte's arduous imprisonment is difficult to read about without wincing in sympathy, and Bowen's cold self-centeredness may strike some as ridiculous; however, I've actually known people like Bowen and I can verify they act exactly as the author has described Bowen in this novel.
I was also wondering for too long when Thomas Lynley, eighth Earl of Asherton, and CID detective, was going to be brought into the story. It felt like he might not be investigating this one since it is Simon, Lynley's friend, and Lady Helen, Lynley's fiancé, who Luxley turns to in order to find Charlotte. Their investigation is described for almost a hundred pages of this lengthy mystery.
I don't have a clue why Lynley and Barbara Havers, his sergeant, are charismatic and extremely entertaining to me, but Simon and Helen are on a different wavelength from my manner of thinking. Helen especially annoys me with her hothouse temperament. (I can't see what Lynley loves about Helen, but as usual, he sticks his foot in his mouth when he blows up at Simon and Helen for conducting their investigation without informing the police about the kidnap, and as usual Helen and Deborah, Simon's wife, are emotionally devastated by guilt and hurt.) Simon seems like a doormat to me, and his wife Deborah needs long-term therapy.
I'm getting extremely annoyed by Deborah's resistance to adopting a child, and I am thinking every time Simon and Deborah come up in this series with their emo suffering over her miscarriages that if I was Simon I would soon be like "Frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn". How tiring Deborah is with her easily solvable problem given their class and money and the need for adoptive parents all over the Western world.
For those readers who are politically correct and sensitive, skip the next sentence. I am always thinking whenever Deborah appears in this series, 'what a stupid cow.'
Thankfully, when Lynley and Havers finally appear, the case, and the writing, gains speed and strength. I think I can tease a little bit by saying us readers, as well as the character Havers in particular, will be in for a hell of a roller coaster ride!