Published in 1970, this is the fourth in the Inspector Sloan series, which I am enjoying immensely. Dr William Latimer is a young doctor, who has just taken over a practice from Dr Henry Tarde, who recently died. Opposite the doctor's practice is a bomb site, which is about to be redeveloped and, during the building work a skeleton is found - that of a woman who was pregnant.
Inspector Sloan is again, unwillingly, given Detective Constable Crosby to assist him, as he delves into the past to try to find out who the young woman was and how she was killed. I was a young child in 1970, but I do remember bomb sites still in London and that strange period when the country was still marked by war and it was within the memory of adults who lived there. As such I enjoyed the musings of Sloan's boss, Superintendent Leeyes, mesmerised by the cafe across the road, full of long-haired young men, vehicles painted with flowers and a world, which to him, seems topsy-turvy. Meanwhile, there are musings on what another war would mean and Aird enjoys sly humour as Sloan visits Leeyes office and hears his thoughts on the case and the state of the world.
This is such an enjoyable series and I am so glad that I have found it. It is less about the plots, although of course they are important, and more about the characters. I enjoy the rose-growing, stolid and sensible Sloan and think he should be more patient with Crosby, who at least ensures that tea arrives at his superiors desk...