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The year is 1759 and London is shrouded in a cloak of fear. With the constables at the mercy of highwaymen, it’s a perilous time to work the already dangerous streets of Soho. Lizzie Hardwicke makes her living as a prostitute, somewhat protected from the fray as one of Mrs Farley’s girls. But then one of her wealthy customers is found brutally murdered… and Lizzie was the last person to see him alive.
Constable William Davenport has no hard evidence against Lizzie but his presence and questions make life increasingly difficult. Desperate to be rid of him and prove her innocence Lizzie turns amateur detective, determined to find the true killer, whatever the cost.
Yet as the body count rises Lizzie realises that, just like her, everyone has a secret they will do almost anything to keep buried…
296 pages, Kindle Edition
First published May 13, 2019
“She had fallen too far for me to find her a respectable trade – any more than I could find one myself – but I could help her out as best I could. There, but for the grace of God, walked I, after all.”Lizzie was such a wonderfully formed character and Georgina Clarke leveraged her role to provide us glimpses of London in the 1700s – the squalor and living conditions, the attitudes of people, the precarious ways people eked out a living, and the historical highlights of the time. The main historical gems weaved into the story including the highwayman John Swann, who is captured and facing trial in Newgate, while his gang are terrorising London. Secondly, is John Fielding who, along with his brother Henry, founded the police force in England and his men were nicknamed the ‘Bow Street Runners’ of which Davenport is one.


