Neil Broadfoot is certainly putting Stirling on the Scottish crime fiction map with a bang with this blood drenched and gritty follow up to No Man's Land, featuring ex-Belfast cop turned Sentinel security consultant , now promoted to Senior Director, Connor Fraser, a man with presence and a volatile temper which he manages mostly to make work for him. Returning with him is the ambitious Donna Blake, now a Sky News reporter, still in search of exclusives and the pragmatic DCI Malcolm Ford, denied promotion, willing to go against procedure by including Fraser in his investigations, knowing he cannot stop him getting involved and would prefer to have his valuable input. To understand the relationships between the three of them, I would strongly recommend reading the first book before this one.
Sentinel have been hired by the notoriously controversial Blair Charleston, once a financier whose career went down the pan after a takeover resulted in two high profile deaths. He has reinvented himself with astounding success as a self help guru, running a lucrative weekend course at the exclusive Alloa House Hotel. However, the past continues to dog Charleston with a threatening note sent to him in London, so he is paying Fraser and his team to protect him. Charleston with his salvation by soundbites, proves to be a slippery customer, hiding behind lawyers and legal contracts, narcissistic, craving a need to be the centre of attention and feeding off the adulation of others. The weekend gets off to a horrifying start for Charleston and Fraser, with connected murders committed with a brutal savagery by a sociopathic killer that spread fear and terror. Donna experiences losses close to her, once again sparking a fury, sorrow, and grief that make her determined, in tandem with Fraser, to find the truth of Charleston's past and the circle of deaths and murders surrounding the man.
Broadfoot writes a atmospheric, fast paced, visceral, violent and riveting crime thriller, with a recurring group of characters that include Jen, her father, Duncan MacKenzie, running one of Scotland's biggest haulage businesses, and his chauffeur, Paulie, who will do anything to protect Jen. Connor Fraser is a charismatic central protagonist, a man who cannot forget his police background, and refuses to be pigeon-holed as a meathead security bodyguard when he has so much more to offer. Ford is his conduit to be part of the police case, keeping Fraser informed and a central player whilst he provides valuable intel to the official police team. The team is completed by the media angle provided by reporter, Donna, a single mother with a young son, Andrew, relying on her parents to provide essential childcare so that she can do her job. This is a brilliant addition to what is shaping up to be a stellar Scottish crime series. Many thanks to Little, Brown for an ARC.