In this, the third of Johanna Bell's series featuring the Bobby Girls, focusing on the origins of women in the police force with the establishment of the Women's Police Service (WPS). The trio of pioneering policewomen, Maggie Smyth, Annie Beckett and Poppy Davis are serving at Bethnal Green Police Station, where they have become mostly accepted as their successes are recognised after overcoming the initial hostility their presence generated. It is 1915, and Annie is in the midst of wedding preparations after her soldier fiance, Richard's re-proposal. She could not be happier as she awaits Richard's return, only for her world to be shattered into tiny pieces when she receives the worst news imaginable. She sinks into a dark abyss of grief and depression, unable to function, refusing to see anyone, confining herself to her bed and bedroom, cocooned in her parents home.
She can't even face seeing Maggie and Poppy, as the weight just falls off her body, until she receives a visitor who begins to open her eyes to the fact that she cannot continue like this. So Annie returns to work just as they are transferred to Holborn, having to once again establish their credibility amongst the male officers at the station, where Chief Police Constable Green offers no initial support or direction, telling them to just get on with it and to organise themselves and their work hours. The women do just that, familiarising themselves with their new domain, and proving to be worth their weight in gold almost immediately, despite having no powers of arrest. They are able to diffuse situations where male officers find themselves in incendiary situations trying to arrest drunk and disorderly soldiers that the public treat as heroes. In the run up to Christmas, they help to handle the tricky situations of prostitutes seeking or being sought by soldiers, are there on the frontline emergency situations that arise in a London being bombed and hit by the deadly Zeppelin air raids, and come face to face with the dangerous and ruthless criminal menace of traffickers targeting vulnerable female refugees from Europe.
It is Annie that takes centre stage in this addition of Bell's series, Annie has come a long way from the person she used to be when she first joined the WPS. Being a Bobby Girl, and the close friendship and support of Maggie and Poppy, has helped to shape her into a strong and independent woman. She faces heavy knocks that devastate her, pushing into her into a heavy pit of grief, despair and depression. However, she slowly learns to understand that she still wants to live, although this does not stop her taking on the riskiest of investigations when she spots a figure from the past and vows to see that he gets his comeuppance. This is a wonderfully heartwarming and entertaining historical read that will appeal to many readers. Many thanks to Hodder and Stoughton for an ARC.