DSI Billie Wilde is on her first day back after an enforced holiday. She made a very forceful arrest where the suspect was badly hurt and she was reported by a junior detective, and has also lost her parents recently. Her impending marriage to a man she has known all her life is also hanging over her like a cloud, driven along by her future mother in law with very little input from Billie herself. At least her godfather, the Chief Constable, has her back and has probably played a part in her being given promotion to Assistant Chief Constable. Except she doesn’t really want it – MIT is where her heart lies, even if it means working with DC Jo Green (The Grass) who constantly rubs her up the wrong way. Fortunately her wingman DS Ash Sanghera can always be relied on. As she drives into work that morning she witnesses a terrible crime scene – the appalling murder of a small child suspended from a famous landmark and Billie is determined to catch the killer. The victim is swiftly identified and the post mortem reveals she was drugged and smothered to death, although there are also stab wounds, including one very strange signature from the killer. A second body, this time an adult woman, is discovered soon after with the same strange marking. What could possibly link the two victims? As the case progresses, Billie starts to have disturbing flashbacks to childhood and makes a very startling discovery about her early life. Finally the detectives receive a lead to a good suspect but then the whole investigation turns on its head. With her life in complete turmoil, can Billie catch a killer whilst dealing with her troubling suspicions about her own family history, not knowing who she can even trust any more?
I found Billie to be a complex character. She is very young to be a Detective Superintendent and the way she is involved in the investigations seems like more in keeping of that of a DI, for example going out and interviewing witnesses and suspects. She also behaves a bit childishly at times and doesn’t seem to have the maturity that goes with her rank, let alone her promotion. She is clearly a strong woman at work and yet lets her personal life be dictated and mapped out by others, even to the point of marrying a man she seems fond of at best. I really liked some characters, like Josta, who brought some great gallows humour to the story. It’s a super story, so much more than a simple murder investigation with an exciting plot, loads of red herrings and false trails, and a fantastic ending which kept me gripped right to the very last page. I do hope there will be another story featuring Billie Wilde – she is far too good a character to only have one outing! 5*