4.5★
“‘So you were letting him do your dirty work? That doesn’t sound like you.’
‘A good boss provides opportunities for personal growth and development. I think we were all winners, on the day.’ ”
Boss Jackson Lamb always has plenty of dirty work and plenty of so-called opportunities for the Slow Horses of Slough House, loosely referred to as an arm of the Secret Service at Regent Park.
“Slough House was a branch of the Service, certainly, but ‘arm’ was pitching it strong. As was ‘finger’, come to that; fingers could be on the button or on the pulse. Fingernails, now: those, you clipped, discarded, and never wanted to see again. So Slough House was a fingernail of the Service: a fair step from Regent’s Park geographically, and on another planet in most other ways.”
The personnel are all failed spies (“joes” when they’re on an op and active in the field), but have been sidelined rather than terminated following some unforgivable mistake.
River Cartwright was the main character in the last instalment, “Real Tigers”, and we met his grandfather, David Cartwright, fondly referred to by all as the OB, the Old Bastard, who was a seriously high spook in the service in his day. River’s mother left him in his grandparents’ care when he was a little boy, and he loved listening to the old stories, always carefully edited for his ears. When River joined the service, the OB shared more stories, but certainly not all.
But he’s in his 80s now, lives alone in the country, and River is more and more worried about his grandfather’s increasing forgetfulness and wondering what the likelihood is of the OB “reminiscing” and revealing state secrets to neighbours or shopkeepers. He also wonders what steps the Service might do to deal with this risk.
The OB, on the other hand, knows he’s forgetful, but he has retained his lifelong suspicion of everyone. He keeps an eye out for “stoats”, as he refers to “the watchers” who may be sent to spy on him. He knows he’s superfluous to requirements and a bit of a loose cannon, and he’s determined not to be eliminated by either side.
I never thought about how dangerous life would be for old spies getting dementia. What do you do with them? These were the people who have kept us feeling safe. Whether we were or not or whether their methods were “acceptable” or not is beside the point. The OB is a decided risk, and while he may forget his trousers, he doesn’t forget to look for evidence he’s being watched.
And he still has a gun. Oops. This could get serious.
Meanwhile, things have changed at Slough House, with nerdy-beyond-belief Roddy Ho sporting “cool” clothes and bragging about a girlfriend. He’s always thought he follows all the rules he’s read in magazines and that he is irresistible. Unbelievable is more like it.
“‘Jesus. And this is an actual relationship? Not an abduction? Well well well.’
Lamb dropped the appalled expression, and beamed round at the company. ‘See what you can achieve with a little application?’
He patted Ho on the shoulder. ‘It does me good to see you rise above your disability.’
‘I don’t have a disability,’ Ho said.
‘That’s the spirit. . .
Jackson Lamb, a glorious slob, a brilliant but disreputable head of this strange bunch of has-beens, is a master of the back-handed “compliment”.
The book starts off with a bang, literally, kept me anxious to see what was next, and then it crossed into a whole different area and I didn’t know where it was going. It lost some of the sarcastic tone and the story got bleaker by the rain-soaked minute. Less banter, less sarcasm, more plot, which for a mystery is hardly a bad thing. I wondered what Herron was up to.
But it wasn’t until he began tying up some of the threads so I could see why he digressed that I got fascinated again. More action, more surprises (and yes, more banter and character development), and all-in-all, another great read in the series.
Thanks to NetGalley and Hachette Australia for the preview copy from which I’ve quoted (not nearly as much as I’m tempted to, I have to say). Love the series!