This is the latest in Susan Hill's series featuring DCS Simon Serrailler of Lafferton Police, a blend of family drama and crime fiction, an addition which has Serrailler wondering if the time has come to make different life choices, including whether he should move to the country after his comfortable life renting a flat. Professionally, he finds himself having to confront the nightmare rise and spread of the county lines drugs trade, a threat to young people, the exploitation of children, with all the attendant threats it poses to the community. It is winter, it all begins with the discovery in the village of Starly of the ravaged body of a young man in a flat above a Chinese herbal pharmacy, a heroin overdose, and which sparks police inquiries as they try to identify the victim.
It is his sister, Dr Cat Deerbon and her family, who provides the familial roots and stability to a Serrailler who has up to this point been a commitment phobe when it comes to women and relationships, although a meeting with a lover from his past, Rachel, push him towards considering permanent change. Cat is now working in the private health sector as a GP for Concierge Medical, although the pressures and strains of her profession remain, with patients like 95 year old Lionel Brown, along with the state of the NHS local hospital. This and the everyday family dramas, such as husband Chief Constable Kevin Bright's leg injury, worries over their dog Wookie, and Sam's problems, combine to leave Cat feeling exhausted. In the meantime, tragedies involving children recruited and threatened by the drugs trade, and other murders have Serrailler and his team determined to get some forms of justice.
This was an uneven reading experience for me, and the pacing of the novel felt awkward and abrupt on occasion. Hill's central protagonist, Serrailler, is not someone I feel particularly invested in, he feels like someone whose character is markedly underwritten, and I am not sure I believe in his sudden awareness of his deeper feelings for Rachel, his sister Cat is far more interesting to me. What makes this novel a worthwhile read is Hill's portrayal of 14 year old Olivia and 11 year old Brooklyn 'Brookie' Roper, and his father, Vince, trying to do all that he can to protect his young son. Overall, this a engaging read, with the darkness of the horrors of the drugs trade and its terrifying toll on young people and others in the community. Many thanks to the publisher for an ARC.