DCI Bill Slider and his staff at Shepherd’s Bush CID tackle the case of an 18-year-old murdered in the kitchen of her family’s quiet home.
Rhianne Morgan’s death was anything but easeful. Even though there’s no evidence of a ligature, the police surgeon insists she was strangled hours before her stepfather, estate agent David Morgan, found her body and destroyed all hope of recovering evidence from a crime scene in his frantic attempts to revive her. Once DS Jim Atherton and his mates have sifted through the complicated relations surrounding her mother and stepfather, both of whom have been married before, three leading suspects emerge. A local man named Andrew Denton has just been released from prison, still loudly proclaiming his innocence after serving a sentence for aggravated rape. Corey Willans, the older brother of Rhianne’s boyfriend, Kenton, bolted when police officers tried to question him and seems to have had a thing with Rhianne himself. And Rhianne’s stepfather, David, a skirt-chaser who turns out to have faked his alibi, is anything but trustworthy. In addition, Rhianne’s well-attested fondness for older men raises the possibility of still other suspects lurking in the shadows. With so many suspicious characters and so many shifting leads, it’s no wonder that Slider’s boss, Det. Supt. Porson, complains, “It’s like nailing jelly to the wall, this case.” As usual, Harrod-Eagles slips updates about her detectives’ domestic lives into her coolly professional account of the teamwork that eventually identifies Rhianne’s killer.
A model British procedural from a proven veteran.