A young woman from the country finds adventure in World War II–era England.
At first things look bleak for Wilhelmina "Billie" Harkness of Barton St Giles in rural Wiltshire. Her father, a rector, is a prisoner of war, and her brother’s missing in action. Her mother, after tearing up Billie’s enlistment papers, is run down by a car and killed, leaving Billie alone in the vicarage with her father’s rector, Ronald Kershaw. Afraid of the scandal his living under the same roof as an unmarried woman threatens, he gives Billie an ultimatum: marry him or leave her home. Fortunately, a letter from a cousin she’s never met rescues her. Lydia Harkness, who has pots of money, invites her for an indefinite stay in her gracious home in Hull. A port city, Hull is bigger and busier than sleepy Barton St Giles. It’s also a target of German aircraft, as a raid during Billie’s first night proves. Lydia arranges a job for her cousin in the library, but Billie’s made for more challenging stuff. Before she even starts her new post, she’s recruited as one of Hull’s two female constables, an innovation brought on by the need to send every able-bodied man to the front. After the bang-bang pace of the events that bring Billie out of the vicarage under the watchful eye of her mum to semi-independence in her cousin’s house, readers can expect the very different treat of watching her negotiate for respect in her newly created post. Tackling everything from the theft of Father O’Connell’s bicycle to the death of a young woman the night of the air raid, Billie proves herself more than up to the task.
Brisk and colorful.