An old enemy offers everything but an apology to get Brooklyn private eye Lillian Pentecost to track down a sharp old lady missing from the apartment building she turns out to own.
Before she retired in 1941, Perseverance “Vera” Bodine wasn’t just any legal secretary. Her photographic memory made her a highly prized employee at Boekbinder and Gimbal. Now Forest Whitsun, the high-powered defense attorney who left Lillian bloody but unbowed when they crossed swords in court, entreats her to find out what’s happened to his friend Vera, who’s sharp as ever even though she’s pushing 80. Whitsun’s greatest fear is that Vera’s post-legal work as a Nazi hunter has exposed her to enemies who’d stop at nothing even though the war’s been over for two years. Since the case involves a vulnerable woman, Lillian signs on despite her worsening multiple sclerosis, as if she already knows that the greatest dangers will await her right-hand woman (and the novel’s narrator), Willowjean Parker, who begins by getting beaten with her own blackjack by a pair of Coney Island thieves and then gets into even bigger trouble when she traces the culprits to a mob run by the menacing Donny Russo. In his detecting duo’s fourth adventure, Spotswood dials down Lillian’s saltiness and the period details. And this time around he’s even less interested than usual in the big reveal; the different strands of Will’s investigations never come together satisfactorily, and the person behind Vera’s disappearance is an unforgivably minor character.
What remains is the pungent first-person narration. Is that enough? You decide.