Approaching the same case from entirely different directions, David Mallin and George Coe remain completely unaware of the other’s interest. But not for long.
Seventeen-year-old Carol Turner is somehow involved with a murder case, and she has a weapon in her possession that could solve the case. David looks into it, but doesn’t get very far. George takes a different approach, simply allowing matters to develop.
But is it David’s wife, Elsa Mallin, who’s destined to suffer the most? And is Carol Turner the key to releasing her from her pain?
"Eclectic, underrated Ormerod can be relied upon to come up with the startling goods" - Sunday Times
"I am glad to announce that the detective novel is still alive and well in Mr Ormerod's skillful hands" - The Spectator
"Fast-moving, with well-orchestrated jiggery-pokery; not unlike an early Dick Francis in tone and method” - Times Literary Supplement
Roger Ormerod (1920-2005) was a prolific writer of ingenious and densely plotted crime novels - some 35 in all - which were published in the UK and the USA. He lived in Wolverhampton and amongst other things worked as a civil servant and as a Social Security inspector – backgrounds which he made full use of in his fiction, as he did with his hobbies of painting and photography.
Roger Ormerod was born in Wolverhampton, Staffordshire. He worked as a county court officer, an executive officer in the Department of Social Security, a postman, and a shop loader in an engineering factory.
I enjoyed this book. It was an interesting story and was written in a unique way. I loved the characters and the plot. I am glad to have read this book.