Revenge is best served cold in a second case for DC Sean Blake (Loose
Tongues, 2018),
of the Greater Manchester Police’s Serious Crimes Unit.
Jordan Hughes was only a kid of 15 when Anthony Brown and his
mates at Belle Vue High framed him for the murder of Norman Hornby, a homeless
man Ant had delighted in setting afire. Now, after spending half his life in
prison, Jordan’s free at last, and he makes a beeline for Ant and his
confederates. Nick McGhee is off in Majorca on a photography assignment, but
Kevin Rowe, Carl Parker, Phil Nordern, Lee Goodwin, and Ant himself, who’s
risen far enough in the world to own several casinos, are all available for
target practice. Jordan wastes no time in ambushing Kevin Rowe in his own home
and torturing him to death. In the meantime, Sean and his mentor, DS Magda
Dragomir, have already learned of the murder of Lee Goodwin and Phil Nordern.
What first looks like a routine game of cat and mouse is complicated by the
fact that both of them were drowned—a far cry from the spectacular violence
visited on Rowe. Even if Sean were somehow granted miraculous access to
Jordan’s mind, he’d be none the wiser, because Jordan, after a blackout of 48
hours, really can’t remember whether he killed Goodwin and Nordern, much as he
would have liked to. Is Jordan being framed once again? Are two different
avengers at work? And if so, just what is the connection between them?
Readers willing to suspend an awful lot of disbelief will be
rewarded with a warts-and-all view of Greater Manchester’s finest and an ending
guaranteed to surprise.

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