The last thing you need when you're on holiday is to become involved in
a murder. For most people, that would easily qualify as the holiday from
hell. For George Gently, it is a case of business as usual. The Chief
Inspector's quiet Easter break in Norchester is rudely interrupted when
a local timber merchant is found dead. His son, with whom he had been
seen arguing, immediately becomes the prime suspect, although Gently is
far from convinced of his guilt.
Norchester City Police gratefully accept Gently's offer to help
investigate the murder, but he soon clashes with Inspector Hansom, the
officer in charge of the case. Hansom's idea of conclusive evidence
appals Gently almost as much as Gently's thorough, detailed, methodical
style of investigation exasperates Hansom, who considers the murder to
be a straightforward affair.
Locking horns with the local law is a distraction Gently can do without
when he's on the trail of a killer.