‘Of course Andrew had enemies. He was a politician, and one with views a lot of people thought extreme. He wasn’t a fan of independence, for one thing. Not shy of saying so, I think you’ll agree.’
In the depths of a Scottish winter, Inspector Tony McLean is assigned to the investigation of the deaths of a Member of the Scottish Parliament, Andrew Weatherly, caught on security camera at his home in Fife, drugging then smothering his daughters and shooting his wife, before turning the rifle on himself. McLean is surprised to find his one-time mentor, Detective Superintendent Tennant of the local police, is the Senior Investigating Officer, who observes with a keen Scottish wit that the case ‘…is way too important to leave to people who know what they are doing.’
As McLean’s team interviews staff and business associates to try and establish a motive for the killings a second case is under investigation, the death of a naked man covered in a full body tattoo, found wedged in the rocks of the River Esk. The PM is performed by Edinburgh pathologist Angus Cadwallader, who also handles the PM’s for the Weatherly’s. Most of the man’s tattoos are recent, but older one’s lead to the military…
Pressure is applied from on high for the Weatherly case to be wrapped up as quietly as possible and handed over to the Procurator Fiscal, in a cover up to avoid media speculation over Weatherly’s lifestyle and proclivities, but McLean receives visits and incriminating evidence from Special Branch, who want the investigation to continue. McLean attends the funeral for the family and the wake, meeting the mysterious Mrs. Saifre.
I found the first half of the book entertaining; the characters well-formed, police procedural and forensics fascinating, the rich wit and linguistic flourishes, comments on the recent restructuring from the old divisions to Police Scotland, the psychologist and physiotherapist attending to McLean’s injuries, the workers at soup kitchens for the homeless, Mrs. McCutcheon’s cat exercising its authority over the large house McLean inherited from his grandmother.
But then the story morphed into modern day gothic, with satanic influences, ritual killings and burials which was unexpected and for me, a tad disappointing.