Nicola Upson's latest addition to her historical crime series featuring the Scottish writer Josephine Tey has a very dark heart, set in the Suffolk village of Polstead, where Tey inherited a house from her godmother. Black clouds hang heavy as villagers prepare for the coming war, with the order to carry gas masks at all times and fitting black out curtains, and Tey is living with her friend and lover, Marta, making the most of the time they have together before Marta leaves for America to work with Hitchcock. London is preparing for the terror of war with the mass evacuation of children and mothers with little children to more rural parts of the country. Unsurprisingly, there is heartbreak and anguish amongst parents, having to entrust their precious children to strangers, hoping they have made the right decision.
Vicar's wife Hilary Lampton has made arrangements for Polstead residents to take some of the children, only to find amidst the chaos and confusion, four times more than expected turn up, leaving her to cajole the community into accepting them all. However, one child, Betty is taken in by the Herron family, but they refuse to take in her brother, Noah. Tey takes him in as a short term measure, only to find he is more disturbed and unsettled than she first realises. In the meantime, Scotland Yard DCI Archie Penrose finds himself in charge of a London murder with a victim, a rent collector, he has little sympathy with. At the village fete, Tey finds herself meeting the well known author, Marjery Allingham, and judging the various competitions with her, when it transpires that there is a missing child, and a search for her is organised by Penrose who is temporarily visiting.
There are unexpected twists in a harrowing narrative where the full extent of nightmare horrors hidden with Polstead's community slowly begin to come to light, as the start of the war shakes out other secrets as well. Upson skilfully introduces a wide ranging cast of disparate characters as she builds up a intricate and detailed picture of the ordinary and everyday life of a village. The underlying sinister and menacing undercurrents culminate in revelations that come as a traumatic shock, it seems you can know people all your life and yet not know who they really are. This is a wonderfully atmospheric historical crime series, this addition captures the turbulence of this period, in London with the messy logistics of a mass evacuation and the impact on rural villages. Many thanks to the publisher for an ARC.