Many cases going on at once in this fifth entry in the Detective Chief Inspector Carol Jordan/Dr. Tony Hill mysteries. I didn't care for it at all, but at least it introduced Tony's mother, Vanessa Hill, and it also revealed Tony had suffered an abusive childhood. I think finding out more about Tony's past makes the book worth reading, but for me, the various unrelated crimes were never engaging enough.
Tony is a hero at the start this time. A mental patient at Bradford Moor Secure Hospital loses control and goes on a murderous rampage. The halls soon are slippery with blood and gore - Lloyd Allen found an axe. Allen believes God gave him the mission to bring people to The Lord. Tony stops him, but he is a little slow getting out the way of the axe.
While recovering in the hospital, his knee shattered, Tony soon discovers even worse things are headed in his direction. Boredom first. Then, incredibly, his mother, long gone from his life, shows up. She is still the blaming, unloving witch he remembers. Why is she coming to visit? Thankfully, Carol shows up chasing mommy dearest away. Things are slow for the Major Incident Team. Then things explode. Literally.
Robbie Bishop, famous football player, dies of poisoning. Then Danny Wade, lottery winner, dies of poisoning. Are they linked? Tony thinks so, which means they are. However, Carol is out of sorts. She has another case on her mind - a bomb goes off at the football stadium. Was it terrorism? Before she can get her team on it, the Counter Terrorism Command swoops in and takes over her office, relegating her team into grunt work. She is told to go about her poisoning case. She is not amused. Then Tony high-handedly begins commandeering her staff into doing legwork on both cases. Besides trying to find out why people are being poisoned, Tony also thinks the bombing wasn't terrorism, but a murder case, too. Is he right? Carol is not sure he knows what he is doing, but she definitely has a problem with how he is doing it.
Well. Time and 480 pages of reading will expose the secrets of Bradford citizens, guilty of criminal acts. At least, some of them are criminals. The rest, distressingly, are family, whether work mates or relatives.