Detective
Inspector John Marco of the South Wales Police is just back from a three-week
holiday in Italy. He’s called to a café in Cardiff, specifically to the
storeroom. A body has been found, and the victim has been clearly executed, as
in a professional killing. Marco’s assistant, Detective Sergeant Lydia Flint, recognizes
the dead man as Felix Bevard, the owner of a minicab company long believed tied
to drug trafficking, prostitution, and money laundering.
As it turns out,
Bevard was just about reading to turn state’s evidence in a murder case – and
on a former partner now serving prison time. It was the partner that the Wales
police have desperately wanted to collar permanently.
Marco also
discovers he has a temporary boss – his rather hated rival. And the rival turns
out to have been one of the investigating officers in the murder case.
Somebody Told Me is the third DI John Marco mystery by
Stephen Puleston, and it’s a winner. Puleston artfully combines crime
investigation, police force politics, and Marco’s own romantic ups and downs
into a satisfying police procedural.
Stephen Puleston |
This novel is
slightly different from its predecessors in that the reader knows who the likely
culprit (or culprits) is. The puzzle lies in how Marco, Flint, and their team
chase down the all-important “how” – the evidence. And it’s neither obvious nor
intuitive, and will, in fact, require good old-fashioned slogging through the
case.
Somebody Told Me
is the last of three published DI Marco novels (and the last of six by
Puleston). There’s word of another DI Marco novel in the works, and that’s a
good thing. It’s a highly entertaining series.
Related:
Photograph: Night scene in Cardiff,
Wales.
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