The Fifth Ben Schroeder Novel
April 1971. When DI Webb and DS Raymond respond to a 999 call at Harpur Mews in Bloomsbury, a horrific scene awaits them.
Susan Lang is lying on the ground, bleeding to death. Her husband Henry is sitting nearby, holding a large, blood-stained knife.
In shock, Henry claims to have no memory of the events that led to his wife’s death, leaving his barrister, Ben Schroeder, little with which to defend a potential murder charge.
Unbeknownst to his strict Baptist wife, Deborah, Justice Rainer has a secret life as a gambler. In his desperation for money to fund his habit, he has already raided his own and Deborah’s resources, and now he has crossed another line – one from which there is no return.
To his horror, as the trial of Henry Lang starts, Rainer discovers a sinister connection between the trial and his gambling debts which could cause his world to unravel. In a rare case in which the judge is in greater peril than the defendant on trial, both Lang and Rainer have called down the storm on their own heads.
Their lives are on the line, and time is running out.
Category: Political / legal thriller
RRP: £8.99
ISBN: 9781843446736
Published: June 28, 2017
Extent: 416 pages
RRP: £4.99
ISBN: 9781843446750
Published: June 28, 2017
‘The writing is competent and confident’
Gill Chedgey , NudgeBooks.com
‘I enjoyed this book – the twists and turns in the plot were really good, and the story was well put together. I would definitely choose another book by this author’
Julie Hosford , Netgalley
‘In the pages of this novel, notorious historical figures like Lord Lucan rub shoulders with the complex characters of Murphy’s fictional legal world: the clients and lawyers, the police and expert witnesses, and above all of them, the judge. There is time, too, to discuss the subtleties of psychology and the ethics of legal privilege, in a story in which the patient workings of justice compete with the gathering storm of a bloody tragedy’
Barrister
‘What an interesting idea for a plot – this blurb had me hooked from the second I saw the press release! How great that the judge in a murder trial is almost as criminal as those he presides over in his courtroom!?’
Emma The Little Book Worm