December 1940. With the Luftwaffe pounding London nightly the population seeks refuge in London’s underground stations. One of them is Aldwych, which has been taken out of service to shelter the British Museum’s Elgin marbles, along with countless civilians escaping the bombing. The body of a young man is found in the tunnel just outside the station. Wearing a tuxedo, but barefoot, he has been poisoned.
Soon other bodies appear, some shot, one battered to death, and DCI Coburg’s jazz pianist wife, Rosa, becomes a target.
DCI Coburg and Sergeant Lampson find themselves caught up in a world of underground jazz clubs, disused tunnels, looters, auxiliary fire services, espionage, as they search for a brutal and ruthless murderer. No-one is safe.
In this series Eldridge explores crimes in the derelict London Underground stations during the World War Two, tapping into our perennial fascination with London and its underground railway. The first in a brand new series from Jim Eldridge, author of the bestselling Museum and Hotel Mysteries.