TY - BOOK AU - Robinson,Peter TI - Watching the dark T2 - Inspector Banks mystery SN - 9781444704891 AV - PR6068.O1964 W38 2012 U1 - 823.92 23 PY - 2012/// CY - London PB - Hodder & Stoughton KW - Banks, Alan, KW - Banks, Alan (Fictitious character) KW - fast KW - Fiction KW - Cold cases (Criminal investigation) KW - Detective and mystery stories KW - Police KW - Crimes against KW - Police Crimes against Fiction KW - Cold cases (Criminal investigation) Fiction KW - Yorkshire (England) Fiction KW - Tallinn (Estonia) Fiction KW - Mystery fiction KW - Yorkshire (England) KW - gsafd N1 - "The new Chief Inspector Banks novel"--Cover N2 - When Detective Inspector Bill Reid is found murdered in the tranquil grounds of the St Peter's Police Treatment Centre, and compromising photographs are discovered in his room, DCI Banks is called in to investigate. Because of the possibility of police corruption, he is assigned an officer from Professional Standards, Inspector Joanna Passero, to work closely with him, and he soon finds himself and his methods under scrutiny. It emerges that Reid's murder may be linked to the disappearance of an English girl called Rachel Hewitt, in Tallinn, Estonia, six years earlier. The deeper Banks looks into the old case, the more he begins to feel that he has to solve the mystery of Rachel's disappearance before he can solve Reid's murder, though Inspector Passero has a different agenda. When Banks and Passero travel to Tallinn to track down leads in the dark, cobbled alleys of the city's Old Town, it soon become clear that that someone doesn't want the past stirred up. Meanwhile, DI Annie Cabbot, just back at work after a serious injury, is following up leads in Eastvale. Her investigations take her to the heart of a migrant labor scam involving a corrupt staffing agency and a loan shark who preys on the poorest members of society. As the action shifts back and forth between Tallinn and Eastvale, it soon becomes clear that crimes are linked in more ways than Banks imagined, and that solving them may put even more lives in jeopardy ER -