Chief Inspector Nigel Cockett could have retired at the age of 55, but like a fool he stayed on for that last promotion that would raise his pension just a little more. Unfortunately, just then a corpse turned up in the holding cell of his own police station. Inspector Manson, his young colleague fresh from police college-the chappy that was supposed to succeed him-seemed to think that he, Nigel, was the culprit. Just because he was the only person who had the key to the lock-up in his possession. "This won't do at all," the policeman thought, "I've been framed!" So he called his old acquaintance Daisy Hayes on the phone. She was the only real-life sleuth he'd ever met with any talent for solving murders. He begged her to help him prove his innocence: "The only thing I can say for sure is that I didn't do it!" "This is your classical locked-room mystery, with a twist of lemon, and the chief suspect is none other than Nigel Cockett, of 'D for Daisy' fame. Our favourite blind sleuth could not resist the challenge! Serve ice-cold." - The Weekly Banner
Autorentext
Nick Aaron is Dutch, but he was born in South Africa (1956), where he attended a British-style boarding school, in Pietersburg, Transvaal. Later he lived in Lausanne (Switzerland), in Rotterdam, Luxembourg and Belgium. He worked for the European Parliament as a printer and proofreader. Currently he's retired and lives in Malines.
Recently, after writing in Dutch and French for many years, the author went back to the language of his mid-century South African childhood. A potential global readership was the incentive; the trigger was the character of Daisy Hayes, who asserted herself in his mind wholly formed.