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* RedOniBlueOni: Havers is red, Lynley is blue. However, as is this show's habit, the reality is slightly more complex: Havers is certainly more fiery and hotheaded in daily life, but she is generally the cool, collected one in a crisis, whereas Lynley is generally the more rational and pragmatic one, but tends to panic when the shit hits the fan. Also, Lynley is more likely to fly off the handle at suspects, whereas Havers is more likely to react with TranquilFury.

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* RedOniBlueOni: Havers is red, Lynley is blue. However, as is this show's habit, the reality is slightly more complex: Havers is certainly more fiery and hotheaded in daily life, but she is generally the cool, collected one in a crisis, whereas Lynley is generally usually the more rational and pragmatic one, but tends to panic when the shit hits the fan. Also, Lynley is more likely to fly off the handle at suspects, whereas Havers is more likely to react with TranquilFury.
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* RedOniBlueOni: Havers is red, Lynley is blue. However, as is this show's habit, the reality is a bit more complex: Havers is certainly more fiery and hotheaded in daily life, but she is generally the cool, collected one in a crisis, whereas Lynley is generally the more rational and pragmatic one, but tends to panic when the shit hits the fan. Also, Lynley is more likely to fly off the handle at suspects, whereas Havers is more likely to react with TranquilFury.

to:

* RedOniBlueOni: Havers is red, Lynley is blue. However, as is this show's habit, the reality is a bit slightly more complex: Havers is certainly more fiery and hotheaded in daily life, but she is generally the cool, collected one in a crisis, whereas Lynley is generally the more rational and pragmatic one, but tends to panic when the shit hits the fan. Also, Lynley is more likely to fly off the handle at suspects, whereas Havers is more likely to react with TranquilFury.
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* RedOniBlueOni: Havers is red, Lynley is blue. However, as is this show's habit, the reality is a bit more complex: Havers is certainly more fiery and hotheaded in daily life, but she is generally the cool, collected one in a crisis, whereas Lynley is generally the more rational and pragmatic one, but tends to panic when the shit hits the fan. Also, Lynley usually flies into a frothing rage at suspects, whereas Havers is more likely to react with TranquilFury.

to:

* RedOniBlueOni: Havers is red, Lynley is blue. However, as is this show's habit, the reality is a bit more complex: Havers is certainly more fiery and hotheaded in daily life, but she is generally the cool, collected one in a crisis, whereas Lynley is generally the more rational and pragmatic one, but tends to panic when the shit hits the fan. Also, Lynley usually flies into a frothing rage is more likely to fly off the handle at suspects, whereas Havers is more likely to react with TranquilFury.
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* RedOniBlueOni: Havers is red, Lynley is blue.

to:

* RedOniBlueOni: Havers is red, Lynley is blue. However, as is this show's habit, the reality is a bit more complex: Havers is certainly more fiery and hotheaded in daily life, but she is generally the cool, collected one in a crisis, whereas Lynley is generally the more rational and pragmatic one, but tends to panic when the shit hits the fan. Also, Lynley usually flies into a frothing rage at suspects, whereas Havers is more likely to react with TranquilFury.
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Elizabeth George is one of only two American writers[[note]]the other is Tony Hillerman[[/note]] whose novels have been adapted for Creator/{{PBS}}' ''MYSTERY!''

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Elizabeth George is one of only two American writers[[note]]the other is Tony Hillerman[[/note]] whose novels have been adapted for Creator/{{PBS}}' ''MYSTERY!''
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* FanServicePack/ProgressivelyPrettier: During the pilot and the first four series, Barbara has short hair and goes around in baggy sweaters and coats. In series five and six, her hair has lengthened dramatically and she's wearing clothes that are much more form-fitting. The end result is [[http://www.bbc.co.uk/drama/content/images/2007/01/10/haverscharlead_396x222.jpg this]].

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* FanServicePack/ProgressivelyPrettier: FanServicePack[=/=]ProgressivelyPrettier: During the pilot and the first four series, Barbara has short hair and goes around in baggy sweaters and coats. In series five and six, her hair has lengthened dramatically and she's wearing clothes that are much more form-fitting. The end result is [[http://www.bbc.co.uk/drama/content/images/2007/01/10/haverscharlead_396x222.jpg this]].

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Elizabeth George is one of only two American writers[[hottip:*:the other is Tony Hillerman]] whose novels have been adapted for {{PBS}}' ''MYSTERY!''

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Elizabeth George is one of only two American writers[[hottip:*:the writers[[note]]the other is Tony Hillerman]] Hillerman[[/note]] whose novels have been adapted for {{PBS}}' Creator/{{PBS}}' ''MYSTERY!''



* ''A Great Deliverance''[[hottip:*:two-part episode]]

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* ''A Great Deliverance''[[hottip:*:two-part episode]]
Deliverance''[[note]]two-part episode[[/note]]



* BreakTheCutie: Barbara Havers starts out as a BrokenBird, so she's not exactly [[JerkassWoobie sweet and adorable any more]] in the pilot. And yet somehow, the show proceeds to break her ''even further''. [[hottip:*:First her father dies and she has to put her mentally ill mother in a nursing home (where she most likely dies during the early seasons). Then she's demoted (and almost sacked) for doing the right thing, after which she's shot in the line of duty and then held hostage at gunpoint on her first case back after said shooting, whereupon she has a panic attack as a result of said hostage-taking. Then her partner's suspended for excessive violence. Once he's back she's hit over the head with a rock by a psycho and would have died on a deserted moor if her partner hadn't found her. Then her partner's wife is killed right in front of them (who she couldn't save despite her attempts at CPR), after which he then goes on a drinking binge and takes all his anger and bitterness out on her despite her only trying to help.]] Ouch, show. Ouch. (This looks light compared to what her partner goes through, until you remember that in her case, a lot of the breaking was done [[BrokenBird before she even met Thomas Lynley]].)
* BreakTheHaughty: Although he's not without his own angst, Barbara [[DarkAndTroubledPast has quite a bit more angst in her past]] than Lynley does. The storyline proceeds to make up for this rather thoroughly. [[hottip:*:To wit: he almost loses his wife to a deliberate car accident perpetrated by someone angry with his work on a case, which also causes his wife to miscarry their baby and break up with him. Then his devoted partner is shot in the line of duty right in front of him. Then he and his wife become even more estranged, with him eventually thinking she's going to ask him for a divorce. Then he's suspended for allegedly using excessive violence on a suspect. Then, just as he and his wife are starting to reconcile, ''she'' is shot and killed right in front of him by someone connected to a case he's working. As soon as he comes back on the job after ''that'', he becomes the chief suspect in a murder investigation, with the victim in question being probably the first romantic contact he's had since his wife's death.]] ...''ouch.''

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* BreakTheCutie: Barbara Havers starts out as a BrokenBird, so she's not exactly [[JerkassWoobie sweet and adorable any more]] in the pilot. And yet somehow, the show proceeds to break her ''even further''. [[hottip:*:First [[note]]First her father dies and she has to put her mentally ill mother in a nursing home (where she most likely dies during the early seasons). Then she's demoted (and almost sacked) for doing the right thing, after which she's shot in the line of duty and then held hostage at gunpoint on her first case back after said shooting, whereupon she has a panic attack as a result of said hostage-taking. Then her partner's suspended for excessive violence. Once he's back she's hit over the head with a rock by a psycho and would have died on a deserted moor if her partner hadn't found her. Then her partner's wife is killed right in front of them (who she couldn't save despite her attempts at CPR), after which he then goes on a drinking binge and takes all his anger and bitterness out on her despite her only trying to help.]] [[/note]] Ouch, show. Ouch. (This looks light compared to what her partner goes through, until you remember that in her case, a lot of the breaking was done [[BrokenBird before she even met Thomas Lynley]].)
* BreakTheHaughty: Although he's not without his own angst, Barbara [[DarkAndTroubledPast has quite a bit more angst in her past]] than Lynley does. The storyline proceeds to make up for this rather thoroughly. [[hottip:*:To [[note]]To wit: he almost loses his wife to a deliberate car accident perpetrated by someone angry with his work on a case, which also causes his wife to miscarry their baby and break up with him. Then his devoted partner is shot in the line of duty right in front of him. Then he and his wife become even more estranged, with him eventually thinking she's going to ask him for a divorce. Then he's suspended for allegedly using excessive violence on a suspect. Then, just as he and his wife are starting to reconcile, ''she'' is shot and killed right in front of him by someone connected to a case he's working. As soon as he comes back on the job after ''that'', he becomes the chief suspect in a murder investigation, with the victim in question being probably the first romantic contact he's had since his wife's death.]] ...[[/note]] ...''ouch.'' ''



* CharacterDevelopment: Through his partnership with Barbara, Lynley becomes less snobbish and elitist, not to mention less likely to fly off the handle. Through her partnership with Lynley, Barbara begins to let her softer side show more often and learns that the world isn't out to get her and that it's okay to trust people and let them in.[[hottip:*:This doesn't even ''begin'' to cover what these two do for each other over the course of the series, but it's a start.]] In the end, they are not only more effective detectives due to their partnership, they are, quite simply, better ''people''. And it is [[CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming beautiful]].

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* CharacterDevelopment: Through his partnership with Barbara, Lynley becomes less snobbish and elitist, not to mention less likely to fly off the handle. Through her partnership with Lynley, Barbara begins to let her softer side show more often and learns that the world isn't out to get her and that it's okay to trust people and let them in.[[hottip:*:This [[note]]This doesn't even ''begin'' to cover what these two do for each other over the course of the series, but it's a start.]] [[/note]] In the end, they are not only more effective detectives due to their partnership, they are, quite simply, better ''people''. And it is [[CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming beautiful]].



* {{Deadpan Snarker}}/{{The Snark Knight}}: Havers. Oh, Havers. That poor, dear girl.

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* {{Deadpan Snarker}}/{{The Snark Knight}}: DeadpanSnarker / TheSnarkKnight: Havers. Oh, Havers. That poor, dear girl.



* {{Deuteragonist}}: Havers, in a ''rare'' example of an [[TheInspector Inspector]]'s partner being this. Unlike most non-protagonist Detective Sergeants in British mystery fiction, Havers' storyline gets almost as much focus as the titular protagonist's right from the get-go. In addition, though she frequently acts as TheWatson to her partner, it isn't uncommon for ''him'' to act as TheWatson to ''her'' (for instance, the majority of "Natural Causes", or the caravan site in "One Guilty Deed"). This very trope has been cited as one of the things that sets this series apart from other {{Detective Drama}}s of its kind, and as one of the best aspects of the show.

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* {{Deuteragonist}}: Havers, in a ''rare'' example of an [[TheInspector Inspector]]'s Inspector's]] partner being this. Unlike most non-protagonist Detective Sergeants in British mystery fiction, Havers' storyline gets almost as much focus as the titular protagonist's right from the get-go. In addition, though she frequently acts as TheWatson to her partner, it isn't uncommon for ''him'' to act as TheWatson to ''her'' (for instance, the majority of "Natural Causes", or the caravan site in "One Guilty Deed"). This very trope has been cited as one of the things that sets this series apart from other {{Detective Drama}}s of its kind, and as one of the best aspects of the show.



* {{Fan Service Pack}}/ProgressivelyPrettier: During the pilot and the first four series, Barbara has short hair and goes around in baggy sweaters and coats. In series five and six, her hair has lengthened dramatically and she's wearing clothes that are much more form-fitting. The end result is [[http://www.bbc.co.uk/drama/content/images/2007/01/10/haverscharlead_396x222.jpg this]].
* [[FinishingEachOthersSentences Finishing Each Other's Sentences]]: In "Natural Causes", Lynley and Havers go back and forth like this when they solve the MysteryOfTheWeek, upon which DI Fiona Knight, temporarily partnered with Havers, remarks, "You really ''are'' a double act, aren't you!"

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* {{Fan Service Pack}}/ProgressivelyPrettier: FanServicePack/ProgressivelyPrettier: During the pilot and the first four series, Barbara has short hair and goes around in baggy sweaters and coats. In series five and six, her hair has lengthened dramatically and she's wearing clothes that are much more form-fitting. The end result is [[http://www.bbc.co.uk/drama/content/images/2007/01/10/haverscharlead_396x222.jpg this]].
* [[FinishingEachOthersSentences Finishing Each Other's Sentences]]: FinishingEachOthersSentences: In "Natural Causes", Lynley and Havers go back and forth like this when they solve the MysteryOfTheWeek, upon which DI Fiona Knight, temporarily partnered with Havers, remarks, "You really ''are'' a double act, aren't you!" you!"



* {{Flashback Echo}}/{{Trigger}}: In "In Divine Proportion" when Barbara [[spoiler:is held hostage at gunpoint]]. Her flashback is to the previous series' finale, in which [[spoiler:she was shot in the abdomen]]; she shows obvious signs of PTSD throughout the episode and goes a little nuts at the end. It takes - who else? - Lynley literally [[spoiler:pulling her off the guy]] and administering a CooldownHug to bring her back to normal. (No actual flashback occurs; because the triggering event happens in the previous episode, however, the audience is quite clearly supposed to draw the parallel.)

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* {{Flashback Echo}}/{{Trigger}}: FlashbackEcho / {{Trigger}}: In "In Divine Proportion" when Barbara [[spoiler:is held hostage at gunpoint]]. Her flashback is to the previous series' finale, in which [[spoiler:she was shot in the abdomen]]; she shows obvious signs of PTSD throughout the episode and goes a little nuts at the end. It takes - who else? - Lynley literally [[spoiler:pulling her off the guy]] and administering a CooldownHug to bring her back to normal. (No actual flashback occurs; because the triggering event happens in the previous episode, however, the audience is quite clearly supposed to draw the parallel.)



* GettingCrapPastTheRadar: Barbara Havers has a quite earthy[[hottip:*:read: perverted]] sense of humour, and some of her quips can make viewers wonder how this ever got aired before the watershed. For instance, during the episode "Well Schooled in Murder" after one of their suspects has, er, exposed himself:

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* GettingCrapPastTheRadar: Barbara Havers has a quite earthy[[hottip:*:read: perverted]] earthy[[note]]read: perverted[[/note]] sense of humour, and some of her quips can make viewers wonder how this ever got aired before the watershed. For instance, during the episode "Well Schooled in Murder" after one of their suspects has, er, exposed himself:



* LimitedSocialCircle: Our Heroes ''do'' spend time with people other than each other, but none of them seem to last more than a few episodes[[hottip:*:Christine Wood, Lynley's LoveInterest in series 5, whom he winds up ditching for Barbara]], or at most a single series[[hottip:*:Azhar and Haddiyah, Barbara's sort-of LoveInterest and his daughter, in series 2, who regrettably [[WhatHappenedToTheMouse vanish]] after that series' finale]]. The only characters to not fall victim to this, aside from their police superiors, are Helen[[hottip:*:who is [[spoiler:KilledOffForReal at the end of series 5, and their reconciliation likely wouldn't have lasted anyway]], their coworker DC Winston Nkata[[hottip:*:who first shows up in series 5]], and the Medical Examiner Stuart Lafferty[[hottip:*:ditto]]. And even they aren't seen hanging out with the [[OddCouple main duo]] outside of work to any great extent. And finally, they can't be apart for any great length of time. Lynley goes to Cornwall for vacation? Havers goes along. Havers [[spoiler:gets demoted]]? Lynley [[spoiler:[[SubordinateExcuse calls her in on every case he can]]]]. Etc, etc, etc. Let's face it; at the end of the day, they just keep coming back to each other.

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* LimitedSocialCircle: Our Heroes ''do'' spend time with people other than each other, but none of them seem to last more than a few episodes[[hottip:*:Christine episodes[[note]]Christine Wood, Lynley's LoveInterest in series 5, whom he winds up ditching for Barbara]], Barbara[[/note]], or at most a single series[[hottip:*:Azhar and Haddiyah, Barbara's sort-of LoveInterest and his daughter, in series 2, who regrettably [[WhatHappenedToTheMouse vanish]] after that series' finale]]. The only characters to not fall victim to this, aside from their police superiors, are Helen[[hottip:*:who is [[spoiler:KilledOffForReal at the end of series 5, and their reconciliation likely wouldn't have lasted anyway]], their coworker DC Winston Nkata[[hottip:*:who Nkata[[note]]who first shows up in series 5]], 5[[/note]], and the Medical Examiner Stuart Lafferty[[hottip:*:ditto]].Lafferty[[note]]ditto[[/note]]. And even they aren't seen hanging out with the [[OddCouple main duo]] outside of work to any great extent. And finally, they can't be apart for any great length of time. Lynley goes to Cornwall for vacation? Havers goes along. Havers [[spoiler:gets demoted]]? Lynley [[spoiler:[[SubordinateExcuse calls her in on every case he can]]]]. Etc, etc, etc. Let's face it; at the end of the day, they just keep coming back to each other.



* OddCouple: Whose bright idea was it to pair an Eton-and-Oxford-schooled hereditary Lord with a cranky, [[DeadpanSnarker sarcastic]] working-class sergeant? [[UndyingLoyalty A genius]], [[TrueCompanions of course.]] They were, and remained, ''very'' different people, but this only seemed to strengthen the bond between them.

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* OddCouple: Whose bright idea was it to pair an Eton-and-Oxford-schooled hereditary Lord with a cranky, [[DeadpanSnarker sarcastic]] working-class sergeant? [[UndyingLoyalty A genius]], [[TrueCompanions of course.]] They were, and remained, ''very'' different people, but this only seemed to strengthen the bond between them.



* OvertookTheSeries: Done after the first two series.

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* OvertookTheSeries: Done after the first two series.



* ShipSinking: Meta example. In the {{PBS}} airing of "Missing Joseph", host Diana Rigg notes that "[[SuspiciouslySpecificDenial it might appear that Sergeant Havers has a thing for her partner]]" but hastily goes on to mention that "she gives him nothing but grief" (while apparently missing and/or ignoring the fact that the [[UnresolvedSexualTension subtext]] in the first season alone could crush your average linebacker). She then goes on to note that Lynley is already in love with Helen Clyde - who [[spoiler:dies at the end of series 5]]. Considering that [[FanPreferredCouple shippers]] have looked past [[IncestYayShipping blood relationships]], [[GhostShipping death]], [[ShipsThatPassInTheNight little-to-no interaction]], and ''[[CrossoverShip not even being from the same universe]]'', this is hardly proof positive that nothing will ever happen, and in fact they are given an [[AndTheAdventureContinues open ending]] with [[spoiler:all romantic competition out of the way]] and seven years of added depth to their relationship. In light of all this, the denial is not particularly convincing.

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* ShipSinking: Meta example. In the {{PBS}} Creator/{{PBS}} airing of "Missing Joseph", host Diana Rigg notes that "[[SuspiciouslySpecificDenial it might appear that Sergeant Havers has a thing for her partner]]" but hastily goes on to mention that "she gives him nothing but grief" (while apparently missing and/or ignoring the fact that the [[UnresolvedSexualTension subtext]] in the first season alone could crush your average linebacker). She then goes on to note that Lynley is already in love with Helen Clyde - who [[spoiler:dies at the end of series 5]]. Considering that [[FanPreferredCouple shippers]] have looked past [[IncestYayShipping blood relationships]], [[GhostShipping death]], [[ShipsThatPassInTheNight little-to-no interaction]], and ''[[CrossoverShip not even being from the same universe]]'', this is hardly proof positive that nothing will ever happen, and in fact they are given an [[AndTheAdventureContinues open ending]] with [[spoiler:all romantic competition out of the way]] and seven years of added depth to their relationship. In light of all this, the denial is not particularly convincing.



* SurvivorGuilt: Implied to be the main cause of Lynley's HeroicBSOD following [[spoiler:Helen's death]], as she was [[spoiler:shot right in front of him because of a case he was working]].

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* SurvivorGuilt: Implied to be the main cause of Lynley's HeroicBSOD following [[spoiler:Helen's death]], as she was [[spoiler:shot right in front of him because of a case he was working]].



* UnresolvedSexualTension: Many episodes can be seen as this. Special mention goes to "One Guilty Deed" and "If Wishes Were Horses", which both involve [[spoiler: Lynley running to Havers' aid after she gets hit with a rock and shot, respectively. Very special mention to the latter, where Lynley calls her "Barbara" and not "Havers."]] And let's not forget the last two scenes of "In Divine Proportion," in which Barbara is [[spoiler:held hostage at gunpoint on her first case back from getting shot. The way he holds her close and soothes her is... a bit more than friendly. Especially that kiss he presses to the top of her head...]] Special mention ''also'' goes to the "shower scene" in "One Guilty Deed," when they dance around each other in tight quarters while she's in pyjamas and he's in - a ''towel''. ''And'' "Word of God" where he [[spoiler:''breaks off a date'', ''shows up at Barbara's flat in the middle of the night'' and ''questions whether or not he ever truly loved Helen'']]. Immediately after this, [[spoiler:they admit that they are ''each others' reason to get up in the morning'']] - I'm sorry, was this supposed to be ''[[{{Subtext}} subtext]]??''

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* UnresolvedSexualTension: Many episodes can be seen as this. Special mention goes to "One Guilty Deed" and "If Wishes Were Horses", which both involve [[spoiler: Lynley running to Havers' aid after she gets hit with a rock and shot, respectively. Very special mention to the latter, where Lynley calls her "Barbara" and not "Havers."]] And let's not forget the last two scenes of "In Divine Proportion," in which Barbara is [[spoiler:held hostage at gunpoint on her first case back from getting shot. The way he holds her close and soothes her is... a bit more than friendly. Especially that kiss he presses to the top of her head...]] Special mention ''also'' goes to the "shower scene" in "One Guilty Deed," when they dance around each other in tight quarters while she's in pyjamas and he's in - a ''towel''. ''And'' "Word of God" where he [[spoiler:''breaks off a date'', ''shows up at Barbara's flat in the middle of the night'' and ''questions whether or not he ever truly loved Helen'']]. Immediately after this, [[spoiler:they admit that they are ''each others' reason to get up in the morning'']] - I'm sorry, was this supposed to be ''[[{{Subtext}} subtext]]??''''{{Subtext}}??''



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<<|CrimeAndPunishmentSeries|>>

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* SlummingIt: Tangled up in all the ''many'' reasons Barbara Havers initially loathes Thomas Lynley is her perception that he is doing this. [[NonIdleRich He's not]], is rather offended she'd think so, and proceeds to disabuse her of the notion in short order. After she eats humble pie, she [[FireForgedFriends gains a tremendous amount of respect for him]].



* SubordinateExcuse: When Barbara is [[spoiler:demoted at the beginning of series 2]], Lynley plays this trope to the ''hilt'' to [[spoiler:keep her with him, and calls her in on every case he possibly can even though she's not technically under his supervision any more]]. When forced to justify this to ''his'' supervisor, he tells said supervisor that [[spoiler:he's calling her in because she's proven that she can work with him effectively]]. This is absolutely true, and has absolutely ''nothing'' to do with [[TrueCompanions why he wants her around]].

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* SubordinateExcuse: When Barbara is [[spoiler:demoted at the beginning of series 2]], Lynley plays this trope to the ''hilt'' to [[spoiler:keep her with him, and calls her in on every case he possibly can even though she's not technically under his supervision any more]]. When forced to justify this to ''his'' supervisor, he tells said supervisor that [[spoiler:he's calling her in because she's proven that she can work with him effectively]].effectively and that paper-shuffling will be good for her]]. This is absolutely true, and has absolutely ''nothing'' to do with [[TrueCompanions why he wants her around]].


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* TeethClenchedTeamwork: Our two heroes start out as this. It evolves rather quickly into FireForgedFriends.
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The intrigue of the show came almost entirely from watching the lead characters navigate the inevitable clashes of personality, gender, class, and opinion that arose from their radically differing backgrounds. Lynley and Havers gradually discovered that their differences complemented each other more thoroughly than either of them could have expected. Moreover, they found numerous unexpected similarities, including a mutual devotion to justice, distrust of the higher-ups, and [[ChaoticGood tendency to]] [[ScrewTheRulesImDoingWhatsRight screw the rules in favour of doing what's right]]. While they remained two ''very'' different people, the [[TrueCompanions bond]] that developed between them changed them both for the better and created a partnership more enduring and effective than anyone ever predicted.

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The intrigue of the show came almost entirely from watching the lead characters navigate the inevitable clashes of personality, gender, class, and opinion that arose from their radically differing backgrounds. Lynley and Havers gradually discovered that their differences complemented each other more thoroughly than either of them could have expected. Moreover, they found numerous unexpected similarities, including a mutual devotion to justice, distrust of the higher-ups, and [[ChaoticGood tendency to]] [[ScrewTheRulesImDoingWhatsRight screw the rules in favour of doing what's right]]. While they remained two ''very'' different people, the [[TrueCompanions bond]] that developed between them changed them both for the better and created a partnership more enduring and effective than anyone could have ever predicted.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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The intrigue of the show came almost entirely from watching the lead characters navigate the inevitable clashes of personality, gender, class, and opinion that arose from their radically differing backgrounds. Lynley and Havers gradually discovered that their differences complemented each other more thoroughly than either of them could have expected. Moreover, they discovered numerous unexpected similarities, including a mutual devotion to justice, distrust of the higher-ups, and [[ChaoticGood tendency to]] [[ScrewTheRulesImDoingWhatsRight screw the rules in favour of doing what's right]]. While they remained two ''very'' different people, the [[TrueCompanions bond]] that developed between them changed them both for the better and created a partnership more enduring and effective than anyone ever predicted.

to:

The intrigue of the show came almost entirely from watching the lead characters navigate the inevitable clashes of personality, gender, class, and opinion that arose from their radically differing backgrounds. Lynley and Havers gradually discovered that their differences complemented each other more thoroughly than either of them could have expected. Moreover, they discovered found numerous unexpected similarities, including a mutual devotion to justice, distrust of the higher-ups, and [[ChaoticGood tendency to]] [[ScrewTheRulesImDoingWhatsRight screw the rules in favour of doing what's right]]. While they remained two ''very'' different people, the [[TrueCompanions bond]] that developed between them changed them both for the better and created a partnership more enduring and effective than anyone ever predicted.
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If you're looking for tropes specific to the lead characters, please see the [[Characters/Inspector Lynley character sheet]].

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If you're looking for tropes specific to the lead characters, please see the [[Characters/Inspector Lynley [[Characters/InspectorLynley character sheet]].

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* BadassAdorable: Havers.



* BrokenBird: Barbara Havers pretty much had any semblance of optimism ground out of her with extreme prejudice after [[DeadLittleBrother her little brother's death from cancer]] tore her family apart and her parents succumbed to mental illness and lung disease right before her eyes. When combined with the fact that she has NoSocialSkills (which have left her alone and misunderstood her entire life), a HairTriggerTemper (ditto), and massive class resentment issues, it's no wonder the poor thing was on the verge of being kicked off the force, [[BunnyEarsLawyer Bunny Ears Detective]] or not, before she teamed up with Thomas Lynley. Although the show proceeds to further BreakTheCutie (and also [[BreakTheHaughty the haughty]] - her partner isn't spared), she [[DefrostingIceQueen softens and blossoms]] when paired with the one man who refuses to give up on her no matter how much [[JerkassFacade she tries to drive him away]]. The result is a far more likable - but still [[DeadpanSnarker snarky]] - Havers, in a rare case of a show helping put the bird back together again. [[TheWoobie Sort of.]]
* BunnyEarsLawyer: Havers should have been kicked off the force ''years'' ago - she was, in fact, on the verge of being sacked when she met Thomas Lynley, and was even [[spoiler:demoted]] once - because she has NoSocialSkills and a HairTriggerTemper. She's still around because she is, in fact, a frighteningly competent detective, and also the only officer on the force who can manage to survive as Thomas Lynley's partner for more than a month.



* TheConsigliere: Barbara is this to Lynley, despite her own fiery temper. Seen repeatedly over the series is Havers laying a calming hand on Lynley's arm and saying, "Sir? ''Sir!''" when he is about to lose his temper, [[TheConscience which serves to snap him out of it]]. She is so far the only person on the show to be able to do this with any sort of regular success.



* DefrostingIceQueen: Both the lead characters. By each other.



* DistressedDamsel: Barbara seems to end up trapped with AxCrazy murderers far more often than Lynley. Being Barbara, however, she usually beats the crap out of them before Lynley can get there - or at least takes a piece out of them first.



* FairCop: Lynley certainly has the ruggedly-handsome thing going on, and Barbara Havers is adorableness incarnate.

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* FairCop: Lynley certainly has the ruggedly-handsome "ruggedly handsome" thing going on, and Barbara Havers is adorableness incarnate.



* FieryRedhead: Barbara Havers. So very much.



* GoodIsNotNice: Barbara Havers is undoubtedly a truly ''good'' character, but, especially early on, she is not a particularly ''nice'' one.



* HairTriggerTemper: Havers. In ''spades''.
-->'''Lynley''': The woman is a minefield!



* TheInspector: But of course.



* KnightInSourArmor: Barbara, whose nigh-impenetrable wall of cynicism hides a woman who absolutely wants to believe the best of everyone but has been betrayed far too many times.

to:

* KnightInSourArmor: Barbara, whose nigh-impenetrable wall of cynicism hides a woman who absolutely wants to believe the best of everyone but has been betrayed far too many times.



* PuppyDogEyes: Barbara, whose large, expressive sage green eyes are more than capable of this, and clue the audience in to her [[TheWoobie vulnerability]] when she's covering it up with a [[{{Tsundere}} scathing remark]]. It is, in fact, largely because of her eyes that Barbara is such a sympathetic character; if her eyes didn't provide a window into just what a good reason she has to be defensive and prickly, she would come off as a complete bitch in early episodes.

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* PuppyDogEyes: Barbara, whose Barbara's large, expressive sage green eyes are more than capable of this, and clue the audience in to her [[TheWoobie vulnerability]] when she's covering it up with a [[{{Tsundere}} scathing remark]]. It is, in fact, largely because of her eyes that Barbara is such a sympathetic character; if her eyes didn't provide a window into just what a good reason she has to be defensive and prickly, she would come off as a complete bitch in early episodes.



* RulesLawyer: Lynley takes on this characteristic at times.



** Meta-wise, Nathaniel Parker said in an interview that he would have ended the series with Lynley and Barbara holding hands and walking into the sunset...

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The intrigue of the show came almost entirely from watching the lead characters navigate the inevitable clashes of personality, gender, class, and opinion that arose from their radically differing backgrounds. Lynley and Havers gradually discovered that their differences -- and unexpected similarities, namely a mutual devotion to justice -- complemented each other more thoroughly than either of them could have expected. While they remained two ''very'' different people, the [[TrueCompanions bond]] that developed between them changed them both for the better and created a partnership more enduring and effective than anyone ever predicted.

to:

The intrigue of the show came almost entirely from watching the lead characters navigate the inevitable clashes of personality, gender, class, and opinion that arose from their radically differing backgrounds. Lynley and Havers gradually discovered that their differences -- and unexpected similarities, namely a mutual devotion to justice -- complemented each other more thoroughly than either of them could have expected. Moreover, they discovered numerous unexpected similarities, including a mutual devotion to justice, distrust of the higher-ups, and [[ChaoticGood tendency to]] [[ScrewTheRulesImDoingWhatsRight screw the rules in favour of doing what's right]]. While they remained two ''very'' different people, the [[TrueCompanions bond]] that developed between them changed them both for the better and created a partnership more enduring and effective than anyone ever predicted.
predicted.

If you're looking for tropes specific to the lead characters, please see the [[Characters/Inspector Lynley character sheet]].



* ActionGirl: Havers is quite capable of handling herself, thank you.



* AffectionateSpitfire: Barbara Havers.


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* OneOfOurOwn: "Limbo".
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* OldCopYoungCop: One of a very few British detective series ''not'' to follow this trope, in yet another example of this show breaking the mold. Although their ages are never given in-series, Nathaniel Parker is only five years older than Sharon Small.
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** Havers, during the same scene, takes this trope to even higher levels, going chalk white with absolute fear. Considering [[spoiler:she's on the wrong end of the exact same kind of gun that put her in hospital at the end of the last episode]], she has every reason to be terrified - but the kicker is that she doesn't make a production of it. She makes viewers' hearts stop in pure terror with nothing more than a facial expression and the two words, "He's here."
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* CryIntoChest: Textbook straight when Barbara falls apart after being held hostage at gunpoint and suffers a FlashbackEcho. See also InelegantBlubbering and CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming.

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* CryIntoChest: Textbook straight when Barbara [[TearsOfFear falls apart after being held hostage at gunpoint gunpoint]] and suffers a FlashbackEcho. See also InelegantBlubbering and CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming.
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* DefrostingIceQueen: Both the lead characters. By each other.
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* TheWatson: Havers, usually, although as noted above it isn't uncommon for Lynley to be this to her as well.
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* {{Deuteragonist}}: Havers, in a ''rare'' example of an [[TheInspector Inspector]]'s partner being this. Unlike most non-protagonist Detective Sergeants in British mystery fiction, Havers' storyline gets almost as much focus as the titular protagonist's right from the get-go. In addition, though she frequently acts as TheWatson to her partner, it isn't uncommon for ''him'' to act as TheWatson to ''her'' (for instance, the majority of "Natural Causes", or the caravan site in "One Guilty Deed"). This very trope has been cited as one of the things that sets this series apart from other {{Detective Drama}}s of its kind, and as one of the best aspects of the show.
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* WorthLivingFor: Lynley and Havers, for each other. A CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming for the entire show.
-->'''Lynley''': How do you do it? Living alone.
-->'''Havers''': Oh... you get used to it. I've never been married, never had anything you could call a relationship. So you get to a point where you just have to accept what you are, what you have. And then you find something else, and that gives you the reason to get up in the morning. And I have that, don't I.
-->'''Lynley''': We both do.
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moving to YMMV


* RelationshipWritingFumble: If the writers wanted viewers to believe Havers and Lynley aren't falling head-over-heels in love throughout the course of the show, they ''really'' shouldn't have had them call each other [[spoiler:their reason to get up in the morning]], or given them the infamous CryIntoChest at the end of "In Divine Proportion" that looks nothing so much like a man comforting his traumatized lover. Many, ''many'' fans have pointed out that Lynley has much better chemistry - and a much healthier relationship - with Barbara than he ever did with [[DesignatedLoveInterest Helen]].
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* RelationshipWritingFumble: If the writers wanted viewers to believe Havers and Lynley aren't falling head-over-heels in love throughout the course of the show, they ''really'' shouldn't have had them call each other [[spoiler:their reason to get up in the morning]], or given them the infamous CryIntoChest at the end of "In Divine Proportion" that looks nothing so much like a man comforting his traumatized lover. Many, ''many'' fans have pointed out that Lynley has much better chemistry - and a much healthier relationship - with Barbara than he ever did with [[DesignatedLoveInterest Helen]].
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''The Inspector Lynley Mysteries'' was a BBC television series that ran from 2001--2007, centered around the aristocratic Detective Inspector Thomas "Tommy" Lynley, [[TheBritishTitleSystem 8th Earl of Asherton]] (NathanielParker), and his working-class partner, Detective Sergeant Barbara Havers (SharonSmall), both of ScotlandYard. The first eleven episodes were based on novels by the American author Elizabeth George, though the author's plots and characters were often significantly altered. Most, if not all, fans consider the show to take place in an AlternateContinuity from the books.

to:

''The '''''The Inspector Lynley Mysteries'' Mysteries''''' was a BBC television series that ran from 2001--2007, centered around the aristocratic Detective Inspector Thomas "Tommy" Lynley, [[TheBritishTitleSystem 8th Earl of Asherton]] (NathanielParker), and his working-class partner, Detective Sergeant Barbara Havers (SharonSmall), both of ScotlandYard. The first eleven episodes were based on novels by the American author Elizabeth George, though the author's plots and characters were often significantly altered. Most, if not all, fans consider the show to take place in an AlternateContinuity from the books.
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* BadassAdorable: Havers can take care of herself, thank you very much - including taking down a man fully four inches taller than she is. She could also probably qualify for the Miss Adorable contest.

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* BadassAdorable: Havers can take care of herself, thank you very much - including taking down a man fully four inches taller than she is. She could also probably qualify for the Miss Adorable contest.Havers.



* TheConsigliere: Barbara is this to Lynley, despite her own fiery temper - in many ways she is his common sense and voice of reason, and she is the one who brings him back when he loses himself in his quest for justice. Seen repeatedly over the series is Havers laying a calming hand on Lynley's arm and saying, "Sir? ''Sir!''" when he is about to lose his temper, [[TheConscience which serves to snap him out of it]]. She is so far the only person on the show to be able to do this with any sort of regular success.

to:

* TheConsigliere: Barbara is this to Lynley, despite her own fiery temper - in many ways she is his common sense and voice of reason, and she is the one who brings him back when he loses himself in his quest for justice.temper. Seen repeatedly over the series is Havers laying a calming hand on Lynley's arm and saying, "Sir? ''Sir!''" when he is about to lose his temper, [[TheConscience which serves to snap him out of it]]. She is so far the only person on the show to be able to do this with any sort of regular success.

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* MostImportantPerson: As has been demonstrated time and time again, no one will ''ever'' be as important to Thomas Lynley or Barbara Havers as they are to each other.

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* MostImportantPerson: LivingEmotionalCrutch: As has been demonstrated time and time again, no one will ''ever'' be as important to Thomas [[http://spikewriter.livejournal.com spikewriter]] on LJ put it, Lynley or Barbara and Havers are "...two screwed-up individuals who are surviving as well as they are to each other.because they found someone they could cling to."


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* TheNotLoveInterest: As has been demonstrated time and time again, no one will ''ever'' be as important to Thomas Lynley or Barbara Havers as they are to each other.
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* GutFeeling: If Barbara Havers feels uneasy around someone, that person is either shady or an outright villain (or aristocratic, which in Barbara's mind is pretty much the same thing). The only times this fails, the characters involved are [[spoiler:working-class, like Barbara, and being kicked down by society, ''also'' like Barbara]], which blinds her to their true natures.


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* RulesLawyer: Lynley takes on this characteristic at times.
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* BreakTheCutie: Barbara Havers starts out as a BrokenBird, so she's not exactly [[JerkassWoobie sweet and adorable any more]] in the pilot. And yet somehow, the show proceeds to break her ''even further''. [[hottip:*:First her father dies and she has to put her mentally ill mother in a nursing home (where she most likely dies during the early seasons). Then she's demoted (and almost sacked) for [[ScrewTheRulesImDoingWhatsRight doing the right thing]], after which she's shot in the line of duty and then held hostage at gunpoint on her first case back after said shooting, whereupon she has a panic attack as a result of said hostage-taking. Then her partner's suspended for excessive violence. Once he's back she's hit over the head with a rock by a psycho and would have died on a deserted moor if her partner hadn't found her. Then her partner's wife is killed right in front of them (who she couldn't save despite her attempts at CPR), after which he then [[DrowningMySorrows goes on a drinking binge]] and takes all his anger and bitterness out on her despite her only trying to help.]] Ouch, show. Ouch. (This looks light compared to what her partner goes through, until you remember that in her case, a lot of the breaking was done [[BrokenBird before she even met Thomas Lynley]].)

to:

* BreakTheCutie: Barbara Havers starts out as a BrokenBird, so she's not exactly [[JerkassWoobie sweet and adorable any more]] in the pilot. And yet somehow, the show proceeds to break her ''even further''. [[hottip:*:First her father dies and she has to put her mentally ill mother in a nursing home (where she most likely dies during the early seasons). Then she's demoted (and almost sacked) for [[ScrewTheRulesImDoingWhatsRight doing the right thing]], thing, after which she's shot in the line of duty and then held hostage at gunpoint on her first case back after said shooting, whereupon she has a panic attack as a result of said hostage-taking. Then her partner's suspended for excessive violence. Once he's back she's hit over the head with a rock by a psycho and would have died on a deserted moor if her partner hadn't found her. Then her partner's wife is killed right in front of them (who she couldn't save despite her attempts at CPR), after which he then [[DrowningMySorrows goes on a drinking binge]] binge and takes all his anger and bitterness out on her despite her only trying to help.]] Ouch, show. Ouch. (This looks light compared to what her partner goes through, until you remember that in her case, a lot of the breaking was done [[BrokenBird before she even met Thomas Lynley]].)
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Bug fixed!

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[[quoteright:315:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ilm_lynley_havers_5937.png]]
[[caption-width-right:315:He's a Lord. She's ''not'' a lady. Think you can fool them? Think again.]]
->'''DI Fiona Knight:''' You two really ''are'' a double act, aren't you!
->-''The Inspector Lynley Mysteries'', "Natural Causes"

->'''Barbara Havers:''' No. [[UndyingLoyalty You resign]], [[MostImportantPerson I resign]].
->'''Tommy Lynley:''' But that's absurd! Why, for heaven's sake?
->'''Barbara:''' [[OddCouple Well... no one else will work with me]].
->'''Lynley:''' [[AffectionateSpitfire This is you being nice to me, isn't it]].
->'''Barbara:''' [[SarcasticDevotee Yeah]]. [[TrueCompanions Shall we hit the pub]]?
->-''The Inspector Lynley Mysteries'', "Payment In Blood"

''The Inspector Lynley Mysteries'' was a BBC television series that ran from 2001--2007, centered around the aristocratic Detective Inspector Thomas "Tommy" Lynley, [[TheBritishTitleSystem 8th Earl of Asherton]] (NathanielParker), and his working-class partner, Detective Sergeant Barbara Havers (SharonSmall), both of ScotlandYard. The first eleven episodes were based on novels by the American author Elizabeth George, though the author's plots and characters were often significantly altered. Most, if not all, fans consider the show to take place in an AlternateContinuity from the books.

Elizabeth George is one of only two American writers[[hottip:*:the other is Tony Hillerman]] whose novels have been adapted for {{PBS}}' ''MYSTERY!''

The intrigue of the show came almost entirely from watching the lead characters navigate the inevitable clashes of personality, gender, class, and opinion that arose from their radically differing backgrounds. Lynley and Havers gradually discovered that their differences -- and unexpected similarities, namely a mutual devotion to justice -- complemented each other more thoroughly than either of them could have expected. While they remained two ''very'' different people, the [[TrueCompanions bond]] that developed between them changed them both for the better and created a partnership more enduring and effective than anyone ever predicted.

[[folder:Episode List]]
[[AC:Pilot]]
* ''A Great Deliverance''[[hottip:*:two-part episode]]

[[AC:Series 1]]
* ''Well Schooled in Murder''
* ''Payment in Blood''
* ''For the Sake of Elena''
* ''Missing Joseph''

[[AC:Series 2]]
* ''Playing for the Ashes''
* ''In the Presence of the Enemy''
* ''A Suitable Vengeance''
* ''Deception on His Mind''

[[AC:Series 3]]
* ''In Pursuit of the Proper Sinner''
* ''A Traitor to Memory''
* ''A Cry for Justice''
* ''If Wishes Were Horses''

[[AC:Series 4]]
* ''In Divine Proportion''
* ''In the Guise of Death''
* ''The Seed of Cunning''
* ''Word of God''

[[AC:Series 5]]
* ''Natural Causes''
* ''One Guilty Deed''
* ''Chinese Walls''
* ''In the Blink of an Eye''

[[AC:Series 6]]
* ''Limbo''
* ''Know Thine Enemy''
[[/folder]]


-----
This show provided examples of:

* AbilityOverAppearance: SharonSmall was supposedly too pretty to play the plain Barbara Havers, but absolutely nailed the character in the pilot and won author Elizabeth George completely over. Her performance is to this day lauded as one of the best aspects of the series.
* ActionGirl: Havers is quite capable of handling herself, thank you.
* AdaptationalAttractiveness: In the novel series, Barbara Havers is described as short, ugly, overweight and poorly dressed. Sharon Small, who plays Havers, is short.
** Reverse direction for Lynley: The books regularly refer to him as a 'Greek god' type, which usually means Apollon/Adonis, when Nathaniel Parker probably only could get away as Hephaistos (if he fakes a limp). Ruggedly handsome, yes, but an Adonis he is not.
* AdaptationDyeJob: Lynley went from blond in the novels to being played by brunet Nathaniel Parker.
* AffectionateSpitfire: Barbara Havers.
* AlwaysMurder
* AndTheAdventureContinues
* ArtisticLicense: When Barbara is [[spoiler:busted down a rank in the series 3 premiere]], she is [[spoiler:issued a uniform]] but is consistently referred to as [[spoiler:'''D'''C]] Havers. This is incorrect, as [[spoiler:DC means ''Detective'' Constable. Detectives - attached to CID or Special Branch - wear plainclothes. If she was issued a uniform, it would mean she was kicked out of CID, yet the prefix "Detective" indicates that she was not - especially since she went back to plainclothes when she was reinstated in the third episode of that series]]. The likely explanation for this is that [[spoiler:being busted back into a uniform]] packs more of an emotional punch.
* BadassAdorable: Havers can take care of herself, thank you very much - including taking down a man fully four inches taller than she is. She could also probably qualify for the Miss Adorable contest.
* BerserkButton: The one surefire way to make sure Thomas Lynley will hate you forever is to injure or threaten Barbara Havers. (His wife is also a pretty reasonable bet.) Barbara, meanwhile, tends to lose her shit if anyone goes after Lynley - or [[FriendToAllChildren kids]].
* BigFancyHouse: Howenstowe, the seat of the Earls of Asherton. It's located in Cornwall. [[SceneryPorn Shameless advantage is taken of this]].
* BreakTheCutie: Barbara Havers starts out as a BrokenBird, so she's not exactly [[JerkassWoobie sweet and adorable any more]] in the pilot. And yet somehow, the show proceeds to break her ''even further''. [[hottip:*:First her father dies and she has to put her mentally ill mother in a nursing home (where she most likely dies during the early seasons). Then she's demoted (and almost sacked) for [[ScrewTheRulesImDoingWhatsRight doing the right thing]], after which she's shot in the line of duty and then held hostage at gunpoint on her first case back after said shooting, whereupon she has a panic attack as a result of said hostage-taking. Then her partner's suspended for excessive violence. Once he's back she's hit over the head with a rock by a psycho and would have died on a deserted moor if her partner hadn't found her. Then her partner's wife is killed right in front of them (who she couldn't save despite her attempts at CPR), after which he then [[DrowningMySorrows goes on a drinking binge]] and takes all his anger and bitterness out on her despite her only trying to help.]] Ouch, show. Ouch. (This looks light compared to what her partner goes through, until you remember that in her case, a lot of the breaking was done [[BrokenBird before she even met Thomas Lynley]].)
* BreakTheHaughty: Although he's not without his own angst, Barbara [[DarkAndTroubledPast has quite a bit more angst in her past]] than Lynley does. The storyline proceeds to make up for this rather thoroughly. [[hottip:*:To wit: he almost loses his wife to a deliberate car accident perpetrated by someone angry with his work on a case, which also causes his wife to miscarry their baby and break up with him. Then his devoted partner is shot in the line of duty right in front of him. Then he and his wife become even more estranged, with him eventually thinking she's going to ask him for a divorce. Then he's suspended for allegedly using excessive violence on a suspect. Then, just as he and his wife are starting to reconcile, ''she'' is shot and killed right in front of him by someone connected to a case he's working. As soon as he comes back on the job after ''that'', he becomes the chief suspect in a murder investigation, with the victim in question being probably the first romantic contact he's had since his wife's death.]] ...''ouch.''
* BritishAccents: Lynley is of course R.P., while Havers speaks what appears to be Estuary English with an East London twist (which fits, as one of the centerpieces of her character is that she is solidly working-class).
* BritishBrevity
* BrokenBird: Barbara Havers pretty much had any semblance of optimism ground out of her with extreme prejudice after [[DeadLittleBrother her little brother's death from cancer]] tore her family apart and her parents succumbed to mental illness and lung disease right before her eyes. When combined with the fact that she has NoSocialSkills (which have left her alone and misunderstood her entire life), a HairTriggerTemper (ditto), and massive class resentment issues, it's no wonder the poor thing was on the verge of being kicked off the force, [[BunnyEarsLawyer Bunny Ears Detective]] or not, before she teamed up with Thomas Lynley. Although the show proceeds to further BreakTheCutie (and also [[BreakTheHaughty the haughty]] - her partner isn't spared), she [[DefrostingIceQueen softens and blossoms]] when paired with the one man who refuses to give up on her no matter how much [[JerkassFacade she tries to drive him away]]. The result is a far more likable - but still [[DeadpanSnarker snarky]] - Havers, in a rare case of a show helping put the bird back together again. [[TheWoobie Sort of.]]
* BunnyEarsLawyer: Havers should have been kicked off the force ''years'' ago - she was, in fact, on the verge of being sacked when she met Thomas Lynley, and was even [[spoiler:demoted]] once - because she has NoSocialSkills and a HairTriggerTemper. She's still around because she is, in fact, a frighteningly competent detective, and also the only officer on the force who can manage to survive as Thomas Lynley's partner for more than a month.
* BusmansHoliday: Both times Lynley ([[TrueCompanions and]] [[TheNotLoveInterest Barbara]]) go to visit his family in Cornwall, they get caught up in a local mystery, largely because Lynley cannot keep his nose out of ''anything'' and Barbara will follow him wherever he goes (albeit with [[SarcasticDevotee plenty of]] [[DeadpanSnarker snarking]] along the way).
* CharacterDevelopment: Through his partnership with Barbara, Lynley becomes less snobbish and elitist, not to mention less likely to fly off the handle. Through her partnership with Lynley, Barbara begins to let her softer side show more often and learns that the world isn't out to get her and that it's okay to trust people and let them in.[[hottip:*:This doesn't even ''begin'' to cover what these two do for each other over the course of the series, but it's a start.]] In the end, they are not only more effective detectives due to their partnership, they are, quite simply, better ''people''. And it is [[CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming beautiful]].
* TheConsigliere: Barbara is this to Lynley, despite her own fiery temper - in many ways she is his common sense and voice of reason, and she is the one who brings him back when he loses himself in his quest for justice. Seen repeatedly over the series is Havers laying a calming hand on Lynley's arm and saying, "Sir? ''Sir!''" when he is about to lose his temper, [[TheConscience which serves to snap him out of it]]. She is so far the only person on the show to be able to do this with any sort of regular success.
* CoolCar: Lynley drives a Bristol 410, which oozes not only class but exclusivity in that much fewer than a hundred of them were ever built. (You will never see a dealer for these cars; you go straight to the builder, or you go without.)
* CuteAndPsycho: [[spoiler: Carly in "One Guilty Deed" went a little unhinged after she killed Martin.]]
* CryIntoChest: Textbook straight when Barbara falls apart after being held hostage at gunpoint and suffers a FlashbackEcho. See also InelegantBlubbering and CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming.
* DeadLittleBrother: Barbara. His death gave her much of her renowned cynicism; she's really quite a romantic at heart.
* {{Deadpan Snarker}}/{{The Snark Knight}}: Havers. Oh, Havers. That poor, dear girl.
* DefectiveDetective: ''Oh my God.'' Lynley and Havers, both of them. One is a [[MarriedToTheJob workaholic]] with a personal life worthy of a soap opera; the other is a BrokenBird who has raised antisociality and [[JerkassFacade self-protection via jerkassery]] to an art form. Somehow, they become [[LikeAnOldMarriedCouple incredibly]] [[TrueCompanions close]] [[TheNotLoveInterest friends]] anyway, which spawns an absolutely glorious amount of CharacterDevelopment for both of them. And [[ThePowerOfFriendship it]] [[ThePowerOfTrust is]] [[ThePowerOfLove beautiful]].
* DistressedDamsel: Barbara seems to end up trapped with AxCrazy murderers far more often than Lynley. Being Barbara, however, she usually beats the crap out of them before Lynley can get there - or at least takes a piece out of them first.
* DontYouDarePityMe: Say it with me now... oh, ''Barbara''.
* DrowningMySorrows: This is how Lynley "copes" with [[spoiler:Helen's death]] until [[MostImportantPerson Barbara]], after six months of trying, finally snaps him out of it in "Limbo".
* EpiphanyTherapy: Lynley goes through this in "Natural Causes," realizing he wants to make it work with Helen. He does it while "undercover" at a center that's an XMeetsY between a rehab clinic and a ChurchOfHappyology. [[spoiler: It turns out the head of the center is behind a real estate land-grab, not the murders.]]
* FairCop: Lynley certainly has the ruggedly-handsome thing going on, and Barbara Havers is adorableness incarnate.
* FakeNationality: The very Scottish SharonSmall as the very working-class English Barbara Havers. Her accent is quite convincing.
* {{Fan Service Pack}}/ProgressivelyPrettier: During the pilot and the first four series, Barbara has short hair and goes around in baggy sweaters and coats. In series five and six, her hair has lengthened dramatically and she's wearing clothes that are much more form-fitting. The end result is [[http://www.bbc.co.uk/drama/content/images/2007/01/10/haverscharlead_396x222.jpg this]].
* FieryRedhead: Barbara Havers. So very much.
* [[FinishingEachOthersSentences Finishing Each Other's Sentences]]: In "Natural Causes", Lynley and Havers go back and forth like this when they solve the MysteryOfTheWeek, upon which DI Fiona Knight, temporarily partnered with Havers, remarks, "You really ''are'' a double act, aren't you!"
* FireForgedFriends: Barbara and Lynley Do Not Like each other when they're originally assigned together. Their superior officers were counting on this, hoping they would do something outrageous enough to get themselves fired when forced to work together. By the end of the pilot episode, their plan [[HoistByHisOwnPetard backfired]] [[TrueCompanions quite]] [[UndyingLoyalty spectacularly]]... and Barbara and Lynley only get ''[[MostImportantPerson closer]]'' from there.
* {{Flashback Echo}}/{{Trigger}}: In "In Divine Proportion" when Barbara [[spoiler:is held hostage at gunpoint]]. Her flashback is to the previous series' finale, in which [[spoiler:she was shot in the abdomen]]; she shows obvious signs of PTSD throughout the episode and goes a little nuts at the end. It takes - who else? - Lynley literally [[spoiler:pulling her off the guy]] and administering a CooldownHug to bring her back to normal. (No actual flashback occurs; because the triggering event happens in the previous episode, however, the audience is quite clearly supposed to draw the parallel.)
* FriendToAllChildren: Barbara Havers may be difficult to work with, but she has a real gift for getting children to talk to her.
* FriendshipMoment: ''Many'' between Lynley and Havers. Actually, pretty much any time Lynley and Havers are together and not yelling at/arguing with each other is one of these when it's not a CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming.
* ForbiddenFriendship: Part of the reason Barbara is so hostile to Lynley in early episodes is because she is absolutely convinced this trope is in play. It is made fairly clear, however, that ''she'' is a great deal more concerned by the class differences between them than ''he'' is. She [[CharacterDevelopment gets better]] over the course of the show.
* GentlemanDetective: Lynley, naturally.
* GentlemanSnarker: Lynley, oh so very much, which makes him an excellent match for the equally snarky Barbara.
* GettingCrapPastTheRadar: Barbara Havers has a quite earthy[[hottip:*:read: perverted]] sense of humour, and some of her quips can make viewers wonder how this ever got aired before the watershed. For instance, during the episode "Well Schooled in Murder" after one of their suspects has, er, exposed himself:
-->'''Havers''': How shall I phrase that in my notes, sir? [[GagPenis Would "hung" and "donkey" cover it?]]
* GoodIsNotNice: Barbara Havers is undoubtedly a truly ''good'' character, but, especially early on, she is not a particularly ''nice'' one.
* HairTriggerTemper: Havers. In ''spades''.
-->'''Lynley''': The woman is a minefield!
* HeldGaze: Lynley and Havers give [[TheXFiles Mulder and Scully]] a run for their money in terms of just how charged these moments could get. These looks between them spoke ''volumes'' about the depths of their relationship. In fact, during many of the most critical moments of their relationship, the words coming out of their mouths were completely incidental to the conversation they were having with their eyes.
* HoistByHisOwnPetard: Pairing Havers and Lynley was originally done in order to keep Barbara's mouth shut about not getting any good cases (and, if they were lucky, get her tossed out of the force for disrespect and/or violence). Yeah, [[OddCouple that]] [[OppositesAttract worked out]] [[UndyingLoyalty well]]...
* HonestAdvisor: Barbara to Lynley again; she can get away with saying things no one else could, because she has earned his trust a thousand times over. He might bark at her for whatever she says, but he ''always'' listens.
* HypocriticalHeartwarming: In the pilot episode, Barbara goes on a long diatribe about everything she thinks is wrong with Thomas Lynley as a man and as a detective. When Lynley's old partner shows up and levels a number of those very same accusations at him just hours later, she immediately jumps to his defense, completely ignoring her earlier complaints. This sets up the entire precedent of their relationship: ''Barbara'' can [[WhatTheHellHero call Lynley out]] just as much as she pleases, but if anyone else tries the same thing, it had better be when Barbara is locked in a soundproof box at the other end of the galaxy, because otherwise, the 'anyone else' in question is going to get a dressing-down the likes of which s/he will never forget. Although it's not seen as much, this works in reverse as well - Lynley has no problems [[WhatTheHellHero calling Barbara out]], but will immediately and fiercely defend her from anyone else who dares to try the same thing.
* [[IHaveYourWife I Have Your Partner]]: A couple of perps try and pull this on Lynley with Havers. This is [[BerserkButton a universally bad move]].
* INeedAFreakingDrink: Or rather, "D'you fancy a drink?" - frequently said by one partner to the other after a particularly hard case.
* InelegantBlubbering: What happens once Lynley manages to administer the above-mentioned CooldownHug, although we don't see the evidence as her face is buried against his shirt.
* InLoveWithLove: [[spoiler:Lynley believes his feelings for Helen were this]].
* TheInspector: But of course.
* [[InstantDeathBullet Instant Death Stab]]: Averted in ''Payment in Blood'', where a single stab through the throat is enough to kill the victim, but only because it impales her to a mattress, allowing a bleed-out.
* ItGotWorse: Poor Lynley. In the final episode of series 3, his wife is [[spoiler:involved in a car accident that results in her miscarriage, a hospital stay, and their separation]]. As if that's not bad enough, days later [[spoiler:his partner is shot in the line of duty]], resulting in [[spoiler:yet another hospital stay, months of recovery time and PTSD]]. Wow.
* JerkassFacade: Barbara. Yes, she is and always will be a blunt, outspoken, cranky, DeadpanSnarker SarcasticDevotee, but by and large, her harsh personality is a defense mechanism against a lifetime of torment and ridicule. Arguably the most critical moment of her first case with Lynley is his catching on to the fact that it ''is'' a facade and telling her she doesn't have to do it any more; he knows she's a good person, and in fact he genuinely cares about her. This freaks Barbara the hell out, but she gets used to it. Eventually.
* JumpingOffTheSlipperySlope: Seems to be the killer's motive in the episode "In Divine Proportion." [[spoiler: The killer is a police officer. Years ago, he murdered a rapist after the rapist's victim committed suicide. In the episode, he kills the victim's sister, and at the end of the episode is ready to kill everyone who helped him kill the rapist.]]
* KilledOffForReal: [[spoiler:Helen, at the end of series 5]]. Which renders [[spoiler:DieForOurShip]] unnecessary, as it [[spoiler:clears the way for [[FanPreferredCouple Lynley/Havers]] in just about the most convenient manner possible]].
* KnightInSourArmor: Barbara, whose nigh-impenetrable wall of cynicism hides a woman who absolutely wants to believe the best of everyone but has been betrayed far too many times.
* LastNameBasis: Lynley and Havers are this, with a couple of exceptions. The first one, noted lower down, is YouCalledMeXItMustBeSerious; the other is when Havers is staying with him at the family estate in Cornwall. This is lampshaded in "In the Guise of Death," when Lynley wants her help on a local murder investigation; he wakes her up at an ungodly hour of the morning, briskly saying, "Come on, Havers! Follow me!" Havers [[DeadpanSnarker snarks]]:
-->'''Barbara''': Oh, see? Now you want my help, it's bye-bye 'Barbara' and hello 'Havers'!
* LikeAnOldMarriedCouple: Once they get on even footing with each other, their bickering takes on a hefty shading of this. It really becomes apparent after the events of "In Divine Proportion"; the next episode in particular ("In The Guise of Death") is especially notable for this vibe.
* LimitedSocialCircle: Our Heroes ''do'' spend time with people other than each other, but none of them seem to last more than a few episodes[[hottip:*:Christine Wood, Lynley's LoveInterest in series 5, whom he winds up ditching for Barbara]], or at most a single series[[hottip:*:Azhar and Haddiyah, Barbara's sort-of LoveInterest and his daughter, in series 2, who regrettably [[WhatHappenedToTheMouse vanish]] after that series' finale]]. The only characters to not fall victim to this, aside from their police superiors, are Helen[[hottip:*:who is [[spoiler:KilledOffForReal at the end of series 5, and their reconciliation likely wouldn't have lasted anyway]], their coworker DC Winston Nkata[[hottip:*:who first shows up in series 5]], and the Medical Examiner Stuart Lafferty[[hottip:*:ditto]]. And even they aren't seen hanging out with the [[OddCouple main duo]] outside of work to any great extent. And finally, they can't be apart for any great length of time. Lynley goes to Cornwall for vacation? Havers goes along. Havers [[spoiler:gets demoted]]? Lynley [[spoiler:[[SubordinateExcuse calls her in on every case he can]]]]. Etc, etc, etc. Let's face it; at the end of the day, they just keep coming back to each other.
* MostImportantPerson: As has been demonstrated time and time again, no one will ''ever'' be as important to Thomas Lynley or Barbara Havers as they are to each other.
* MustHaveCaffeine: British or not, they're still cops. It's not uncommon to see one or the other of them with two paper coffee cups in hand - one for their partner, and one for them. Whether the substance inside is coffee or tea, however, is anybody's guess. (When not on the job, they tend to drink [[INeedAFreakingDrink alcohol]]. And they need it, [[{{Woobie}} poor things]].)
* NeverOneMurder
* NonIdleRich: Lynley works at Scotland Yard though he's both rich and the eighth Earl of Asherton.
* ObfuscatingStupidity: Havers has a knack for pulling the "I'm just an uneducated working-class bumpkin" or the "I'm just a silly little girl" front when she needs to trick suspects into confiding in her. Behind this is a sharp-as-a-tack police officer with street smarts and common sense that make ''Lynley'' look stupid.
* OddCouple: Whose bright idea was it to pair an Eton-and-Oxford-schooled hereditary Lord with a cranky, [[DeadpanSnarker sarcastic]] working-class sergeant? [[UndyingLoyalty A genius]], [[TrueCompanions of course.]] They were, and remained, ''very'' different people, but this only seemed to strengthen the bond between them.
* OhCrap: Multiple times, considering the nature of their work. One of the most notable comes when [[spoiler:Lynley realises that Barbara is trapped inside a pub at gunpoint and that this is going to trigger her like nothing else]]. The only thing that stops him from going in on the spot is an armed assault team holding him back.
* OneHeadTaller: Lynley and Havers.
* OppositesAttract: Cranky, has-class-issues working-class Sergeant paired with an Oxford-educated Inspector who happens to be a hereditary Lord? Violence waiting to happen, right? [[UndyingLoyalty Not so much]].
* OvertookTheSeries: Done after the first two series.
* {{Oxbridge}}: Lynley is an Oxford alum, and this plays a plot-important role in several episodes.
-->'''Havers''': One tug on the old school tie and you come running.
* PassiveAggressiveKombat: Lynley. This makes for some interesting confrontations with [[HairTriggerTemper Barbara]], as their fights usually consisted of her yelling and him using sarcasm to lethal effect.
* ThePowerOfTrust: The hard-earned building of this is entire foundation of the show, and what makes watching worthwhile.
* {{Protectorate}}: There is nothing Barbara Havers will not do to [[BigSisterInstinct protect children]] - probably because of her DeadLittleBrother. She'll also stop at nothing to rescue her partner. Meanwhile, Lynley is protective of quite a few things - mostly children and his wife. But there is no single faster way to make Thomas Lynley lose his cool than putting Barbara Havers in danger - any semblance of reason usually goes out the window when she's threatened. Notably, it takes an ''armed assault team'' to keep him from bursting into the pub where Barbara is [[spoiler:being held hostage at gunpoint]] in "In Divine Proportion."
* PuppyDogEyes: Barbara, whose large, expressive sage green eyes are more than capable of this, and clue the audience in to her [[TheWoobie vulnerability]] when she's covering it up with a [[{{Tsundere}} scathing remark]]. It is, in fact, largely because of her eyes that Barbara is such a sympathetic character; if her eyes didn't provide a window into just what a good reason she has to be defensive and prickly, she would come off as a complete bitch in early episodes.
* RedOniBlueOni: Havers is red, Lynley is blue.
* RelationshipUpgrade: Lynley and Helen start as friends. Matters progress over the course of the show.
* SarcasticDevotee: Barbara Havers snarks up, down, and all around at Lynley and is the first to tell him when she thinks he's about to do something stupid. There is ''also'' no force in the universe strong enough to break her loyalty to him or to keep her from moving heaven and earth to get back to him. And God forbid [[HypocriticalHeartwarming anyone else say anything remotely unpleasant about him]]!
* SceneryPorn: Whenever the main characters solve cases outside of London.
* ScrewedByTheNetwork: In this case, the network was the BBC.
* SheIsNotMyGirlfriend: [[UnresolvedSexualTension ...yet]].
* ShipperOnDeck: Barbara appears to be this for Lynley and Helen. Whether she a) genuinely wants them to get together, b) genuinely wants them to get together and doesn't realize she's in love with Lynley, c) genuinely wants them to get together but is in [[ListingShip unrequited love]] with Lynley anyway, or d) is in unrequited love with Lynley and is encouraging him in order to hide her own feelings is a matter for endless debate.
** Meta-wise, Nathaniel Parker said in an interview that he would have ended the series with Lynley and Barbara holding hands and walking into the sunset...
* ShipSinking: Meta example. In the {{PBS}} airing of "Missing Joseph", host Diana Rigg notes that "[[SuspiciouslySpecificDenial it might appear that Sergeant Havers has a thing for her partner]]" but hastily goes on to mention that "she gives him nothing but grief" (while apparently missing and/or ignoring the fact that the [[UnresolvedSexualTension subtext]] in the first season alone could crush your average linebacker). She then goes on to note that Lynley is already in love with Helen Clyde - who [[spoiler:dies at the end of series 5]]. Considering that [[FanPreferredCouple shippers]] have looked past [[IncestYayShipping blood relationships]], [[GhostShipping death]], [[ShipsThatPassInTheNight little-to-no interaction]], and ''[[CrossoverShip not even being from the same universe]]'', this is hardly proof positive that nothing will ever happen, and in fact they are given an [[AndTheAdventureContinues open ending]] with [[spoiler:all romantic competition out of the way]] and seven years of added depth to their relationship. In light of all this, the denial is not particularly convincing.
* SnarkToSnarkCombat: Lynley and Havers. ''Lots'' of it.
* SubordinateExcuse: When Barbara is [[spoiler:demoted at the beginning of series 2]], Lynley plays this trope to the ''hilt'' to [[spoiler:keep her with him, and calls her in on every case he possibly can even though she's not technically under his supervision any more]]. When forced to justify this to ''his'' supervisor, he tells said supervisor that [[spoiler:he's calling her in because she's proven that she can work with him effectively]]. This is absolutely true, and has absolutely ''nothing'' to do with [[TrueCompanions why he wants her around]].
* SurvivorGuilt: Implied to be the main cause of Lynley's HeroicBSOD following [[spoiler:Helen's death]], as she was [[spoiler:shot right in front of him because of a case he was working]].
* TheOtherDarrin: Lynley's wife Helen was played by three separate actresses: Emma Fielding in the pilot, Lesley Vickerage in series one through three (up until she separated from Lynley), and Catherine Russell in series five.
* TheyFightCrime: He's a Lord with a title and a complicated personal life. She's a cranky, foul-mouthed working-class junk food addict with massive class resentment issues.
* TrueCompanions: It doesn't seem to matter how badly they're fighting this week - any outside attempt to turn them against each other ''will'' fail, and probably end whatever fight they're having to boot.
* UltimateJobSecurity: Averted. Both of the main characters are at serious risk of being fired at least once during the series' run.
* UndyingLoyalty: It must be seen to be believed. There's nothing these two would not do for each other.
-->'''Lynley''': No, see, that's the thing I think you've got wrong. ''I'' think he's counting on my loyalty to ''you''.
* UnequalPairing: Lynley/Havers has this in ''spades'', in both class disparity and in rank. This is somewhat mitigated in that by the end of the series their interactions are much, much more those of police ''partners'' as opposed to superior/subordinate, but there are still massive, massive issues to overcome. [[FanPreferredCouple The entire fandom ships them anyway.]]
* UnresolvedSexualTension: Many episodes can be seen as this. Special mention goes to "One Guilty Deed" and "If Wishes Were Horses", which both involve [[spoiler: Lynley running to Havers' aid after she gets hit with a rock and shot, respectively. Very special mention to the latter, where Lynley calls her "Barbara" and not "Havers."]] And let's not forget the last two scenes of "In Divine Proportion," in which Barbara is [[spoiler:held hostage at gunpoint on her first case back from getting shot. The way he holds her close and soothes her is... a bit more than friendly. Especially that kiss he presses to the top of her head...]] Special mention ''also'' goes to the "shower scene" in "One Guilty Deed," when they dance around each other in tight quarters while she's in pyjamas and he's in - a ''towel''. ''And'' "Word of God" where he [[spoiler:''breaks off a date'', ''shows up at Barbara's flat in the middle of the night'' and ''questions whether or not he ever truly loved Helen'']]. Immediately after this, [[spoiler:they admit that they are ''each others' reason to get up in the morning'']] - I'm sorry, was this supposed to be ''[[{{Subtext}} subtext]]??''
* VitriolicBestBuds: ...say it with me, folks - Lynley and Havers.
* WhamEpisode: Most of the series finales. Series 2 had [[spoiler:the events in the North Sea that led to Barbara's demotion]], Series 3 had [[spoiler:Helen's miscarriage and Barbara being shot]], Series 4 had [[spoiler:Lynley's suspension]], and Series 5 had [[spoiler:Helen's death]]. Series 6 didn't follow this pattern, but that was because the show was [[ScrewedByTheNetwork cancelled]] before the third and fourth episodes of the series could be completed.
* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: Hadiyyah and Azhar vanish without explanation after the events of "Deception on His Mind", incidentally removing the only viable romantic interest [[FanPreferredCouple not named Thomas Lynley]] Barbara ever has on the show.
* WhatTheHellHero: Part of the reason Lynley and Havers are such an effective team is not simply because they're willing to call each other out, both personally and professionally, but because they ''listen'' to each other when their partner is directing one of these at them.
* WithDueRespect: Any variant of this phrase out of Barbara's mouth is code for, "I'm about to tell you I think you're an idiot." She's usually right. Its sister phrase, "Yes, ''sir''," is code for, "I think you're an idiot, but I'm following your orders because I have to."
* WorkingClassHero: Barbara fits this more than she doesn't, as she's much better than Lynley when it comes to street smarts and, frequently, reading people's interactions, particularly those of the working class - Lynley tends to get a bit clueless about these things when he's not among the powerful or well-educated. This is, of course, why they are perfect partners for each other.
** Incidentally, Slate Magazine called her [[http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/tv_club/features/2012/downton_abbey_season_2/week_7/what_should_i_watch_while_downton_abbey_is_gone_.html "one of the great working-class characters of British television."]]
* YouCalledMeXItMustBeSerious: Suffice it to say that when Lynley calls Havers "Barbara," it's either a CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming or a massive, massive TearJerker - like when [[spoiler:Havers gets shot]], at which point Lynley loses it quite spectacularly and can only say, "[[CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming Barbara?]] ''[[TearJerker Barbara]]??''"

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<<|CrimeAndPunishmentSeries|>>
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[[quoteright:315:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ilm_lynley_havers_5937.png]]
[[caption-width-right:315:He's a Lord. She's ''not'' a lady. Think you can fool them? Think again.]]
->'''DI Fiona Knight:''' You two really ''are'' a double act, aren't you!
->-''The Inspector Lynley Mysteries'', "Natural Causes"

->'''Barbara Havers:''' No. [[UndyingLoyalty You resign]], [[MostImportantPerson I resign]].
->'''Tommy Lynley:''' But that's absurd! Why, for heaven's sake?
->'''Barbara:''' [[OddCouple Well... no one else will work with me]].
->'''Lynley:''' [[AffectionateSpitfire This is you being nice to me, isn't it]].
->'''Barbara:''' [[SarcasticDevotee Yeah]]. [[TrueCompanions Shall we hit the pub]]?
->-''The Inspector Lynley Mysteries'', "Payment In Blood"

''The Inspector Lynley Mysteries'' was a BBC television series that ran from 2001--2007, centered around the aristocratic Detective Inspector Thomas "Tommy" Lynley, [[TheBritishTitleSystem 8th Earl of Asherton]] (NathanielParker), and his working-class partner, Detective Sergeant Barbara Havers (SharonSmall), both of ScotlandYard. The first eleven episodes were based on novels by the American author Elizabeth George, though the author's plots and characters were often significantly altered. Most, if not all, fans consider the show to take place in an AlternateContinuity from the books.

Elizabeth George is one of only two American writers[[hottip:*:the other is Tony Hillerman]] whose novels have been adapted for {{PBS}}' ''MYSTERY!''

The intrigue of the show came almost entirely from watching the lead characters navigate the inevitable clashes of personality, gender, class, and opinion that arose from their radically differing backgrounds. Lynley and Havers gradually discovered that their differences -- and unexpected similarities, namely a mutual devotion to justice -- complemented each other more thoroughly than either of them could have expected. While they remained two ''very'' different people, the [[TrueCompanions bond]] that developed between them changed them both for the better and created a partnership more enduring and effective than anyone ever predicted.

[[folder:Episode List]]
[[AC:Pilot]]
* ''A Great Deliverance''[[hottip:*:two-part episode]]

[[AC:Series 1]]
* ''Well Schooled in Murder''
* ''Payment in Blood''
* ''For the Sake of Elena''
* ''Missing Joseph''

[[AC:Series 2]]
* ''Playing for the Ashes''
* ''In the Presence of the Enemy''
* ''A Suitable Vengeance''
* ''Deception on His Mind''

[[AC:Series 3]]
* ''In Pursuit of the Proper Sinner''
* ''A Traitor to Memory''
* ''A Cry for Justice''
* ''If Wishes Were Horses''

[[AC:Series 4]]
* ''In Divine Proportion''
* ''In the Guise of Death''
* ''The Seed of Cunning''
* ''Word of God''

[[AC:Series 5]]
* ''Natural Causes''
* ''One Guilty Deed''
* ''Chinese Walls''
* ''In the Blink of an Eye''

[[AC:Series 6]]
* ''Limbo''
* ''Know Thine Enemy''
[[/folder]]


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This show provided examples of:

* AbilityOverAppearance: SharonSmall was supposedly too pretty to play the plain Barbara Havers, but absolutely nailed the character in the pilot and won author Elizabeth George completely over. Her performance is to this day lauded as one of the best aspects of the series.
* ActionGirl: Havers is quite capable of handling herself, thank you.
* AdaptationalAttractiveness: In the novel series, Barbara Havers is described as short, ugly, overweight and poorly dressed. Sharon Small, who plays Havers, is short.
** Reverse direction for Lynley: The books regularly refer to him as a 'Greek god' type, which usually means Apollon/Adonis, when Nathaniel Parker probably only could get away as Hephaistos (if he fakes a limp). Ruggedly handsome, yes, but an Adonis he is not.
* AdaptationDyeJob: Lynley went from blond in the novels to being played by brunet Nathaniel Parker.
* AffectionateSpitfire: Barbara Havers.
* AlwaysMurder
* AndTheAdventureContinues
* ArtisticLicense: When Barbara is [[spoiler:busted down a rank in the series 3 premiere]], she is [[spoiler:issued a uniform]] but is consistently referred to as [[spoiler:'''D'''C]] Havers. This is incorrect, as [[spoiler:DC means ''Detective'' Constable. Detectives - attached to CID or Special Branch - wear plainclothes. If she was issued a uniform, it would mean she was kicked out of CID, yet the prefix "Detective" indicates that she was not - especially since she went back to plainclothes when she was reinstated in the third episode of that series]]. The likely explanation for this is that [[spoiler:being busted back into a uniform]] packs more of an emotional punch.
* BadassAdorable: Havers can take care of herself, thank you very much - including taking down a man fully four inches taller than she is. She could also probably qualify for the Miss Adorable contest.
* BerserkButton: The one surefire way to make sure Thomas Lynley will hate you forever is to injure or threaten Barbara Havers. (His wife is also a pretty reasonable bet.) Barbara, meanwhile, tends to lose her shit if anyone goes after Lynley - or [[FriendToAllChildren kids]].
* BigFancyHouse: Howenstowe, the seat of the Earls of Asherton. It's located in Cornwall. [[SceneryPorn Shameless advantage is taken of this]].
* BreakTheCutie: Barbara Havers starts out as a BrokenBird, so she's not exactly [[JerkassWoobie sweet and adorable any more]] in the pilot. And yet somehow, the show proceeds to break her ''even further''. [[hottip:*:First her father dies and she has to put her mentally ill mother in a nursing home (where she most likely dies during the early seasons). Then she's demoted (and almost sacked) for [[ScrewTheRulesImDoingWhatsRight doing the right thing]], after which she's shot in the line of duty and then held hostage at gunpoint on her first case back after said shooting, whereupon she has a panic attack as a result of said hostage-taking. Then her partner's suspended for excessive violence. Once he's back she's hit over the head with a rock by a psycho and would have died on a deserted moor if her partner hadn't found her. Then her partner's wife is killed right in front of them (who she couldn't save despite her attempts at CPR), after which he then [[DrowningMySorrows goes on a drinking binge]] and takes all his anger and bitterness out on her despite her only trying to help.]] Ouch, show. Ouch. (This looks light compared to what her partner goes through, until you remember that in her case, a lot of the breaking was done [[BrokenBird before she even met Thomas Lynley]].)
* BreakTheHaughty: Although he's not without his own angst, Barbara [[DarkAndTroubledPast has quite a bit more angst in her past]] than Lynley does. The storyline proceeds to make up for this rather thoroughly. [[hottip:*:To wit: he almost loses his wife to a deliberate car accident perpetrated by someone angry with his work on a case, which also causes his wife to miscarry their baby and break up with him. Then his devoted partner is shot in the line of duty right in front of him. Then he and his wife become even more estranged, with him eventually thinking she's going to ask him for a divorce. Then he's suspended for allegedly using excessive violence on a suspect. Then, just as he and his wife are starting to reconcile, ''she'' is shot and killed right in front of him by someone connected to a case he's working. As soon as he comes back on the job after ''that'', he becomes the chief suspect in a murder investigation, with the victim in question being probably the first romantic contact he's had since his wife's death.]] ...''ouch.''
* BritishAccents: Lynley is of course R.P., while Havers speaks what appears to be Estuary English with an East London twist (which fits, as one of the centerpieces of her character is that she is solidly working-class).
* BritishBrevity
* BrokenBird: Barbara Havers pretty much had any semblance of optimism ground out of her with extreme prejudice after [[DeadLittleBrother her little brother's death from cancer]] tore her family apart and her parents succumbed to mental illness and lung disease right before her eyes. When combined with the fact that she has NoSocialSkills (which have left her alone and misunderstood her entire life), a HairTriggerTemper (ditto), and massive class resentment issues, it's no wonder the poor thing was on the verge of being kicked off the force, [[BunnyEarsLawyer Bunny Ears Detective]] or not, before she teamed up with Thomas Lynley. Although the show proceeds to further BreakTheCutie (and also [[BreakTheHaughty the haughty]] - her partner isn't spared), she [[DefrostingIceQueen softens and blossoms]] when paired with the one man who refuses to give up on her no matter how much [[JerkassFacade she tries to drive him away]]. The result is a far more likable - but still [[DeadpanSnarker snarky]] - Havers, in a rare case of a show helping put the bird back together again. [[TheWoobie Sort of.]]
* BunnyEarsLawyer: Havers should have been kicked off the force ''years'' ago - she was, in fact, on the verge of being sacked when she met Thomas Lynley, and was even [[spoiler:demoted]] once - because she has NoSocialSkills and a HairTriggerTemper. She's still around because she is, in fact, a frighteningly competent detective, and also the only officer on the force who can manage to survive as Thomas Lynley's partner for more than a month.
* BusmansHoliday: Both times Lynley ([[TrueCompanions and]] [[TheNotLoveInterest Barbara]]) go to visit his family in Cornwall, they get caught up in a local mystery, largely because Lynley cannot keep his nose out of ''anything'' and Barbara will follow him wherever he goes (albeit with [[SarcasticDevotee plenty of]] [[DeadpanSnarker snarking]] along the way).
* CharacterDevelopment: Through his partnership with Barbara, Lynley becomes less snobbish and elitist, not to mention less likely to fly off the handle. Through her partnership with Lynley, Barbara begins to let her softer side show more often and learns that the world isn't out to get her and that it's okay to trust people and let them in.[[hottip:*:This doesn't even ''begin'' to cover what these two do for each other over the course of the series, but it's a start.]] In the end, they are not only more effective detectives due to their partnership, they are, quite simply, better ''people''. And it is [[CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming beautiful]].
* TheConsigliere: Barbara is this to Lynley, despite her own fiery temper - in many ways she is his common sense and voice of reason, and she is the one who brings him back when he loses himself in his quest for justice. Seen repeatedly over the series is Havers laying a calming hand on Lynley's arm and saying, "Sir? ''Sir!''" when he is about to lose his temper, [[TheConscience which serves to snap him out of it]]. She is so far the only person on the show to be able to do this with any sort of regular success.
* CoolCar: Lynley drives a Bristol 410, which oozes not only class but exclusivity in that much fewer than a hundred of them were ever built. (You will never see a dealer for these cars; you go straight to the builder, or you go without.)
* CuteAndPsycho: [[spoiler: Carly in "One Guilty Deed" went a little unhinged after she killed Martin.]]
* CryIntoChest: Textbook straight when Barbara falls apart after being held hostage at gunpoint and suffers a FlashbackEcho. See also InelegantBlubbering and CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming.
* DeadLittleBrother: Barbara. His death gave her much of her renowned cynicism; she's really quite a romantic at heart.
* {{Deadpan Snarker}}/{{The Snark Knight}}: Havers. Oh, Havers. That poor, dear girl.
* DefectiveDetective: ''Oh my God.'' Lynley and Havers, both of them. One is a [[MarriedToTheJob workaholic]] with a personal life worthy of a soap opera; the other is a BrokenBird who has raised antisociality and [[JerkassFacade self-protection via jerkassery]] to an art form. Somehow, they become [[LikeAnOldMarriedCouple incredibly]] [[TrueCompanions close]] [[TheNotLoveInterest friends]] anyway, which spawns an absolutely glorious amount of CharacterDevelopment for both of them. And [[ThePowerOfFriendship it]] [[ThePowerOfTrust is]] [[ThePowerOfLove beautiful]].
* DistressedDamsel: Barbara seems to end up trapped with AxCrazy murderers far more often than Lynley. Being Barbara, however, she usually beats the crap out of them before Lynley can get there - or at least takes a piece out of them first.
* DontYouDarePityMe: Say it with me now... oh, ''Barbara''.
* DrowningMySorrows: This is how Lynley "copes" with [[spoiler:Helen's death]] until [[MostImportantPerson Barbara]], after six months of trying, finally snaps him out of it in "Limbo".
* EpiphanyTherapy: Lynley goes through this in "Natural Causes," realizing he wants to make it work with Helen. He does it while "undercover" at a center that's an XMeetsY between a rehab clinic and a ChurchOfHappyology. [[spoiler: It turns out the head of the center is behind a real estate land-grab, not the murders.]]
* FairCop: Lynley certainly has the ruggedly-handsome thing going on, and Barbara Havers is adorableness incarnate.
* FakeNationality: The very Scottish SharonSmall as the very working-class English Barbara Havers. Her accent is quite convincing.
* {{Fan Service Pack}}/ProgressivelyPrettier: During the pilot and the first four series, Barbara has short hair and goes around in baggy sweaters and coats. In series five and six, her hair has lengthened dramatically and she's wearing clothes that are much more form-fitting. The end result is [[http://www.bbc.co.uk/drama/content/images/2007/01/10/haverscharlead_396x222.jpg this]].
* FieryRedhead: Barbara Havers. So very much.
* [[FinishingEachOthersSentences Finishing Each Other's Sentences]]: In "Natural Causes", Lynley and Havers go back and forth like this when they solve the MysteryOfTheWeek, upon which DI Fiona Knight, temporarily partnered with Havers, remarks, "You really ''are'' a double act, aren't you!"
* FireForgedFriends: Barbara and Lynley Do Not Like each other when they're originally assigned together. Their superior officers were counting on this, hoping they would do something outrageous enough to get themselves fired when forced to work together. By the end of the pilot episode, their plan [[HoistByHisOwnPetard backfired]] [[TrueCompanions quite]] [[UndyingLoyalty spectacularly]]... and Barbara and Lynley only get ''[[MostImportantPerson closer]]'' from there.
* {{Flashback Echo}}/{{Trigger}}: In "In Divine Proportion" when Barbara [[spoiler:is held hostage at gunpoint]]. Her flashback is to the previous series' finale, in which [[spoiler:she was shot in the abdomen]]; she shows obvious signs of PTSD throughout the episode and goes a little nuts at the end. It takes - who else? - Lynley literally [[spoiler:pulling her off the guy]] and administering a CooldownHug to bring her back to normal. (No actual flashback occurs; because the triggering event happens in the previous episode, however, the audience is quite clearly supposed to draw the parallel.)
* FriendToAllChildren: Barbara Havers may be difficult to work with, but she has a real gift for getting children to talk to her.
* FriendshipMoment: ''Many'' between Lynley and Havers. Actually, pretty much any time Lynley and Havers are together and not yelling at/arguing with each other is one of these when it's not a CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming.
* ForbiddenFriendship: Part of the reason Barbara is so hostile to Lynley in early episodes is because she is absolutely convinced this trope is in play. It is made fairly clear, however, that ''she'' is a great deal more concerned by the class differences between them than ''he'' is. She [[CharacterDevelopment gets better]] over the course of the show.
* GentlemanDetective: Lynley, naturally.
* GentlemanSnarker: Lynley, oh so very much, which makes him an excellent match for the equally snarky Barbara.
* GettingCrapPastTheRadar: Barbara Havers has a quite earthy[[hottip:*:read: perverted]] sense of humour, and some of her quips can make viewers wonder how this ever got aired before the watershed. For instance, during the episode "Well Schooled in Murder" after one of their suspects has, er, exposed himself:
-->'''Havers''': How shall I phrase that in my notes, sir? [[GagPenis Would "hung" and "donkey" cover it?]]
* GoodIsNotNice: Barbara Havers is undoubtedly a truly ''good'' character, but, especially early on, she is not a particularly ''nice'' one.
* HairTriggerTemper: Havers. In ''spades''.
-->'''Lynley''': The woman is a minefield!
* HeldGaze: Lynley and Havers give [[TheXFiles Mulder and Scully]] a run for their money in terms of just how charged these moments could get. These looks between them spoke ''volumes'' about the depths of their relationship. In fact, during many of the most critical moments of their relationship, the words coming out of their mouths were completely incidental to the conversation they were having with their eyes.
* HoistByHisOwnPetard: Pairing Havers and Lynley was originally done in order to keep Barbara's mouth shut about not getting any good cases (and, if they were lucky, get her tossed out of the force for disrespect and/or violence). Yeah, [[OddCouple that]] [[OppositesAttract worked out]] [[UndyingLoyalty well]]...
* HonestAdvisor: Barbara to Lynley again; she can get away with saying things no one else could, because she has earned his trust a thousand times over. He might bark at her for whatever she says, but he ''always'' listens.
* HypocriticalHeartwarming: In the pilot episode, Barbara goes on a long diatribe about everything she thinks is wrong with Thomas Lynley as a man and as a detective. When Lynley's old partner shows up and levels a number of those very same accusations at him just hours later, she immediately jumps to his defense, completely ignoring her earlier complaints. This sets up the entire precedent of their relationship: ''Barbara'' can [[WhatTheHellHero call Lynley out]] just as much as she pleases, but if anyone else tries the same thing, it had better be when Barbara is locked in a soundproof box at the other end of the galaxy, because otherwise, the 'anyone else' in question is going to get a dressing-down the likes of which s/he will never forget. Although it's not seen as much, this works in reverse as well - Lynley has no problems [[WhatTheHellHero calling Barbara out]], but will immediately and fiercely defend her from anyone else who dares to try the same thing.
* [[IHaveYourWife I Have Your Partner]]: A couple of perps try and pull this on Lynley with Havers. This is [[BerserkButton a universally bad move]].
* INeedAFreakingDrink: Or rather, "D'you fancy a drink?" - frequently said by one partner to the other after a particularly hard case.
* InelegantBlubbering: What happens once Lynley manages to administer the above-mentioned CooldownHug, although we don't see the evidence as her face is buried against his shirt.
* InLoveWithLove: [[spoiler:Lynley believes his feelings for Helen were this]].
* TheInspector: But of course.
* [[InstantDeathBullet Instant Death Stab]]: Averted in ''Payment in Blood'', where a single stab through the throat is enough to kill the victim, but only because it impales her to a mattress, allowing a bleed-out.
* ItGotWorse: Poor Lynley. In the final episode of series 3, his wife is [[spoiler:involved in a car accident that results in her miscarriage, a hospital stay, and their separation]]. As if that's not bad enough, days later [[spoiler:his partner is shot in the line of duty]], resulting in [[spoiler:yet another hospital stay, months of recovery time and PTSD]]. Wow.
* JerkassFacade: Barbara. Yes, she is and always will be a blunt, outspoken, cranky, DeadpanSnarker SarcasticDevotee, but by and large, her harsh personality is a defense mechanism against a lifetime of torment and ridicule. Arguably the most critical moment of her first case with Lynley is his catching on to the fact that it ''is'' a facade and telling her she doesn't have to do it any more; he knows she's a good person, and in fact he genuinely cares about her. This freaks Barbara the hell out, but she gets used to it. Eventually.
* JumpingOffTheSlipperySlope: Seems to be the killer's motive in the episode "In Divine Proportion." [[spoiler: The killer is a police officer. Years ago, he murdered a rapist after the rapist's victim committed suicide. In the episode, he kills the victim's sister, and at the end of the episode is ready to kill everyone who helped him kill the rapist.]]
* KilledOffForReal: [[spoiler:Helen, at the end of series 5]]. Which renders [[spoiler:DieForOurShip]] unnecessary, as it [[spoiler:clears the way for [[FanPreferredCouple Lynley/Havers]] in just about the most convenient manner possible]].
* KnightInSourArmor: Barbara, whose nigh-impenetrable wall of cynicism hides a woman who absolutely wants to believe the best of everyone but has been betrayed far too many times.
* LastNameBasis: Lynley and Havers are this, with a couple of exceptions. The first one, noted lower down, is YouCalledMeXItMustBeSerious; the other is when Havers is staying with him at the family estate in Cornwall. This is lampshaded in "In the Guise of Death," when Lynley wants her help on a local murder investigation; he wakes her up at an ungodly hour of the morning, briskly saying, "Come on, Havers! Follow me!" Havers [[DeadpanSnarker snarks]]:
-->'''Barbara''': Oh, see? Now you want my help, it's bye-bye 'Barbara' and hello 'Havers'!
* LikeAnOldMarriedCouple: Once they get on even footing with each other, their bickering takes on a hefty shading of this. It really becomes apparent after the events of "In Divine Proportion"; the next episode in particular ("In The Guise of Death") is especially notable for this vibe.
* LimitedSocialCircle: Our Heroes ''do'' spend time with people other than each other, but none of them seem to last more than a few episodes[[hottip:*:Christine Wood, Lynley's LoveInterest in series 5, whom he winds up ditching for Barbara]], or at most a single series[[hottip:*:Azhar and Haddiyah, Barbara's sort-of LoveInterest and his daughter, in series 2, who regrettably [[WhatHappenedToTheMouse vanish]] after that series' finale]]. The only characters to not fall victim to this, aside from their police superiors, are Helen[[hottip:*:who is [[spoiler:KilledOffForReal at the end of series 5, and their reconciliation likely wouldn't have lasted anyway]], their coworker DC Winston Nkata[[hottip:*:who first shows up in series 5]], and the Medical Examiner Stuart Lafferty[[hottip:*:ditto]]. And even they aren't seen hanging out with the [[OddCouple main duo]] outside of work to any great extent. And finally, they can't be apart for any great length of time. Lynley goes to Cornwall for vacation? Havers goes along. Havers [[spoiler:gets demoted]]? Lynley [[spoiler:[[SubordinateExcuse calls her in on every case he can]]]]. Etc, etc, etc. Let's face it; at the end of the day, they just keep coming back to each other.
* MostImportantPerson: As has been demonstrated time and time again, no one will ''ever'' be as important to Thomas Lynley or Barbara Havers as they are to each other.
* MustHaveCaffeine: British or not, they're still cops. It's not uncommon to see one or the other of them with two paper coffee cups in hand - one for their partner, and one for them. Whether the substance inside is coffee or tea, however, is anybody's guess. (When not on the job, they tend to drink [[INeedAFreakingDrink alcohol]]. And they need it, [[{{Woobie}} poor things]].)
* NeverOneMurder
* NonIdleRich: Lynley works at Scotland Yard though he's both rich and the eighth Earl of Asherton.
* ObfuscatingStupidity: Havers has a knack for pulling the "I'm just an uneducated working-class bumpkin" or the "I'm just a silly little girl" front when she needs to trick suspects into confiding in her. Behind this is a sharp-as-a-tack police officer with street smarts and common sense that make ''Lynley'' look stupid.
* OddCouple: Whose bright idea was it to pair an Eton-and-Oxford-schooled hereditary Lord with a cranky, [[DeadpanSnarker sarcastic]] working-class sergeant? [[UndyingLoyalty A genius]], [[TrueCompanions of course.]] They were, and remained, ''very'' different people, but this only seemed to strengthen the bond between them.
* OhCrap: Multiple times, considering the nature of their work. One of the most notable comes when [[spoiler:Lynley realises that Barbara is trapped inside a pub at gunpoint and that this is going to trigger her like nothing else]]. The only thing that stops him from going in on the spot is an armed assault team holding him back.
* OneHeadTaller: Lynley and Havers.
* OppositesAttract: Cranky, has-class-issues working-class Sergeant paired with an Oxford-educated Inspector who happens to be a hereditary Lord? Violence waiting to happen, right? [[UndyingLoyalty Not so much]].
* OvertookTheSeries: Done after the first two series.
* {{Oxbridge}}: Lynley is an Oxford alum, and this plays a plot-important role in several episodes.
-->'''Havers''': One tug on the old school tie and you come running.
* PassiveAggressiveKombat: Lynley. This makes for some interesting confrontations with [[HairTriggerTemper Barbara]], as their fights usually consisted of her yelling and him using sarcasm to lethal effect.
* ThePowerOfTrust: The hard-earned building of this is entire foundation of the show, and what makes watching worthwhile.
* {{Protectorate}}: There is nothing Barbara Havers will not do to [[BigSisterInstinct protect children]] - probably because of her DeadLittleBrother. She'll also stop at nothing to rescue her partner. Meanwhile, Lynley is protective of quite a few things - mostly children and his wife. But there is no single faster way to make Thomas Lynley lose his cool than putting Barbara Havers in danger - any semblance of reason usually goes out the window when she's threatened. Notably, it takes an ''armed assault team'' to keep him from bursting into the pub where Barbara is [[spoiler:being held hostage at gunpoint]] in "In Divine Proportion."
* PuppyDogEyes: Barbara, whose large, expressive sage green eyes are more than capable of this, and clue the audience in to her [[TheWoobie vulnerability]] when she's covering it up with a [[{{Tsundere}} scathing remark]]. It is, in fact, largely because of her eyes that Barbara is such a sympathetic character; if her eyes didn't provide a window into just what a good reason she has to be defensive and prickly, she would come off as a complete bitch in early episodes.
* RedOniBlueOni: Havers is red, Lynley is blue.
* RelationshipUpgrade: Lynley and Helen start as friends. Matters progress over the course of the show.
* SarcasticDevotee: Barbara Havers snarks up, down, and all around at Lynley and is the first to tell him when she thinks he's about to do something stupid. There is ''also'' no force in the universe strong enough to break her loyalty to him or to keep her from moving heaven and earth to get back to him. And God forbid [[HypocriticalHeartwarming anyone else say anything remotely unpleasant about him]]!
* SceneryPorn: Whenever the main characters solve cases outside of London.
* ScrewedByTheNetwork: In this case, the network was the BBC.
* SheIsNotMyGirlfriend: [[UnresolvedSexualTension ...yet]].
* ShipperOnDeck: Barbara appears to be this for Lynley and Helen. Whether she a) genuinely wants them to get together, b) genuinely wants them to get together and doesn't realize she's in love with Lynley, c) genuinely wants them to get together but is in [[ListingShip unrequited love]] with Lynley anyway, or d) is in unrequited love with Lynley and is encouraging him in order to hide her own feelings is a matter for endless debate.
** Meta-wise, Nathaniel Parker said in an interview that he would have ended the series with Lynley and Barbara holding hands and walking into the sunset...
* ShipSinking: Meta example. In the {{PBS}} airing of "Missing Joseph", host Diana Rigg notes that "[[SuspiciouslySpecificDenial it might appear that Sergeant Havers has a thing for her partner]]" but hastily goes on to mention that "she gives him nothing but grief" (while apparently missing and/or ignoring the fact that the [[UnresolvedSexualTension subtext]] in the first season alone could crush your average linebacker). She then goes on to note that Lynley is already in love with Helen Clyde - who [[spoiler:dies at the end of series 5]]. Considering that [[FanPreferredCouple shippers]] have looked past [[IncestYayShipping blood relationships]], [[GhostShipping death]], [[ShipsThatPassInTheNight little-to-no interaction]], and ''[[CrossoverShip not even being from the same universe]]'', this is hardly proof positive that nothing will ever happen, and in fact they are given an [[AndTheAdventureContinues open ending]] with [[spoiler:all romantic competition out of the way]] and seven years of added depth to their relationship. In light of all this, the denial is not particularly convincing.
* SnarkToSnarkCombat: Lynley and Havers. ''Lots'' of it.
* SubordinateExcuse: When Barbara is [[spoiler:demoted at the beginning of series 2]], Lynley plays this trope to the ''hilt'' to [[spoiler:keep her with him, and calls her in on every case he possibly can even though she's not technically under his supervision any more]]. When forced to justify this to ''his'' supervisor, he tells said supervisor that [[spoiler:he's calling her in because she's proven that she can work with him effectively]]. This is absolutely true, and has absolutely ''nothing'' to do with [[TrueCompanions why he wants her around]].
* SurvivorGuilt: Implied to be the main cause of Lynley's HeroicBSOD following [[spoiler:Helen's death]], as she was [[spoiler:shot right in front of him because of a case he was working]].
* TheOtherDarrin: Lynley's wife Helen was played by three separate actresses: Emma Fielding in the pilot, Lesley Vickerage in series one through three (up until she separated from Lynley), and Catherine Russell in series five.
* TheyFightCrime: He's a Lord with a title and a complicated personal life. She's a cranky, foul-mouthed working-class junk food addict with massive class resentment issues.
* TrueCompanions: It doesn't seem to matter how badly they're fighting this week - any outside attempt to turn them against each other ''will'' fail, and probably end whatever fight they're having to boot.
* UltimateJobSecurity: Averted. Both of the main characters are at serious risk of being fired at least once during the series' run.
* UndyingLoyalty: It must be seen to be believed. There's nothing these two would not do for each other.
-->'''Lynley''': No, see, that's the thing I think you've got wrong. ''I'' think he's counting on my loyalty to ''you''.
* UnequalPairing: Lynley/Havers has this in ''spades'', in both class disparity and in rank. This is somewhat mitigated in that by the end of the series their interactions are much, much more those of police ''partners'' as opposed to superior/subordinate, but there are still massive, massive issues to overcome. [[FanPreferredCouple The entire fandom ships them anyway.]]
* UnresolvedSexualTension: Many episodes can be seen as this. Special mention goes to "One Guilty Deed" and "If Wishes Were Horses", which both involve [[spoiler: Lynley running to Havers' aid after she gets hit with a rock and shot, respectively. Very special mention to the latter, where Lynley calls her "Barbara" and not "Havers."]] And let's not forget the last two scenes of "In Divine Proportion," in which Barbara is [[spoiler:held hostage at gunpoint on her first case back from getting shot. The way he holds her close and soothes her is... a bit more than friendly. Especially that kiss he presses to the top of her head...]] Special mention ''also'' goes to the "shower scene" in "One Guilty Deed," when they dance around each other in tight quarters while she's in pyjamas and he's in - a ''towel''. ''And'' "Word of God" where he [[spoiler:''breaks off a date'', ''shows up at Barbara's flat in the middle of the night'' and ''questions whether or not he ever truly loved Helen'']]. Immediately after this, [[spoiler:they admit that they are ''each others' reason to get up in the morning'']] - I'm sorry, was this supposed to be ''[[{{Subtext}} subtext]]??''
* VitriolicBestBuds: ...say it with me, folks - Lynley and Havers.
* WhamEpisode: Most of the series finales. Series 2 had [[spoiler:the events in the North Sea that led to Barbara's demotion]], Series 3 had [[spoiler:Helen's miscarriage and Barbara being shot]], Series 4 had [[spoiler:Lynley's suspension]], and Series 5 had [[spoiler:Helen's death]]. Series 6 didn't follow this pattern, but that was because the show was [[ScrewedByTheNetwork cancelled]] before the third and fourth episodes of the series could be completed.
* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: Hadiyyah and Azhar vanish without explanation after the events of "Deception on His Mind", incidentally removing the only viable romantic interest [[FanPreferredCouple not named Thomas Lynley]] Barbara ever has on the show.
* WhatTheHellHero: Part of the reason Lynley and Havers are such an effective team is not simply because they're willing to call each other out, both personally and professionally, but because they ''listen'' to each other when their partner is directing one of these at them.
* WithDueRespect: Any variant of this phrase out of Barbara's mouth is code for, "I'm about to tell you I think you're an idiot." She's usually right. Its sister phrase, "Yes, ''sir''," is code for, "I think you're an idiot, but I'm following your orders because I have to."
* WorkingClassHero: Barbara fits this more than she doesn't, as she's much better than Lynley when it comes to street smarts and, frequently, reading people's interactions, particularly those of the working class - Lynley tends to get a bit clueless about these things when he's not among the powerful or well-educated. This is, of course, why they are perfect partners for each other.
** Incidentally, Slate Magazine called her [[http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/tv_club/features/2012/downton_abbey_season_2/week_7/what_should_i_watch_while_downton_abbey_is_gone_.html "one of the great working-class characters of British television."]]
* YouCalledMeXItMustBeSerious: Suffice it to say that when Lynley calls Havers "Barbara," it's either a CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming or a massive, massive TearJerker - like when [[spoiler:Havers gets shot]], at which point Lynley loses it quite spectacularly and can only say, "[[CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming Barbara?]] ''[[TearJerker Barbara]]??''"

<<|BritishSeries|>>
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<<|CrimeAndPunishmentSeries|>>
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[[quoteright:315:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ilm_lynley_havers_5937.png]]
[[caption-width-right:315:He's a Lord. She's ''not'' a lady. Think you can fool them? Think again.]]
->'''DI Fiona Knight:''' You two really ''are'' a double act, aren't you!
->-''The Inspector Lynley Mysteries'', "Natural Causes"

->'''Barbara Havers:''' No. [[UndyingLoyalty You resign]], [[MostImportantPerson I resign]].
->'''Tommy Lynley:''' But that's absurd! Why, for heaven's sake?
->'''Barbara:''' [[OddCouple Well... no one else will work with me]].
->'''Lynley:''' [[AffectionateSpitfire This is you being nice to me, isn't it]].
->'''Barbara:''' [[SarcasticDevotee Yeah]]. [[TrueCompanions Shall we hit the pub]]?
->-''The Inspector Lynley Mysteries'', "Payment In Blood"

''The Inspector Lynley Mysteries'' was a BBC television series that ran from 2001--2007, centered around the aristocratic Detective Inspector Thomas "Tommy" Lynley, [[TheBritishTitleSystem 8th Earl of Asherton]] (NathanielParker), and his working-class partner, Detective Sergeant Barbara Havers (SharonSmall), both of ScotlandYard. The first eleven episodes were based on novels by the American author Elizabeth George, though the author's plots and characters were often significantly altered. Most, if not all, fans consider the show to take place in an AlternateContinuity from the books.

Elizabeth George is one of only two American writers[[hottip:*:the other is Tony Hillerman]] whose novels have been adapted for {{PBS}}' ''MYSTERY!''

The intrigue of the show came almost entirely from watching the lead characters navigate the inevitable clashes of personality, gender, class, and opinion that arose from their radically differing backgrounds. Lynley and Havers gradually discovered that their differences -- and unexpected similarities, namely a mutual devotion to justice -- complemented each other more thoroughly than either of them could have expected. While they remained two ''very'' different people, the [[TrueCompanions bond]] that developed between them changed them both for the better and created a partnership more enduring and effective than anyone ever predicted.

[[folder:Episode List]]
[[AC:Pilot]]
* ''A Great Deliverance''[[hottip:*:two-part episode]]

[[AC:Series 1]]
* ''Well Schooled in Murder''
* ''Payment in Blood''
* ''For the Sake of Elena''
* ''Missing Joseph''

[[AC:Series 2]]
* ''Playing for the Ashes''
* ''In the Presence of the Enemy''
* ''A Suitable Vengeance''
* ''Deception on His Mind''

[[AC:Series 3]]
* ''In Pursuit of the Proper Sinner''
* ''A Traitor to Memory''
* ''A Cry for Justice''
* ''If Wishes Were Horses''

[[AC:Series 4]]
* ''In Divine Proportion''
* ''In the Guise of Death''
* ''The Seed of Cunning''
* ''Word of God''

[[AC:Series 5]]
* ''Natural Causes''
* ''One Guilty Deed''
* ''Chinese Walls''
* ''In the Blink of an Eye''

[[AC:Series 6]]
* ''Limbo''
* ''Know Thine Enemy''
[[/folder]]


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This show provided examples of:

* AbilityOverAppearance: SharonSmall was supposedly too pretty to play the plain Barbara Havers, but absolutely nailed the character in the pilot and won author Elizabeth George completely over. Her performance is to this day lauded as one of the best aspects of the series.
* ActionGirl: Havers is quite capable of handling herself, thank you.
* AdaptationalAttractiveness: In the novel series, Barbara Havers is described as short, ugly, overweight and poorly dressed. Sharon Small, who plays Havers, is short.
** Reverse direction for Lynley: The books regularly refer to him as a 'Greek god' type, which usually means Apollon/Adonis, when Nathaniel Parker probably only could get away as Hephaistos (if he fakes a limp). Ruggedly handsome, yes, but an Adonis he is not.
* AdaptationDyeJob: Lynley went from blond in the novels to being played by brunet Nathaniel Parker.
* AffectionateSpitfire: Barbara Havers.
* AlwaysMurder
* AndTheAdventureContinues
* ArtisticLicense: When Barbara is [[spoiler:busted down a rank in the series 3 premiere]], she is [[spoiler:issued a uniform]] but is consistently referred to as [[spoiler:'''D'''C]] Havers. This is incorrect, as [[spoiler:DC means ''Detective'' Constable. Detectives - attached to CID or Special Branch - wear plainclothes. If she was issued a uniform, it would mean she was kicked out of CID, yet the prefix "Detective" indicates that she was not - especially since she went back to plainclothes when she was reinstated in the third episode of that series]]. The likely explanation for this is that [[spoiler:being busted back into a uniform]] packs more of an emotional punch.
* BadassAdorable: Havers can take care of herself, thank you very much - including taking down a man fully four inches taller than she is. She could also probably qualify for the Miss Adorable contest.
* BerserkButton: The one surefire way to make sure Thomas Lynley will hate you forever is to injure or threaten Barbara Havers. (His wife is also a pretty reasonable bet.) Barbara, meanwhile, tends to lose her shit if anyone goes after Lynley - or [[FriendToAllChildren kids]].
* BigFancyHouse: Howenstowe, the seat of the Earls of Asherton. It's located in Cornwall. [[SceneryPorn Shameless advantage is taken of this]].
* BreakTheCutie: Barbara Havers starts out as a BrokenBird, so she's not exactly [[JerkassWoobie sweet and adorable any more]] in the pilot. And yet somehow, the show proceeds to break her ''even further''. [[hottip:*:First her father dies and she has to put her mentally ill mother in a nursing home (where she most likely dies during the early seasons). Then she's demoted (and almost sacked) for [[ScrewTheRulesImDoingWhatsRight doing the right thing]], after which she's shot in the line of duty and then held hostage at gunpoint on her first case back after said shooting, whereupon she has a panic attack as a result of said hostage-taking. Then her partner's suspended for excessive violence. Once he's back she's hit over the head with a rock by a psycho and would have died on a deserted moor if her partner hadn't found her. Then her partner's wife is killed right in front of them (who she couldn't save despite her attempts at CPR), after which he then [[DrowningMySorrows goes on a drinking binge]] and takes all his anger and bitterness out on her despite her only trying to help.]] Ouch, show. Ouch. (This looks light compared to what her partner goes through, until you remember that in her case, a lot of the breaking was done [[BrokenBird before she even met Thomas Lynley]].)
* BreakTheHaughty: Although he's not without his own angst, Barbara [[DarkAndTroubledPast has quite a bit more angst in her past]] than Lynley does. The storyline proceeds to make up for this rather thoroughly. [[hottip:*:To wit: he almost loses his wife to a deliberate car accident perpetrated by someone angry with his work on a case, which also causes his wife to miscarry their baby and break up with him. Then his devoted partner is shot in the line of duty right in front of him. Then he and his wife become even more estranged, with him eventually thinking she's going to ask him for a divorce. Then he's suspended for allegedly using excessive violence on a suspect. Then, just as he and his wife are starting to reconcile, ''she'' is shot and killed right in front of him by someone connected to a case he's working. As soon as he comes back on the job after ''that'', he becomes the chief suspect in a murder investigation, with the victim in question being probably the first romantic contact he's had since his wife's death.]] ...''ouch.''
* BritishAccents: Lynley is of course R.P., while Havers speaks what appears to be Estuary English with an East London twist (which fits, as one of the centerpieces of her character is that she is solidly working-class).
* BritishBrevity
* BrokenBird: Barbara Havers pretty much had any semblance of optimism ground out of her with extreme prejudice after [[DeadLittleBrother her little brother's death from cancer]] tore her family apart and her parents succumbed to mental illness and lung disease right before her eyes. When combined with the fact that she has NoSocialSkills (which have left her alone and misunderstood her entire life), a HairTriggerTemper (ditto), and massive class resentment issues, it's no wonder the poor thing was on the verge of being kicked off the force, [[BunnyEarsLawyer Bunny Ears Detective]] or not, before she teamed up with Thomas Lynley. Although the show proceeds to further BreakTheCutie (and also [[BreakTheHaughty the haughty]] - her partner isn't spared), she [[DefrostingIceQueen softens and blossoms]] when paired with the one man who refuses to give up on her no matter how much [[JerkassFacade she tries to drive him away]]. The result is a far more likable - but still [[DeadpanSnarker snarky]] - Havers, in a rare case of a show helping put the bird back together again. [[TheWoobie Sort of.]]
* BunnyEarsLawyer: Havers should have been kicked off the force ''years'' ago - she was, in fact, on the verge of being sacked when she met Thomas Lynley, and was even [[spoiler:demoted]] once - because she has NoSocialSkills and a HairTriggerTemper. She's still around because she is, in fact, a frighteningly competent detective, and also the only officer on the force who can manage to survive as Thomas Lynley's partner for more than a month.
* BusmansHoliday: Both times Lynley ([[TrueCompanions and]] [[TheNotLoveInterest Barbara]]) go to visit his family in Cornwall, they get caught up in a local mystery, largely because Lynley cannot keep his nose out of ''anything'' and Barbara will follow him wherever he goes (albeit with [[SarcasticDevotee plenty of]] [[DeadpanSnarker snarking]] along the way).
* CharacterDevelopment: Through his partnership with Barbara, Lynley becomes less snobbish and elitist, not to mention less likely to fly off the handle. Through her partnership with Lynley, Barbara begins to let her softer side show more often and learns that the world isn't out to get her and that it's okay to trust people and let them in.[[hottip:*:This doesn't even ''begin'' to cover what these two do for each other over the course of the series, but it's a start.]] In the end, they are not only more effective detectives due to their partnership, they are, quite simply, better ''people''. And it is [[CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming beautiful]].
* TheConsigliere: Barbara is this to Lynley, despite her own fiery temper - in many ways she is his common sense and voice of reason, and she is the one who brings him back when he loses himself in his quest for justice. Seen repeatedly over the series is Havers laying a calming hand on Lynley's arm and saying, "Sir? ''Sir!''" when he is about to lose his temper, [[TheConscience which serves to snap him out of it]]. She is so far the only person on the show to be able to do this with any sort of regular success.
* CoolCar: Lynley drives a Bristol 410, which oozes not only class but exclusivity in that much fewer than a hundred of them were ever built. (You will never see a dealer for these cars; you go straight to the builder, or you go without.)
* CuteAndPsycho: [[spoiler: Carly in "One Guilty Deed" went a little unhinged after she killed Martin.]]
* CryIntoChest: Textbook straight when Barbara falls apart after being held hostage at gunpoint and suffers a FlashbackEcho. See also InelegantBlubbering and CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming.
* DeadLittleBrother: Barbara. His death gave her much of her renowned cynicism; she's really quite a romantic at heart.
* {{Deadpan Snarker}}/{{The Snark Knight}}: Havers. Oh, Havers. That poor, dear girl.
* DefectiveDetective: ''Oh my God.'' Lynley and Havers, both of them. One is a [[MarriedToTheJob workaholic]] with a personal life worthy of a soap opera; the other is a BrokenBird who has raised antisociality and [[JerkassFacade self-protection via jerkassery]] to an art form. Somehow, they become [[LikeAnOldMarriedCouple incredibly]] [[TrueCompanions close]] [[TheNotLoveInterest friends]] anyway, which spawns an absolutely glorious amount of CharacterDevelopment for both of them. And [[ThePowerOfFriendship it]] [[ThePowerOfTrust is]] [[ThePowerOfLove beautiful]].
* DistressedDamsel: Barbara seems to end up trapped with AxCrazy murderers far more often than Lynley. Being Barbara, however, she usually beats the crap out of them before Lynley can get there - or at least takes a piece out of them first.
* DontYouDarePityMe: Say it with me now... oh, ''Barbara''.
* DrowningMySorrows: This is how Lynley "copes" with [[spoiler:Helen's death]] until [[MostImportantPerson Barbara]], after six months of trying, finally snaps him out of it in "Limbo".
* EpiphanyTherapy: Lynley goes through this in "Natural Causes," realizing he wants to make it work with Helen. He does it while "undercover" at a center that's an XMeetsY between a rehab clinic and a ChurchOfHappyology. [[spoiler: It turns out the head of the center is behind a real estate land-grab, not the murders.]]
* FairCop: Lynley certainly has the ruggedly-handsome thing going on, and Barbara Havers is adorableness incarnate.
* FakeNationality: The very Scottish SharonSmall as the very working-class English Barbara Havers. Her accent is quite convincing.
* {{Fan Service Pack}}/ProgressivelyPrettier: During the pilot and the first four series, Barbara has short hair and goes around in baggy sweaters and coats. In series five and six, her hair has lengthened dramatically and she's wearing clothes that are much more form-fitting. The end result is [[http://www.bbc.co.uk/drama/content/images/2007/01/10/haverscharlead_396x222.jpg this]].
* FieryRedhead: Barbara Havers. So very much.
* [[FinishingEachOthersSentences Finishing Each Other's Sentences]]: In "Natural Causes", Lynley and Havers go back and forth like this when they solve the MysteryOfTheWeek, upon which DI Fiona Knight, temporarily partnered with Havers, remarks, "You really ''are'' a double act, aren't you!"
* FireForgedFriends: Barbara and Lynley Do Not Like each other when they're originally assigned together. Their superior officers were counting on this, hoping they would do something outrageous enough to get themselves fired when forced to work together. By the end of the pilot episode, their plan [[HoistByHisOwnPetard backfired]] [[TrueCompanions quite]] [[UndyingLoyalty spectacularly]]... and Barbara and Lynley only get ''[[MostImportantPerson closer]]'' from there.
* {{Flashback Echo}}/{{Trigger}}: In "In Divine Proportion" when Barbara [[spoiler:is held hostage at gunpoint]]. Her flashback is to the previous series' finale, in which [[spoiler:she was shot in the abdomen]]; she shows obvious signs of PTSD throughout the episode and goes a little nuts at the end. It takes - who else? - Lynley literally [[spoiler:pulling her off the guy]] and administering a CooldownHug to bring her back to normal. (No actual flashback occurs; because the triggering event happens in the previous episode, however, the audience is quite clearly supposed to draw the parallel.)
* FriendToAllChildren: Barbara Havers may be difficult to work with, but she has a real gift for getting children to talk to her.
* FriendshipMoment: ''Many'' between Lynley and Havers. Actually, pretty much any time Lynley and Havers are together and not yelling at/arguing with each other is one of these when it's not a CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming.
* ForbiddenFriendship: Part of the reason Barbara is so hostile to Lynley in early episodes is because she is absolutely convinced this trope is in play. It is made fairly clear, however, that ''she'' is a great deal more concerned by the class differences between them than ''he'' is. She [[CharacterDevelopment gets better]] over the course of the show.
* GentlemanDetective: Lynley, naturally.
* GentlemanSnarker: Lynley, oh so very much, which makes him an excellent match for the equally snarky Barbara.
* GettingCrapPastTheRadar: Barbara Havers has a quite earthy[[hottip:*:read: perverted]] sense of humour, and some of her quips can make viewers wonder how this ever got aired before the watershed. For instance, during the episode "Well Schooled in Murder" after one of their suspects has, er, exposed himself:
-->'''Havers''': How shall I phrase that in my notes, sir? [[GagPenis Would "hung" and "donkey" cover it?]]
* GoodIsNotNice: Barbara Havers is undoubtedly a truly ''good'' character, but, especially early on, she is not a particularly ''nice'' one.
* HairTriggerTemper: Havers. In ''spades''.
-->'''Lynley''': The woman is a minefield!
* HeldGaze: Lynley and Havers give [[TheXFiles Mulder and Scully]] a run for their money in terms of just how charged these moments could get. These looks between them spoke ''volumes'' about the depths of their relationship. In fact, during many of the most critical moments of their relationship, the words coming out of their mouths were completely incidental to the conversation they were having with their eyes.
* HoistByHisOwnPetard: Pairing Havers and Lynley was originally done in order to keep Barbara's mouth shut about not getting any good cases (and, if they were lucky, get her tossed out of the force for disrespect and/or violence). Yeah, [[OddCouple that]] [[OppositesAttract worked out]] [[UndyingLoyalty well]]...
* HonestAdvisor: Barbara to Lynley again; she can get away with saying things no one else could, because she has earned his trust a thousand times over. He might bark at her for whatever she says, but he ''always'' listens.
* HypocriticalHeartwarming: In the pilot episode, Barbara goes on a long diatribe about everything she thinks is wrong with Thomas Lynley as a man and as a detective. When Lynley's old partner shows up and levels a number of those very same accusations at him just hours later, she immediately jumps to his defense, completely ignoring her earlier complaints. This sets up the entire precedent of their relationship: ''Barbara'' can [[WhatTheHellHero call Lynley out]] just as much as she pleases, but if anyone else tries the same thing, it had better be when Barbara is locked in a soundproof box at the other end of the galaxy, because otherwise, the 'anyone else' in question is going to get a dressing-down the likes of which s/he will never forget. Although it's not seen as much, this works in reverse as well - Lynley has no problems [[WhatTheHellHero calling Barbara out]], but will immediately and fiercely defend her from anyone else who dares to try the same thing.
* [[IHaveYourWife I Have Your Partner]]: A couple of perps try and pull this on Lynley with Havers. This is [[BerserkButton a universally bad move]].
* INeedAFreakingDrink: Or rather, "D'you fancy a drink?" - frequently said by one partner to the other after a particularly hard case.
* InelegantBlubbering: What happens once Lynley manages to administer the above-mentioned CooldownHug, although we don't see the evidence as her face is buried against his shirt.
* InLoveWithLove: [[spoiler:Lynley believes his feelings for Helen were this]].
* TheInspector: But of course.
* [[InstantDeathBullet Instant Death Stab]]: Averted in ''Payment in Blood'', where a single stab through the throat is enough to kill the victim, but only because it impales her to a mattress, allowing a bleed-out.
* ItGotWorse: Poor Lynley. In the final episode of series 3, his wife is [[spoiler:involved in a car accident that results in her miscarriage, a hospital stay, and their separation]]. As if that's not bad enough, days later [[spoiler:his partner is shot in the line of duty]], resulting in [[spoiler:yet another hospital stay, months of recovery time and PTSD]]. Wow.
* JerkassFacade: Barbara. Yes, she is and always will be a blunt, outspoken, cranky, DeadpanSnarker SarcasticDevotee, but by and large, her harsh personality is a defense mechanism against a lifetime of torment and ridicule. Arguably the most critical moment of her first case with Lynley is his catching on to the fact that it ''is'' a facade and telling her she doesn't have to do it any more; he knows she's a good person, and in fact he genuinely cares about her. This freaks Barbara the hell out, but she gets used to it. Eventually.
* JumpingOffTheSlipperySlope: Seems to be the killer's motive in the episode "In Divine Proportion." [[spoiler: The killer is a police officer. Years ago, he murdered a rapist after the rapist's victim committed suicide. In the episode, he kills the victim's sister, and at the end of the episode is ready to kill everyone who helped him kill the rapist.]]
* KilledOffForReal: [[spoiler:Helen, at the end of series 5]]. Which renders [[spoiler:DieForOurShip]] unnecessary, as it [[spoiler:clears the way for [[FanPreferredCouple Lynley/Havers]] in just about the most convenient manner possible]].
* KnightInSourArmor: Barbara, whose nigh-impenetrable wall of cynicism hides a woman who absolutely wants to believe the best of everyone but has been betrayed far too many times.
* LastNameBasis: Lynley and Havers are this, with a couple of exceptions. The first one, noted lower down, is YouCalledMeXItMustBeSerious; the other is when Havers is staying with him at the family estate in Cornwall. This is lampshaded in "In the Guise of Death," when Lynley wants her help on a local murder investigation; he wakes her up at an ungodly hour of the morning, briskly saying, "Come on, Havers! Follow me!" Havers [[DeadpanSnarker snarks]]:
-->'''Barbara''': Oh, see? Now you want my help, it's bye-bye 'Barbara' and hello 'Havers'!
* LikeAnOldMarriedCouple: Once they get on even footing with each other, their bickering takes on a hefty shading of this. It really becomes apparent after the events of "In Divine Proportion"; the next episode in particular ("In The Guise of Death") is especially notable for this vibe.
* LimitedSocialCircle: Our Heroes ''do'' spend time with people other than each other, but none of them seem to last more than a few episodes[[hottip:*:Christine Wood, Lynley's LoveInterest in series 5, whom he winds up ditching for Barbara]], or at most a single series[[hottip:*:Azhar and Haddiyah, Barbara's sort-of LoveInterest and his daughter, in series 2, who regrettably [[WhatHappenedToTheMouse vanish]] after that series' finale]]. The only characters to not fall victim to this, aside from their police superiors, are Helen[[hottip:*:who is [[spoiler:KilledOffForReal at the end of series 5, and their reconciliation likely wouldn't have lasted anyway]], their coworker DC Winston Nkata[[hottip:*:who first shows up in series 5]], and the Medical Examiner Stuart Lafferty[[hottip:*:ditto]]. And even they aren't seen hanging out with the [[OddCouple main duo]] outside of work to any great extent. And finally, they can't be apart for any great length of time. Lynley goes to Cornwall for vacation? Havers goes along. Havers [[spoiler:gets demoted]]? Lynley [[spoiler:[[SubordinateExcuse calls her in on every case he can]]]]. Etc, etc, etc. Let's face it; at the end of the day, they just keep coming back to each other.
* MostImportantPerson: As has been demonstrated time and time again, no one will ''ever'' be as important to Thomas Lynley or Barbara Havers as they are to each other.
* MustHaveCaffeine: British or not, they're still cops. It's not uncommon to see one or the other of them with two paper coffee cups in hand - one for their partner, and one for them. Whether the substance inside is coffee or tea, however, is anybody's guess. (When not on the job, they tend to drink [[INeedAFreakingDrink alcohol]]. And they need it, [[{{Woobie}} poor things]].)
* NeverOneMurder
* NonIdleRich: Lynley works at Scotland Yard though he's both rich and the eighth Earl of Asherton.
* ObfuscatingStupidity: Havers has a knack for pulling the "I'm just an uneducated working-class bumpkin" or the "I'm just a silly little girl" front when she needs to trick suspects into confiding in her. Behind this is a sharp-as-a-tack police officer with street smarts and common sense that make ''Lynley'' look stupid.
* OddCouple: Whose bright idea was it to pair an Eton-and-Oxford-schooled hereditary Lord with a cranky, [[DeadpanSnarker sarcastic]] working-class sergeant? [[UndyingLoyalty A genius]], [[TrueCompanions of course.]] They were, and remained, ''very'' different people, but this only seemed to strengthen the bond between them.
* OhCrap: Multiple times, considering the nature of their work. One of the most notable comes when [[spoiler:Lynley realises that Barbara is trapped inside a pub at gunpoint and that this is going to trigger her like nothing else]]. The only thing that stops him from going in on the spot is an armed assault team holding him back.
* OneHeadTaller: Lynley and Havers.
* OppositesAttract: Cranky, has-class-issues working-class Sergeant paired with an Oxford-educated Inspector who happens to be a hereditary Lord? Violence waiting to happen, right? [[UndyingLoyalty Not so much]].
* OvertookTheSeries: Done after the first two series.
* {{Oxbridge}}: Lynley is an Oxford alum, and this plays a plot-important role in several episodes.
-->'''Havers''': One tug on the old school tie and you come running.
* PassiveAggressiveKombat: Lynley. This makes for some interesting confrontations with [[HairTriggerTemper Barbara]], as their fights usually consisted of her yelling and him using sarcasm to lethal effect.
* ThePowerOfTrust: The hard-earned building of this is entire foundation of the show, and what makes watching worthwhile.
* {{Protectorate}}: There is nothing Barbara Havers will not do to [[BigSisterInstinct protect children]] - probably because of her DeadLittleBrother. She'll also stop at nothing to rescue her partner. Meanwhile, Lynley is protective of quite a few things - mostly children and his wife. But there is no single faster way to make Thomas Lynley lose his cool than putting Barbara Havers in danger - any semblance of reason usually goes out the window when she's threatened. Notably, it takes an ''armed assault team'' to keep him from bursting into the pub where Barbara is [[spoiler:being held hostage at gunpoint]] in "In Divine Proportion."
* PuppyDogEyes: Barbara, whose large, expressive sage green eyes are more than capable of this, and clue the audience in to her [[TheWoobie vulnerability]] when she's covering it up with a [[{{Tsundere}} scathing remark]]. It is, in fact, largely because of her eyes that Barbara is such a sympathetic character; if her eyes didn't provide a window into just what a good reason she has to be defensive and prickly, she would come off as a complete bitch in early episodes.
* RedOniBlueOni: Havers is red, Lynley is blue.
* RelationshipUpgrade: Lynley and Helen start as friends. Matters progress over the course of the show.
* SarcasticDevotee: Barbara Havers snarks up, down, and all around at Lynley and is the first to tell him when she thinks he's about to do something stupid. There is ''also'' no force in the universe strong enough to break her loyalty to him or to keep her from moving heaven and earth to get back to him. And God forbid [[HypocriticalHeartwarming anyone else say anything remotely unpleasant about him]]!
* SceneryPorn: Whenever the main characters solve cases outside of London.
* ScrewedByTheNetwork: In this case, the network was the BBC.
* SheIsNotMyGirlfriend: [[UnresolvedSexualTension ...yet]].
* ShipperOnDeck: Barbara appears to be this for Lynley and Helen. Whether she a) genuinely wants them to get together, b) genuinely wants them to get together and doesn't realize she's in love with Lynley, c) genuinely wants them to get together but is in [[ListingShip unrequited love]] with Lynley anyway, or d) is in unrequited love with Lynley and is encouraging him in order to hide her own feelings is a matter for endless debate.
** Meta-wise, Nathaniel Parker said in an interview that he would have ended the series with Lynley and Barbara holding hands and walking into the sunset...
* ShipSinking: Meta example. In the {{PBS}} airing of "Missing Joseph", host Diana Rigg notes that "[[SuspiciouslySpecificDenial it might appear that Sergeant Havers has a thing for her partner]]" but hastily goes on to mention that "she gives him nothing but grief" (while apparently missing and/or ignoring the fact that the [[UnresolvedSexualTension subtext]] in the first season alone could crush your average linebacker). She then goes on to note that Lynley is already in love with Helen Clyde - who [[spoiler:dies at the end of series 5]]. Considering that [[FanPreferredCouple shippers]] have looked past [[IncestYayShipping blood relationships]], [[GhostShipping death]], [[ShipsThatPassInTheNight little-to-no interaction]], and ''[[CrossoverShip not even being from the same universe]]'', this is hardly proof positive that nothing will ever happen, and in fact they are given an [[AndTheAdventureContinues open ending]] with [[spoiler:all romantic competition out of the way]] and seven years of added depth to their relationship. In light of all this, the denial is not particularly convincing.
* SnarkToSnarkCombat: Lynley and Havers. ''Lots'' of it.
* SubordinateExcuse: When Barbara is [[spoiler:demoted at the beginning of series 2]], Lynley plays this trope to the ''hilt'' to [[spoiler:keep her with him, and calls her in on every case he possibly can even though she's not technically under his supervision any more]]. When forced to justify this to ''his'' supervisor, he tells said supervisor that [[spoiler:he's calling her in because she's proven that she can work with him effectively]]. This is absolutely true, and has absolutely ''nothing'' to do with [[TrueCompanions why he wants her around]].
* SurvivorGuilt: Implied to be the main cause of Lynley's HeroicBSOD following [[spoiler:Helen's death]], as she was [[spoiler:shot right in front of him because of a case he was working]].
* TheOtherDarrin: Lynley's wife Helen was played by three separate actresses: Emma Fielding in the pilot, Lesley Vickerage in series one through three (up until she separated from Lynley), and Catherine Russell in series five.
* TheyFightCrime: He's a Lord with a title and a complicated personal life. She's a cranky, foul-mouthed working-class junk food addict with massive class resentment issues.
* TrueCompanions: It doesn't seem to matter how badly they're fighting this week - any outside attempt to turn them against each other ''will'' fail, and probably end whatever fight they're having to boot.
* UltimateJobSecurity: Averted. Both of the main characters are at serious risk of being fired at least once during the series' run.
* UndyingLoyalty: It must be seen to be believed. There's nothing these two would not do for each other.
-->'''Lynley''': No, see, that's the thing I think you've got wrong. ''I'' think he's counting on my loyalty to ''you''.
* UnequalPairing: Lynley/Havers has this in ''spades'', in both class disparity and in rank. This is somewhat mitigated in that by the end of the series their interactions are much, much more those of police ''partners'' as opposed to superior/subordinate, but there are still massive, massive issues to overcome. [[FanPreferredCouple The entire fandom ships them anyway.]]
* UnresolvedSexualTension: Many episodes can be seen as this. Special mention goes to "One Guilty Deed" and "If Wishes Were Horses", which both involve [[spoiler: Lynley running to Havers' aid after she gets hit with a rock and shot, respectively. Very special mention to the latter, where Lynley calls her "Barbara" and not "Havers."]] And let's not forget the last two scenes of "In Divine Proportion," in which Barbara is [[spoiler:held hostage at gunpoint on her first case back from getting shot. The way he holds her close and soothes her is... a bit more than friendly. Especially that kiss he presses to the top of her head...]] Special mention ''also'' goes to the "shower scene" in "One Guilty Deed," when they dance around each other in tight quarters while she's in pyjamas and he's in - a ''towel''. ''And'' "Word of God" where he [[spoiler:''breaks off a date'', ''shows up at Barbara's flat in the middle of the night'' and ''questions whether or not he ever truly loved Helen'']]. Immediately after this, [[spoiler:they admit that they are ''each others' reason to get up in the morning'']] - I'm sorry, was this supposed to be ''[[{{Subtext}} subtext]]??''
* VitriolicBestBuds: ...say it with me, folks - Lynley and Havers.
* WhamEpisode: Most of the series finales. Series 2 had [[spoiler:the events in the North Sea that led to Barbara's demotion]], Series 3 had [[spoiler:Helen's miscarriage and Barbara being shot]], Series 4 had [[spoiler:Lynley's suspension]], and Series 5 had [[spoiler:Helen's death]]. Series 6 didn't follow this pattern, but that was because the show was [[ScrewedByTheNetwork cancelled]] before the third and fourth episodes of the series could be completed.
* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: Hadiyyah and Azhar vanish without explanation after the events of "Deception on His Mind", incidentally removing the only viable romantic interest [[FanPreferredCouple not named Thomas Lynley]] Barbara ever has on the show.
* WhatTheHellHero: Part of the reason Lynley and Havers are such an effective team is not simply because they're willing to call each other out, both personally and professionally, but because they ''listen'' to each other when their partner is directing one of these at them.
* WithDueRespect: Any variant of this phrase out of Barbara's mouth is code for, "I'm about to tell you I think you're an idiot." She's usually right. Its sister phrase, "Yes, ''sir''," is code for, "I think you're an idiot, but I'm following your orders because I have to."
* WorkingClassHero: Barbara fits this more than she doesn't, as she's much better than Lynley when it comes to street smarts and, frequently, reading people's interactions, particularly those of the working class - Lynley tends to get a bit clueless about these things when he's not among the powerful or well-educated. This is, of course, why they are perfect partners for each other.
** Incidentally, Slate Magazine called her [[http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/tv_club/features/2012/downton_abbey_season_2/week_7/what_should_i_watch_while_downton_abbey_is_gone_.html "one of the great working-class characters of British television."]]
* YouCalledMeXItMustBeSerious: Suffice it to say that when Lynley calls Havers "Barbara," it's either a CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming or a massive, massive TearJerker - like when [[spoiler:Havers gets shot]], at which point Lynley loses it quite spectacularly and can only say, "[[CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming Barbara?]] ''[[TearJerker Barbara]]??''"

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