Maria Purificacion de Lafont lives in Sevilla Spain, she’s married to Christobal de Balboa, and she owns a chocolate shop. In 1920, times are still tough in Spain after the end of the First World War, when Puri receives a letter from a lawyer in Vinces, Ecuador, a town known as “little Paris” and she’s inherited a share of her estranged father’s cocoa plantation.
Don Armand Lafront, abandoned his wife and Puri when she was two and moved to Ecuador. Puri’s closes her shop, with her husband Christobal they embark on the sea voyage to Ecuador and he plans to write his novel. They have no idea that Puri’s life’s in danger, when Christabal comes to her aid, he’s killed, and Puri’s left in shock and terrified. She decides to dress in her husband’s clothes, take on his identity until she finds out who wanted to kill her and why?
Arriving in Ecuador, she discovers her father was a rich man, she has three half siblings and she continues to maintain her disguise. Martin Sabater runs the plantation, he takes Puri on a tour, as a chocolate maker she finds, the process of growing, harvesting, fermenting and drying of the cocoa beans fascinating.
The house is full of tension and she uncovers her father had other affairs, he kept secrets and his eldest daughter by his “second wife” resented Puri for being his only legitimate child. Puri doesn’t feel safe at all, she’s cant confess who she really is, until she works out who’s wants kill her, and is it one of her father’s children, their spouse, a disgruntled employee and has someone been forging her father’s signature?
The Spanish Daughter is a story full of intrigue, secrets, deception, and of course deceit. It was based on author Lorena Hughes discovering a cacao bean roasting machine was patented by a woman in 1847, and she created her story around that vital piece of information. It’s really interesting that cacao growers in 1920’s Ecuador, had never tried the final product and despite making a fortune from harvesting cacao beans.
I received a copy of this book from Edelweiss and Kensington Publishing in exchange for an honest review, a light historical mystery, four stars from me, and I look forward to reading The Sister of Alameda Street, I didn’t realize it was by Lorena Hughes and I purchased it a few weeks ago!