A Victorian thriller taken from today's headlines!!
Victor Narraway, director of Her Majesty's Special Services Branch, under direction from the very top, briefs Pitt on a murder at luxurious Eden Lodge - the dead man, Edwin Lovat, is a junior diplomat, of no particular distinction, and, under normal circumstances of no particular importance to Special Services. The stink of potential political scandal blew all the way into Prime Minister Gladstone's office because Lovat was shot in the garden of Ayesha Zakhari, the sultry and exotic, beautiful Egyptian mistress of Saville Ryerson, a senior cabinet minister. Ryerson is currently conducting a sensitive negotiation on the price of Egyptian cotton that has enormous implications for fragile trade relationships between England and Egypt, not to mention a delicate labour situation in Manchester district that could explode into widespread strikes with disastrous economic fall-out. The difficulties are rather compounded by Ryerson's admission that he was helping Zakhari dispose of the body but neither of them is able or willing to provide any reasonable explanations beyond insisting they are innocent of the actual shooting.
When Narraway sends Pitt hustling off to Alexandria to investigate Lovat's and Zakhari's pasts in more detail, Charlotte and their servant, Gracie, with the elegant assistance of Aunt Vespasia Cumming-Gould, look into a family matter on their own - the rather puzzling abrupt disappearance of a friend's brother. Perry's masterful and surprising resolution of these two separate investigations into a single case culminates in an explosive courtroom drama - the outcome of which may well determine the economic fate of much of the British Commonwealth.
As usual, Perry's delicious plotlines and superb story-telling are accompanied by a voluptuous description of Victorian life that would have made Dickens or Conan Doyle look to their laurels to see who was catching up - clothing, weather, ambience, smells, sights, manners, class attitudes and distinctions, accents - it's all there in an extraordinary wealth of minute detail! The real pièce de résistance for me came when I realized that the story is ripped right out of today's headlines and world situation. That it could just as easily have taken place in a modern New York or London courtroom made this novel just that much more exciting!
If you're a mystery lover, this is one you won't want to miss out on.
Paul Weiss