‘There is no doubt that being accused of murder first thing in the morning, before breakfast and after only two pints of ale, is neither reassuring or relaxing.’
March 1557. Jack Blackjack is back in London and looking forward to a quieter life. He is now living in the parish of St Helen’s (avoiding jealous husbands is sometimes important), and while he’s hopeful of relaxing with wine and women, beer and women, and just women, life has other plans. In church, Miss Rachel Nailor catches his eye, and Jack would love to get to know her better. Unfortunately, a week later Rachel Nailor is found murdered on the floor of the church vestry, and Jack becomes a suspect.
‘Now I may be considered by some, and especially John Blount, to be less than a match for the brains of the average stone pillar, but that is because I conceal my intellect carefully.’
In addition to trying to find out who killed Rachel Nailor, Jack must avoid a few people (including a lover’s husband and a landlord to whom he owes a debt). Rachel Nailor was, like Jack himself, sympathetic to the Lady Elizabeth, sister of Queen Mary. Religious intolerance and unrest are part of the backdrop to this tale, and once again John Blount calls on Jack to investigate.
While on several levels this is a light read, Mr Jecks captures the tension created by the religious differences between Queen Mary and the Lady Elizabeth. Jack Blackjack, opportunist and fixer, fits right in. So, who did murder Rachel Nailor, and why?
This is the eighth novel in Mr Jecks’s Bloody Mary Tudor Mystery series and while I have only read a few of them, I feel like I’ve known Jack forever. Or, perhaps, I met one of his descendants in my younger days. Hmm.
If you enjoy historical crime fiction with a rogue hero, you may enjoy this. I did.
Note: My thanks to NetGalley and Severn House for providing me with a free electronic copy of this book for review purposes.
Jennifer Cameron-Smith