With nine books down, this series is still going strong. The partnership between Rafferty and Llewellyn remains fresh, funny and insightful. The series has tackled many relevant issues. Though other books have alluded to religion and the effect your childhood upbringing has on you as an adult, this one takes the issue head on. No matter your personal beliefs, Ms Evans shows there is room for us all.
Life is good for Rafferty. He and Abra, Llewellyn’s cousin, had been living together for the last six months. Other than the odd nag from his mother to marry the girl, home life was grand. Until he gets a blackmail letter in the mail.
It alludes to the time before he met Abra when he borrowed his cousin’s identity and joined a dating service. Since it was all over before the two met, he never told her about anything that happened then, or about the murder case that ensued. The letter threatens to blab to Rafferty’s superior, something that would have disastrous effects, and would lead to Abra finding out all about it. Oddly the blackmailer makes no demands, just threats.
Of all the worst times, the same morning he recieves the letter, he also gets a new murder case. A nun in an enclosed monastery stumbled over a body buried in a shallow grave on the grounds. As a faithfully lapsed Catholic, Rafferty had as little to do with the church as possible. He thought himself passed his quota of nuns for a lifetime after parochial school.
Investigating a murder among the nuns and being blackmailed has Rafferty’s nerves and conscience in turmoil. Can the detective and his sergeant solve this baffling case while Rafferty tries to outsmart his blackmailer?
I was gifted the boxset containing this novel and am voluntarily leaving a review.