Once again Heley has written a very good whodunit, with a unique and clever plot.
Bea Abbott is a very admirable and yet very human heroine who - as most sleuths do - has a keen sense of observation combined with a gift for examining possibilities.
The series was written a number of years ago but does not seem dated.
I do find the scenario, as is so often the case with fiction, that almost one has a family and when they do it is usually extremely dysfunctional, to be rather depressing. Surely there are people who come from wholesome settings who become involved in and solve crimes too?
But Bea took two forlorn young people under her wing at the beginning of this series, and they have become near and dear, affectionately calling her, "mother hen."
In greater or lesser degrees they play a part in all of the problems that come Bea's way.
This time it is reluctantly getting involved in the problems of a very wealthy family who own a business her own son is pressuring her to partner with. Who knew the timid and abused wife of the man who currently runs this business, due to the fake diamond she wears as a wedding ring, would get Bea involved in physical abuse, fraud, and eventually the cold blooded murder of three family members?