Though this is considered a novel in the Second Sons Agency series, the investigating agency doesn’t appear very prominently in this story. A very exciting novel and an indictment of the Victorian treatment of women at the same time.
Lots of rose lore available, written in through explanation by the experts Charles visits and his investigations as he sorts through suspects and his frustration as he always comes back to only one—his uncle—is relayed quite convincingly. His loyalty to the man who’s a relative as well as his determination that justice will be carried out, even if it means turning his uncle over to the police, keep the story moving quite speedily. Though the romance is a secondary plot to that of finding the killer, it’s no less frustrating to both the characters and to the reader. Ariadne’s father signed a marriage contract between her and the man who offered the money to save his business. Though Ariadne is a rose expert in her own right, she’s ignored because she’s a woman, considered too weak-minded to run a business, indeed to draw a breath without a man to tell her to inhale. Charles is very proper in that he doesn’t wish to poach on another man’s territory but the more time he spends in her company, the more he knows that he loves.
There’s plenty of changes of scenery, plenty of action, and a couple of surprises and twists along the way. It’s an exciting mystery, a sweet love story, and a compendium of rose information all in one.