I received a copy of this novel from BookSprout and this is my freely given opinion.
I do enjoy a historical mystery and this definitely caught and held my interest.
Samantha Kingston is an orphaned young woman in Victorian England, under the guardianship of her uncle, Sir Arthur, a baron married to her aunt. Samantha has been living with them for many years and it does not sound like it was a happy home for her. Sir Arthur is domineering, sounds abusive to her and her aunt, and has estranged his own son. He is manipulating Samantha for his own purposes, as she is in her second Season, and maybe trying to steer her towards a marriage of greatest advantage to him.
In the meantime, he has also been on the receiving end of what appear to be blackmail notes that he dismisses, but they make Samantha curious and nervous. One night, this comes to a head, and two people break into their home, when Samantha was home alone except for some servants, and appear to have been there to kidnap her. She managed to thwart the kidnappers by hiding away. Sir Arthur hatches a plan to trap the kidnappers, involving sending the servants to their country home, and hiding his wife, himself, and Samantha in a townhouse in London, under assumed names. This plan goes awry and they are found, and Sir Arthur, his wife, and the housekeeper are murdered; Samantha barely manages to escape, and turns back to find out what happened, and finds the bodies of her relatives, and is caught, literally red-handed by the police. They immediately suspect her, and she is fearful of of what will happen to her, and runs away.
She finds out she has no one she can turn to, and ends up turning to the streets to survive. Eventually she meets up with V. T. Wyatt, a younger son of an aristocrat who has turned to private investigation as a way of making his way in life. Despite her fallen circumstances and new way of life to survive, he recognizes that Samantha is a gently raised lady. He eventually offers his help, though she does not initially trust him with her true story.
This story had me quite interested and engaged. I quite liked the characters and their interactions, and the strength and wily intelligence shown by Samantha when she ended up running and taking to the streets; also her gumption. There were some tangents to the story that I felt ended rather abruptly or did not lend to the overall story other than to add atmosphere, perhaps, such as her day working in the pub or the fight with the drunk men, over their abuse of a wife, that lead to her black eye - but they were interesting and perhaps served to demonstrate her growth in personal strength and fortitude. There was interesting dialogue, such as between Wyatt and Samantha, his cousin, and friend Lord Aston, that served to also help lighten the atmosphere. There were some interesting twists also in relationships and the underlying murder and subsequent crimes. I enjoyed the developing trust, relationship, and respect between Wyatt and Samantha as well. There was also an abrupt ending between the relationship between Samantha and the woman who essentially helped give her a save place to sleep and some help on how to survive on the streets - once Samantha accepts Wyatt's help, there is no further contact with her, Annie, and that was a loose thread in my mind. There was also no resolution to the relationship between Wyatt and Samantha in the end, so that leads me to wonder if this is the start of a series.
If it is not, then I would have to say that the end of the novel, in terms of the relationship between Wyatt and Samantha was very unsatisfactory. But the development and resolution of the underlying mystery and Samantha's plight was intriguing and I enjoyed that story very much.
3.75 stars out of 5.