The Deadly Dispute by Amanda Hampson
Synopsis /
1967: Hazel’s new job at the docks quickly turns perilous when she stumbles into the criminal underworld that lurks beneath the surface. A million in gold coins has vanished from a cargo ship and a dead body washed up. Suddenly, she’s in over her head.
Disillusioned with her life, Betty is led astray by a charismatic new friend and finds herself exposed in more ways than one – until a crisis drags her back to reality.
Living in a high-class brothel, Irene gets wind of a threat that could destroy her livelihood. She takes on the Maltese mafia and becomes involved in a dangerously sticky situation.
When one of the tea ladies disappears, they face their greatest challenge yet, pushing their detective skills to the limit. It will take more than a glass of Hazel’s homemade wine to solve this one.
My Thoughts /
It's been a while, but I'm excited to be back and reunited with The Tea Ladies. I'm dead keen to see what these girls have been up to.
This is book #3 in Aussie author, Amanda Hampson's hugely entertaining series titled (as if you couldn't guess) 'The Tea Ladies'. Now these ladies are a group of entirely mismatched individuals whose personalities couldn't be any more different, but the one thing they all have in common is that they are all card carrying members of the Tea Ladies Guild. They were known as trusted confidants who delivered refreshments via a tea trolley. The other thing you will come to learn very quickly is that the tea ladies must never be underestimated!
Set in 1967 Sydney, Australia - the main stalwarts in the Guild are Hazel Bates, Irene Turnbuckle, Betty Dewsnap and Merl Perlman. In book #2 there was trouble brewing within the walls of Empire Fashionwear, where an interloper threatened not just Hazel's job but the very role of tea lady. In book #3 it's revealed that Hazel has lost that fight - to a machine. A machine that dolls out dollops of coffee dust, milk powder and hot water with nary a thought to how your day is going. It doesn't care whether you had a fight with your long-suffering significant other, or whether 'her-next-door's' roses which won first prize in the local gardening competition are nothing compared to yours - it's only job is to make coffee, not conversation. For Hazel, being out of work has had its perks, but it doesn't fix her leaky roof, so when she was offered a job as a tea lady for the Dockworkers Union by her childhood friend Rex Shepperton, Hazel couldn't say no.
While the wharves aren't the safest of places to frequent, Hazel thinks if she keeps her head down and sticks to making tea she'll avoid trouble. But her new job quickly turns perilous when, on her first day at the docks, Hazel witnesses a dead body being hauled out of the harbour. Then she is asked by a woman to help find her missing son who was last seen working the wharves. Unknowingly to Hazel, Mrs Fletcher's son, Cliff has gotten in deep with the criminal underworld by helping them smuggle Krugerrand into the country. But alas, the gold coins, worth in excess of one million dollars, go missing – and so does Cliff. Hazel's natural curiosity and "eagle-eyed" observation skills quickly pull her into the mystery surrounding the stolen gold coins (Krugerrands) and union corruption.
If Hazel's dilemma isn't enough to stew your tea; Irene decides to go 'toe-to-toe with the Maltese mafia after her employer's brothel is targeted. Betty meanwhile has some new-found friends whose artistic endeavours leave her somewhat embarrassed. And back over at Empire Fashionwear, Pixie, granddaughter of the owner and founder of Empire Fashionwear, undergoes a significant transformation as she steps away from her family's shadow to open her own boutique.
With themes of Female Empowerment and "Invisible" Agency: This series highlights how older women in service roles—often overlooked by society—use their "invisible" status to gather information and solve crimes that police ignore. Hampson writes characters that challenge the stereotypes of "doddery" older women. The tea ladies' friendship is presented as a vital support system that provides not just investigative collaboration but emotional security during a time of great personal and societal upheaval. Long may they reign.