Number 12 in the Cherringham series of cozy mysteries.
Okay, Messrs Costello and Richards, j’accuse – you have violated The Mystery Readers’ Bill of Rights. At the beginning of this story, when the events leading up to the crime at the heart of the mystery are being narrated, you say:
But with the window being rolled down, and seeing the man’s face catching the glare of the headlights bouncing off her dress, she realized she knew him, recognised him from the village.
Didn’t actually know him by name; but someone she saw in the shops, or at church on the big holidays.
This statement is repeatedly contradicted throughout the remainder of the story. Now, I understand and enjoy the use of red herrings and unreliable narrators, but this is obviously just a continuity error. It’s as if you forgot you had said it, and changed your story as you progressed.
For shame!