Veronica Heley shows her talent with this mystery series featuring heroine widow Bea Abbot. After finishing this, the third one, the primary characters have maintained the personalities that were presented in the first, and each scenario and plot is fresh and original each time.
Bea is slowly recovering from the death of her beloved husband. She is a born leader and manager as an attractive 60 something. She has decided to continue to run the agency she and Hamilton had built up that provided a comfortable living for themselves. Assisting her and shaping up quite well under a boss who brings out the best in each of them are two unlikely young people, Maggie and Oliver.
Once again in A False Step, an agency that is supposed to provide clients with housekeeping, catering, and other domestic needs, finds itself in a crisis situation. A relied upon housekeeping service comes upon the dead body of their client lying in his bedroom when they show up one morning, and in a panic they dump the entire situation on Bea.
Was it suicide? Maybe. But some things bother Bea about this situation, and she is a very observant person.
Why is the step-daughter so anxious to had a hurried funeral that excludes all of this popular man's many friends and close associates, for one thing.
In the chaos of personal and professional life, Bea Abbot is beginning to seek the council and assistance of the God her husband was devoted to, and finding out prayers do work.
My only criticism with Heley's books are that they seldom feature any well adjusted family members. Everyone seems to have made horrible personal decisions or come from extremely dysfunctional family situations. And once again, as is the case in so many fiction stories, the slate is swept clean of too much family. I wonder how Britain could have such a teeming population if almost everyone was an only child!