After dealing summarily with an unwanted sexual advance by her boss, Simeon Pemberton, Harriet “Harry” White is reassigned to the mailroom at the London bank she works at. The manager of the mailroom, Mr. Babbage, thinks it is no place for a woman so he finds her a quiet office and sets her on her new assignment: answer the ever-incoming letters that arrive at the bank, which are addressed to Mr. Sherlock Holmes. The bank occupies a large enough portion of Baker street to encompass multiple addresses, including 221, and people's letters requesting assistance from Sherlock Holmes arrive at the bank, , where Mr. Babbage has let them pile up.
Harry begins reading, and crafts a standard reply, indicating Mr Holmes can not help them as he is retired. Most of the inquiries are inconsequential, but one strikes Harry as more important and urgent. A young woman, Esme Longstaff, is seeking Holmes’ help locating her older sister Miriam, who went to London for work, then was dismissed for theft (which she vehemently denied) from her maid position, then she disappeared.
Harry decides to visit the Longstaffs, who live in the village near her wealthy family’s estate. Pretending to be Sherlock’s secretary R.K. Moss, Harry gets relevant details, then tries to find Miriam; she instead stumbles upon a violent female shoplifting gang, with whom she thinks Miriam has thrown in. Except it turns out there is much more going on with the situation. Though not a detective, Harry she digs up more than she or her sort of crush Oliver (lawyer and her older brother’s friend) ever expected. Her eyes are opened to the very different lives of those less fortunate than herself, and she’s determined to deal, more conclusively, eventually, with her former boss. And, to keep on helping others.
This was so much more entertaining than I expected. Harry is smart, resourceful, and not willing to while away her days in idle pursuits, or give in to her mother's relentless matchmaking. Harry willingness to transform what her awful boss thought would cow her into an interesting and challenging activity shows a great attitude, intelligence, and determination.
Her first case sees her assuming disguises, trying on accents, and running around London neighbourhoods that would terrify and shock her family, occasionally making mistakes, but finding a way to take charge of her life and help others. Harry's a lot of fun, and I hope there are more mysteries in store for this plucky protagonist.
Thank you to Netgalley and to Boldwood Books for this ARC in exchange for my review.