A period mystery set in 1930's Chicago among the glitz and glamour of radio dramas and just after Capone is dethroned from power and jailed. Not a genre I usually go for but the book's back blurg snagged my attention. Good thing, too, as this was a page-turner of a mystery. It was well-thought-out with full-bodied characters, vivid imagery, and enough twists and turns, blind alleys and dead ends that the ending was a total surprise!
On the evening of her mother's annual Christmas party, Vivian Witchell discovers a key hidden in a picture frame holding an old ornament she made. Finding it opens her deceased father's long-locked desk drawer, she's even more startled to uncover an envelope full of cash accompanied by a threatening note. Then...the envelope goes missing, she finds another threatening message in the drawer, and a second key. Befuddled, wanting advice and answers, and not sure whom she can trust she goes to Charlie Haverman private eye. Hiring him, despite his discouragement that she pursue this, to find out why her father had an envelope of cash and who might have been threatening him and why.
As they explore leads, she is reawakened to her attraction to Charlie. But there is an obstacle, a big one, to forming a relationship with him. In two words...her career. Her career as a radio drama personality is finally flourishing with talks of ad campaigns and even moving to Hollywood. Plus, as part of her contract, she is in a "relationship" with her on-air costar on The Darkness Knows, Graham Yarborough. Even though it is for publicity only, she is concerned what will happen both for the show and her career if she breaks things off with Graham and pursues Charlie.
As we wind down the path of clues Vivian is followed, her house is broken into and ransacked, a friend is pushed in front of a trolley, and everyone is suspect. This trail of shocking revelations, lying friends, and disturbing events leads up to a stunning conclusion and a bang of a start to 1939.