A masquerade ball, an impostor, a murder, a hunt, and a story from the past gives Emily and her associates a new case to solve. It was an interesting situation in which the murder was the less important of mysteries to solve.
This is the ninth installment in the series. I suppose it could be read out of order in a pinch, but the regular characters and their situations make better sense read in series order.
The story opens with Emily and Colin attending a masquerade ball for Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee. An impostor is unmasked as not the eccentric lady explorer, Estella Lamar. Later the impostor is killed. Colin is given the authority to investigate the murder and Emily helps, but all the while Emily and her friend Cecilie worry about the real Estella Lamar. Nobody has seen her in years as she travels the world. The murder has to tie-in somehow so the Hargreaves, Cecilie and Emily's friend Jeremy all work together to follow the trail of hearsay, old clues, and a mysterious red-haired man to get to the bottom of things.
The book engaged me and I enjoyed it, but I will admit that the tension and suspense were toned down. It was like a previous book in that there were two stories going on every other chapter. There was the murder mystery in Emily's day and a past story thread with Estella Lamar. Both were equally engaging and left me wondering how the past shaped the present.
As I said, the murder was actually not the dominant focus. That's actually not too tough to solve. It's the situation with the real Estella that is the true conundrum. Is she alive? Is she dead? Is she alive, but living in captivity? It was hard to say and I enjoyed the twisty path that led to the truth.
In the end, it was a pleasure as always to immerse myself in a Lady Emily mystery. I didn't feel the tighter suspense of the earlier stories, but it was still a good mystery nonetheless. Historical mystery fans who enjoy authenticity in their backgrounds and settings and well drawn characters should give these a try.