This novel opens in 1948, teeming with mystery, a fateful ending for someone, then moves between 1915 and 1938, times in the world, especially England, that are fraught with peril. In 1915, Josephine Tey spends a summer teaching at Charleston, a sprawling estate designed for horticultural training, perhaps for sustainability for England for the challenging years ahead. Years later, Tey is implicated by the press in a criminal act at Charleston; despite her responsibilities to her current theater production and the publication of her fourth novel, "The Franchise Affair," she commits herself to discovering the truth of that fateful summer in 1915. Launching this fourth detective novel, Peter Davies, the manager of the firm that published her novels, is quoted, " Josephine has us doubting in turn the victim and the victimized. One minute has central characters seem capable of almost anything; the next we are firmly on their side as they battle the poisonous atmosphere of small-town gossip." Indeed.
This is the eighth book in the series; I have only read a few and have not had any difficulties understanding Josephine Tey's background, characters from earlier novels, how they connect to Tey and each other because the author seamlessly provides details as she extends the complicated plot of this novel. By 1938 and 1948, Josephine Tey has successfully published novels and written plays. The author's deep research into Josephine Tey's professional life and her extreme privacy is reflected in the development of the plot and characters with unexpected turns, a most unexpected ending, all with the underpinning of a world disrespectful and prejudiced against women. The side trips with Tey's professional relationship with Alfred Hitchcock are a reminder of her extensive body of work.
There are scenes in this novel so shocking that I wondered how anyone could recover: the murder of a teenager, the complete destruction of property, and the bleach attack of a middle-aged woman, but they are the reflections of deep anger/misunderstanding/fear toward same-sex relationships in 1915...1938...1948...and today.
How complicated our lives are, at any age, the assumptions we make, the perceptions we hold on to. One of the things the author calls my attention to, through characters' introspection, is "What do I think?"..."What would I do?" Josephine, in 1915, a young woman experiencing a small town's visceral reaction to the death of a young woman and the relationship between the heads of the horticultural enterprise questions herself: was she strong enough to follow her heart?
Finally, one of the many quotes I loved: "If you can't be brave, at least be kind. Don't blame the person who loves you for what you can't face."