Never having read the books of Paul Doherty, I was attracted at first by the splendid cover of the paperback which I bought. The background is a soft golden map of medieval London and in the middle of the cover there is an oval inset outlined in shiny gold. Inside the inset is a section of a church depicting the altar, screened wall and outline of an ornate door. Lying on the black and yellow paving stones are two bodies dressed in bright blue hose, one with a green jerkin, the other with red. The title is printed in embossed gold letters against a blue background, under which is a border of an ecclesiastical pattern frequently seen in church pews. A monk clad in a purple gown stands on the left hand side of the title, a skeleton on the right. Most intriguing!
Brother Athelstan, friar of St Erconwald's, is beset by problems - namely one monk missing and another dead and - once the altar stone is lifted in the church during restoration work - the skeleton of what appears to be a young woman.
Sir John Cranston, the King's Coroner and Brother A's friend, is invited to a banquet given at the Regent's Palace by John Of Gaunt, where he is trapped into a wager by a visiting dignitary. The wager is that he will - or will not - come up with a solution to a "locked room" murder mystery. Sir John is forced to accept, however, if he loses Sir John will pay a thousand gold crowns on his behalf, thereby binding him to John Of Gaunt forever. If he wins, he will gain the thousand gold crowns for himself.
Paul Doherty has presented the reader with an interesting cast of characters. At St Erconwald there is a delegation of two from the Inquisition, who are there to judge the young and ambitious Brother Henry's controversial treatise on God. Brother Athelstan is surrounded by his cat - Bonaventure and his old warhorse, Philomena - and a small group of lay brothers.
The story centres around two plots: Sir John's desperation for Brother A to come up with a solution to the locked room mystery, his fear of his tiny wife, Maude and love for his twin sons. The other is what turns out to be the murder of one Brother, the disappearance of the other and then... well, you need to read this excellent and thoroughly enjoyable mystery for yourself!
Doherty weaves three irresistible murder mysteries against a seething, colourful and sometimes brutal backdrop of medieval London, not the least of which is the young King Richard, who true nature flashes out from behind his boyish demeanour- a portent of things to come.