In this, number 18 in the series, Thea and her family are getting ready for Christmas. She is concerned about a friend, Ant Frowse, who lives nearby. The Frowse family live in a tied cottage on land now owned by hostile landlords. The harassment, intended to Induce them to leave, has worsened since the landlord's marriage to Carla, a Russian woman with three daughters, two of whom have arrived for Christmas and who are now menacing Ant and his father. Meanwhile, his mother has gone off for an unspecified reason just before Christmas, and his only reassurance that she is safe is a fragmentary phone call while she was on a low battery, cut off just as she was saying something that alarmed him. Her departure may be connected with a row with the landlord who accused her of intercepting a parcel containing a valuable gold necklace, a present for Carla. Then a body is found in suspicious circumstances, drawing suspicion on the Frowse family.
As usual, Thea wants to be involved, something her family, especially husband Drew, resists. He has his own problems when his estranged mother contacts him the day before Christmas Eve to tell him his father just died and she wants him to visit on Christmas Eve.
The story was rather slow moving and a bit repetitive, especially Ant continually fretting about his mum and her cryptic phone call. However, there’s a nicely portrayed family dynamic with his father being infuriatingly obtuse and cryptic himself, for good reason as it later transpires. I wasn't quite convinced by the denouement, but despite the tensions in Thea's marriage it was nice to see her developing a good relationship with her smart and precocious stepdaughter. Drew continues to irritate a bit: he used to involve himself in crime-solving in the original West Country series that merged with this one but has now become a bit of an old fogey. I did find it a bit incredible that the (offscreen) Detective Chief Inspector rang Thea to appraise her of developments, and it was a little unsatisfying that the mystery is solved by another character, not Thea.
On balance I would rate this at 2.5 stars, rounded up to 3.