Impressive. This author is a master of keeping her clues hidden, especially in this baffling case... aside from the Contemporary Annoying Americanisms, this one is Perfect for those who love historical (Victorian) mysteries.
Imogen Chadwick went into the Gypsy camp to have her fortune told, for she wanted to be reassured that despite her abysmal life being married for duty and to a man she did not love and who did not love her... aside from being forced to live with a formidable mother~in~law and two sisters~in~law (one was like her and was her friend and the other one taunted and despised her bland personality), she would still have a long and happy life. She was told she would... and yet she ended up garroted dead inside an empty caravan. About that time, the tavern~owner's niece also disappeared. Were the two events connected? A conundrum that Lord Redmond and Inspector Haze had to sort out amid a roiling cauldron of paranoia and xenophobia against the annual exodus of the same Travelers into the village of Birch Hill because the murder happened in the Romanis' camp... ergo, they were guilty. The case would have been solved faster had Redmond been aware that his ward, escaping his assigned reading lessons, was wont to roam the woods with his friend, the gamekeeper's son... but it was what it was.
On a lighter and most happy note, Sarah Haze gave her husband a daughter and Redmond finally married his Katie.