If one enjoys reading mysteries set in Victorian England, this is a wonderful series to try. They do not have to be read in order, as there is enough information about the regular characters included in each episode to help the reader know them. There are several things I especially enjoy about this mystery and series. The mysteries are not easily solved despite the clever detective, constables, and informers. The regular characters are mostly engaging and wise people. There are corresponding pieces of history that are relevant to the era.
Mrs. Jeffries is the housekeeper in the home of Inspector Gerald Witherspoon. She is a wise and hardworking woman who works well with the rest of the staff. They are like their own little family, since many have no blood relatives.
Inspector Witherspoon has the best homicide solve rate in the area, with the help of his associate, Constable Barnes. His nemesis, Inspector Nivens, is reduced to working in the records room due to his previous behaviors, and he wants to get Witherspoon in trouble So Bad that I picture him as a caricature or a cartoon villain.
Witherspoon and Barnes get sent to an archery club where, until a terrible storm interrupted it, competitions were being held for the season. During a very brief break in the rain, a former member, Jeremy Marks, was seen at the targets, looking closely at the ground with the aid of a lantern. Marks is notorious as a cheater (which got him kicked out the club), a man who one wouldn’t want to go into business with or be engaged or married to. Most haven’t heard yet, but his fiancée had just broken up with him before the women’s competition. A couple men waiting for the competition to resume are out on the back porch, watching and discussing what Marks might be looking for. One second he was bent over, and seconds later, he was lying on the ground, dead, felled by a couple well-aimed arrows. They had been unable to see what happened as it was still dark with heavy clouds.
Thus begins a confounding investigation to catch the killer of a man who will not be missed by anybody. Mrs. Jeffries, the servants of the estate, and even Witherspoon’s special lady friend are ready to help the inspector find whodunit, of which he is totally unaware. There is a network of people who will help collect intel to discuss with Mrs. Jeffries. She puts it together with what Witherspoon tells her of the case, and gives the information to Constable Barnes the next morning when he picks up the Inspector. If the process works, as it has many times before, the man they respectfully refer to as “our inspector” will soon have another case solved.
I truly enjoyed this novel, and was certainly surprised at the ending. I had looked at the vast number of suspects (ex-lady friends, former business partners, and vendors), and didn’t have a pet suspect, so I watched the inspector’s loyal staff and what they learned from their informers. This is one of my favorite historical mystery series of the time and setting, and I highly recommend it to those who appreciate well written cozy/ historical mysteries set in London with interesting and intelligent characters, startling plot twists, and a bit of humor throughout.