The second book in Deborah Crombie's series about Scotland Yard's Detective Superintendent Duncan Kincaid and Sergeant Gemma James is even better than the first book!
This book is better to me than the first because we learn even more about what makes both Duncan and Gemma tick.
It begins when Duncan's 49 year old neighbor, lung cancer victim, Jasmine Dent, is found dead by Duncan and a visiting nurse he helps pick the lock for when Jasmine fails to open the door. At first, it might be easily written off as a cancer death. Jasmine was, in fact, dying and the surgeries and chemos had not worked for her. She had put off seeing about her nagging cough and the cancer had been caught late. But it was not the cancer that killed her.
On the other hand, a former co-worker, Meg Bellamy shows up while Duncan and the nurse Felicity Howarth are still there, having been on her way for a visit to Jasmine and carrying a sack of food when she saw an ambulance drive away with the body. Meg explains that Jasmine has asked her to be there with her while she took an overdose of all of the morphine she had in the house so she wouldn't die alone so suddenly it looks like a suicide. Only it was not a suicide. Jasmine told Meg just the day before that she had changed her mind.
If not for Duncan's intervention, this murder would have slipped by unnoticed but Duncan was a good friend and not willing to let it slide so he forces an investigation and begins working with Gemma to see it through.
There are quite a few suspects:
(1) Meg, who lives in a tiny bedsitter apartment stands to inherit almost everything from Jasmine. Did she do it to get free of her sad little life of poverty?
(2) Theo is Jasmine's younger brother. their mother died at his birth and from age 5 on, Jasmine has cared for her brother. He is a quiet man who loves old movies and has never been able to succeed at anything involving business sense. Did he kill her hoping to inherit enough to save his shop?
(3) The Major served in India when Jasmine's father was a civil servant there, the very civil servant whose incompetence led to his wife and child dying in a riot. He has been quietly friendly with Jasmine but never got over the loss of wife and child. Are the sins of the father being taken out on the daughter? And was the major REALLY sick when he left choir rehearsal early the night Jasmine died?
(4) Roger- why did this good looking but completely vile young man take up with plain little Meg at the pub instead of her gorgeous co-worker? Why is he leaching off Meg and telling his mates he is going to come into money? Why was he angry and storm off when Meg told him Jasmine had changed her mind about suicide?
(5) Felicity is a private duty nurse who specializes in cancer patients and the dying. Just why did she choose Jasmine as a patient and just why is it that instead of comforting her, she has harshly scared the woman with stories of how the cancer will make her suffer.
There are also people locked away in creepy mental hospitals, little old ladies, and a victim of an act of long ago child abuse who hold keys to the mystery. It couldn't be suicide- all of the morphine given to Jasmine is still accounted for in the fridge and there were no empty bottles left anywhere. Jasmine could not manage to even walk the steps to go out let alone get rid of the bottles. It is murder and Duncan will search out the guilty party.
I like how we got to see and learn a lot more about Gemma James. I like this woman. She is a young rising cop who is the single mom of a toddler son named Toby and in this book, her ex (who ran off on her and Toby after the baby's birth) has really disappeared now- quit his job and left where he lived- so she is getting no child support but is stuck paying for the high mortgage on the house he saddled her with along with day care costs for Toby. I liked seeing how Duncan was so sympathetic to her plight. That, along with his compassion for Jasmine and others, and his actions with Jasmine's cat Sidhi, show what a kind, loving man he is. I am a little in love with both him and Gemma!
For those of you, like myself, who love and rescue animals, you will probably feel some anxiety when Jasmine dies and her black cat Sidhi is left behind. The cat was a love of her life and wonderful companion but in books, the cat is often tossed out on its own or taken to animal control where they are killed. Though at first no one wants the cat- don't like cats, are allergic to cats,not allowed to have a cat where they live, going to prison for murder (!!!), I must report that Duncan Kincaid made sure to feed the cat, change the litter box, give water, and even leave the lights on for the kitty daily. And in the end, I am delighted at the very good home Sid goes to. Bravo to Deborah Crombie (who has 3 cats and a German shepherd of her own) for including Sidhi's care and fate in this book in a highly responsible and satisfying way. I love people who are good to animals!!!