Pages
217
Year
2011
Language
English

About

Things are not what they seem in fashionable Rutland Place, where secrets that are never discussed at tea include murder   When her mother asks her help in finding a lost locket with a compromising picture, neither Charlotte Pitt, nor her mother, has any idea that the locket may be at the center of a bizarre chain of events leading to murder. Arriving at her mother's home at Rutland Place, Charlotte discovers that other residents of the exclusive neighborhood have also suffered similar small thefts. It all appears quite mild as crimes go-a light-fingered servant, perhaps. That is, until Mina Spencer-Brown, a woman known for her prying, is poisoned and dies. Inspector Thomas Pitt quickly surmises that Mina's snooping might have led to her murder, but what secrets had she stumbled upon? And whose?    As Pitt patiently struggles to break down the protective silence of high-born neighbors, Charlotte works behind the closed doors of society's drawing rooms to help unravel a mystery that reveals sordid secrets and the chilling, dark corners of human behavior.

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Reviews

"The period detail remains fascinating, and [Anne Perry's] grasp of Victorian character and conscience still astonishes."
The San Diego Union-Tribune
"When Anne Perry puts Thomas and Charlotte Pitt on the case, we are in exemplary Victorian company."
The New York Times
"When it comes to the Victorian mystery, Anne Perry has proved that nobody does it better."
The San Diego Union-Tribune

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