A letter to a Victorian advice columnist introduces a clever young woman to murder.
“Dear Miss Hermione” is just Aunt Adelia to Violet Manville, a practical bluestocking whose younger half sister Sephora’s nose is always in the clouds. The two girls have lived with Adelia since their father died. Now, leaving London for a trip to the Continent, Adelia puts Violet in charge of writing her column, confident that her niece's common sense and adventurous spirit make her perfect for the job. While Sephora busies herself falling for a dashing, mysterious man, Violet struggles to reply to a letter from a recently married woman uneasy in her role and fearful that someone’s trying to kill her. Although the letter is unsigned, Violet hopes to identify the correspondent. With the help of Bunty, their knowledgeable housekeeper, she discovers that the writer’s name may be Ivy and that she probably lives in the Essex village of Willingdale. Newspaper clippings enclosed with the letter concern a vicar, a doctor, a lady, and a member of the gentry. They all seem like unlikely murderers, but Violet sets off for Willingdale to investigate. She arrives just in time for the funeral of Ivy Clague Armstrong, who supposedly fell off a bridge and drowned. Pretending to be an old schoolmate, Violet inserts herself into the group of Ivy’s friends and soon concludes that she was murdered. As Sephora grieves when her new love vanishes from London, Violet learns a great deal about Ivy’s life, including her mother’s rumored madness. A series of surprising revelations leads to a shocking conclusion.
The first in a series steeped in Victorian mores offers a dashing heroine and an impressive pile of red herrings.