Elena Standish is sent to a most unlikely place to ferret out the killer of a fellow spy.
John Repton, who’d been active in MI6 during the Great War, had more or less retired by 1934. But the very last job he agreed to take on—secretly keeping an eye on Wyndham Hall in the Cotswolds—ended with the discovery of his body in a ditch nearby. Urgently needing to know what Repton had discovered and who’d shot him to death, Peter Howard sends Elena and James Allenby, two of his best, to Wyndham Hall to pretend they’re a couple while they ask discreet questions and gather evidence. It seems more and more likely that the motive for Repton’s murder was political. Sir David Wyndham has donated sizable sums to Oswald Mosley’s Blackshirts. His wife, Lady Griselda, is clearly more than just an acquaintance of Edward, Prince of Wales, and his mistress, Wallis Simpson. And now that Robert Hastings, the local MP who’s been spoken of as the next prime minister, has been accused by his aide, Timothy Rogers, of improper sexual advances that could put paid to his career, Lady Griselda has made it clear that she considers the pliant Chief Constable Algernon Miller the ideal replacement. What makes the assignment especially dicey for Elena is that Geoffrey Baden, David’s brother-in-law and the beau of Elena’s sister, Margot Driscoll, is another admirer of Mosley’s, and Elena correctly believes that Margot considers every indication her sister gives that she should proceed with extreme caution as a sign of Elena’s jealousy.
Perry, who died earlier this year, caps a well-upholstered tale of aristocratic murder with news of a surprising killer.