Not one but two unexpected journeys carry nursing Sister Bess Crawford far from whatever comfort zone she might imagine she still has.
When her mother receives an entreaty from Bess’ cousin Melinda to stop in at the home of Lady Beatrice Linton, the widowed employer of Melinda’s friend Lillian Taylor, to stand in for the nurse Lady Beatrice refuses to engage after the pending removal of her gallbladder, she suggests to Bess that the two of them combine the trip with a visit to Florence Dunstan, Bess’ friend in York. But Clarice Crawford has to drop out at the last minute, leaving Bess to travel alone to Yorkshire. First Lady Beatrice takes to her so strongly that she insists Bess stay on with her after her surgery; then Bess’ plans are upended even more completely by a terse telegram to Lady Beatrice: “Gordon had accident. Come at once.” Since the patient is still convalescing, Bess travels again, this time with Lillian, to Scarfdale, the home of Lady Beatrice’s godson. Gordon Neville has indeed been gravely injured in a fall from an outcropping, but his brother Arthur’s telegram has buried the lede: The same incident left the brothers’ childhood friend Lt. Frederick Caldwell dead. Deeply saddened but no longer traumatized by violence since her service in the Great War, Bess examines Frederick’s body and realizes that at least one of his wounds looks anything but accidental. It’s not long before she also realizes that she’s the only person who knows that Gordon’s alibi for a murder that soon follows won’t stand up. Fortunately, she brings both experience and expertise to the mystery, for murder is “rather like nursing in a way.”
As usual in this elegiac series, the heroine’s detective work is less important than the sad secrets it discloses.