The good old days weren’t good for everyone.
Although she grew up with wealth, Elizabeth Wilkens needed her father and his loving servants to shield her from her cold mother. When her first husband was killed on the last day of World War I, the shock caused her to miscarry. In 1926, she’s begun a new married life with attorney Fred Wilkins. While they await the completion of their new home in Oak Park, Illinois, Elizabeth enjoys the support of Fred’s Aunt Lucy, whose broken arm doesn’t prevent her from giving cooking lessons. Fred, meanwhile, is defending prickly Caroline Dobbs, who’s suspected of murdering her own aunt, with whom she often quarreled. The gossipy neighbor who discovered Aunt Agatha near death is convinced that Caroline is guilty, but Fred’s instincts tell him otherwise. Elizabeth, who hates injustice, is determined to help. Although her habit of keeping people at arm’s length has left her with few friends, she decides to join the Nineteenth Century Woman’s Club, whose members have power in the community. Agatha, who owned a valuable farm, was a miser living in deplorable conditions, and Elizabeth is appalled when she sees her home and Caroline’s, which is even worse. Inheriting Agatha’s property gives Caroline a strong motive, but Elizabeth, unsatisfied, keeps digging into her family’s past with help from new friends, Al Capone’s minions, and family servants whom she’s dismayed to realize have to be careful, as “colored people,” not to get too involved.
An enjoyable period mystery that highlights the bigotry and class differences that are still with us.