The wheel of life comes full circle for Crispin Guest in the last of his great adventures.
Guest lost his fortune and knighthood to an accusation of treason when he chose to stand with the Duke of Lancaster after having sworn fealty to 10-year-old King Richard. He escaped with his life but was forced to reinvent himself as the Tracker of London, a medieval private eye with a specialty in holy relics. Now that Lancaster is dead and his exiled son, Henry Bolingbroke, has returned to England, Guest’s thoughts constantly turn to him, but first he has several murders to solve. St. Frideswide is a priory whose modest numbers have been recently reduced by one natural death and two murders. The prioress, refusing to involve the civil authorities, hires Guest, who’s just realized that the murders have been staged to mimic some of the seven deadly sins when another victim dies almost before his eyes. The very short list of suspects includes the one-armed caretaker and the priest Father Holbrok. Limited in what he and Jack Tucker, his devoted longtime apprentice, can accomplish, Guest sends for Philippa Walcote, the woman he loves, who’s married to another man, and her son, whose looks identify him as Guest’s. Beneath the priory’s calm surface they discover a seething mass of jealousy and deceit that will eventually lead to a killer. But it’s the arrival of Henry that changes Guest’s life forever.
Readers who have followed Guest through 14 mysteries will be sad to see him go but pleased with his ultimate fate.