A second case takes genius detective Lillian Pentecost and her sidekick, Willowjean Parker, from Brooklyn to Stoppard, Virginia, where Willow’s reunion with the circus that once took her in is provoked by murder.
Time was every kid dreamed of running away to join the big top, but Willow actually did it, escaping her abusive family to make a new home with Hart & Halloway’s Traveling Circus and Sideshow. It’s been four years since she bade the troupe farewell, but she still has fond memories of them in 1946, when a telegram from owner/ringmaster Big Bob Halloway asks her boss to come investigate the stabbing of Ruby Donner, the Amazing Tattooed Woman. It’s a pleasure for Willow to rekindle her ties with Maeve Bailey, the All-Seeing Madame Fortuna, and Frieda, the Impossible Rubber Band Girl, who was more than a friend to Willow back then. But she’s not happy to make the acquaintance of the Amazing Annabelle, the ambitious new assistant to Nedley Johnson, the Great Mysterio, or to regard any of her old friends as suspects, or especially to hear that Stoppard Police Chief Thomas Whiddle has arrested her old mentor, knife-thrower Valentin Kalishenko, who supplied the weapon someone stuck in Ruby’s back. Lillian, who has a glass eye and multiple sclerosis, pieces together some unlikely clues—the recent decease of the boa constrictor Bertha in Ray Nance’s House of Venomous Things, the persistent hints of heroin, the unexpected subject of Ruby’s very first tattoo—to produce a surprising solution.
Rich circus atmosphere and a satisfying puzzle.