Brought together by murder, Lady Worthing and her neighbor Stapleton Henderson are once again involved in a case that may prove the death of them.
Abigail Carrington Monroe, Lady Worthing—a half-Jamaican, half-Scottish aristocrat of mixed race—ardently hopes for the abolition of slavery in Britain. She and her cousin Florentina are attempting to cross London to spend Christmas with the Jamaican side of her family when their plans are almost derailed by a major snowstorm. Stapleton, her neighbor and partner in crime-solving, offers to take them in his sturdy carriage providing he can make a stop first in Berkeley Square to beg off a dinner party he was happy to get out of attending. But when they arrive at the home of Lord Duncan, they find the body of barrister Benjamin Brooks covered in blood and snow on a nearby bench. As the storm rages, everyone is forced to stay at Lord Duncan’s dinner party, which he calls the Night of Regrets. No love is lost among the guests, who go one by one to their deaths, with Brooks followed by Duncan’s valet, a Black man named Peters. The deaths seem to follow the events in “The Rebel’s Rhyme,” a West Indian poem, part of which was on Stapleton’s invitation to the dinner. Even though they’re threatened, the men are unimpressed by Abigail’s reputation as a sleuth, and solving a series of murders may turn out to be simple compared to managing her personal life. Her seldom-seen husband has written suggesting that she have an affair and a child, and her feelings for Stapleton, a former Navy physician, are fanning the flames. Each death is different and few of the suspects have alibis. Who will remain alive when the poem is completed?
Lovers of Agatha Christie will find this puzzle both disturbing and delightful.