A Cursed Inheritance by Kate Ellis
This is the ninth book in the Wesley Peterson mystery series set in Devon, a series that I'm gradually making my way through. Wesley is a senior police officer in Devon, England. He has a degree in archeology and is also Black. All of these things bring a unique aspect to his cases.
Here, there is a new case of a freelance journalist who is found dead in the river. Luckily, he hadn't been in the water a long time, so once they identify the body they are quickly looking into what he was doing in the area and what may have led to his death. At the same time, a case where a man has been serving time for years is reopened after a woman who has been living abroad since the crime gives him an alibi. As the police take another look at the evidence and case notes, they must ask themselves why the previous investigation didn't get it right.
The journalist had been looking at a crime from 1985 where nearly the whole Harford family and their staff at their sixteenth century house, Potwoolstan Hall, had been killed. At the time, it was determined that the young housekeeper had killed everyone and then herself. The police have to ask themselves whether maybe this case was solved with too little questions being asked as well, given that the journalist is also now dead. The house has been transformed into a wellness center offering lodging and treatment for guests willing to spend the high fees for the New Age treatments on offer.
Wesley's archeologist friend Neil Watson is part of an exchange program, where he is off to Virginia in the United States to visit a dig there at a settlement founded by people who took a ship from this area of Devon centuries before, including one member of the original family of Potwoolstan Hall. Neil also has a personal task he has been given by a family member.
As some of these cases converge and the historical dig gives uncovers interesting information about some deaths back then, we can see elements of similarity in some of the stories.
I enjoy seeing Wesley's personal life as well, here with his wife Pam in the later stages of her second pregnancy, which is putting stress on their relationship as well.

No comments:
Post a Comment