5 Stars. Catherine Aird at her best. She grows on you. Her writing style is straightforward, not flowery, and she rarely digresses from the subject at hand. You can be sure that almost all, if not all of the narrative will, somehow, find resolution by the end of the novel. Aird is also a terrible tease. On more than one occasion, she has our central figure, the stoic Detective Inspector C.D. Sloan, hint to his pressuring but erratic boss, Superintendent Leeyes, or to his ambitious but young assistant, Detective Constable Crosby, that he can glimpse the outline of that resolution. I immediately said to myself, "You can? I can't!" The problem is that he offers no help to me, or to Leeyes and Crosby! Some will find Aird's style slow; it's an older type of murder mystery, but I enjoyed the read. It develops from what looks like a traffic accident. There's been a hit and run in the hamlet of Larking; the victim is the quiet Mrs. Grace Jenkins. She's a widow with a loving daughter, Henrietta, now almost 21. Problems develop when Dr. Dabbe, the pathologist at Berebury Hospital, questions the accident. And Henrietta's parentage too. Then who is she? I couldn't put it down. That's a five star novel. (March 2023)