A murder at Old Harbor Friends, a Quaker boarding school, leaves both staff and students horrified. Though the victim was odious, such violence flies in the face of the values taught by the school. Bess Dore tries to restore calm to her charges while also unwittingly becoming the go-between for the police and a private detective hired by the school.
There was so much to unpack with this story, perhaps too much. I lost track of the countless relationships, affairs, and rivalries that comprised the dynamic of the school's adult population. This was not the happy campus that Bess, the main character, insisted it was. If my children were enrolled at Old Harbor Friends when all the goings-on came to light, I'd have withdrawn them from its "care".
Moving from the school to the detectives, I found that neither side won my favour. The police officer in charge of the case was needlessly irascible and uncouth. The private investigator sent up red flags with his oh-so-smooth behaviour. The main character seemingly adored them both - in different ways - but I could not share her opinion. After the conclusion of the case, I would have sent the two of them on their way.
For me, the whole work moved glacially. There was far too much description for a story that needed a snappier pace. Rather than intriguing, the telling irritated me yet I truly wanted to like this story.
If there was a positive, it was exposure to a religion not often encountered in a mystery. I did like the minuscular glimpses of Quaker life. This book may become a springboard for my next trip down the rabbit hole of research.