ENGLAND , 1816
Jess aka Jessamine Beauchene, cook at Haven Manor, ex-spy
Derek Thornbury, Art expert, all around thorn in Jess's side
Daphne and Kit, friends of Jess's from Haven Manor
Ryland, Duke of Marshington
Miranda, Ryland's wife
William, Marquis of Chemsford, Daohne's husband
Lord Graham Wharton, Kit's husband
This! This was why I continued this series, and I'm so glad I did. I thoroughly enjoyed it.
Jess (the focus of book three) was pretty much a mystery all the way through the series until this third book. Then an incredible story unfolds that had me fascinated.
So…a little background…An abandoned estate in the woods was allowed by the owner to be used as a home for children sired illegitimately by nobility who would have virtually abandoned them anyway. Three women took the children in (babies in most cases) turning the estate into a usable home and each were taught essential school subjects, and practical jobs, with the best outcome being that the children could grow up to know a trade. The three women were called Mama Kit, Mama Daphne, and Mama Jess. When the current owner died the estate was inherited by a man who wanted to take it over as his permanent residence.
In book one Mama Kit had married a Duke and moved alway, and the current new owner, William, Marquis of Chemsford, eventually married Mama Daphne in book two, using the estate now and then.
In book two the children and mamas scrabbled to put the home back in "estate" order, bringing back stored original furniture and art, adopted out most of the little ones, and moved the rest into a little cottage on the property, away from the main house. The remnants were now "staff" as kitchen or household servants, and a young boy who tended the horses and livestock.
Back to Jess…
Jess was sooooo much more than a knife-wielding cook in a children's home. We knew from the books that she had been a spy, but not a great deal of her history was brought out. I don’t remember her at all in A Nobel Masquerade, but apparently she was an important character in the life of Ryland, the Duke of Marshington. Makes me want to reread that book to see her in action.
There's a complicated mystery and a need to find an object to bring back the kingdom of Verbonne by using a very old diary written in Italian and 150-year-old paintings. The person Jess needed to help her with both reading Italian and find these paintings was the very annoying art expert whom the estate owner hired to catalog all his art.
This started an intriguing jaunt all over England, often getting into tight spots.
“For what it’s worth,” he said, “God decided you were worth love a long time ago when He sacrificed Jesus on your behalf. If you’re going to continue to claim you aren’t worth it, you’re calling God a liar.”
The faith element was lovely! For three years Jess heard Kit and Daphne quoting scripture and hearing the Bible read to the children in the home. But in this book, she faces emotions she's avoided a long time.
"She was listening differently, now that she’d realized how important it was to seek God in the quiet times in order to know what to cling to in the chaos.”
I don’t want to ruin the book by giving anything else away, just know it’s very clean and so much fun.
5⭐️!