A popular caterer turns detective to find the killer of her bestie’s aunt.
Even when she’s rushing to cater a midmorning tea for the Bramblewood Community Theater Foundation, hosted by bookshop owner Marigold Markel, Allie Catt keeps calm by channeling her favorite literary characters, especially Elizabeth Bennet. She’s joined in that obsession by Tegan Potts, Marigold’s niece, whose husband has just asked for a divorce. A phone call from Marigold sends them both racing to the bookstore, where they discover Marigold in a dazed condition, perhaps dehydrated. Arriving shortly thereafter are Tegan’s half sister Vanna, a rival caterer whose open hostility reminds Allie of one of her least favorite Austen characters (“persnickety and rude” Caroline Bingley); Marigold’s younger sister Noeline, quarter owner of the bookshop; and her new boyfriend, financial consultant Rick O’Sheedy. When Marigold is found dead in the bookshop clutching a copy of Pride and Prejudice, Allie has little doubt that she’s been murdered, and Detective Zach Armstrong tends to agree. Although the two are obviously attracted to each other, Zach isn’t happy when Allie starts sleuthing. Marigold was even better off than her relatives knew. In addition to the store, she leaves behind a large jewelry collection and plenty of cash—at least, until $100,000 of it goes missing. Tegan does not seem to have an alibi, and Vanna is quick to accuse her and Allie once she learns that Marigold left Allie an interest in the bookshop. Money is always a plausible motive, but is it the right one here?
Foodies and Jane Austen fans alike will delight in this charming mystery.