The queen investigates the death of a sex worker.
Bennett’s Elizabeth II already has quite a record as a crime-buster, having solved three cases in 2016 alone. But in this exploit, set in the 1950s, she has help. Joan McGraw, drawn from the typing pool when the queen’s regular assistant private secretary falls ill, turns out to be a find. Smart, intuitive, and sensitive, Joan is just what the young queen needs to help her discover who in her court is trying to sabotage her goodwill trips to France, the United States, and Canada. Joan is tactful in dealing with Elizabeth’s three closest advisors, Private Secretary Sir Hugh Masson, Deputy Private Secretary Major Miles Urquhart, and Press Secretary Jeremy Radnor-Milne, whom Prince Philip calls “the men in moustaches.” But she proves her true worth when the palace gets embroiled in a grisly double murder in Chelsea. Clement Moreton, Dean of Bath, wakes up one morning in his London pied-à-terre to find two dead bodies in the adjoining bedroom: Dino Perez from Argentina and the escort Perez had hired for the night from the Raffles Agency. The two victims had been cavorting before their demise at the Artemis Club, a venue frequented by the Duke of Edinburgh. When Elizabeth seeks to learn what connection her husband has to the crime, the men in moustaches naturally stay mum. It’s up to Joan to help the young queen find out the truth so that she can face her overseas junkets with grace and aplomb.
Bennett blends detection with domestic detail and transnational pageantry to create a royal treat.