A dangerous affair

Caro Peacock

Book - 2009

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MYSTERY/Peacock, Caro
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Subjects
Published
New York : HarperCollins Avon A 2009.
Language
English
Main Author
Caro Peacock (-)
Edition
1st ed
Item Description
"A novel of Victorian England"--Cover.
Physical Description
303 p.
ISBN
9780061447488
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Victorian London supplies the backdrop for this latest mystery novel featuring Liberty Lane. Beautiful but unpleasant Columbine has her share of fans in the world of ballet, but her fellow dancers spend a lot of their time on stage covering up her incompetence. In one of the book's best-realized scenes, Columbine and a rival dancer, Jenny Jarvis, actually draw blood as these rivals pirouette about the stage in performance. Soon after this fiasco, Columbine expires in her dressing room from ingesting her favorite syllabub, surreptitiously poisoned. Although the dancer had offended plenty of others in her life, suspicion focuses on Jenny. Found guilty of the murder, Jenny is sentenced to hang. All London gets involved in the sensational crime, even newly elected Conservative Member of Parliament Disraeli, who apparently holds some key to the solution of the crime. Both mystery readers and fans of Victoriana will enjoy this adventure.--Knoblauch, Mark Copyright 2008 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Liberty Lane returns in Peacock's newest Victorian London melodrama. Worried about funds, the industrious Liberty (last seen in A Foreign Affair) accepts a commission from Benjamin Disraeli to spy on Columbine, a dancer whose indiscretions could cause a public scandal. When Columbine turns up poisoned after feuding with Jenny, another dancer, Liberty decides she must track down the killer before Jenny hangs for the crime. What she uncovers is a web of secrets drawing together the mighty with the dregs of society. Peacock skillfully interweaves figures of real Victorian London, while avoiding the genre's typical focus on aristocracy. London's artistic underbelly is grimy, gritty and has instant appeal that the ton can't match. The mystery flows smoothly, with well-placed red herrings, excellent reveals and pleasing surprises. Readers should look forward to their next meeting with Liberty and her friends, particularly gruff, wise groom Amos, the Watson to Liberty's would-be Sherlock Holmes. (Feb.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

A Dangerous Affair Chapter One Neither of us knew the rate for bribing a gaoler at the Old Bailey. My friend Daniel Suter was two steps below me on the way down to the cells. He'd fought his way through the crowd to get there, pushing aside men twice his weight with bruiser's faces, ignoring jeers and curses. In those two steps he'd crossed the boundary between the civilized modern building of the Central Criminal Court and the centuries-old misery of the passageway connecting it to Newgate prison next door. Freshly plastered walls gave way to damp brick and a smell of choked drains. "I want to see her," Daniel said to the gaoler's broad back. He looked terribly out of place there, a slim and elegant figure, top hat in hand. That was one of the reasons they were jeering at him. "How much?" said the gaoler, half turning. The gaoler had hair cropped like a scrubbing brush, a wart on his chin the size of a coat button. Even from yards away, I could smell the onion and tobacco on his breath. "Very much." Seeing Daniel's confusion, I whispered, "He means money." Daniel's hand went to his pocket. His arm was shaking. I knew he never carried much money because he never had much to carry, and we'd already had to pay to get into the spectators' enclosure in court. The gaoler walked down a couple of steps, slowly. From the top of the staircase, the crowd went on jeering at Daniel. "Your fancy, is she? Look out she doesn't poison you, like she did Columbine." Daniel turned to me, all the world's misery on his face, holding out a handful of coins. A gold sovereign and a half sovereign, two half crowns, a silver sixpence and three pennies. It might have been enough if she'd been an ordinary prisoner, like a pickpocket condemned to transportation, but when the judge had put that square of black silk on his wig five minutes ago, her value had gone up. I felt in the pocket under the waistband of my skirt and found a sovereign. It was payment that I'd managed to extract from a client some time ago for music lessons, but with everything else happening I'd forgotten about it till then. I took a step down and added it to the coins in Daniel's palm. The clink of it made the gaoler stop and turn round. "Is it enough?" Daniel said, holding out the handful. "It's all we've got anyway," I said. The man bit each sovereign in turn, nodding reluctantly as his teeth closed on the soft gold, then continued on down the steps into a narrow opening between stone walls. Daniel went after him and I followed. Down there, the clamor of the courtrooms upstairs was muffled but the wagons outside in Newgate, grinding over the paving slabs on their way from Smithfield market, made a constant vibration you could feel in your stomach. The smell and dampness seemed to cling to your face, as if you were trying to breathe through a wet dishrag. The gaoler stopped and gave an echoing slap with the flat of his hand on a heavy door. A voice from inside said something I didn't catch. "Gentleman to see the prisoner," the gaoler announced. A man's hand came out and some of the coins were passed over, then the door was opened from the inside just enough to let Daniel in. I followed before the gaoler realized I was there. He pulled the door shut behind us and I suppose stood guard in the passage. It was a big, cold room--far too big for the figure that sat in a rough wooden chair against the wall, with a plump gaoler on one side and a middle-aged woman on the other. Jenny had always been slim but after the weeks in prison she seemed to be on the point of disappearing altogether. The sleeves of her rough gray dress flopped around arms that looked no thicker than withy twigs. Only the jut of a badly fitting corset gave any shape to her upper body. Her red-brown hair that had floated like autumn leaves in the wind when she danced was streaked with black dye and dull from lack of washing, twisted into a knot that seemed to stretch her pale skin painfully tight over her cheekbones. Her big gray eyes had been one of her best features but now they were frightening. They were as large as ever, larger if anything, but blank as slate, as if the world had ceased to exist. Even when Daniel was only two steps away from her, their focus didn't change and she didn't seem to see him. "Jenny." The way Daniel said it was closer to a groan than a name. It was enough though. Something sparked in her eyes and suddenly she was on her feet, flinging herself at him. Before the gaoler could move she had her arms wrapped round Daniel, her head against his chest. She was a dancer, after all; still quick on her feet even when nothing else survived. "No touching," the gaoler barked, lumbering toward them. I stood in his way. "Why, is that extra?" He stared at me as if the question puzzled him. I think he was at least half drunk. Surprisingly, the woman took my side. I didn't know if she was a gaoler too or another prisoner. "You leave them be. It's not for long." She'd probably taken a drink or two as well, but it must have brought out her sentimental side. Jenny was talking as she clung to Daniel, low urgent words into his chest. He had his head bent to hear them. ". . . help me. You're the only one who can help me. There's not much time . . . they haven't told me when . . ." That went to my heart for Daniel's sake as much as hers. Here she was, believing that one man without power, money or influence could somehow halt the millstones of justice that were grinding on in the courtrooms over our heads. A Dangerous Affair . Copyright © by Caro Peacock. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold. Excerpted from A Dangerous Affair by Caro Peacock All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.