Mysterious Lover by Mary Lancaster

Mysterious Lover (Crime & Passion Book 1)Barbara’s rating: 4 of 5 stars

Series: Crime & Passion #1
Publication Date: 2/23/21
Period: Victorian London – 1851
Number of Pages:238

This is my first read by Mary Lancaster other than her contribution to the anthology Storm & Shelter: A Bluestocking Belles Collection with Friends released earlier this year. Since I enjoyed that contribution so much, I wanted to read more of her work – and – then I found she had a historical mystery and I was sold. The mystery is really well done with lots of potential suspects, lots of red herrings, lots of dangerous pursuits, and an unexpected solution. While Historical Mystery is my favorite genre, they must include a romance to keep me fully happy. This book met that requirement with a most unusual couple.

Lady Grizelda (Griz) Niven, daughter of a powerful duke, and sister to a powerful leader in a ‘secret’ branch of the Home Office, is viewed as eccentric by friends and family alike. Today, she would be the norm, but in Victorian times, she was definitely an aberration. She saw nothing special about power and privilege and treated everyone equally. Oh, she followed the appropriate protocols whenever she was in the company of aristocrats, but she treated everyone with the same courtesy and regard. Griz views herself as the ‘forgotten’ family member, the one who fades into the background and isn’t noticed. I’m not sure that was true, but her mother certainly seemed to take her for granted.

Dragan Tisza is a poor, Hungarian refugee who fought on the losing side of the Hungarian revolution. Dragan was studying medicine and had no admiration at all for violence and the taking of lives. However, when the revolution came, he could only join his fellow citizens in fighting for freedom and equality. Dragan is intelligent, handsome, honorable, and trying his best to make it in the country that gave him refuge when he’d lost everything in his own country. When the police made the comment to him about being on the wrong side of the revolution, Dragan replied, “Oh, no, I was on the right side. Unfortunately, it turned out to be the losing side.”

Dragan and Griz first meet when they collide – literally – in a hallway at the opera. They meet again over the dead body of Griz’s maid. Each wonders if the other committed the crime – and each decides ‘probably not’. However, the police have no such qualms – they immediately arrest Dragan even though Griz was the one who originally had the knife in her hand. Dragan was an easy target because he was foreign and a revolutionary.

After a restless night at home, Griz has decided that there is no way Dragan had the time or opportunity to have committed the crime. In her inimitable way, she sets out to get Dragan released. You’ll love that scene in the story. Griz and Dragan begin to investigate together and soon run into some very unsavory characters, chases through the slums, and some very perplexing circumstances. The final scene where the villain is identified and Griz is saved in the nick of time is both exciting and entertaining. You’ll definitely enjoy ‘the ladies’ in that scene.

I really enjoyed the story, the mystery, and the characters and will definitely look forward to reading the next book in the series. All of that said, I have a hard time buying that Griz’s family is quite so lax as it is about her activities and close proximity to a most inappropriate man. When they fairly readily accept a permanent relationship between Griz and Dragen, my jaw dropped. As long as the mysteries are good, exciting, and engrossing, I can ignore the items I just mentioned. It will be interesting to see, in future books, how Griz adapts to being poor or how Dragen adapts to being beholden to Griz’s family for money. Both of those seem to be impossible situations given the personalities of the two characters, so the author’s resolution will need to be an innovative one.

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How the Scot was Won by Caroline Linden

How the Scot Was Won (Desperately Seeking Duke, #2.5)How the Scot Was Won by Caroline Linden

Tracy’s rating: 5 of 5 stars

Series: Desperately Seeking a Duke, #2.5

Release Date: July 6, 2021

If you read A Scot to the Heart then you have already met Agnes and Felix and are probably dying to know what happened to make her first dislike him and then apparently reconcile with him – Well the wait is over and the story is delicious! If you haven’t read the aforementioned book, no worries – this novella is their complete story and you will have no problems jumping right in.

Felix Duncan and Agnes St. James have a long history, one that goes back to their childhood, Felix was a friend of Agnes’ brother Andrew and was always kind to her, but it wasn’t until years later that Felix saw her again and realized that little girl that always tagged along was now a beautiful woman. One he wanted to get to know. Through “random” meetings at a coffeehouse, they formed a friendship and deeper feelings began to take root. But a night of revelry and a bit too much whiskey resulted in the world’s worst marriage proposal and the end to what had been a lovely friendship.

Things remained tense between them, and while they would have liked to avoid each other, that is not possible when her brother returns and Agnes ends up staying with her friend Ilsa who becomes romantically involved with her brother – who happens to be staying with Felix. When Andrew organizes a house party and invites Felix to join them, it appears that our lovers will finally talk and reconcile – a boon in Felix’s opinion and one he doesn’t plan on wasting, because, despite everything that has happened, he really has fallen for Agnes. But just as things seem to be falling into place for their HEA, things completely fall apart for Ilsa and Andrew, and any hope for a quick HEA is lost, but that doesn’t mean it will never happen – does it?

I really enjoyed this novella, it was well-written and never felt rushed or recycled as it was also its own story even though it is on the same timeline as A Scot to the Heart, this book is filled with emotion, angst, steamyish love scenes, a hero who works hard for redemption and finally a well-deserved HEA. This was written as a companion novella to the novel A Scot to the Heart which is Andrew and Ilsa’s story, and while you can read this story without reading that one with no problems, I wouldn’t recommend reading this one first as it will have spoilers.

*I am voluntarily leaving a review for an eARC that I requested and was provided to me by the publisher. All opinions in this review are my own.*