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The Path of the Wicked

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Private investigator Liberty Lane's latest case takes her to rural Gloucestershire to uncover the truth of a brutal murder
July, 1840. Liberty Lane has left London for Cheltenham, where she's been hired by a local magistrate to establish the guilt or innocence of young Jack Picton, who stands accused of killing governess Mary Marsh. Picton is a known rebel and political agitator. But is he a murderer?
Liberty shares the magistrate's doubts as to whether the right man is in the dock. But how can she help Picton when he refuses to reveal his whereabouts on the night of the murder? He's certainly hiding something. But what?
As Liberty is about to discover, behind Cheltenham's genteel façade lies a hotbed of vice including gambling, drunkenness and illicit love affairs. A place where the poor are driven to desperate lengths to escape the horror of the workhouse. A place which is harbouring a ruthless killer. Can Liberty uncover the truth in time?|1840. Liberty Lane is in Cheltenham, where she's been hired by a local magistrate to establish the guilt or innocence of young Jack Picton, who stands accused of killing governess Mary Marsh. Liberty believes the wrong man is in the dock. But how can she help Picton when he refuses to reveal his whereabouts on the night of the murder?
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 15, 2013
      In the first chapter of Peacock’s fine sixth early Victorian historical (after 2012’s Keeping Bad Company), Benjamin Disraeli, the future British prime minister, asks Liberty Lane, a female private investigator who has served him in the past, to spy on the Chartists—working-class political reformers whom the government views as a threat. The indignant Lane refuses Disraeli’s offer, freeing her to help Gloucestershire magistrate Stephen Godwit, who’s concerned that a man imprisoned for murder may be innocent. The authorities have charged Jack Picton, reputed to be a revolutionary, with the bludgeoning death of governess Mary Marsh. Picton had been feuding with the victim’s employers and was possibly her lover. Lane soon learns of a bizarre disappearance that may have a connection with the crime. The author has put a lot of work into laying the groundwork for the denouement, which will satisfy classic whodunit fans.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from October 10, 2011
      The impending engagement of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert in 1839 forms the backdrop for Peacock’s gripping fourth Liberty Lane mystery (after 2009’s Death in Shining Armour). London is rife with rumors that the devil’s chariot, “drawn by two black horses with red eyes and footmen on the back with bull’s heads and horns,” is snatching women off the streets. When Lane goes in search of 19-year-old Dora Tilbury, whose sweetheart last saw her at church in Essex before she was supposed to meet him in London, the female private investigator finds the corpse of more than one unidentified young woman. Meanwhile, a shadowy figure who claims to be working for Disraeli asks Lane to help with a delicate matter involving a member of the retinue of Prince Albert’s brother. Lane is more than up to the challenge of an intricate puzzle that merges subtle fair-play clues, rich period atmosphere, and fast-moving action.

    • Kirkus

      November 15, 2011
      A killer of young women terrorizes 1839 London. Liberty Lane, a music teacher turned private investigator, is still establishing herself when she suddenly gets two new clients. The first is a young man whose fiancée is missing, the second a gentleman of mystery who wants her to protect the Contessa D'Abbravilla from a dangerous involvement with Price Ernest of Saxe Coburg, who's visiting England with his brother Price Albert. Liberty and her assistant Tabby, a streetwise girl she's taken in, have paid scant attention to the awful stories of girls being snatched off the street by men with the heads of bulls driving a black carriage. Now they must consider the possibility that one of the bodies found dead at the base of a well-known monument may be the missing fiancé. Liberty is also busy trying to get close to the Contessa in the hopes of thwarting her plans to talk to Price Ernest, the lover who spurned her. Although the nation is enthralled with the romance between Queen Victoria and Prince Albert, Liberty learns that even royal love affairs have diplomatic consequences and fears that neither of her cases may be as simple as she first thought. Since her clients are not what they seem, Liberty must make the most of her social connections to get the information she is discovering to the right people. Peacock's fourth (A Foreign Affair, 2008, etc.) is an enjoyable mystery featuring a sprightly heroine and the obligatory period detail.

      (COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

    • Library Journal

      December 1, 2011

      Young women are being scooped off the streets of 1839 London under the cover of darkness, and folks think the devil himself is driving the coach. When the bodies of two victims are later positioned near prominent London monuments, the fear factor rises. Even Liberty Lane, a female private investigator, is shaken by this development. She has been probing the disappearance of a young man's fiancee--who has been murdered--and her client is AWOL. At the same time, a woman whom Liberty has been hired to shadow vanishes, and Liberty is correct in assuming the worst. Most disturbingly, both of Liberty's cases point toward Windsor Castle, where the young Queen Victoria is entertaining Prince Albert and his brother, Prince Ernest. Danger and intrigue ensue. VERDICT The intrepid Liberty Lane (A Family Affair) is not to be missed in her fourth outing. Neither cozy nor too gritty, Peacock's series somehow meshes gumshoe sleuthing with Victorian high society. Caro Peacock is the pen name of Gillian Linscott (Nell Bray series).

      Copyright 2011 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      November 15, 2011
      Peacock fashions another atmospheric early Victorianera mystery featuring plucky and resourceful female sleuth Liberty Lane. With her finances precariously dwindling, Liberty relies on her skills as a discreet private investigator in order to hang onto to her increasingly tenuous position as an independent gentlewoman. As a sinister chariot of death roams the sooty streets of London in search of innocent young girls, and a nubile Queen Victoria entertains a clutch of foreign diplomats that includes her future husband, Liberty sets off in search of a young man's missing fianc'e. Neatly dovetailing disparate pieces of the puzzle, Liberty reaches across social classes and boundaries to unearth a complex plot with deep and twisted roots in a failed diplomatic gambit. Peacock crafts a crackerjack whodunit while effectively shining a spotlight on both the grit and the glamour of Victorian London.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2011, American Library Association.)

    • Booklist

      May 15, 2013
      Gillian Linscott writing as Carol Peacock brings readers another case featuring the intrepid female sleuth Liberty Lane. In July 1840, magistrate Stephen Godwit, of Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, visits Liberty's office in London to discuss a case that came before his court. He fears that young Jack Picton, a trade unionist and political agitator, has been unjustly accused of murdering governess Mary Marsh. Liberty finds that the sleepy little town of Cheltenham is really a hotbed of vice. The poor residents of the town will do just about anything to avoid being sent to the horrible workhouse. Historical-mystery fans will enjoy this colorful adventure set in the nineteenth-century British countryside.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2013, American Library Association.)

    • Kirkus

      April 15, 2013
      A private investigator takes up a seemingly hopeless case. It is 1840, and Liberty Lane has just turned down a job offered by Benjamin Disraeli spying on the more revolutionary elements of society with which she has great sympathy. Instead, she takes herself off to the home of Mr. Godwit, a magistrate who feels that a young man he and his two fellow magistrates have sent up for trial may be innocent of murdering the governess of a local family in the Cheltonham area. It is true that Jack Picton, a trade unionist, is probably guilty of something, just not murder. Picton has not helped his cause with his arrogant attitude and refusal to say where he was the night of Mary Marsh's death. Liberty and her maid/sleuthing partner, Tabby, have no trouble digging up local scandals, including a broken engagement between Mary Marsh's charge, Barbara Kemble, and Peter Paley, who recently vanished after his wealthy father refused to pay his mountainous debts. England's class-driven society makes it difficult for Liberty to even suggest another candidate for the murder, but she plans on doing all she can to keep the unsympathetic Picton from the gallows. The sixth in this highly enjoyable series (Keeping Bad Company, 2012, etc.) adds social commentary to a rich broth of historical tidbits and an excellent mystery.

      COPYRIGHT(2013) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      June 1, 2013

      Intrepid PI Liberty Lane heads off to Cheltenham in the summer of 1840 to help investigate the murder of a governess. This is the sixth case (after Keeping Bad Company) for an outstanding historical series. Peacock is Gillian Linscott's pseudonym.

      Copyright 2013 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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