A Feast of Poisons
Kathryn Swinbrooke #7
By Paul Dohert (writing as C L Grace)
Reviewed August 13, 2024
1473
The village of Walmer, not far from Canterbury, is your typical village where everybody knows everybody else’s business. But matters take a deadly turn when Elias, the Blacksmith, and his wife are both poisoned. Elias may not have been the nicest person, but who would hate him enough to want him and his wife dead?
Not long after, Adam the Apothecary is also poisoned, yet he had locked himself in his private room while his bed-ridden mother is calling for him. Is someone settling some scores? Are these deaths in any way connected to an incident after the battle of Tewkesbury when three Lancastrian soldiers came to Walmer seeking the sanctuary of the Church but were cut down by villagers eager to prove their loyalty to King Edward?
Meanwhile, Lord Henry Beauchamp at the behest of King Edward has invited French envoys Sanglier, Delacroix, and Cavignac to his estate in Walmer, ostensibly to begin negotiations for a peace treaty between England and France, but also to learn the truth about the disappearance of English envoy William Marshall and the Book of Ciphers he was supposed to have had with him.
On their medieval equivalent of a honeymoon, newlyweds Kathryn Swinbrooke and Colum Murtagh are also in Walmer, and at Lord Henry’s request are staying at his manor to be witnesses to any negotiations that take place. Their past service to the Crown is now well known in the region and honeymoon or not, you don’t really say no to what is, in essence, a royal request.
Whoever this poisoner is, he (or she) is able to slip in and out without being detected, and when one of the French envoys is poisoned, this mystery needs to be solved quickly or dire consequences including the possibility of war could result.
This is, at this time, the last of the Kathryn Swinbrooke mysteries, and I’m sorry to see the series end. The mysteries are always nicely convoluted, with plenty of clues and red herrings to delight the lovers of this genre, and the characters are always interesting. The development of the relationship between Kathryn and her Irishman has also been fun to follow. Highly recommend to series to anyone who enjoys mysteries with a medieval setting.