Corvinus is back in the Alban Hills, investigating a suspicious death. As usual, questions abound. The widow's grief is clearly sincere, but why is she hiding so much? Why was the victim attacked in the street, six days before his death, by a man no one recognised? Why is his partner in the legal firm still so upset by the death, decades ago, of his first wife? There are more personal matters too. The Corvinus household is getting older; we seem to be about to lose one member to old age, while another is contemplating marriage. Young Clarus, Marilla's boyfriend, is introducing us to the Roman medical world and its increasing interest in the autopsy. But the two most pressing questions are; what are Gabba and the other lads at Pontius's wineshop up to in secret, and why has Meton, Corvinus's bolshie gorilla of a cook, taken to going out dressed in a clean tunic and wearing perfume? Corvinus thinks he has guessed the answer, but it's much more surprising than that....
One thing that's beginning to look interesting. We already know Corvinus has a horror of mental incapacity. Now once again, as in "Food for the Fishes", he says if he ever became mentally incapable he hopes someone would oblige him with a mercy killing. I'm beginning to wonder if Wishart is building up to confronting him with this problem close to home.
Not the all-time best from this series but well up to standard.