Reviewed by readingwithwrin on
Before I read this book, I was a little worried about Charlotte having magically changed now that her and Jamie were a couple. Thankfully she hadn't, she was still the same old Holmes who now cares for someone, but is still truthfully afraid to let him in and see all of her. She still need to feel like she is in control and she does that by keeping him at a distance and running whenever he gets to close. Because of this Jamie is feeling like he's useless and now that the mystery of who was trying to kill them is gone, that they won't make it and it was just a phase for Charlotte. Even though they are meeting spending the holidays with each others families and appearing to be getting closer than ever.
"I like your flat because you grew up here and I like eating your dinner because it's yours, which makes it better than mine."
That is until Charlotte's uncle goes missing after only a few days at the family home, as well as many other things going on as well that appear to not be connected, but of course Charlotte thinks they are.
This leads us onto the big adventure that finally started happening about a quarter of the way through the book.
Though because of the massive tension between Jamie and Charlotte due to the distance they have put between each other this mystery is a little bit more complicated to solve.
It involves help not only from Charlotte's brother, but a person that Jamie thought was dead as well.
While the last mystery they had to solve was dangerous, this one was far more dangerous. Not only because of the crossed family lines, the relationship problems, and a forging scheme things get rather messy.
"She's a child that that thinks she can play with adults, and she needs to understand that this isn't a game."
Overall I ended up enjoying this one just as much as the first one, if not a little bit more because of how the characters stayed true to how they were in the first book and didn't just suddenly change.
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Reading updates
- Started reading
- 23 March, 2017: Finished reading
- 23 March, 2017: Reviewed