Guilty Conscience

by Michael Underwood

Published 23 October 1992

When Evelyn Henshaw comes to Rosa Epton's office demanding that in the event of her disappearance her husband be investigated for murder, Rosa is more than a little doubtful. Hesitant to take the woman on as a client, she is drawn in when Mr Henshaw subsequently arrives at her office claiming that his wife has disappeared.

And when the young lodger living in the couple's home turns up dead, Rosa must unearth the skeletons of the couple's troubled marriage and fit together the pieces of a complicated puzzle.


Dual Enigma

by Michael Underwood

Published 1 January 1988
Rosa Epton, solicitor-heroine of Underwood's recent crime novels, gets entangled in another mystery as first a boy is killed and then a former client is murdered at the boy's school. What is their connection? The author leads his readers down many devious sideroads before the truth is discovered. Michael Underwood, a pseudonym, worked for many years as Assistant Director of Public Prosecutions. His previous novels have included "The Uninvited Corpse" and "The Injudicious Judge".

A Compelling Case

by Michael Underwood

Published 1 January 1989

For the police it was an open and shut case: Stephen Lumley was guilty of taking part in the robbery at his uncle's jewellery shop. All the evidence was against him - he was unemployed and in debt, he'd made threats in the past against his uncle, Bernard Hammond, and he'd tried to escape when the other thieves fled the scene.

Yet Lumley maintains his innocence, and the only person who believes him - apart from his wife - is his lawyer, the intuitive Rosa Epton. Rosa's efforts to learn the truth are frustrated by the elusiveness of a possible lead, so Lumley must stand trial at the Old Bailey. Undeterred, Rosa carries on her private enquiries with little success, until, that is, her lead turns up - dead.

As the police investigate, new evidence comes to light, and events take another turn when Hammond's wife is kidnapped.