We open our story in the San Francisco of the 1890s. The
detective agency of Carpenter and Quincannon recently solved The
Bughouse Affair, a complex case that included a locked-room mystery.
They could do without any overly-complex cases for a while. That’s what this
job was supposed to be for Sabina Carpenter: she was basically hired as a
babysitter, looking after Virginia St. Ives and making sure she doesn’t sneak
off for a rendez-vous with her boyfriend, a man of whom her family disapproves.
It’s true, Virginia was a little brat, but it seemed like the toughest part of
Sabina’s assignment would be to refrain from slapping the girl.
But nobody could possibly have foreseen the outcome: at a
fancy party, Virginia confronts Sabina and runs out of the house, only to commit
suicide by jumping off a parapet. But when a group is organized to retrieve the
body, it’s nowhere in sight… When a suicide note is discovered, the questions
only get deeper. Why did Virginia St. Ives commit suicide?


