Who Slays the Wicked (Releases April 2, 2019)
By C. S. Harris
Berkley/Penguin, 352
pages.
★★★
Some books set in the past falter because they get history
terribly wrong. Others are confusing because they get it right. The second may
be a problem for newer readers of C. S. Harris. Who Slays the Wicked is book
14 in her Sebastian St. Cyr series.
C. S. Harris is the nom
de plume of Air Force brat Candice Proctor, who holds a Ph.D. in European
history and now lives in Louisiana. Ms Harris writes well and precisely delves into
great detail. It’s not a necessity, but it sure would help to know a bit about
Hanoverian England to appreciate her St. Cyr novels. Who Slays the Wicked is set in 1814, a time in which the Napoleonic
wars are sputtering* to a conclusion. George III is on the throne–the same
sovereign who lost the American colonies. His son, the future
George IV, is serving as regent however, as George III went hopelessly insane
in 1811.
When Napoleon was defeated for good in 1815, a European-wide
peace conference redrew the map of Europe. The same conference planted the
seeds for the decline of aristocracy, but they didn’t blossom until the end of
World War I in 1918. For another hundred years, nobility lived according to
different customs and social codes than their subjects.
If you’ve read other Harris novels, you know that proper breeding sometimes allowed one literally to get away with murder.Not this time. St. Cyr is called upon to unravel the gruesome death of Lord Ashworth and he’s keen to solve it as among the prime suspects is Ashworth’s wife Stephanie, who is also St. Cyr’s niece. Stephanie has recently given birth to twins, but she detested her late husband. As it transpires, so did virtually everyone who ever set eyes on Ashworth except his aged father. As was often the case with children of noble blood, the sadistic Ashworth treated women and the hoi polloi as if they were there for his amusement and abuse. He sexually abused Stephanie, as he did also to a string of mistresses, prostitutes, and gullible innocents. He cheated numerous merchants, one of whom is also a hot suspect, and Ashworth was also abusive to architect Russell Firth. That’s very bad news, as rumors hold that Firth has been stepping out with Stephanie.
If you’ve read other Harris novels, you know that proper breeding sometimes allowed one literally to get away with murder.Not this time. St. Cyr is called upon to unravel the gruesome death of Lord Ashworth and he’s keen to solve it as among the prime suspects is Ashworth’s wife Stephanie, who is also St. Cyr’s niece. Stephanie has recently given birth to twins, but she detested her late husband. As it transpires, so did virtually everyone who ever set eyes on Ashworth except his aged father. As was often the case with children of noble blood, the sadistic Ashworth treated women and the hoi polloi as if they were there for his amusement and abuse. He sexually abused Stephanie, as he did also to a string of mistresses, prostitutes, and gullible innocents. He cheated numerous merchants, one of whom is also a hot suspect, and Ashworth was also abusive to architect Russell Firth. That’s very bad news, as rumors hold that Firth has been stepping out with Stephanie.
The more St. Cyr digs into matters, the longer the suspect
list grows. The phrase St. Cyr, his fearless wife Hero, and magistrate Sir
Henry Lovejoy repeatedly hear is, “I’m glad he’s dead.” St. Cyr, like much of
London, is certain that Ashworth is the culprit behind the deaths of numerous
street children.
The wildcard suspects are in London by way of Moscow. All of
Europe knows that the Prince Regent and his wife, Caroline of Brunswick, had
been separated for more than a decade. They had just one child, Princess
Charlotte, which made her a desirable marriage catch. Charlotte is affianced
to the heir to the Dutch throne, but the czar of Russia hopes to break that
alliance and perhaps even entice the Prince Regent to divorce and marry his
sister. Harris introduces a fictional character, Ivanna Gagarin, as the consort
to the Russian Grand Duchess. She is beautiful, calculating, amoral, and
perhaps deadly, though the entire Russian entourage in London had enough
contacts with Ashworth to make all of them suspect. The fact that Buckingham
Palace tells St. Cyr to back off elevates St. Cyr’s suspicion level. **
Harris juxtaposes court intrigue with the grit, dirt, and
crushing poverty of working-class London. She takes us inside seedy pubs and
down dark and dangerous alleyways, and introduces us to the stomach-churning
world of the night soil men who clean privies, rag and bone collectors, and
“pure” finders, the latter of whom roam the street and collect excrement to
sell to tanneries. It’s also a world in which ragamuffin children sweep
streets, deliver messages, and run errands for anyone who will throw them a few
coppers. You can be excused if you conclude that the residents of squalid London
have less dirt on their hands than the upper crust. Harris subtly suggests that
better times are ahead for some of the down-market parts of London. Firth is
modeled on developer James Burton, who financed the building of Regent’s Park,
Bloomsbury Square, and numerous other great Georgian projects.
Harris throws us enough red herrings to make fish stew, but
if you're not a historian or already immersed in the St. Cyr universe, you
might find parts of the novel rather slow going until you catch on to who’s who.
It might help to make a cheat sheet as you read. You will need to know, for
example, that Lord Ashworth is Anthony Ledger and that St. Cyr is also the
Viscount Devlin. All of the aristocratic characters have both a titled and a
christened name, and which one you encounter depends upon with whom that
character is interacting. This stuff even confuses Brits–friends of mine in
London frequently say “some lord or other”–and it can be quite a puzzlement
for those not used to it.
I am used to it and ultimately found the central mystery
intriguing, but I confess that I am more prone to place nobility into the upper
class twit category. This is to say I found the novel much more interesting
when Sebastian and Hero St. Cyr were cavorting with marginal folks rather than
having tea with toffs. I leave open the possibility that I came into the series
too late in the game. I enjoyed Who Slays
the Wicked, but I’m not holding my breath for the next St. Cyr installment.
Rob Weir
* I used the term
"sputtering" because it took separate campaigns to subdue Napoleon.
In 1814, Napoleon abdicated when a European alliance captured Paris. He was
exiled to the island of Elba, but escaped less than a year later, raised an
army, and invaded Belgium. Shortly after his defeat at Waterloo in June 1815,
he surrendered and was sent to the remote island of St. Helena, where he died
in 1821.
** In real life, Russian meddling did break Charlotte’s
planned marriage, though she eventually married a German prince, not a Russian.
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