book cover of Murder for the Countess
 

Murder for the Countess

(2025)
and Other Unauthorised Familiarities
(A book in the Regency: Corpses & Courtship Club series)
A novel by

 
 
I am the narrator of this book, which means I have already hauled the novel through every dripping corridor, every self-important meeting, and every cup of coffee that tastes faintly of despair, and now ‘they’ want me to sell it as well. Fine. I have carried heavier things than a blurb, usually other people''s egos.

At Ainsworth Court, Lady Seraphina Vale, Countess of Ainsworth, is attempting the apparently scandalous feat of being a widow with a spine and a canal to build, when her map room decides to lock itself and her chief surveyor obligingly dies face-first in ink. Locked door, dead man, altered figures, missing deeds, unfamiliar footprints, and, on schedule, a parade of trustees and lawyers arriving to decide whether she is ‘equal’ to responsibility.

Naturally, the only person in the house who always has the key is Tobias Rook, her butler: precise, unreadable, and about to become very interesting to a magistrate with more paperwork than imagination. Together, they sift seals, scraps, ledgers, and the sort of polite threats men call ‘concern’, while the canal, the estate, and Seraphina’s autonomy hang on whether the truth comes out neatly enough to survive society.

If she fails, she does not merely lose a murderer, she loses her scheme, her standing, and the right to run her own life, and Rook becomes a convenient scapegoat in a well-cut coat.

Perfect for readers who like locked-room puzzles, prickly competence, a hyper-observant butler, drawing-room power games, and dry Regency humour with teeth, plus just enough romantic friction to make propriety sweat.

Expect a clue-rich, fair-play mystery with a satisfying logical reveal, non-gory Regency intrigue, and a closed-door, slow-burn romance with a hopeful HFN, all in a complete standalone case within the wider series. Now go on, click Look Inside, you may as well see who had the nerve to weaponise ink.


Genre: Mystery

Used availability for Marisa Paxon's Murder for the Countess


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