Prologue
"Welcome to the sequel of Baker and Jones - The Winchester Conspiracy! I have a deep love for this series, and this sequel is shaping up to be a complicated and exciting work. It'll be a slightly different format than the first book, featuring both Annette and Cordelia's perspectives, as well as a few other fascinating little things along the way.
I look forward to watching it come together, and I hope you enjoy it as much as I do.
To start: a synopsis:
Detective Cordelia Jones accepts a case that brings her and her partner, Annette Baker, across the sea to Kereland - an island known for its rich folklore and cantankerous people. Her mission: expose the coven of witches terrorizing the emerging city of Fieldston.
Never one for a straightforward mystery, Cordelia's newest case brings her face-to-face with a terrifying fear - that the magic of this coven might not be all smoke and mirrors. Meanwhile, Annette grapples with returning to her birthlands, struggling to make sense of her place amidst Kereland's sluggish recovery from a devastating famine.
The detective duo find themselves pushed to the brink, scrambling to make sense of the power of the coven, the history of this land, and the challenges of navigating their secret relationship with one another..."
- Ms. Appropriately
On the Rolling Hills of the Famine King
There were Seven men in Seven rooms who gave up the Kerish.
First was King Edward on throne,
who called the islands his home.
Second was Minister Mathews on stage,
who carved out the borders on page.
Third was Treasurer Ravethelen in book,
who turned all the profit and took,
Fourth was Lord Catesbyrne in castle,
who wed eviction to death and hassle.
Fifth was Abbot Heathroe on pulpit,
who the sale of the Kerish soul was culprit.
Sixth was God Almighty in Heaven,
who blighted the crop for all Seven.
And worst,
worst of all measure,
Seventh, the men who came after,
who claimed it never was.