Murder Under A Blue Moon
Mona Moon is not your typical young lady. She is a cartographer by trade, explorer by nature, and adventurer by heart.
But there's a problem. Miss Mona is broke. It's during the Depression, and her application has just been turned down to join an expedition to the Amazon.
What's she to do? Perhaps get a job as a department store salesgirl. Anything to tide her over until the next assignment.
There's a knock on the door. Who could this be in the middle of the night?
Holding a revolver, Mona reluctantly opens her door to a man wearing a Homburg hat and holding a briefcase.
"I bring glad tidings. Your Uncle Manfred Moon has died and left you as his heir to the Moon fortune. You are now one of the richest women in the country!" he says.
Mona's response is to point her revolver in his face. If the stranger is telling the truth, she will apologize. If he is a fraud, she will shoot him.
That's how Mona does things in 1933.
Murder Under A Blood Moon
Mona is eating breakfast with Jetta Dressler, her personal secretary, and Chloe, her poodle, when she receives a telegram from her friend, Lady Alice Morrell, begging her to come to England. It seems Lady Alice is receiving death threats!
Alarmed that her dear friend needs help, Mona gathers her pistol, her steamer trunks, and Violet, her maid, to travel to Merry Old England. Once there, Mona encounters a nemesis she hasn't seen for a very long time. She was lucky once to survive. Will she be as lucky now?
Armed with her pistol, courage, and a bag of tricks, Mona is determined to save Lady Alice from harm, even if it means she might die trying.
That's how Mona does things in 1933.
Murder Under A Bad Moon
Mona has inherited a fortune from her uncle and is one of the richest women during the Depression. But there's a problem. Miss Mona is being accused of murdering her neighbor by a corrupt sheriff. Mona has made enemies in the Bluegrass, and the sheriff's been told to make life difficult for her.
Why? Because Mona pays good wages to her employees and offers free health care. She even let her miners unionize. Mona is considered a radical and dangerous to some of the other horse owners. They want to be shed of Mona's extreme views.
It's too bad someone murdered Judge Landis Garrett, but if the evidence swings around Mona's way--all the better if it sticks many of the locals think.
Mona's response is to tell the sheriff and his cronies to go to hell. You want a fight? Well, bring it on!
That's how Mona does things in 1933.