The
Back Bay Murders (1930) is the second detective novel Dorothy
Blair and Evelyn Page co-wrote under their shared pseudonym, "Roger
Scarlett," which cemented Inspector Kane of the Boston Police
as their series-character and had the dubious honor of falling prey
to "the most glaring piece of plagiarism ever to exist" –
a "word for word copy" surreptitiously published in
England. Curt Evans
has an interesting piece
on his blog about the cover-to-cover plagiarism of The Back Bay
Murders in Don Basil's Cat and Feather (1931) with
comparable samples. And the plagiarized passages have to be read to
be believed. Don had cheek, that's for sure.
The
Back Bay Murders opens with Inspector Norton Kane taking his
friend and loyal chronicler, Mr. Underwood, to Mrs. Quincy's
reputable brownstone boardinghouse in "the formerly sedate
neighborhood of Boston's Back Bay."
Mrs.
Quincy caters to solitary individuals, "entrenched in
respectability," without immediate relatives and offers them
comfort, luxury and human society. Only exception to this rule is
Arthur Pendergast, a neurotic young man, who lives there with his
mother and he has reported unusual case of housebreaking to the
police. Pendergast's room had been ransacked and the floor was
stained with thick, reddish brown substance, as if "blood had
rained down from the ceiling," but even more curious was the
white Persian cat playing in the room with a white feather –
tossing it around and pouncing on it. A bizarre scene and Kane
promises to let him know if anything turns up.
However,
Kane and Underwood return to the brownstone the next day when
Pendergast has been found murdered in his room. Someone had slit his
throat and a white feather was left on the scene.
Inspector
Kane is in fine form as he solves Pendergast's murder in short time
and identifies a visitor to the brownstone, Alvin Hyde, as the
murderer. Hyde came to the brownstone to deliver a record of
Saint-Saëne's Danse Macabre to Mr. Weed and they listened to
it together, which is when Hyde got out of the room and murdered
Pendergast. But this explanation immediately poses another question:
who's Alvin Hyde?
Kane
reasons that Pendergast was a neurotic man without friends or
acquaintances outside of the house, which means that without "a
ready-made, practically self-confessed murderer" the police
would looking for his killer among his fellow lodgers. So the
murderer blazed a path of evidence leading straight out of the front
door of the brownstone. And, had the police fallen for this scheme,
they would forever be chasing a man who doesn't exist. A scheme as
cunning as it's daring and especially liked the red herring of the
faked fingerprints. Just one of the many clever little aspects that
make up the plot of The Back Bay Murders.
During
the second half of the story, Mrs. Quincy is scratched with a deadly
dose of hydrocyanic acid in her bedroom and the circumstances of her
death makes it a (borderline) impossible crime.
Hydrocyanic
acid causes instantaneous death and her husband, who was in the
sitting room next door, heard her fall. The bedroom had second,
unlocked door that opened into the hallway (see floorplan), but her
husband heard no commotion or anything that indicated that a second
person had been present in the bedroom – which is by itself not
enough to tag this as an impossible crime. However, the murderer
turns out to have a perfect alibi and, as Kane observed, it appeared
to be "physically impossible" for this person to have
killed Mrs. Quincy. And the explanation is a play on a well-known
locked room technique.
So
I decided to tag this review as a "locked
room mystery" and "impossible
crime." Even if it is, technically, only a borderline
impossibility. Still, a very nicely done and cleverly conceived
murder.
Honestly,
I did not expect The Back Bay Murders to upstage its
predecessor, because the series would not really find its own voice,
namely that of a dark, gloomy yakata-mono (mansion stories),
until the next novel, but here the authors were already getting
comfortable with themselves – slowly emerging from the shadow of
S.S. van Dine. This
second mystery has a really knotty, complex plot littered with
physical and psychological clues and hints, which range from a leaky
roof, broken pieces of (crystal) glass and the psychological makeup
of the murderer. There's always a hint of Freud in the Scarlett
novels.
The
personality of the murderer obviously took its cue from R.L.
Stevenson's Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1885) and
the only drawback is that this made the murderer's identity
increasingly obvious as the story progresses.
Nevertheless,
everything else was very well handled and showed two mystery writers
who were growing and quickly finding their own stride. They would
come into full bloom with their next three mystery novels and the
result is a lamentably short-lived, but high quality, series of
detective stories that simply cannot be recommended enough. Coachwhip
and Curt Evans deserve a heap of praise for bringing this series back
into print. Because these books belong on the shelves of every
enthusiast of the Golden Age of detective fiction.
The
Roger Scarlett Mysteries:
The
Beacon Hill Murders
(1930)
The
Back Bay Murders
(1930)
Cat's
Paw
(1931)
Murder
Among the Angells
(1932)
In
the First Degree
(1933)
I read Beacon Hill & Back Bay err... back-to-back, and found them very similar in design (extreme focus on character movement and alibi, the claustrophobic setting that isn't as atmospheric as in later novels, the early/mid plot twist followed by the second murder), so that was both disappointing and slightly tiring: I imagine that putting some time in between would've made Back Bay stand more on its own in my mind, rather than 'it's basically Beacon Hill but different'.
ReplyDeleteBut on this is on the whole a very entertaining series (with Angells as the masterpiece of course), and it's also a good showcase of an author (authors) who are willing to evolve, picking out the good stuff from their earlier work and using that to come up with a different kind of novel the next time.
You're probably right that it helped not reading them back-to-back, because I didn't think The Back Bay Murders resembled The Beacon Hill Murders all that much. Stylistically, they were cut from the same cloth, but thought the plot and story-telling were different enough to distinguish the two.
DeleteOne of the amazing things about this series is how different the first and last novels are. The only thing they have in common is the mansion setting and Inspector Kane.
By the way, I got myself a copy of The 8 Mansion Murders and look forward to reading it, but you have to wait until early July for the review.
Thanks, and take your time :)
DeleteThanks for the review. :) Now that you've read all of them, I'd be curious to know how you would categorise and rank them in order of merit...?
ReplyDeleteI would rank them as follow:
Delete1: Murder Among the Angells (obviously)
2: In the First Degree (not entirely original, but has a daring, well-handled plot)
3: Cat's Paw (an excellent, well crafted mystery only marred by the fact that it withheld an important clue from the reader)
4: The Back Bay Murders (an improvement on the first one)
5: The Beacon Hill Murders (a good Van Dine-style mystery, but overshadowed and outperformed by the other books in this series).
Hahaha, now your comment earlier this week makes sense -- how's that for serendipity?! I shall be back to add my own reflections after my review goes up tomorrow...
ReplyDeleteSure, it fits this situation as well, but I was referring to another recent discovery of mine. I'm almost sure that you're completely unaware of it.
DeleteCool, you have me very curious. I guess we'll have to wait and see...
DeleteWell, now we know that we agree on this one, I'm very happy that you also like the second murder. Unlike you I wasn't entirely confident I could list it as impossible, but the timing element probably does just sweep it into such and so I'll go back and change the labelling on my own review in due course.
ReplyDeleteand even if it's not fully impossible, the way it's setup and clewed is fabulous (the method comes a bit out of nowehre, but the...other aspect is a beautifully sly piece of giving the reader a key piece of information to disregard).
Yes, the second murder is in that gray, borderland area between the impossible crime and the howdunit, but the method (a classic locked room technique) in combination with the perfect alibi of the murderer made me decide to tag it as an impossible crime. I think it was the alibi that tipped the scales for me.
DeleteI know you like to read series in chronological order, but you should really consider switching Cat's Paw and Murder Among the Angells around for your next Scarlett read. I want to know if you see the same thing in the locked room that I saw.
Sorry, I'm not abandoning my chronological order of these for anything -- I think there's far too much to be gleaned from the gradual improvements Blair and Page make as they go, incrementally working from something they thought they'd ape to something they actually wanted to become. And I'm rather fascinated to watch it all play out, to be honest.
DeleteBut we shall compare notes on Angells, we shall, we shall, we shall. Just all in good time.
Just read them back-to-back then. :)
DeleteXD
Delete