Helen
McCloy's The Pleasant Assassin and Other Cases of Dr. Basil
Willing (2003) is a collection of short stories, originally
assembled by Crippen
& Landru, reprinted in 2013 as an ebook by The
Murder Room and gathered all ten short stories about McCloy's
series-detective, Dr. Basil Willing – a psychiatric consultant of
the district attorney's office. This volume has all ten short
stories, including eight previously uncollected stories, that were
written about Dr. Basil Willing. A splendid collections demonstrating
McCloy's versatility as both a writer and plotter.
There are stories
littered with the conventions of the traditional detective, such as
locked room puzzles, impossible crimes and unbreakable alibis, but
the post-1940s stories show a willingness to adept to a new world.
Resulting in some unusual plots or subject matters. Well, unusual
when it comes from a writer so closely associated with the genre's
Golden Age.
Most notably, there are
not one, but two, stories in this collection dealing with a crime
rarely touched upon by classic mystery writers: mass murder.
Fascinatingly, there's an extraterrestrial element in both stories
and they were penned exactly thirty years apart. So it was
interesting to see McCloy revisit these ideas so late in her career
and wrote a completely different story around them, but I'm getting
ahead of myself here. Let's take down these stories from the top.
"Through a Glass,
Darkly" is the opener of this collection, originally published in
the September, 1948, issue of Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine
(hereafter, EQMM), but this novella has already been discussed
in my 2011 review
of All But Impossible! An Anthology of Locked Room and Impossible
Crime Stories by Members of the Mystery Writers of America
(1981). So moving on!
The second novella of the
collection, "The Singing Diamonds," was first printed in the
October, 1949, issue of EQMM and is a quasi-impossible crime
story plotted around the UFO phenomena. There are entire shelves of
detective stories with supposedly malevolent ghosts, family curses
and rooms that kill, but not that many have handled the topic of
alien visitations. McCloy here mixed a flurry of UFO sightings with
mass murder, possible espionage and government conspiracies.
Mathilde Verworn was one
of the eyewitnesses who saw the flat, elongated squares, "like
the pips on a nine of diamonds," flying in V-formation at a
great height, emanating "a strange resonance" like the
humming or singing of "a high-tension wire in the wind,"
but in the last fortnight three witnesses have unexpected died –
which is why she decided to consult a specialist, Dr. Basil Willing.
The plot he exposes is a clever, well executed interpretation of a
trick as classic as it's pure evil. But the story as a whole was
marvelous. From the premise of the flying diamonds and dying
witnesses to Dr. Willing getting "a lesson in the manufacture of
public opinion" as a high-placed Naval Intelligence officer
shows him how they manipulated and distorted the press reports on the
flying diamonds. Easily one of the better and more memorable stories
in this collection.
"The Case of the
Duplicate Door" is a completely overlooked locked room mystery with
an unusual publishing history, which when it was released, in 1949,
as a separately printed story in the Mystery of the Month series of
jigsaw puzzles. You had to put together a 200-piece jigsaw puzzle and
the completed picture was a clue to the solution. This is probably
why even Robert Adey missed it when he was compiling Locked Room
Murders (1991). However, the story was reprinted in the February,
1965, issue of EQMM under alternative title, "Into Thin
Air," with an added paragraph to replace the jigsaw clue.
This is the EQMM
version of the story with its original title restored and a reduced,
black-and-white reproduction of the assembled jigsaw puzzle. Purely
as a locked room story, this is a curiosity that put a false solution
to good use.
Matthew Rex, President of
the Conservative Trust, has absconded with $80,000 in cash and
$300,000 in bearer bonds, but he sends a panicky radio gram from
Bermuda that he can "explain everything" and that he'll
return the following day by private-plane – police is waiting for
him when he lands. But when they storm the plane, they only find a
fedora, a pair of gloves and a shot glass half filled with brandy.
Nobody had left the plane after it landed and the pilot swears his
boss had been aboard, but Matthew Rex had inexplicably disappeared
along with a briefcase that had been chained to his wrist. This is
the point where the story does something that's as clever as it's
frustrating.
A perfectly logical, but
incorrect, solution is proposed that turned the inexplicable
disappearance into an unfortunate accident. An accident is not the
most desirable explanation to a seemingly impossible situation, no
matter how bizarre the circumstances, but this was a genuinely good,
reasonable and acceptable answer – directly linked to the actual
solution. A weak, uninspired solution that looked much better than it
was, because it was backed up by the false solution. Dr. Willing
figured out the trick when he spotted the flaw in this perfectly
acceptable explanation.
So this is an uneven, but
interesting, curiosity and the only reason why it never made any of
the locked room anthologies is its obscurity. Hey, it would be an
excuse to put McCloy's name on the cover and you can't keep
reprinting "Through a Glass, Darkly."
The next story, "Thy
Brother Death," was culled from a 1955 issue of This Week
and begins when Dr. Willing is consulted by an acquaintance. Dick
Blount found an anonymous letter, addressed to his wife, in the
morning mail with ominous-sounding lines of poetry from Percy Bysshe
Shelley. Suspicion has fallen on a village girl, who had worked for
them as a maid, but was dismissed after a diamond brooch went
missing. Dr. Willing wants a sample of her handwriting and
accompanies Blount to his private office to get some canceled checks
she had endorsed, but, when they arrive, the telephone is ringing.
The caller was his desperate wife, Clara, who called to say "someone
was prowling outside the house" followed by scream and a
gunshot. And then silence.
A good, old-fashioned
detective story with more emphasis on the how, rather than the who,
which hinged on a clever, but ultimately simple, alibi-trick
reminiscent of Christopher
Bush. A note of warning: the solution is harder to anticipate for
readers today, because the hinge of the alibi-trick is specific to
that period in time.
"Murder Stops the
Music" was first published in This Week in 1957 and Dr.
Willing is tasked with solving the murder of a famous concert
pianist, Gertrude Ehrenthal, who was stabbed to death during a
village square dance for local charity when the place was suddenly
plunged in darkness. I think murderer moved around a little too
easily in a pitch-black room with people standing around, but the
double-clue of the ill-mannered dog was smartly handled. A good, but
minor, story.
"The Pleasant Assassin"
was originally published in the December, 1970, issue of EQMM
and Dr. Willing is consulted by Captain Aloysius Grogan, of the
Boston Police Department, who needs his help with ensnaring a
respected academic, Professor Jeremiah Pitcairn. Apparently, the
professor is deeply involved in the drug trade and capturing involves
a quasi-locked room problem of a warning message being transmitted
from a closely observed space (c.f. Edmund Crispin's "A
Country to Sell," 1955). However, the plot is paper-thin to the
point that it barely exists, but stands out for its open,
liberally-minded opinion on marijuana and Captain Grogan even
endorsed its legalization ("as long as marijuana is illegal it
brings young people it brings young people into contact with the
criminal world"). Not what you would expect from a Golden Age
mystery writer, but good to see McCloy tried to keep up with the
times.
"Murder Ad Lib" was
originally published in the November, 1964, issue of EQMM and
is an unusual poorly plotted detective story. Dr. Willing is only
present as a sharp-eyed, quick-witted spectator. Lt. Carson Dawes, of
the Los Angeles Police, knows the murderer's identity and that his
alibi has crumbled to pieces, but the murderer is blissfully unaware
of these development. So all the police lieutenant has to do is sit
back and "let him talk himself into the gas chamber," but
he allowed a close friend of the suspect to be present and this
person managed to give him a warning message. Dawes is the only one
who misses the moment when this happened. The reader can only spot
this painfully obvious moment, but decoding the message is
impossible. So this is the practically inescapable dud you come
across in nearly every short story collection.
"A Case of Innocent
Eavesdropping" was originally published in the March, 1978, issue
of EQMM and is more of a domestic crime than a puzzle
detective story.
Mrs. Jessie Markel is an
elderly lady who moves in with her son, daughter-in-law and grandson,
but her daughter-in-law, Maggie, exploits her from all sides. Maggie
has taken full control of her income and has her "scrubbing all
the pots and pans that can't go into the dishwasher," running
the vacuum cleaner, polishing the silver and babysitting her grandson
– which gives her little time or energy for anything else. Maggie
tells her friends Mrs. Markel needs this work "to recover her
identity." There is, however, something sinister going on the
Markel household and Mrs. Markel learns a terrifying secret that ends
in murder.
However, the only thing
Dr. Willing has to do here is exonerate an innocent man by destroying
a lie from a cantankerous, dishonest eyewitness. I didn't dislike
this story, but hardly one of McCloy's best works.
"Murphy's Law" is
another minor, but enjoyable, story originally published in the May,
1979, issue of EQMM and the structure of the plot recalls
Edward
D. Hoch's short stories about his thief-for-hire, Nick
Velvet. The story begins with Gerald Murphy and Professor
Allerton plotting to steal "a small album" of ten ancient
Greek coins from a notorious collector, Sammy Bork, which have an
estimated value of half a million dollars. Naturally, everything goes
wrong and Dr. Willing has to exonerate one of them from a potential
murder charge. A good short story with multiple, intertwined
plot-threads.
This collection ends
strongly with the unnerving "The Bug That's Going Around,"
originally printed in the August, 1979, issue of EQMM and
opens with a covert challenge to the reader. In most of Dr. Willing's
murder cases, "the essential clue has been some scrap of rare
information," but this time, he solved it with common "scraps
of knowledge" accessible "to everybody who bothered to
read newspapers." The extraordinary problem here is another
quasi-impossible puzzle of a scientific nature and the story is in
more than way related to "The Singing Diamonds."
The backdrop of the story
is a convention of microbiologists at the Forum Hotel, but an
inexplicable epidemic has left five people dead and even Dr.
Willing's five-year-old grandson has fallen ill. A bizarre
micro-organism has been found in the bodies of everyone who died or
fell ill at the hotel, but the problem is that the micro-organism
appears to be "a new species," violating all "the
laws of evolution by appearing too suddenly," which makes the
thing a monster – something literally out of this world! So are
these micro-organisms "silent, invisible micro-astronauts,"
who don't need spaceships, because they can survive "all
extremes of heat, cold and distance." An alien killer! And if
this is the case, how did they get in the air-conditioning system of
a Boston hotel?
Dr. Willing finds a
logical and rational explanation for "an impossible
micro-organism," which he deduced from a doodle on a telephone
pad found at the scene of a murder. A genuinely good, slightly
unnerving story of mass murder and a potential extraterrestrial
threat. A great closer to a great collection!
So, on a whole, The
Pleasant Assassin and Other Cases of Dr. Basil Willing is an
outstanding collection of McCloy's short fiction that opened strongly
with an all-time classic, a highly original novella, a virtually
unknown locked room mystery and good alibi story. After these four
excellent stories, the quality tapered off a little bit and had one
dud, but McCloy returned to form in the last two stories. Highly
recommended!
No comments:
Post a Comment