John R.S. Pringle was a
veritable one-man factory of crime fiction, who wrote hundreds of
novels, short stories and plays, published under a handful of
pennames and translated into more than thirty languages, but, upon
his passing, his work began to fall into neglect – until the
redoubtable Philip
Harbottle intervened. Since then, a good chunk of his detective
novels, thrillers and short story collections have been reissued by
the Linford Mystery Library and Endeavour Media. Such as the
interesting locked room novella I reviewed last year, The
Beard of the Prophet (1937).
I had planned to return
to his work with the promising-sounding The Last Warning
(1962), but Harbottle recommended The Royal Flush Murders
(1948). A mystery novel with "a very much better locked room
murder" than the one from The Last Warning. Well, say no
more!
The Royal Flush
Murders is the ninth book in the Superintendent Robert Budd
series, published as by "Gerald
Verner," which has a plot with a distinctly American flavor to
it. I can only describe it as S.S. van Dine's The
Greene Murder Case (1928) or Ellery Queen's The
Tragedy of Y (1932) as perceived by John
Russell Fearn (c.f. The
Man Who Was Not, 2005).
The Royal Flush
Murders begins with Superintendent Robert Budd, of Scotland Yard,
looking askance at a newspaper report of a murder with, what he
called disparagingly, "story-book stuff," because "murder
in real life was usually sordid" – without "sealed
doors" or "long lists of suspects." However, the
murder at the quaint, old-world village of Long Millford certainly
has some very unusual features.
John Brockwell was the
youngest son of Mr. Henry Brockwell, despised by everyone, whose body
had been found by a forester "impaled to the trunk of a tree
with a pitchfork" with the ten of diamonds "pinned to the
lapel of the dead man's jacket." Three weeks pass without any
arrests being made and the local authorities decide to call in
Scotland Yard. And this brings Superintendent Budd to Long Millford.
When he arrives at The
Croft, Budd finds a highly dysfunction family. Or, as the locals call
them, "a very queer lot." Henry Brockwell is a boorish
loudmouth with a short temper and constantly fights with his wife and
children, which even can get physical. The two remaining children,
James and Sandra, don't like each other very much either. Nor do they
appear to mourn the death of their younger brother. They simply yell,
fight and throw around accusations in front of the police, but, in
the middle of all of this, a letter arrives with the five playing
cards of a royal flush in diamonds written on it – a cross was
drawn besides the ten of diamonds. The murderer more than delivers on
this veiled promise of more bloodshed.
Budd has to look on,
often rather hopelessly, as one family member after another gets
shot, stabbed and strangled. Only clues the murderer left behind were
the playing cards of the unbeatable hand in poker.
The long list of suspects
with potential motives, such as revenge, extends all over the
village, but Budd also has two other problems to contend with. One of
them being the presence of an unpleasant tabloid reporter, Joshua
Craven, who's a sour man with "a perpetual grievance against his
fellow men" and functions here as a rival detective, but often
appeared to act as a lazy plot-device, or deus ex machine, by
uncharacteristically dropping clues and hints – which actually
turned out to have simple, but decent, answer. A second problem is
Budd's direct superior's getting antsy about the lack of progress,
bad press and the mounting body count. And they even threaten to take
replace him, which would be a black mark on an otherwise impeccable
record.
When a fourth murder is
committed under completely impossible circumstances, Budd is only
given four more days to find the murder or be taken off the
investigation completely.
Mrs. Brockwell is shot to
death in her bedroom, while Budd was watching the door, and the only
window was not only shut, but fastened on the inside and suicide is
out of the question, because she could not have shot herself under
her shoulder-blade. And there was no weapon found in the room. So how
did the murderer escape from the room without being seen? The locked
room-trick is modeled around a pretty standard, often used, idea in
impossible crime stories, but was put to decent use here. If only as
a fairly minor side-puzzle. The only problem with it is that it made
it even more obvious who's behind the murders. And this is where the
plot becomes quite unfair to the reader.
More than once, Budd
hammered on the fact that "the most important thing about these
crimes is the motive." If they knew why someone was busy
exterminating the whole Brockwell family, they have have their man,
but Verner holds these cards close to the chest. So you can figure
out who's behind these murders, but the motive remains murky until
the end. This made me eye another potential suspect based on, what I
assumed was, a very lively clue.
So, yeah, the plot of The
Royal Flush Murders didn't exactly gave me the "unbeatable
hand" of its namesake, but it was still a really quick and
entertaining read with an interesting take on the American-style
mansion mysteries – transplanted here to Jolly Ol' England. More
importantly, I started to like the plodding Superintendent Budd and
ended the book with a line perfectly describing his role in the
story, "I'm like Great Britain... I lose all the battles except
the last one." I might have found a companion for Fearn in
Verner!
Just so you know, I'll
return to Verner with my next read, because Sorcerer's
House (1956) is supposedly one of his better detective novels
and very John
Dickson Carr-like. Well, say no more!
This is uncanny! Tonight I am finishing my post on Venrer's Simon Gale books. I had this Verner mystery listed on my wish list of future purchases. Maybe I'll hold off.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed Sorcerer's House, the second Gale book but the one I chose to read first. I think you will be sorely disappointed by its solution. The first Gale book Noose for a Lady is so much better though the final scene is a bit too histrionic for my tastes. Tune in later on my blog for all the details.
"I think you will be sorely disappointed by its solution."
DeleteWell, you're wrong! I liked Sorcerer's House and my review will be posted tomorrow. I just submitted a comment on your piece about this series, which, for anyone interested, can be read here.