Christopher
Bush's The Case of the Hanging Rope (1937) is the
seventeenth detective novel in the Ludovic Travers and Superintendent
Wharton series, rechristened as The Wedding Night Murder in
US., which was published during what some consider to be a vintage
year for the genre – a golden year, of the golden decade, of the
Golden Age. A fine year with an excellent harvest of detective
stories. Some of them are still considered classic masterpieces
today.
Classics such as Anthony
Berkeley's Trial
and Error (1937), John Dickson Carr's The
Four False Weapons (1937), Agatha Christie's Death
on the Nile (1937), Gladys Mitchell's Come
Away, Death (1937) and John Rhode's Death
on the Board (1937).
So where does Bush's The
Case of the Hanging Rope exactly stand in this illustrious class
of '37? Well, let's find out!
Sonia Vorge is an
Anglo-Russian aviatrix, like Amelia Earhart, who was driving race
cars at eighteen, "picking up prizes at Brooklands,"
before she started competing in "the international circuits and
holding her own against men," but, during an Alpine race, she
wrecked her car – killing her friend and passenger, Irene Carne.
Sonia escaped with a broken arm and smashed ribs. After her stint as
a female dare-devil of the race track, she picked up parachuting,
gliding and finally long-distance flying.
A second tragedy happens
when Sonia crashes her plane in the Austrian Alps and her co-pilot,
Maurice Trove, damaged his legs and is unable to walk. So she went
looking for help, but she wandered around for two days until by "sheer bling, blazing luck" stumbling across a forester.
The wreck and Trove's body were never found, but rumors of "reliable
evidence" of Trove's survival have begun to circulate. A man
claimed to have seen Trove in Odessa, Russia, three months after the
plane crash. Even the newspaper headlines are now boldly asking the
question "IS MAURICE TROVE STILL ALIVE?"
These rumors and public
speculations begin on the eve of her marriage to a well-known
theatrical producer, Sidley Cordovan, who had broken off his initial
engagement to Sonia. Cordovan had "some pretty hard things"
to say about his former fiance, but they became reengaged in the wake
of the plane crash.
Sidley and Sonia have a
modest wedding ceremony at a London registry office with Ludovic
Travers, an acquaintance of Sonia, acting as one of the witnesses.
When Travers
congratulates the newlywed Sonia, she invites him to have lunch with
him the following day and promises with "a sardonic delight"
that he won't be bored, but why delay their honeymoon for a casual
lunch? The day had been heavy with portent. Early next morning,
Travers is called out of bed, by Wharton, with the news that Sonia
Vorge had been murdered at Montage Court – where they had been
spending their wedding night. Sonia was stabbed to death in her
bridal bed and Sidley was found in the next room, drugged and dazed,
with a noose of stout linen-line hanging from a cross-beam. A poor
attempt by the murderer to disguise the crime as a botched
murder/suicide.
A salient detail is that
the elderly caretaker, Coales, claims to have seen the foreboding "apparition" of the Lame Monk of Montage, "quite a
well-known ghost," on the night of the murder. Travers would
probably have believed Coales had he seen the ghost on any other
night, but not on that specific night.
Travers and Wharton begin
to delve into the backgrounds of everyone involved, which brings
Wharton to France to talk with the eccentric owner of Montage Court,
Sir Raphael Breye, who left England to live as a recluse in the south
of France with his vast collection of paintings. This charming little
excursion to France shows why Wharton has become my favorite Golden
Age policeman. Meanwhile, Travers is doing what he does best: testing
the soundness of everyone's alibis.
Some of the alibis aren't
only cast-iron, they appear to be made of hand-wrought steel, but "hand-wrought may be home-made" and they've demolished
seemingly unbreakable alibis before. Travers gives a practical
demonstration on how to make a homely alibi. However, the murderer's
alibi-trick is something different altogether.
Bush's best and most
successful alibi stories either have minutely-timed, clockwork-like
plots (The
Case of the Missing Minutes, 1936) or were carefully staged
tricks (The
Case of the Murdered Major, 1941), but here the murderer's
unshakable alibi relayed on something unpredictable – which could
have rendered the alibi completely useless. Sure, the murderer had an
excuse to explain this unpredictable element, but it would still left
this person without an alibi. Still, the idea behind the alibi-trick
is original and possibly unique. Only problem is that it's a risky
method to use in a crime that can get you hanged. Murderer was really
lucky it worked exactly as planned.
The explanation as to who
murdered Sonia, drugged Sidley and why there was a rope hanging from
a cross-beam formed an interesting play on the tightly-linked,
closely-timed double murder puzzles Bush specialized in before World
War II. Dead
Man Twice (1930), Dancing
Death (1931) and The
Case of the April Fools (1933) are great examples of them,
but the multiple, interacting plot-threads of The Case of the
Hanging Rope were loosely tied together. Something that would
have been less of a problem, if the murderer had a stronger motive
and the characterization had been better. There were only three
convincing characters, besides Travers and Wharton, which is why I
didn't go over the list of suspects. They were mostly colorless.
Unfortunately, these
shortcomings prevented The Case of the Hanging Rope from
securing a spot in the top-rank in Bush's oeuvre, but I can
still recommend it to his loyal readers as a good, but loosely
plotted, entry in the series with an insanely original alibi-trick.
And if you specifically like detective stories that center on
destroying alibis, you have to read The Case of the Hanging Rope,
because this one doesn't rely on screwing with people's perception of
space and/or time.
My last few excursions
into this series haven't exactly been as successful as my earlier
ones. So my next read from Dean
Street Press is probably going to be return to always wonderful
E.R.
Punshon.
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