They're finally here!
Earlier this month, Dean
Street Press reissued the first ten novels in the long
out-of-print Anthony Bathurst series by an unjustly forgotten mystery
writer, Brian
Flynn, but I grew tired of waiting and dipped into three novels
ahead of the reprints – namely The
Billiard-Room Mystery (1927), The
Murders Near Mapleton (1929) and The
Spiked Lion (1933). I was favorably impressed by all three of
them and made me look forward to the rest even more.
So, now that I finally
got my hands on a couple of reprints, I wanted to read the novel that
put Flynn on his journey back to the printed page.
Some years ago, Steve
Barge, who's better known as "The Puzzle Doctor" of In
Search of the Classic Mystery Novel, received a normally
hard-to-get copy of Flynn's The
Mystery of the Peacock's Eye (1928) as a Christmas present.
It was love on first sight. Over the next two years, Steve posted
many tantalizing reviews
on his blog of Flynn's often obscure, long out-of-print detective
novels and probably began blackmailing pestering Dean Street Press
behind the scenes to get Flynn reprinted – until they finally
relented. Steve also introduced these new editions instead of Curt
Evans (turf war, turf war, turf war!). So, with the intro out of
the way, let's dig in!
The Mystery of the
Peacock's Eye is the third entry in the Anthony Bathurst series
and shows the same quality of complex, but ultimately simple,
plotting that was on display in The Murders Near Mapleton and
an obvious admiration for Conan
Doyle's Sherlock Holmes.
The first three chapters
set the stage with the introduction of three, apparently separate,
events that become hopelessly intertwined when they begin to interact
and disentangling all the plot-threads takes quite some work. The
first act takes place at The Westhampton Hunt Ball, "the
outstanding event of the season," which has been honored with "the presence of Royalty" and Sheila Delaney dances with a
stranger. A stranger who prefers to stay incognito and was introduced
to Sheila as Mr. X. In the next chapter, Flynn takes a page from
Doyle's "A Scandal in Bohemia" (collected in The Adventures of
Sherlock Holmes, 1892) when Bathurst is called upon by Alexis,
Crown Prince of Clorania, who's engaged to the Princess Imogena of
Natalia – a union that will bind Clorania and Natalia in "an
irrevocable alliance." Regrettably, His Royal Highness had been
indiscreet with a woman and is now being hounded by a blackmailer.
Chief Detective-Inspector
Richard Bannister is one of the "Big Six" of Scotland Yard and in
the third chapter "Dandy Dick," as he's known to friends, is
enjoying a well-deserved holiday, but is disturbed by Sergeant
Godfrey from the Seabourne Police Station. A murder has been reported
to them and they immediately turned to the famous Scotland Yard
detective for help.
A young lady went to the
dental surgery of Mr. Ronald Branston, a posh dentist, to get a tooth
extracted, but when Branston briefly went into his workroom, he was
locked inside. Branston's cries attracted the attention of his
housekeeper, but, when he returned to his surgery, he found that the
lady was sitting dead in the operating chair. All around her mouth "hung that unmistakable bitter almonds smell." This is
merely the premise of a case that becomes hard to comprehend when
these three, seemingly unconnected, events begin to interact and
found myself grasping at shapes and shadows without getting hold of
the full truth. But the beautiful and complex layering of the plot
doesn't allow me to divulge much more about the story.
What I can tell you is
that Bathurst and Bannister made a great team, wonderfully playing of
each other, as they tried to grapple with the problems facing them.
Such as why the identity of the victim was obscured, who was the
mysterious Indian who called upon the victim a month before the
murder and how all of this is tied to the Peacock's Eye – a "magnificent blue-shaded emerald" of "somewhat
peculiar shape." There's also a delightful series of chapters
in which the detectives track down several banknotes that were stolen
from the victim. And these banknotes changed hands quite a few times
between suspects and side-characters in the story. Flynn knew how to
pen an engrossing detective story!
However, the biggest
surprise, besides the solution, came in the final chapters when the
action moved from England to "the spider-web city" of the "Land of Water," Amsterdam, The Netherlands, where the chief of
the Dutch police, Cuypers, lends a hand in apprehending the killer.
Normally, when English detectives cross the channel, they go to
France. So this was a very pleasant surprise. It almost felt like
going from an English Golden Age mystery to a translation of a Appie
Baantjer novel.
So, all in all, Flynn's
The Mystery of the Peacock's Eye succeeded marvelously in
making an ultimately simple, grubby crime appear like an inescapable,
maze-like problem, but with all the clues to the very interesting
solution sprinkled throughout the story – making it one of the
better detective novels of the 1920s. Obviously, Flynn admired
Doyle's Sherlock Holmes, but I unreservedly recommend The Mystery
of the Peacock's Eye to devotees of Agatha
Christie. The story has the feeling of very early Christie, like
The
Secret of Chimneys (1925) and The
Mystery of the Blue Train (1928), but with one of those
shimmering plots that defines her 1930s mystery novels.
I'll definitely tackle
the other Flynn's on my pile ASAP, but not until early November,
because my blogging schedule is filled until then.
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