John
Russell Fearn was an incredibly prolific
fictioneer who cut his teeth in the American pulp magazines of the
1930s, writing primarily science-fiction, but in the mid-1940s he
began to move into the hardcover novel market with wildly
imaginative, pulp-style detective novels – bubbling with
creativity, original ideas and some innovative tricks. Fearn had an
fundamental understanding what makes a detective story tick with his
own ideas what can be done with it, but he was also a pulp writer in
heart and soul. So he wrote fast and what he wrote often lacked the
polish of his more well-known Golden Age contemporaries.
Nevertheless, Fearn could
be a tremendously entertaining mystery writer whose rich imagination
and original ideas turned many of his second-string mystery novels in
clever or innovative pieces of detective fiction. Sometimes, he
produced something that was more than merely a fun, second-string
pulp mystery.
Within
That Room! (1946) is mostly a throwback to the
turn-of-the-century detective story, but distinguished itself with a
unique locked room-trick concerning a haunted room where, once a
year, a demonic entity appears – levitating in mid-air! They
Arm Alone (1947) has, what can only be described as, a "once
in a lifetime" crime never used before or since in a detective
story. Except
for One Thing (1947) is an inverted mystery with the main
question being what happened to the body and the solution is
shockingly original. The
Master Must Die (1953) preceded Isaac Asimov's The
Caves of Steel (1954) as an experiment in transporting the
traditional (locked room) detective story to the science-fiction
genre, which has a sequel in The
Lonely Astronomer (1954). A less than perfect blend of the
two genre's with an annoying detective at the helm, but the absolute
loopy, purely science-fiction solution to the impossible murder was
vivid and original.
The inventive impossible
crimes, the creative scientific murders and his deeply-rooted ties to
the pulps aren't the only things that sets his detective novels
apart. Fearn set some of his best detective novels among the
lower-and working classes of society, which give them a very unusual
atmosphere for traditional detective novels.
One
Remained Seated (1946) and the posthumously published
masterpiece, Pattern
of Murder (2006), take place among the people who work at
movie theaters in the 1940s and 50s, while Death
in Silhouette (1950) is a locked room mystery with an
ordinary, working class family home as the backdrop – which has a
great play on the double-solution. Flashpoint
(1950) gives the reader flashes of the malaise in post-war Britain.
So you don't come across large, sprawling mansions or country houses
in Fearn's detective story, but, when they're used as a setting,
there tends to be a utilitarian reason behind it.
The
Crimson Rambler (1947) takes place in-and around a big,
rambling manor house, some hundreds of years old, but a large place
with surrounding grounds were needed for the intricate locked
room-trick to work. Account
Settled (1949) introduced a large, isolated house in its
second half that had been converted into a giant, mechanized death
trap.
So with all of that in
mind, I expected the subject of today's review, The Fourth Door
(1948), to follow a similar track with its manor house setting as The
Crimson Rambler or Account Settled. Philip
Harbottle noted in his 2017 guest-post, "The
Detective Fiction of John Russell Fearn," that The Fourth
Door has "some impossible crime sub-texts," but that's
not the case and the story, while toying with fingerprints, is not
one of Fearn's science-based mysteries – instead opting to play
around with some dusty old tropes from a bygone era. Fearn emptied a
bag of 1920s mystery cliches, a big manor house, twins and an
oriental dagger, which he used to confuse and mislead the genre-savvy
reader. Something he succeeded in doing for a good chunk of the
story!
The Fourth Door
takes place amid the flat, densely wooded countryside of Caldon
Village, Berkshire, which is overlooked by a hill with a ruined
castle perched on its summit. This beautiful, picturesque sight is
what greeted Elva Reeves when she arrived there from London.
Elva Reeves has been
engaged as the new parlor maid at the home of Drake Caldon, Caldon
Manor, where he lives with his cousin, Barry Wood, who works as his
estate manager and a small staff – most notably the butler and
housekeeper, Mr. and Mrs. Carfax. There used to be a twin brother,
Arthur Caldon, but the brothers had one hell of a row three years
ago. So now Arthur lives in a cottage, half a mile from the cottage, "where he dabbles at painting for fun," but he still loves
to spite his brother. Such as getting engaged to Jessie Standish, who
runs a garage with her brother, because getting "the chance of
tying up the Caldon name with a garage" amuses him. Arthur also
has in his possession a antique, oriental dagger with "an extra
long, thin blade" that will become an important piece of
evidence in a murder case.
A very conventional
premise that seemingly becomes predictable when Wood tries to make a
move on Elva, but Drake tells him to go pound dirt, because he
intends to make Elva his wife. But then the story unexpectedly
abandons the well-trodden path.
Elva has no interest in
the salaried estate manager as "a possible man to help her climb
the social ladder" and naturally agrees to become Caldon's
wife. She goes from parlor maid to personal secretary to lady of the
manor in mere weeks, but less successful is her attempt to end the
feud between her husband and brother-in-law, which forces her to side
with her husband. And it is revealed that Caldon has Wood completely
under his thumb, because he has another man's life on his conscience.
So you would assume that
everything has been put in place for the murder of either Arthur or
Drake, but it's Jessie Standish who's murdered with the oriental
dagger in her bedroom and her brother witnessed Arthur fleeing the
scene – or was it his brother? After the murder, Arthur disappears
and his cottage is torched to the ground. A pretty problem for the
rustic Inspector Butteridge, "the best criminal expert for miles
around," who's faced with "a lot of tomfool clues"
suggesting three equally maddening options: (A) Drake framed his
brother and perhaps even murdered him (B) Arthur committed the murder
and perhaps could have taken his brother's place at the manor house
(C) a third person is pulling the strings from the shadows. A
possibility that cannot be discarded out of hand.
The groundwork for The
Fourth Door is rock solid with an original take on some old,
hackneyed tropes and fully expected the ending would cement it as one
of Fearn's best detective novels, but the plot began began to fall
apart towards the end of chapter 15. My problem is not that an
important clue fortuitously fell into Elva's lap, but that's where
the trouble started with the plot. Next thing that happens is
unexpected, completely ridiculous, twist in the plot-thread about the
past murder. A twist that could not possibly have been secret to
Wood, because he kept a steel cashbox in his room with newspaper
clippings. I don't believe the newspapers would have neglected to
mention such an important and essential detail, but it was necessary
to add another dimension to option C and to tidy up another (minor)
plot-thread.
What ultimately prevented
The Fourth Door from becoming an alternative classic, of
sorts, is the ending. Fearn came up with a truly imaginative designed
to trick and confuse experienced mystery readers, but he decided to
go with obvious and least imaginative explanation. So the intriguing
premise was completely wasted. I can't help but think what John
Dickson Carr or Agatha
Christie could have done with the setup, because The Fourth
Door had all the potential to be a detective novel like Carr's
Death
Turns the Tables (1941) and Christie's Peril
at End House (1932). But this unfortunately turned out to be
a case in which Fearn's pulp tendencies, fast writing and careless
plotting, worked against him. The Fourth Door should have been
so much better!
Interestingly, the
multi-faceted motive of the murderer showed some of his usual
ingenuity and creativity, of which was one facet was something new
(certainly at the time) that should have been explored further.
On a whole, The Fourth
Door started promising, but failed to deliver on its promise and
therefore hard to recommend to anyone who's not a fan of either the
author or obscure, second-string mystery novels – which is,
admittedly, a very niche corner of the genre. So, if you're new to
Fearn, I recommend you start with his masterpiece, Pattern of
Murder or the excellent Flashpoint. John Norris, of Pretty
Sinister Books, wrote glowing reviews of those two titles here
and here.
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