On October 5, 2020, Dean
Street Press is going to drop the second set of Brian
Flynn reprints, comprising of books 11-20 in the Anthony Bathurst
series, which includes a title with all the promise of being as much
as a classic as The
Mystery of the Peacock's Eye (1928) and Murder
en Route (1930) – namely Tread Softly (1937). Steve
Barge, the Puzzle Doctor,
wrote the introductory pieces and described Tread Softly as
having "a truly unique plot" that, to his knowledge, has "never been imitated." So my inner fanboy was squealing
with delight when I found a review copy in my inbox.
Tread Softly begins
with Chief Inspector Andrew MacMorran, of Scotland Yard, consulting
the Sherlockian gentleman detective, Anthony Bathurst, on what should
have been a cut-and-dried case.
Claude Merivale is a
reasonably successful stage-and screen actor, of independent means,
who appeared to have been happily married, but one day, he turns up
at the Yard to announce he had strangled his wife, Vera Merivale –
whose body was left in their bedroom. The police immediately went out
to investigate and found that the facts were exactly as he had
stated, but "the defense that he's putting up is so
extraordinary" that he very well may "leave the New Bailey
a free man." What he claims has happened is that "he
dreamt he was being attacked by a number of people" and he
fought back, but in the struggle he turned to his sleeping wife, "seized her by the throat and strangled her." Supposedly,
this happened in a state of semi-conscious unconsciousness.
A hardly credible story,
to say the least, but with an eager counsel for the defense, a highly
reputable medical expert, a hypothetical motive and a presentable
suspect who obligingly confessed suddenly placed the case for the
Crown in jeopardy. MacMorran wants "to hang the woman's
murderer" and there only three weeks left until the trial
starts.
Anthony Bathurst, astute
and helpful as ever, promises MacMorran to look into the case and
raises a number of points the police missed, or neglected to
investigate, because the murderer had come down to the Yard and
volunteered to full story to them – a story that checked out. So
there was no reason to delve deeper until they realized the strength
of the defense. And while some time has elapsed, Bathurst still
manages to unearth a clue or two. Such as a seaside snapshot of
Claude and Vera, the position of the seating of a deckchair, two
hidden tickets to a dance party at a fashionable night club and
nail-scratch on the body that shouldn't be there. Flynn even shows
the reader a scene where Bathurst is not present and tells the reader
that, had he witnessed the scene, it would have "proved
invaluable to him in his initial attempts to understand thoroughly
the psychology of the case." You don't often get a bonus clue,
but they don't make the core problem any clearer.
You're never exactly sure
what you're reading. An inverted mystery with a murderer who plays a
high stakes game of bluff poker? A whodunit posing as an inverted
mystery, because Claude Merivale was either framed or shielding
someone? Or perhaps an early precursor of the psychological crime
novel? These possibilities kept me puzzling along with my first
suspicion being something along the lines of Harriette
Ashbrook's The
Murder of Sigurd Sharon (1933), which had at the time of its
publication a startling original and unique solution, but it didn't
hold water for long. A second, more traditional, idea formed around
the facts that Merivale locked the bedroom door behind him and went
straight to the Yard instead of the local police, but that one didn't
hold either. Before you know it, you've arrived at the last two
chapters of Part One, "The Trial" and "The Verdict," which
didn't conclude in the way I expected.
There's not much that can
be said about Part Two without giving anything vital away except that
it involves a recently finished movie, The Painter of Ferrara,
which linked to a second death with all the ingenuity of the Golden
Age that was briefly teased as an impossible crime – because a
towel went missing from the locked crime scene. So how does it all
stack up? Is it as good as people say it is? Well... it depends on
what you expect.
Steve noted in his
introduction that Flynn always tried to do something different with
his novels and the style, or framework, "shifts from courtroom
drama to gothic darkness, from plotting serial killers to events that
spiral out of control." Where Tread Softly can be called
original, or unique, for its time is how the plot is presented and
played out, but not how it's resolved. Part One is a modern crime
novel decades ahead of its time with Part Two returning to the
proper, Golden Age-style detective story with one of those devilishly
murder methods. So, needless to say, I preferred the second half over
the first half.
I'm a little cautious
here, because I don't want to overpraise Tread Softly and give
the false impression it's another The Mystery of the Peacock's
Eye, The
Murders Near Mapleton (1929) or Murder en Route. Tread
Softly is not that kind of detective story. What it is, is
another fine example of the creative versatility of Brian Flynn who
continues to emerge as one of the most unjustly forgotten mystery
writers of the genre's Golden Era. You can look forward to reviews of
The Padded Door (1932), The Edge of Terror (1932), The
Horn (1934) and The Fortescue Candle (1936) in the not so
distant future.
A note for the curious:
Steve and Kate were the first to review Tread Softly in 2017
and 2018
and they were less hesitant in praising it as a masterpiece.
I enjoyed this title (and its first part) more than you did, but look forward to your reviews of the other books, none of which I have read.
ReplyDeleteDon't get me wrong. I did enjoy it, but with all the praise, I expected it to be The Mystery of the Peacock's Eye or Murder en Route of this second round of reprints. Hence my careful wording.
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