The
past ten years have been a deluge of reprints, translations and even
some newer, classically-styled works that turned into a flood of
Noah-like proportions ushering in the current period of rediscovery –
a renaissance age I predicted in the late 2000s and again
towards the end of 2014. Coincidentally, or exactly according to my
prediction, the reprint renaissance really began to gain momentum in
2015 as more publishers and imprints appeared. The downside to this
success that it's hard sometimes to keep pace with all the new
releases. So, usually, I'm trailing behind the new reprints and
releases, except this time.
Two
months from now, the British
Library Crime Classics is going to publish a reprint of
Christianna
Brand's third novel, Suddenly at His Residence (1946),
which was published in the US as The Crooked Wreath and
serialized in The Chicago Tribune under the title One of
the Family. Suddenly at His Residence has been on the
to-be-reread list for a while now. And not without a reason.I
wrote in my reviews of Agatha Christie's Murder
on the Orient Express (1934) and John Dickson Carr's The
Three Coffins (1935) that the current reprint renaissance
coincided with some very famous, time-honored classics having their
status reevaluated and sometimes downgraded – which also went the
other way round. For example, Carr's Till
Death Do Us Part (1944) once had the profile of a decent,
mid-tier title from the Dr. Gideon Fell series, but today, it's
looked upon as one of Carr's finest detective novels. During the
2000s, Brand's Suddenly at His Residence tended to be
dismissed as an inferior, mid-tier work dragged down by melodramatic
sentimentality and not anywhere near the same league as Green for
Danger (1944), Death
of Jezebel (1948) and London Particular (1952). But
that began to chance towards the end of the decade. Just compare Nick
Fuller's 2001
and John Norris' 2011
reviews. Nowadays, Suddenly at His Residence is highly
regarded and some even consider
the book to be among the
best impossible crime novels the genre has produced.
I've
only read Suddenly at His Residence in a Dutch translation,
ages ago, remember very little beside the spectacular, unforgettable
ending and those final lines. So why not take a second look in
anticipation of the British Library reprint to see if its recent
status upgrade is justified.
Once
upon a time, Sir Richard March was married to a ballerina, Serafita,
who gave him three sons, but he also kept a mistress, Bella, with an
illegitimate child in a bijou house at Yarmouth. Somewhat of an open
secret. Serafita predicted she would die young and Sir Richard would
bring Bella to the house where she would "listen to nothing but
'Serafita,' 'Serafita,' 'Serafita,' till she is sick of the very
sound of my name," which is exactly what happened. Sir Richard
turned Swanswater into a shrine to his first wife full of "ancestor
worship and ballet-dancing and rose-wreaths and coloured gloves."
But the family has changed since the days of Serafita. The three sons
had been killed in the First World War, their wives were gone and
only the grandchildren were left. You can say they form the typical,
dysfunctional family that tend to inhabit these type of country house
mysteries.
Philip
Marsh, "returned from that heathen America where in his
childhood his mother had taken him," to settle down into a
promising medical practice with a wife, Ellen, and a newborn child.
Only they have quickly grown apart as Philip began an affair with his
cousin, Claire, who "insisted upon working in some dreadful
newspaper office" and raised her grandfather's ire with her
ideas about "independence and a career." Peta is the
darling of Sir Richard and heir to his fortune, which the family
lawyer, Stephen Garde, had fought for and won – "and in so
doing, himself had lost." A quiet country lawyer does not
secure "a hearty fortune" for a young lady and then ask
her to marry him. Edward Treviss is their half-cousin and the only
grandson of Sir Richard and Bella. Edward had lost his parents in a
boating accident, which everyone assumed he had witnessed and
discovered as a child he could exploit his assumed trauma ("the
next time he was due for a spanking, therefore, he had put his little
hand to his forehead and declared that it felt queer").
Something he continues to do as an 18-year-old to get attention and
have people "express anxiety about him."They
are all coming down to Swanswater, two miles out of the small town of
Heronsford, in Kent, to take part in the ceremony that Sir Richard
always held on the anniversary of Serafita's death. It goes without
saying they test their grandfather's patience and ends with him
banging the table, "I'll cut you all out of my will, the whole
ungrateful pack of you," instructs Stephen to draft a new will.
Sir Richard also announces his intention, despite being in poor
health, to spent the night alone in the lodge where Serafita had
died. What you expect to happen is discovered next morning.
Apparently,
Sir Richard died from over stimulation of his "dickey heart,"
but Philip concludes somebody killed him when he notices that Sir
Richard's medication and a phial of strychnine missing from his bag.
But how could someone have been possibly poisoned him? There were
three, narrow paths running up through the rose beds to the lodge,
"one to the back door, and one to the French window of the
sitting-room," which were freshly sanded and smoothed over
shortly after Sir Richard retreated into the lodge – two of the
paths were innocent of footprints. The third path only showed Clair's
footprints as she walked up the path with a breakfast tray and
spotted Sir Richard's body sitting at his desk through the French
window. Nobody could possibly have pushed a way through the roses
without bringing "down a shower of petals." The doors and
windows were all closed and locked. A pretty little puzzle!
Inspector
Cockrill, "a dusty little old sparrow arrayed in a startlingly
clean white panama hat," makes his third appearance, but
largely acts as a spectator as he rolls cigarettes, observes and
occasionally stirring the pot to keep everyone talking (“he
liked to get his suspects talking”). So the focus remains
firmly on the family and with a very good reason. Suddenly at His
Residence pretty much plays out like one, very big and long
family row during which various members accuse each other of murder
complete with a false-solution to explain how they could have done
it. Some of these false-solutions are not without ingenuity and form
an impressive whole considering how many different possibilities
Brand came up that needed to fit as many different characters as well
as the unchanging facts of the murder. Outsiders also get in on the
fun. A personal favorite comes during the inquest when one of the
jurors proposes a false-solution, which barely holds up on a second
glance, but his fellow jurors liked it so much, they brought in a
verdict of murder against one of the family members. And that forced
an arrest.
Fortunately,
the body of the gruff, unlikable gardener, Brough, is found not long
thereafter in the sitting room of the lodge with a poisonous needle
in his arm. On the dusty tiles in the hallway, near his right hand,
was written "I KILLED SIR R." Everything was "locked and sealed from the inside" and "there was no
possible way of getting there except across the hall,” but
“there were simply acres of untrodden dust between him and the
door." So when evidence is found that pulls the rug from under
the suicide theory, Cockrill suddenly has two impossible crimes on
his hands and a family of whom one is now twice a murderer.The
strength of Suddenly at His Residence is not in the pair of
no-footprints puzzles. Judging the book solely on the impossible
crimes, the tricks are good enough with the second, dusty murder
finding a clever new way to do that trick, but, by themselves, would
hardly justify a classical status. Nor is the strength in the clues
and red herrings or the who-and why. But the pure craftsmanship of
the plot construction. And the pure showmanship in telling an
otherwise fairly cliched country house mystery. What sets the well
intended amateur apart from the masters is how much they'll allow the
reader to know. An amateur closely guards clues and important
information in fear of giving away too much, too early, while a
master simply shows them or parades them around in front of the
reader – hoping you either missed or misinterpreted those clues.
What separates the masters from true legends like Brand, Carr and
Christie is an unrivaled ability to rub the truth in your face or
casually refer to an important clue and simultaneously pull the wool
over your eyes. A talent that made lesser-known Carr and Christie
novels, like Death
in the Clouds (1935), The
Crooked Hinge (1938), The
Problem of the Green Capsule (1939) and Evil
Under the Sun (1941), tower above the best works of their
contemporaries. Brand had that talent as well and she went all in
with it here.
Suddenly
at His Residence is already fairly clued to the point where you
can call it immaculate with (HUGE SPOILER/ROT13)
gur pevzr fprar orvat n fuevar gb n qrnq onyyrevan, ohg Oenaq gbbx
vg n srj fgrcf shegure ol qrcvpgvat Pynver fgnaqvat “irel fgenvtug
naq ybiryl” orarngu gur cbegenvg bs Frensvgn cbfvat ba cvax
gbr-cbvagf nf fur snprq Pbpxevyy. Be abapunynagyl ersrerapvat gur
inphhz pyrnare fgnaqvat va gur unyyjnl zbzragf nsgre gur frpbaq
ivpgvz vf sbhaq. This kind of brazen confidence and command of
the plot elevated everything from the impossible murders to the
multiple, false-solutions to the solution and bombshell ending. An
amazing, completely fair and acceptable dues ex machina
plot-device to help resolve everything that happened at Swanswater
and none of it would have landed without the sound structure erected
underneath it all. A lesser writer and plotted would not have been
able pull it off and raise an essentially thoroughly cliched
detective story to something that can stand with the best from the
best.
Only
thing Suddenly at His Residence has going against itself is
Brand wrote much better, superior detective novels and suspect its
once poor reputation came from comparisons to London Particular.
A painfully human detective story in which a tightly-knit, caring
family construct false-solution to implicate themselves in order to
protect the others. When you compare that to the family row here with
relatives accusing each other of murder, even an excellently
constructed and executed detective story like Suddenly at His
Residence can appear cheap and gaudy. I'm sure the premise of a
patriarch getting murdered after announcing he's going to change his
will didn't do its reputation any favors at the time, which is why
its recent reevaluation based solely on its own merits is more than
deserved. I only wish I had an eye back then to see and appreciate
how skillfully and audaciously everything had been put together, but
those very skills is what makes the best detective stories stand up
to a second read. Another thing Brand apparently has in common with
Carr and Christie. So, cutting another long, rambling review short,
Suddenly at His Residence is an excellent Golden Age mystery
that comes highly recommended!
On
a final, somewhat unrelated note: I got my hands all over a really
obscure, long out-of-print, but supposedly very good, locked room
mystery in even more obscure, never reprinted Dutch translation. So
stay tuned!