Before the unrelenting
deluge of reprints and translations of classical,
conventionally-structured detective novels and short stories, I took
regular trips down the trail of obscurity. During these excursions, I
unearthed such little-known, but surprisingly good, titles as Lynton
Blow's The
Moth Murders (1931), Joseph B. Carr's The
Man With Bated Breath (1934) and Franklyn Pell's Hangman's
Hill (1946).
So I wanted to return to these earlier days and present you with a truly obscure, long-forgotten mystery novel by a writer who's not even mentioned on the Golden Age of Detection Wiki – a veritable who's who of who the hell are these guys. Oh, boy, did I exhumed one that fits the bill to a tee.
R.
Francis Foster was a journalist and an author of books on the
countryside, how-to-write manuals and penned a number of detective
novels, short stories and serializations. His serialized novels and
short stories appeared in such publications as The Strand
Magazine, Detective Fiction Weekly and Hutchinson's
Mystery Story Magazine. Predictably, I would probably have
remained unaware of Foster had it not been for the late Robert Adey's
Locked Room Murders (1991), which listed one of his mystery
novels.
Something Wrong at
Chillery (1931) constitutes the last recorded case of Foster's
series-detective, Anthony Ravenhill, who's the "notorious crime
reporter" of The Planet and has been published, during
the 1930s, under two alternative titles – namely The Mystery at
Chillery and The Chillery Court Mystery. Somehow, in spite
of these alternative book-titles, my brain assumed the titular
chillery referred to the cold storage of a distillery. No idea why.
But you're allowed to point and laugh at me.
The story begins with a
restless Captain Trevor Hawkesbridge, late of his Majesty's Indian
Army, who's time Indian has sharpened his "sense of danger."
Captain Hawkesbridge has come to the conclusion that "anyone
with half an eye can see there's something wrong" at Chillery
Court.
Chillery Court is the
home of Hawkesbridge's old Commanding Officer in India, Colonel
Merrow, who invited Hawkesbridge to come and stay with his family,
but he has the distinct impression he had been summoned to help them
on a very delicate matter. Hawkesbridge overheard a conversation in
which Mrs. Merrow told her husband to "trust him" and "tell him the first thing in the morning." However, this
is not the only reason for Hawkesbridge's apprehension. The daughter
of Colonel Merrow, Osyth, had slipped out of the house and left a
trail of footprints on the glistening, moonlit lawn. And, from his
bedroom window, Hawkesbridge noticed "a second trail" across the
lawn. Someone had been following Osyth!
On the following morning,
Hawkesbridge discovers a third trail with "the toemarks towards
the house." There were two people about the previous night, but "only one returned." Hawkesbridge traced the trail of
footprints to a hut and evidence suggests Osyth has stayed there for
several hours, but refuses to believe she had a secret assignation
with the unknown man. The problem takes a sinister turn when he
return to Chillery Court.
The North Sussex Argus
has a "STOP PRESS" that "the body of a well-dressed
young woman was found in a third-class compartment of the 10.35 train
from Horsham to Brighton at Shoreham" and the unidentified
victim had been strangled – which mortified Osyth when she read it.
Hawkesbridge is convinced that the murder on the night-train is
connected with the affairs at Chillery Court. And this murder brings
Anthony Ravenhill to Chillery Village, because "a train murder's
always good copy."

After a while, the story
becomes complicated because the people involved either refuse to tell
the whole story or are physically unable to do so. Somewhat of a
problem when you're working with only a handful of characters.
They're either murdered, attacked, physically collapse or lose their
memory. A very convenient plot-device and you can put that down to
the story being a tribute-act to the 1920s-style detective novels,
which is most notable in the Indian material of the plot – such as
Thuggi, dark yogi and the goddess of death, Kali.
Nonetheless, there are some interesting bits and pieces of detection
here. For example, this is only Golden Age mystery novel that
actually uses "death spots" on the body to prove that the
second victim had been murdered somewhere else. And later moved to
the hut.
Where the book becomes
truly noteworthy, as a second-tier mystery novel, is the locked room
murder, which is committed in one of the final chapters of the book.
The house is tightly locked up with all of the windows securely
shuttered and the doors locked and bolted. A precaution against the
murderer. However, an unexpected and surprising victim is found
murdered inside a locked bedroom and the solution is mindbogglingly
simple, but where it draws it strength is that the explanation is
also the final sentence of the book! A gimmick that Christianna
Brand would use sixteen years later in one of her own impossible
crime novels (Suddenly
at His Residence, 1947).
Only thing robbing this
otherwise original ending of its surprise is that the murderer's
identity had been obvious for a while. You can chalk that down to a
lack of suspects.
Something Wrong at
Chillery is not a bad detective story at all, for a second-tier
mystery, which even had some good and original ideas, but Foster
missed the master's touch to make it fully work and he struck me as a
poor man's Francis
Vivian (i.e. a small cast of characters). On the upside, Adey
considered this to be only "an average Foster novel." So,
hopefully, this means The Lift Murder (1925), The Music
Gallery Murder (1927) and Murder from Beyond (1931) are
detective novels worth the trouble of tracking down.
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