Archy McNally, Palm Beach’s most fashionable and erudite “discreet investigator,” is at it again in this fourth installment of Lawrence Sanders’s very entertaining series. When the McNally law firm’s client Griswold Forsythe II suspects someone in his large household of stealing a number of valuable items from him, Archy goes undercover to try to identify the thief. He tells Forsythe’s family members and household staff that he’s been employed to catalog the books in Forsythe’s large library.
Although Archy’s sometime girlfriend, Connie Garcia, had described the Forsythes as “dull, dull, dull,” Archy soon finds them all turning out to be “actors in an amateur production of Animal Crackers.” Unfortunately, one of these eccentric characters had apparently “adopted stealing as a hobby.” Not only have some of the father’s valuables gone missing, but daughter Geraldine also confides to Archy that some of her jewelry has disappeared.
Things take a more ominous tone when daughter-in-law Sylvia is almost strangled to death. Again, it appears from the circumstances that the perpetrator could only be someone in the household. And he or she strikes another family member a few days later, but this time the result is murder.
There is no shortage of suspects—including the women in the household—in what is now a robbery and homicide investigation. But Archy being Archy, he doesn’t let that get in the way of enjoying himself with more than one of the women. As he acknowledges, “A man would be a fool to become involved with a woman like that. I’m a fool.” He claims he wants to be faithful to Connie, “but fate conspires against me; I am constantly offered opportunities to betray her trust and I did not have a resolve strong enough to resist.” He recalls a Mickey Rooney line from an Andy Hardy movie: “Why should I marry and make one woman miserable when I can stay single and make so many women happy?”
Despite his unorthodox methods, Archy manages to solve the case. But he’s honest with himself when he evaluates his success: “No, it was not sharp intelligence, reason, and logic that enabled me to discover what the dotty old Forsythes were up to. If the truth be told—and I must tell it—the only reason I have achieved a modicum of success in my discreet inquiries is that I am just as loopy as the miscreants I investigate. There’s an affinity, no doubt about it. I think, feel, and act as they do.”
And that’s what makes Archy such a great character, and what makes McNally’s Caper, like the rest of the books in the series, such a fun book to read.