I had such fun reading this book. I can't imagine how the author came up with the name of Bittermeads for the book and the house in the book, but he did. The author is E. R. Punshon, another author I've never heard of before, but that happens a lot. The book I was reading said the author's name was E. R. Punshon (Ernest Robertson) so I'm not sure why they didn't just skip the initial thing and put his entire name in the front, but they didn't. After finishing the book and liking it as much as I did I plan to read more by him, if I can find any, this one came in a box of old "junk" a friend of mine bought at an auction, although why they buy boxes of things they think of as junk is beyond me, I've read quite a few books thanks to their junk boxes. On the inside cover of the book it says this:
"That evening the down train from London deposited at the little country station of Ramsdon but a single passenger, a man of middle height, shabbily dressed, with broad shoulders and long arms and a most unusual breadth and depth of chest. Of his face one could see little, for it was covered by a thick growth of dark curly hair, beard, moustache and whiskers, all overgrown and ill-tended, and as he came with a somewhat slow and ungainly walk along the platform, the lad stationed at the gate to collect tickets grinned amusedly and called to one of the porters near. "
That isn't all that helpful if you want to know what the story is about, but it does mention something often mentioned in the book and that is that beard. Our bearded man is Robert Dunn and he is there looking for his friend Charlie Wright who has disappeared. The last time he was heard from he was at Bittermeads. So instead of walking around the town asking people if they've seen Charlie, or knock on the door of Bittermeads and ask if they know where Charlie has gone, he breaks in and finds only two women in the house, Mrs. Dawson and her daughter Ella. I can't remember where Mr. Dawson is, but he comes home while Robert Dunn is still searching for Charlie, or some sign of him, and instead of calling the police he hires him as a gardener, driver, errand runner, that kind of thing. Mr. Dawson, with the unusual first name of Deede, is a bad guy, anyone can tell that, although all he ever seems to do is sit around working on complicated chess problems. I guess being a bad guy is the reason he wasn't all that thrilled with the idea of calling the police.
As for that beard, Dunn grew it so no one would know who he was obviously, but since no one knew who he was anyway I don't know why he needed the beard. It did make him more mysterious I suppose. It turns out that finding poor Charlie is only part of Dunn's problem, things get more complicated in the second half of the book. It should have been easy for Dunn to figure out who the real bad guy was long before he did, but he wasn't looking at things as clearly as I was. It was a fun book, my favorite kind. Happy reading.