This book is subtitled “A Welsh Borders Mystery”, and the setting of a largely inaccessible landscape is an important element of this excellent mystery. The author is probably better known in the British Library Crime Classics and elsewhere as E.C.R. Lorac, another of her several pen names, and the decision to reprint this apparently very rare novel is an excellent choice. Martin Edwards’ informative Introduction explains how it fits into the author’s work.
This book has all the classic elements of a crime novel of the period, a small community from which a suspect can be isolated, deep-rooted secrets which may become motives, and excellent character descriptions. It features Carnac’s series detectives, Chief Inspector Julian Rivers and Inspector Lancing who become involved after a local police officer is injured in a surprising development, and Rivers is given full scope to display his background and knowledge of farming. These are important factors as the mystery appears deeply hidden among the isolated farms and trackways of a hill district changed by extreme weather and a vehicle accident. The significance of being cut off by ice, water and floods means that even the potential crime scenes are difficult to access, and those involved must tackle challenging circumstances to even retrieve bodies and the injured. I particularly enjoyed the fact that while the male characters are well drawn, the few woman characters are varied and insightful. The author reveals a deep knowledge of the area and the significance of the landscape, giving her characters descriptive powers that make it come alive. I really enjoyed this engaging and well written book and was very grateful for the opportunity to read and review it.
The novel begins with a discussion amongst the Lambton family about the terrible driving of local retired doctor, Dr Robinson, whose age, eyesight, and deafness have made him less than safe driving his big car locally, especially given the narrowness of the roads. Henry, the eldest son of the household, gives his well-argued opinion forcefully – he is an expert at dealing with recalcitrant vehicles of all types, as well as an ability to deal with a crisis. When a large crash alerts him and others to a terrible accident, he fears what he will find; the doctor’s car has failed to stop when necessary and crossed the road in the path of another car, and now both vehicles are in danger of disappearing into the river. They find one driver dazed but unhurt, and he is returned to the Lambton house to be cared for, but the other car must be quickly evacuated before it sinks into a raging river. As expected, they find the elderly doctor’s body, but also manage to recover the bring out another dead man, who nobody recognises and seems that was already dead when the crash occurred. Cut off from the rest of the world, Henry and another man manage to struggle through to report the fatalities to Colonel Wynne, a practically minded magistrate who enlists local military men to organise much needed transport over the challenging landscape. When Rivers and Lancing begin their investigations, hampered by floods and other challenges, they begin to discover that those who live in such difficult circumstances have many secrets.
I felt that this novel kept me guessing while setting up a terrific atmosphere and complex plot. The geography of the crime sites is a little tricky to understand, and the way that it is cut off perhaps difficult to visualise, but the sense of the people involved is very well constructed. I found this an unusual murder mystery with real depth of characters which makes much of the setting and circumstances. I recommend it as a good read, and I am really pleased that this very rare novel will find a new audience.