Golly, this was a smashing bit of intrigue. It had a brave young hero who was nowhere as stupid as he looked. The heroine came through because she was too plucky for words. When handsome meets pretty in a dark lane in the middle of the middle of the night, he gallantly escorts her to her train.
Next, he takes up a position as secretary to a surly, eccentric genius, only to find himself in the middle of dark doings...yes, it's espionage!
I really love these books from between the wars. Well, I'm not crazy about the casual racism, sexism, and xenophobia, but the core of the story is corny genius. Hugo alternates between blushing and stammering like an ingenue and doing the right thing because, dash it all, he's an English gentleman.
The villains come from Central Casting. Someone phoned Baddies R Us and requested one evil scientist, one dark and dangerous brute, and a red-headed Bolshie. Fantastic!
The brave young Loveday and the vampish Madame de Lara are the two poles of womanhood in these espionage novels. Loveday is pure and childlike, prone to mad acts of bravery followed by weeping on Hugo's manly shoulder. She nearly gets sold into white slavery due to trusting the wrong people. I mean, reely. Madame de Lara is a vamp, a scamp, and a bit of a tramp. She is not so much evil as greedy.
Although this is the first in a Benbow Smith series, he gets approx 20 pages of dialogue most of which include a cockatoo named Ananias. Not sure what the hell that was about. Well Christie gave Poirot an egg shaped head and fancy moustaches, so Wentworth can certainly provide her genius with a pink talking bird...