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Tuesday nights have suddenly turned quite ridiculously noisy in the country town of Chalmsbury, where the good folk are outraged at having their rest disturbed.
It begins with a drinking fountain being blown to smithereens – next the statue of a local worthy loses his head, and the following week a giant glass eye is exploded. Despite the soft-soled sleuthing of cub reporter Len Leaper, the crime spate grows alarming.
Sheer vandalism is bad enough, but when a life is lost the amiable Inspector Purbright, called in from nearby Flaxborough to assist in enquiries, finds he must delve deep into the seamier side of this quiet town’s goings on.
192 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1960
“Mr Hoole was the complainant, sir, but he didn't exactly report it. He just stood under where the sign had been and used bad language. I advised him to be careful and he changed to much longer words that didn't seem to give as much offence to bystanders.”
“A somewhat impetuous man, Mr Biggadyke, by all accounts.”
“Very likely. But that was no excuse for him going round and telling everybody that story about the Colonel and Bessie Egan.”
“Ah, yes. And the spurs.”
“So you see the person I think the police ought to be looking for is someone here in the town who's been turned into an enemy of society – perhaps through being sent to jail for a crime he didn't commit.”
“That ought to be a lot easier,” Kebble daringly remarked, “than having to pick from all the people in Chalmsbury who haven't been sent to prison for things they did commit.”