“A trim little figurehead she was…neat as an admiral’s cutter…” Sailor Joe’s description of Nancy Drew.
In the opening scene, we read that Nancy Drew is driving back from Red Gate Farm, on her way back to the Drew home, along with her friend George Fayne and George’s cousin, Bess Marvin.
Red Gate Farm happens to have been the place that Nancy helped capture a counterfeiting gang in an earlier mystery titled, “The Clue in The Diary.” But today their farm visit was for a very different purpose…to pick up a trunk load of fruits and vegetables for the Drew’s housekeeper, Hannah Gruen to use for cooking, preserves and baking purposes.
As the three girls draw near to the Drew home, they spot the local mail carrier, Mr. Ira Nixon, as he labors under the weight of the heavy mail bag. Nancy slows down the car to greet the carrier, who tells her that he has a letter for her at the bottom of his bag. One that was sent by air mail from London, England. Nancy thanks the carrier, then remembering that it was cool outside, asks the elderly man to stop by their house for cocoa when he reached their address.
For the rest of the drive home, the three girls speculate as to who might be the sender of this mysterious letter from England. Nancy had no friends there, so that possibility was ruled out. Bess, for her part, opined that it must be a secret admirer, a suggestion that the other two girls laughed off as yet another of Bess’s romantic fantasies.
Later, the girls arrive at the Drew home, and with the help of Hannah Gruen, they unload the trunk of the car. Sometime later, the mailman catches up to them. The exciting, mysterious letter is in his mailbag, and Nancy is tempted to ask about it straight away. But instead, she opts to be courteous by first offering the carrier a hot chocolate, cookies and delicious pie. It’s an offer Mr. Nixon gladly accepts as he sets his bag by the front door and comes into the house to sit down with his friendly hosts.
Sometime later, he’s about to leave when he suddenly remembers, “Nancy, I almost forgot to give you your letter!”
The mailman then exits through the front door and a moment later he cries out, “The letters, they’re gone!”
As Nancy and the girls make their way to him, they see him standing there, empty mailbags in hand, overwhelmed with the implications of the theft, “Oh dear! Only six weeks more to my retirement and now this disgrace!”
Bess then tries to sooth his nerves, “But Mr. Nixon, it wasn’t your fault!”
The carrier sighs, “It’s a rule that a mail carrier must keep his bag with him at all times.”
Suddenly George turns to Nancy, “Your letter from England! Now you’ll never know who sent it!”
The mail man then recalled another problem, “And that’s not the worst of it…I also had a registered letter for Mr. Drew. There might have been an important document inside it!”
Upon hearing this, Nancy sprang into action, “The thief can’t be far away…we must try to catch him!”
The three girls then put on their coats and dashed out the front door. Moments later, Nancy spotted little Tommy Johnson riding his tricycle on the sidewalk. Her intuition told her that he might have seen a man fleeing the scene, and that the guilty man, even if he saw Tommy looking at him, would not be concerned, since he was such a young boy. Nancy’s intuition proved correct, the boy did indeed see a man quickly climb into his car and speed away. Further, he gave a general description of a thin, rather tall man wearing a yellow winter coat. The car, the boy added was almost the same color as his coat and his license plate had a TJ letter on it, (remembered easily because these were the boy’s own initials). The first two numbers were 1 and 2 the boy added.
And as if this boy wasn’t helpful enough already, he added that he saw the man stuffing what looked like letters into the pocket of his large coat.
Nancy thanks the boy, promising him a detective badge next time she sees him. She, George and Bess then return to the Drew home, informing the distraught letter carrier (now laying on the sofa, an elderly man in a state of shock,) that while they did not catch the thief, they gained some valuable information.
Nancy then left Hanna and the girls to comfort the older man while she placed calls to the police, the postal inspector and her father about the stolen mail. It was police chief McGinnis that she reached at the station, telling him everything she knew so far. The postal inspector was out, but an investigative aid took her message, promising to pass it on once the inspector arrived back in the office.
Then Nancy called her father and told him about the excitement that happened at the house, of her lost letter and the one intended for him. Mr. Drew was concerned, “Keep me informed on what is happening Nancy, I’m afraid that the registered letter might have contained a large sum of money.”
“Who was the letter from?” Nancy asked.
Mr. Drew sighed, “I suspect its from a client of mine named Mrs. Quigley.”
“Isn’t it unusual for people to send money through the mail nowadays?” Nancy asked.
“Indeed, it is, and it’s a very bad thing to do.” The lawyer replied, then went on, “I’ve told her repeatedly to send checks, but I have a hunch she ignored my advice again.”
Suddenly, there was another voice in the background of the call, “My secretary just tole me that Mrs. Quigley is here…I’ll have to call you back Nancy,” Her father informed her.
While waiting, Nancy told George and Bess about the client who insisted on sending cash in the mail. It was not long till Mr. Drew called back telling her that indeed it was Mrs. Quigley that sent the packet of cash in the mail. He said that he was just making this quick call to let her know this one detail and that he and Mrs. Quigley had more to discuss so he had to go but did ask Nancy to keep him update on any further developments.
Nancy hung up, then turned to the mail man to see if she could learn anything more from him, “Did you by chance see the return address on the envelope to me?”
The carrier, somewhat revived, did his best to concentrate, then a moment later, brightened even further when a thought dawned on him, “Seems to me your letter was not from one person…it was more like three names.”
“A business firm,” Nancy suggested.
The postal worker was now absorbed, trying his best to conjure up some detail from his memory. Suddenly, his face lit up once again, “I remember now, clear as a bell…the first word was Malmsbury!”
“That’s a wonderful help!” Nancy told him, even as she thought there were probably a lot of Malmsburys in the London area. It would take her a long time to find out who the sender of the mysterious letter was…
But this is Nancy Drew we’re talking about; she wouldn’t stop until she solved the mystery.
And what an eventful few days were to follow for Nancy, George and Bess! Some of my favorite moments included: Nancy’s run in with a young officious postal inspector, a feisty woman who takes a swing at Nancy for losing a sawbuck, a cufflink clue, a bridge buckling under the weight of Nancy’s car, a Lonely Hearts Club mail scam, Nancy’s collision with an overenthusiastic snow sledder, the rambling but ultimately helpful Mrs. Skeets, Nancy and a new acquaintance trapped in a dark theater, a dangerous flying rock that almost takes out a young sleuth, and a near miss with a stage curtain were but a very few of the fantastic moments in this story.
I also thought that Nancy, George and Bess’s efforts to short-circuit a wedding was a unique sub plot in this unique version of a Nancy Drew mystery.
History of this book:
“Nancy’s Mysterious Letter” was originally published in 1932, the copy I read was the 1968 edition.
The cover art in the ’68 edition was the work of renowned painter Rudi Nappi. He depicted Nancy in a pink suit, (in the style attributed to Chanel), with a letter in her hand and an overlay image of a letter on a blue background.
The cover art paintings of the 1960’s and 1970’s Nancy Drew editions are, in my opinion, exquisite. They also aid in telling the story and in general are part of the joy of owning the volumes of this storied collection.