Death and the Dutiful Daughter

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by Anne Morice




  Anne Morice

  Death and the Dutiful Daughter

  ‘Going somewhere nice for lunch?’ he enquired.

  ‘No,’ I said. ‘As a matter of fact, I’m going straight back to the country. Something tells me there isn’t a minute to lose.’

  The scene of the crime is a large Victorian Rectory. An aged and famous opera singer dies; she has been ill for some time and initially her death would appear to be natural. But her will, signed on the day she died, causes both astonishment and considerable ill-feeling among her kin. Then two more sinister deaths occur at the Rectory . . .

  Tessa Crichton, soignée actress and inadvertent sleuth, is an old friend of the family. Under the circumstances she can’t resist investigating, while her detective husband, Robin Price of Scotland Yard, works on another case near by. Tessa’s imagination and powers of deduction are brilliant as ever. By twists and turns she reaches the solution, but not without a measure of danger to herself – and just a little help from the local police.

  Death and the Dutiful Daughter was originally published in 1973. This new edition features an introduction and afterword by crime fiction historian Curtis Evans.

  ‘Anne Morice has a gift for creating intelligent, affection-generating characters, set in light and entertaining atmospheres.’ Spectator

  ‘Relaxing, polished entertainment of high order.’ Daily Telegraph

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page/About the Book

  Contents

  Introduction by Curtis Evans

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Afterword

  About the Author

  Titles by Anne Morice

  Copyright

  Introduction

  By 1970 the Golden Age of detective fiction, which had dawned in splendor a half-century earlier in 1920, seemingly had sunk into shadow like the sun at eventide. There were still a few old bodies from those early, glittering days who practiced the fine art of finely clued murder, to be sure, but in most cases the hands of those murderously talented individuals were growing increasingly infirm. Queen of Crime Agatha Christie, now eighty years old, retained her bestselling status around the world, but surely no one could have deluded herself into thinking that the novel Passenger to Frankfurt, the author’s 1970 “Christie for Christmas” (which publishers for want of a better word dubbed “an Extravaganza”) was prime Christie—or, indeed, anything remotely close to it. Similarly, two other old crime masters, Americans John Dickson Carr and Ellery Queen (comparative striplings in their sixties), both published detective novels that year, but both books were notably weak efforts on their parts. Agatha Christie’s American counterpart in terms of work productivity and worldwide sales, Erle Stanley Gardner, creator of Perry Mason, published nothing at all that year, having passed away in March at the age of eighty. Admittedly such old-timers as Rex Stout, Ngaio Marsh, Michael Innes and Gladys Mitchell were still playing the game with some of their old élan, but in truth their glory days had fallen behind them as well. Others, like Margery Allingham and John Street, had died within the last few years or, like Anthony Gilbert, Nicholas Blake, Leo Bruce and Christopher Bush, soon would expire or become debilitated. Decidedly in 1970—a year which saw the trials of the Manson family and the Chicago Seven, assorted bombings, kidnappings and plane hijackings by such terroristic entities as the Weathermen, the Red Army, the PLO and the FLQ, the American invasion of Cambodia and the Kent State shootings and the drug overdose deaths of Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin—leisure readers now more than ever stood in need of the intelligent escapism which classic crime fiction provided. Yet the old order in crime fiction, like that in world politics and society, seemed irrevocably to be washing away in a bloody tide of violent anarchy and all round uncouthness.

  Or was it? Old values have a way of persisting. Even as the generation which produced the glorious detective fiction of the Golden Age finally began exiting the crime scene, a new generation of younger puzzle adepts had arisen, not to take the esteemed places of their elders, but to contribute their own worthy efforts to the rarefied field of fair play murder. Among these writers were P.D. James, Ruth Rendell, Emma Lathen, Patricia Moyes, H.R.F. Keating, Catherine Aird, Joyce Porter, Margaret Yorke, Elizabeth Lemarchand, Reginald Hill, Peter Lovesey and the author whom you are perusing now, Anne Morice (1916-1989). Morice, who like Yorke, Lovesey and Hill debuted as a mystery writer in 1970, was lavishly welcomed by critics in the United Kingdom (she was not published in the United States until 1974) upon the publication of her first mystery, Death in the Grand Manor, which suggestively and anachronistically was subtitled not an “extravaganza,” but a novel of detection. Fittingly the book was lauded by no less than seemingly permanently retired Golden Age stalwarts Edmund Crispin and Francis Iles (aka Anthony Berkeley Cox). Crispin deemed Morice’s debut puzzler “a charming whodunit . . . full of unforced buoyance” and prescribed it as a “remedy for existentialist gloom,” while Iles, who would pass away at the age of seventy-seven less than six months after penning his review, found the novel a “most attractive lightweight,” adding enthusiastically: “[E]ntertainingly written, it provides a modern version of the classical type of detective story. I was much taken with the cheerful young narrator . . . and I think most readers will feel the same way. Warmly recommended.” Similarly, Maurice Richardson, who, although not a crime writer, had reviewed crime fiction for decades at the London Observer, lavished praise upon Morice’s maiden mystery: “Entrancingly fresh and lively whodunit. . . . Excellent dialogue. . . . Much superior to the average effort to lighten the detective story.”

  With such a critical sendoff, it is no surprise that Anne Morice’s crime fiction took flight on the wings of its bracing mirth. Over the next two decades twenty-five Anne Morice mysteries were published (the last of them posthumously), at the rate of one or two year. Twenty-three of these concerned the investigations of Tessa Crichton, a charming young actress who always manages to cross paths with murder, while two, written at the end of her career, detail cases of Detective Superintendent “Tubby” Wiseman. In 1976 Morice along with Margaret Yorke was chosen to become a member of Britain’s prestigious Detection Club, preceding Ruth Rendell by a year, while in the 1980s her books were included in Bantam’s superlative paperback “Murder Most British” series, which included luminaries from both present and past like Rendell, Yorke, Margery Allingham, Patricia Wentworth, Christianna Brand, Elizabeth Ferrars, Catherine Aird, Margaret Erskine, Marian Babson, Dorothy Simpson, June Thomson and last, but most certainly not least, the Queen of Crime herself, Agatha Christie. In 1974, when Morice’s fifth Tessa Crichton detective novel, Death of a Dutiful Daughter, was picked up in the United States, the author’s work again was received with acclaim, with reviewers emphasizing the author’s cozy traditionalism (though the term “cozy” had not then come into common use in reference to traditional English and American mysteries). In his notice of Morice’s Death of a Wedding Guest (1976), “Newgate Callendar” (aka classical music critic Harold C. Schoenberg), Seventies crime fiction reviewer for the New York Times Book Review, observed that “Morice is a traditionalist, and she has no surprises [in ter
ms of subject matter] in her latest book. What she does have, as always, is a bright and amusing style . . . [and] a general air of sophisticated writing.” Perhaps a couple of reviews from Middle America—where intense Anglophilia, the dogmatic pronouncements of Raymond Chandler and Edmund Wilson notwithstanding, still ran rampant among mystery readers—best indicate the cozy criminal appeal of Anne Morice:

  Anne Morice . . . acquired me as a fan when I read her “Death and the Dutiful Daughter.” In this new novel, she did not disappoint me. The same appealing female detective, Tessa Crichton, solves the mysteries on her own, which is surprising in view of the fact that Tessa is actually not a detective, but a film actress. Tessa just seems to be at places where a murder occurs, and at the most unlikely places at that . . . this time at a garden fete on the estate of a millionaire tycoon. . . . The plot is well constructed; I must confess that I, like the police, had my suspect all picked out too. I was “dead” wrong (if you will excuse the expression) because my suspect was also murdered before not too many pages turned. . . . This is not a blood-curdling, chilling mystery; it is amusing and light, but Miss Morice writes in a polished and intelligent manner, providing pleasure and entertainment. (Rose Levine Isaacson, review of Death of a Heavenly Twin, Jackson Mississippi Clarion-Ledger, 18 August 1974)

  I like English mysteries because the victims are always rotten people who deserve to die. Anne Morice, like Ngaio Marsh et al., writes tongue in cheek but with great care. It is always a joy to read English at its glorious best. (Sally Edwards, “Ever-So British, This Tale,” review of Killing with Kindness, Charlotte North Carolina Observer, 10 April 1975)

  While it is true that Anne Morice’s mysteries most frequently take place at country villages and estates, surely the quintessence of modern cozy mystery settings, there is a pleasing tartness to Tessa’s narration and the brittle, epigrammatic dialogue which reminds me of the Golden Age Crime Queens (particularly Ngaio Marsh) and, to part from mystery for a moment, English playwright Noel Coward. Morice’s books may be cozy but they most certainly are not cloying, nor are the sentiments which the characters express invariably “traditional.” The author avoids any traces of soppiness or sentimentality and has a knack for clever turns of phrase which is characteristic of the bright young things of the Twenties and Thirties, the decades of her own youth. “Sackcloth and ashes would have been overdressing for the mood I had sunk into by then,” Tessa reflects at one point in the novel Death in the Grand Manor. Never fear, however: nothing, not even the odd murder or two, keeps Tessa down in the dumps for long; and invariably she finds herself back on the trail of murder most foul, to the consternation of her handsome, debonair husband, Inspector Robin Price of Scotland Yard (whom she meets in the first novel in the series and has married by the second), and the exasperation of her amusingly eccentric and indolent playwright cousin, Toby Crichton, both of whom feature in almost all of the Tessa Crichton novels. Murder may not lastingly mar Tessa’s equanimity, but she certainly takes her detection seriously.

  Three decades now having passed since Anne Morice’s crime novels were in print, fans of British mystery in both its classic and cozy forms should derive much pleasure in discovering (or rediscovering) her work in these new Dean Street Press editions and thereby passing time once again in that pleasant fictional English world where death affords us not emotional disturbance and distress but enjoyable and intelligent diversion.

  Curtis Evans

  I

  (i)

  Thanks to a miraculous intervention of Providence, Robin declared himself able and willing to represent us both at the funeral of our illustrious old friend, Maud Stirling, which was to be held at Storhampton Parish Church on Saturday, 13th August. The reason, as he explained to me at breakfast on Thursday morning, was that he was already committed to spending the next few days in that neighbourhood, having been delegated to lend a helping hand to the Dedley C.I.D. They, it appeared, had run into some kind of tangle which required the assistance of Scotland Yard to unravel and, since Robin had served his apprenticeship at Dedley and was closely acquainted with the terrain and many of its inhabitants, the task had naturally fallen to him.

  ‘In fact,’ he went on, ‘I was about to suggest your joining me for the weekend. I saw us making a sentimental pilgrimage round all the old haunts. A funeral doesn’t quite fit in with that idyllic picture, but I suppose it can’t be helped. You don’t mean to go yourself, though? No, very sensible. There’s sure to be some stylish memorial service in London later on, which will be much more in your line.’

  ‘Yes, but I feel that one of us ought to put in an appearance, seeing how kind poor old Maudie was to us. If you can go, it means I can sit with Betsy during the service. She sounded pretty distraught when she was telling me the news on the telephone just now.’

  ‘Betsy not going to the funeral either?’

  ‘Can’t face it apparently.’

  ‘Ah! The tragedy queen act in full spate, no doubt. She’s stretching it a bit though, isn’t she? After all, Maud must have been ninety, if she was a day.’

  ‘No, only eighty-two; and I don’t see why that should make it any easier. If you’ve been dominated by your mother for over half a century, I should imagine her departure would create an even bigger vacuum, Betsy’s the last person to find any quick ways of filling it. On the other hand . . .’

  ‘What?’ he asked, buttering himself a fresh slice of toast.

  ‘Nothing, really. I got the impression from the way she was carrying on that there was something else on her mind as well, but perhaps I imagined it. What time are you leaving?’

  ‘Any minute. The car is picking me up at nine-thirty, so I’d better go and fling some things in a suitcase.’

  ‘It’s a pity you can’t put it off till tomorrow, Robin, because then I could come with you. The trouble is that I’ve promised to auction a teapot at the South Wimbledon Summer Antiques Fair. It’s in aid of some charity and they’re trying to rope in as many pros as they can. However obscure,’ I added, for form’s sake.

  ‘If it were just myself,’ Robin said civilly, removing himself and the breakfast tray from my bed as he spoke, ‘I would cheerfully wait around until every teapot in London had come under your hammer, but the Yard have this idea that since a murder has been committed it might be as well to push on a bit.’

  ‘So it’s murder, is it?’ I asked, following him into his dressing-room. ‘What sort?’

  ‘Some young lady getting herself strangled on her way home from a dance.’

  ‘Oh, one of those!’

  ‘No, on the contrary, not one of those. Otherwise, would I be needed? This one has the hallmarks of something a trifle more subtle than the usual drunken assault or lurking sex maniac. For one thing, she was a respectably married woman who knew her way around, by all accounts. Oh damn! I’ll need a dark suit now, won’t I?’

  ‘No, much too hot for that. The one you’re wearing will do beautifully. Besides, it’s to be strictly private. Family only, Betsy told me, apart from ourselves, and they’ll all be far too busy polishing up their own images to notice what anyone else is wearing. What was her husband doing, letting her walk home alone from the dance? Or wasn’t she alone?’

  ‘Those are some of the questions I am going there to ask,’ he replied, frowning abstractedly at the row of suits in his cupboard. ‘And I’d be ever so obliged if you’d shut up for two minutes and let me concentrate on my packing.’

  I counted slowly and silently to a hundred and twenty and then switched to a new tack:

  ‘You’ll stay with Toby?’

  ‘No.’

  ‘Why not? He’d love it.’

  ‘It’s kind of you to say so, but I don’t believe in mixing business with relatives, even cousins by marriage. Furthermore, Roakes Common is a good half hour’s drive from Dedley and I prefer to be on the spot. I shall make do with the Red Lion, which happens to be the spot, par excellence.’

  ‘In what way?’

&n
bsp; ‘It was the scene of the Saturday night dance which ended so disastrously for one of the guests.’

  ‘You do surprise me. I should have thought Masonic dinners were more in their line.’

  ‘So would I, but as I told you there are several unexpected features about this case. I only hope I don’t run into too many more when I get there.’

  ‘Well, cheer up, darling. I’ll be down myself tomorrow evening and I’ll be able to give you a hand.’

  ‘Thanks for the warning,’ he said, snapping the suitcase shut. ‘I can see I shall have to work fast.’

  (ii)

  Unhampered by restrictions on cousinhood and with no desire to immure myself in the Red Lion, which had been craftily constructed to exclude every shaft of sunlight from its cavernous interior, I telephoned Roakes Common 3206 and invited myself for the weekend.

  Toby’s response bordered on the rapturous:

  ‘You can come if you like,’ he said. ‘In fact, I don’t mind if you do.’

  ‘You sound a bit glum,’ I told him.

  ‘To put it bluntly, I never felt more like singing the blues.’

  ‘I hope that doesn’t mean you’ve got someone horrible staying with you?’

  ‘No, quite alone. That’s part of the trouble.’

  ‘What about Ellen?’ I asked. The reference was to his daughter, then aged sixteen, but already a practised soother of sore-headed bears.

  ‘Some misguided friends have taken her to Tunisia, if you know where that is.’

  ‘Roughly. So what’s the trouble?’

  ‘I’ll explain when I see you,’ he replied. ‘Between nine and twelve a.m. these walls have ears.’

  I interpreted this as a warning that Mrs Parkes was in the vicinity, flapping her duster and alert with every fibre of her being for his next words; so, turning to a safer subject, I said:

 

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