Death in the Dark by Moray Dalton
published 1938
This very enjoyable book was recommended to me because of
this intriguing (and very Clothes in Books) detail: the young heroine
has an aunt who is in business:
She bought dresses, coats, furs from ladies’ maids and sometimes from the ladies themselves in the morning to sell again in the evening to shop girls and factory hands. She had a flair for clothes though she never wore anything smarter than a shapeless woollen jumper and a sagging tweed skirt herself, and soon she was picking and choosing to suit her regular customers. The blue panné velvet that had cost fifty guineas and been first worn at a Hunt Ball was the very thing for little Jessie Higgins, who earned her living as a professional dancing partner at a fourth rate night club. Auntie Apples, who knew Jessie had a child to keep, let her have the frock for fifteen shillings.
She is called Auntie Apples for reasons that are not clear
to me – Curt Evans in his intro says she sent apples to her German husband when
he was interned during World War I, but all it says in the text is that she
sent parcels. Anyway.
The first half of the book is excellent. There is a family
trapeze act, travelling the music hall circuit. One of them, David, is accused
of a complicated murder – a strange story of a rich older man who invites
artistes to visit him in his house. David panics and lies, and is convicted of
murder and will hang.
His sister Judy is firmly convinced of his innocence, and sets out to investigate. Auntie Apples is her backup and helps where she can, though the dance-dress business is very peripheral:
It was the time when the girls
going home from the factory were apt to drop in to find out if Auntie Apples
had any more dance frocks in stock. It was the second evening after their
return from Holton that she sold the green and silver brocade. “It’s a lovely
material, and it fits you as if it had been made for you, and the lady—a lady
of title, but I don’t name names—only wore it the once. She spilt a little
coffee on it, see. It doesn’t show a bit.”
“How much?” This customer, a
barmaid at the King’s Head, was always flush of money. “Three guineas,” said
Mrs. Sturmer firmly. “Cripes!” “It cost ninety.” “It’s too much.” But she
looked longingly at her reflection in the long glass fixed to the door of the
tiny fitting-room. “All right.”
More of that would have been welcome (but possibly only to
me). Also, the trapeze act disappears when one of the main participants goes to
Death Row – not surprising, but a shame.
Judy receives a letter from someone who also has an
interest in the case, and arranges to meet him at London Zoo – reassured by his
choice of location:
“If he’d chosen the Mappin
Terraces he might have pushed me into the bear pits, but he can’t do much to me
in the lion house.”
Now, as an experienced crime book reader, I had wondered if
this was going to be the romantic interest for Judy, and I looked forward to
meeting C. Fleming. Judy and I were both in for a surprise. [Anyone reading
Dalton’s books in order won’t be surprised, as I will explain in a later post] [which is HERE]
Her enquiries take her in search of the relations and heirs
of the dead man (which perhaps the police might have thought of too). And that
is a most extraordinary location in Somerset: a miserable, down-at-heel house –
Sard Manor – which has a menagerie or private zoo in its grounds. She takes a
job there as a maid. The house is full of awful people and there is no money,
and all those wild animals - unsurprisingly
they have a lot of problems keeping staff. It is the most godforsaken place,
and Judy bravely tries to find out what is going on. She is rather dashing,
adventurous, kind, and not easily put off – a splendid heroine.
At Sard Manor, the wolves woke
you in the night and you heard the boards creaking, if you listened long
enough, under what might be a stealthy footstep...
But then – Judy loses her important role, and a male
policeman takes over. She is completely retired for the second half, and we are
not entirely sure what has happened to her. My take on it was that women
dominate at first, and the book loses its urgency when they lose out to the
men: a sad disappointment when Dalton was herself a woman.
It picks up at the end – I don’t think it’s a spoiler to
say that at a late point all the animals are let loose and people are trapped
and in considerable danger. It is obvious early on who is the villain,
“This final touch is quite in
character. If he wasn’t such a damnably cruel, cold-blooded brute I’d say he
deserved to get away.” And later “He seems to be a resourceful person,”
and Dalton herself reveals it quite early, but she still manages a rousing and rollicking ending with the wild beasts.
How many of the animals are likely to be dangerous, Bowles?” “It’s hard to say. The wolves might not attack you, but then again they might. One of the bears is harmless enough, but the other’s very spiteful. You see, they won’t understand, and they’ll be frightened and suspicious, and that’s when they turn on you. And then, of course, there’s Selim. I half hoped he’d draw the line there, but no. I had to pass near his cage as I was legging it over here and I saw it was empty. You don’t see anything down there in the shrubberies, do you?” They all peered down into the thick, dark tangle of privet and yew and laurel that grew up to within a few feet of the house. “I can’t be sure,” said Collier at last, “but he must have been close behind you, Bowles, when you came in. That roar sounded near enough.”
I don’t think it’s a spoiler to report the headlines in the
next day’s paper:
“Amazing Scenes in a Private Zoo.
“Tiger at large in Somerset.
“Chief Constable and Police on Safari.
Battle of wild animals in English Park.”
It is a good solid story. But there is a loose end – early
on Judy is considerably helped by the stage
manager of the theatre where the events originated, and there is this:
Judy’s tweed coat had been through more than one winter, her gloves had been mended, and the bravura with which she wore her beret tilted at the latest angle did not deceive the experienced eye of Ben Levy. And she wasn’t even pretty by some standards. But he liked her. He liked her a thousand times better than the glamorous females who sometimes raised hell in his office. On the trapeze she was no match for him, he could only look up and gasp at the incredible nonchalant grace of her. But on earth she seemed touchingly helpless, like a swallow unable to use its long wings without the air to lift them.
(lovely writing). But poor Ben – who is the only person who
truly helps her early on – is just
abandoned, disappears wholly from the book. A pity.
But still, all in all a most enjoyable book – take a bow,
again, Dean St Press.
Dance dresses from
NYPL
The trapeze act poster from Wikimedia Commons
The trapeze artiste is Mable Jordan of the Flying
Jordans, NYPL.
The illo with animals is actually an early view of the Bronx Zoo in New York, but I thought had a look of a private zoo. NYPL.
It sounds fun, though I think I'd be irritated by the loose ends. I suspect she didn't plot very carefully in advance.
ReplyDeleteI think that's right, she didn't have an overall plan. Still plenty to enjoy.
DeleteThis does sound like an enjoyable read Moira. And I do need to explore Dalton's work! But I'm not sure I like the whole 'loose ends' thing. Still, it's got a lot that appeals to me.
ReplyDeleteIt's got plenty of good GA features, Margot. The trouble is, there's so many books out there...
DeleteSome reviewers have mentioned that the aunt's nickname came from her surname, Sturmer, which was also the name of an apple! The Sturmer Pippin was apparently well-known at that time but is now an heirloom variety.
ReplyDeleteOh that's so interesting - thank you!
DeleteI recommended the book, so glad you enjoyed it! I completely agree about the second half of the book. Judy is a wonderful character, and I was disappointed that she was sidelined. I hope it's not spoilerish to say that she should have married Ben rather than her actual choice. It's not exactly a GA trope I suppose, but it reminded me of the Sittaford Mystery and the heroine's choice of husband at the end of that book.
ReplyDeleteAagh, you are anon, so I still can't give you credit!
DeleteThanks so much for the tipoff, which led me to yet another Moray Dalton too.
And yes - I was sad for Ben, such a nice man.
Thank you for introducing me to Moray Dalton and Aunty Apples. The buying and selling of secondhand finery is a fascinating area. I am looking forward to reading her.
ReplyDeleteThis is Moira, CiB, on a different device!
DeleteSo glad you are taken with this, and hope you enjoy.
Yeah someone explained the Auntie Apples thing to me after the book was out. Usually I catch that stuff, but sometimes being American trps me up, I guess.
ReplyDeleteMoira/CiB here. You do such a fantastic job, Curt, with your introductions and resurrecting books - you can't know everything! Your intro was really helpful and illuminating.
DeleteIt’s the little details in Golden Age crime that I love so much - things like Judy’s tweed coat having been through more than one winter, and her mended gloves. Those clothes tell us exactly where she is on the social scale, while the ‘bravura’ way she wears her beret shows she’s feisty. Do modern clothes tell us about the wearer’s character?
ReplyDeleteMoira/CiB here. Yes you are exactly right, and I was so glad to read your comment, as I had just been reading someone claiming clothes descriptions are a waste of time.
DeleteNever! They tell us so much about a character and the world the live in.
DeleteEX----ACTLY!
Delete