Murder of a Lady: A Scottish Mystery

Murder of a Lady: A Scottish Mystery

Murder of a Lady: A Scottish Mystery

Murder of a Lady: A Scottish Mystery

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Overview

Mystery crime fiction written in the Golden Age of Murder

"This 1931 novel, now republished as part of the British Library's Crime Classics series, is a cunningly concocted locked-room mystery, a staple of Golden Age detective fiction." Booklist STARRED review

Duchlan Castle is a gloomy, forbidding place in the Scottish Highlands. Late one night the body of Mary Gregor, sister of the laird of Duchlan, is found in the castle. She has been stabbed to death in her bedroom—but the room is locked from within and the windows are barred. The only tiny clue to the culprit is a silver fish's scale, left on the floor next to Mary's body.

Inspector Dundas is dispatched to Duchlan to investigate the case. The Gregor family and their servants are quick—perhaps too quick—to explain that Mary was a kind and charitable woman. Dundas uncovers a more complex truth, and the cruel character of the dead woman continues to pervade the house after her death. Soon further deaths, equally impossible, occur, and the atmosphere grows ever darker. Superstitious locals believe that fish creatures from the nearby waters are responsible; but luckily for Inspector Dundas, the gifted amateur sleuth Eustace Hailey is on the scene, and unravels a more logical solution to this most fiendish of plots.

Anthony Wynne wrote some of the best locked-room mysteries from the golden age of British crime fiction. This cunningly plotted novel—one of Wynne's finest—has never been reprinted since 1931, and is long overdue for rediscovery.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781464205712
Publisher: Sourcebooks
Publication date: 02/02/2016
Series: British Library Crime Classics
Edition description: Reprint
Pages: 304
Sales rank: 537,438
Product dimensions: 5.20(w) x 7.90(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

ANTHONY WYNNE is a pseudonym of Robert McNair-Wilson (1882-1963), who wrote twenty-seven detective novels featuring Eustace Hailey, a physician and amateur sleuth. He also published on economics and history, notably a biography of Napoleon.

Read an Excerpt

Murder of a Lady

A Scottish Mystery


By Anthony Wynne

Poisoned Pen Press

Copyright © 2016 Estate of Anthony Wynne
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-4642-0571-2



CHAPTER 1

Murder at Duchlan

Mr. Leod McLeod, Procurator Fiscal of Mid-Argyll, was known throughout that county as "the Monarch of the Glen". He deserved the title, if only because of the shape and set of his head and the distinction of his features. A Highlander, full length, in oils, dignified as a mountain, touchy as a squall, inscrutable, comic in the Greek sense. When at ten o'clock at night he came striding in, past the butler, to the smoking-room at Darroch Mor, even Dr. Eustace Hailey gasped, giving, by that, joy to his host, Colonel John MacCallien.

"I must apologize, gentlemen, for disturbing you at this unseasonable hour."

Mr. McLeod bowed as he spoke, like a sapling in a hurricane.

"Won't you sit down?"

"Thank you. Yes. Yes, I will. Dear me, is it ten o'clock?" John MacCallien signed to his butler, who moved a table, furnished with decanters and siphons, closer to his visitor. He invited him to help himself.

"That's too kind of you. Well, well ..."

Mr. McLeod poured what seemed to Dr. Hailey a substantial quantity of whisky into a tumbler. He drank the whisky, undiluted, at a gulp. A sigh broke from his lips.

"Believe me, gentlemen," he said in solemn tones, "it is not lightly that I have troubled you. I heard that Dr. Hailey was staying here. It seemed to me that the gravity of the case and our remoteness from help gave me title to lay his skill under contribution."

He moved uneasily as he spoke. Dr. Hailey observed that his brow was damp.

"There's been murder," he said in low tones, "at Duchlan Castle. Miss Mary Gregor has been murdered."

"What!"

"Yes, Colonel MacCallien, it's too true. Murdered, poor lady, while sleeping in her bed last night." The Procurator Fiscal's hand was raised in a gesture which expressed condemnation as well as horror.

"But, it's impossible. Mary Gregor hadn't an enemy in the world." John MacCallien turned to Dr. Hailey. "Even tramps and tinkers turned to bless her as she passed them, and with good reason, for she was constantly helping them."

"I know, Colonel MacCallien, I know," Mr. McLeod said. "Who is there in Argyll who does not know? But I state the fact, there she lies, murdered." The man's voice fell again. "I have never seen so terrible a wound."

CHAPTER 2

A Fish's Scale

Mr. McLeod wiped his brow, for his habit was sudorific. His nostrils expanded.

"It was no ordinary knife which made that wound," he declared in hoarse tones. "The flesh has been torn." He turned and addressed himself to Dr. Hailey. "Miss Gregor was lying crouching beside her bed when they found her." He paused: the blood diminished in his face. "The door of that room was locked on the inside and the windows of that room were bolted."

"What, a locked room?" John MacCallien exclaimed.

"That's it, Colonel MacCallien. Nobody can have gone into that room and nobody can have come out from it. I have examined the windows myself, yes, and the door, too.

You could not close these windows from the outside if you tried. And you could not unlock the door from the outside."

He shook his head, closing his eyes, meanwhile, as though he had entered into communion with higher powers. After a moment he turned to Dr. Hailey.

"The wound," he stated, "is in the left shoulder, near the neck. So far as I could judge it is three or four inches deep, a gash that looks as if it had been made with an axe. And yet, strange to say, there seems to have been little bleeding. Dr. McDonald of Ardmore, who examined the body, says that he thinks death was due to shock more than to the wound itself. Miss Gregor, it appears, has suffered for many years from a weak heart. There would not be much bleeding in that case, I suppose?"

"Possibly not."

"There's a little blood on the nightdress, but not much. Not much." Mr. McLeod gulped his whisky. "I telephoned to Police Headquarters in Glasgow," he stated, "but this being the Sabbath day I don't look to see Inspector Dundas, who is coming, until to-morrow morning. I said to myself, when I heard to-night that you were staying here: if Dr. Hailey will be so good as to examine the room and the body immediately, we shall have something to go upon in the morning." He rose as he spoke: "I have a car waiting at the door."

John MacCallien accompanied his guest to Duchlan.

They were greeted in the hall of the Castle by the dead woman's brother, Major Hamish Gregor, whom Mr. McLeod called "Duchlan". Duchlan looked like an old eagle. He shook Dr. Hailey's hand with sudden and surprising vigour but did not speak a word. Then he conducted John MacCallien to a room adjoining the hall, leaving Mr. McLeod to take the doctor upstairs.

"Who knows, this blow may be mortal," the Procurator Fiscal confided to his companion in a loud whisper as they ascended the oak staircase. "Duchlan and his sister were all things to each other."

The stair ended in a gallery; from this several passages radiated. They passed along one of these and came to a door from which the lock had been cut away. Mr. McLeod paused and turned to the doctor.

"This is the room; nothing but the lock of the door has been disturbed. I had a great shock myself when I entered and I would therefore prepare your mind."

Dr. Hailey inclined his head, responding to the Highlander's gravity with a reserve which gave nothing away. The door moved noiselessly open. He saw a woman in a white nightdress kneeling beside a bed. The room was lit by a paraffin lamp which stood on the dressing-table; the blinds were drawn. The kneeling figure at the bed had white hair which shone in the lamplight. She looked as if she was praying.

He glanced about him. There were framed samplers and pieces of fine needlework on the walls, and many pictures. The furniture was old and heavy; a huge four-poster bed in mahogany with a canopy, a wash-stand that looked as if it had been designed to accommodate a giant, a wardrobe, built like a feudal castle, and, scattered about among these great beasts, the small deer of tables and chairs, smothered, all of them, in faded and tarnished upholstery.

He walked across the room and stood looking down at the dead woman. Mr. McLeod had not exaggerated; the weapon had cut through her collar-bone. He bent and drew back the nightdress, exposing the whole extent of the wound. The look of pity on his face changed to surprise. He turned and signed to Mr. McLeod to approach. He pointed to a pale scar which ran down the breast from a point slightly above and to the inside of the end of the wound. The scar ended near the upper border of the heart.

"Look at that."

Mr. McLeod gazed for a moment and then shook his head.

"What does it mean?" he asked in a whisper.

"It's a healed scar. So far as I can see it means that she was wounded long ago nearly as severely as she was wounded last night."

"May it not have been an operation?"

"There are no marks of stitches. Stitch marks never disappear."

Mr. McLeod shook his head. "I never heard that Miss Gregor had been wounded," he declared.

He watched the doctor focus his eyeglass on the scar and move the glass up and down. Sweat broke anew on his brow. When an owl screeched past the window he started violently.

"This old wound," Dr. Hailey announced, "was inflicted with a sharp weapon. It has healed, as you see, with as little scarring as would have occurred had it been stitched. Look how narrow and clean that scar is. A blunt weapon would have torn the flesh and left a scar with ragged edges."

He pointed to the new wound. "There's an example of what I mean. This wound was inflicted with a blunt weapon. Offhand, I should say that, at some early period of her life, Miss Gregor was stabbed by somebody who meant to murder her. It's common experience that uninstructed people place the heart high up in the chest whereas, in fact, it's situated low down."

He had been bending; he now stood erect. His great head, which excellently matched his body, towered above that of his companion. Mr. McLeod looked up at him and was reminded of a picture of Goliath of Gath which had haunted his childhood.

"I never heard," he said, "that anybody ever tried to murder Miss Gregor."

"From what John MacCallien said I imagine that she was the last woman to attempt to take her own life."

"The last."

The doctor bent again over the scar.

"People who stab themselves," he said, "strike one direct blow and leave, as a rule, a short scar; whereas people who stab others, strike downwards and usually leave a longer scar. This scar, as you see, is long. And it broadens as it descends, exactly what happens when a wound is inflicted with a knife."

He moved his eyeglass to a new focus over the recent wound. "The blow which killed, on the contrary, was struck with very great violence by somebody using, I think, a weapon with a long handle. A blunt weapon. The murderer faced his victim. She died of shock, because, had her heart continued to beat, the wound would have bled enormously."

The screech owl passed the window again and again Mr. McLeod started.

"Only a madman can have struck such a blow," he declared in fervent tones.

"It may be so."

Dr. Hailey took a probe from his pocket and explored the wound. Then he lighted an electric lamp and turned its beam on the woman's face. He heard Mr. McLeod gasp. The face was streaked in a way which showed that Miss Gregor had wetted her fingers in her own blood before she died. He knelt and took her right hand, which was clenched so that he had to exert force to open it. The fingers were heavily stained. He looked puzzled.

"She clutched at the weapon," he declared; "that means that she did not die the moment she was struck."

He glanced at the fingers of her left hand; they were unstained. He rose and turned to his companion.

"Her left hand was helpless. She grasped the weapon with her right hand and then pressed that hand to her brow. Since there was little bleeding, the weapon that inflicted the wound must have remained buried in it until after death. Perhaps, before she collapsed, she was trying to pluck the weapon out of the wound. The murderer was a witness of this agony for he has taken his weapon away with him."

Mr. McLeod was holding the rail at the foot of the bed; it rattled in his grasp.

"No doubt. No doubt," he said. "But how did the murderer escape from the room? Look at that door." He pointed to the sawn part of the heavy mahogany. "It's impassable; and so are the windows."

Dr. Hailey nodded. He walked to the window nearest the bed and drew back the curtain which covered it. Then he opened the window. The warm freshness of the August night entered the room astride a flood of moonlight. He relit his lamp and examined the sill. Then he closed the window again and looked at its fastenings.

"It was bolted, you say?"

"Yes, it was. The other window is bolted too." Mr. McLeod wiped his brow again. He added: "This room is directly above Duchlan's study."

Dr. Hailey moved the bolt backwards and forwards. The spring which retained it in position was not strong and seemed to be the worse of wear.

"Did Miss Gregor sleep with her windows open?" he asked.

"I think she did in this weather. I've ascertained that the windows were open last night."

The doctor turned the beam of his lamp on to the floor below the window and immediately bent down. There were drops of blood on the floor.

"Look at these."

"Was she wounded on this spot, do you think?" Mr. McLeod asked in hushed tones.

"Possibly. If not she must have come here after she was wounded. Notice how small the quantity of blood is. Only a drop or two. The weapon was in the wound." He bent again and remained for a moment looking at the stains. "The odds, I think, are that she was wounded here. When a blade remains in a wound it takes a second or two for the blood to well up and escape. No doubt she rushed back to her bed and collapsed just when she reached it."

"The murderer didn't escape by the window," Mr. McLeod declared in positive tones. "There's no footmark on the border below, and the earth is soft enough to take the prints of a sparrow. If you'll look to-morrow you'll see that no human being could climb up or down those walls. They're as smooth as the back of your hand. You would need a scaffolding to reach the windows."

He had evidently considered all the possibilities and rejected them all. He wiped his brow again. Dr. Hailey walked to the fireplace where a fire was laid and scrutinized it as he had scrutinized the window.

"At least we can be sure that nobody entered by the chimney."

"We can be quite sure of that. I thought of that. The chimney-pot would not admit a human body. I've looked at it myself."

It remained to examine the place where the body was kneeling. There was a quantity of blood on the floor there but much less than must have been found had the wound not been kept closed until after death.

Dr. Hailey moved the beam of his lamp up and down the little, crouching figure, holding it stationary for an instant, here and there. He had nearly completed his search when a gleam of silver, like the flash of a dewdrop on grass, fixed his attention on the left shoulder, at the place where the neck of the nightdress crossed the wound. He bent and saw a small round object which adhered closely to the skin. He touched it; it was immediately dislodged. He recognized a fish's scale.

CHAPTER 3

Brother and Sister

Dr. Hailey asked Mr. McLeod to confirm his opinion of the scale. The Procurator Fiscal did so without hesitation.

"Yes, it's a fish's scale, a herring's. There's no other scale of any fish that looks like that, as any man or woman on Loch Fyne-side will tell you."

"If that is so we shall have to look for a weapon with a use in the herring fishery."

He spoke with an undertone of excitement in his voice. Mr. McLeod agreed.

"It looks like it. It looks like it. The fishermen use an axe sometimes, I believe, though I've never had much to do with them. It's a wonder there's no more of these scales.

You'll get hundreds of them on your fingers if you so much as handle a herring."

"Still, the blade had probably been cleaned."

"It's very difficult to clean away these scales. You're apt to miss them because they lie close to whatever they touch."

Mr. McLeod's agitation was increasing. The discovery of the herring-scale seemed to have shaken him almost as much as the discovery of the murder itself, possibly because so many people in Argyllshire earn their living directly or indirectly from the Loch Fyne herring fishery. Dr. Hailey opened a penknife and very gently and carefully lifted the scale on its blade. He carried the scale to the dressing-table where the lamp was burning.

"There will be no objection, I take it," he asked, "to my retaining possession of this? Happily, you saw it in position and can confirm the fact of its presence."

He laid the knife down as he spoke and took his watch from his waistcoat pocket. He opened his watch. He was about to place the scale in the lid when Mr. McLeod objected that so important a piece of evidence ought to be shown to Inspector Dundas.

"I think, Doctor," he protested, "that it will be well if you leave the scale in the room here, for Dundas to see. He's a pernickety body that doesn't thank you for giving him advice, and if we remove any piece of the evidence the chances are that he'll make himself disagreeable."

"Very well."

Dr. Hailey put the scale in one of the small drawers of the dressing-table. He closed the drawer.

"I should like," he said, "to open the window again before we go downstairs. I saw a boat moored near the house."

"The motor-launch. It belongs to Duchlan's son, Eoghan."

When the curtain was drawn the moonlight made the lamp seem feeble and garish. Dr. Hailey threw up the window and looked out over the quiet waters of Loch Fyne, across which a silver streak that moved and shimmered below him led into the mouth of a burn. He could hear the gurgling of this stream as it ran round the side of the castle. He leaned out of the window. A wide flower-bed illuminated now by the light from the study window below, separated the carriage-way from the walls. The carriage-way ended at the front door, to the left of the window. Further still to the left, a steep bank fell to the burn.

The boat was anchored off the burn's mouth; its white hull gleamed dully in the moonlight and made sharp contrast with the black bulk of a jetty built just within the little estuary.

"Put the lamp out, will you?" he asked his companion.

He turned, when McLeod had obeyed him, from the loveliness without to the fear within. Miss Gregor's white hair shone in the moonlight with an added lustre that made her nightdress seem dull. In the dark setting of her chamber she looked remote, ghostly, pathetic. Mr. McLeod took the lamp, opened the door and went out into the corridor. He relighted the lamp.

When Dr. Hailey joined him he was holding the lamp in both hands. The glass funnel shook, making a small, rattling sound.

"I can't bear to look at yon poor woman," he confessed. "Did you notice the moonlight on her hair? I believe she was praying in her last moments."


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Murder of a Lady by Anthony Wynne. Copyright © 2016 Estate of Anthony Wynne. Excerpted by permission of Poisoned Pen Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

Chapter Page Introduction, 1,
I. Murder at Duchlan, 5,
II. A Fish's Scale, 7,
III. Brother and Sister, 14,
IV. Inspector Dundas, 25,
V. The Sound of a Splash, 30,
VI. Oonagh Gregor, 38,
VII. A Woman Who Sees a Ghost, 45,
VIII. Husband and Wife, 51,
IX. A Heat Wave, 54,
X. "Duchlan Will Be Honoured", 67,
XI. Family Magic, 78,
XII. The Second Murder, 87,
XIII. "A Curse on this House", 102,
XIV. A Queer Omission, 106,
XV. The Real Enemy, 113,
XVI. Inspector Barley, 120,
XVII. "What an Actress!", 129,
XVIII. Secret Meetings, 139,
XIX. Accusation, 146,
XX. Eoghan Explains, 152,
XXI. Cheating the Gallows, 157,
XXII. Torture, 168,
XXIII. Footprints, 178,
XXIV. By the Window, 187,
XXV. A Process of Elimination, 196,
XXVI. Once Bitten, 204,
XXVII. Man to Man, 210,
XXVIII. "Ready?", 220,
XXIX. Painful Hearing, 223,
XXX. The Gleam of a Knife, 231,
XXXI. The Invisible Slayer, 235,
XXXII. Mother and Son, 242,
XXXIII. The Swimmer, 256,
XXXIV. "Something Wrong", 263,
XXXV. The Chill of Death, 266,
XXXVI. The Mask, 274,
XXXVII. The Swimmer Returns, 282,
XXXVIII. The Face in the Water, 285,
XXXIX. Dr. Hailey Explains, 288,
XL. The End, 296,

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