The Crime-Book Society No. 2
This, the second of my Crime-Society novels, starts well: Body found on Terrace of House of Commons. I immediately made a mental list of who I hoped it might be; but Seldon Truss is writing about the 1930s not 2025. If you look for Seldon Truss (1892-1990) on the Internet, there are reams of headings about Anthony Seldon's demolition account of Liz Truss' time as Prime Minister. Not helpful. In 2010, another reviewer simply said of the author, he's almost assuredly unknown to any but the most serious collector today. This is probably equally true fifteen years later. Truss was born in Wallington, South London, and was a film director as well as a prolific author. He was the creator of Chief Inspector Gidleigh, a CID detective (24 novels); Detective Inspector Shane, a Scotland Yard detective (6 novels); and Detective Inspector Bass (3 novels). He also used the pseudonym George Selmark. They Came by Night (1933) is among the other nine books he wrote.
The first chapter then goes on to introduce three characters who are integral to the storyline and who all read The Evening Mail's headline and short accompanying note: firstly, a a shabby and ill-favoured loafer; secondly a man in the comfortable lounge of a Piccadilly Hotel - a big man, massive both in height and girth, and his full-moon, hairless countenance was puckered genially as he read; and, finally, in Whitehall, a spare-built [man] with greying hair and keen, tired eyes. The second chapter swiftly takes us into the very centre of England, where we meet the undoubted hero of the story: John Worth, an infantry captain with a War record in the Intelligence Department, who is presently in a car belonging to Lord Marchington, the Foreign Secretary, and driven by the latter's chauffeur. They reach the little village of Hayling-Bois, where they gaze on an amazing sight: in the centre of a field adjoining the graveyard an immense pile of faggots had been erected, and surmounting these, lashed to a decrepit rocking-chair, a stuffed effigy garbed in rusty black clothes with an ancient top-hat above its grinning cardboard mask, perched drunkenly. Recent rain meant that, so far, there was much smoke and little fire. Guy Fawkes' Day? No - it is to burn an effigy of a local unpopular landowner, who locals think had murdered his wife. The fires now begins to burn; then, Worth notices one of the effigy's hay-stuffed gloves was beginning to singe. Suddenly, the hand twitched. What a brilliant start to the novel - shades of the Wicker Man! Worth and the chauffeur leap into action and rescue the 'effigy'; the hat and the absurd, leering mask came away together in a fluster of hay, disclosing the deathly white features of a girl.
It is hard for the subsequent story to live up to that opening; but, by and large, it does. The girl is taken to the early Georgian manor house of Montague Clayden and she proves to be Daphne Manners, the step-child of Clayden, my late wife's daughter. Clearly, there are rum doings afoot. Clayden, who had abnormally large eyes in a wasted face and who appeared to Worth to be a sour-faced eccentric (surely, that's a clue to his being a wrong-un), is further apparently shocked to hear that Daphne had been drugged. A garage bung full of petrol further adds to feeling something is not right. Can all this be relevant to Worth's original mission, to uncover a vast and diabolical conspiracy against the country? He is told by his superiors, which include Marchington, that Major Seton Richardson, the greatest daredevil of the War, now in retirement, due to his war wounds which included being nearly blinded, had unearthed details of the conspiracy. However, Richardson had disappeared! Hence Worth's journey to Hayling-Bois, where worrying cases of blindness have occurred. These cases will multiply alarmingly during the story and, obviously, are bound up with the conspiracy; Clayden has several unsavoury henchman, one of whom is an absurd little figure in a neckcloth, whose glass eye (I should have seen the clue there and then) glinted with an extraordinary effect of savagery. He goes by the name of Comrade William Smithers, of the Young Red Workers. He needs watching!
The scene switches to Whitehall, where Marchington is in discussion with the Prime Minister, the Home Secretary and the Home Office pathologist - they fear that the few cases of blindness will develop into a thousand a day. It is a declaration of war. The enemy? The Lilliputian and semi-barbarous State of Mongoria - on the shores of the Caspian Sea! Mongoria want to establish a powerful state and they need capital for road, rail and dock development. In return for supplying serum to cure the cases of blindness, they require complete immunity from any reprisals and an indemnity of £25 million pounds! Not a bad idea for a thriller. The Prime Minister is relaxed: a big task for one man, but Worth is a big man. And so John Worth proves to be. Working with the gorgeous Daphne Manners (Worth later sees her in a slender chiffon frock as a breath-taking little vision of sheer beauty that caused his heart to leap), he manages to outwit the Mongorian thugs. Perhaps rather far-fetched, but good fun. What one might call a rollicking-yarn. We could do with these particularly when one is confronted with such dire national and international news daily in the media. In fact, we could do with a few more John Worth and Daphne Manners characters in charge today.