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  Murder of a Lady

  A Scottish Mystery

  Anthony Wynne

  Poisoned Pen Press

  Copyright

  Originally published in London in 1931 by Hutchinson

  Copyright © 2016 Estate of Anthony Wynne

  Introduction copyright © 2016 Martin Edwards

  Published by Poisoned Pen Press in association with the British Library

  First E-book Edition 2016

  ISBN: 9781464205729 ebook

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in, or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the publisher of this book.

  The historical characters and events portrayed in this book are inventions of the author or used fictitiously.

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  Contents

  Murder of a Lady

  Copyright

  Contents

  Introduction

  Chapter I

  Chapter II

  Chapter III

  Chapter IV

  Chapter V

  Chapter VI

  Chapter VII

  Chapter VIII

  Chapter IX

  Chapter X

  Chapter XI

  Chapter XII

  Chapter XIII

  Chapter XIV

  Chapter XV

  Chapter XVI

  Chapter XVII

  Chapter XVIII

  Chapter XIX

  Chapter XX

  Chapter XXI

  Chapter XXII

  Chapter XXIII

  Chapter XXIV

  Chapter XXV

  Chapter XXVI

  Chapter XXVII

  Chapter XXVIII

  Chapter XXIX

  Chapter XXX

  Chapter XXXI

  Chapter XXXII

  Chapter XXXIII

  Chapter XXXIV

  Chapter XXXV

  Chapter XXXVI

  Chapter XXXVII

  Chapter XXXVIII

  Chapter XXXIX

  Chapter XL

  More from this Author

  Contact Us

  Introduction

  Murder of a Lady, first published in 1931, is an excellent example of the “impossible crime” mystery, written by a long forgotten master of this ingenious form of detective puzzle. Set in the author’s native Scotland, the story gets off to a cracking start, as the Procurator Fiscal calls on Colonel John MacCallien, and his guest Dr. Eustace Hailey, late one evening. He brings news that Mary Gregor has been stabbed to death in nearby Duchlan Castle: “I have never seen so terrible a wound.” The dead woman was found crouching by her bed, but there is no trace of a murder weapon. The door of her room was locked, and so were all the windows.

  Another murder follows, and suspicion shifts around a small cast of suspects. One tantalizing question is: why were herring scales found at the crime scenes? (The book had at one time an alternative title, The Silver Scale Mystery.) Luckily, Dr. Hailey happens to specialize in solving this kind of conundrum, although he opts to work independently of the police: “I’m an amateur, not a professional, and my studies of crime are undertaken only because they interest me…I follow a line of investigation often without knowing exactly why I’m following it—it would be intolerable to have to justify and explain every step…The detection of crime, I think, is an art more than a science, like the practice of medicine.” Later, he adds: “Detective work is like looking at a puzzle. The solution is there before one’s eyes, only one can’t see it…because some detail, more aggressive than the others, leads one’s eyes away from the essential detail.”

  Hailey is, in other words, the archetypal “great detective” of the type so popular during the Golden Age of Murder between the wars. Anthony Wynne, his creator, contributed an essay about him to a book called Meet the Detectives, published four years after Murder of a Lady, in which Hailey expresses the view that: “The really interesting crimes are those committed by people who, in ordinary circumstances, would have lived all their lives without apparent fault.” Hailey “never blames the criminal so whole-heartedly as to be unable to see and feel his tragedy”. He maintains that the psychology of the criminal is key: “more often I come to the truth indirectly by an understanding of the special stresses to which he was subjected immediately before the crime took place.”

  Hailey and his creator were admired in their day, and Dorothy L. Sayers was among the critics who reviewed him favourably: “Mr. Anthony Wynne excels in the solution of apparently insoluble problems.” Hailey first appeared in the 1920s, and his career lasted until 1950, but by then, readers’ tastes were changing, and elaborately concocted whodunits were no longer fashionable—unless written by Agatha Christie. The late Robert Adey, author of the definitive study Locked Room Murders, lists no fewer than 33 books and stories written by Wynne which feature “impossible crime” elements. As he points out, Wynne “soon established himself as the champion of [a] form of impossible crime: death by invisible agent. Time after time he confronted his…detective with situations in which the victim was killed, quite on his own, in plain view of witnesses who were unable to explain how a close-quarters blow could have been struck.”

  There is, of course, a striking contrast between such elaborate game-playing plot material and the examination of criminal psychology, and Wynne’s real focus was the former, rather than the latter. He did not lighten his books with as many macabre trappings or as much gleeful humour as did John Dickson Carr, the American novelist who is commonly regarded as the finest of all specialists in locked-room mysteries, and this may help to explain why his work has faded from view. But his best work remains attractive to readers who love a cunningly contrived puzzle.

  Anthony Wynne was the pseudonym of Robert McNair Wilson (1882–1963), a Glasgow-born physician who developed a specialism in cardiology after working as assistant to Sir James Mackenzie, whose biography he wrote. McNair Wilson published on a range of scientific and medical subjects, as well as on historical topics, especially in connection with the French Revolution. He was also fascinated by politics (in the early 1920s, he twice stood unsuccessfully as a Parliamentary candidate for the Liberal Party) and by economics. His obituary in The Times noted that “he developed a deep interest in monetary problems; for a time they dominated his conversation, and he wrote several books challenging what he considered to be the unjustifiable power wielded by moneyed interests.” These included Promise to Pay: An Inquiry into the Principles and Practice of the Latter-day Magic Sometimes Called High Finance (1934).

  McNair Wilson was medical correspondent of The Times for almost thirty years, and was admired by Lord Northcliffe, whose biography he wrote; at one time he was also engaged to write chatty feature articles for another newspaper, the Sunday Pictorial. “His lively and inquiring mind could not be bound to any one subject for long, however great and however interesting,” his obituarist said. “Writing and conversation were…his chief pleasures.” He wrote little fiction in the last two decades of his life, but one likes to think that he would be gratified that a twenty-first-century revival of interest in Golden Age detective fiction has resulted in the re-emergence of Dr. Hailey after many years in the shadows, and the republication of this intricate mystery as a British L
ibrary Crime Classic.

  Martin Edwards

  www.martinedwardsbooks.com

  Chapter I

  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 II

  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 uninstruc
ted 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.