Four
young women who attend Persephone College in Oxford casually stroll down to the
River Cherwell for a
little ceremony. They are there, an undergraduate secret society of a sort, to
express their frustration, anger, and general ill will against the college’s
bursar, Myra Denning, who’s apparently something of a tyrant and generally
disliked. As they stand near the riverbank, they see a canoe coming toward them,
Myra Denning’s canoe, and Myra’s in it.
And
Myra Denning is very much dead.
And
she appears to have drowned. But if she drowned, then how did she get into the
canoe?
So
begins Mavis Doriel Hay’s Death
on the Cherwell, one of three mysteries published by Hay in the 1930s
and recently republished by the British Library (the others being Murder
Underground and The
Santa Klaus Murder.
Death on the Cherwell is kind of a
locked room mystery. While there’s no apparent shortage of suspects – from local
residents fighting the sale of land to the undergraduates themselves – everyone
involved seems to have something of an airtight alibi. The local detective
investigating the murder is somewhat confounded; the college girls start doing
some sleuthing of their own; and eventually Scotland Yard arrives. And it is
the Yard who will ultimately solve the murder. And murder it indeed is.
Hay
attended St. Hilda’s College at Oxford, at a time when women could attend but not
graduate. She draws upon that experience for this story, and it has the feel of
the city and colleges we know as Oxford (says this seasoned traveler who’s been
there all of one time).
While
story looks like one without a solution, it has one, of course. And the shape
of it appears fairly early in the narrative – the key is something of a secret,
buried in the past. Those secrets, however, have a bad habit of surfacing at
inconvenient times.
It’s
a fun story, too, and includes cameo appearances by two of the characters from Murder Underground.
The
three stories were Hay’s only contributions to the Golden Age of the mystery
story (and the sub-genre popularized by Agatha Christie). For whatever reason,
she left mystery writing behind, and turned her creative energies to other
endeavors, especially quilt making. But we do have these three.
Related:
My
reviews of Hay’s other mysteries:
I've always loved Dorothy Sayers' mysteries, and have read a good bit of P. D. James, though she is awfully dark, if you catch my drift. I'll be sure to check out these works by Hay. Thanks, Glynn!
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