British
mystery writer Elizabeth Edmondson
wrote two acclaimed Hugo Hawksworth novels, A
Man of Some Repute and A Question of
Inheritance. She was almost finished the third when she died rather unexpectedly.
The fate of the third novel was left somewhat in doubt.
Her son, Anselm Audley, a
British fantasy writer and the author of a series of dramatic narrative
histories for the Amazon Kindle Single program, ultimately stepped in. He
finished the final few chapters, using his mother’s notes. The result is A
Matter of Loyalty, and it is a welcome result indeed.
Hawksworth,
an agent with the UK’s Special Branch in the mid-1950s, has been assigned to
the small town of Selchester. He’s officially a statistician, but everyone in
the town knows the institution he works for has something to so with espionage.
It is a small town, after all, and everyone knows everyone else’s business.
A
scientist involved with a nearby nuclear research program is found dead, shot
in the back of the head. The death is rather inconvenient for the authorities (not
to mention the scientist), as he was the No. 1 suspect in a leak to the
Russians. But if they can find the killer, the case may be wrapped up nicely
and forgotten. And they do identify one, but Hawksworth is convinced it’s the
wrong man.
Anselm Audley |
Elizabeth Edmondson |
Hawksworth’s
personal problems play out against the case he’s investigating. He walks with a
permanent limp, the result of a shooting in Berlin that ended his military career
and led to another. He’s become the guardian of his 13-year-old sister Georgia,
and she is quite a handful (and plays a significant role in the story). He’s
engaged to a socialite in London, but he’s coming to regret the relationship – she’s
determined to maneuver him into a boring government or corporate desk job. And
there’s another possible love interest – the lovely Freya Wryton, who lives at
Selchester Castle and was the niece of the murdered earl in the first
Hawksworth novel.
A Matter of Loyalty is a fast-paced story that bears a
close reading – it’s filled with characters and sub-plots and eventually align
with the main story but the read had to pay attention.
In a
postscript, Audley says this will indeed be the last of the Hawksworth novels,
and describes how he came to finish the story. He’s done well by his mother’s
legacy, but we’ll miss Hugo, Georgia, Freya, the American earl, and the other
characters in Edmondson’s memorable stories.
Related:
Photograph by Karen
Arnold via Public Domain Pictures. Used with permission. (The photo is actually
of Arundel Castle, similar to but not the actual setting for Selchester Castle.)
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