"Fans will enjoy this fine historical mystery"
A tea party is commencing at Humphrey House, but the owner
of the place, train devotee Francis Humphreys fails to be
with his guests. Relatives and friends become concerned
because he is a punctual person. A knock on his door goes
unanswered. Recently Francis has been forgetful as if he
was in an early stage of senility. All talking at the
party abruptly ends when a shot is heard. Everyone rushes
to Francis' room where they find him dead, a bullet to his
head. They call the cops and Scotland Yard sends their
top detective Inspector Witherspoon to investigate what
looks like a suicide by a man losing his mind. The Inspector is disgusted as he is stuck with as his
assistant Inspector Niven's' nephew Lionel Gates;
Witherspoon would rather have Constable Barnes whom he
respects. Still they interview the guests and investigate
motives; most inherit part of Francis' estate. However
opportunity remains elusive as every attendee had an alibi
as all of them were in the drawing room together when the
shot was heard. Witherspoon's housekeeper Mrs. Jeffries
and the rest of the downstairs staff secretly investigate
in hopes of finding clues to assist their kind employer
and prevent a killer from murdering again. Reading a Mrs. Jeffries Victorian whodunit is paraphrasing
the Lays' potato chip commercial you can't read just one.
The latest case is a fabulous locked room police
procedural with all the suspects providing alibis for one
another as they were together having tea. Witherspoon is
as always solves the case, but is clueless that his
housekeeping staff conducts an inquiry with the downstairs
employed at Humphrey House. Fans will enjoy this fine
historical mystery that showcases how the police conduct
an official investigation and how the amateur sleuths
perform their version. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted March 29, 2009
SummaryA two-story killer.
Train enthusiast Francis Humphreys took his last breath
while relatives and neighbors visited downstairs. But if
everyone was downstairs, who could have stolen into Uncle
Francis's study, killed him, and escaped? Mrs. Jeffries will
have to lend her downstairs common sense to this upstairs
murder mystery.
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