Murder stalks a wartime Kentish hospital in Brand’s masterpiece, a welcome reprint from 1944.
A year after postman Joseph Higgins delivers letters from seven citizens accepting positions at Heron’s Park Military Hospital, an air raid leaves him with a broken leg, and he’s brought to the hospital, where all seven of the correspondents are now working. Harley Street surgeon Gervase Eden, aging Maj. Moon, and Capt. Barnes are physicians; Jane Woods, Esther Sanson, Frederica Linley, and Sister Marion Bates are nurses. Even though Higgins’ injury is straightforward, he somehow dies of asphyxia during his routine surgery. Summoned from Torrington, DI Cockrill disconcerts the staff by pointing out that since only seven people knew that Higgins had even been admitted to the hospital—the same seven whose letters he had delivered—his murderer must have been one of those seven, a pool of suspects that a second murder soon shrinks to six. Brand (1907-88) adroitly evokes the wartime atmosphere of the hospital: the stiff-upper-lip sangfroid, the black humor, the flirtations that blossom overnight into unlikely romance. Her leading characters, appealing on their own terms, double surprisingly well as intermittently guilty-looking suspects. Most impressive of all is her equal attention to the mysteries of who killed Joseph Higgins, how they managed his murder, and why they wanted him dead in the first place. Even the savviest fans of golden-age puzzles should prepare to be hornswoggled.
Hands down one of the best formal detective stories ever written. It’s a treat to have it back in print.