The year is 1894, the city is San Francisco, and Sabina Carpenter and John Quincannon, owners and operators of Carpenter and Quincannon, Professional Detective Services, have been partnered for over three years. “When they had met by chance in Silver City, Idaho, he had been an operative of the United States Secret Service investigating a counterfeiting operation, and she had been a Pink Rose, one of the select handful of women employed as investigators by the Pinkerton International Detective Agency, at the time working undercover to expose a pyramid swindle involving mining company stock. Circumstances had led them to join forces to mutually satisfactory conclusions, and resulted in an alliance that had prompted Quincannon” to suggest the business partnership—an equal one—to which Sabina agreed.
In the case
under consideration, Sabina has just been hired by the owner of the Haight
Street Chutes Amusement Park to find and stop the activities of a pickpocket
who has been plaguing the site’s customers. Quincannon, meanwhile, has been
hired by the Great Western Insurance Company to find and stop the activities of
a burglar who has already robbed the homes of three “prominent citizens,” all
of whom are policy-holders. The company suspects that at least three other such
citizens are targets.
When the
detectives manage to identify the objects of their separate pursuits as
pickpocket Clara Wilds and burglar “Dodger” Brown, they wonder if their cases
have somehow converged because Clara and Dodger are known to be—or to have
been—a romantic pairing. But then Sabina finds Clara dead, murdered, and Dodger
immediately becomes a prime suspect.
Complicating the
detectives’ lives, Quincannon’s in particular, is an Englishman who claims to
be Sherlock Holmes. Ambrose Bierce has already surmised in his newspaper column
that the man is an impostor because it is well known that Holmes died three
years earlier in a plummet from a Swiss waterfall. Whether Holmes or not, he
insinuates himself into Quincannon’s investigation, which becomes much more
than the pursuit of Dodger Brown. It evolves into the investigation of an
impossible crime when an attorney, Andrew Costain, requests a meeting with
Quincannon at his home. The latter observes someone breaking into the home: “Up
and over the railing there, briefly silhouetted: the same small figure dressed
in dark cap and clothing. Across to the door, and at work there for just a few
seconds. The door opened, closed again behind the burglar.” When Quincannon and
Holmes, the Englishman having watched the house from a different direction,
enter, they find Andrew Costain dead—both stabbed and shot—in a study whose
doors and windows are locked from the inside. The two of them had previously
taken precautions to effectively seal the house against exit or entry, yet
their quarry managed to evade capture and vanish.
As Holmes, or
pseudo-Holmes, sums up the conundrum to Quincannon: “…You are adept at solving
seemingly impossible crimes. How then did the pannyman manage a double escape?
Why was Andrew Costain shot as well as stabbed? Why was the pistol left in the
locked study and the bloody stiletto taken away? And why was the study door
bolted in the first place? A pretty puzzle, eh, Quincannon? One to challenge
the deductive skills of even the cleverest sleuth.”
Count this
reader as one who easily nailed down the identity of the murderer upon spotting
a particular clue, but who did not come close to solving the locked room/sealed
house aspects of the puzzle. The first in a series about the Carpenter/Quincannon
partnership, this well-paced novel melds an enticing puzzle plot with humor,
picturesque characters, and colorful descriptions, based on the authors’
research, of the San Francisco of the 1900s.
Marcia Muller
and Bill Pronzini are Mystery Writers of America Grand Master Award-winners.
The only other married couple to achieve that distinction was Margaret Millar
and Ross Macdonald. As much as I recommend The Bughouse Affair, the meaning of
whose title will become evident not long after one gets into the book, the
authors’ reputations, separate and combined, recommend it far more.
Barry Ergang ©2016,
2022
Among his other works, Derringer Award-winner Barry Ergang’s locked-room novelette, The Play of Light and Shadow, can be found in e-book formats at Smashwords.com and Amazon.com
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