Crime de Luxe: A Benvenuto Brown Mystery
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“Give me my rights or I will let them kill you. Think what has happened already—”
Benvenuto Brown is on the luxury liner Atalanta, heading for New York. His thoughts are on his forthcoming one-man exhibition, not murder – until a seemingly inoffensive old dear is found dead. Who could possibly ha
Elizabeth Gill
Elizabeth Gill was born Elizabeth Joyce Copping in 1901, into a family including journalists, novelists and illustrators. She married for the first time, at the age of 19, to archaeologist Kenneth Codrington. Her second marriage, to artist Colin Gill, lasted until her death, at the age of only 32, in 1934, following complications from surgery. She is the author of three golden age mystery novels, The Crime Coast (aka Strange Holiday) (1931), What Dread Hand? (1932), and Crime de Luxe (1933), all featuring eccentric but perceptive artist-detective Benvenuto Brown.
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The Crime Coast: A Benvenuto Brown Mystery Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsWhat Dread Hand?: A Benvenuto Brown Mystery Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratings
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Crime de Luxe - Elizabeth Gill
INTRODUCTION
The death of Elizabeth Joyce Copping Gill on 18 June 1934 in London at the age of 32 cruelly deprived Golden Age detective fiction readers of a rapidly rising talent in the mystery fiction field, Elizabeth Gill.
Under this name Gill had published, in both the UK and the US, a trio of acclaimed detective novels, all of which were headlined by her memorably-named amateur detective, the cosmopolitan English artist Benvenuto Brown: Strange Holiday (in the US, The Crime Coast) (1929), What Dread Hand? (1932) and Crime De Luxe (1933). Graced with keen social observation, interesting characters, quicksilver wit and lively and intriguing plots, the three Benvenuto Brown detective novels are worthy representatives of the so-called manners
school of British mystery that was being richly developed in the 1930s not only by Elizabeth Gill before her untimely death, but by the famed British Crime Queens Dorothy L. Sayers, Margery Allingham and Ngaio Marsh, as well as such lately rediscovered doyennes of detective fiction (all, like Elizabeth Gill, reprinted by Dean Street Press) as Ianthe Jerrold, Molly Thynne and Harriet Rutland.
Like her contemporaries Ianthe Jerrold and Molly Thynne, the estimable Elizabeth Gill sprang from a lineage of literary and artistic distinction. She was born Elizabeth Joyce Copping on 2 November 1901 in Sevenoaks, Kent, not far from London, the elder child of illustrator Harold Copping and his second wife, Edith Louisa Mothersill, daughter of a commercial traveler in photographic equipment. Elizabeth--who was known by her second name, Joyce (to avoid confusion I will continue to call her Elizabeth in this introduction)--was raised at The Studio
in the nearby village of Shoreham, where she resided in 1911 with only her parents and a young Irish governess. From her father’s previous marriage, Elizabeth had two significantly older half-brothers, Ernest Noel, who migrated to Canada before the Great War, and Romney, who died in 1910, when Elizabeth was but eight years old. Elizabeth’s half-sister, Violet, had passed away in infancy before Elizabeth’s birth, and a much younger brother, John Clarence, would be born to her parents in 1914. For much of her life, it seems, young Elizabeth essentially lived as an only child. Whether she was instructed privately or institutionally in the later years of her adolescence is unknown to me, but judging from her novels her education in the liberal arts must have been a good one.
Elizabeth’s father Harold Copping (1863-1932) was the elder son of Edward Copping--a longtime editor of the London Daily News and the author of The Home at Rosefield (1861), a triple-decker tragic Victorian novel vigorously and lengthily denounced for its morbid exaggeration of false sentiment
by the Spectator (26 October 1861, 24)—and Rose Heathilla Prout, daughter of watercolorist John Skinner Prout. Harold Copping’s brother, Arthur E. Copping (1865-1941), was a journalist, travel writer, comic novelist and devoted member of the Salvation Army. Harold Copping himself was best-known for his Biblical illustrations, especially The Hope of the World
(1915), a depiction of a beatific Jesus Christ surrounded by a multi-racial group of children from different continents that became an iconic image in British Sunday Schools; and the pieces collected in what became known as The Copping Bible (1910), a bestseller in Britain. Harold Copping also did illustrations for non-Biblical works, including such classics from Anglo-American literature as David Copperfield, A Christmas Carol, Little Women and Westward, Ho! Intriguingly Copping’s oeuvre also includes illustrations for an 1895 girls’ novel, Willful Joyce, whose titular character is described in a contemporary review as being, despite her willfulness, a thoroughly healthy young creature whose mischievous escapades form very interesting reading
(The Publisher’s Circular, Christmas 1895, 13).
Whether or not Harold Copping’s surviving daughter Joyce, aka Elizabeth, was herself willful,
her choice of marriage partners certainly was out of the common rut. Both of her husbands were extremely talented men with an affinity for art. In 1921, when she was only 19, Elizabeth wed Kenneth de Burgh Codrington (1899-1986), a brilliant young colonial Englishman then studying Indian archaeology at Oxford. (Like Agatha Christie, Elizabeth made a marital match with an archaeologist, though, to be sure, it was a union of much shorter duration.) Less than six years later the couple were divorced, with Elizabeth seeming to express ambivalent feelings about her first husband in her second detective novel, What Dread Hand? After his divorce from Elizabeth, Codrington, who corresponded about matters of religious philosophy with T.S. Eliot, would become Keeper of the Indian Museum at the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, and later the first professor of Indian archaeology at London’s School of Oriental and African Studies. Codrington’s affection and respect for Indian culture,
notes an authority on colonial Indian history, led him to a strong belief in a mid-century ideal of universal humanity
(Saloni Mathur, India by Design: Colonial History and Cultural Display)—though presumably this was not to be under the specifically Christian banner metaphorically unfurled in Harold Copping’s The Hope of the World.
In 1927 Elizabeth wed a second time, this time to Colin Unwin Gill (1892-1940), a prominent English painter and muralist and cousin of the controversial British sculptor Eric Gill. As was the case with his new bride, Colin Gill’s first marriage had ended in divorce. A veteran of the Great War, where he served in the Royal Engineers as a front-line camouflage officer, Colin was invalided back to England with gas poisoning in 1918. In much of his best-known work, including Heavy Artillery (1919), he drew directly from his own combat experience in France, although in the year of his marriage to Elizabeth he completed one of his finest pieces, inspired by English medieval history, King Alfred’s Longships Defeat the Danes, 877, which was unveiled with fanfare at St. Stephen’s Hall in the Palace of Westminster, the meeting place of the British Parliament, by Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin.
During the seven years of Elizabeth and Colin’s marriage, which ended in 1934 with Elizabeth’s premature death, the couple resided at a ground-floor studio flat at the Tower House, Tite Street, Chelsea--the same one, indeed, where James McNeill Whistler, the famous painter and a great-uncle of the mystery writer Molly Thynne, had also once lived and worked. (Other notable one-time residents of Tite Street include writers Oscar Wilde and Radclyffe Hall, composer Peter Warlock, and artists John Singer Sargent, Augustus John and Hannah Gluckstein, aka Gluck
—see Devon Cox’s recent collective biography of famous Tite Street denizens, The Street of Wonderful Possibilities: Whistler, Wilde and Sargent in Tite Street.) Designed by progressive architect William Edward Godwin, a leading light in the Aesthetic Movement, the picturesque Tower House was, as described in The British Architect (Rambles in London Streets: Chelsea District,
3 December 1892, p. 403), divided into four great stories of studios,
each of them with a corresponding set of chambers formed by the introduction of a mezzanine floor, at about half the height of the studio.
Given the strongly-conveyed settings of Elizabeth’s first two detective novels, the first of which she began writing not long after her marriage to Colin, I surmise that the couple also spent a great deal of their time in southern France.
Despite Elizabeth Gill’s successful embarkation upon a career as a detective novelist (she also dabbled in watercolors, like her great-grandfather, as well as dress design), dark clouds loomed forebodingly on her horizon. In the early 1930s her husband commenced a sexual affair with another tenant at the Tower House: Mabel Lethbridge (1900-1968), then the youngest recipient of the Order of the British Empire (O.B.E.), which had been awarded to her for her services as a munitions worker in the Great War. As a teenager Lethbridge had lost her left leg when a shell she was packing exploded, an event recounted by her in her bestselling autobiography, Fortune Grass. The book was published several months after Elizabeth’s death, which occurred suddenly and unexpectedly after the mystery writer underwent an operation in a West London hospital in June 1934. Elizabeth was laid to rest in Shoreham, Kent, beside her parents, who had barely predeceased her. In 1938 Colin married again, though his new wife was not Mabel Lethbridge, but rather South African journalist Una Elizabeth Kellett Long (1909-1984), with whom Colin, under the joint pseudonym Richard Saxby, co-authored a crime thriller, Five Came to London (1938). Colin would himself pass away in 1940, just six years after Elizabeth, expiring from illness in South Africa, where he had traveled with Una to paint murals at the Johannesburg Magistrates’ Courts.
While Kenneth de Burgh Codrington continues to receive his due in studies of Indian antiquities and Colin Gill maintains a foothold in the annals of British art history, Elizabeth Gill’s place in Golden Age British detective fiction was for decades largely forgotten. Happily this long period of unmerited neglect has ended with the reprinting by Dean Street Press of Elizabeth Gill’s fine trio of Benvenuto Brown mysteries. The American poet, critic, editor and journalist Amy Bonner aptly appraised Elizabeth’s talent as a detective novelist in her Brooklyn Eagle review of the final Gill mystery novel, Crime De Luxe, writing glowingly that Miss Gill is a consummate artist. . . . she writes detective stories like a novelist. . . . [Her work] may be unhesitatingly recommended to detective fiction fans and others who want to be converted.
CRIME DE LUXE
Why, indeed, he thought peevishly, couldn’t people murder each other on dry land instead of intruding upon this pleasant and highly artificial board-ship life their personal feuds? It seemed to him at the moment like a breach of manners.
In Crime De Luxe, Elizabeth Gill’s final Benevenuto Brown detective novel, the author eschews the southern France settings of her two previous mysteries, in favor of a transatlantic luxury ocean liner, the mythically-named Atalanta, on which the artist and amateur detective is traveling to New York, where a gallery is to hold an exhibition of his paintings. Among the passengers Brown meets on board Atalanta during his five days ocean crossing are the quaintly English Mr. and Mrs. Pindlebury, she seeming to Brown on first impression rather a dear . . . though a foolish dear
and he something rather like a Surtees squire
(this a reference to R.S. Surtees, master of Hamsterley Hall in County Durham and a Victorian era author of such novels as Handley Cross, Hillingdon Hall and Hawbuck Grange, many of which were illustrated by the great Punch caricaturist John Leech); the nouveau riche Lord Stoke, the latest vulgar ornament to the British peerage,
and Lady Stoke, his Follies-girl wife
; the effortlessly alluring young widow Ann Stewart, who emphatically catches Brown’s charmed eye; Leonard Growling, whom Brown mentally labels the bicycle agent
; Roger Morton-Blount, avowed Communist and a fervent admirer of the Soviet experiment; the enigmatic and oddly out-of-date Miss Smith, who brings to Brown’s mind the lyrics of the popular Victorian song Daisy Bell (Bicycle Built for Two)
; gorgeous Rutland King, the greatest lover on the screen
; and a recurrent American blonde. Benvenuto Brown quickly discovers that there are dangerous undercurrents eddying about these passengers; and, soon enough, he finds himself assisting yet another murder investigation, his fame as an amateur sleuth having preceded him on board. This time around Inspector Leech, Brown’s policeman friend in Gill’s first two detective novels, is not present (though he does send the painter a clue clinching telegram), his place providentially being taken by Ex-Inspector Markham, late of the C.I.D., New Scotland Yard.
Gill’s skeptical portrayal of Lord Stoke and Roger Morton-Blount, representatives of antipodal ideological poles (unrestrained capitalism and unfiltered Communism respectively), may well have been informed by circumstances in the author’s own life. The family textile manufacturing firm of Gill’s maternal great-grandfather and grandfather, both named James Mothersill, was liquidated in the 1880s, prompting the younger James Mothersill to relocate with his wife and eight children, including Elizabeth’s mother, from Manchester to Islington, London, where he sold camera equipment for a living—rather a comedown for the family economically, which may have given Gill a sense of distaste for the vagaries of the marketplace and the predations of its more rapacious representatives. On the other hand, Gill in Crime De Luxe also adopts a skeptical stance toward alleged social advances being made at the time in the Soviet Union, despite the fact that her father’s brother, journalist and author Arthur E. Copping, had gradually become, during his stint as Russian correspondent for the London Daily Chronicle in the years following the Great War, sympathetic to the Soviet cause, producing a series of nationally circulated pro-Bolshevik press articles about the U.S.S.R. that one anti-Bolshevik source sourly characterized as insipid effusions.
(See, for example, INTO SOVIET RUSSIA WITH A GAY PARTY OF LENIN’S AGENTS: Correspondent Accompanies Them to Petrograd and Moscow to See for Himself
and MOSCOW ORDERLY UNDER RED RULE: Investigator Finds Bolsheviki Good Administrators and Enjoying Popular Support.
) In contrast, Ann Stewart—something, one suspects, of an author mouthpiece, like, in the earlier novels, Julia Dallas and Adelaide Moon—speaks doubtfully concerning Roger Morton-Blount’s millennialist idealization of the U.S.S.R.: Roger has a religion, you see, though it’s a social one. He believes Russia is the Promised Land. I don’t know enough about it to know if he’d still think so if he went there. I expect so. He always sees what he expects to see.
At the midway point of the voyage (and the novel), an interesting discussion takes place among Ann Stewart, Benvenuto Brown and the Pindleburys, husband and wife, concerning the modern world and the modern woman, with Mr. Pindlebury giving voice to traditional British conservatism and Ann, in particular, taking a more iconoclastic, radically individualist view:
Mr. Pindlebury shook his head vigorously. "Nonsense, sir. ’Tisn’t growth, it’s rot we’re suffering from. I tell you, human beings knew what they were about when they fell into separate classes and invented the conventions. You can’t play a game without abiding by the rules. When people start to cheat, it’s the beginning of the end. Look at America—a country with even less respect for law and order and the conventions than we have ourselves. What’s the result? Chaos, sir; bootleggers, gangsters, and kidnappers. Respectable citizens being shot down in the street. Battle, murder, and sudden death. Call that progress?
Yes,
said Ann. It’s a sign of progress, or of vitality, at least. I can’t see much difference between the gangsters of America and the men who went out and conquered half the world for England, except that they work on a smaller scale. We’ve got in the habit of calling them heroes and empire builders, but they were mostly pirates and brigands, really. The point is that they all have the same quality—Francis Drake or Al Capone: the quality of personal courage. They are real people who go for what they want without counting the cost. That’s why they’re dangerous. . . . Don’t you realize the old laws are no good? People have outgrown them, they’re cunning, they can outwit them. Until we’ve built up some new ones to fit our new world, we have to act alone, on our own responsibility, according to our own lights—unless we want to sit back and be ruled by people who are dead and buried.
At the end of the voyage (and the novel), Benvenuto Brown, having solved his latest murder case, raptly gazes out from Atalanta’s deck at the slowly materializing outline of New York City, thinking: What a city to paint—what a city! El Greco would have liked it. . . . Fra Angelico would have liked it—he’d have used it in a background for the Holy Family.
Elizabeth Gill herself travelled by liner from the UK to the US several times, the first time in 1928 with her husband, Colin Gill, when Colin was serving on the award jury for the Carnegie International, the annual exhibition of contemporary art held at the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh. Judging by Crime de Luxe, Elizabeth liked what she saw in America. Americans reading Crime De Luxe returned the favor, judging by contemporary notices. In the Brooklyn Eagle poet and critic Amy Booker praised Gill as a novelist playing with intellectual ideas, like time; introducing Russian communism; describing and dressing her characters with the eye of a novelist; and giving the reader an altogether delightful treat
; while in the New York Times Book Review the novel received an unqualified rave from crime fiction critic Isaac Anderson, who with mock outrage complained:
Somebody has been holding out on us; otherwise we should have had an opportunity before this of meeting Benvenuto Brown, the painter detective, for there have been two other books about him. Those two books may have skipped by us in the days when publishers were putting out detective stories faster than they could possibly be reviewed. If so, it was just too bad, for Brown is distinctly worth meeting. . . . The story, besides being sufficiently baffling, is very well written and introduces a group of unusually well-drawn characters.
In the UK Crime de Luxe was published with a jacket design based on The Arrival (c. 1913), a Futurist painting by C.R.W. Nevinson, who was, like Colin Gill, one of the noteworthy English Great War artists. A contemporary article on The Arrival stated of the painting that it resembles a Channel steamer after a violent collision with a pier. You detect funnels, smoke, gangplanks, distant hotels, numbers, posters all thrown into the melting-pot, so to speak.
The dynamism and energy that is manifest in The Arrival powerfully conveys the modernist sentiments expressed in Crime De Luxe. The novel is a fitting final stroke from Elizabeth Gill, a writer most proficient in the fine art of murder who left this world far too soon.
Curtis Evans
THE FIRST DAY
CHAPTER I
TRANSATLANTIC
The ocean liner Atalanta was ready to make her hundredth voyage to New York.
For the hundredth time she had spent four days in Southampton Docks, four days during which men had swarmed over her like ants. Long before the last of the passengers had stepped off the gangway the stevedores had got at her, unloading mail sacks, luggage, motor cars, hundreds of tons of cargo; grimy muscular men who hurried up the gangways, into her sides, lifted, pushed, heaved at the load of treasure. Then, as soon as they’d stripped her, they started loading her again—four hundred more tons of cargo they’d given her; twenty thousand gallons of water; four thousand tons of oil.
Down in the engine rooms the engineers worked, overhauling, repairing, greasing; up in the cabins stewards cleaned and stripped and polished, threw away flowers, powder boxes, cigar-ends, magazines, erasing every trace of the personalities that, for a few days, had turned each cabin into something individual, alive, different from its fellow. Soon they were clean and bare, hung with fresh linen, waiting, cool and silent, to be reanimated by fresh travellers and their possessions.
Up on the decks seamen rubbed and scrubbed until the brass shone and the woodwork was white, while all the time into the sides of the ship poured a never-ending stream of merchandize, food, and drink. Fish, meat, potatoes, milk, game, caviar, a ton of ice-cream—it was like stocking up a luxury Ark ready for a Metro-Goldwyn Flood.
Now it was finished. Clean and replete, with the sunlight gleaming on her vast sides, powerful, magnificent, and a trifle bored, the Atalanta awaited her passengers.
Meanwhile the Ocean Liner Express was rushing through Hampshire towards the sea at sixty miles an hour. The train was crowded, mostly with homing Americans, for being early autumn it was the season when many of them return to their own country after a summer in Europe. They gave the English train a faintly unfamiliar air, an air of careless expensiveness and careful comfort. Also, unlike the