HELL BAY by Will Thomas: Book Review
Someone is killing the people at a dinner party at Godolphin House, a manor located on a remote family-owned island off the southwest corner of England. Deaths by rifle shot, knife, explosion–but why?
The owner of the island, Lord Hargrave, arrives at the office of Cyrus Barker and his assistant Thomas Llewelyn, private enquiry agents in London. Hargrave and his wife will be hosting this party with a dual purpose; he wants to come to a diplomatic agreement with Henri Gascoigne, the French ambassador, concerning colonies in Africa; she is hoping to find suitable matches for their older son and their only daughter. The nobleman wants the agents to guard Gascoigne, and Cyrus, the senior member of the firm, reluctantly agrees.
Everything appears to be going smoothly at the house until the first murder. Lord Hargrave himself is the victim, shot after dinner while surrounded by several of his guests in the garden. Of course everyone is horrified, and Ambassador Gascoigne insists he needs his own bodyguard, who has remained on board the boat that brought the ambassador to the island, to protect him. When Cyrus and Thomas rush to the harbor to bring Delacroix back to the house, however, the boat is gone and his body is floating in the water.
Thus begins a terrifying ordeal for those left in Godolphin House. In addition to the two investigators and the ambassador, Lady Hargrave and her three children, Colonel Fraser and his wife, Doctor Anstruther and his two daughters, a businessman and his valet from South America, and Philippa Ashleigh, Cyrus Barker’s particular friend, are present. And, naturally, the servants—fifteen of them.
In fact, two killings occur even before Cyrus and Thomas arrive at the island. The head of a boarding school on the mainland is shot as he calls out the window to one of his students; the woman who ran a foster home is found in her yard with a broken neck. These two deaths, seemingly unrelated to each other or to the island, are actually just the beginning of the murderous spree that will follow.
Hell Bay is narrated by young Thomas, Cyrus’ assistant. He is in awe of his employer and cannot shake the feeling that he will never have the insights that the latter has. He’s anxious to appear more sophisticated and worldly than he actually is and desperate to absorb knowledge from his mentor. But Cyrus refuses to coddle him, saying “If I spoon-feed you the answers, however shall you learn?”
Hell Bay is the eighth mystery in Will Thomas’ Barker and Llewelyn series, set at the end of the nineteenth century. Each one of his novels sets a perfect scene that will draw you into a period well worth visiting.
You can read more about Will Thomas at this web site.
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