This novel is one of three that Patricia Wentworth had published in 1950. Her first novel in this series was published in 1928 and she kept up an amazing publication schedule until 1961, when the last one in this series (#32) was published. I am not even going to talk about the huge pile of stand alone novels she wrote!
As is the case fairly often, Miss Silver does not enter the story until events are well underway. I enjoyed the preliminary story a great deal as we are introduced to all the main characters who have an effect on the outcome of this mystery. There are star-crossed romantic relationships – not just a triangle, but with other connections as well. There is the Lady Sybil whose domineering personality is accustomed to having events under her control.
There is a sojourn in the country and a dinner party where an additional suspect or two are introduced and, of course, there is the ivory dagger itself and the question of how it made its way from its vaulted, locked display shelf and into the study.
A young woman is the strongest suspect, yet everyone tells the police it cannot be – that she is subject to sleepwalking but definitely not murder. Or is she? And what about the young man she tossed over in favour of the extraordinarily rich, ivory-obsessed “lord of the manor”? Who stands to gain? And what do they stand to gain? Money? Freedom? Love? Revenge?
Lady Sybil has lost control of the entire situation, and it is she who made the call to request Miss Silver’s services. Every time a new person is interviewed by the police and/or Miss Silver, they seemed to me to be the guilty person. Time and again, I was proved wrong.
Meantime, I learned a great deal about how different people respond to tension, stress, and fear – and at the same time, it is clear that another person in the same chair could react completely otherwise.
One thing I can say is that Patricia Wentworth writes her characters with full knowledge ahead of time about their personalities and their psychological motivations. It is one of the aspects of her novels that I have witnessed time and again. And since everyone has something to hide, small or large, shameful or criminal, embarrassing or incriminating, it is their efforts to cover up their own shortcomings that skew the progress of the investigations.
Reading the Miss Silver series has always been a delight for me. Although they are mysteries, and there is usually a murder or two involved, they are always interesting and entertaining. Each time I have to set the book down to do some task or other, I always look forward to picking it up again and continuing with the story. I look forward to my next Miss Silver read next month.