The opening chapters of this 1924 novel outline the problems faced by a woman married to an abusive husband.Here Freeman gives vent to his views, coloured less by sympathy for Angelina Frood than by his passion for eugenics .
‘. …”But there seems to me worse possibilities with a fellow of this kind; a drinking, drug-swallowing, hysterical degenerate. You never know what a man of that type will do." "You always hope that he will commit suicide," said Thorndyke; "and to do him justice, he does fairly often show that much perception of his proper place in nature. But, as you say, the actions of a mentally and morally abnormal man are incalculable. He may kill himself or he may kill somebody else, or he may join with other abnormals to commit incomprehensible and apparently motiveless political crimes. But we will hope that Mr. Frood will limit his activities to sponging on his wife."’
Much of the novel is taken up by investigations into the disappearance of Mrs Frood and the possible implication of her husband in it. Dr John Strangeways, another young doctor first acting as a locum then in his own not very demanding practice, keeps Thorndyke fully apprised of local events in Rochester as well as pursuing a new found friendship with the attractive Peter Bundy.
The prolonged nature of the search for Angelina does give the modern reader time to work out the main twists in the solution although,for me, one aspect still sprang a surprise. Thorndyke’s role is relatively minor until remains are found although he is said to be working in the background.
This one is interesting for all sorts of reasons but is not a prime example of the medico-legal expert at work.
3.75 stars.