Published by Bookouture,
8
January 2024.
ISBN: 978-1-83790-958-2.
The story is set in November 1921 and
Mabel Canning has moved to London to assert her independence by working for the
Useful Women Agency. This agency aims to find women willing to undertake any
respectable task that the ladies that hire them are willing to pay for and this
evening offers the most unusual assignment that Mabel has experienced.
Mrs Ivy Plomley has employed Mabel to accompany her to a séance in which she
hopes to contact her late husband, Stamford, who died in a fire that completely
destroyed his work shed some nine months previously. Before Mr Plomley’s death,
he and his wife had attended a spiritual evening held by the medium who is
holding the séance, the improbably named Madame Pushkana, and Mrs Plomley has
reason to believe that she will receive a message from Mr Plomley’s spirit.
Mabel is impressed by the size and elegance of Madame Pushkana’s house and
thinks that, if it indeed belongs to her, she must be running a very profitable
business. As a practical-minded person Mabel is sceptical about the
authenticity of the séance she is about to attend but it she is excited at being
present at an experience similar to those advocated by the famous author Arthur
Conan Doyle.
Mabel
is uneasy when she realises that all of her fellow guests know Madame Pushkana
and each other well and she thinks that she can work out how most of the
medium’s effects have been achieved. However, things change when the medium
calls on Stamford Plomley and, when he answers, it sounds as if he is actually
present in the room, which is unlike the earlier exchanges with Madame
Pushkana’s spirit guide. Ivy and Stamford Plomley ignore Madame Pushkana’s
attempts to interrupt their conversation but suddenly the chandelier above them
rocks violently and a flash of intense light blinds Mabel and presumably all of
the other participants and then the room
plunges into darkness.
When the light is restored, and with it some semblance of order, Madame
Pushkana is discovered unconscious on a pile of curtains that have been pulled
down. The medium is lifted up by her solicitous followers and Mabel discovers a
body beneath the curtains. It is Stamford Plomley and it is evident that,
rather than having died several months ago, he has been strangled within the
last few minutes by somebody using a curtain tie.
It seems that the other guests, apart from Mrs Plomley and the butler, Perkins, are too preoccupied by fussing over the unconscious medium to notice Stamford Plomley’s corpse, so Mabel has to take charge. She orders Perkins to send for Detective Inspector Tollerton, a police officer that she encountered when she was involved in an earlier murder case. Although Mabel has done her duty in summoning the police, she cannot quell her curiosity regarding this extraordinary murder and cannot resist investigating. Although she thinks that Madame Pushkana has used tricks to manipulate her in an attempt to convince Mabel of her psychic abilities, Mabel is not convinced that she is guilty of murder, and she likes Perkins and hopes that he is also innocent. However, there are several more suspects for her to consider and she is determined to look into the background of all of the medium’s guests. Also, she cannot ignore the suspicious behaviour of her client and knows that Mrs Plomley has not been honest about what she has told Mabel.
With
so many suspects, none of whom she can trust, Mabel is grateful to have her
usual allies who live in the same block of flats. Two of these are Cora
Portjoy, whose work in a hat shop means that she is expert in creating clever
disguises, and Skeff, an investigative journalist. Mabel’s third helper is Park
Winstone, an ex-police detective with whom she is developing a close
relationship. At the moment Park is working in Paris and, however often Mabel
tells herself that she is an independent woman, she really longs for his
support in coping with this difficult investigation.
Fortunately, Park soon returns and immediately sets to work helping Mabel as
she probes into the background and motives of all of the people who were
present at the séance. Madame Pushkana schedules another spiritual evening,
which all of her followers attend. Mabel is determined to be present too, but
danger still surrounds the medium and other lives are in danger, including
Mabel’s own life.
A Body at the Séance is the second book in the series featuring Mabel
Canning. It has an interesting plot and warm and engaging characters who are
developing in fascinating ways as the series continues. This is an excellent
addition to a delightful series.
-------
Reviewer: Carol Westron
Carol Westron is a successful author and a Creative Writing teacher. Her crime novels are set both in contemporary and Victorian times. Her first book The Terminal Velocity of Cats was published in 2013. Since then, she has since written 8 further mysteries. Carol recently gave an interview to Mystery People. interview
www.carolwestron.com
To read a review of Carol
latest book click on the title
Death and the Dancing Snowman
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