“She is trying to come home,” she said.
“This …. woman …. is trying to come home from the cold. She wants you to help
her.”
A
shocked Flavia leaps to her feet knocking over the table and candle and setting
the tent alight.
When
the smoke has settled Flavia makes her way inside to see how the aged gypsy,
Fenella, is faring and offer an apology. Fenella is exhausted. As usual, the 11
year old Flavia decisively takes action inviting Fenella to stay on a meadow,
the Palings, that is a part of the family estate, Buckshaw. Flavia of course
accompanies her on the horse drawn wagon to the Palings.
On
the way there is a confrontation with Mrs. Bull that Flavia deflects with some
clever untruths. Fenella is impressed:
“So,” she said, suddenly animated, as if
the encounter with Mrs. Bull had warmed her blood, “you lie like us. You lie
like a Gypsy.”
“Is that good?” I asked. “Or bad.”
Her answer was slow in coming.
“It means you will live a long life.”
Flavia,
after leaving the weary Gypsy, heads home. Thinking of something to eat, for
she has missed lunch, Flavia lets her guard down as she enters the house and is
assailed by her sisters, Daffy and Feely, who bundle her downstairs so they can
humiliate and interrogate her on a missing brooch.
After
a family parley the de Luce family retires for the evening.
Late
into the night, close to morning, Flavia leaves Buckshaw to visit Fenella and
finds her badly injured. Realizing her limited Girl Guide first aid is
inadequate Flavia pursues help.
When
Fenella is taken away to the hospital Flavia happily realizes there will be
another criminal investigation by the esteemed Inspector Hewitt. While he
professes to not need her assistance she is undeterred.
Riding
her trusty bike, Gladys, Flavia tirelessly rides around the country diligently
seeking information.
The
book sees the greatest use of Flavia’s chemistry acumen. She is constantly
reflecting on the chemical composition of items:
Red blood cells, I remembered from my
chemical experiments, were really not much more than a happy soup of water,
sodium, potassium, chloride, and phosphorus.
While
she would prefer science solve all she learns an obscure, supposedly extinct,
religious sect, the Hobblers, may be involved.
Back
at Buckshaw, it appears ever more clear that her father is on the verge of
losing the ancestral home because of succession duties on Harriet’s estate.
I
liked A Red Herring Without Mustard
as much as the first book, The Sweetness
at the Bottom of the Pie, and much better than The Weed That Strings the Hangman's Bag.
Flavia
is at the forefront of A Red Herring
Without Mustard and has no difficulty carrying the plot.
While
a disciplined scientific thinker in the investigation she is also a sad little
girl who desperately misses her mother and longs to know more of her.
Almost
innately she earns her father’s quiet approval by a “stiff upper lip” approach
to life. While Flavia is proud of his admiration it is a way of life that
prevents a father from hugging a vulnerable 11 year old daughter.
I look forward to reading the fourth in the series.
****
Bradley, Alan - (2015) - The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie and A Postage Stamp Provides the Motive; (2016) - The Weed That Strings the Hangman's Bag and Flavia de Luce and Tom Swift Jr.
I'm glad you enjoyed this one, Bill. I think Bradley does a really effective job of portraying Flavia with both her strengths and her vulnerability. I think Bradley handles the side issues and sub-plots really well, too.
ReplyDeleteMargot: Thanks for the comment. I admire Bradley's depiction of Flavia as vulnerable in a way I would expect of an 11 year old.
DeleteI agree with you that this one was much stronger than the 2nd book. I love this series, and Flavia is such a wonderful, complex character.
ReplyDeleteMelanie: Thanks for the comment. I continue to be amazed by Flavia.
DeleteI haven't read this series, but if I do, I'll start with this one. But the father's demeanor towards his daughter is making me sad. Oh, why, do some men think that's what fathers are supposed to be like? Thankfully, most fathers have moved beyond that behavior these days in real life.
ReplyDeleteKathy D.: Thanks for the comment. I think it would be best to read the first, skip the second and then read this book. The English reserve described in the book is quite forbidding.
Delete