Nero Wolfe has his orchids. Detective Inspector C.D. Sloan has his roses. There he is, in the middle of a complicated case in Catherine Aird’s His Burial Too, and he’s worried that his Princess Grace rose will peak before a show on Saturday. Little things like this make Sloan human.

When his boss, Police Superintendent Leeyes, hands over the case of a missing man, Sloan protests he might have chosen to be missing, and it’s too soon to start an investigation. But, everyone, from Tindall’s daughter to his employees insist Richard Mallory Tindall is a creature of habit, and he wouldn’t have left without telling anyone. When the housekeeper and daughter find his car in the garage, they’re even more worried.

One call, though, from the construction site of an old Saxon church provides a partial answer. There’s a body inside the church, but both doors are blocked. A marble and iron memorial piece has toppled, and crushed the body. It takes large equipment to remove the doors so the police and pathologist can get to the body. There’s not much evidence at the scene, and only a missing file at Tindall’s patent firm to provide a clue as to why the man disappeared. But, his body, crushed in the church, is only the first one to have a connection to Tindall’s firm.

Once again, Aird brings together the unusual little police team that catches odd crimes in the fifth book in The Calleshire Chronicles series. These are fun books with a dry humor, but they take crime and murder seriously. His Burial Too is an excellent example of Aird’s storytelling skills.

His Burial Too by Catherine Aird. Rue Morgue, 1973. 159p.


FTC Full Disclosure – I picked up an ebook through Amazon.