The Affair at the Semiramis Hotel - Mason A. E. W.
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BOOK 2 IN THE INSPECTOR HANAUD SERIES, in which we again join
Ricardo and Hanaud, this time in an ambiguous situation. A young,
wealthy vagabond English man, Calladine, whom Ricardo knew before,
hastily comes to Ricardo's London home in the morning, while Hanaud
happens to be visiting. Calladine, very agitated, still dressed
formally as for an evening ball, tells his disturbing story-- He
had gone to a costume party that night in a hotel ballroom, met a
beautiful young woman, Joan Carew, with whom he danced, dined, and
talked. "She was young, fair, rather tall, slim, and very pretty;
her hair was drawn back from her face with a ribbon, and rippled
down her shoulders in heavy curls; and she was dressed in a satin
coat and knee-breeches of pale green and gold, with a white
waistcoat and silk stockings and scarlet heels to her satin shoes.
She was as straight-limbed as a boy, and exquisite like a figure in
Dresden china." While dancing, Joan's eyes fixed upon a stout
costumed lady, obviously wealthy. Calladine was puzzled, but didn't
ask why the fascination with that woman. Joan and Calladine leave
the party and Joan runs off at 1:30am. A few hours later, Joan
appears at Calladine's apartment door, very distressed. He lets her
in. She tells her story about being obsessed with the pearls the
lady wore; about finding the lady's dropped key to her hotel suite;
about sneaking into the room at night to steal the pearls but being
surprised by other thieves already in the dark room, who grabbed
her and tied her as she fell unconscious; about awakening in the
early morning and finding herself untied, on the couch, with the
wealthy lady motionless in bed, apparently dead; then fleeing,
seeking Calladine's help.Ricardo and Hanaud accompany Calladine to
his home. While Calladine showers, Hanaud finds hidden beans of
mescal, a hallucinogenic plant. On the mantle, there is a porcelain
figurine of a woman looking exactly as Calladine described Joan.
Hanaud's astute mind wonders, was Calladine's story truth or a
fantasy imagined in a vivid mescaline dream? He and Ricardo then
endeavor to solve this mystery.