Allan Massie
Right Royal Majesty
Murder in the Métro: Laetitia Toureaux and the Cagoule in 1930s France
By Gayle K Brunelle and Annette Finley-Croswhite
Louisiana State University Press 259pp $39.95
‘The Parisian press called the assassination of the twenty-nine-year-old Italian widow, Laetitia Toureaux a perfect crime,’ begin the authors of this book. After spending a Sunday afternoon at a dance hall, Toureaux boarded the Métro and took a place in an otherwise empty first-class carriage:
At 6.27pm the train left the station. When it arrived less than sixty seconds later at its next stop, Toureaux was dying, an eight-inch dagger buried to its hilt in her neck. She expired before she could identify her killer, who had managed to enter the car, attack her, and flee unseen from the Métro station.
The crime occupied the attention of the newspapers for weeks, but was never solved. Sixty years later it attracted the attention of two American researchers; this book, in which they hazard a solution, is the result. It should be said that their solution is plausible, but, since the
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