Having made the grim discovery at his cottage, Guy fails to convince the Inspector of his bizarre story, and when the letter that mentioned Peter Antrobus has gone, Guy must be lying. Guy is held at gun point by Mary's furious father George Antrobus, Guy tries to link Mary to his group of friends, the name Felix pops up. Antrobus later contacts Guy, giving game a netting place and a time from a note found in Mary's handbag, The Dial. Visiting at the allocated time nobody arrives, the next morning Guy Kearns that Doctor Swanley's receptionist Joy Dean was attacked there.
It is one of the cleverest plot twists to come from the pen of Frances Durbridge, Guy Foster at this stage is in so deeply that he must be lying, there seems no other possibility, the web is spun wide, and deep. Brian Wilde continues to impress as Inspector Carter, he's sympathetic yet steel like.
As always the scenery is fabulous, particularly the High Street, the shops look wonderful. The music is incredibly corny, very 1960's, but of the time of course. It's a very watchable series.
It is one of the cleverest plot twists to come from the pen of Frances Durbridge, Guy Foster at this stage is in so deeply that he must be lying, there seems no other possibility, the web is spun wide, and deep. Brian Wilde continues to impress as Inspector Carter, he's sympathetic yet steel like.
As always the scenery is fabulous, particularly the High Street, the shops look wonderful. The music is incredibly corny, very 1960's, but of the time of course. It's a very watchable series.