'When a man has three separate notices by three different women
inserted in the local paper, and he's my own namesake besides, I feel I
owe him something.'
Sequential death notices appear for Robert Raynald: one by his mother,
one by his estranged wife, one by his daughter. This odd approach draws
the attention of Superintendent Mallett and his friend Dr. Fitzbrown.
The inquest had decided that Raynald shot himself whilst temporarily
insane, but his daughter Geraldine is not convinced and presents enough
evidence to arouse the investigator within Mallett. Raynald's story is
presented in flashbacks, as Mallett and Fitzbrown build a picture of his
life through the people who knew him best. Requiem for Robert combines
the excitement of a detective story with a haunting reading of
character.