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Charles Parker (detective) : ウィキペディア英語版
Charles Parker (detective)

Charles Parker is a fictional police detective who appears in several Lord Peter Wimsey stories by Dorothy L. Sayers, and becomes Lord Peter's brother-in-law.
==Sayers works==
He is first introduced in ''Whose Body?'' as a Detective Inspector from Scotland Yard. In the next book, ''Clouds of Witness'', he is summoned to assist the local police in the North Riding of Yorkshire who are investigating the death of Captain Dennis Cathcart, the fiancé of Peter's sister, Lady Mary Wimsey, apparently at the hands of Wimsey's brother, the Duke of Denver.
Parker first sees Lady Mary at the inquest into Cathcart. Travelling to Paris, where Cathcart had lived previously, he uncovers evidence which implicates Lady Mary in Cathcart's death – which makes Parker very depressed, since he is clearly in love with her. Lady Mary later confesses to killing Cathcart. Lord Peter, however, proves that Mary was lying to protect her secret lover Goyles, with whom she had been planning to elope on the night of Cathcart's death. Parker is happy to see Mary break off the relationship, as Goyles proves to be unreliable and cowardly.
At the end of the case, when Denver is proved innocent, Wimsey, Parker and another of Wimsey's friends, the financier the Hon. Freddy Arbuthnot, all become roaring drunk when celebrating the outcome.
Parker subsequently assists Wimsey in his investigations in ''Unnatural Death'' and ''The Unpleasantness at the Bellona Club''. He has meanwhile invited Lady Mary to dinner several times but is nervous of making their relationship public, in spite of Wimsey's encouragement.
In ''Strong Poison'', Parker has apparently made a good case against mystery writer Harriet Vane for the murder of her former lover Philip Boyes. Wimsey, who has instantly fallen in love with Harriet, forces Parker to re-examine the case. Parker's investigations are inconclusive but Wimsey, with Parker's help, discovers and unmasks the true murderer. Parker has meanwhile at last proposed to Lady Mary. The Duke and Duchess of Denver are opposed to the marriage but Wimsey insists that "one of these days he'll be a big man, with a title, I shouldn't wonder, and everything handsome about him".
In ''Five Red Herrings'', Parker assists the Dumfriesshire constabulary by easily tracing a suspect who has fled to London in disguise (although he proves to be innocent). He does not feature in ''Have His Carcase'', but by the time of the next book, ''Murder Must Advertise'', he and Mary are married with two small children, Charles Peter and Mary Lucasta. Wimsey is investigating the death of a copywriter, which proves to be linked to Parker's official enquiries into a drug-smuggling ring. Parker is attacked and injured by a suspect when he is mistaken for Wimsey.
The book also notes an ingenious solution to the problems inherent in a marriage where the wife is far richer than her husband: Mary's money was placed into a trust fund, administered by her brothers on behalf of her children, from which she gets every three months a sum equal to that earned by her husband in the same period. Mary, an outspoken left-winger disgusted with her aristocratic origins, is quite happy with the arrangement.
In ''The Nine Tailors'', Parker once again assists a county police force, this time the Lincolnshire Constabulary, in Wimsey's investigation into the case of an unlawfully buried body. One suspect is a former burglar from London; two other suspects (who are brothers) flee to London or attempt to conceal evidence there. Parker uses questionable tactics when he places a hidden microphone in the interview room where they are waiting (or in the TV adaptation, leaves a desk intercom "live"). However, the brothers' unguarded conversation absolves them both of the crime of murder.
Parker does not feature in ''Gaudy Night'', and appears only very briefly at the wedding of Wimsey and Harriet Vane in ''Busman's Honeymoon''. The Duchess of Denver is snobbishly opposed to the match and writes to a friend, "Mary's policeman was bad enough, but he is at any rate quiet and well-behaved...".

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