'"The New Andromeda," by Carlton Dawe, is something of a comedy and more of a tragedy. The story opens with the breakdown of a motor-car. While assistance is being sought by the driver, the owner finds the new Andromeda bound to a sapling. Carey Vermont frees her, and she dresses herself grotesquely in one of his suits. She will not reveal who she is or how she came to be in her unthinkable situation. They call one another Perseus and Andromeda (the author evidently thinking it somewhat humorous to refer to the genuine Perseus as a 'Greek bounder.') They become chums on strictly platonic lines, and have nothing in particular to do but run about the country in the motor. Then things get not so platonic, and "the touch of her burning palm thrilled him strangely, and to save himself from further confusion he turned hastily away, and, without speaking, opened the door. She passed out, a strange smile on her lips, but a stranger light in her eyes."
'While they are living in their fools' paradise, a man whom Vermont knows turns up. It is the inevitable husband, who is mad, and things get eminently dramatic. Andromeda runs away, and the furious husband is at length got rid of, but remains on the watch with the cunning of a maniac. He discovers her whereabouts, and, in the absence of Vermont, gains admission to her. Then the agony is piled on, and there is a long interview between the two, in which she employs every artifice to put him from his purpose.
Finally, "with the point of his boot he turned the lifeless figure on its back.
"'It was a pity,' he muttered. 'She had a most superb throat.'"
"The story is, in spite of a certain degree of humour, an unpleasant one, though showing signs of undoubted ability.'
Source:
'The New Andromeda', Western Mail, 27 March 1909, p.50.