The Crowner John Series by Bernard Knight
THE SANCTUARY SEEKER
THE POISONED CHALICE
CROWNER'S QUEST
THE AWFUL SECRET
THE TINNER'S CORPSE
THE GRIM REAPER
FEAR IN THE FOREST
THE WITCH HUNTER
FIGURE OF HATE
THE ELIXIR OF DEATH
THE NOBLE OUTLAW
THE MANOR OF DEATH
CROWNER ROYAL
A PLAGUE OF HERETICS
WHERE DEATH DELIGHTS
A forensic mystery of the nineteen-fifties
Bernard Knight
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Â
First world edition published 2011
in Great Britain and in the USA by
SEVERN HOUSE PUBLISHERS LTD of
9â15 High Street, Sutton, Surrey, England, SM1 1DF.
Copyright © 2010 by Bernard Knight.
All rights reserved.
The moral right of the author has been asserted.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
Knight, Bernard.
Where Death Delights.
1. Forensic pathologistsâFiction. 2. Wye, River, Valley
(Wales and England)âFiction. 3. Detective and mystery stories.
I. Title
823.9'14-dc22
ISBN-13: 978-1-78010-117-0 (ePub)
ISBN-13: 978-0-7278-6874-9 (cased)
ISBN-13: 978-1-84751-222-2 (trade paper)
Except where actual historical events and characters are being described for the storyline of this novel, all situations in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to living persons is purely coincidental.
This ebook produced by
Palimpsest Book Production Limited,
Falkirk, Stirlingshire, Scotland.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I would like to thank fellow crime writers Brian Innes and Michael Jecks for information on forensic chemistry, document examination and weapons; Judge John Prosser QC for some advice on legal history; Dr Wayne Jones of Linköping University, Sweden, and Professor Derrick Pounder of Dundee University for historical data on toxicological analysis â and Peter Haig and Jeremy Wills of Molyslip Atlantic Ltd for information on lubrication additives. Any errors are due to my misinterpretation of their kind assistance.
AUTHOR'S NOTE
In this tale of crime and detection, you will find no mention of CSI, DNA, SOCOS, PCA, PCR, PACE, CPS, HOLMES, FME or any of the endless forensic acronyms, as the action is deliberately placed in 1955. This was the year the author first became a pathologist and is a blatant piece of nostalgia, though the era has now become very popular in books, radio and television, possibly as a form of escapism.
To write an authentic crime novel nowadays, one has to defer to Health and Safety Regulations, Crime Scene Managers, Team Initiatives, Mission Statements, Human Tissue Act, Data Protection Act, Home Office Directives and all the depressing panoply of the bureaucratic Nanny State and political correctness.
Maybe our overcrowded world now needs these Orwellian strictures, but the stress levels were far less fifty years ago, when a trilby-wearing detective inspector in a belted raincoat could lean against the autopsy table with a fag and a mug of Typhoo Tips and chat to the pathologist about last Saturday's game!
Though the geography is authentic, considerable trouble has been taken to make all the characters and situations totally fictitious.
âTaceant colloquia, effugiat risus. Hic locus est ubi mors gaudet succurrere vitae . . .'
âLet conversation cease, let laughter flee. This is the place where death delights to help the living'
Inscription on the marble wall of the City of New York Chief Medical Examiner's Office and Morgue
PROLOGUE
The Welsh Marches â May 1955
A
small lorry was perched on the rim of the wide concrete bowl. Two hundred yards across, it sat in the green countryside like a giant saucer. Fields sloped down on one side and woods rose on the other. The purple mass of the Black Mountains loomed on the horizon, beyond the fertile undulations of the borderland between England and Wales. Away on the left, the Skirrid could be seen, its profile split by the earthquake said to have occurred on the day of the Crucifixion.
Three men sat in the cab of the Austin one-tonner, squeezed together in the comfortable manner of workmen who have a legitimate reason to do nothing and still get paid for it. The driver had a copy of the
News Chronicle
spread over the steering wheel, while the older man in the middle was marking a folded copy of the
Sporting Times
with the stub of a pencil. On the nearside, the youngest member of the trio, an acne-scarred youth waiting to be called-up for National Service, stared down into the bowl of the small reservoir, where the steel-grey surface reflected the clouds.
âThey're a 'ell of long time coming, in't they?' he complained in a nasal version of a Forest of Dean accent.
The driver raised his head from his paper. âYou did tell 'em it was urgent, din't you?'
âCourse I did! But the copper on the other end was as thick as two short planks. I hope he passed it on, after me walking best part of mile to the bloody phone box.'
As if to allay his concern, there was the sound of an engine labouring up the steep slope of the lane from the main road and a moment later, a black Ford Consul, with a âPolice' sign on the roof, appeared through the open gateway on the other side of the reservoir. Reluctantly, the Water Board men climbed out and leaned against the back of the truck, which was filled with barrows, spades and the other implements of their trade. They waited impassively for the car to come up the ramp on to the circular apron. A uniformed inspector and a large man in plain clothes emerged and walked towards them, looking down at the water below.
âWhat's all this, then?' boomed the inspector, in the time-honoured greeting of policemen everywhere. He was a thin man with a lined face and a bushy moustache, almost certainly ex-RAF, thought the youth.
The driver stepped a pace forward, touching a finger to the peak of his flat cap. âI'm the foreman, Ted Reynolds. I sent the lad to phone you when we found this stuff.' He pointed the finger away from the water, towards the bushes that filled the area between the concrete and the perimeter fence twenty yards away. The man in the tweed suit and a trilby with a turned-down brim introduced himself as PC Christie, the coroner's officer. The five of them walked the few paces to the edge of the rim and stared across the water to the distant hills.
âWhat exactly is this place?' asked Christie.
âAn old holding reservoir, gives a head of pressure down to the villages round Pontrilas and Grosmont,' responded the foreman. âWe come up now and then to clean the sluices and check the inlet valves.'
âBest show us what you've found,' grunted the inspector.
Ted Reynolds turned and led the way across the concrete into the rough ground beyond, filled with saplings and brambles. The lad hung well behind, not too keen on a reunion with what he had discovered two hours ago. Reynolds halted behind a scraggy elder bush, then bent and pointed down with a calloused forefinger.
âYer 'tis, I reckon there's more under the surface,' he prophesied, poking at a brown object with a piece of twig. The inspector and the coroner's officer squatted one each side of him, staring down at the thing projecting from a drift of last autumn's leaves.
âThe lad came over here for a pee,' explained the foreman. âThen he called us to have a look.'
He beckoned to the young labourer, who reluctantly came nearer.
âI thought it was some old dead sheep, but when I kicked at it, it looked different,' he muttered.
The foreman gave it another prod with his stick. âI used to work in an abattoir, so I know what the top end of a thigh bone looks like. But this ain't no cow nor sheep â it's yooman!'
The inspector took the twig from him and carefully scraped away some of the damp leaf mould from around the knob which projected above the surface, revealing a discoloured bone that went down into the soil.
Then he looked up and spoke to the coroner's officer.
âJohn, what d'you want to do about this? Call in CID or deal with it like a sudden death?'
Christie was a calm, avuncular man who looked and dressed like a prosperous farmer. He rubbed his chin thoughtfully.
âBetter tell the DI, I suppose. Let him have a look at it and then get the remains taken to the County Hospital in Hereford. They can deal with them there, unless anything naughty turns up and we have to call in the Home Office chap.'
He turned to the Water Board foreman. âDon't touch anything, and make sure nobody else comes near until we get another officer up here.'
Reynolds nodded, glad of an excuse to postpone working for another hour or so. The two policemen went back to their car, where the inspector radioed to get a local constable to stand guard until the CID appeared. Then with a wave to the workers, he made a cautious three-point turn on the concrete and vanished in the direction of Monmouth.
ONE
The Wye Valley â June 1955
â
I
f I'd realized that setting up house was as hellish as this, I'd have stayed in bloody Singapore!'
He staggered through the office door with a large cardboard box and dumped the heavy typewriter on a new desk, whose five-ply top creaked ominously.
âStop complaining, Richard! We've broken the back of it now.'
He stifled the obvious retort about breaking his own back and dropped into the swivel chair behind the desk, wiping the sweat from his face with a large khaki handkerchief. It was very warm and the confines of the Wye Valley seemed to hold in the summer heat, even though he should be used to it, having lived in the tropics for the past thirteen years. Looking across at Angela Bray, he almost resented how cool and fresh she looked in a yellow summer dress. His business partner sat at a table, checking lists of laboratory equipment, ticking off delivery notes against her own inventory of what they needed. The rest of the room and the one next door, which was to be their main laboratory, were piled with crates and cardboard boxes, most carrying labels bearing the name of suppliers in Cardiff and Bristol.
âAll we need now are some clients, or it'll soon be overdraft time!' he muttered, thinking of their rapidly dwindling bank balance.
Angela slapped down her pencil and glared at Richard Pryor. âCome on, Richard, the coroner has promised you regular post-mortems in Chepstow and Monmouth. And you've got those medical school lectures in Bristol, so that's a good start. We agreed that it would take us at least a year to break even.'
Her level-headed pragmatism was a counterpoint to his swinging moods, for she was always calm and self-possessed whatever the crisis. Pryor sometimes thought of her as the âice maiden', except that the thick mane of brown hair that framed her handsome face was hardly that of some Nordic beauty.
âThat's the last of the stuff from the car,' he announced, his good humour returning. âSo I'll start shifting some of this stuff into the lab.'