Shangas
I'll Lock Up
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- 6,116
- Location
- Melbourne, Australia
A couple of members have asked me to share this with the forum. This is my little murder-mystery I wrote as an entry-piece for a local writing competition. Enjoy. Critique, comments, questions etc, all welcome.
Snow is soft and white and beautiful. Snow is romantic and alluring; fun, enchanting and mesmerising. Snow is bullshit. Believe me. I know. I'm standing in it right now. It's cold and wet and when it melts it runs down the back of your shirt and freezes you and goes all over the damn place except where it should go: on the ground. I look around me and take in my surroundings. I'm standing at the docks in Southampton, England. I have a hat, a three-piece suit, a steamer-trunk, two suitcases and an empty whiskey flask. Terrific. I turn around to look up at the big, block letters on the bow of the ship that's just hauled me across the Pond for the last week. The R.M.S. Aquitania. A fine ship and all in all, a comfortable crossing, but I was still glad to get off of her. A man in a blue uniform approaches me. What on earth can he want?
"Mr. Richard Haines?"
"Yes".
"A gentleman is waiting for you at the station, sir".
"I'm not expecting anyone to meet me".
"He seemed to think not, sir. He gave me his card, sir".
I took the card that the porter gave me and had a look at it.
“Oh,” I said.
“Do you know the gentleman, sir?”
“Yes, but I wasn’t expecting him”. I pause. “Oh alright. Take me to him”.
The porter grabs the trolley containing my luggage and pushes it ahead of him as he strides towards the station nearby. I follow him to a platform where a long row of carriages is waiting for its means of motion – which appears to be temporarily absent – but which doesn’t seem to stop people from wanting to get onboard, even though the train doesn’t look like it’s in any hurry to be anywhere else anytime soon. The man stops in front of a compartment with all the blinds pulled down. He opens it and ushers me inside before handing me my suitcases. Then, the man slams the door shut and I hear him walk away. I straighten up properly inside the compartment and turn around. Sitting in a corner of one of the seats wearing an expensive, dark suit and smoking a cigar long enough to go punting with, and with the electric light reflecting off of his gold-rimmed monocle, was...
“Hello old chap!”
I groan and collapse into a seat. The man merely smiles.
“A fine way to greet an old college chum, wot?”
I sigh and throw off my hat. I suddenly realise what a real nightmare that last night at sea was. I’d barely slept at all and now I feel like I could sleep for an eternity and then some.
My name is Richard Haines. I was a cop. Around the time of prohibition I gave up being a cop. It was getting dangerous and deadly and I have a fetish for staying alive. I decided on a career-change. Not too much of a career-change though. Just a little one. Still in New York, but I went from being a public cop to being a private cop; a gumshoe, a shamus, a private detective. At least now, I could decide the kind of danger I’d be getting myself into, and set my own payment and rewards in the event that I managed to get out of it. I’m six foot three inches tall, about two hundred pounds. I’ve got dark brown hair and brown eyes, a solid build and a rather quiet and rough disposition. At least it seems that way compared to Mr. Newpenny here.
Sitting diagonally opposite to me in the railroad compartment that now begins to move is Dr. James Holloway. Or Sir James Holloway, as it now appears to be. Whatever his title, James is an old friend. We knew each other at university when I was studying law and he was studying medicine and both of us were studying girls. The only difference there was that he passed on girls and I failed on it. As I look at James now it occurs to me that not much has changed about him. Okay the hair is a bit thinner, but it’s still the same light blond tint, still immaculately brushed back, tight and perfect, held down with enough Brilliantine to groom a mammoth, and he’s still got the same tall, thin build: six feet of it, with pale skin and cold blue eyes. He’s a nice guy really, if a bit creepy. I wonder how his patients feel whenever they go and see him. It occurs to me now, that he looks something like Fred Astaire. On the other hand I feel like Humphrey Bogart.
“So when did it happen?”
Overjoyed, it seemed, that one of his best friends had finally decided to say something, James pulled out his silver cigar-case and opened it, presenting me with its contents by way of celebration. A present from a doctor to a patient who had finally done him the common courtesy of following his orders and who was now experiencing the benefits of his wisdom. Or something like that. He flipped open a cigarette-lighter and lit the cigar I’d selected from his case. I took a good drag while he replied.
“When did what happen?”
“Sir James Holloway,” I say slowly, emphasis on ‘Sir’, “Have you upgraded from collecting stamps to collecting aristocratic titles?”
James chuckles.
“Two months ago. Heart-failure”.
“I’m sorry for your loss”.
“Oh it’s no great loss. He had a good run. And he left me a sizable bit of dosh and a fancy title. I shouldn’t feel too upset. Would you?”
“I suppose not”.
“Well there you are”.
We passed new time by talking of old time, as the train sped north towards London, black smoke and white steam mixing and mingling in the air to swirl past our windows in a weird, grey enigmatic dance that looked like ink poured into a glass of milk.
Eventually we fall asleep. Our slumber interrupted at last by our compartment door being wrenched open by a porter. We stagger out of the carriage into the brightness of the station and the porter, aided by another, loads my luggage onto a waiting trolley. I push it sleepily through the station with James following. We emerge into the streets of London and James pulls a small metal object from his pocket. He puts it to his mouth. The cab-call whistle echoes over the street and a blue and black Austin taxi pulls up. The cab-driver hauls my luggage onto the storage-platform next to his seat and is about to open the door when he looks at his two, zombie-like fares, who are so tired they look like they’d keel over at any minute. James fumbles in his pocket for his wallet and peels some banknotes from within its leather sides and thrusts them into the cab-driver’s hands. We tumble into the cab like a pair of circus-clowns and James gives the cab-driver his address in Grosvenor Square. He groans and yawns. I don’t blame him. It’s been a hell of a day.
Bloody Christmas
December, 1933
Snow is soft and white and beautiful. Snow is romantic and alluring; fun, enchanting and mesmerising. Snow is bullshit. Believe me. I know. I'm standing in it right now. It's cold and wet and when it melts it runs down the back of your shirt and freezes you and goes all over the damn place except where it should go: on the ground. I look around me and take in my surroundings. I'm standing at the docks in Southampton, England. I have a hat, a three-piece suit, a steamer-trunk, two suitcases and an empty whiskey flask. Terrific. I turn around to look up at the big, block letters on the bow of the ship that's just hauled me across the Pond for the last week. The R.M.S. Aquitania. A fine ship and all in all, a comfortable crossing, but I was still glad to get off of her. A man in a blue uniform approaches me. What on earth can he want?
"Mr. Richard Haines?"
"Yes".
"A gentleman is waiting for you at the station, sir".
"I'm not expecting anyone to meet me".
"He seemed to think not, sir. He gave me his card, sir".
I took the card that the porter gave me and had a look at it.
Sir James Holloway
M.D., FRCP., FRCS., FRS., etc
M.D., FRCP., FRCS., FRS., etc
“Oh,” I said.
“Do you know the gentleman, sir?”
“Yes, but I wasn’t expecting him”. I pause. “Oh alright. Take me to him”.
The porter grabs the trolley containing my luggage and pushes it ahead of him as he strides towards the station nearby. I follow him to a platform where a long row of carriages is waiting for its means of motion – which appears to be temporarily absent – but which doesn’t seem to stop people from wanting to get onboard, even though the train doesn’t look like it’s in any hurry to be anywhere else anytime soon. The man stops in front of a compartment with all the blinds pulled down. He opens it and ushers me inside before handing me my suitcases. Then, the man slams the door shut and I hear him walk away. I straighten up properly inside the compartment and turn around. Sitting in a corner of one of the seats wearing an expensive, dark suit and smoking a cigar long enough to go punting with, and with the electric light reflecting off of his gold-rimmed monocle, was...
“Hello old chap!”
I groan and collapse into a seat. The man merely smiles.
“A fine way to greet an old college chum, wot?”
I sigh and throw off my hat. I suddenly realise what a real nightmare that last night at sea was. I’d barely slept at all and now I feel like I could sleep for an eternity and then some.
My name is Richard Haines. I was a cop. Around the time of prohibition I gave up being a cop. It was getting dangerous and deadly and I have a fetish for staying alive. I decided on a career-change. Not too much of a career-change though. Just a little one. Still in New York, but I went from being a public cop to being a private cop; a gumshoe, a shamus, a private detective. At least now, I could decide the kind of danger I’d be getting myself into, and set my own payment and rewards in the event that I managed to get out of it. I’m six foot three inches tall, about two hundred pounds. I’ve got dark brown hair and brown eyes, a solid build and a rather quiet and rough disposition. At least it seems that way compared to Mr. Newpenny here.
Sitting diagonally opposite to me in the railroad compartment that now begins to move is Dr. James Holloway. Or Sir James Holloway, as it now appears to be. Whatever his title, James is an old friend. We knew each other at university when I was studying law and he was studying medicine and both of us were studying girls. The only difference there was that he passed on girls and I failed on it. As I look at James now it occurs to me that not much has changed about him. Okay the hair is a bit thinner, but it’s still the same light blond tint, still immaculately brushed back, tight and perfect, held down with enough Brilliantine to groom a mammoth, and he’s still got the same tall, thin build: six feet of it, with pale skin and cold blue eyes. He’s a nice guy really, if a bit creepy. I wonder how his patients feel whenever they go and see him. It occurs to me now, that he looks something like Fred Astaire. On the other hand I feel like Humphrey Bogart.
“So when did it happen?”
Overjoyed, it seemed, that one of his best friends had finally decided to say something, James pulled out his silver cigar-case and opened it, presenting me with its contents by way of celebration. A present from a doctor to a patient who had finally done him the common courtesy of following his orders and who was now experiencing the benefits of his wisdom. Or something like that. He flipped open a cigarette-lighter and lit the cigar I’d selected from his case. I took a good drag while he replied.
“When did what happen?”
“Sir James Holloway,” I say slowly, emphasis on ‘Sir’, “Have you upgraded from collecting stamps to collecting aristocratic titles?”
James chuckles.
“Two months ago. Heart-failure”.
“I’m sorry for your loss”.
“Oh it’s no great loss. He had a good run. And he left me a sizable bit of dosh and a fancy title. I shouldn’t feel too upset. Would you?”
“I suppose not”.
“Well there you are”.
We passed new time by talking of old time, as the train sped north towards London, black smoke and white steam mixing and mingling in the air to swirl past our windows in a weird, grey enigmatic dance that looked like ink poured into a glass of milk.
Eventually we fall asleep. Our slumber interrupted at last by our compartment door being wrenched open by a porter. We stagger out of the carriage into the brightness of the station and the porter, aided by another, loads my luggage onto a waiting trolley. I push it sleepily through the station with James following. We emerge into the streets of London and James pulls a small metal object from his pocket. He puts it to his mouth. The cab-call whistle echoes over the street and a blue and black Austin taxi pulls up. The cab-driver hauls my luggage onto the storage-platform next to his seat and is about to open the door when he looks at his two, zombie-like fares, who are so tired they look like they’d keel over at any minute. James fumbles in his pocket for his wallet and peels some banknotes from within its leather sides and thrusts them into the cab-driver’s hands. We tumble into the cab like a pair of circus-clowns and James gives the cab-driver his address in Grosvenor Square. He groans and yawns. I don’t blame him. It’s been a hell of a day.
***