This Private Plot

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Authors: Alan Beechey

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This Private Plot

An Oliver Swithin Mystery

Alan Beechey

alanbeechey.blogspot.com

Poisoned Pen Press

Copyright

Copyright © 2014 by Alan Beechey

First E-book Edition 2014

ISBN: 9781464202438 ebook

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in, or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the publisher of this book.

The historical characters and events portrayed in this book are inventions of the author or used fictitiously.

Poisoned Pen Press
6962 E. First Ave., Ste. 103
Scottsdale, AZ 85251

www.poisonedpenpress.com

[email protected]

Contents

Dedication

To the memory of my parents: Tom Beechey,
who gave me my sense of humor;
and Lucy Beechey, who gave me a copy of
Agatha Christie's The Mysterious Affair at Styles
when I was twelve.

Epigraph

“…it seems to us that the readers who want fiction to be like life are considerably outnumbered by those who would like life to be like fiction.”

—Sarah Caudwell
The Sirens Sang of Murder

An old Danish jester named Yorick
Drank a gallon of pure paregoric.
My jokes have been dull,
Said he, but my skull
Will one of these days be historic.

—Ogden Nash
There's Always Another Windmill

Chapter One

Friday night

“The odd thing about a banana,” Oliver Swithin mused as he chased the naked policewoman across the moonlit field, “is not that it's an excellent source of potassium, but that everybody seems
to
know
it is.”

A week earlier, he'd been borrowing a book about swans from the library. A passing reader had tapped him on the shoulder and whispered: “A full-grown swan can break a man's arm, you know.”

Oliver might have forgotten the incident, but on his way home, a bus passenger had spotted the book poking out of his leather satchel and said the same thing. Later, his housemate Geoffrey Angelwine couldn't resist making a similar comment.

That's when it struck Oliver that he'd never had a conversation about George Washington without somebody piping up: “Did you know he had wooden teeth?” Every time the subject of hedgehogs arose, someone felt compelled to say: “They're covered in fleas, you know.” Munch on a celery stalk and you'd inevitably be told that you burn more calories digesting it than you take in from eating it. And how many discussions of sexual orientation had led to the dubious anecdote that Britain had no laws against lesbians because Queen Victoria didn't (or couldn't or wouldn't) believe they existed?

An owl hooted, interrupting his thoughts. At least Oliver guessed it was an owl. It could have been a hedgehog howling at the moon for all he knew about country matters. It was hard to hear anything over his labored breathing. Was that a nettle patch he'd just run through?

Oliver had assumed that he and Effie were only going for a nighttime stroll. But when they'd reached the edge of Synne Common, the tract of scrubland near the Cotswolds village where they were staying, she had swiftly disrobed, bundled her clothes under a holly bush, and, ordering him to “get your kit off,” hared off into the darkness. Mesmerized, Oliver undressed and followed, struggling to catch up with his girlfriend's slim outline, silvery-blue in the moonlight, the mass of curly hair fanning out around her head and bouncing wildly as she ran. Pure Botticelli. But he knew that he'd need some serious mental distraction to blot out his awareness that he was stark naked in a public place and it wasn't a dream.

Back to bananas.

Oliver believed that this irresistible urge to educate strangers about swans and bananas and lesbians was a new strain of trivia that he'd identified. No, not trivia.
Anti
-trivia. It was the opposite of conventional trivia, the stuff of board games and pub quizzes.

That kind of trivia, you either knew or you didn't. More likely, you didn't. For example, Effie Strongitharm, like many women, had a pair of faint indentations, set symmetrically on her lower back. (The clear moon might have been bright enough to reveal them now, but Oliver had left his glasses with the rest of his clothes.) And he would have bet that not one person in a hundred knew they had a name—the “dimples of Venus.”

But in contrast, Oliver thought, his attention drifting downwards,
everyone
can (and, crucially, does) tell you that the gluteus maximus, the humble buttock, is the largest muscle in the human body. (Well, strictly speaking, it's in joint first place with its counterpart.) “Muscle” couldn't do justice to Effie's fleet derriere, flickering about five yards ahead of him. No need for his glasses to make that out. Perhaps there is a divinity that shapes our ends, he reflected. Or maybe it's the squats.

Did Botticelli do bottoms? Or would it take a sculptor to do full justice to his girlfriend, capturing the way each side approached the Euclidian perfection of the sphere, those gluteal creases each an almost perfect arc? Dear God, they seemed to be smiling at him!

Effie slowed and turned round. Oliver stumbled to a halt, remembering Sir Robert Helpmann's caveat about nude ballet: that not everything stops when the music does.

“What's on your mind?” she asked.

“Solid geometry,” he confessed.

Effie nodded. “Serves a girl right for asking.”

Oliver sneezed. Fair-haired and English-skinned under the full moon, he felt as conspicuous as a polar bear in a nunnery. In his late twenties, he had so far avoided gathering any spare flesh on his wiry frame, but his physique was still an embarrassing contrast to Effie's lean, athletic build. Her attractive face under the teeming curls, vaguely reminiscent of the young Ginger Rogers, would always score higher out of ten than his own benign features—his chin not quite firm enough, his teeth a touch too prominent, his pale blue eyes always looking as if he had just removed his glasses, even while he was wearing them. Gazing at her blurry form and trying to recover his breath, he was struck again by how grown-up it felt that a whole adult person, with a smirking bottom and everything else that goes with it—most of which was currently on display, since she'd elected to unmask her beauty to the moon—should love him as much as he loved her.

“I still wonder what you see in me,” he confessed.

“You know, the number of times my colleagues at the Yard say the same thing, you'd think I could come up with a reason by now.”

Oliver's riposte was thwarted by another sneeze.

“So have you guessed where you are?” Effie asked.

“In the middle of bloody Warwickshire, far from my clothes, even farther from my nice warm bed, too far by half from London, and in constant fear of being dive-bombed by bats,” he thought, but kept it to himself. The irony had not escaped him that, since his adolescence, he'd lavished many hours of his imagination on female nudity, preferably accompanied by his own. Now that it was an al fresco reality, all he wanted to do was cover up his full Monty and go in search of a nice hot cup of tea. A cloud, which had momentarily slid across the moon, moved on, and the expanse known as Synne Common ensilvered itself moment by moment.

He saw that they had reached the highest point of the Common. In front of them, surrounded by a chain-link fence, was a huge, circular pattern, about 150 feet in diameter, where the top surface of the chalky soil had been scraped away to leave a dozen concentric rings of dark grass, each a yard wide. This landmark was the nearby village of Synne's greatest claim to fame. It was one of England's seven authentic turf mazes, possibly the finest, well documented since the seventeenth century, but called the Shakespeare Race only since the early twentieth, on the grounds that any community within twenty miles of Stratford-upon-Avon needed to claim some Shakespearean connection, no matter how spurious.

Because Synne had been his parents' home for the last ten years, Oliver had seen the Race many times, but its serpentine beauty, monochrome and almost luminous in the glimpses of the moon, was still an impressive sight, despite his fuzzy vision. On the far side of the Race, an ancient tree known as The Synne Oak was reputed to have been the village gibbet.

“Splendid,” he said, wiping his nose on his handkerchief. “Although I don't see why we had to take our clothes off first. Can we go back now?”

Effie punched him mischievously in the upper arm. It hurt.

“Back? We haven't even started. We have to do the maze.”

“Do the maze?”

“I was talking to your brother Toby.”

“Oh dear.”

“Toby, as you know, is stuffed full of Shakespearean lore and local traditions. He was telling your Aunt Phoebe and me that it was a custom for young lovers to come up here at midnight on May Day and follow the path of the maze.”

“Naked?”

“As nature intended.” She paused, narrowing her eyes. “Hang on, where did that handkerchief come from?”

“I stuffed it into my sock.”

“You kept your socks on! Oh, Oliver! Here am I, trying to arrange something mystical and life-affirming, and you're turning it into a bad porn movie.”

“It's only one sock,” he protested. “My hay fever's playing up. I needed somewhere to stash my hankie. And it was the other foot that stepped into what I think was a cowpat.”

“Okay, Buster, off with the sock.”

“Where shall I put my handkerchief?” He hopped on one foot as he complied.

“Don't tempt me.”

Oliver's bare foot landed on a thistle. He cursed briefly.

“My parents have lived in Synne for nearly a decade, but this is the first I've heard of this custom.”

Effie sighed. “Oh, come on, Ollie. You've been thoroughly miserable since you got here two days ago. Toby's not around, you're not interested in your mother's village activities, and you never talk to your father. Your Uncle Tim and Aunt Phoebe turned up this evening, and you barely cracked a smile. I thought this might perk you up.”

Oliver looked out again over the Shakespeare Race. He knew that it was technically not a maze but a labyrinth: breaks and bridges in the pattern at the cardinal points made it possible to trace a sinuous, half-mile pathway of grass from the starting point, just by the opening in the modern fence, to a round island at the center.

“There's a similar pattern in the tiles of Chartres Cathedral,” he said. “Not exactly a steep and thorny way to heaven, but people walk that, too, as an aid to meditation or prayer. They generally keep their clothes on.”

“Who said anything about walking?”

Effie began to run along the outer circle of the Race. Oliver followed reluctantly, grateful that the twists and hairpins kept their speed down. He settled into a steady jog, seeking diversion again. Something more effective than buttocks.

Finsbury the Ferret. Yes, good distraction. If he collected more of this pseudo-trivia—he ought to come up with a better name for it—maybe he would have enough material for a book supposedly penned by Finsbury, the nastiest and consequently the most popular character in his Railway Mice series.
Finsbury the Ferret's Guide to What Everybody Knows
would be a suitably cynical theme for the vile creature, and the book would probably sell well to his many adult readers, given that nobody these days seems in a hurry to find out what they
don't
know. It would make a pleasant change from another children's story stuffed with badgers, stoats, pugnacious swans, flea-infested hedgehogs, and the like—always a challenge for their resolutely urban author. Oliver usually limited his visits to his parents' Warwickshire home to a handful of weekends a year. He was staying longer this time because his editor at Tadpole Tomes for Tiny Tots had demanded he do some original research for once instead of leaving it to a team of overworked subeditors to make corrections, such as changing the word “sheep” to “cow” every time he mentioned a dairy farm. “And try to work some zombies into the next book,” she'd urged. “Zombies are in.”

Oliver hated the countryside. His hay fever had already kicked in. But at least Effie was staying for the duration, taking some overdue leave from Scotland Yard.

They reached the heart of the maze. “Now what?” he asked.

“Well, Oliver C. Swithin,” she purred, “we're two young lovers, naked on a grassy knoll, the night is fine, the moon is full, and there's nobody around for miles. What do you think we could do?”

It was clearly a rhetorical question, because she started to show him. Suddenly, she froze. “Did you hear something?” she whispered.

Oliver listened. A slight breeze rustled the leaves of the Synne Oak. A branch groaned, as if carrying a burden. A distant buzz might have been a truck on the motorway, carried miles on the still air.

But there it was. Voices, far off, but getting closer quickly. And fast footsteps muffled in the long grass.

“Oh Lord,” Oliver said. “Somebody's coming.”

It was too late to scurry back through the opening, and there was no space between the Synne Oak's broad trunk and the fence for them to squeeze into. Their only option was to flatten themselves to the ground. It might just work, as long as the visitors stayed near the entrance.

Two figures came into view, a man and a woman, both at least twice as old as Oliver and Effie, but both running and both apparently naked. To Oliver, they were little more than two out-of-focus white smudges, which merged briefly into one as they paused to embrace.

“And this is some ancient fertility rite?” the man asked. Oliver flinched.

“So young Toby says,” replied the woman. “We have to follow the path all the way to the center.”

“What do I get if I get there first?”

“The same thing you get if
I
get there first.” The woman laughed, and there was further physical contact with a slightly moist soundtrack.

Oliver pushed his mouth as close to Effie's ear as her thick curls permitted. “Oh, my prophetic soul!” he hissed. “My uncle!”

“I know,” she whimpered. “That's why I'm not looking.”

If Oliver had been wearing his glasses, he could have made out the tall, white-haired figure of his uncle-by-marriage, Tim Mallard, who in his unclothed state looked even younger and fitter for a man in his sixties than he did when dressed for work as a detective superintendent in Scotland Yard's Serious Crime Directorate.

And Effie's immediate boss.

Oliver assumed that the smaller blur was his Aunt Phoebe, Mallard's wife; otherwise her voice and appearance made her indistinguishable from her identical twin sister, Chloe Swithin. Oliver's mother.

The newcomers started to jog around the circumference of the maze. Oliver made his mind up.

“Stay behind me,” he said, rising to his feet and screening Effie. She adopted a nymph-surprised-while-bathing pose.

Being an introvert, Oliver always found starting conversations a challenge, but there was nothing in any self-help article he'd ever read that prepared him for attracting the attention of nude relatives in an ancient monument at midnight. Fortunately, his abrupt sneeze solved this problem.

Phoebe came to a halt and screamed. Mallard started like a guilty thing, uttered an expletive, and shielded his wife with his body.

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