Writing Quotes

I learned that you should feel when writing, not like Lord Byron on a mountain top, but like a child stringing beads in kindergarten - happy, absorbed and quietly putting one bead on after another. Brenda Ueland

Thursday, June 13, 2013

The Severed Head


This story is the result of an exercise set at writing group. The exercise was to write a short story using the following words -

 
"The head, severed with surgical precision, had been placed at a jaunty angle on the window ledge......"

 
Some interesting stories were written and not all of them about murder. Hope you enjoy my first attempt at a "Whodunit" and don't find it too gruesome...Goldie

 


"The head, severed with surgical precision, had been placed at a jaunty angle on the window ledge......"

 

Inspector James frowned as he observed the head. “Some bastard has a sick sense of humour or they’re just plain sick,’ he said to his assistant Curtis.

 

“I thoroughly agree Sir,” said Curtis, who suppressed an urge to vomit.

 

Elizabeth, a maid at the Compton house, discovered the head as she came into the dining room to set the table for breakfast. She was in a terrible state. The cook took her to the kitchen for a cup of tea and was trying to calm her down.

 

Brown the butler, phoned the police immediately.

 

The head in question belonged to Mrs Compton the lady of the house and young second wife of Neville Compton who was at present on business overseas.

 

“Come, Curtis, we’ll go outside and see what’s out there.”

 

It was damp outside from recent rain. If there had been any footprints they were washed away. James and Curtis thoroughly searched the grounds for a body but found nothing. Curtis was by the back door that led to the kitchen and dining room. He was bent over examining something. It was a gold necklace with a gold pendant in which was set a tiny ruby.

 

“Who would have dropped it in such an obvious place where it would be seen by many of the staff?

 

“Only a dimwit I’d say,” said James or else someone trying to put us off the scent. “Unless of course the murderer didn’t realize it had fallen off the body. Presuming it belongs to Mrs Compton that is.”

 

Suddenly high pitched screams omitted from the house in the direction of the kitchen. James and Curtis high tailed it inside to find cook standing at the open freezer white-faced and gibbering like a fool.

 

“Calm down please Madam and tell us what you have seen.” said James.

 

“L-l-look i-i-in the f-f-freezer I-I-Inspector J-J-James.”

 

There in the freezer was the headless body of Mrs Compton lying on its side with the arms and legs hacked off and layed neatly beside it.

 

Inspector James called in the forensic team and informed the staff they were not to leave the house until he had interviewed them all.

 

There was a knock on the kitchen door and Nellie, Mrs Compton’s personal assistant answered it. “Oh, it’s you,” she said looking with disdain at the man standing there.

 

“What’s happening? I heard screams?”

 

“Mrs Compton is dead Jack, someone has decapitated her. That’ll take the wind out of your sails.”

 

Curtis came to the door and asked, “Who are you?”

 

“I’m the gardener.”

 

“More than the gardener!” sniffed Nellie.

 

Well don’t leave the property until you’ve been interviewed,” Curtis said.

 

Interviews were held all morning. Cook had stayed in all night in her room. She read until late and never heard a thing.

 

Both Elizabeth and Nellie went to the local dance with their boyfriends and did not arrive home until the early hours of the morning.

 

Brown the butler went to the hotel in the village to meet a friend and came home about midnight.

 

Jack the gardener said he was in all night and watched television and then went to bed. 

 ***

 
“Curtis, I want you to verify with those boyfriends of the girls and Brown’s friend their whereabouts last night. Ask the publican if he saw Brown at any time too.”

 

Inspector James had a feeling that something was not right with the gardener’s alibi. He seemed evasive and nervous.  “I think I’ll have a word with him again,” he said to himself.

***


Now Jack, “How long have you worked here?”

 

“About a year Inspector.”

 

“Have you always worked as a gardener?”

 

“No.”

 

“What did you do before you worked here then?”

 

“I worked at a butcher shop.”

 

“You mean you were a butcher?”

 

“Well, yes.”

 

“What did you think of Mrs Compton, Jack?”

 

“She was okay.”

 

“Some of the others say you thought she was more than okay.”

 

“We used to talk a lot about the plants and things. She liked gardening.”

 

“Hum, thank you Jack. That will be all for now.”

 

Inspector James took himself outside and went to the garden shed. It was dark and gloomy and smelled of fertiliser.

 “Aha!” there wrapped in towels behind the fertislier were implements as such used by butchers. The longest sharp knife was smeared with blood. “Another job for forensics,” he thought as he carefully wrapped the implements in the towel again. “This seems too easy.”

 ***

 
“All their stories checked out Sir,” said Curtis.

 

“Good, but I’ve found something of interest while you were away. Forensics will give us the answer by the morning. I want everyone in the house assembled in the sitting room by eleven o’clock in the morning, Curtis.”

 

“Yes, Sir!”

 ***
 

Cook, Brown, Elizabeth, Nellie and Jack were already seated at the dining room table when Inspector James and Curtis arrived next morning.

 

“Inspector, shall I bring in tea for everyone before we start?” asked Cook.

 

“No! This is a murder investigation not a tea party Madam.” Red-faced, Cook sat down on her chair dabbing at her eyes with a tissue.

 

“I’ll start with you Elizabeth and you Nellie. Your stories checked out.

 

Cook, I think that even though you disliked Mrs Compton you are no murderer.

 

Now, Jack; you say that you and Mrs Compton talked about gardening and that was all. Well I don’t believe you. I put it to you that Mrs Compton and you were having an affair and that on the night she was murdered she had visited you at your house. I’m right aren’t I Jack?” Jack nodded and hung his head. “However, I don’t believe you murdered Mrs Compton even though I found that blood-stained knife amongst your butcher’s tools. You loved her didn’t you?”

 

“Yes.”

 

“And I come to you Brown. Your story checked out at the pub and you did arrive home at midnight. However, there was still plenty of time to decapitate a body and dispose of it in the freezer and enough time to place the severed head on the window sill before daybreak.”

 

Brown turned pale. “Oh, no Sir, not me.”

 

“Oh, yes Sir. Your fingerprints were on the knife.

 

“All right, all right Inspector. I did kill her and she deserved it. Miss High and Mighty! We all; I mean Cook, Nellie, Elizabeth and myself; hate her for the way she treats Mr Compton. He doesn’t deserve what she dishes out. Mr Compton is a good man and treats her like a queen. Ungrateful trollop!  As for Jack, we despise him for carrying on with her while Mr Compton is away working hard to pay for bills she runs up.”

 

“Tell me what happened Brown.”

 

“Well, I was coming home from the pub when I saw the light still on at Jack’s house and I knew she was there. I waited until she came out and grabbed her on her way home. I dragged her across the highway that runs beside Mr Compton’s property into the scrub and did it there. I’d taken Jack’s butchering implements a while back and had them with me.”

 

“Do you mean to say, you had planned all this sometime ago?” asked the Inspector.

 

“Yes, Sir.”

 

“Tell me Brown, why did you put her body in the freezer and her head on the window sill?”

 

“I put her head on the window sill because I wanted the others to know she was dead not just missing. I thought they’d be pleased. As for her body, it was getting near daylight and there was no time to bury her. I panicked and shoved her in the freezer after I chopped off her legs and arms so the body would fit. I had to hurry to clean up the mess in the bathroom before anyone got out of bed. I must say I was rather pleased with the way I managed it. Later on I hid Jack’s tools back in the garden shed.”

 ***
 

Inspector James and Curtis were seated at the bar of the local hotel.

 

“Well Sir, another case solved.” Curtis took a gulp of the frothy beer. “I must say I think Brown is completely sick. The way he said he was rather pleased with how he managed it.”

 

“I agree completely Curtis.”