Articoli correlati a Malice in Cornwall: An Erskine Powell Mystery: 2

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9780804116565: Malice in Cornwall: An Erskine Powell Mystery: 2
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The second mystery in a series set in the Scottish Highlands pays homage to The Hound of the Baskervilles through the story of Chief Superintendent Powell's investigation of an unsolved murder and a reported ghost. Original.

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L'autore:
Graham Thomas, a biologist by training, lives in British Columbia with his wife, their two children, and a Gordon setter named Laddie. His first mystery featuring Detective-Chief Superintendent Powell was Malice in the Highlands.
Estratto. © Riproduzione autorizzata. Diritti riservati.:
Detective-Sergeant Black turned right off the B3300 just before Portreath
onto the minor road that led to Penrick and to Porthtowan beyond. Powell
interrupted his travelogue momentarily to lower the passenger-side window.
He took a deep breath. The air was bracing with the faint but unmistakable
astringency of the sea. He lit a cigarette. The road undulated over
scrubby fields punctuated by occasional roofless engine houses with
crumbling chimneys, abandoned mines with names like Wheal Faith and Wheal
Bounty. Stark reminders of the Duchy's past riches.

"It's amazing to think that Bronze Age men were streaming and smelting tin
here three thousand years ago," Powell remarked.

Black grunted with apparent interest. "You seem to know a lot about
Cornwall, sir."

"During my annual summer pilgrimages to Bude with Marion and the boys I've
found ample opportunity to dabble in the local history. I'm not much of a
beach person, I'd rather be poking around some old ruins."

"I'm the same way, sir."

"By the way, what did you think of our session with the locals yesterday?"
After arriving in Camborne they'd spent the previous afternoon being
briefed by the local superintendent.

"Well, sir, I get the impression they're not exactly thrilled about our
being here."

Powell smiled. "Superintendent Harrison and I go back a long way. It's
only natural to protect one's turf, of course, but I suspect he's secretly
relieved to get the file off his desk. And he was good enough to loan us a
car."

"They seem to think it's a fairly routine job."

"Perhaps. But I have a hunch there may be more to it than meets the eye;
I'm hoping that Chief Inspector Butts in St. Ives will be able to fill in
some of the blanks. All, no doubt, will be revealed in the fullness of
time."

The road began to rise slightly, then dipped abruptly into the grassy
valley of the River Teal.

"Wasn't it Chesterton who wrote that the rolling English road was made by
the rolling English drunk?" Black observed casually.

"Something like that." Once again Powell was taken aback. It seemed there
was indeed another side to his old colleague that he had hitherto not
recognized.

As they descended, the valley gradually narrowed to a steep ravine with
small white and cream houses clinging to its sides above a burbling
stream, the roadside ditches alight with yellow primroses. After a few
hundred yards the valley opened up again to reveal a fetching prospect, a
fine stone church with the sparkling blue sea as a backdrop. Having delved
into his collection of travel guides before leaving home, Powell knew that
the church had been built in the fourteenth century and dedicated to St.
Penrick, who had arrived at the estuary of the River Teal in a coracle
from Ireland in the sixth century. His was a grimly ascetic order who,
amongst their many rituals of spiritual purification, would stand immersed
to their necks in ice-cold water amidst the granite megaliths erected by
the ancestors of their newfound congregation, reciting psalters and
praying for the conversion of the heathen. Powell supposed that the
current vicar, in his own way, still labored in the same fields.

"Pull over here," he directed.

The churchyard afforded a fine view of the village below and the
surrounding stretch of coastline. A stone bridge crossed the stream at the
foot of the steep hill below the church. A mile-long arc of tawny sand
confined by two steep promontories--the larger, Towey Head, to the
southwest--encircling the bay like two claws. The narrow river channel
marked by straggling poles, a few brightly painted fishing boats propped
up on the sand waiting for high tide, and color-washed cottages piled tier
upon tier up the hillside, with the church set like a beacon on top. A
spiritual lighthouse for the lost souls of Penrick.

"Lovely," remarked Detective-Sergeant Black, who was not usually given to
such outbursts.

Powell could only assume that his companion was at a loss for a suitable
quotation, so he stepped into the breach:
"Thy shores are empires, changed in all save thee;

Assyria, Greece, Rome, Carthage, what are they?

Thy waters wasted them while they were free..."

Without missing a beat, Black continued solemnly:
"Unchangeable save to the wild waves' play,

Time writes no wrinkles on thine azure brow;

Such as creation's dawn beheld, thou rollest now."

Then he smiled equably. "I quite like Lord Byron."

Any lingering suspicion that Sergeant Black was a mere literary dilettante
was dispelled once and for all. Powell's casual serve had been expertly
returned; he realized he would have to place his shots more carefully in
the future. "We'd better get settled in," he said. "I understand our
accommodation comes highly commended by Butts."

Amongst the cottages ran a maze of streets and alleys barely wide enough
for a car, but Black eventually negotiated a route down to the water's
edge. Powell experienced a sinking feeling as a closer inspection revealed
that the village center consisted of a few unremarkable shops and
guesthouses clustered around the tiny harbor. More promising was a plain
but elegant Georgian pub, the Head, which was painted, appropriately
enough, pink. There were a few people strolling along the front, taking
the morning air.

They soon located the Wrecker's Rest Guesthouse, the premises of George
and Agnes Polfrock, straight out of Fawlty bloody Towers, as
Detective-Sergeant Black was later to remark in the Head over a pint. The
best thing that could be said for the Wrecker's Rest was that it had come
recommended by Chief Inspector Butts, but this turned out to be a dubious
distinction indeed. Powell had to admit that its whitewashed facade with
flower boxes and mullioned windows looking out over the quay, cluttered
with lobster traps and crab pots, the sweep of yellow sand and the wide
blue Atlantic beyond, possessed a certain superficial charm--picturesque
chic was the expression that came to mind. However this notion was quickly
dispelled by the pervasive aura of the proprietors, which permeated the
premises like a pungent odor.

"Ooo, Chief Superintendent Powell! It isn't often we have guests from
Scotland Yard," Mrs. Polfrock gushed. She was a squarish, lumpy woman with
improbable red hair. "And this must be . . ."

"Detective-Sergeant Black, madam," Black volunteered.

"Yes, of course. We've prepared the Smuggler's Suite for you, Chief
Superintendent, commanding a fine view of the Sands and Towey Head. And
Sergeant, er, I'm sorry . . ."

"Black, madam," Black prompted between clenched teeth.

"Yes, of course. We've put you in the back. Now if you'll just sign the
guest registry I'll have my husband, George, show you to your rooms.
Buttie didn't say how long you would be staying," she added, as if by way
of casual chitchat.

Powell cocked an eyebrow. "Buttie?"

"Alf Butts, my brother-in-law."

"Chief Inspector Butts, oh I see!" Powell was beginning to
wonder if their being maneuvered to the Wrecker's Rest was simple nepotism
or Buttie putting the boot in for being muscled off his turf.

Mrs. Polfrock clucked disapprovingly. "All this publicity is bad for
business, although I don't believe a word of it myself, and even Buttie
says it's a load of codswallop. Don't you agree, Chief Superintendent?"

"That's what we're here to find out, Mrs. Polfrock."

She smiled fixedly, her mouth a thick red smudge of lipstick. Then without
warning she let out a bellow. "George!"

Powell swore he could feel the roof slates rattle.

George Polfrock came scurrying, a little man much smaller than his wife,
balding, with nervous, darting eyes. "Yes, my sweet," he panted, catching
his breath and sizing up his new guests. He reminded one of a Pekingese,
eager for a treat.

"Show Chief Superintendent Powell and, er, the sergeant to their rooms."
It was clearly an order, not a request. "By the way, will you gentlemen be
taking lunch?"

"I think not, Mrs. Polfrock. Thanks all the same. We had a late breakfast
in Camborne and we're anxious to get started."

Her eyes narrowed suspiciously. "As you like, but please remember that I
require at least four hours' notice to reserve a place for lunch and the
evening meal."

"We'll bear that in mind, Mrs. Polfrock. Do you get many guests this time
of year?" Powell inquired innocently.

A grudging shrug. "Besides you two, there's just that person from the
press." She looked as if she had just swallowed something nasty. "But in a
month's time we'll be full up right through the season."

Powell picked up his suitcase. "Splendid. Lead the way, Mr. Polfrock."

Fifteen minutes later Powell and Black fled the Wrecker's Rest and made a
beeline for the pub.
"Bloody charming," Black said as he tucked into his fish and chips.

They had the place to themselves and Powell, having reluctantly eschewed a
selection from the surprisingly extensive wine list, savored his first
pint of Cornish bitter since the previous summer. He smacked his lips
appreciatively. "Ah, well, I trust we won't be spending too many cozy
evenings with our hosts gathered together around the hearth." He poked at
his ploughman's. "Still, Butts has got a nerve, don't you think? Although
he probably didn't have much choice, considering--"

He was interrupted by the publican, who had come over to introduce
himself. Tall and wide and beginning to bulge in the wrong places, the man
looked like a rugby player gone to seed.

"Tony Rowlands at your service," he said heartily. "Is everything all
right?"

"Excellent, thank you." Powell introduced Black and himself. "Very nice
place you have here." Always wise to open with a platitude.

Rowlands smiled. "We try to add a little class to the neighborhood. I've
lived here for over thirty years and I'm still working at it." He pulled
up a chair and sat down. "Just passing through?"

"We're staying at the Wrecker's Rest for a few days."

Rowlands smirked. "There's an odd couple if ever there was one. She's a
horrible old shrew and he's a raving pervert. Spies on the young girls at
Mawgawan Beach with a telescope."

Powell wasn't quite sure whether he found this display of candor
refreshing or slightly off-putting. More the former, he decided, as it
confirmed his own first impression of the Polfrocks.

"What brings you gentlemen to Penrick--business or pleasure?" Rowlands
inquired easily.

Powell explained that they were policemen and had come to investigate the
so-called Riddle.

Rowlands was suddenly tight-lipped.

"Mrs. Polfrock says it's bad for business," Powell ventured.

"That depends on how you look at it. After all, I've just got two new
customers, haven't I?"

Powell raised his glass. "Soon to be regulars, I think."

"Well, you've come to the right place, Chief Superintendent," a feminine
voice piped in. The sturdy blonde barmaid, who looked like she was
genetically predisposed to pull pints, came over to their table. "I
couldn't help overhearing that you gentlemen are from Scotland Yard, here
to investigate the sightings. I was the first to see it, wasn't I, love?"

Rowlands rolled his eyes but said nothing.

Powell reached over and pulled a chair out from the table. "Please sit
down, Miss, er ... ?"

"Thompson. But you can call me Jenny."

"Right then, Jenny, why don't you tell us all about it?"

"It was a week ago last Monday after closing time--two weeks ago today
that would be," she began breathlessly. "I went for a walk along the
Sands, down toward the Head. The tide was in, so there was just that
narrow strip of beach to walk along. I was just coming around a small
point of rock when I saw a faint light at the water's edge, sort of a
greenish glow. I wondered what it was, so I went a little closer. Well, I
nearly fainted on the spot! It was someone or some thing trying to crawl
out of the water. It was all furry and wrinkled, with a strange halo all
around and"--she shuddered--"it didn't have a head!"

Detective-Sergeant Black cleared his throat politely.

Powell ignored him. "Are you sure, Miss, er, Jenny?"

She nodded earnestly. "I know she didn't! I swear to God, her neck just
sort of ended and--"

"You said she," Powell interjected.

Jenny seemed slightly taken aback, as if it had just struck her for the
first time. "I don't know why, exactly, but I'm sure it was a she."

"You said it was trying to crawl out of the water," Powell said gravely.
"Are you certain it was moving of its own accord?"

She looked indignant. "I wasn't about to stick around to find out, was I?"

"No, I suppose not. What did you do next?"

"I ran back here as fast as I could to tell Tone. Didn't I, Tone?"

"That's right," Rowlands said. "The poor girl looked like death warmed
over--"

"Tony!" Jenny admonished.

He smiled. "Sorry, love, figure of speech. Anyway, I grabbed a torch and
my twelve bore and went back to look for it. I'm pretty sure I found the
right spot, but I'm damned if I could find anything. At the time I thought
that Jen was seeing things, but the next night it was spotted again by
somebody else. Isn't that right, love?" He gave her a sharp slap on the
bottom.

A gesture of familiarity or admonishment? Powell wondered.

Jenny looked none too pleased. "That's right, Tone."

Rowlands shrugged. "That's the goods. It's been seen on the Sands several
times since, between here and the Head, always at night."

"What do you make of it?" Powell asked.

Rowlands regarded Powell shrewdly before replying. "The damn thing gives
me the creeps, if you want to know the truth, but I think it's pretty
obvious, don't you?"

"Go on."

"It's something drifting in and out with the tide. It turns up here and it
turns up there."

"Yes, but what?"

Rowlands shifted uneasily in his chair. "You tell me."
The surf crashed riotously against the rocks and Nick Tebble pulled
smartly, expertly timing his strokes so that the tiny skiff rode the
swells as smoothly as any Malibu surfer. Gulls clamored overhead, wheeling
and plung-ing as if harrying a school of herring. He stayed his oars
momentarily. "Bugger off, yer greedy bastards," he shouted above the din.

The birds took no notice so he began to row again, straining at the oars
now and making for a small cove, perhaps fifty feet wide and twice as
deep, that had suddenly opened up in the looming cliff face. A dozen more
pulls and the skiff was deposited abruptly on a patch of shingled beach in
front of a gray stone house that looked like it had grown organically from
the surrounding rock. Above the door, carved in the granite lintel, were
the words the old fish cellar and, underneath, dulcis lucri odor. A lane
behind the house climbed steeply to the turf-covered heights above.

He clambered out and dragged the boat a few feet farther up the beach.
Trailing the bow rope behind him like an umbilical cord, he trudged toward
the house. The shingle gave way to shelving rock slab...

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  • EditoreFawcett
  • Data di pubblicazione1998
  • ISBN 10 0804116563
  • ISBN 13 9780804116565
  • RilegaturaCopertina flessibile
  • Numero di pagine240
  • Valutazione libreria

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9780708943243: Malice in Cornwall

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ISBN 10:  0708943241 ISBN 13:  9780708943243
Casa editrice: Ulverscroft Large Print Books, 2000
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Descrizione libro Paperback. Condizione: new. Paperback. ERSKINE POWELL OF SCOTLAND YARD IS BACK--INVESTIGATING THE STRANGE RIDDLE OF PENRICK SANDS. On the north coast of Cornwall, residents in the quaint seaside town of Penrick report a terrifying phenomenon--an eerie, glowing apparition that rides the surf at night, adding a weird fascination to this place of picturesque streets, secluded beaches, and abandoned mines. Yet Chief Superintendent Powell soon learns that Penrick already harbors unsolved mysteries. For, thirty years ago, someone killed a teenager and left her body to wash up on Penrick Sands--precisely where the apparition now appears. In fact, Powell faces not one but two strangely intertwined puzzles and a double-edged sword of menace. . . . In a story reminiscent of "The Hound of the Baskervilles," Chief Superintendent Powell must investigate an unsolved murder and a reported ghost. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. Codice articolo 9780804116565

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