I'm thrilled to welcome Mick Herron,
Newcastle-on-Tyne born and Oxford resident, to guest for me today on Murder Is
Everywhere. Mick doesn't confine himself to his Sarah Tucker/Zoe Boehm series
but writes Ellery Queen Award winning short stories, standalones and the CWA
Gold Dagger Best Novel winner DEAD LIONS. DEAD LIONS topped my best of list
last year - the only way I can describe the book which I recommend to friends
is 'think special needs MI5'! Mick and I travelled to Florida for a reading
last September - his wit and patience dealing with my driving deserves a bravo.
I only wish my phone had enough battery to catch the look on his face at
the Elvis impersonator sidewalk-side in West Palm Beach. Priceless.
Thanks for joining us today, Mick and welcome!
—Cara
There’s a Stanley Ellin short story which I may be about to
spoil for you. Ellin (1916–86) was a master of the short form, most famous for
the macabre “Speciality of the House”, but the story I was reminded of recently
took place on a train. It’s years since I read it, but it goes something like
this. A man is setting out on holiday, on doctor’s orders: he’s overworked,
suffering from nervous exhaustion, and needs complete rest. And it looks like
he’s about to get it, because as the train pulls away from his home town he
feels his stress levels lower, and he begins to relax at last.
So what happens next is that two men occupy the seat in
front of him and start a conversation he can’t help but overhear. The newcomers
are lawyers, and their discussion grabs our man’s attention because it has all
the hallmarks of a classic mystery story. It appears that a defendant in a
recent trial one of the pair was involved in has committed the perfect crime: by
means of an ingenious and apparently watertight method, and with the aid of his
brother, the defendant both confessed to murder and simultaneously put himself
beyond the reach of the law. After listening to a detailed account of the
proceedings, and the cunning displayed by the two brothers, the second lawyer
asks, “So they got away with it, then?”
“Ah, no,” says his companion. “As it turned out, they made
one fatal error.” And just as he begins to explain precisely what this error
was, the train pulls up at a station and the pair, still deep in conversation,
depart. Leaving our character frustrated, overwrought, and already knowing that
the stress-free relaxation he was looking forward to has been ruined by this
interrupted tale…
It’s a neat story because it substitutes lack of payoff for
payoff: the clever twist is the absence of clever twist. Ellin pokes the
reader’s need for closure with a stick, leaving us in exactly the same state of
frustration as the story’s character, worrying at the few clues we have, and
knowing we’ll never solve the mystery.
I was reminded of all this because I was on a train myself
the other week, heading to the North East of England. It was a busy,
pre-Christmas journey, involving a lot of stops, and there was a lot of
activity at each. At one, a young woman boarded with two small children: a
girl, maybe four or five, and a boy perhaps two years older. The woman and the
girl sat immediately in front of me; the boy a little way behind, there being
no other available seat. Before the train departed I’d learned, from their three-way
conversation, that they were only travelling one stop, to the next city, where
they’d be staying with the boy’s grandmother. Then the train moved off, and I
settled back into Handling Sin.
Ten minutes later the guard appeared, asking for tickets. When
she reached the woman, she checked her ticket, and the daughter’s, then asked
for the little boy’s.
“He’s not with me,” the woman said.
It was evident that the guard suspected this was a joke.
She’d just spoken to the boy, asked him who he was travelling with, and he’d
pointed to his mother. She laughed, a little nervously. “No, really,” she said.
“Show me his ticket.”
“He’s not with me,” the woman repeated, refusing to look
round at her son.
And so the guard spoke to the little boy again, who mutely
pointed to his mother. I’d laid my Kindle down, and like everyone else within
earshot was rigid with tension. The woman once more denied her son. The little
boy said nothing.
The guard, herself a young woman, handled the situation
well. She invited the woman to step out of the carriage, into the vestibule,
where the doors closed behind them, muffling their dialogue. Neither
reappeared. When the train reached the next station, I watched through the
window as the woman, accompanied by both her children, alighted from the train
and walked off down the platform.
So what was all that about? Lack of money, almost certainly;
a situation desperate enough that for the price of a one-stop, child-rate fare
a mother would deny her son, in his hearing and that of a dozen or more
strangers. But the detail – whatever it was she said to the guard behind closed
doors, and whatever resolution the pair reached – all of that remains as
obscure as the solution to Ellin’s story. It happened off the page. There’s
nothing more for the reader to know.
Given the obvious bleakness underlying this incident, and
the fact that there were real lives involved, there are more appropriate
responses than one of simple frustration at being denied a satisfactory ending.
But one of the effects of a lifetime’s reading is that it engenders a need for
narrative tidiness that can roll right over other considerations, including
strangers’ sensibilities. An interest was piqued, then utterly denied, and if
the social being that I am rued the causes of the scene I’d witnessed, all the
narrative junkie within me felt was discontent.
Graham Greene famously noted that writers have a splinter of
ice in their hearts. It hadn’t occurred to me before, but maybe the same goes
for readers too.
Mick for Cara—Tuesday
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