Authors: Dorothy L. Sayers
made a convenient objective, and one could always choose some more rural
spot for a night’s lodging. The coast-road ran pleasantly at the top of a low
range of cliffs, from which she could look down upon the long yelow stretch of
the beach, broken here and there by scattered rocks, which rose successively,
glistening in the sunlight, from the reluctant and withdrawing tide.
Overhead, the sky arched up to an immense dome of blue, just fretted here
and there with faint white clouds, very high and filmy. The wind blew from the
west, very softly, though the weather-wise might have detected in it a tendency
to freshen. The road, narrow and in poor repair, was almost deserted, al the
heavy traffic passing by the wider arterial road which ran importantly inland
from town to town, despising the windings of the coast with its few scattered
hamlets. Here and there a drover passed her with his dog, man and beast alike
indifferent and preoccupied; here and there a couple of horses out at grass lifted
shy and foolish eyes to look after her; here and there a herd of cows, rasping
their jawbones upon a stone wal, greeted her with heavy snufflings. From time
to time the white sail of a fishing-boat broke the seaward horizon. Except for an
occasional tradesman’s van, or a dilapidated Morris, and the intermittent
appearance of white smoke from a distant railway-engine, the landscape was as
rural and solitary as it might have been two hundred years before.
Harriet walked sturdily onwards, the light pack upon her shoulders interfering
little with her progress. She was twenty-eight years old, dark, slight, with a skin
naturaly a little salow, but now tanned to an agreeable biscuit-colour by sun
and wind. Persons of this fortunate complexion are not troubled by midges and
sunburn, and Harriet, though not too old to care for her personal appearance,
was old enough to prefer convenience to outward display. Consequently, her
luggage was not burdened by skin-creams, insect-lotion, silk frocks, portable
electric irons or other impedimenta beloved of the ‘Hikers’ Column’. She was
dressed sensibly in a short skirt and thin sweater and carried, in addition to a
change of linen and an extra provision of footwear, little else beyond a pocket
edition of
Tristram Shandy
, a vest-pocket camera, a smal first-aid outfit and a
sandwich lunch.
It was about a quarter to one when the matter of the lunch began to loom up
importantly in Harriet’s mind. She had come about eight miles on her way to
Wilvercombe, having taken things easily and made a detour to inspect certain
Roman remains declared by the guide-book to be ‘of considerable interest’.
She began to feel both weary and hungry, and looked about her for a suitable
lunching-place.
The tide was nearly out now, and the wet beach shimmered golden and
silvery in the lazy noonlight. It would be pleasant, she thought, to go down to
the shore – possibly even to bathe, though she did not feel too certain about
that, having a wholesome dread of unknown shores and eccentric currents. Stil,
there was no harm in going to see. She stepped over the low wal which
bounded the road on the seaward side and set about looking for a way down.
A short scramble among the rocks tufted with scabious and sea-pink brought
her easily down to the beach. She found herself in a smal cove, comfortably
screened from the wind by an outstanding mass of cliff, and with a few
convenient boulders against which to sit. She selected the cosiest spot, drew
out her lunch and
Tristram Shandy
, and settled down.
There is no more powerful lure to slumber than hot sunshine on a sea-beach
after lunch; nor is the pace of
Tristram Shandy
so swift as to keep the faculties
working at high pressure. Harriet found the book escaping from her fingers.
Twice she caught it back with a jerk; the third time it eluded her altogether. Her
head drooped over at an unbecoming angle. She dozed off.
She was awakened suddenly by what seemed to be a shout or cry almost in
her ear. As she sat up, blinking, a gul swooped close over her head, squawking
and hovering over a stray fragment of sandwich. She shook herself reprovingly
and glanced at her wrist-watch. It was two o’clock. Realising with satisfaction
that she could not have slept very long, she scrambled to her feet, and shook
the crumbs from her lap. Even now, she did not feel very energetic, and there
was plenty of time to make Wilvercombe before evening. She glanced out to
sea, where a long belt of shingle and a narrow strip of virgin and shining sand
stretched down to the edge of the water.
There is something about virgin sand which arouses al the worst instincts of
the detective-story writer. One feels an irresistible impulse to go and make
footprints al over it. The excuse which the professional mind makes to itself is
that the sand affords a grand opportunity for observation and experiment.
Harriet was no stranger to this impulse. She determined to walk out across that
tempting strip of sand. She gathered her various belongings together and started
off across the loose shingle, observing, as she had often observed before, that
footsteps left no distinguishable traces in the arid region above high-water mark.
Soon, a little belt of broken shels and half-dry seaweed showed that the
tide-mark had been reached.
‘I wonder,’ said Harriet to herself, ‘whether I ought to be able to deduce
something or other about the state of the tides. Let me see. When the tide is at
neaps, it doesn’t rise or fal so far as when it is at springs. Therefore, if that is
the case, there ought to be two seaweedy marks – one quite dry and farther in,
showing the highest point of spring tides, and one damper and farther down,
showing today’s best effort.’ She glanced backwards and forwards. ‘No; this is
the only tide-mark. I deduce, therefore, that I have arrived somewhere about
the top of springs, if that’s the proper phrase. Perfectly simple, my dear
Watson. Below tide-mark, I begin to make definite footprints. There are no
others anywhere, so that I must be the only person who has patronised this
beach since last high tide, which would be about – ah! yes, there’s the difficulty.
I know there should be about twelve hours between one high tide and the next,
but I haven’t the foggiest notion whether the sea is coming in or going out. Stil,
I do know it was going out most of the time as I came along, and it looks a long
way off now. If I say that nobody has been here for the last five hours I shan’t
be far out. I’m making very pretty footprints now, and the sand is, naturaly,
getting wetter. I’l see how it looks when I run.’
She capered a few paces accordingly, noticing the greater depth of the toe-
prints and the little spurt of sand thrown out at each step. This outburst of
energy brought her round the point of the cliff and into a much larger bay, the
only striking feature of which was a good-sized rock, standing down at the
sea’s edge, on the other side of the point. It was roughly triangular in shape,
standing about ten feet out of the water, and seemed to be crowned with a
curious lump of black seaweed.
A solitary rock is always attractive. Al right-minded people feel an
overwhelming desire to scale and sit upon it. Harriet made for it without any
mental argument, trying to draw a few deductions as she went.
‘Is that rock covered at high tide? Yes, of course, or it wouldn’t have
seaweed on top. Besides, the slope of the shore proves it. I wish I was better
at distances and angles, but I should say it would be covered pretty deep. How
odd that it should have seaweed only in that lump at the top. You’d expect it to
be at the foot, but the sides seem quite bare, nearly down to the water. I
suppose it
is
seaweed. It’s very peculiar. It looks almost more like a man lying
down; is it possible for seaweed to be so very – wel, so very localised?’
She gazed at the rock with a faint stirring of curiosity, and went on talking
aloud to herself, as was her rather irritating habit.
‘I’m dashed if it isn’t a man lying down. What a sily place to choose. He
must feel like a bannock on a hot girdle. I could understand it if he was a sun-
bathing fan, but he seems to have got al his clothes on. A dark suit at that. He’s
very quiet. He’s probably falen asleep. If the tide comes in at al fast, he’l be
cut off, like the people in the sily magazine stories. Wel, I’m not going to
rescue him. He’l have to take his socks off and paddle, that’s al. There’s
plenty of time yet.’
She hesitated whether to go on down to the rock. She did not want to wake
the sleeper and be beguiled into conversation. Not but that he would prove to
be some perfectly harmless tripper. But he would certainly be somebody quite
uninteresting. She went on, however, meditating, and drawing a few more
deductions by way of practice.
‘He must be a tripper. Local inhabitants don’t take their siestas on rocks.
They retire indoors and shut al the windows. And he can’t be a fisherman or
anything of that kind; they don’t waste time snoozing. Only the black-coated
brigade does that. Let’s cal him a tradesman or a bank-clerk. But then they
usualy take their holidays complete with family. This is a solitary sort of fowl. A
schoolmaster? No. Schoolmasters don’t get off the lead til the end of July.
How about a colege undergraduate? It’s only
just
the end of term. A
gentleman of no particular occupation, apparently. Possibly a walking tourist
like myself – but the costume doesn’t look right.’ She had come nearer now
and could see the sleeper’s dark blue suit quite plainly. ‘Wel, I can’t place him,
but no doubt Dr Thorndyke would do so at once. Oh, of course! How stupid!
He must be a literary bloke of some kind. They moon about and don’t let their
families bother them.’
She was within a few yards of the rock now, gazing up at the sleeper. He lay
uncomfortably bunched up on the extreme seaward edge of the rock, his knees
drawn high and showing his pale mauve socks. The head, tucked closely down
between the shoulders, was invisible.
‘What a way to sleep,’ said Harriet. ‘More like a cat than a human being.
It’s not natural. His head must be almost hanging over the edge. It’s enough to
give him apoplexy. Now, if I had any luck, he’d be a corpse, and I should
report him and get my name in the papers. That would be something like
publicity. “Wel-known Woman Detective-Writer Finds Mystery Corpse on
Lonely Shore.” But these things never happen to authors. It’s always some
placid labourer or night-watchman who finds corpses. . . .’
The rock lay tilted like a gigantic wedge of cake, its base standing steeply up
to seaward, its surface sloping gently back to where its apex entered the sand.
Harriet climbed up over its smooth, dry surface til she stood almost directly
over the man. He did not move at al. Something impeled her to address him.
‘Oy!’ she said, protestingly.
There was neither movement nor reply.
‘I’d just as soon he didn’t wake up,’ thought Harriet. ‘I can’t imagine what
I’m shouting for.
Oy!
’
‘Perhaps he’s in a fit or a faint,’ she said to herself. ‘Or he’s got sunstroke.
That’s quite likely. It’s very hot.’ She looked up, blinking, at the brazen sky,
then stooped and laid one hand on the surface of the rock. It almost burnt her.
She shouted again, and then, bending over the man, seized his shoulder.
‘Are you al right?’
The man said nothing and she puled upon the shoulder. It shifted slightly – a
dead weight. She bent over and gently lifted the man’s head.
Harriet’s luck was in.
It
was
a corpse. Not the sort of corpse there would be any doubt about,
either. Mr Samuel Weare of Lyons Inn, whose ‘throat they cut from ear to ear’,
could not have been more indubitably a corpse. Indeed, if the head did not
come off in Harriet’s hands, it was only because the spine was intact, for the
larynx and al the great vessels of the neck had been severed ‘to the hause-
bone’, and a frightful stream, bright red and glistening, was running over the
surface of the rock and dripping into a little holow below.
Harriet put the head down again and felt suddenly sick. She had written often
enough about this kind of corpse, but meeting the thing in the flesh was quite
different. She had not realised how butchery the severed vessels would look,
and she had not reckoned with the horrid halitus of blood, which streamed to
her nostrils under the blazing sun. Her hands were red and wet. She looked
down at her dress. That had escaped, thank goodness. Mechanicaly, she
stepped down again from the rock and went round to the edge of the sea.