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Authors: Christianna Brand

Heads You Lose

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Heads You Lose
An Inspector Cockrill Mystery
Christianna Brand

A MysteriousPress.com

Open Road Integrated Media

Ebook

To Dumpsti, my dachsund;

and to Mr. and Mrs. Rhys Rees of Ystalyfera,

for all their kindness to him

Contents

Foreword

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Foreword

O
UTSIDERS ARE ALWAYS SURPRISED
by crime novelists. When writers whose imaginations centre around wickedness and cruelty, death, destruction and deceit are gathered together, they seem to be people who are remarkably gentle, friendly and kind. As one visitor remarked, a meeting of the Crime Writers’ Association is reminiscent of nothing so much as a Women’s Institute.

Christianna Brand, who did a stint as the Association’s president, looked like the very last person to dwell on hatred and jealousy, which, paired with love so obsessive as to be dangerous, were the basic motives of most of her characters.

She was plump and pretty, called everyone darling, greeted friends and acquaintances with generous delight, and when she was a famous writer would regularly reduce her audiences to helpless laughter, not so much at her stories themselves but at how she told them.

Born in Malaya in 1907, Mary Christianna Milne was the daughter of a rubber planter. She had the conventional education of an upper middle class girl, at first in India, and then at a convent school in Somerset. When she was seventeen her family lost its money. She had to earn her own living in a series of jobs for which no training was required. For ten years during which she was ‘always broke and often hungry’ she was a governess, an interior decorator, a dress packer and fashion model, a demonstrator of gadgets at trade fairs, a night club hostess and professional ballroom dancer, the manager of a working girls’ club in the London slums, a secretary and a shop assistant selling Aga cookers.

There she grew to hate and dread her bullying boss and took revenge by making her the victim in a murder mystery set not in a kitchen but a smart London dress shop.
Death in High Heels,
after rejection by fifteen publishers, was published by the sixteenth in 1941 in the same year as Christianna Brand’s second book,
Heads You Lose.
By that time, two years into the Second World War, she was married to Roland Lewis, a surgeon working at a military hospital in Kent. She used Kent as the setting for this book as well as the next,
Green For Danger.

The Pigeonsford of
Heads You Lose
is classic crime country. Rural England; a big house; servants - complete with butler, naturally—and characterful tenants. The squire is entertaining a house party. Murder follows, and suspects as well as future victims are snowed in together. Enter, for his first appearance, Inspector Cockrill of the Kent County Police.

Cockrill is not in the fictional tradition of a realistic police officer. He is far more like the omniscient, eccentric private detectives who solve their mysteries less by cooperative and bureaucratic procedure than by individual brilliance and their own acute deductions. He is irritable and shrewd, and one can’t imagine his shabby, cigarette-stained figure in police uniform or calling any superior ‘sir’.

Cockie’s solutions are to problems posed with great subtlety and skill by Christianna Brand. She described her method by reference not to the jigsaw puzzles with which so many crime novels are compared, but to clockwork. In conversation with the crime writer H. R. F. Keating she said it was like fitting together from a pile of little cogs and springs and ratchets an intricate watch, except that there was no guarantee that every tiniest wheel had to be part of the final whole. But, she added, you must fiddle and fix and then unfix and fiddle in a new way until at last you have something that works. ‘Only then can you plunge into the joy of writing.’

And the joy of writing is one of the chief characteristics of Christianna’s work. In her high spirited, zestful young people, her likeable older men and women, her delightful landscapes, bubbling dialogue and eventual understanding of human motives, one can see the author’s own zest for life and her own sympathetic interest in other people.

Christianna Brand once said, ‘I write a few mainstream novels but crime novels are my real interest. I write them for no reason more pretentious than simply to entertain.’

By the time of her death in 1988 she had written seven other books, many short stories and the brilliant Nurse Matilda series for children. But the eight crime novels are her main monument, and they do exactly what she hoped: they entertain.

Jessica Mann

Jessica Mann has written fourteen novels, of which the latest is
Telling Only Lies
(Hutchinson and Arrow Books) and a non-fiction book about women crime writers,
Deadlier Than The Male
(David and Charles). She has worked as a freelance journalist for the Daily and Sunday
Telegraph
and other national papers, as well as appearing on a wide variety of radio and television programmes. She was born and went to school in London, read archaeology at Cambridge and married an archaeologist. They have four children and live in Cornwall.

The Black Dagger Crime Series

T
HE BLACK DAGGER CRIME
series is a result of a joint effort between Chivers Press and a sub-committee of the Crime Writers’ Association, consisting of Marian Babson, Peter Chambers and Peter Lovesey. It is designed to select outstanding examples of every type of detective story, so that enthusiasts will have the opportunity to read once more classics that have been scarce for years, while at the same time introducing them to a new generation who have not previously had the chance to enjoy them.

The Characters

PENDOCK
, the Squire of the Village, and his guests

LADY HART

FRANCESCA HART

} her granddaughters

VENETIA GOLD

HENRY GOLD
, Venetia’s husband

JAMES NICHOLL

BUNSEN
, the butler

GRACE MORLAND
, a foolish woman

PIPPI LE MAY
, her cousin

TROTTY
, their maid

Among these ten very ordinary people were found two victims and a murderer.

Chapter 1

G
RACE MORLAND WAS SITTING
on the terrace outside Stephen Pendock’s house, putting the finishing touches to a wishy-washy sketch of the Old Church Tower in the Snow. To the left, the railway line made an interesting pattern, smudged abruptly across the plump white downs; to the right a factory chimney reared its sooty finger and a column of grey-black smoke rolled grandly against the wintry sky; but Grace Morland’s eye was systematically blinkered against atrocities made by man. She ignored the chimney, put in the downs without the railway, and concentrated upon the church tower which, having been erected to the glory of God, could be relied upon to be picturesque.

It had other advantages than this, for it necessitated a fluttering request that she might be permitted to sit, as quiet as a mouse, upon Stephen Pendock’s terrace so as to get the only perfect view. “I shan’t be in anybody’s way,” she had promised, looking up at him with her yearning pale-blue eyes; “I shall sit as quiet as a teeny mouse, and be no trouble to anyone…”

It was certainly unlikely that she would be very much in anybody’s way, out on a snow-covered terrace in the teeth of a biting wind. “Why, certainly,” Pendock had said, eyeing her with tolerant indifference; “as long as you like. But haven’t you done it before?”

Of course she had done it before. The Old Church Tower in Bluebell Time, hung, even now, over her mantelpiece at Pigeonsford Cottage; the Church Tower, Autumn, was pushed away into the cupboard underneath Pendock’s own stairs, to be produced whenever he had notice of her coming to the house and hung up on the dining-room wall. Spring, summer, autumn and winter she asked, twittering, if she might sit on the terrace and be no trouble to anyone; and spring, summer, autumn and winter she sat so late that he was obliged to ask her to tea or dinner before she went home, and, finally, whether he might not see her to her door; but spring, summer, autumn or winter, so far, he had never proposed.

Pendock was fifty: a tall, straight, good-looking man, with hair growing becomingly grey above his ears, and eyes of a quite amazing deep blue-green. Lying at the edge of a cliff looking down into the clear, cold water of the Cornish seas, you looked into the very depth and colour of Pendock’s eyes. Kind eyes, good eyes, humorous, warm, friendly eyes; but not loving eyes; not sentimental eyes; not, anyway, for Grace.

She looked anxiously at her watch. Half-past four and the light was getting so dim that, really, she had no excuse for sitting out there any longer. She pondered the advisability of putting in a plea to be permitted to come again to-morrow; but to-morrow the remains of the snow would probably be gone. It was thick on the downs still, but down here in the valley it was rapidly melting away, and she had had to use a good deal of imagination, even as things were. Of course the
wind
was very cold—it might snow tonight… But surely someone would come out of the house soon, and ask her to stay to tea. Perhaps they had forgotten her. Pendock had guests, she knew: Lady Hart, who had been a friend of his family from the days before he was born, who had stayed at Pigeonsford since his grandfather’s time, was there now with her two granddaughters; and Henry Gold who had married Venetia Hart, one of the granddaughters; she imagined them all sitting indoors over a cosy tea—herself, forgotten, left out on the terrace in the bitter cold. There was no pretext for going back into the house, for if she were to keep to her promise of being no trouble to anyone, all she had to do was to walk down the steps of the terrace, pick her way through the melting snow on the lawn, nip over the little bridge that divided Pendock’s garden from the orchards that surrounded the Cottage, and be having tea in her own drawing-room by a quarter to five. She began reluctantly to clean up her palette and put her brushes away.

Voices from the french window behind her considerably accelerated this process, and a sleek black dachshund arrived upon the scene and commenced investigations. Venetia Gold and her sister Francesca stepped out on to the terrace.

Miss Morland who had been expecting them for the past half-hour was, of course, quite overcome by surprise. “Oh, Mrs. Gold! Miss Hart! how you startled me! I was just going to pack up my things and creep away quietly to my little house. A teeny mouse, no trouble to anyone!”

“Wouldn’t you like some tea before you go?” asked Venetia, politely speaking her piece. “Mr. Pendock said we must bring you in to tea.”

“Can we have a look at your picture first?” said Fran, who had rather forgotten what Miss Morland’s pictures were apt to be like. “Everything looks so lovely in the snow, doesn’t it? Even these rather sloppy downs take on a bit more meaning with the trees so black and the railway line running up the valley and all that…” They both moved round and stood before the easel.

“How exquisite they are!” thought Grace wistfully, for though Venetia was safely married to that dreadful little Jew, Henry Gold, Francesca was only too free, only
too
free, thought Grace darkly, and so very, so painfully, pretty. Venetia was like her name, all Gold: a golden cobweb that looked as if it might, at any moment, to be blown away by the lightest breath of wind to some enchanted land where it really belonged; but Fran, as slim and tall and delicately built as her twin, with the same little hands and narrow, high-arching feet, had yet a look of staunchness about her, a look of courage and resolution as though she would match herself against the world and come out, lightheartedly, the victor. She was as dark as her sister was fair, with black, soft, curling hair and bright, dark eyes; with a generous mouth, generously smeared with scarlet lipstick, so that she looked like a tropical flower blooming in this English garden. Flowers! thought Grace. Cobwebs! If Grace were like a flower, it was a thoroughly British one, a bluebell that looked all right in a wood, but faded and drooped when you came up to it; if she were like a cobweb, it was just an ordinary, dusty grey cobweb, with never a glint of gold. And what chance had she against all this riot of colour and beauty, all this youth and life and gaiety that the Hart sisters carried with them in their shining eyes and eager, exquisite hands; what chance, at thirty-eight, what chance had Grace?

They stood before the picture, hugging their arms because they were cold. “Aziz darling,
not
on Miss Morland’s easel,” they said to the dachshund; and Venetia, always polite and kind, turned back to the painting and added: “It’s awfully pretty, Miss Morland. The church tower. How—how pretty!”

BOOK: Heads You Lose
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