"Whenever bizarre phenomena occur that seem to defy human understanding, there are very few who can actually fish out the evil plots lurking behind them. And the longer one waits, the truth grows exponentially distant."- Lai Shang-rong (Ashibe Taku's Murder in the Red Chamber, 2004)
Recently,
two of my fellow bloggers, Kate and "JJ," wrote tepid reviews of
Robert van Gulik's The
Chinese Maze Murders (1956) and The
Willow Pattern (1965), which tempted me back to my beloved
Judge Dee series to provide a counterweight to their blog-posts, but
the last remaining title on my TBR-pile is Murder
in Canton (1966) – generally considered to be one of the
poorer entries in the series. So I decided to backtrack over
previously traversed ground and return to one of my favorite titles
from the series.
The
Red Pavilion (1961) begins with Judge Dee, accompanied by Ma
Joong, breaking their homeward journey from the capital at the Sin
City of 7th century China, Paradise Island. A town with gambling
halls, wine shops and brothels on every street corner.
Personally,
Judge Dee does not approve of what goes on Paradise Island, but
realizes such resorts are "a necessary evil" and a good
warden, like Feng Dai, ensures that it is "a controlled evil."
So, much to Ma Joong's delight, they decide to overnight at the
pleasure resort. There are, however, a rapidly mounting pile of
problems and unforeseen circumstances forcing them to extend their
stay at Paradise Island – which begins with the difficulty of
finding a place to spend the night.
Upon
their arrival, Paradise Island is in the middle of celebrating the
Festival of the Dead, when the souls of the departed mingle with the
living, but the consequence of these festivities is that lodgings are
scarce. The Hostel of Eternal Bliss does have one unoccupied room,
called the Red Pavilion, which has been the scene for a string of
violent and inexplicable deaths. Someone took his own life in there
only a couple of days ago!
Nevertheless,
Judge Dee waves away the objections uttered by the inn keeper and
takes possession of the accursed room. A decision that would come
back to haunt the magistrate, but he would make another one before
the end of the day.
The
second lapse of judgment came during a brief encounter with a
colleague, Magistrate Lo, whose presence on the island pertained to
the tragic suicide of a promising Academician, Lee Lien – recently
appointed a member of the Imperial Academy. On his way home, Lee
tarried at the island and became infatuated with a woman, but when
she turned him down he "cut his jugular vein with his own
dagger" behind the locked door of the Red Pavilion. An
elaborate key of "intricate pattern" was on the inside of
the door and the only window barred with iron bars no more than a
span apart. So it had to be suicide, assured Lo, as he asked Dee to
stay a day, or two, in order to wind up the affair for him. And then
hightails it out of there.
Magistrate
Lo had a good reason to leave the pleasure resort in a hurry: a
famous courtesan and Queen of Flower of Paradise Island, named Autumn
Moon, tried to sink her claws into the magistrate. Judge Dee had
already met her, before taking over the investigation, but had given
her the cold shoulder and angrily she mentioned that, only three days
ago, a scholar killed himself because of her – which is the death
Lo had been investigating. But the room would soon claim another
victim.
When
he returns from dinner, Judge Dee finds that the bedroom door of the
Red Pavilion is locked on the inside and a glance through the barred
window reveals the form of a naked woman on the floor. The door is
battered down and the body is shown that to be of Autumn Moon. She
appears to have suffered a heart attack, but the doctor also
discovers bruises around her throat. This suggests someone had been
throttling her, however, there were "no marks of fingernails."
So how was she attacked and how did the murderer entered, and left,
the room when the key was on the inside of the door?
Meanwhile,
Ma Joong strikes up an acquaintance with a pair of delightful
characters, Crab and Shrimp, who work for the warden of Paradise
Island and they refuse to believe the Academician was the type of
commit suicide, but, more importantly, they tell about another fishy
suicide that took place in the same room over thirty years ago –
when the father of the local wine merchant reputedly took his own
life in the locked and barred bedroom of the Red Pavilion.
So
that's three inexplicable deaths, separated by three decades and
three days each, which all had the same locked room as the scene of
the tragedies, but Van Gulik provided the story with a different
explanation for each case. A very ambitious attempt that has to be
appreciated, but two of three impossibilities were a trifle weaker
than I remembered.
The
past murder is only nominally a locked room and the then magistrate
of the district only passed it off as a suicide because a deadly
smallpox epidemic was ravaging the region at the time, which will
come to play an important part in the two deaths several decades
later. So the lack of a proper locked room trick can be forgiven as
this supposed suicide and epidemic has far-reaching consequences. On
the other hand, the locked room problem surrounding the Academician
turned out to be a routine affair (Lo was sort of right there) with
one of the oldest and unimaginative tricks in the book.
However,
the explanation for the death of Autumn Moon is one of those
one-of-a-kind locked room trick tailored to the specific events and
setting of the story (e.g. Alan Green's What
a Body, 1949).
A
trick splendidly using such clues as the victim's poor health, the
strange bruises, past epidemics, the supposed suicide from three days
previously and the room itself to create an impossible crime that, in
itself, function as a clue to the overall solution. But where that
overall solution really excels is when all of the plot-strands,
including the three locked rooms, are twisted together with the theme
of the book showing the consequences when the evil of past events are
left unresolved – which revealed the excellent mystery I remembered
reading all those years ago.
A
second consequence, story-wise, is that the nature of the case does
not allow Judge Dee to act as an examining magistrate or detective,
but as a correcting factor who lays the restless spirits of the
sin-filled pleasure island to rest by covering everything up. Nobody
is arrested, sentenced and escorted to the execution grounds. And he
has a good reason to sweep everything under the carpet. So the past
and its ghosts are finally laid to rest at the end of the Festival of
the Dead, which was a nice, stylistic touch to the story.
Overall,
The Red Pavilion definitely stood up to re-reading with a
solid, well-crafted plot that, when everything came together,
strengthened the individual parts that looked a trifle weak on their
own – which is the hallmark of a good plotter.
I previously rambled about The Chinese Maze Murders (1956) and Judge Dee at Work (1967).
All this talk of Judge Dee inspired me to grab a copy of The Chinese Gold Murders, which I've now just finished reading. I hope to have a review up early next week. I think the secret to enjoying these books is that you have to accept that they're not quite golden age fiction. They're a genre on their own.
ReplyDeleteIn any case I thoroughly enjoyed The Chinese Gold Murders.
The Judge Dee series is basically a blueprint on how to write historical detective stories. I remember reading somewhere that Van Gulik is often cited by science-fiction and fantasy writers as an example on how to depict an "alien culture."
DeleteSo, yes, you could say that even within the historical sub-genre of detective stories, the series stands apart from the rest.
Glad you liked The Chinese Gold Murders! It's my other favorite title from the series and recall the plot and story struck me as very Carrish. Looking forward to your review, D!
This sounds absolutely awesome, thanks for the review TC, can't wait to grab a copy of this. That pulling together of strands was so apparent in The Chinese Gold Murders as well, he really can pull things together, and how he keeps so many strands afloat is beyond me.
ReplyDeleteVan Gulik modeled his Judge Dee stories on ancient Chinese mysteries, in which the main character, often a judge, investigates three cases simultaneously and he improved upon story-telling structure by pulling the separate strands together.
DeleteI believe this is what makes his book appealing to plot-driven, GAD readers even (as D said) they're not quite GAD.
This is definitely one of the best of the series. Probably the best purely from a plot angle. But it’s been so long since I read most of them, maybe not!
ReplyDeleteI reread Nail Murders this summer. Holds up very well.