J.A.
Konrath is an American writer of more than twenty novels and over
a hundred short stories, mostly crime and horror fiction, who has won
the Derringer Award and Ellery Queen Reader's Choice Award, but my
only exposure to his work has been "On the Rocks" – a short
story anthologized by Mike Ashley in The Mammoth Book of Perfect
Crimes and Impossible Mysteries (2006). A good little locked room
story featuring the forty-something Chicago homicide detective,
Lieutenant Jacqueline "Jack" Daniels. This was not the last time
an impossible crime would be dropped into her lap.
"With a Twist"
originally appeared in the December, 2005, issue of Ellery Queen's
Mystery Magazine and republished in 2011 as an ebook. This story
is, in my opinion, a minor classic and I'll tell you why in a moment.
The story opens with Jack
Daniels and Herb Benedict, of the Chicago Police Department, standing
in the blood-splattered living room of the Edward Wyatt, a
67-year-old retiree, who lies splayed out on the beige carpeting "damp with bodily fluids" – his skull had been shattered
and "his spinal column looks like a Dutch pretzel."
Evidently, Wyatt had fallen from a great height, but the ceiling is
no higher than eight foot and the place had been securely locked up.
The front and back door were fitted with so-called privacy locks and
dead-bolted from the inside. Same story with the windows, which were
also locked from the inside.
You probably think the
whole scene was staged by a devious killer, but all of the physical
evidence, including the locked doors and windows, point towards an
impossible suicide.
There are hundreds of
carpet fibers embedded in the body and the wall-to-wall carpeting has
a secondary splatter, indicating that the body bounced when it hit
the floor, which is all consistent with a fall from a great height. A
religiously-worded suicide note is found on the bookshelf. Wyatt
could have only taken his own life that way, if he had taken off the
roof, "jumped out of a plane" and "landed in his
living room." So, either way you look at it, the case is an
impossible one.
Where the story becomes
truly great is when items in the house reveals the victim to have
been "a man who loved mysteries, games, and puzzles." The
book shelf was crammed with mystery novels, such as G.K.
Chesterton and John
Sladek, puzzle magazines, books on logical thinking and some
old-fashioned (puzzle) games – like Clue and a 1980s Rubik's Cube.
They also found cancer drugs. And this is where the game really
begins.
Lt. Daniels quickly comes
to the conclusion that this was a very ingeniously contrived and
elaborately arranged suicide, staged by a puzzle fiend, who wanted to
go out on his own terms and hid tell-tale clues, codes and messages
all over the house – somewhat reminiscent to an escape room game.
But here it gives you the solution to a seemingly impossible puzzle.
So what exactly makes "With a Twist" a minor classic of the modern locked room story? I
hate and loath it when an impossible crime is explained away as a
suicide-disguised-as-murder, because it's a bullshit cop-out and,
worst of all, hacky. It barely requires any imagination or plotting
skills. For example, you can have a stabbing inside a sealed,
concrete bunker and explain it away by saying the victim committed
suicide by walking backwards into the knife that was wedged in
between something.
I never expected to read
an impossible crime story, with a suicide, that not only worked, but
was good. Konrath pulled it off here by making it clear early on
Daniels was investigating a suicide. And she had to figure out how it
was done. This approach made for an interesting take on the inverted
mystery and helped making the more labored aspects of the plot more
acceptable, because you know the victim was a dying man who loved
puzzles and why he would go through all trouble of turning his
suicide into one big riddle – which I completely respect. I liked
it there were basically two impossibilities, an impossible fall and a
locked house, of which the latter was better than the former. A
simple, straightforward, but effective, locked room-trick that nicely
played on an old idea.
So, all in all, "With a
Twist" is a good and fun detective story with a victim who played
the role of a benevolent Jigsaw Killer, from Saw (2004), which
resulted in an unusual, but pleasant, locked room tale. I would like
to read his third locked room story, "Mixer"
(2015), which he apparently co-wrote with Nick Andreychuk, but it
appears to have been scrubbed from the internet. It's not available
anywhere. Hopefully, that one will get reprinted, because I would
like another shot of Jack Daniels.