The 68th volume of Gosho
Aoyama's Case
Closed, published in the non-English speaking world as
Detective Conan, begins with the final chapter of the story
that closed the previous
volume and has one of those which-of-the-three setups littering
the series, but here it was poorly executed with a painfully obvious
solution – resulting in an incredibly mediocre story. Luckily, the
next two stories are much better.
The plot of the second
story centers on another ill-fated attempt by Rachel to get her
estranged parents, Richard Moore and Eva Kaden, back together and the
birthday of her mother provides her with an opportunity. Rachel has
won a weekend getaway at the Shizuoka Seaside Hotel, which is a
perfect location for a small, intimate birthday party, but the series
murder-magnet, Conan, tagged along with Rachel, Richard and Eva. So a
murder interrupting the birthday party is a question of when, not if.
Eva Kaden is a busy,
successful attorney at law and had to reschedule an important meeting
to the hotel where she was having her birthday party.
Kaden's client are a
former model, Akiho Kokubu, who has been the victim of a stalker and
her husband, Takehiko Kokubu. Their appointment was to arrange an
out-of-court settlement with the mother of the man who was stalking
her, all of whom are in the hotel, but, before their scheduled
meeting can take place, Akiho's body "appeared out of nowhere"
in Kaden's hotel room when she was taking a shower – which is
patently impossible. The hotel room has a door that can only be
opened with a key card and has a small window without a balcony. So
how did the murderer enter or leave the locked room?
The problem of the locked
room is practically immediately solved, but this answer reveals a
second problem hiding underneath it. How could the murderer have
carried out a certain task requiring two, or more, people? One of the
clues gave me an idea how this could have been done, but failed to
completely envision the trick before it was revealed. So a good,
richly clued story with a sugary ending.
The third story marks the
return of my favorite recurring side-character, Jirokichi Sebastian,
who's Serena Sebastian's rich uncle and sworn nemesis of that
infamously elusive thief, Kaito KID. Jirokichi has attempted to
capture KID numerous times, such as in volumes 44,
61
and 65,
but it was Conan who, time and time again, prevented KID from getting
away with a valuable object – something that gave the old man an
idea. Jirokichi has gotten the traditional warning note from KID
promising that, when the moon is full, he'll appear again "to
take the Kirin's Horn," but this time he had added a
post-script. A post-script asking Jirokichi to "put aside
childish things" and "settle this like men."
Jirokichi deduces from
this that he wants adults present, not children, because "children
are Kaito KID's weakness." After all, not even a master of
disguise, like KID, can pass himself off as a child. So he places
Conan and the Junior Detective League in the limelight. Admittedly,
this was certainly the most original way to shoehorn them into a case
without them just being there. Conan remained surprisingly
cool-headed in the face of all those rollings news camera considering
that it could blow his cover wide open. Anita at least pulled her
hoodie over her head, but Conan like a deer in the headlights.
Anyway, the Kirin's Horn
is "a rare piece of amber" containing "a seed that's
ten of thousands of years old," which was recently discovered
in a shrine constructed by the devilishly ingenious 19th century
craftsman, Kichiemon
Samizu – whose "tricky devises" has given Conan and
KID hard times on several occasions. However, the presence of his
long-dead hand, sort of, gave away the mechanics of the plot.
Nevertheless, the
impossible situation that emerged from this setup was an intriguing
one: the Kirin's Horn is part of a statue, well hidden inside a
mechanical pillar, which stands in the middle of a small room with
four differently colored pedestals in each corner. All of these
pedestals have keyholes and the four colored keys have to be turned
at the exactly the same time to make the statue inside the pillar
appear. Jirokichi ordered an electrical current to be placed on the
pedestals and placed members of the Junior Detective League in front
of the keyholes. Finally, Jirokichi nailed the keys into the wall
with a big staple.
Well, in spite of all the
security measures, the lights go out as predicted and it takes KID
only a minute to steal the horn, but he has a problem, because the
trap is sprung and he's trapped inside the shrine – along with the
police, a film crew and Jirokichi. Uncharacteristically, KID has
taken Conan out with a taser and spends most of the story lying in
the middle of the room, like John Kramer, but why?
Seriously, I began to
suspect KID had gotten his hands on some short-term APTX 4869 and had
taken Conan's place, which would be perfectly acceptable within this
universe and this would explain why Anita and Conan acted differently
towards the news cameras. You know, KID would look practically
identical to Conan as a child. Luckily, this turned out not to be the
case and the explanation showed a little but more ingenuity. The
locked room trick is mainly a mechanical one, which is hardly a
spoiler, but still required enough subterfuge and manipulation of the
situation to not make the mechanical aspect feel like a cop-out.
As a bonus, KID gives the
reader a second locked room mystery when he appears to be trapped,
but simply vanishes when the lights go out for a second or two! The
solution is very comic book-like, but have come across it before in a
short story and admired the skillfully placed red herring that made
it very easy to overlook the solution.
Admittedly, this is far
from the best story with either Jirokichi, KID or the lingering
presence of Kichiemon Samizu, but still found this to be a
wonderfully imagined, cleverly constructed and enjoyable story.
Regrettably, this volume
is book-ended by two incredibly mediocre stories and the final story
deals with a purse snatcher, disguised in a goofy-looking Hyottoko
mask, who targets tori-no-ichi markets and his latest victim
is Rachel's best friend, Serena Sebastian – who's determined to get
revenge. So they're present when the purse snatcher wounds a man with
knife and the victim, before losing conscious, gives Conan a cryptic,
near-death-message. However, Western readers rarely have a shot
solving the codes or dying messages in this, because they nearly
impossible to translate. And this story is no different. So that
probably detracted something from this pretty average, uninspired
which-of-the-three detective story.
All in all, this was a
fairly balanced volume with weak stories opening and closing this
collection, but wedged in between you'll find two solid cases and one
of them has appearances of some of my favorite recurring
side-characters. And those two stories were more than enough to leave
me satisfied.
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