Recently, I read the very
first Japanese locked room mystery, entitled "D
zaka no satsujin-jiken" ("The Case of the Murder on D. Hill,"
1925), written by the father of the Japanese detective story, Edogawa
Rampo, who penned it as a response to the critics of his time –
who asserted that it was impossible to use the open, wood-and-paper
houses of Japan as a stage for a Western-inspired mystery. Rampo
proved them wrong by writing a short locked room story set in a
traditional Japanese house with paper walls, sliding doors and
tatami-matted floors.
Historically, "The Case
of the Murder on D. Hill" is an important cornerstone of the
Japanese detective story and handed a blueprint to both his
contemporaries and successors to follow, but, purely as an impossible
crime story, it's not really impressive. Rampo merely showed it was
possible to stage a locked room murder in a wood-and-paper house
without showing any ingenuity in the solution. Something he would
rectify in another story from the same year.
"Yaneura no sanposha"
("The Stalker in the Attic") was originally published in the
August, 1925, issue of Shin-Seinen and a translation was
published in a collection of short stories and essays, The Edogawa
Rampo Reader (2008), which gave 1926 as the story's original year
of publication – which has to be wrong. The story is an inverted
locked room mystery and remarkably modern in its subject matter.
Gōda Saburō is a
restless, ennui-ridden and perpetual bored twenty-five year old man
who left "no stone unturned in his search for amusement."
A generous allowance from his parents allowed him to act with "reckless abandon" and regularly changed lodgings. There
were two events that placed Gōda on the path of murder: one of them
was becoming acquainted with Rampo's famous amateur detective, Akechi
Kogorō, whose "wealth of fascinating crime stories"
entertained Gōda. Akechi seemed to take an interest in his
pathological personality.
The second event was
discovering that the closet in his room, in a recently built boarding
house, has a panel in the ceiling giving access to a normally
inaccessible attic!
Tōeikan boarding house
encircles a courtyard to form a square and the attic follows this
shape, which means Gōda can walk around in a circle and return where
he started, but the cherry on top is that the boardinghouse was
"shoddily built" and the ceiling boards are riddled with
gaps and knotholes – giving him a thrilling opportunity to spy on
his neighbors. You read that right. A 1920s detective story about
voyeurism and genre historians might want to take note of this story,
but I'm unrepentant Golden Age detective fanboy and there were other
features of the plot that fascinated me.
Firstly, there are the
architectures features which are integrated into the plot in the
tradition of the finest Golden Age detective stories.
"The Stalker in the
Attic" solved the problem Rampo addressed in "The Case of the
Murder on D. Hill" by merging the traditional Japanese houses with
a Western-type building. The Tōeikan boarding house has sleek,
sturdy walls of painted wood and doors fitted with "metal
locks," which allowed for more privacy, but the interior of the
rooms very much resembled a traditional Japanese house – especially
when seen from above as "every item in the room is framed by
tatami mats." Secondly, the movement of Gōda during his
so-called "attic walks" is fascinating as he freely moves
around the squared circle and spies on his fellow boarders in their
rooms on the second floor. During one of his excursions, Gōda
changes on a way to commit the perfect murder inside a locked room.
Gōda absolutely detests
one of his fellow boarders, Endō, but, when he discovers the open
mouth of the loudly snoring Endō lies smack dab under a knothole, he
realizes the criminal potential of the situation. He can drip poison
along a drawstring into his wide, open mouth and push a small bottle
of poison through the knothole. Endō always locked his door and
window before going to bed, which made it "impossible for
someone to enter from the outside" and made his untimely death
appear like a suicide.
So, purely as an
impossible crime story, "The Stalker in the Attic" is not only
the first truly Japanese locked room mystery, but the direct ancestor
of the bizarre architecture so often found in the modern shin
honkaku detective novels.
The way Rampo integrated
the features of the boarding house into the plot reminded me of Soji
Shimada's Naname
yashiki no hanzai (Murder in the Crooked House, 1982),
Yukito Ayatsuri's Jakkakukan
no satsujin (The Decagon House Murders, 1987), Szu-Yen
Lin's Death
in the House of Rain (2005) and the many stories from The
Kindaichi Case Files – e.g. The
Alchemy Murder Case, The
Prison Prep School Murder Case and The
Antlion Murder Case. I was also reminded of Max Rittenberg's
1914 short story "The Invisible Bullet," collected in The
Invisible Bullet and Other Strange Cases of Magnum, Scientific
Consultant (2016), which deals with an impossible murder in a
fencing academy situated on the top floor of a tall building. The way
in which the layout of buildings are used in service of the plot and
the original locked room-tricks showed that Rampo's "The Stalker in
the Attic" and Rittenberg's "The Invisible Bullet" were ahead
of their time in their respective regions. I seriously wonder if
Rampo, who could read English, was aware of this particular story.
Akechi Kogorō appears on
the scene in the final ten pages of the story to play a little
cat-and-mouse game with Gōda, but this merely to give the story,
which has already been told by this point, a tidy ending.
So very much like my
rereading of Akimitsu Takagi's Shisei
satsujin jiken (The Tattoo Murder Case, 1948), I
appreciated "The Stalker in the Attic" a whole lot more the
second time around. An important and well-done story that ought to be
better known among a Western (locked room) mystery readers. Highly
recommended!
A couple of notes for the
curious: "The Stalker in the Attic" is the only good story
collected in The Edogawa Rampo Reader, but the essays are
really interesting and recommend "Fingerprint Novels of the Meiji
Era," "Dickens and Poe" and "An Eccentric Idea" to every
genre historian/scholar. Secondly, there's a Western hybrid of the
detective and horror story, namely Ed Bryant's "The
Lurker in the Bedroom" (1971), which reads like it was inspired
by Rampo. Lastly, I clearly remember there was a floor plan of the
boarding house, showing the attic route, but apparently, my memory
deceived me. There's no floor plan.
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