Louis
L'Amour was a consummate story-teller with close to a hundred
novels and numerous short story collections to his name, primarily
tales of the frontier, whose work was honored with the Congressional
Gold Medal and the Presidential Medal of Freedom – making him the
only novelist in American history to receive both medals. During the
1940s and 50s, L'Amour contributed
short pieces of hardboiled crime-fiction to such pulp magazines as
Black Mask, Popular Detective and Thrilling
Detective. One of his detective stories is of the impossible
variety!
"The Hills of Homicide"
was originally published in the May, 1949, issue of Detective
Tales and was listed by Robert Adey in Locked Room Murders
(1991) with an unusual lengthy comment tacked to it.
Adey described "The
Hills of Homicide" as an "interesting and worthwhile story,"
but added that the publishing history of the eponymous short story
collection, The Hills of Homicide (1983), is even more
interesting. Apparently, there was an unauthorized
edition with fewer stories published by Carroll & Graf, which
actually preceded the complete, fully authorized Bantam edition!
Adey's comment on the collection's back-story drew my attention to
the fact that an "unnamed private eye" is the detective in
this hardboiled, Western-tinged impossible crime tale. A literary
ancestor of Bill
Pronzini's Nameless Detective and John Quincannon? Let's find
out!
"The Hills of Homicide"
opens with the arrival of a private-detective from Los Angeles in a
small, out-of-the-way mining town, Ranagat, which lay in "the
cupped hand of the hills like a cluster of black seeds," where
the other night Jack Bitner was murdered at his cliff-top home – a "cantankerous old cuss" who owned the Bitner Gold Mine.
Sheriff Jerry Loftus only has three suspects to consider. The
victim's niece and sole heir, Karen Bitner. A tough-guy gambler and
an alumnus of "the Chicago underworld of the late Capone era,"
Blacky Caronna, who had a dispute with Old Bitner. Caronna had
visited him on the night of the murder. Lastly, there's Johnny
Holben, "a suspicious old coot," who had been at daggers
drawn with the victim. Only reason why the sheriff focuses on these
three suspects is the scene of the crime.
A three-room stone house
was built on the edge of a cliff and "the wall of sheer,
burnt-red sandstone looked impossible to climb." So the only
way to get to the top is a narrow trail going through a cut in the
rock. At a wide spot in the cut, Holben had built his cabin to annoy
to Bitner and "nobody could ever get up that trail without being
seen." This makes it appear to be a who-of-the-three type of
detective story.
Caronna hired a big city
detective to find evidence exonerating him of any suspicion and his
proclamation of innocence is oddly compelling ("I ain't had a
hand in a killin' in—in years"). So our nameless detective
tackles the case in the typical, hardboiled manner and, more than
once, has to use his fists to get out of a tight corner, but they
were some of the best fistfights ever seen inside the squared circle
of a pulp magazine and this should not come as a surprise –
considering L'Amour competed as a professional boxer. However, the
highlight of the story was the solution to the impossible murder. A
solution I detested on first sight, a weird menace-type of
explanation, but quickly grew incredibly fond of it.
Yes, "The Hills of
Homicide" turned out to be an actual locked room mystery, of sorts,
in spite of the foundation for such a story looking as leaky as the
haul of the Titanic. One of the suspects found another way to
reach the house, qualifying it as an impossible crime story, but the
bizarre solution struck me as preposterous. Something only a pulp
writer would dare to offer as a solution. However, the nameless
detective mentioned that this method is used in some parts of the
world by criminals "to gain access to locked houses." So
looked around the web and what do you know? Apparently, this method
was even used on the battlefield with a notable example dating back
to the 17th century (historical spoiler,
click at your own risk). This made me do 180 on my initial reaction
to the solution.
"The Hills of Homicide"
is a cracking example of the more plot-driven, hardboiled locked room
mysteries with a plot that has time to spare to settle a score in the
"best scrap" the town has ever witnessed. Quality pulp!
And highly recommended!
A note for the curious:
the story briefly mentions miners are smuggling small amounts of gold
ore out of the mine, which should be practically impossible to do,
because Sheriff Loftus explains they have "a change room where
the miners take off their diggin' clothes" and "walk naked
for their shower" – coming out on "the other side for
their street clothes." But they always find a way to get out
with some gold. Obviously, a solution is never given for this
quasi-impossible crime, but I gave it some thought and came up with a
more dignified way to smuggle the gold pass the change-and shower
rooms. All a smuggler has to do is grow a decently sized beard and
use it to tie a small, oilskin pouch under his chin that will be
hidden from view by the rest of the beard. A miner's curtain!
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