by Robert Lopresti
Move aside, Oscar! Fie on thee, Edgar! Make room for the
real awards. For the
fifth year I am listing the best detective short stories of the year as determined by yours truly.
FIfteen
stories made the list this time, one fewer than last year. I am
astonished to report that there was a three-way tie between
Hitchcock, Queen, and
The Strand, with four stories each. The other three came from anthologies from three different publishers.
Three of the stories are historical. Three are humorous. One is a first story. By main character we have:
Detective 6
Criminal 5
Victim 1
Other 3
And here are the lucky winners. They can pick up their gift bags in the green room.
"I Am Not Fluffy," by Liza Cody, in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, December 2013.
I
worked as a
hostess and greeter at a bar-restaurant six nights a week for five
years while Harvey qualified to be a tax lawyer. And for two nights a
week Harvey was going round to Alicia's flat to bounce her bones. "You
were never there," he complained. "What was I supposed to do all by
myself every night?"
What
indeed. Insult to injury: Alicia was an old friend of hers. And now
that Harvey is making a bundle he wants a no-fault divorce and a big
white wedding to his new love.
Our narrator goes for
textbook passive-aggressive tactics: refusing to sign the divorce
papers. And she begins writing her polite protests against the world around her in chalk on the sidewalk, signing them
Fluffy.
Is this a story about a nervous breakdown? A split personality? Or is our heroine learning to
not be Fluffy anymore, to be a person who can take care of herself?
"The Sequel," by Jeffrey Deaver, in The Strand Magazine, November-February 2012-2013.
Frederick Lowell
is an elderly literary agent and one day he gets a letter that hints
that one of his deceased clients wrote a sequel to his classic novel.
Lowell travels around the country in pursuit of it and - well, a lot of
things happen. In fact, it almost feels like Deaver made a list of
every way this story could work out and then rang the changes, covering
every possibility.
In the first half of the story he
gives us a classic quest structure but when that ends we get a mystery,
one with several red herring solutions, clever reversals and unexpected
twists.
"Margo and the Silver Cane," by Terence Faherty, in Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, January/February 2013.
My fellow SleuthSayer, Terence Faherty, is the only author making a second appearance on my list this year.
In the days before Pearl Harbor Margo Banning is an ambitious career woman, working as associate
producer on a Sunday radio show. One of the stars is Philip St,
Pierre, a self-proclaimed "radio detective." And in this week's show he
announces that
next week he will be revealing the identity of a
top German spy. What follows is a lot of fun and amusingly written.
Take this conversation regarding one of the other performers on the
radio show.
"You are not a radio detective?"
"That question takes us into the realm of philosophy. Or do I mean
psychology? Are we who we decide to be or who the world tells us to
be? For example, I work with a woman who has forced her will upon the
world. She's become a former Broadway star despite the inconvenience of
never having been a current one."
"Mamie Gallagher," Edelweiss said a little wistfully. "She has a very attractive voice. I imagine her blonde."
"So does she."
"Restraint" by Alison Gaylin, in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, March/April 2013.
When
the woman who killed Kevin Murphy's daughter walked into Cumberland
Farms to pay for her gas, the first thing Kevin noticed about her was
the way she crumpled her money.
Got your
attention? I thought it would. And the ending is no slouch either.
But in between you will slowly learn about what happened to Murphy's
daughter -- none of the obvious things that might pop into your head --
and about the revenge Murphy plans. Again, that is a long way from
obvious. It is not bloody or particularly violent, but it will shock
you.
"The Confidante," by Diana Dixon Healy, in Best New England Crime Stories 2014: Stone Cold, edited by Mark Ammons, Katherine Fast, Barbara Ross, and Leslie Wheeler, Level Best Books, 2013.
Peggy is a mousy young woman who works
for a presidential campaign. She is flattered when the more vibrant
worker Kim takes an interest in her. They start meeting regularly and
Kim begins to tell her secrets, secrets that could change political
history...
Some lovely twists in this one.
"The Murderer At The Cabin," by Robert Holt, in All Hallow's Evil, edited by Sarah E. Glenn, Mystery and Horror, LLC.
Lexington is a very bad fella.
He's a serial killer with a complicated system of picking his victims
and a suitably insane motive. As the story starts he is looking for a
new person to focus his attention on. And he finds one in a cabin in
the woods where a dozen wealthy people are holding a meeting. So he
takes his hatchet and prepares to single out his first victim.
And here's the twist. The people in the cabin have paid big money for a
high-grade murder theatre experience, complete with elaborate props and
make-up. So when Lexington starts his work they think it's part of the
show. But Lexington
doesn't know about the mystery theatre aspect and he is as baffled by his victims as they are by him...
"A People Person," by Michael Koryta, in The Strand Magazine, November-February
2012-2013.
Koryta has given us a
lovely little character study about Thor, who has been the hit man for
two decades for Belov, who is the head of organized crime in Cleveland.
These two have been through tough times on two continents and, in a
business that doesn't support long-lasting relationships, they seem
inseparable.
The
English word for the way Thor felt about killing was "desensitized,"
but he did not know that it was a proper fit. Maybe he was overly
sensitized. Maybe he understood it more than most. Maybe the poeple
who had not killed or could not imagine being killed were the
desensitized breed.
What could come between Thor and his boss? Could there, to his own amazement, be a line he could not cross?
"Not A Penny More," by Jon Land, in The Strand Magazine, February-May 2013.
Walter Schnitzel is a loser and a loner. He is a middle-aged accountant, watching younger men get promoted over his head.
But his life makes a sudden lurch when he takes an old clunker of a used
Buick for a week-long test drive. All of a sudden Walter gets lucky -
in more senses than one. His whole self-image changes as well.
So, is the car magic? Is it all coincidence? And, oh yeah, why is this story in a magazine full of
crime stories?
"The Queen of Yongju-gol," by Martin Limón, in Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine,
November 2013.
Martin's fiction is always set in
South Korea. In this tale the hero is Roh Yonk-bok, one of the wealthiest men
in the country.
But he didn't start out that way. He was able to get an
education only through money sent back home from his big sister who was
working as a bar girl in Yongju-gol, a community that served American
G.I.'s, where Koreans were forbidden as customers. One day his sister
disappeared and now, years later, Roh is determined to find out what
happened to her.
It is a dark tale, full of betrayal and hard-learned cynicism.
"Canyou trust these people, sir?"
Roh turned to look at his bodyguard. He was a faithful man -- in
fact chosen for that quality -- and competent at his job, but he had
little imagination.
"They want money, don't they?" Roh replied.
"Yes, sir."
"Then I have trust. Not for them but for their greed."
"Othello Revised," by Denise Middlebrooks, in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, December 2013.
This is Middlebrooks' first story, a promising start.
The narrator has just written a mystery novel and his wife recommends he
takes it to a professional editor. The editor turns out to be an
interesting person, a real estate agent who reinvented herself in the
recession, and she has some fascinating suggestions about the book. Or
what she thinks is the book.
And there we have to stop. Go read the story. You deserve a treat.
"Dress Blues," by Chris Muessig, in Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, October 2013.
Sergeant Nolan, a Marine sergeant, finds
himself facing multiple crises. His wife has left him. He has to decide whether to re-enlist for another
six-year hitch. And his boss goes off on extended duty, leaving him as
the only Corps member to look after a private who has been arrested for
murder. Worse, that private is a Black man and this story takes place
in a time and place where that can be a dangerous place to be --
especially if you are accused of killing a white man.
A fascinating tale, and one that told me a lot I didn't know about its time period.
"Footprints in Water," by Twist Phelan, in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, July 2013.
Henri Karubje is a detective in the NYPD and he is called out to help
investigate the missing daughter of a Congolese family. The
relationships between the people, and with their medicine man,
neighbors, and priest, are complicated to say the least.
Tangling the matter further is that Karubje is not their as
investigator, but as translator. The lead detective is a newly promoted
woman he has worked with when she was on patrol. The cliche here would
be to have them in territorial conflict but Phelan chooses instead to
have the new detective looking for more help while Karubje insists on
making/letting her run the show.
Karubje is haunted by his childhood in the genocidal conflict of Rwanda
and he makes good use of his memories of that horror to sort out the
motives and inconsistencies of the characters.
"A Game Played," by Jonathan Rabb, in The Strand Magazine, June-September 2013.
George Philby is a member of Britain's diplomatic core, stationed in
Washington. He is a quiet, self-effacing man, and his great burden is
his name.
Kim Philby was the most famous British traitor in a
century, so he is somewhat in the position of a man named Benedict
Arnold joining the U.S. Army. "It made them all think too much, a
sudden hesitation in the voice."
And in D.C. it leads to an odd friendship with Jack Crane, an American
oil man. Crane brings Philby out of his shell a bit and the
relationship leads to -- well, that would be telling. But one question
this story asks is: Does your name determine your destiny?
I liked this low-key tale better the day after I read it. Then I read it a second time and liked it more.
"The Samsa File," by Jim Weikart, in Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, September 2013.
Havel, a police detective in present-day
Prague is assigned to investigate the apparent murder by poisoning of a
young man named Gregor Samsa. Except - surprise! - Gregor had somehow
transformed into a giant cockroach.
This is sort of reverse steampunk, transforming a Victorian plot -- Franz Kafka's
Metamorphosis, of course --
into the modern era, and a modern genre, the police procedural.
Weikart even offers something that Kafka had no interest in, an
explanation for Samsa's transformation.
"The Hotel des Mutilées," by Jim Williams, in Knife Edge Anthology, Marble City Publishing, 2013.
It's
Paris between the wars and our narrator says he is a guy who fixes
situations, no details given. In a bar he meets an American named
Scotty,
who says he is a writer. Scotty asks him to talk about the most
fascinating person he ever met. So the
fixer talks about a guy he met in World War I.
This is one of
the stories where the joy comes in figuring out what's going on. For
me, the enlightment came in three distinct bursts, about three different
characters.