Tetsuya
Ayukawa was a mystery writer who has been described as "the
Japanese honkaku mystery story," comparable to how
Ellery
Queen is called the American detective story, whose forte were
cast-iron alibis that were minutely-timed with "the diverse
trains" that ran along "the
web of railways that covered the islands of Japan"
– as well as having a predilection for the locked
room mystery. Ayukawa had an interesting perspective on the
impossible crime and unbreakable alibi: an alibi is a "locked
room in time" while a locked room is an "alibi in space."
Just like that, Ayukawa handed us an excuse to include alibi-tricks
in the next supplement edition of Locked Room Murders. Get to
work, Brian!
Chief Inspector Onitsura
is "Ellery Queen wearing the face of Inspector French" and
his métier is disassembling carefully fabricated alibis, which means
that his stories have the outward appearance of a Croftian police
procedural, but his cases are crammed with "original tricks and
impressive lines of logic." Ryūzō
Hoshikage is a dashing, well dressed, but obnoxious, pipe smoking
merchant with pencil mustache and "a gifted amateur detective"
– who earned the respect and admiration Chief Inspector Tadokoro.
Hoshikage mainly acts as an armchair detective who listens to
Tadokoro every time he gets stuck in one of those locked room
mysteries, mutters some cryptic remarks and than produces a solution
that had eluded every one else.
So how can you not be
enticed by a traditional detective novelist whose assets were locked
rooms and unbreakable alibis? John Pugmire, of Locked
Room International, agreed and formally introduced Ayukawa,
Hoshikage and Onitsura to Western mystery readers with a collection
of specially selected short stories.
The Red Locked Room
(2020) comprises of seven stories, originally published between 1954
and 1961, which were translated by our resident tour guide in the
world of the Japanese detective story, Ho-Ling
Wong. Taku
Ashibe penned an informative introduction to Ayukawa and his two
series-detectives. So let's investigate.
The first story in The
Red Locked Room is "The White Locked Room," which opens with
a female student, Kimiko Satō,
visiting the snow-covered, cottage-like home of Professor Zama, but
the door is answered by the editor-in-chief of New
Century, Nobuo Mine – who
came to have the professor proofread one of his articles. Nobuo tells
Kimiko he arrived only three minutes before her and found the
professor's body in the study. Chief Inspector Tadokoro when the
murder turns out to be an impossible crime. The whole house had been
searched, top to bottom, but "not
even a mouse was found"
and the only, untampered traces in the snow were the footprints of
Kimiko and Nobuo. So how did the murderer entered and left the house
without leaving any footprints behind?
Tadokoro
decides to consult his friend and celebrated detective, Ryūzō
Hoshikage, who acts more as an armchair oracle than an armchair
detective. Hoshikage listens to every detail of the case, makes some
cryptic remarks and asks a baffling question ("any
talk about a cat or dog being burnt in the neighbourhood?"),
which he neatly works into a logical and ultimately simple
explanation. A clever locked room-trick that uses a well-known
impossible crime technique to create a new solution to the
no-footprints problem. I don't recall having ever come across this
exact solution before. So well done, Ayukawa!
The
second story is "Whose Body?" and has a plot suggesting to me
that the unbreakable alibi is not the only reason why Ayukawa's Chief
Inspector Onitsura novels and short stories are "often
categorised as realistic police procedurals." This story hinges
entirely on breaking down someone's identity. An important feature of
the Realist School.
"Whose Body?" begins
with showing why the exterior of a police procedural can be deceiving
and exposed it ties to the intuitive
school of detective fiction. There are three artists who all
receive packages respectively containing a recently fired gun, a rope
and an empty bottle of acid. Some get mad, while others assume it was
a prank, but the person whose name was used to send the packages
claims to be innocent. And then a body is discovered in the basement
of a burnt-out building. A headless body with his hands chemically
burned, but the victim still had all his possession and the name tags
were not ripped out of his clothes – making identification of the
mutilated victim suspiciously easy. Chief Inspector Onitsura finds an "exceptionally intelligent" killer who came up with a
scheme that would have tricked a less astute policeman. A well-done
play on an age-old trick.
"The Blue Locked Room"
is the next story in line and starts with a drunken actor, Fuyuto
Shinano, assaulting his stage director, Katsuhiko Kashimura, with a
knife, but the timely arrival of a police officer prevented them from
killing one another. However, the next morning the director is found
murdered in his bedroom with the door locked from the inside and the
open window overlooking a flowerbed, which was unmarked by any
footprints. So, once again, Chief
Inspector Tadokoro turns that famous amateur detective, Ryūzō
Hoshikage, but the person he fingers as the murderer shocks even him.
A
good and decent enough story, but very much a patchwork of old ideas
and therefore can across as a trifle weak surrounded by more original
and intricately-plotted stories. Edward
D. Hoch actually wrote a story so similar to "The Blue Locked
Room" that Hoshikage's summation of the case gave me déjà
vu, but you can probably
ascribe that to Ayukawa and Hoch using the same locked room mystery
as their model. However, they both used a different locked
room-tricks.
"Death
in Early Spring" is an outstanding example of how to apply a
classic impossible crime technique to the manufacturing of
indestructible alibis! Chief Inspector Onitsura has to find
the murderer of a young man, Kazuomi Kokuryō,
who had been strangled to death at a construction site on the
outskirts of Gofukubashi 3-Chōme
– a one, or two, minute walk from the Yaesu Exit of Tokyo Station.
Only suspect is a rival in love, Fukujirō
Fuda, who possesses an unshakable alibi. Ayukawa assured the reader
in the opening of the story that it was "necessary to examine a
dry series of railway timetables" to understand "how the
culprit managed to mystify the chief inspector without utilizing any
special trickery." I count this as a challenge to the reader
and perhaps the most fitting story to use it in. Ellery Queen would
have approved!
It's
very tempting to compare the next story to John
Dickson Carr, but "The Clown in the Tunnel" stands much
closer to Carr's modern-day followers and imitators. Such as Paul
Halter, Jean-Paul
Török and David
Renwick.
A
clown is witnessed entering the lodgings of a band, Swing Wagon
Lodge, where stabs the singer to death in the bathroom and than ties
up the maid in the kitchen. After the clown had washed his hands and
tidied up his custom, his went outside and the maid saw him disappear
into the tunnel that connected the house with the streets. There was,
however, a traffic accident on the street-side of the tunnel and the
policemen on the scene swore that nobody, let alone a clown, emerged
from the tunnel. So what happened to the clown inside the tunnel and
how was the vanishing-trick pulled off?
Chief
Inspector Tadokoro and Ryūzō Hoshikage have to closely examine and
weigh every minute that had ticked away between the moment the clown
was seen entering the building and was seen escaping through the
tunnel to uncover the solution – which revealed one hell of a
trick! The previous story used an impossible crime technique to
create an alibi, but this story employed the tricks of the alibi
story to make a clown vanish into thin air. Something tells me this
story is going to turn up in a future anthology of locked room and
impossible crime stories.
The
next story is "The Five Clocks" and has Chief Inspector
Onitsura doggedly pursuing a murderer
whose alibi was backed by five different clocks in as many different
locations. A clock in the study. The wristwatch of a witness. A radio
broadcast. The clock at the murderer's tailor and the clock at the
wall of a soba restaurant, but more is not always better and only the
trick with the restaurant clock was impressive. So not exactly a
classic of the alibi story, but a good example of how to break them
down.
Finally,
we come to the titular story, "The Red Locked Room," which is a
simple red brick building, containing the dissection room, standing
on a lonely corner of a university campus. Honestly, a dissection
room or mortuary has not been used enough as a setting for a locked
room story, because the mood and atmosphere practically creates
itself. This time, Tadokoro and Hoshikage are confronted with the
body of female student, Katsuki, who had been expertly cut to pieces
and left behind the locked door of the dissection room – secured on
the outside with a combination-lock. And only one person knows the
combination to that lock.
However,
if you're familiar with the tropes of the Japanese locked room
mystery, or are simply aware of them, you should be able to work out
the trick before Hoshikage reveals it to a baffled Tadokoro. Still a
solid impossible crime story and another possible candidate for
inclusion in a future locked room anthology.
On a whole, The Red
Locked Room is an excellent and highly recommended introduction
to a writer whose debut novel, Petrov
jiken (The
Petrov Affair, 1950), was
seen as at the time as "a
bellwether of the arrival of a new generation of
honkaku mystery writers."
So, hopefully, this isn't the last we have seen of Ayukawa in the
West.
On
a last, semi-related note: I didn't want this review to linger in my
blogging queue for over a month and decided to find a hole in the
schedule to cram it in, but now have to find another hole to play
armchair detective. You see, there's a change I might have figured
out the true/double identity of the mysterious boss from Gosho
Aoyama's Case
Closed. I know I'm not
far enough in the series to officially know about the revelation that
was hidden volume 30, but bits and pieces have been spoiled to me
over the years. Recently, the pieces began to fall into place. I
still have to work out the details in my head, but it makes sense up
there. Nobody on the internet seems to have considered this
possibility! And even if it collapses, I'll probably still post my
little theory just for the fun of it.