Today I present a story with Captain Leopold - which is contained in a splendid anthology by Bob Adey & Jack Adrian, Murder Impossible: An Extravaganza of Miraculous Murders, fantastic Felonies and Incredible Criminals, 1990 (aka The Art of Impossible, in UK) . There are two different editions of this story: the first in EQMM of December 1976, with the title in English reflecting the translated Italian title: The Impossible Murder; the second appeared elsewhere, with the title Captain Leopold and the Impossible Murder. Finally, it should be noted that this story does not belong to the collection published in 1985, Leopold's Way (with an introduction by Nevins Jr.), which brought together 19 stories of Captain Leopold.
WARNING: SPOILERS !!!
As he is returning home, Captain Leopold is warned by his assistant, Lieutenant Fletcher, that in a coplanar of the freeway, he found the body of a strangled man, driving a car, left blocked up in traffic like so many of an interminable queue.
Finding the body was the driver of the car following her who, unnerved by the fact that the car in front of him, did not move at the repeated honking of the horn, got out of his car and opened the car door, he had found the man strangled, with a piece of rope still tied around his neck. It had not been possible to make any accusations against the man, a plumber, because the driver of the car immediately after that of the plumber had confirmed the dynamics of the incident, and moreover the man's death was more than half an hour earlier.
Leopold is faced with another impossible crime, indeed the most impossible of the impossible crimes that have ever happened to him: that of a corpse that was driving around alone in a car, unless you consider the other hypothesis, equally bizarre, which is Vincent Conners, a very high-earning stockbroker, wanting to commit suicide for some reason, decided to do it by strangling himself with a rope while driving his car in the chaotic end-of-day traffic.
Not knowing where to start, Leopold goes to the house of Vincent's wife, Linda Cornell who, despite being torn by grief, tells him the story of Vincent's family and how Vincent's father, in turn, died in the car. bled to death after a hunting accident. Besides her, and the children, Vincent's closest relatives are his two aunts, Aunt Flag and Aunt Gert, two sprightly old ladies, sisters of the father: Aunt Flag is the younger of the two, and has been assisting Aunt Gert for many years. older and the only one who had a car at home in the years immediately following the Second World War. From this and her observation of the family property, she understands that Vincent's family of origin, the father and two aunts, was of wealthy background. Here he is confirmed the story of the death of Vincent's father, bled to death in the back seat of the car, which the two sisters still keep as an heirloom, in an old single-seater garage near their house.
Leopold begins to consider a certain idea: what if someone, on the basis of the ancient crime, for some reason had decided to simulate another death in a car? He decides to investigate his wife and a colleague of her husband, whose attitudes they have caught very confidential with the woman. They get nowhere: the wife seems irreproachable, and the husband's colleague as well. But they are kept under control anyway, and a few days later she is caught going out the back to meet someone who is not her husband's colleague but ...
Leopold understood the dynamics of the murder and how it could have become an impossible crime. But he also understood how the murder and not the hunting accident of Vincent's father took place many years earlier.
Leopold will thus find the murderer of a recent crime and will discover the author of a crime sunk in the past.
THE END OF THE SPOILERS
The present crime linked to a crime sunk in the past is not an original idea.
A year earlier, Richard Forrest had published a beautiful novel, A Child's Garden of Death, containing another beautiful Locked Room , in which a crime from the past was linked to something happening in the present. It does not seem out of place, therefore, to assume that Hoch had read Forrest's novel and used the basic idea for a story by him. Especially since Hoch's tale like Forrest's novel are dominated by a melancholic background note, that of the past crime.
To be found in Hoch's account, there are two things:
- first of all, that initially, no one had thought of staging an impossible murder, but only an accident that, as in the past, would have disguised a murder: only that the incident of the past could have easily been mistaken for an accident because in hunting , sometimes there are accidents, while if the corpse was found not perfectly charred, following the premeditated road accident that was intended to be staged, how could the strangulation be explained? So in essence, a crime orchestrated not very carefully, is transformed by chance, the traffic that is conveyed from the freeway on the coplanar, into an impossible crime, after the murderer decides that in a short time he must necessarily face a different scenario. . This is a bit like what happens in many other examples of Locked Rooms and Impossible Crimes in which the case, in the form of any accident, modifies the original situation, complicating the scene and at the same time modifying it, so that the accident that was to taking place, no longer happens, and the forgetfulness (in this case having neglected to remove the rope from the victim's neck) becomes the presupposition that one thinks of a suicide.
-that once again, for a paradoxical situation that borders on the impossible to be staged, more people are needed, who collaborate together, each with their own task, to carry out a certain plan: in our case, that someone, killed at least half an hour before , can be found driving a car, left blocked up in traffic of a coplanar.
Hoch's plot is absolutely brilliant and explains the whole sequence: in some ways, one could also think of a filiation of Hoch from Carr, the Carr of one of the novels with Bencolin, the celebrated The Lost Gallows, in which a corpse looks strangled case, it seems that he is driving a car (in that case the car is moving, and is not standing still). Here, to explain the dynamics, one person has to do what in Carr's novel the one who killed the one behind the wheel of the car does, and another has to act as a support, driving a second car.
There is only a reasonable doubt that the shrewd reader who reads this story has: for the assassin's modus operandi to be expressed in his action it would be necessary for the car with the dead to proceed only in a rectilinear motion. But we know that when you drive, to get to your destination, it is impossible to drive only by going straight: you will need to turn at a certain moment, unless the destination to be reached is along a single road and you get there by driving only with a single running motion. The same reference to a coplanar of a motorway suggests the journey that took place to get there. If it really was as Hoch imagines, it would take three people and not two to carry out the plan; unless the place where the strangulation occurs is on the same coplanar, but it would be the first time I know of a house that is not on a street but on a coplanar of the highway.
Pietro De Palma





