
Shadrack Bones made his first appearance in the excellent Whittlesey Wordsmiths collection A Following Wind, in the story:
A Shadrack Bones Mystery
Shadrack Bones, the consulting detective, and his assistant, Dr Wilkins, waited patiently at Leeds Aerodrome to board the aircraft taking them to Guernsey. There can’t be many steam-powered Zeppelins still in service, thought Bones, now that we have the internal combustion engine.
The stewardess made her way along the line of passengers. Her bustle didn’t seem that fashionable to Bones but, on reflection, ladies’ fashion was not something he studied unless it related to an ongoing investigation.
“You will have to put out the pipe, Sir,” said the stewardess. “There is no smoking allowed on the aircraft.”
Turning to Dr Wilkins, she said, “You will have to put that cigar out too, Madam.”
The irony of being told that they couldn’t smoke on a steam-powered Zeppelin whilst waiting as coal was being loaded was not lost on Bones.
“Look at that, Wilkins. They’re loading coal to power this thing, burning it by the ton, and yet we can’t smoke.”
“Actually its coke, Bones; it’s lighter than coal.”
“But they still burn it to fire the boilers, don’t they, Wilkins?”
“That’s true, but these are remarkable engines. They are a form of lightweight turbine; the boilers are extremely efficient and use a revolutionary condensing system. They were cutting-edge when they came into service. I read the paper by Professor Deitrich Stromm earlier.”
Dr Wilkins was not only a Doctor of Medicine but had a doctorate in mechanical engineering; her PhD was on advanced thermodynamics. Bones appeared totally to ignore the fact that Dr Amy Wilkins was a woman. Though she was attractive, Bones seemed only interested in her mind, a fact Amy Wilkins found very frustrating, as she loved Bones dearly.
After a relatively short interval, a tall man in a German style military uniform, with peaked cap, riding breeches, jackboots and wearing a monocle, strode up and boarded the aircraft. The passengers boarded next; there were twelve including Bones and Wilkins.
Whilst they were waiting to take off, Bones turned to Wilkins and said, “That paper you read by Stromm, was it in German?”
“Yes, why?”
“I didn’t know you spoke German.”
“I know it reasonably well. I am more fluent in Russian and Italian.”
“You have hidden depths, Wilkins.”
Yes, thought Wilkins. To you, my femininity is perhaps the most hidden.
The trip was uneventful. They took on more coke south of Canterbury but that was the only break in their journey.
Bones and Wilkins were investigating the loss of Cuttleworth’s secret gravy recipe. It had disappeared on a recent trip to Guernsey. Lord Jericho Cuttleworth was the owner of a successful chain of fast-food restaurants. Cuttleworth’s Pie and Pudding Emporiums sold a pie, baked potato and carrots together with a mug of tea for threepence. Their trademark strapline was, “The secret is in the gravy”. Yorkshire’s most famous son was troubled by the loss of his gravy recipe. Although he knew it off by heart, the thought of it falling into the hands of his rivals frightened him.
Retracing the steps of Lord and Lady Cuttleworth’s recent trip to Guernsey, they were using the same airline, staying at the same hotel and occupying the same room. For the purpose of the investigation, Dr Wilkins was travelling as Mrs Bones, wearing her late mother’s wedding ring for the journey.
The aerodrome at St. Peter Port in Guernsey was small and close to the town. The journey to their hotel, The Victor Hugo, took fifteen minutes by horse and trap.
Bones helped Wilkins down from the trap and they signed in. Dr. Wilkins found signing as Mrs A Bones very odd. They were shown to their room by a maid who appeared to be in her late teens. Once they were in the room and the maid had departed, Wilkins turned to Bones.
“This won’t do, Bones; we are sharing a room as man and wife but are unmarried.”
“Why is that a problem, Wilkins? You are a medical man – sorry, woman. You have seen enough of the male body in your time, I have seen all too many of our species of both sexes in all states of disarray.”
“But it isn’t right, Bones.”
“Very well. I will marry you when we return to London. I can hardly do it here, since we are, as far as the hotel is concerned, already married.”
“Is that a proposal, Bones?”
“Well, you brought the subject up. Do you want me to marry you or not?”
“Very well, but you hardly seem to notice me: certainly not as a woman.”
“You are four foot eleven and a half inches tall. Your boots, size four, have two-and-a-half inch heels, which bring your height to five foot two. You have brown eyes and dark brown hair, which you have cut short at Mr Andrews’ barber shop in Jerome Street every four weeks. Your hair is kept short so that it cannot catch in machinery when you are working as an engineer. You have small strong hands, normally you wear nothing on your hands or wrists, so that there is nowhere for dirt to accumulate or anything to be caught in machinery. You keep your nails short; your hands are kept clean by rubber gloves when you work. You normally wear your mother’s wedding ring on a fine gold chain around your neck. Your bust is about thirty-five inches, your waist uncorseted twenty-five inches; your hips are wide – about thirty-six and a half inches – allowing for easy childbirth. You generally wear black silk stockings, which you buy from Mrs Rogers in Regent Street. Oh, and you have a tiny chip on the corner of your front right-hand tooth, probably caused by the rebound of a hammer.”
“A spanner slipped. It wasn’t a hammer that chipped the tooth, and it was very painful.”
“I didn’t mention your mind. Yours is the finest I have ever encountered; when we age, when our youth and looks have fled, we will still have our minds.”
“Thank you, Bones.”
“Right. Now let’s get back to the case in hand. Lord Cuttleworth said he hid the formula behind a panel in the base of the wardrobe. He always carries a special pocket knife which has a screwdriver blade.”
Bones produced a large magnifying glass from his case, dropped to his knees, and inspected the bottom of the wardrobe. The front panel was secured by two large screws.
“Have you brought your tool kit with you Wilkins?” asked Bones.
Wilkins produced a small red leather case from her handbag and handed it to Bones. He opened it and removed the screwdriver. The screws were not tight, and Bones guessed this was a well-used hiding place.
“We could do with a light Wilkins.”
“I have a small electric torch: a prototype. Mr Etherington gave it to me. It has a small spring-powered dynamo to produce the power.”
Wilkins reached into her capacious handbag. Removing the torch, she released a catch and passed the torch to Bones. The torch began to make a whirring noise, producing a bright beam of light from one end. Bones shone the torch into the space beneath the wardrobe.
“Aha!” he exclaimed. “Look at this, Wilkins.”
The intricacies of Wilkins wardrobe made it difficult for her to get down on the floor next to Bones, but she managed it nonetheless.
“Look to the left, towards the back at the floorboards, Wilkins.”
“I see. One appears to be loose; there is a gap around it and it extends into the next room.”
“Quite so. Pass me the screwdriver again please, Wilkins.”
Wilkins passed Bones the screwdriver; Bones paused and turned to Wilkins.
“We had better find out if the room next door is unoccupied before we do any more.”
Wilkins stood up and went to the door. “I will check.”
Wilkins knocked on the door of the adjacent room. Getting no response, she checked the door. It was locked. She relayed this information to Bones before walking downstairs to the hotel reception. There was no one at the desk and the register lay open in full view.
Surreptitiously she rotated the register and quickly checked the occupants at the time Lord and Lady Cuttleworth were staying. A Mr Houghton was occupying the adjacent room; his address was given as 15 Atkinson Street, Hyde in Cheshire. The room appeared to be unoccupied at present.
She spun the book back around just before the hotelier reappeared at the desk.
The hotelier, a Mr Morose, was a shortish grey-haired man. He was, Wilkins guessed, in his late sixties. A copy of The Times lay open on the desk near the register, the crossword uppermost – all of it filled in.
“My husband and I wondered if the view of the harbour would be better from the room next door to ours; is it currently occupied?”
“Not at the moment, Madam.”
“Would it be in order for us to have a look?”
“I can’t see any difficulty in that,” said the hotelier and handed Wilkins the room key.
Once in the adjacent room, Bones was quickly on his hands and knees in the right-hand corner. He pulled back a rug and located the suspect floorboard that extended under the wall. Using Wilkins’s screwdriver, he unscrewed the single screw securing the floorboard and removed it. He was then able to reach into the space under the wardrobe next door. He quickly replaced the floorboard and, after retightening the screw, replaced the rug.
They viewed the harbour together from the window, Bones putting his arm round Wilkins waist – the first time he had made any physical contact apart from the shaking of hands. Wilkins moved closer in response.
“We know how it was done and roughly when it was done but not yet by whom, and we don’t know where the recipe is now,” said Bones.
“What about Mr Houghton who occupied this room whilst Lord and Lady Cuttleworth were staying here?”
“We can’t discount him, but my money is on a member of the hotel staff. Lord Cuttleworth said he used a small piece of Plasticine as a seal on the wardrobe panel, and that hadn’t been disturbed.” Bones continued, “It is my guess that a member of staff, knowing when both rooms were unoccupied, took advantage of the situation and removed the recipe. It is unlikely that Houghton would know of the special floorboard, whereas a member of staff either knew of the floorboard or arranged it.”
“What do you propose to do, Bones?”
“Setting a trap would seem the best option, Wilkins. But we need a speedy result, before the value of the recipe is realised and it falls into the wrong hands – that is, if we are not already too late.”
Later that day, the manager of the hotel signed for a registered package addressed to Mr S Bones, Victor Hugo Hotel, St Peter Port, Guernsey.
The package was handed to Bones as he and Wilkins returned from a walk in town. Once safely inside their room, Bones opened the envelope, peered inside and put it to one side.
“I sent it from London before we left.”
“Why did you do that, Bones?”
“I thought we might need some bait. Look at the sender’s address on the back.”
Wilkins took the envelope, turned it over and read aloud, “Bank of England, Threadneedle Street London.”
Bones opened his suitcase, took out a small jar, removed the lid and poured some of the contents into the envelope. He then resealed the envelope, recapped the jar and replaced it in his case. The wardrobe panel was unfastened. Bones put the package in the compartment and refitted the panel, tightening the screws with Wilkins’ screwdriver.
“What is in the jar, Bones?”
“Sneezing powder, it should give anyone opening the envelope a surprise and alert us at the same time – if we are within earshot.”
Opening his suitcase again, he removed an envelope and several sheets of blank notepaper. He folded the notepaper, placed it in the envelope, and sealed the flap with sealing wax. Taking a pencil from his pocket, he marked the envelope, S Bones. He asked Wilkins to take the package to the desk and ask if it could be deposited in the hotel safe.
After a late supper they retired for the night. Bones was irritated when Wilkins wore her Mrs Edith Spencer’s impenetrables to bed, insisting that Bones could only avail himself of her facilities once they were properly married.
It was at 1.30 am that Bones woke Wilkins, shaking her gently but with his hand over her mouth. He hissed a warning for her to remain quiet. They heard a faint scraping sound, consistent with a floorboard being slid from under the wardrobe. Bones quietly left the bed, putting on his dressing gown over his nightshirt.
Anticipating such an event, Bones had earlier removed the two screws securing the panel under the wardrobe. He now dropped to his knees and, swiftly removing the panel, reached into the compartment and grasped the wrist he found there.
Wilkins bounded out of bed and raced into the next room. The moonlight streaming in from the uncurtained window revealed the silver-haired hotelier lying prone on the floor.
She grabbed a copper warming pan, fortunately empty and cold, from the bed and swung it hard down on the hotelier’s head, knocking him out cold.
Bones, hearing the bang and feeling the wrist go limp, got up from the floor and joined Wilkins in the adjacent room.
“Well done, Wilkins.”
“I think if we are to be married you should start calling me Amy, Shadrack.”
“Very well, Wilkins – sorry, Amy.”
The hotelier started to regain consciousness, groggily removed his arm from the floorboards, and sat up. Bones demanded the return of Cuttleworth’s gravy formula.
“I don’t know what you are talking about,” he said.
“The game’s up, Mr Morose. Dr Wilkins is a crossword expert too and has completed today’s Times crossword.”
“I still don’t understand what you are alleging.”
“She is also a cryptologist, often employed by the British government.”
“And?”
“The key to the code was MrHoughton15AtkinsonStreet. It has twenty-six characters, the same as the alphabet. She was able to decode the message hidden in the crossword accepting your terms for the sale of the gravy recipe.”
Seeing the game was up, Mr Morose led them to the office and retrieved the recipe from a secret drawer in his desk.
Lord Cuttleworth, overjoyed at the return of his recipe, not only paid Bones and Wilkins a handsome fee plus expenses but also provided the wedding reception at Cuttleworth Hall.
Copyright P W Cumberland 2019.
Posted by Jane on February 6, 2021 at 12:51 pm
I love this story. It was my introduction to Shadrack Bones. He’s wonderful and awful at the same time. You just have to love him.
Posted by fenlandphil on February 6, 2021 at 12:55 pm
I think Doctor Wilkins is the real brains of the outfit.
Posted by Cathy Cade on February 6, 2021 at 1:58 pm
We await further developments (no doubt in your upcoming novel?)
Posted by fenlandphil on February 6, 2021 at 3:10 pm
Probably in a collection of Shadrack Bones stories. He is working on a case for Lord Archimedes Pendle Grope at the moment.
Posted by Marsha on July 24, 2022 at 3:55 pm
Bones certainly is not a romantic, that’s for sure. I can’t believe she is even interested in him. His description of her is priceless. No comments at all about how her looks made him feel. I’m not sure how this story relates to Sheila – or does it?
Posted by fenlandphil on July 24, 2022 at 4:10 pm
It doesn’t relate to Sheila, I posted the link in a response to Gloria’s comment. It is a spoof of the character of Sherlock Holmes. The prompt was a story with one word changed in the title. The original title was A Study in Scarlet by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.
Posted by Marsha on July 24, 2022 at 4:27 pm
Oh, ok. I just misunderstood. Do you have a link to the full Sheila story that I can put in the summary? I’m anxious to read that one, too. Lots of great comments on Sheila’s story, Phil. 🙂
Posted by fenlandphil on July 24, 2022 at 4:58 pm
The full version of Sheila’s story, “An Unusual Job for a Woman” will be in the next Whittlesey Wordsmith’s Collection, (Three Sheets to The Wind}, I would rather not post it until it has been published but as soon as we have the book published I will put it on my blog and supply a link to it.
Posted by fenlandphil on July 24, 2022 at 4:59 pm
Thanks for your help, Marsha.