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Excerpt: The Oxford Murders by Martínez

 
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ygc0525

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Since: Nov 14, 2003
Posts: 69



(Msg. 1) Posted: Mon Jan 29, 2007 11:32 am
Post subject: Excerpt: The Oxford Murders by Martínez
Archived from groups: alt>books>mysteries (more info?)

The following is an excerpt from the book The Oxford Murders
by Guillermo Martínez
Published by Penguin Books; September 2006;$13.00US; 9780143037965
Copyright © 2005 Guillermo Martínez


Chapter 1

Now that the years have passed and everything's been forgotten, and now that
I've received a terse e-mail from Scotland with the sad news of Seldom's
death, I feel I can break my silence (which he never asked for anyway) and
tell the truth about events that reached the British papers in the summer of
'93 with macabre and sensationalist headlines, but to which Seldom and I
always referred -- perhaps due to the mathematical connotation -- simply as
the series, or the Oxford Series. Indeed, the deaths all occurred in
Oxfordshire, at the beginning of my stay in England, and I had the dubious
privilege of seeing the first at close range.

I was twenty-two, an age at which almost anything can still be excused. I'd
just graduated from the University of Buenos Aires with a thesis in
algebraic topology and was travelling to Oxford on a year's scholarship,
secretly intending to move over to logic, or at least attend the famous
seminars run by Angus MacIntyre. My supervisor, Dr Emily Bronson, had made
all the preparations for my arrival with meticulous care. She was a
professor and fellow of St Anne's, but in the e-mails we exchanged before my
trip she suggested that, instead of staying in the rather uncomfortable
college accommodation, I might prefer -- grant money allowing -- to rent a
room with its own bathroom, kitchen and entrance in the house of a Mrs.
Eagleton, a delightful and discreet lady, she said, the widow of her former
professor. I did my sums, as always a little optimistically, and sent off a
cheque for advance payment of the first month's rent, the landlady's only
requirement.

A fortnight later I was flying over the Atlantic in the incredulous state
which overcomes me when I travel: it always seems much more likely, and more
economical as a hypothesis -- Ockham's Razor, Seldom would have said -- that
a last-minute accident will send me back to where I started, or to the
bottom of the sea, than that an entire country and the immense machinery
involved in starting a new life will appear eventually like an outstretched
hand down below. And yet, exactly on time, the plane cut calmly through the
layer of cloud, and the green hills of England appeared, undeniably true to
life, in a light that had suddenly faded, or perhaps I should say
deteriorated, because that was my impression: that, as the plane went down,
the light was becoming increasingly tenuous, as if it were weakening and
languishing, having passed through a filter.

My supervisor had instructed me to take the bus from Heathrow straight to
Oxford and apologized several times for not being able to meet me when I
arrived as she'd be in London all week at an algebra conference. Far from
bothering me, this seemed ideal. I'd have a few days to wander around town
and get my bearings, before my academic duties began. I didn't have much
luggage, so when the bus arrived at the station I carried my bags across the
square to get a taxi. It was the beginning of April but I was glad I'd kept
my coat on: there was an icy, cutting wind, and the pallid sun wasn't much
help. Even so, I noticed that almost everyone at the fair occupying the
square, as well as the Pakistani driver who opened his taxi door for me, was
in short sleeves. I gave him Mrs. Eagleton's address and as we drove off I
asked if he wasn't cold. 'Oh no, it's spring,' he said, waving towards the
feeble sun as if this were irrefutable proof.

The black cab advanced sedately towards the main street. As it turned left,
I saw, on either side, through half-open wooden gates and iron railings,
neat college gardens with immaculate, bright-green lawns. We passed a small
graveyard beside a church, with tombstones covered in moss. The taxi went a
little way along Banbury Road before turning into Cunliffe Close, the
address I had written down. The road now wound through an imposing park.
Large, serenely elegant stone houses appeared behind privet hedges,
reminding me of Victorian novels with afternoon tea, games of croquet and
strolls through the gardens. We checked the house numbers along the road
but, judging by the amount of the cheque I'd sent, I couldn't believe that
the house I was looking for was one of these. At last, at the end of the
road, we came to a row of identical little houses, much more modest but
still pleasant, with rectangular wooden balconies and a summery look to
them. Mrs. Eagleton's was the first house. I unloaded my bags, climbed the
small flight of steps at the entrance and rang the bell.

From the dates of her PhD thesis and early published work, I guessed that
Emily Bronson must be about fifty-five, so I wondered how old the widow of
her former professor might be. The door opened and I saw the angular face
and dark-blue eyes of a tall, slim girl not much older than me. She held out
her hand, smiling. We stared at each other in pleasant surprise, but then
she seemed to draw back cautiously as she freed her hand, which I may have
held a little too long. She told me her name, Beth, and tried to repeat
mine, not entirely successfully, before showing me into a very cosy sitting
room with a rug patterned with red and grey lozenges.

Mrs. Eagleton sat in a floral armchair and held out her hand, smiling
welcomingly. The old lady had twinkling eyes and a lively manner, and her
white hair was carefully arranged in a bun. As I crossed the room, I noticed
that there was a wheelchair folded up and leaning against the back of her
armchair. A tartan blanket was laid over her legs. We shook hands and I felt
her frail, slightly tremulous fingers. She held my hand warmly for a moment,
patting it with her other hand, and asked about my journey and whether this
was my first visit to England.

'We weren't expecting someone so young, were we, Beth?' she said with
surprise.

Beth, standing by the door, smiled but said nothing. She took a key from a
hook on the wall and, after I'd answered a few more questions, she suggested
gently: 'Don't you think, grandmother, that we should show him to his room
now? He must be terribly tired.'

'Of course,' said Mrs. Eagleton. 'Beth will explain everything. And if you
don't have anything else planned this evening, we'd be delighted if you'd
join us for dinner.'

I followed Beth out of the house and down a little flight of steps to the
basement. She stooped slightly as she opened the small front door and showed
me into a large, tidy room. Though below ground level, it received quite a
lot of light from two windows, very high up by the ceiling. Beth began
explaining all the little details as she walked about the room, opening
drawers and showing me cupboards, cutlery and towels, in a kind of
recitation that she must have repeated many times. I checked out the bed and
the shower, but mainly I looked at her. Her skin was dry, tanned, taut, as
if she spent a lot of time outdoors, and although it made her look healthy,
it also made her look in danger of ageing early.

At first I'd thought she was in her early twenties but now, seeing her in
different light, I realised that she must be nearer twenty-seven or
twenty-eight. Her eyes were particularly intriguing: they were a very
beautiful deep blue, but they seemed more still than the rest of her
features, as if reluctant to express emotion. She was wearing a long, loose
peasant dress with a round neck, which didn't give much away about her body
other than that she was thin, although looking more closely I saw hints
that, luckily, she wasn't thin all over. From the back, especially, she
looked very huggable. Like all tall girls, there was something slightly
vulnerable about her. When our eyes met again she asked me -- without irony,
I think -- if there was anything else I wanted to check out. I looked away,
embarrassed, and quickly answered that everything seemed fine. Before she
left I asked, taking much too long to get to the point, whether I really
should consider myself invited to dinner. She laughed and said that of
course I should, and that they'd expect me at six-thirty.

I unpacked my few belongings, piled some books and copies of my thesis on
the desk and put my clothes away in the drawers. After that I went for a
walk around town. At one end of St Giles, I spotted the Mathematical
Institute straight away: it was the only hideous modern building. I looked
at the front steps and the revolving door at the entrance, and decided that
I could give it a miss on my first day. I bought a sandwich and had a
solitary and rather late picnic lunch on the banks of the river, watching a
rowing team train. I browsed in a few bookshops, stopped to admire the
gargoyles on the cornices of a theatre, followed a tour group around the
courtyards of one of the colleges and then went for a long walk through the
University Parks. In an area edged by trees a man on a machine was mowing
large rectangular sections of grass and another man was marking out the
lines of a tennis court. I stood and watched nostalgically. When they
stopped for a break I asked when the nets would be going up. I'd given up
tennis in my second year at university and hadn't brought my rackets with
me, but I promised myself I'd buy a new one and find a partner.

On the way back I went into a supermarket for a few supplies and then took
time finding an off-licence, where I chose a bottle of wine for dinner more
or less at random.

When I got back to Cunliffe Close, it was only just after six but it was
already dark and there were lights on in all the houses. I was surprised to
see that nobody drew their curtains; I wondered if this was due to (possibly
excessive) faith in the spirit of discretion of the English, who wouldn't
stoop to spying on the life of others; or perhaps to an equally English
certainty that they wouldn't do anything in private that was worth spying
on. There weren't any shutters anywhere and I had the feeling that most
doors weren't locked.

I had a shower, shaved, selected my least crumpled shirt and, at exactly
six-thirty, went up the little flight of steps and rang the bell, carrying
my bottle. The dinner passed in an atmosphere of polite, smiling, rather
bland cordiality which I'd get used to in time. Beth had smartened herself
up a little, though she still wasn't wearing make-up. She had changed into a
black silk blouse and brushed her hair so that it fell seductively over one
side of her face. But none of it was for me: I soon found out that she
played the cello with the chamber orchestra of the Sheldonian Theatre, the
semicircular building with the gargoyles that I'd seen on my walk. They were
having their final rehearsal that evening and some lucky man called Michael
was picking her up in half an hour. There was a brief, awkward silence when,
assuming that he must be, I asked if he was her boyfriend. The two women
exchanged glances but as my only answer Mrs. Eagleton asked if I'd like more
potato salad. For the rest of the meal Beth seemed slightly absent and in
the end the conversation was entirely between me and Mrs. Eagleton.

The doorbell rang and, after Beth left, my hostess became noticeably more
animated, as if an invisible thread of tension had slackened. She poured
herself a second glass of wine and for a long time I listened to her talk
about her eventful, remarkable life. During the war she'd been one of a
small number of women who entered a national crossword competition, in all
innocence, only to find that the prize was to be recruited and confined to
an isolated little village, with the mission of helping Alan Turing and his
team of mathematicians decipher the codes of the Nazis' Enigma machine. That
was where she met Mr. Eagleton. She recounted lots of anecdotes about the
war and also the circumstances surrounding Turing's famous poisoning.

When she moved to Oxford, she said, she gave up crosswords and took up
Scrabble instead, which she played with a group of friends whenever she
could. She wheeled herself briskly over to a little low table in the sitting
room, and told me to follow her and not to worry about clearing the table,
Beth would take care of it when she got back. I watched apprehensively as
she took a Scrabble board from a drawer and unfolded it. I couldn't refuse.
So that's how I spent the rest of my first evening in Oxford: trying to form
words in English, sitting opposite an almost historical old lady who, every
two or three goes, used up all her seven letters, laughing like a little
girl.

Reprinted by arrangement with Penguin, a member of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.,
from The Oxford Murders by Guillermo Martínez. Copyright © 2005 by
Guillermo Martínez

Author
Guillermo Martínez was born in Argentina in 1962. Since 1985 he has lived in
Buenos Aires, where he earned a Ph.D. in mathematical science. He is the
author of several highly acclaimed novels and short story collections.

Rights to The Oxford Murders, winner of the prestigious Planeta Prize, have
been sold in twenty countries.

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