Murder's a Swine: A Second World Way Mystery Read online




  This edition published 2020 by

  The British Library

  96 Euston Road

  London

  NW1 2DB

  Murder’s a Swine was originally published in 1943 by Hutchinson and Co. Ltd, New York, Melbourne and London.

  Introduction © 2021 Martin Edwards

  Murder’s a Swine © 1943 The Estate of Pamela Hansford Johnson and Gordon Neil Stewart

  The right of Nap Lombard to be identified as the author of this Work has been asserted by each author in accordance with the Copyright, Designs & Patents Act 1988.

  Cataloguing in Publication Data

  A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

  ISBN 978 0 7123 5378 6

  eISBN 978 0 7123 6787 5

  Front cover image © Mary Evans Picture Library

  Text design, typesetting and eBook by Tetragon, London

  Contents

  Introduction

  Murder’s a Swine

  Introduction

  Murder’s a Swine, known in the United States as The Grinning Pig, is an entertaining wartime mystery, first published in 1943. It was the second (and final) detective novel to appear under the name Nap Lombard, following Tidy Death. The rather mysterious pen-name masked the identities of a husband and wife writing duo, Gordon Neil Stewart and Pamela Hansford Johnson.

  The couple had married in 1936, and when war broke out, they became ARP (i.e. Air Raid Precaution) Wardens. They were stationed, as Deirdre David explains in Pamela Hansford Johnson: a Writing Life, “in the basement of 94 Cheyne Walk, Chelsea, near the highly plausible German bombing target of Battersea Power Station”. In the opening lines of this novel, we are introduced to Clem Poplett, also a warden, in a story set in “the early days of the war, when air-raid wardens were thought funny”. The atmosphere of the times is splendidly evoked, and I was amused by the jokey term “sitzkrieg”, an alternative name for the more familiar concept of “the phoney war”. As so often, an unpretentious and light-hearted detective story makes fascinating reading as a document of social history more than three-quarters of a century after the original publication.

  In the company of a resident, Agnes Kinghof, Clem discovers a body nestling behind the sandbags in an air-raid shelter at Stewarts Court. Two of those floor plans so popular in vintage detective stories are supplied, one showing the flats in block 3 in the building. The other shows flat 10, occupied by Mrs. Sibley, who is able to identify the corpse and set in train a murder investigation in which Agnes and her husband Andrew aid and abet (and sometimes get ahead of) Inspector Eggshell.

  Pamela’s time as a warden came to an end once she became pregnant. Already a published novelist, she amused herself by collaborating with her husband, a journalist, on a detective story. Tidy Death was published in 1940, and featured Agnes and Andrew along with Andrew’s cousin, Lord Whitestone, “who was someone of considerable importance at Scotland Yard”, and who is nicknamed Lord Pig. The appearance of this novel, the follow-up, was delayed by wartime paper shortages.

  Just as Stewarts Court takes its name from the co-authors’ surname (and resembles, Deirdre David suggests, Beaufort Mansions, where the couple were living at the time), so the presentation of Agnes and Andrew contains elements of self-portraiture. It is possible, as David says, that the popularity of the Thin Man movies starring William Powell and Myrna Loy also provided some inspiration. The novel was sufficiently well-received in Britain and the US (“Very British” said Kirkus Reviews, which may have been a compliment) to have encouraged Nap Lombard to produce another book. But none was ever forthcoming.

  Gordon Neil Stewart (1912–99) came from a wealthy Australian family. The Stewarts moved to Paris during his teens and he subsequently settled in London. There he moved in literary circles, and met Pamela. He was also concerned with radical politics, and became a member of the Communist Party. During the war, he joined the British Army, serving in India and Burma. The couple had two children, and their daughter Lindsay became the second wife of the Liberal politician Lord Avebury.

  Long periods of separation took a toll on the Stewarts’ marriage, and they were divorced in 1949. He remarried the next year, and returned to Australia in 1955, publishing a couple of novels as well as non-fiction books. Following the divorce, however, his former wife had a much higher literary profile; in recent years she has been the subject of no fewer than three biographies.

  Pamela Hansford Johnson (1912–81) was born in London, growing up in Clapham. She left school at sixteen, worked as a secretary, and began to publish poems. Becoming aware of Dylan Thomas (like her, he had recently won a prize in a poetry competition sponsored by the Sunday Referee), she wrote him a letter. When they finally met in February 1934, the correspondence ripened into romance. As Deirdre David puts it: “Dylan essentially changed her writing life from the composition of dreamy verses… to writing novels grounded in social and psychological realism.” The title of her first published novel, This Bed Thy Centre (1935) is a quotation from Donne and was suggested by Dylan. Marriage was on the cards, but she was deterred by his drinking as well as by apprehension about his roving eye. She marked the end of their relationship by writing a poem called “By Mutual Consent”.

  Curiously, her relationship with C. P. (Charles Percy) Snow also began by way of correspondence. After their marriage in 1950, they proceeded to become a literary power couple. Snow’s first novel, Death under Sail (1932) had been a detective story in the classic vein, but he was a man of many parts: a chemist who became a mainstream novelist as well as a civil servant and public figure, known for a famous lecture on “The Two Cultures” (i.e. literature and science, and the gulf between them) and even taking a role in Harold Wilson’s Labour government after his elevation to the peerage in 1964. Both husband and wife shared an interest in crime, and Snow’s final book, A Coat of Varnish (1979) was a rather sombre crime novel. Pamela not only attended the trial of the Moors Murderers but later wrote a book about them. But she and her second husband never wrote a whodunit together. Perhaps at that stage of their careers they would have regarded it as too frivolous a pastime.

  Writing in The Spectator in 2018, when five of Pamela’s mainstream novels were reissued, Philip Hensher described the Snows as “a formidable presence to writers of the time, dispensing approval or censure through book reviews, lectures and public patronage” and Pamela as “an immensely influential and powerful figure in the world of literature, plugged into the British Council’s networks and much relied on in official circles”. Hensher is evidently unimpressed by much of her fiction, but concedes: “Johnson was an effective reporter from a particular streak of suburban London, and explored, almost without knowing, the mores and conventions of a forgotten way of living”. This observation neatly captures one aspect of the appeal of Murder’s a Swine.

  The two Nap Lombard novels have long been out of print. I’m not clear how the two youthful authors divided the labour of producing the story, although my guess is that Pamela did most of the writing, while her husband may have been responsible for the plot. I first became aware of the books many years ago, thanks to a passing reference in Julian Symons’ magisterial Bloody Murder, but never managed to lay my hands on a copy of either of them until recently; if one could unearth a signed first edition of a Nap Lombard novel in a dustjacket, it would command a large sum on the collectors’ market. When at last I read this book, I discovered that Symons’ recollection that Nap Lombard’s hero was “Lord Winterstone” was mistaken, but I’m glad that his words prompted me to track down Murder’s a Swine.

  This is a cheerful mystery. There is a political sub-p
lot, but it is treated lightly (although the authors’ disdain for fascism is clear), while the Kinghofs employ a characteristically jokey trick to unmask the culprit. Even if Pamela didn’t regard the Nap Lombard stories as highly as her more serious work, it’s arguable that the detective novel was a form well-suited to her talents. More than that, I’m sure Murder’s a Swine helped its original readers to forget, for an hour or two at least, the miseries of wartime. Writing this introduction at a time when the coronavirus pandemic continues to rage, it is easy to appreciate the virtues of light entertainment at a time of crisis. To be able to lose oneself in an enjoyable, unserious book is an under-estimated pleasure.

  Martin Edwards

  www.martinedwardsbooks.com

  Murder’s a Swine

  “Father’s in the pigsty,

  You can tell him by his hat.”

  —Ancient Ditty

  To

  Harold and Consola

  —Porcos ante Margaritas

  Chapter One

  If Clem Poplett, youngest warden at the post in Featherstone Mews, had done as he was told and continued his patrol instead of dodging in out of the rain to one of the area shelters in Stewarts Court, he would not have discovered his first corpse.

  It happened like this. These were the early days of the war, when air-raid wardens were thought funny, the days when their duties consisted of patrolling the streets for hours on end, shouting Put Out That Light. This night in question, a January night, was bitterly cold, after a long spell of muggy weather, and the streets glistened beneath a coating of that delicate, almost invisible rain that soaks you through to your vest within three minutes. It was half-past eight, and Clem was not expected back to the comfort of the Post, to the fire and the dartboard, the cups of orange-coloured, stewed tea, the cards and the wireless, until nine. He was young, he had the face of an adored pet rabbit, he had red hair, he stood five feet four in his socks, and he was dreadfully cold and wet. And so it occurred to him to spend the last half-hour enjoying a cigarette in the second of one of those dismal shelters, between the blocks of flats, which had been made in the slender hope of protecting the public during air raids. Being no more than disguised tradesmen’s entries, approached by a steep flight of stone stairs and emerging into a well where was the lift that served the five floors, the shelters were bleak, wet, comfortless and narrow as coffins. No fat man or woman would have had a hope of passing the sandbags that half obscured their doorways.

  Clem sneaked down, not lighting his torch lest some Senior Warden should see him. He fumbled his way past the bags, guided himself along the soaking walls, and sat down on the long bench, which was scarcely wide enough to accommodate more than half of his small buttocks. They’ll have to replace all them bags, he thought, they’re growing grass already and they stink to hell.

  He lit a cigarette, and as the match flared up saw that he was not alone. Facing him was Mrs. Agnes Clunkershill Kinghof, née Sidebotham, who lived in one of the flats overhead. Clem jumped, then said: “Good evening ma’am didn’t see you nasty night.” The match went out in time to conceal his blush. Mrs. Kinghof was plain of face, it is true; it was a birdlike face, with little beak, tiny pink mouth and two large, liquid eyes; but her torso was a poem and her legs the admiration of persons for miles around.* “Frozen music,” the Senior Warden had called them. He was considered extremely original, and his remark had been orally cyclostyled, as it were, into several hundred copies.

  * See Tidy Death.

  “Very nasty night,” said Mrs. Kinghof.

  Her voice was entrancing. That, and her legs, had the effect on very young men of making them feel both shy and dashing at once.

  “You’re Mr. Poplett, aren’t you?”

  “That’s right,” said Clem huskily.

  “I know you well by sight. It always makes me feel safe to know that you’re looking after us.”

  “Oh, I don’t know about that,” said Clem. Switching on his torch, he offered his cigarettes. Mrs. Kinghof thanked him and took one. Clem restored the darkness. “’Fraid I can’t light us up, ma’am. The battery’s nearly gone as it is, and I can’t waste it. Got ticked off proper last week for wasting batteries.”

  They smoked in amicable silence.

  “I expect,” said Mrs. Kinghof after a while, “that you’re wondering what on earth I’m doing in this sepulchre, when I might be in my own nice, warm, cosy flat four floors up in Block 3.”

  “Well, I had wondered,” said Clem, “not that it’s none of my business.”

  “The fact is, I’ve lost my key and I can’t get in. The porter’s got the only pass-key and his wife says he’s gone to the pictures and won’t be in till nine, so I’m just passing the time here till he gets back.”

  Clem sympathized and told her his own reasons for seeking the shelter’s malodorous hospitality.

  “Well, then, we ought to be grateful for each other’s company.” The pretty voice plunged through the darkness, sociable, eager. “Tell me, Mr. Poplett, how do you think the war’s going? I’m not asking for military secrets, of course. My husband’s coming home on leave tomorrow—he’s been training militia men in Norfolk—and I’m hoping he’ll tell me how it’s going. No one seems to know.”

  “Seems to be going slow,” said Clem, in the guarded voice of one who is in the know, but is not telling the secrets of the War Office to strangers.

  “Dreadfully slow. My aunt, General Sidebotham, used to say—”

  “Your aunt’s a General?” Clem exclaimed, bewildered.

  “Salvation Army—used to say that wars were wars when she was a young girl, and hadn’t been the same since; but then, she was at Agincourt.”

  “Was she, now,” Clem mused, and choked on his own smoke.

  Mrs. Kinghof, seeing that at least she was entertaining her new friend successfully, plunged on. She was a kindly woman, and believed in bringing excitement into people’s lives. “I believe she commanded a hundred bowmen. She was a tough old lady, and not really religious till later life. My husband admired her intensely, and she admired him.”

  Clem also liked Andrew Kinghof, that long, grey strip of a man who had sent a bottle of whisky, two hundred cigarettes and a dozen American Film magazines round to the Post at Christmas. Feeling that Mrs. Kinghof’s conversation was a little beyond him and hoping to bring it on to more familiar grounds, he said:

  “The Captain keeping well? I expect he thinks this is a rum show to the last war.”

  “Oh, he likes this one much better! He likes his wars to be quiet. Well, as I was saying, General Sidebotham was not really religious until she had turned ninety and by then it was high time. In middle life, she captured Prince Rupert at Marston Moor, and tore off his greaves. She was Cromwell’s white hope. She called herself Perdition-to-All-Fornicators Sidebotham.”

  “If she’s only ninety now,” said Clem thoughtfully, “she must have been very young in Cromwell’s day.”

  Mrs. Kinghof giggled. “All right, I’ll talk sense. I’m sorry. But you know, Mr. Poplett, life’s so dark and monotonous these days that one has an urge to infuse a little romance… if you know what I mean?”

  He said he knew what she meant.

  “Good,” said Mrs. Kinghof. “Now I must tell you about my aunt’s exploit in the American Civil War, when she chased Stonewall Jackson across the Potomac on ice-floes, with only one bloodhound and a borrowed borzoi… Mr. Poplett! This place smells horrible. What is it?”

  “I think them sandbags is gone rotten.”

  “Oh, yes. But there’s another smell too… as if a cat’s got into the bags and died there.”

  Clem switched on his torch and put it on the seat, lighting up the shelter in dismal sort. He rose and went to the bags, which were germinating nicely. Several had already burst, and the others were straining at their stitches like sizeable bosoms at tight blouses. He began to pick away idly at the earthy structure, smelling and snuffling as he did so.

  “Look out,” said
Mrs. Kinghof, “one of them’s coming loose.”

  Clem stepped back just in time to catch a loosened bag that had toppled out from its companions, and as it fell into his arms he found himself nose to nose with a long dead face, phosphorescent, greenish-brown in the torch light, hideously blotched and even more hideously smelling.

  His yelp of fright brought Mrs. Kinghof to her feet.

  “What is it?”

  His shaking finger answered her.

  Mrs. Kinghof looked and swallowed. “All right, Mr. Poplett, all right. We must think. Here, take a drink.” She drew from her bag a quartern bottle of brandy and made him gulp at it. Then she took a long swig herself, and both, by common consent, bolted upstairs into the cold, wet cleanness of the streets.

  Clem was liver-coloured with shock, Mrs. Kinghof only a faint shade ruddier.

  She said bravely: “Don’t worry about me, Mr. Poplett”—though he had shown no signs of worrying about her—“I’m used to corpses. My husband and I were involved in a little affair… just as nasty as this. That was murder. I should imagine this was murder, too, because it would be very difficult to build yourself into a heap of sandbags and then die… Mr. Poplett, you stay on guard here. I’m going to get a policeman. When he comes you can tell him you just went into the shelter to see if anyone had been interfering with the lights—they do interfere, don’t they?—I noticed someone had removed the bulb down there. All right. I won’t be long.”

  Though it occurred to Clem that she might herself have put the dead gentleman in the sandbags and that he should detain her on suspicion, it did not occur with sufficient force to promote action of any kind. Miserably he watched, while Mrs. Kinghof darted on lovely legs through the wet, her mackintosh gleaming like starry water, and he had one awful, paralysing moment of imagining that the corpse was crawling up the stairs behind him to pass its cold and earthy hands about his throat.