by Chris Engle
Welcome to turn four of Death at Sea. Now the crunch is on. Each player is coming at this case from a different theory. Each turn new facts are "found/created" by the players actions. Old theories are substantiated or disproven. Suspicion flows from one suspect to the next. Now the various theories will start to come together. This turn Scarletti goes a long way towards clearing himself. Tex and Madeline seem to have been dropped from the list. Mr Wilson also clears himself by a most imporbable means! Who now has the means, opportunety, and motive to murder? WHO CAN PLAY? As always everyone is invited to participate in this game free of charge. Just send in 2 arguments for Poirot (to establish means motive and opportunity for the person you think murdered Lackland) and 1 argument for the murderer (you decide who you think did it and defend him by making misleading clues etc.). If you wish you may make 1 argument for Spade (he is not as smart as Poirot) and 1 argument for the murderer. At the end of this game the players will have discovered who the murderer is by ruling suspects in or out. I for one am interesting in learning who did it. LIST OF CHARACTERS Hercule Poirot: a famous Belgian private investigator
PRE-MURDER INFORMATION 1. Lacland and Madeline competed for the attention of Dr Jones, Scarletti, and Wilson.
DISCOVERY The Engels discovered Lacland dead at 9:30AM on the 9th day at sea (day 1 of the investigation). Her door was not locked and they stuck their heads in to see if she was up for breakfast. They found her room in disarray and Lacland lying on the floor. Engel, a Spanish American war veteran, knew she was dead. He sent his wife to notify the Captain while he guarded the room. CRIME SCENE A thorough inspection of the room and corpse reveals...
2. A vase and the phone were thrown. The vase broke on a wall. 3. Stains on Lacland's bed sheets indicate that she has sex one or two times the night of the murder. 4. There are three different brands of cigarette butts in the ash tray by the bed. 5. Someone riffled through Lacland's draws looking for something. 6. Lacland's nightgown was dishevelled and showed signs she was in a fight. 7. Lacland had bruises on her arms showing she had been held. 8. Lacland died in the early hours of the morning, no later than 4AM. 9. The cause of death appears to be a blow to the back of the head. 10. She has 2 bruises on her chest that appear to have occurred after she was dead. 11. The radiator across the zoom from the body has blood on it. 12. A pool of blood near the radiator indicates that the body must have lay there for a while after death. THE MATRIX
Mystery Supplement
WHAT HAS HAPPENED SO FARDay 1 M. Poirot examines Lacland's room alone and detects traces on man's musk aftershave in the air from which he concludes that there several men in the room the evening of the murder. Poirot notes that Lacland was a strange woman since Spade heard her say to the Engels "But of course you know about protocols." Which they wouldn't know about if they were midwesterners and why were they discussing the subject anyway? Spade searches the garbage chutes and discovers the remains of a blood covered man's dress shirt in the incinerator room. So the murderer must have been a man! Vinny Scarletti tells Poirot that he has an alibi for last night. He was with Elizabeth Jones! Tex and Madeline also quickly provide themselves with an alibi, by saying that they were together. Unknown to anyone on board (yet!) is that the Bloodless Mr Wilson has a record in Bow Street for assault on Prostitutes. And finally the scene focuses in on the murderer's hand, forging a note in Lacland's hand. "You are vulgar and beneath me. It's over between us. -Lacland." Day 2 Poirot has the trash searched and discovers the letter (noted above). "Ah ze English and zer need to write letters! Zut Alors! Zis shows zat zere was a spurred love." Poirot deduces that the murderer is a very fastidious man. "Note zat he wished the shirt burned rather than simply thrown overboard. And he did not search through ze trash for zis note. He is blind to his own peccadillos." Poirot sends a Cable to captain Hastings to Check with inspector Japp about the connection between the suspects. While waiting for the reply, he ponders why a British socialite would mix with such middle class people. The the answer comes... or is it a greater mystery?
JON DISINHERITED SON OF LANDED FAMILY RELATED TO LACLAND STOP WILSON WAS LACLAND'S FATHERS BANKER STOP WILSON RUINED FATHER STOP FATHER COMMITTED SUICIDE STOP LACLAND LIVED OFF HER MOTHERS MONEY STOP DR JONES LIVED IN KENSINGTON VILLAS BEFORE MARRIED STOP HAD RUN IN WITH THE YARD BUT GENERALLY SOUND STOP LACLAND HAD BEEN ENGAGED TO AN AMERICAN STOP FAMILY PREVENTED THE MARRIAGE STOP Elizabeth Jones tells Spade that Scarletti is a liar! She spent the night with Gavid Jones, her husband! Spade is impressed by the tenderness in her voice and believes her. He thinks Jones is in the clear. The murderer fearing that something in Lacland's papers might incrimenate him steals them arid throws them overboard. This meant breaking into her room and searching it again. Papers removed to the Captain's office are still safe (passport, identification papers). Finally the body of a porter is found in a walk-in freezer. He turns out to be the man on duty on the night of the murder in the part of the ship where Scarletti and Hogsetter have their rooms. Day 3 RADIO MESSAGE COLON PROSTITUTE DISCOVERED MURDERED IN LONDON PERIOD MAN ANSWERING DESCRIPTION WILSON SEEN IN NEIGHBORHOOD PERIOD HOLD FOR QUESTIONING STOP Spade searches Scarletti's room and discovers that Vinny's aftershave smells like musk! I guess Americans have a pretty good sense of smell too. "Scarletti would be the type to murder woman wouldn't he?" Sam comments to himself. Poirot, in the mean time, smells a familiar aftershave musk when the laundry basket is pushed by. He discovers that the smell comes from towels out of Dr Jones' room. "Does zis not remind youof ze casual blindness we have observed zus far In ze murderer?" Dr. Jones notices that Mr Scarletti winces at supper when he sits down. The Dr. investigate, by bumping into him, and finds that Scarletti has a large gash on his right side. "This looks like it has two or three days healing in it. And M. Poirot, I would expect just such wounds to occur in a fight with a desperate woman." Scarletti agrees with the Doctor and says that Elizabeth Jones was the woman who wounded him. He then introduces Spade and Poirot to his next door neighbor, who confirms that Vincent and some woman had a fight Scarletti's room on the night of the murder. "And yes! The bloody shirt was mine!" The scene now shifts. The picture focuses in on the murderer forging an entry in the murdered porter's agenda (pocket calendar). "Meet w/Taffy -- 2AM -- Promenade" (Note: Taffy is an English slang term for a Welshman.) Day 4 Poirot examines the dead porter's agenda and discovers that a page has been torn from it. Acting on a tip from Scarletti, Poirot searches the Jones' room. The Good Doctor was in the mean time busy winning a shuffle board tournament. In Mrs Jones' effects he finds a torn pocket agenda which appears to perfectly match the page torn from the porter's calendar. In addition he discovers a letter opener with faint traces of blood on it! Poirot asks the Captain to detain Mr Wilson as per the request of Scotland Yard. Once in custody, the previously restrained Banker breaks down. He cries like a baby and begins to admit to all the murders on board the ship as well as to offenses in London. Poirot is intrigued and questions him further. As he does so he cleverly asks about murders that took place in England and Scotland on the same day! Wilson confesses to both! From this the Dective concluded that the Banker is mentally deranged. He may indeed have killed the prostitutes in London but if anything his confession to killing Lacland exonerates him rather than implicates him! Spade, still believing Mrs Jones' claim that she did not see Scarletti on the night of the murder, checks out the gangster's room. He finds a hand written inventory of rare art works in Lacland's New York City penthouse. The list is in Lacland's hand! Spade then confronts Scarletti with his findings. He presses him regarding the wound he sustained. Finally the tactic works and Vinny lashes back in anger. "Yea! I saw the bitch that night! She cut me, see. But it all happened in my room. My neighbor heard the whole thing! I spent the rest of the night tending my wound." Spade is stunned by the mobster's answers. Since there was no blood from the attacker in Lacland's room then Vinny may just well be telling the truth! Of course he could have attacked her later, but if he had lost one fight to her, is it reasonable to think he could have won a second? ARGUMENTS TURNED IN THIS TURN THAT FAILED Seaman Jon tells Spade that he saw Dr Jones on the Promenade on the night of the murder, while ion was on his watch. The murderer drops a white dress shirt over the side of the ship. Some one is now missing one white dress shirt. Back to Experimental Games Group # 27 Table of Contents Back to Experimental Games Group List of Issues Back to MagWeb Master Magazine List © Copyright 1993 by Chris Engle This article appears in MagWeb.com (Magazine Web) on the Internet World Wide Web. Other articles from military history and related magazines are available at http://www.magweb.com |