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  To all the school friends who became my other family,

  and to Miss Silk and Mrs. Sanderson,

  who would never have murdered anyone.

  ---

  Murder is Bad Manners

  Being an account of

  The Case of the Murder of Miss Bell, an investigation by the Wells & Wong Detective Society.

  Written by Hazel Wong (Detective Society Secretary), age thirteen.

  Begun Tuesday, October 30, 1934.

  ---

  Deepdean School

  THE STAFF

  Miss Griffin: Headmistress

  Miss Lappet: History and Latin teacher

  Miss Bell: Science teacher, also the victim

  Miss Parker: Math teacher

  Mr. MacLean: Reverend

  Mr. Reid, “The One”: Music and art teacher

  Miss Tennyson: English teacher

  Miss Hopkins: Physical education teacher

  Mademoiselle Renauld, “Mamzelle”: French teacher

  Mrs. Minn, “Minny”: Nurse

  Mr. Jones: Handyman

  Mrs. Strike: Housemistress

  THE GIRLS

  Daisy Wells: Eighth-grader and president of the Wells & Wong Detective Society

  Hazel Wong: Eighth-grader and secretary of the Wells & Wong Detective Society

  Kitty Freebody, Rebecca “Beanie” Martineau, Lavinia Temple, Clementine Delacroix, and Sophie Croke-Finchley: Eighth-graders

  Betsy North: Sixth-grader

  Binny Freebody: Seventh-grader

  The Marys: A trio of seventh-graders

  Alice Murgatroyd: Tenth-grader

  Virginia Overton; Belinda Vance; Henrietta Trilling, “King Henry”(Head girl): Big Girls

  Part One

  THE DISCOVERY OF THE BODY

  This is the first murder that the Wells & Wong Detective Society has ever investigated, so it is a good thing Daisy bought me a new casebook. The last one was finished after we solved The Case of Lavinia’s Missing Tie. The solution to that, of course, was that Clementine stole it in revenge for Lavinia punching her in the stomach during lacrosse, which was Lavinia’s revenge for Clementine telling everyone Lavinia came from a broken home. I suspect the solution to this new case may be more complex.

  I suppose I ought to give some explanation of ourselves, in honor of the new casebook. Daisy Wells is the president of the Detective Society, and I, Hazel Wong, am its secretary. Daisy says that this makes her Sherlock Holmes, and me Watson. This is probably fair. After all, I am much too short to be the heroine of this story, and who ever heard of a Chinese Sherlock Holmes?

  That’s why it’s so funny that it was me who found Miss Bell’s dead body. In fact, I think Daisy is still upset about it, though of course she pretends not to be. You see, Daisy is a heroine-like kind of person, and so it should be her that these things happen to.

  Look at Daisy and you think you know exactly the sort of person she is—one of those dainty, absolutely English girls with blue eyes and golden hair; the kind who’ll gallop across muddy fields in the rain clutching a hockey stick and then sit down and eat ten cinnamon rolls at tea. I, on the other hand, bulge all over like Bibendum the Michelin Man; my cheeks are moony-round and my hair and eyes are stubbornly dark brown.

  I arrived from Hong Kong partway through seventh grade, and even then, when we were all still shrimps (shrimps, for this new casebook, is what we call the little sixth- and seventh-grade girls), Daisy was already famous throughout Deepdean School. She rode horses, was part of the lacrosse team, and was a member of the Drama Club. The Big Girls, which is what we call the girls in the top grades, took notice of her, and by May the entire school knew that the head girl herself—Deepdean’s most important Big Girl—had called Daisy a “good sport.”

  But that is only the outside of Daisy, the jolly-good-show part that everyone sees. The inside of her is not jolly-good-show at all.

  It took me quite a while to discover that.

  Daisy wants me to explain what happened this semester up to the time I found the body. She says that is what proper detectives do—add up the evidence first—so I will. She also says that a good secretary should keep her casebook on her at all times to be ready to write up important events as they happen. It was no good reminding her that I do that anyway.

  The most important thing to happen in those first few weeks of the autumn semester was the Detective Society, and it was Daisy who began that. Daisy is all for making up societies for things. Last year we had the Pacifism Society (dull) and then the Spiritualism Society (less dull, but then Lavinia smashed her mug during a séance, Beanie fainted, and our housemistress, Mrs. Strike, the woman who looks after us all in our school dorm, banned spiritualism altogether).

  But that was all last year, when we were still shrimps. We can’t be messing about with silly things like ghosts now that we are grown-up eighth-graders—that was what Daisy said when she came back at the beginning of this semester having discovered crime.

  I was quite glad. Not that I was ever afraid of ghosts, exactly. Everyone knows there aren’t any. Even so, there are enough ghost stories going round our school to horrify anybody. The most famous of our ghosts is Verity Abraham, the girl who accidentally fell off the gym balcony and died the semester before I arrived at Deepdean, but there are also ghosts of an ex-teacher who locked herself into one of the music rooms and starved herself to death, and a little sixth-grade shrimp who drowned in the pond.

  As I said, Daisy decided that this year we were going to be detectives. She arrived at our school dorm with her small trunk full of books with sinister, shadowy covers and titles like Peril at End House and Mystery Mile. Mrs. Strike confiscated them one by one, but Daisy always managed to find more.

  We started the Detective Society in the first week of the semester. The two of us made a deadly secret pact that no one else, not even our dorm mates, Kitty, Beanie, and Lavinia, could be told about it. It did make me feel proud, just me and Daisy having a secret. It was awfully fun too, creeping about behind the others’ backs and pretending to be ordinary when all the time we knew we were detectives on a deadly secret mission to obtain information.

  Daisy set all our first detective missions. In that first week we crept into the other eighth-grade dorm and read Clementine’s secret journal, and then Daisy chose a sixth-grader and told us to find out everything we could about her. This, Daisy told me, was practice—just like memorizing the licenses of every motor car we saw.

  In our second week there was the case of why King Henry (our name for this year’s head girl, Henrietta Trilling, because she is so remote and regal, and has such beautiful chestnut curls) wasn’t at prayers one morning. But it took only a few hours before everyone, not just us, knew she had been sent a telegram saying that her aunt had died suddenly that morning.

  “Poor thing,” said Kitty, when we found out. Kitty has the next-door bed to Daisy’s in our dorm, and Daisy has designated her a Friend of the Detective Society, even though she is still not allowed to know about it. She has smooth, light brown hair and masses of freckles, and she keeps something hidden in the bottom of her small trunk that I thought at first was a torture device but turned out to be an eyelash curler. She is as crazy about gossip as Daisy, though for less scientific reasons. “Poor old King Henry.
She hasn’t had much luck. She was Verity Abraham’s best friend, after all, and you know what happened to Verity. She hasn’t been the same since.”

  “I don’t,” said Beanie, who sleeps next to me. Her real name is Rebecca but we call her Beanie because she is very small, and everything frightens her. Lessons frighten her most of all, though. She says that when she looks at a page, all the letters and numbers get up and do a jig until she can’t think straight. “What did happen to Verity?”

  “It was an accident,” said Kitty in annoyance. “She fell off the gym balcony last year. Come on, Beans.”

  “Oh!” said Beanie. “Of course. I forgot.”

  Sometimes Beanie is quite slow.

  Something else happened at the beginning of term that turned out to be very important indeed: The One arrived.

  You see, at the end of last year Miss Nelson, our dull old music and art teacher, retired. She was our deputy headmistress, the second-in-command to our school principal, the headmistress, Miss Griffin. We were expecting her to be replaced by someone else quite as uninteresting—but the new music and art teacher, Mr. Reid, was not uninteresting at all. He was also not old.

  Mr. Reid had rugged cheekbones and a dashing mustache, and he slicked his hair back with gel. He looked exactly like a film star, although nobody could agree on which one. Kitty thought Douglas Fairbanks Jr., and Clementine said Clark Gable, but only because Clementine is obsessed with Clark Gable. Really though, it did not matter. Mr. Reid was a man, and he was not Mr. MacLean (our dotty, unwashed old reverend whom Kitty calls Mr. MacDirty), and so the whole school fell in love with him at once.

  A deadly serious half-secret society dedicated to the worship of Mr. Reid was established by Kitty. At its first meeting, he was rechristened The One. We all had to go about making the secret signal at one another (index finger raised, right eye winking) whenever we were in His Presence.

  The One had barely been at Deepdean for a week when he caused the biggest shock since Verity last year.

  You see, before this semester, the whole school knew that Miss Bell (our science teacher) and Miss Parker (our math teacher) had a secret. They lived together in Miss Parker’s little apartment in town, which had a spare room in it. The spare room was the secret. I did not understand when Daisy first told me about the spare room; now that we are in the eighth grade, though, of course I see exactly what it must mean. It has something to do with Miss Parker’s hair, cut far too short even to be fashionable, and the way she and Miss Bell used to pass their cigarettes from one to the other during our bunbreaks (a bunbreak is a gap in morning class when we are given cookies to eat) last year.

  There were no cigarettes being passed this semester, though, because on the first day Miss Bell took one look at The One and fell for him as crazily as Kitty did. This was a terrible shock. Miss Bell was not considered a beauty. She was very tucked-in and buttoned-up and severe in her white lab coat. And she was poor. Miss Bell wore the same three threadbare blouses on rotation, cut her own hair, and did secretarial work for Miss Griffin after school hours for extra pay. Everyone rather pitied her, and we assumed The One would too. We were astonished when he did not.

  “Something has clearly happened between them,” Clementine told our class at the end of the first week of the semester. “I went to the science lab during bunbreak and I came upon Miss Bell and The One canoodling. It was really shocking!”

  “I bet they weren’t, really,” said Lavinia scornfully. Lavinia is part of our dorm too—she is a big, heavy girl with a stubborn mop of dark hair, and most of the time she is unhappy.

  “They were!” said Clementine. “I know what it looks like. I saw my brother doing the same thing last month.”

  I couldn’t stop myself blushing. Imagining stiff, well-starched Miss Bell canoodling (whatever that meant) was extraordinarily awkward.

  Then Miss Parker got to hear about it. Miss Parker is truly ferocious, with chopped-short black hair and a furious voice that comes bellowing out of her tiny body like a foghorn. The argument was immense. Almost the whole school heard it, and the upshot was that Miss Bell was not allowed to live in the little apartment anymore.

  Then, at the beginning of the second week of the semester, everything changed again. We could barely keep up with it all. Suddenly The One no longer seemed to want to spend time with Miss Bell. Instead, he began to take up with Miss Hopkins.

  Miss Hopkins is our physical education teacher. She is round and relentlessly cheerful (unless you happen not to be good at phys ed), and she marches about the school corridors brandishing a hockey stick, her athletic brown hair always coming down from its fashionable clipped-back waves. She is pretty, and (I think) quite young, so it was not at all surprising that The One should notice her—it was only shocking that he should jilt Miss Bell to do it.

  So now it was The One and Miss Hopkins seen canoodling in classrooms, and all Miss Bell could do was storm past them whenever she saw them, her lips pursed and her glare freezing.

  General Deepdean opinion was against Miss Bell. Miss Hopkins was pretty while Miss Bell was not, and Miss Hopkins’s father was a very important magistrate in Gloucestershire while Miss Bell’s was nothing important at all. But I could not help being on Miss Bell’s side. After all, it was not her fault that The One had jilted her, and she could not help being poor. Now that she could not stay in the apartment, of course, she was poorer than ever, and that made me worry.

  The only thing Miss Bell had to cheer her up was the deputy headmistress job, and even that was not the consolation it should have been. You see, Miss Griffin had to appoint a new deputy headmistress, and after a few weeks the rumor went around that Miss Bell was about to be chosen. This ought to have been lucky—once she was formally appointed, Miss Bell’s money worries would vanish for good—but all it really meant was that the teachers who were not chosen began to despise her. There were two others, really, in the running. The first was Miss Tennyson, our English teacher—that is her name, really, although she is no relation to the famous one. If you’ve seen that painting of the Lady of Shalott drooping in her boat, you have seen Miss Tennyson. Her hair is always down round her face, and she is as drippy as underdone cake. The second was Miss Lappet, our history and Latin teacher, who is gray and useless and shaped like an overstuffed cushion, but thinks she is Miss Griffin’s most trusted adviser. They were both simply fuming about the deputy headmistress job, and snubbed Miss Bell in the corridor whenever they saw her.

  And then the murder happened.

  I say that it was me who found the body of Miss Bell, and it was, but I never would have been there at all if it hadn’t been for those crime novels of Daisy’s. Our housemistress’s fondness for confiscation meant that it was no good trying to read them up at our dorm, so Daisy took to hanging around down at school in the evenings. She joined the Literature Club, slipped Whose Body? between the pages of Paradise Lost, and sat there peacefully reading it while the others talked. I joined too, and sat at the back of the room writing up my Detective Society case notes. Everyone thought I was writing poetry.

  It was after Lit Club, on Monday, October 29, that it happened. After-school societies end at 5:20, but afterward Daisy and I hung back in the empty classroom so that she could finish The Man in the Queue. Daisy was absorbed, but I was jumpy with worry that we might be late for dinner up at the dorm and thus incur the awful wrath of Mrs. Strike. I looked around for my sweater and then remembered with annoyance where I had left it.

  “Bother,” I said. “Daisy, my sweater’s in the gym. Wait for me, I’ll just be a minute.”

  Daisy, nose in her book as usual, shrugged vaguely to show that she had heard, and continued reading. I looked at my wristwatch again and saw that it was 5:40. If I ran, I’d have just enough time, as getting up to the dorm from the Old Wing entrance takes seven minutes, and dinner is at six o’clock exactly.

  I pelted along the empty, chalk-smelling corridor of the Old Wing, and then turned right down the high,
black-and-white-tiled Library corridor, my feet echoing in the hush and my chest heaving. Even after a year at Deepdean, when I run, I still huff and puff in a way that rude Miss Hopkins calls “determinedly unladylike.”

  I passed the teachers’ common room, the library, Mr. MacLean’s study, The One’s office, and the hall, then turned right again into the corridor that leads to the gym. There’s a school legend that the gym is haunted by the ghost of Verity Abraham. When I first heard it, I was younger and I believed it. I imagined Verity all bloody, with her long hair hanging down in front of her face, wearing her pinafore and tie and holding a lacrosse stick.

  Even now that I am older and not a shrimp anymore, just knowing that I am on my way to the gym gives me the shivers. It does not help that the gym corridor is awful. It’s packed full of dusty, broken bits of old school furniture that stand up like people in the gloom. That evening all the lights were off, and everything was smudged in murky shades of gray and brown. I ran very fast down the corridor, pushed open the doors to the gym and galumphed in, wheezing.

  And there on the floor was Miss Bell.

  Our gym, in case you have not seen it for yourself, is very large, with bars and beams all folded up against the walls, and wide glass windows. There’s a terrifyingly high-up viewing balcony on the side nearest the main door (we are not allowed to go up there alone in case we fall, but since Verity fell off it no one wants to), and a little room under that for us to change and leave our clothes in, which we call the cupboard.

  Miss Bell was lying beneath the balcony, quite still, with her arm thrown back behind her head and her legs folded under her. In my first moment of shock it did not occur to me that she was dead. I thought I was about to get an awful scolding for being somewhere I oughtn’t, and nearly ran away again before she caught sight of me. But then I wondered—what was Miss Bell doing, lying there like that?