Them bones them bones...
Here is the next post of Jayne Barnard's "The Evil Eye of Africa."
The first post is here.
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You can get all the posts by clicking on the mystery tag.
Remember that if you think you have solved the mystery email your deduction to: madamesaffron at gmail.com.
Madame will be drawing from all the correct solutions for some prizes from Tyche Books!
Keep your sightglass full, your firebox trimmed and your water iced.
KJ
"The Evil Eye of Africa"
By Jayne Barnard
A Guess-the-Murderer Mystery in Two Acts
Act I: The Headlines Thicken
The Cornwall Cog and Goggles
August 3, 1898
BODDY’S BODY FOUND – MYSTERY DEEPENS
The mortal remains of Baron von Boddy, thought lost over the English Channel after his airship was abandoned, have washed ashore in Cornwall, only
a few miles from isolated Boddy Manor.
The remains, much diminished by the action of waves and sea creatures, were lashed to a small, but weighty, White Star Line trunk.
Coast Guard say the body may have been in the water only a couple of weeks, as the shad were running in their millions and could have picked the body clean quite quickly.
| Those who discovered the body immediately opened the trunk, hoping to be the first to see the fabled Nubian treasure the baron sought in Africa, but were disappointed to find only books and papers, some of them damaged by water seepage.
Coast Guard officials say the trunk could not have floated and was probably dragged inshore by the tide.
Why Boddy should have elected to abandon ship with a heavy trunk is un-guessable, but local sea-goers, familiar with the baron’s eccentricities in pursuit of his various quests, believe he might have bailed out at low altitude over shallow water and hoped to drag the trunk ashore safely. Whether the tide set against him or the wind was offshore cannot be known unless the time of his entering the sea can be determined by other means. |
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Beware the Evil eye!
Here is the next post of Jayne Barnard's "The Evil Eye of Africa."
The first post is here.
A list of all the characters is here.
You can get all the posts by clicking on the mystery tag.
Remember that if you think you have solved the mystery email your deduction to: madamesaffron at gmail.com.
Madame will be drawing from all the correct solutions for some prizes from Tyche Books!
Keep your sightglass full, your firebox trimmed and your water iced.
KJ
"The Evil Eye of Africa"
By Jayne Barnard
A Guess-the-Murderer Mystery in Two Acts
Act I: The Headlines Thicken
The Goggles Grapevine – August 1, 1898
EVIL EYE DIAMOND GLOWS RED SAYS PROF
Professor Plum, seen here vigorously protesting his innocence, was one of the last people to see Baron von Boddy alive before his departure for Egypt last May.
Scotland Yard today confirmed there is no case against Professor Polonius Plum for the theft and sale of Henry Brown’s trunk.
“Our only possible witness to any sale has gone missing,” said Chief Inspector Snidely Bellows. “You know, that chap whose airship was just found floating off the South Coast. Without him or the trunk, we’ve got nothing.” | Plum proclaimed his innocence. “Von Boddy wasn’t going after a mask anyway. Masks in Africa are as common as mutton in England. My friend was on the trail of a unique red-veined diamond, sometimes called a bloodshot diamond.” There followed a long, technical explication of the geological processes by which other rare minerals are compressed into the midst of a diamond.
When the American academic’s latest threat was quoted to him, Plum said, “Brown’s yearning to discredit me because I demanded his expulsion from Oxford. If he dares lay a violent hand on me, I’ll have him up on charges. Immediately following a sharp lesson in British pugilism.”
The professor is departing today for Boddy Manor in Cornwall. While awaiting news of his friend’s fate, he intends to catalogue the baron’s papers for his university. |
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Heavy Metal!
There is something wondrous, and also a bit melancholy, about abandoned buildings and factories.
All the energy, thought, labour, and pride expended in creating these great buildings and their complex machines is apparent even in the signs of decay and collapse.
Probably the most melancholy though, are abandoned power plants.
These are places where man manipulates the basic forces of nature into forms that can be used for human purposes. Whether those forces come from rushing water, coal, oil, or even the fundamental building blocks of matter itself, these are the places where we have molded them and converted the energy they contain into standardized human designed forms.
This collection of 32 amazing photos collected on Scribdol evokes the lost power of these places.
7 Most Incredible Abandoned Power Plants
Here are a couple of shots to "wet yer whistle".
Keep your sightglass full your firebox trimmed and your water iced.
KJ
Wedding Mischief
Here is the next post of Jayne Barnard's "The Evil Eye of Africa."
The first post is here.
A list of all the characters is here.
You can get all the posts by clicking on the mystery tag.
Keep your sightglass full, your firebox trimmed and your water iced.
KJ
"The Evil Eye of Africa"
By Jayne Barnard
A Guess-the-Murderer Mystery in Two Acts
Act I: The Headlines Thicken
The Foghorn Afloat
July 29, 1898
ROMANTIC AIRSHIP-BOARD WEDDING
Photo: Sir Ambrose Peacock and his beautiful bride
On his recent trip to Egypt, Sir Ambrose Peacock lost an uncle but gained a bride.
Meeting her on a stopover in Venice, the English knight lost no time in winning the fair lady’s hand. They were married aboard an airship en route back to London.
“Lady Peacock knew my uncle in Cairo,” said Sir Ambrose, when the pair disembarked from a small commercial airship at the Jamaica Inn in Cornwall, the closest regular stop to Boddy Manor.
“He spoke of me so frequently and warmly that she fell half in love with me before we ever met. No, he didn’t tell her where he was going.” | Sir Ambrose’s uncle, Baron von Boddy, was on a quest for a fabled Nubian treasure when his airship was found adrift over the English Channel.
In response to questions directed at his lovely new wife, Sir Ambrose replied for her. “Yes, I’m sure she will enjoy living in my uncle’s isolated manor in Cornwall. No, I’m sure she won’t find Bodmin Moor in the winter at all uncongenial. I hope my uncle gets declared dead soon so I can sell off a few things.”
As this reporter turned away, Sir Ambrose grasped my sleeve. “I don’t suppose you could lend me a fiver? My wife and I have excess baggage charges and the airship won’t unload our trunks until we pay
up.”
Photo: mine house on moor, with airship overhead, reputed to be the Jules Verne |
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A Contretemps in the hallowed halls
Here is the next post of Jayne Barnard's "The Evil Eye of Africa."
The first post is here.
A list of all the characters is here.
You can get all the posts by clicking on the mystery tag.
Keep your sightglass full, your firebox trimmed and your water iced.
KJ
"The Evil Eye of Africa"
By Jayne Barnard
A Guess-the-Murderer Mystery in Two Acts
Act I: The Headlines Thicken
The University Times
July 27, 1898
INDY BROWN’S CASE AGAINST PROFESSOR PLUM
Photo Indiana Brown and Professor Plum nose to nose in Balliol Fellows dining hall
A new wrinkle arose in the mysterious case of the missing baron, when American adventurer Henry “Indiana” Brown levelled a public accusation at Professor Polonius Plum for the theft of his research into the fabled Eye of Africa mask.
“We both attended the annual meeting of the Association for Archaeology in Academia a couple months back, in New York City. We came on to England on the same trans-oceanic airship,” said Brown. “I showed him the map. I put it into my book trunk right in front of him, and next day the whole trunk vanished. | “As soon as I heard that Baron guy was on the trail of the Eye of Africa when he got lost , I knew the Professor had shanghai’d my research for him. And I’ll prove it, by gum, or my name isn’t Henry Walton Brown, Junior.”
In terms not suitable for newspaper publication, Brown expressed his intent to follow the professor to Cornwall, where the latter hopes to curate Baron von Boddy’s papers for the Balliol Library. Said Brown, “And when I catch up to him, I’ll punch him right in the schnoz!”
Hand-drawn facsimile of mask Brown claims to have researched thoroughly |
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A Mysterious woman...
Here is the next post of Jayne Barnard's "The Evil Eye of Africa."
The first post is here.
A list of all the characters is here.
You can get all the posts by clicking on the mystery tag.
Keep your sightglass full, your firebox trimmed and your water iced.
KJ
"The Evil Eye of Africa"
By Jayne Barnard
A Guess-the-Murderer Mystery in Two Acts
Act I: The Headlines Thicken
London Fog and Cog
July 27, 1898
LAST LADY LOVE OF BARON VON BODDY?
Do you recognize this woman, seen in intimate proximity to Baron von Boddy at the Cairo Aerodrome shortly before his departure for parts unknown?
Hercule Hornblower, investigating the last days of Baron von Boddy in Egypt, has learned he was often in company with a lovely young widow whose name, as given at her hotel and to the English community in Cairo, was proved fictional.
This woman was seen weeping at the aerodrome as Boddy departed on his ill-fated treasure hunt into the Nubian desert.
An airship captain who witnessed the tearful parting had no information to share on her identity beyond, “A demmed fine woman, sirrah. Demmed fine.” | Hornblower has appealed without success to the English community in Cairo for the woman’s actual name and whereabouts, and now seeks the same information from the Fog’s loyal readers. If you know this woman by any name, please fill in the Fog and we will ensure the information reaches Monsieur Hornblower.
Below: a wider view of the mystery woman at the aerodrome, being consoled or cajoled by the baron while an incidental airship captain resolutely keeps his eyes on the skies.
|
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Beauty and Danger...
Here is the next post of Jayne Barnard's "The Evil Eye of Africa."
The first post is here.
A list of all the characters is here.
You can get all the posts by clicking on the mystery tag.
Keep your sightglass full, your firebox trimmed and your water iced.
KJ
"The Evil Eye of Africa"
By Jayne Barnard
A Guess-the-Murderer Mystery in Two Acts
Act I: The Headlines Thicken
The Social Steamer
July 22, 1898
AMERICAN HEIRESS BADGERED FOR BATTY BARON’S BILLS
Mrs. Medusa Midas-White in her parlour at Claridge’s Hotel.
Following the discovery of the abandoned Jules Verne, the expeditionary airship of Baron von Boddy, Mrs. Midas-White, the only surviving heir to Atlantic Airship Industries in New Jersey, America, and now resident in Claridge’s Hotel, London, is being urgently billed by merchants who supplied the missing adventurer’s expedition in search of Nubian treasures.
Mrs. White’s patronage of Baron von Boddy was widely known in England, and doubtless contributed to the merchants’ willingness to advance goods to the latter. On being informed the baron had not paid his bills before departure, her shock seemed genuine.
How much the heiress had already advanced in support of Boddy’s latest whacky dream is unknown. A few inquiries would have revealed the venturesome baron’s English investors were long since embittered by his unfruitful quests for legendary treasures. |
Notable detective Hercule Hornblower is on the case.
Mrs. White dispatched a notable British detective, Hercule Hornblower, to Egypt in hopes of determining whether Boddy found the treasure and, if so, where she might lay claim to her contractually guaranteed portion of the trove.
“If I must, I will take my money stick by brick from his property in Cornwall,” she said, frowning severely. “I am going there immediately to make sure it is not tampered with until I’ve got my pound of flesh.”
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About Gears, Goggles, and Steam oh My!
Here I collect interesting bits of information related to the world of Steampunk.