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Monday, 7 October 2019

Consulting Detective Vol. II - Pair of Pretty Paintings Pilfered, Perhaps Pawned

Written by Joe Pranevich


After a birthday detour back into Infocom-land, I’m back to playing Consulting Detective. Last time around, I solved the first of three cases by finding a lion-murdering thief with a penchant for poisoning his witnesses. That case was pretty fun but not perfect. It did take me a bit to get back into the swing of things this series and I could have solved it faster if I had done a better job with the newspaper and remembering to use my “Regulars”. I’m going to jump into this second case more prepared and see if I do any better.

This time out, we are solving the case of the “pilfered paintings” and the case starts with a proper introduction video. Sir Simpson Witcomb, a well-dressed older gentleman, seeks Holmes’s help to recover two “De Kuyper” paintings taken from the National Gallery. Six months ago, two previously unknown paintings by the artist were discovered and auctioned at Armitage’s Gallery. De Kuyper, we are told, was a student of Reubens, a Flemish master and someone even I have heard of. Prior to this auction, only six De Kuyper paintings were known to exist: four in the Louvre in Paris, one in the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam, and one by a private collector, Lord Smedley, in London. Witcomb worked with his head curator, Brady Norris, to acquire the two newly discovered works and add them to the National Gallery’s collection. They were able to snag them for a mere £125,000, far less than expected.

With the National Gallery in London now home to one-fourth of the known De Kuyper paintings, Witcomb set his sights on the first ever expedition of all eight known works. That would have opened tomorrow, if not for the theft of two of the paintings. As such, all of the other works are also in London ready to be moved to the Gallery: the Louvre’s four are stored in the French Embassy, the Rijksmuseum’s one is in a separate National Gallery storeroom, and Smedley’s is at his townhouse. With that helpful information, we are off to solve this case!




The newspaper interface is okay, but not great.

Just because I am curious, I researched art sales. I have no idea what the market was really like in the 1890s, but £125,000 back then equates to around $725,000 in modern US dollars. That is a large sum, but tiny compared to the millions that famous artists from the period sell for. I also notice that the introductory video has a scripting error: Witcomb states that there were six known paintings before the new ones were discovered, but Holmes asks about where the “other four” paintings are, implying a total of six. Either our detective friend lost track of how many paintings were out there or the scriptwriters did. I doubt that will be too pertinent. One error doesn't strike me as a big deal, except the manual and video also do not agree as to the date of the case: the manual says Jan 22, 1891 while the newspaper and video say Jan 1, 1891. However, the lack of any mention of “New Year's Day” in the videos or newspaper, suggests that the 22nd date is more likely. Again, it’s not a huge deal but it hurts to notice errors right out of the gate.

Speaking of newspapers, I search my archive to see what I can find. The common “abandonware” manuals out there on the web for this game have an incomplete set of newspapers and are missing the dates needed for this case. I have since ordered two copies from Amazon, but neither of them came with the originals either. There is an “in game” newspaper that we can use, but it is impossible to search or skim and I may miss something.

The juiciest details are scattered across a few issues:
  • June 9, 1890 - Armitage announces the sale of newly discovered De Kuyper paintings; auction to be held on July 1 at 1:00 PM.
  • June 26, 1890 - Everett Sedwick responds in an op-ed to a previous (not included?) article about Reubens at the National Gallery. He says that Lord Thurlow is correct about how many of his works are in the Gallery, but that he is otherwise an amateur. He corrects him on the spelling of one of the paintings (“Chapeau de Peil” instead of “Chapeau de Paille”). Sedwick compliments the paper’s usual art editor, “H”, for knowing his (or her) stuff.
  • June 26, 1890 - Armitage re-runs the same ad from the 9th.
  • January 1, 1891 (“Today”) - Sir Simpson Witcomb announces his retirement from the National Gallery, effective in June. Coincidence?
  • January 1, 1891 (“Today”) - A thief steals two De Kuyper paintings, “Summer Solstice” and “Blue Unicorn”, shortly before midnight.
There is a lot to take in here, but my mind is already racing. What if the two new paintings are forgeries? Could the whole auction and expedition be a way to flush the other six paintings out into the open? If so, why weren’t they stolen? There was a third even in the Gallery that was passed over! Could Lord Smedley be upset that the value of his paintings are decreased now that there are two more? Does the lower-than-expected cost at auction come into play somehow? We’re going to need to start talking to people and I’m going to reach out to Smedley first.

Not the master manipulator I was expecting.

My theories about Smedley seem off base immediately. Rather than a criminal mastermind, he’s a doddering older gentleman wearing a huge white corsage, a bumbling British aristocrat. He tells us that he bought his De Kuyper from a Dutchman many years ago after being alerted to the sale by “Mr. Donet”. He doesn’t even know the seller's name! Thanks to the burglary, he’s moved his painting to the vault at Cox and Company until the situation is resolved.

I am immediately suspicious that he doesn’t know the name of the guy that he bought his painting from, but he was working through a middle-man so that may not be notable. I’m struck with the idea that his painting could be a forgery as well… or perhaps all of the paintings are forgeries? It’s tempting to say that, but someone must have benefitted from the theft so we have to assume they were valuable.

Everyone in this game has such nice suits.

While Smedley was alerted to his sale by Mr. Donet, someone that we do not know, Witcomb was told about his by Brady Norris, the National Gallery’s head curator. That would seem to eliminate him as a source of suspicion immediately, but it’s worth a discussion if he can shed light on the paintings’ origins. I head to his office for a chat but, he doesn’t know about the crime because he was at Dame Agnus’s dinner party last night when the robbery was happening. An alibi! He claims to have no theories about the thief or how he (or she) could have pulled off the heist. He also explains that the National Gallery has many more expensive paintings than those two, none of which were taken in the crime. It’s clear that the thief was specifically targeting only those two paintings and either was unaware or unable to access the third in the storeroom.

There is no “Dame Agnus” in the London directory so I’m going to move along from that line of inquiry for now. Next up, I’ll talk to one of my “Regulars”, Langdale Pike the society gossip columnist.

That must have been some party!

Mr. Pike turns out to be a better choice than I expected! I had hoped that he could tell me more about Dame Agnus, but he was at the same party that Norris had been and was even nursing a hangover! While he cannot tell me much because of his incredible headache, I learn about Pierre Donet, the world’s foremost expert on De Kuyper. Only two decades ago, Donet was a starving artist but thanks to his discovery of the very first De Kuyper painting in a church in Brussels, he now lives the high society life. He sold that painting to the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam. We know from Smedley that he also facilitated his sale some time later. Donet is presently staying in a “luxurious suite” at the Langham Hotel. Very curiously, Pike adds that despite getting his start as an artist, Donet has never sold a single one of his own works.

Suddenly, this all seems too obvious. My note earlier that all of the paintings might be forgeries was prescient. It’s clear that Donet is a forger twice over: not only has he been creating and selling fake De Kuyper paintings, he likely also invented the artist himself. It’s also possible that the first painting was real, but what’s clear is that he’s spent twenty years living off the proceeds from the sale of only six paintings. Since the two new paintings did not sell for as much as he hoped for, did he steal them to increase the set's value? That seems like a stretch. I suspect that his crime is separate from the thefts. If the thief knew they were forgeries, why bother? If they didn’t know they were forgeries, why just those two and not the third? Or why not steal any other painting in the museum? I have no idea yet.

Seriously, everyone dresses so well...

As Mr. Donet is from Belgium, we don’t find his name in the directory but we do have a listing for the Langdale Hotel. (It’s listed under “H” for “Hotel” for some reason.) We meet him in what appears to be a hotel restaurant and chat over a nice bottle of wine. He claims to have just arrived from Brussels yesterday. More importantly, he tells us about the two paintings that were stolen: he does not know who found them or how they ended up at Armitage, but he was brought in to evaluate the works and sign the certificate of authenticity. Mr. Noir, a Brussels lawyer representing the anonymous seller, witnessed the signature. Donet then saw the paintings for the first time the following day, in Nori’s hotel room. I’m immediately suspicious because he signed the certificate before examining the paintings, although he claims to have spent five hours confirming them the next day. He tells us that the brush strokes, signature, and even type of canvas used all point to the two new works being legitimate De Kuypers.

He’s clearly lying since he signed the certificate before seeing the works and this adds credence to the idea that he’s the forger. I’m just less and less convinced that he’s also the thief. Even if he was trying to increase the value of the remaining paintings, it’s a lot of hoops to jump through if he could just knock out a few new works every couple of years to stay afloat.

This is the “are you some sort of idiot” scene that I see so often.

Even as I feel I’m getting close to the answers, my next moves are all missteps. I still have no lead on Dame Agnus to confirm whether Norris or anyone else left the party early. Everett Sedwick, the expert on Reuben from the newspaper, seemed like a good person to talk to but I find him to be “chatty” but unhelpful. I revisit Sir Simpson Witcomb from the opening cinematic to see about the painting that he has stashed in the National Gallery basement. In what must be a script error, I also get a message saying that he is “baffled that we had come” and “has no idea about our case”. This episode has a higher than usual number of strange errors.

What a suspicious package!

Since Witcomb doesn’t tell me about the painting in the storeroom, I go directly to the National Gallery for the answer. That is the scene of the crime anyway so a good place to look for clues. That reveals an amazing interview with one of the four on-duty guards from the time of the theft. He lays out a timeline of the whole evening:
  • His shift started at 4:00 PM, prior to the Gallery’s closure. His first job is to prepare for the closing an hour later. 
  • By 5:15, all of the employees left except from Witcomb and Norris. That was typical since they liked to ensure the gallery was secured every night.
  • Witcomb left from the main entrance at 5:30, but Norris stayed as he was expecting a delivery.
  • At 5:45, a set of three packages arrive for Norris from “Cummins and Goins”: one large crate and two smaller ones. The guard observed that the smaller crates were from Jardins, but he did not observe the origin of the larger one.
  • As soon as the delivery men left, a guard named Charley barred the door. Norris remained to inspect the packages.
  • At 6:30, Norris locked the storeroom and left for the evening. He was let out the main entrance. The guards resumed their regular rounds.
  • At 11:10, the guard observed that all paintings were still in place.
  • By 11:35, the two De Kuypers were gone, cut from their frames.
  • While Norris and Witcomb have keys to the interior doors, they don't have access through the external doors. Only the guards and the guardroom has those keys.

That is a ton to chew on, and I wish that I had gone here first! Three crates is suspicious, especially with two of them smaller than the other. I suspect that someone was hiding in the large crate and would box up the paintings in the little ones to ferry them safely away. Who? I don’t know, but this seems like a plausible way for the thief to get into and out of the building without being detected. I am still missing a motive for why someone would go through all that trouble for two low-value paintings.

That mustache did it.

Who sent the boxes? Let’s track them back to their sources. I march to the shipping company and speak to someone behind the counter. He confirms that the packages were mailed from Mr. Norris to himself at the museum. The shippers picked them up from Well’s Warehouse at 5:30 PM, arriving at the Museum in an hour. That’s all we know, but it is plenty. I check the warehouse next to learn that it was rented out by someone named Matthew Cole until recently; someone (he doesn’t say who) rented it starting yesterday. That cannot be a coincidence!

Who could have been in the crate? Not Norris because he was at the museum, nor Witcomb since he left at 5:30 and could not have made it to the movers in time to sneak in. Who is left? Donet? I still don’t have anyone with a motive.

What the heck?

My final stop is Disreli O’Brien, the clerk at the hall of records. I hope to discover who rented the warehouse after Matthew Cole, but I get more than I bargained for. For some reason, Watson asks him about some guy named Clifton Maddox. He’s a former art gallery owner who was arrested in 1889 on suspicion of stealing a Turner painting from Sir Charles Chandwick. That sounds like useful information, but this is the first that I am hearing about it. Is that a false lead or am I going to discover that Chandwick is the other accomplice?

With that, I am wrapping up for the night. I still have no motive, but I am sure that Donet is a forger and Norris is an accomplice to the theft. But where are the paintings now? And how will I solve this case? I expect we’ll find the answers soon enough. Please feel free to share your theories (please do not comment if you know the answer) below. See you next week!

Time Played: 2 hr 05 min
Total Time: 5 hr 25 min

11 comments:

  1. The weird errors or bugs of this game make it a bit harder than perhaps it should be (or easier I suppose, if Watson is going to suddenly have information from somewhere). A bit frustrating.

    I do like the idea of making a forgery of a student of a more famous artist, fewer experts familiar with it and therefore allowing you to be more secure in your copies being undiscovered. This does all seem quite convoluted though which I suppose is par for the course with such a mystery.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Well, the clues earlier than expected are more script bugs than game bugs. All of these Consulting Detective games are secretly stateless-- that is one of the reason I questioned if they were "adventures" last time around. You can visit any witness at any time and you can get clues that you shouldn't have if you get lucky. The plot and script must be done in such a way that this isn't that obvious to the player, that it feels like an unfolding narrative. In this case, they failed at that. (And failed a few more times in the rest of the case that I haven't documented yet.)

      I believe, but have not verified, that later games with this engine (Dracula and Club Dead) will be more stateful.

      Speaking which, I am struggling to complete this case. We'll see if I manage to actually solve it myself but I am running out of leads...

      Delete
    2. I can't find where you questioned it last time, but I'll still add my two cents even if you already answered this.
      I feel like its a Visual Novel. Now before you call me many things that aren't very nice, I have a reason for this. There's nothing about VNs that imply they can't have video instead of text, and when you get down to it, the rest of it qualifies for the most part. No real consequences for losing, long stretches between choices. I guess the deciding what to investigate isn't really something VN related, but I know of a few with similar elements.

      Delete
  2. Hooboy, I'm glad I gave up during the Lion case. This is starting to get really bad with suddenly appearing leads.
    The paintings have got to be in the crates. They just got to be. Nothing said anything about checking the crates afterward, clearly something the thief antcipated.

    ReplyDelete
  3. The newspaper is also bugged. The June 9, 1890 auction announcement was not supposed to be in there. We'll get a later witness that is explicit that there was only one announcement, the June 26 one. I'll complain about this more in the next post. :)

    ReplyDelete
  4. My theories about Smedley seem off base immediately. Rather than a criminal mastermind, he’s a doddering older gentleman wearing a huge white corsage, a bumbling British aristocrat.

    Well then obviously hedunnit, right?

    after being alerted to the sale by “Mr. Donet”.

    Oh, wait, no -- hedonet.

    (Puns aside, I suppose if his name is Pierre, it rhymes with Monet?)

    ReplyDelete
  5. I might have to cheat on this case. Despite knowing (I think) who did it, how they did it, how they got out, and what happened next... I still cannot get the game to activate the judging. I have talked to everyone that I can think of that is remotely connected to the case and everyone mentioned in every dialog. I am not sure what is happening. No way for me to ask for help, unless someone happens to have the list of people that you have to talk to to unlock the judging? (Rot13 please)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I don't know this for a fact, but have you tried all the Irregulars and all the places remotely connected to the case? Maybe check Sherlock's notes and send the kids to every person? Its probably not something you haven't already tried though...

      Delete
    2. This should be the list of places you should at least have to check:

      Nezvgntr'f Tnyyrel
      Gur Pneygba
      Wneqvar, Zngurfba & Pb. (haqre "FUVCCVAT PBZCNAVRF")
      Ybaqba Havirefvgl
      Fve Wnfcre Zrrx
      U.E. Zheenl
      Angvbany Tnyyrel
      Ynatqnyr Cvxr
      Erq Ohyy Vaa

      If this doesn't work, I smell a bug.

      Delete
    3. ARGH.

      I had "Herbert Kaufmann" as one of my suspects that I couldn't find an address for. I assumed that he just didn't live in London as many of the characters do not. But no, his last name is spelled "Cofman" and I did not find that in the directory.

      Going there tells you that he can be found in one of two places, one of which is the Carlton that I missed. And that was the only required clue, although frankly he doesn't tell you much at all.

      Not my finest hour on this case, but also not the finest case. Guess I need to write it up now...

      Delete

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