A Murder of Crow Witnesses by James McCarthy
A Murder of Crow Witnesses by James McCarthy
A Murder of Crow Witnesses by James McCarthy
by James McCarthy
It was the bloody chopped heart that enticed them down from the
trees.
snatch a piece. Nala was second, claiming the choicest morsel for herself.
Recent fledglings Boris and Bela descended next but kept further away,
eager for food but nervous of the woman. Finally, Karlova swooped in. One
of last year’s brood, she had stuck around to help her parents raise Bela and
Boris. Karlova landed closest to Dr Jane Watts and deliberately placed the
item in her beak down in front of the zoologist. Dr Watts smiled when she
saw the offering but stayed upright, not reaching for it yet. However, she
This dawn ritual had been playing out for a year now in this pocket of
varied: different kinds of nuts, dried or fresh fruit. But once a week she
liked to offer these carrion crows their favourite food: animal offal.
Watching their delight on this fateful morning, Jane felt that deeper
spiritual connection which comes when humans and animals interact closely.
It was Nala who noticed the man first, with Edgar following her stare
into the deeper shadows. Then Jane heard his soft movements. Turning, she
squeezed both triggers. Shot tore through Jane’s face, body and legs. She
dropped, terribly injured. As four crows flew off in alarm, Jane realised that
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one lay dead beside her. “Karlova...” Meanwhile, the man reloaded,
***
Others in CID respected and resented him in equal measure for his desire to
tally every last loose end. It was partly why they nicknamed him
“Awkward”, though his initials DS SOD suggested it too: awkward sod from
Built like a rock, O’Donald had working class smarts that would gnaw
that one detail would pique DS SOD’s curiosity when he arrived at this
A dog walker had chanced across Dr Watts’ body an hour after the
Had the perpetrator panicked and fled? O’Donald thought not. The
fact the shooter had reloaded and discharged again from closer range didn’t
However, it was neither the cartridge nor unhidden body nor rapid
attempted sleep twenty hours later. No, it was the sight of four crows
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huddled round that dead crow near Dr Watts’ body. Because, for all the
world it seemed to Shane, those imposing black birds were mourning it.
***
confrontational behaviour. For more than a year he’d been locked in bitter
dispute with Dr Watts, sending her increasing angry, erratic emails and then
poultry operation. He’d been shooting them for years but could never quite
eradicate the pests. Jane Watts, who lived a mile away, contested his claim
that the crows did “serious damage”: a legal requirement of his licence to
telling them about Smith, including from his own relatives. Arriving at the
showed had been fired that day); his Ely Grand Prix cartridges (matching the
footprints leading to and from the scene; Smith’s Land Rover whose tyre
treads left fresh impressions beside the wood; burnt clothes in a charred oil
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drum by Smith’s storage barn. And electronic investigation of Smith’s smart
phone established that its location had moved from his farm an hour before
Smith’s alibi was that he’d been asleep the whole time. He’d gotten
drunk the night before and the first he knew of any murder was when
O’Donald and team forcibly entered his locked property and found Smith
***
want to peg back the department’s clear-up rate when this case was in the
bag? And yet.... Shane’s mind wouldn’t stop raking over tangential details
such as: had those four crows actually been mourning their dead family
member?
Shane realised she’d named that particular bird Karlova. And in a box,
Shane found small ‘gifts’ from Karlova to Jane. There was a pearly button, a
snail’s shell, a ring-pull, a golden paper tack and various pieces of coloured
glass. Jane had lovingly bagged, dated and labelled each offering. Shane
single-piece, smiling Lego face. And for just a moment he had a sense of the
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adult zoologist reconnecting to her inner child whose heart has just opened
“Do crows grieve?” Shane later asked Jane’s friend and colleague Dr
“We don’t know either way for certain yet. But what you saw wasn’t
“They do. Studies show how effectively crows change their behaviour
few of its citizens used to shoot the birds as pests. In response, other crows
assessed the situation and raised their flying altitude to get out of range.”
“Corvids are among the most intelligent organisms on Earth. But that
helps with our advanced cognition. Crows have densely packed clusters of
neurons instead: one and a half billion of them, as many as some monkey
displacement. Fashion tools for use. Deploy social ostracism to punish their
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“Like Jane and these ‘gifts’.”
“And actively scold anyone they don’t like. You could say they’re
very astute judges of character. We’re still discovering how astute. Some of
realised there was no mask or scarf that might have hidden Smith’s face.
***
Shane formulated a plan, every part of which was risky. But that was
its appeal too: wanting to prove his radical thinking was correct.
Smith’s face.
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Then, having quietly persuaded a sceptical detective to come and
video on her phone, Shane went to the wood to find the crows with the
Edgar, Nala, Bela and Boris were high in the trees. Shane scattered
peanuts and eventually the birds descended to feed. Shane had never
appreciated how sleek and beautiful carrion crows are, how characterful.
The effect was instantaneous. They recognised “Smith” and all rose,
agitated, at once. All four scolded “Smith” with Edgar and Nala swooping in
severely dented.
morning, why hadn’t the five crows reacted immediately in the same way?
Why didn’t they take flight at this guy who shot them as vermin? Why did
Karlova stay on the ground when the gunman appeared and so get shot and
And if Smith wasn’t the culprit, who was? Who else had access and
Detective Inspector Hughes was aghast when Shane showed him the
video and outlined the next stage of his plan. But Hughes knew Shane
wouldn’t stop working to prove his theory. And, if Shane was right, they
***
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With Smith in custody, his two grown up sons had moved into his
farm, ostensibly to keep it running. Relations between father and sons had
Tommy (the eldest) regularly visited his father and had been there
the night before the murder, but he was working at a supermarket the
morning it happened. Younger Lenny had no alibi except that he was home
with girlfriend Hazel. Both would claim they were having sex. And their
phones’ location services did show them at home when Jane was killed.
But Tommy, Lenny and Hazel had histories of drug dealing, theft and
money and coveted their father’s farm. Cunning enough to know that if they
killed Alan Smith suspicion would fall on them, Tommy had often heard his
father vent fury at that crow-loving bitch Dr Watts. Might Tommy not have
reasoned that her death could be the solution to his and his brother’s
problems?
reporter and ask Lenny and Hazel to comment on rumours the police were
using crows as witnesses to the murder. In private, Lenny and Hazel couldn’t
help discussing the possibility. Once they got talking, their conversation
validated Shane’s theory that Tommy had drugged his father that night,
stolen and copied the farmhouse keys, that Lenny had gone to the farm very
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early the next morning (without his own phone), put on his father’s clothes,
gloves and boots, taken Alan’s phone, shotgun and ammo, and driven the
Land Rover to the woods. And there, he shot and killed Dr Watt before
confronted with the evidence and charged with murder. “What do you
“Oh yes, I do,” Shane had smiled back. “A not-so-little bird has told
me everything.”