The Rosewood Deception

The Rosewood Deception

When Miss Calista Woodbridge—an independent-minded young woman of 29 with copper curls and a penchant for tweed suits tailored with a precision only a Parisian couturier could manage—received the telegram, she was slicing a pear at her rosewood writing desk. It was a cold March morning in 1936, and the fire in the grate crackled as though whispering secrets only she could hear. She lived alone in her ancestral manor on the Dorset coast, having inherited it under curious circumstances following the untimely death of her notoriously eccentric uncle, Oswald Woodbridge, three years ago.

The telegram came from Sir Geoffrey Benton, Chief Constable of Hampshire, a man of firm chin and short temper. Calista had known him all her life—in the way one knows a childhood rival who grew into an unwanted suitor whose proposals she refused with polite clarity. Still, crime had a way of pulling them back into uneasy alliance.

Her green eyes flicked over the telegram:

NEED YOUR ADROIT MIND STOP MURDER AT WEXHAM MANOR STOP VERY PECULIAR INDEED STOP NO ONE TRUSTS ANYONE STOP GREGORY AMONG THEM STOP URGENT STOP

Calista let the pear slice fall uneaten as she stood, her heel’s tap echoing off stone walls. Within an hour, she was en route to Hampshire, her wool coat in camel twill drawn tight at the waist, flaring slightly as she moved with deliberate grace through the station platform. Her gloved hand held a worn leather valise, and her silver pocket watch, inherited from her mother, ticked softly like a heartbeat beneath her coat.

The Setting: Wexham Manor

Wexham Manor stood like a wounded titan among wilted gardens, windows like watchful eyes and ivy crawling up its aged stones like time itself was trying to reclaim it. The air smelled faintly of wet earth, lilacs, and secrets. Inside, the drawing room was staged as though for a tableau vivant: six guests stood or sat in stiff tableau, faces betraying more than they realized—surprise, disdain, calculation.

"Miss Woodbridge," Geoffrey greeted her stiffly, gesturing to a body laid out beneath a silk coverlet. "Gregory Archer. American. Recently acquired a controlling share in Wexham Holdings. He was found at his desk, decanter untouched, but a single glass of brandy laced with… well, that’s the mystery." He paused. "There’s no sign of the usual poisons. But he’s very dead nonetheless."

See also  Embrace the Shattering Chaos

Calista regarded the dapper corpse. His expensive tailoring looked wasted on rigor mortis: pinstripe grey suit, red silk kerchief still puffed defiantly in his breast pocket. His features frozen in an expression more offended than afraid.

The Suspects

The house guests were conveniently varied. Lord Anton Wexham, brooding aristocrat whose family fortune had slipped between baccarat and ill-timed stock choices. Miss Daphne Murney, a poetess with glacier-blue eyes and a soft inflection concealing razor-sharp thought. Dr. Lucien Penmarrow, a neurologist with a smile so perfect it inspired unease. Margot Kensington, an actress whose beauty made it easy to forget she'd financed three failed mining ventures. Guy Ellery, Archer’s business partner—genial to a fault and entirely too helpful. And lastly, the butler: Mr. Hartford, silent and shadow-like, loyal to the manor in ways bordering on the supernatural.

A Web of Memory

Calista moved delicately through the estate, smelling perfume lingering too long on stairwell bannisters, brushing her fingers against the scorched edge of a recently-used fireplace poker, noticing where dust paused mid-print across antique chests. Conversations were pried loose over dinner—phrased in etiquette, coded in innuendo. None told the truth, but each gave her their shade of it—like shards of a stained glass window, light passing through them differently as she repositioned the pieces.

“He promised me legitimacy,” Margot hissed in confidence, lips close to her ear. “Instead he gambled my inheritance on copper futures in Morocco.”

“He offered to buy the estate at twice its worth,” Lord Anton murmured. “Then laughed when I asked about leaving the Wexham name on it.”

“He was funding a neurological institute,” Penmarrow confessed. “But only if I falsified results. That would ruin me.”

Piece by piece, the flames of motive leapt higher.

The Unraveling

It was in the east library that Calista found the final clue—a forgotten gramophone recording tucked behind mismatched medical volumes. She played it late at night, her long auburn hair unbound, dressing gown draped in folds around her as she sat cross-legged beside smoldering logs. On the recording, Archer’s voice crackled through static: “If anything happens… Penmarrow, he… spine-blood alteration... he drinks... believes it extends cognition...” The voice dissolved.

See also  The Coin Gambit: A Dystopian Tale of Rebelling Through Crypto

Geoffrey arrived as dawn breathed pale light across the frostbitten hedges.

“He was running experiments,” Calista said quietly. “Penmarrow. Illegal. Gregory threatened to go public unless he paid tenfold.”

“And the poison?”

“Compound 219B. Neurological shutdown without residue. It mimics natural cerebral failure. Penmarrow developed it.”

They found Penmarrow in his study, meticulously burning notes in his cast-iron stove. He didn’t resist arrest.

A Final Exchange

As Calista prepared to depart, Geoffrey stood beside her, rain pooling darkly at her boots and his overcoat’s shoulders.

"You’ll never let me look heroic, will you?" he said, half-irked, half-proud.

Calista smiled faintly as she opened her umbrella. "I simply don’t believe in heroes, Geoffrey. Only people with motives too tangled for bronze statues."

And with that, she turned and disappeared into the mist-shrouded grounds, the hem of her coat slicing shadows through morning fog.

The Source...check out the great article that inspired this amazing short story: What Went Wrong With GPT-5: Why People Hate It


Disclaimer: This article may contain affiliate links. If you click on these links and make a purchase, we may receive a commission at no additional cost to you. Our recommendations and reviews are always independent and objective, aiming to provide you with the best information and resources.

Get Exclusive Stories, Photos, Art & Offers - Subscribe Today!

You May Have Missed