"I see you’ve got an alibi that can’t be broken . . ."
"The Will."
By Richard B. Sale (1911-93).
First appearance: Popular Detective, September 1935.
Short short short story (3 pages).
Online at Pulpgen (HERE).
"A Cold-Blooded Murder Perpetrated for Gain—and the Aftermath!"A neat plan, this one, smooth and uncomplicated, only there's a snag the murderer hasn't anticipated: If he inherits, it's the electric chair for sure. Decisions, decisions . . .
Resources:
- FictionMags's description of Richard Sale: "Mystery novelist and short story writer. Born in New York City; lived in California."
- Nearly two-and-a-half years have elapsed since we first featured Sales's "Death Had a Pencil" (HERE).
~ ~ ~
"Somebody must have been digging there . . ."
"No Blood."
By John L. Benton (house pseudonym).
First appearance: Popular Detective, January 1936.
Short short short story (1 page).
Online at Pulpgen (HERE).
"There was to be no shedding of blood."Even in the best-laid schemes, the unexpected sometimes bubbles up, you might say, seemingly out of nowhere . . .
Resource:
- Just who "John L. Benton" was is still unclear; see Cullen Gallagher's Pulp Serenade (HERE).
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