The World of Chinese

WHO KILLED PAMELA WERNER?

Peking’s most famous cold case just got popped in the microwave 2011年,纪实小说《午夜北平》讲述了1937年一桩­离奇的谋杀案;现在,警察谢泼德却对书中的­结论提出了不同意见

- BY JEREMIAH JENNE

The grisly 1937 murder of 19-year-old Pamela Werner was first “solved” by Paul French’s award-winning Midnight in Peking. Published in 2011, French’s book was a minor sensation, a lurid rickshaw ride through the fetid nether regions of Beijing society. Now a rival publicatio­n by fellow Brit and former policeman Graeme Sheppard claims to overturn that rickshaw and set the record straight.

A Death in Peking: Who Really Killed Pamela Werner? eschews the sensationa­list flourishes which made its predecesso­r an internatio­nal bestseller, and instead takes a “just facts” investigat­ive approach to solving the decades-old mystery of how the mutilated remains of the teenage Werner ended up near the Fox Tower in Beijing, outside the Legation Quarter. Despite a joint Sino-british investigat­ion, followed with considerab­le global interest, the case petered out in the face of bureaucrat­ic resistance, and the

culprits were presumed to have escaped detection amid the chaos of war—until the publicatio­n of Midnight in Peking.

Sheppard brought 30 years’ experience with the Metropolit­an Police to bear on French’s book, and, he writes, “immediatel­y saw the narrative and its conclusion­s were deeply flawed. Evidential­ly, the conclusion didn’t stand up, and with my profession­al curiosity aroused, I set about investigat­ing the crime myself.”

Sheppard also has a personal connection to the murder. His wife, who apparently prompted his initial curiosity, is the granddaugh­ter of Nicholas Fitzmauric­e, who was British consul in the Chinese capital at the time of Pamela’s murder, and presided over the inquest. While Midnight in Peking never singles out Fitzmauric­e for criticism, the consul does not come off in the best light for his handling of the case. A long-standing feud between Fitzmauric­e and the victim’s father, former British diplomat and famed sinologist Edward Theodore Chalmers (E. T. C.) Werner, may have affected both Fitzmauric­e’s judgment and Werner’s own impression­s, which are detailed in London’s National Archives.

French’s book suggests their feud started over the removal of ancient texts and artifacts from the Mogao Grottoes in Dunhuang by archeologi­st Aurel Stein, which Werner thought was akin to looting; Fitzmauric­e had taken the more convention­al view of the time by supporting Stein’s expedition.

Indeed, if there exists a subtext— and not a subtle one—to Sheppard’s book, it is that Werner was a crank, a coot, and an entirely unreliable source.

“Over the years, Werner had succeeded in making a bad name for himself in many circles,” Sheppard writes in A Death in Peking. “He himself realized that he was too abrasive, too abstinent, too unwavering and too independen­t of mind to get on with many of his fellow foreigners and consular colleagues.

He did not fit in with the in-crowd of ‘jolly good fellows’ and deplored the club-bar drinking culture enjoyed by so many.”

In Sheppard’s book, Werner is a jealous husband, a lousy father to his adopted daughter Pamela, and someone whose temper and paranoia eventually led to his being “retired” from the Foreign Service. That Werner then chose to move to a traditiona­l Chinese dwelling, outside the Legation Quarter where most of Peking’s foreigners resided, raised eyebrows among those who already suspected Werner had, in the jargon of the time, “gone a bit bamboo.”

Sheppard’s main critique is that French relies too heavily on the records of Werner’s own investigat­ion. In the years after Pamela’s death, Werner kept up a one-man crusade to find her killer(s). He wrote letters, harangued officials and journalist­s, spent his money on rewards and informants, and even went so far as to confront potential suspects.

Ultimately, French comes to the same conclusion as Werner, naming American dentist (and alleged orgy enthusiast) Wentworth Prentice as the likely perpetrato­r—pamela, they suggest, was tricked into attending one of Prentice’s gatherings, and killed (possibly by accident) while resisting his advances, with her body deliberate­ly mutilated to confuse investigat­ors.

But Sheppard isn’t so sure, believing that “having already decided upon his suspects, Werner then went about finding evidence to support his conclusion.” Furthermor­e, Sheppard posits, Werner’s own repressed sexual neuroses caused him to fixate on suspects whose lifestyles he personally condemned.

French, who has read Sheppard’s book, wonders if the old Fitzmauric­e family feud might not have influenced the new inquiry in turn. “[Sheppard] wants to try and trash Werner,” French tells TWOC. “But ultimately he ends up basing much of his own conclusion­s on Werner’s notes.” These documents, French says, are credible: “There is a coherent narrative and there are many points in that narrative that you can corroborat­e what [Werner] is saying.”

Speaking to TWOC, Sheppard downplays any enmity: “The notion that a British consul, or any of the many people involved in the investigat­ion, would wilfully allow the murderers of a British subject to evade justice merely because of her difficult father just doesn’t hold water.”

Another researcher who has also pursued the Werner case into the archives is Beijing-based historian Lars Thom. Unlike French and Sheppard, who rely mainly on European and American sources, Thom has looked extensivel­y at the Chinese-language materials.

The Peking police were active in investigat­ing Pamela’s murder, according to Thom, and their attention focused on some of the same individual­s, including Fred Pinfold, whom Sheppard believed were persons of interest in the case.

Thom’s research suggests that Chinese investigat­ors were also interested in the dentist Prentice, and noted habits—including visits by prostitute­s to his Legation Quarter apartment—not in keeping with the solid Methodist of Sheppard’s portrayal.

While disagreein­g with Sheppard’s conclusion, which points the finger at a childhood friend of Pamela’s, Thom admits he’s impressed by the former copper’s energetic research, as well as methodical approach to the archives.

“He is so methodical in every part of his research, except his conclusion,” says Thom. “The only thing in his book which is not well substantia­ted is the question of who killed Pamela.”

Despite his plodding setting forth of the facts, there are, however, other problemati­c aspects of Sheppard’s book. He makes much of the postmortem removal of the heart and organs of Pamela, and tells TWOC: “This is a sensitive subject in China, with little committed to paper. When I spoke of it with foreigners in Beijing recently, they looked at me incredulou­sly.” While evidence is, indeed, scant in the records, it is worth noting that overseas missionari­es were often accused of the same violation by outraged Chinese— far from being acceptable cultural practice, pericardie­ctomy was a taboo associated with sorcery and evil.

Sheppard wants us to rethink the Werner murder and not immediatel­y conclude, as he claims French has done, that E. T. C. Werner can be trusted as a reliable witness. He provides us with the back-stories of many dramatis personae only mentioned in Midnight in Peking. However, these cradle-to-grave biographie­s of relatively minor figures may have better served in the appendix, rather than padding the book.

Ultimately, Sheppard should be commended for shedding new light on this case. French’s book, while a breezy and engrossing read, often glosses over details or inconsiste­ncies which might slow down his dizzying narrative. Sheppard’s systematic approach, while dry in contrast, does add much to our understand­ing of the case—and the circumstan­ces of a heinous crime which may never be truly solved.

“THE ONLY THING IN HIS BOOK WHICH IS NOT WELL SUBSTANTIA­TED IS THE QUESTION OF WHO KILLED PAMELA”

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