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A haunting tale of death and deception

It is a plot that would be relished in a TV murder mystery. Chris Upton looks at a brutal killing in a village in Worcestershire.

The sleepy village of Oddingley

Oh, how we adore an eccentric English murder, set in an eccentric English village. Farmers with dark secrets, an oddball vicar, conspiratorial villagers, a quaint pub, first one brutally despatched body, and then another.

We can sit back and enjoy the blood-bath in tranquil detachment, safe in knowledge that real life is not Midsomer Murders. If it were so, then the death toll in the north Cotswolds would be higher than Jo-burg or Chicago.

Yet fiction and reality do occasionally coincide. Take the peaceful village of Oddingley in Worcestershire, mid-way between Worcester and Droitwich. However uneventful has been the life of this place for generations, it will – like it or not – be always associated with the unsavoury events of the early 19th century.

And every time that unkind image appears to have been shed, and house prices rise once more, along comes yet another writer to disturb the unquiet graves. I know of five books that have uncovered Oddingley’s dark past, the earliest from 1830, the latest only just on the shelves.

With delicious irony (not relevant at the time), the dastardly deed happened to be perpetrated on midsummer day in 1806. A shout was heard in the village, and then a shot, and by the time two passers-by arrived on the scene, a man lay dead. The body was smoking, showing that the shot had been fired at point-blank range, and the wadding from the pistol had ignited the victim’s clothes.

The man in question was none other than the rector of Oddingley church, Rev. George Parker.

(Ordinarily, there would be a commercial break at this point, but let’s plough on.)

What could be the motive for this bloody act? There were, in fact, many in the village who might welcome the untimely removal of their rector. That’s a given in any decent murder mystery.