“Sid, I’ve run into a troublesome case. I think you’ll find it very interesting.”
Outside the door, the bearded policeman crushed his cigarette under his boot and exhaled heavily, exhaustion written all over his face.
Dawn discreetly studied the man before him. Recalling the name recorded in the diary, he guessed this must be Chief Groot.
Watching the bearded officer gesture for him to follow, Dawn shrugged and stepped back.
“Sorry. I’m not interested.”
“…What did you just say?”
Groot’s expression froze.
He stared at the detective—who had once shamelessly chased after every case available—as if he had just heard something absurd.
“You said you’re not interested?”
Dawn nodded casually.
He narrowed his eyes, observing Groot’s reaction with quiet astonishment.
Everything was too real.
When he acted according to his own will, the people he encountered responded logically instead of following some predetermined script.
Was it possible that he hadn’t merely connected to a deceased mind—but that everyone in this dream possessed independent, logical thought?
Dawn raised a brow.
He found it hard to believe. His gaze drifted past the officer’s shoulder toward the gray, overcast sky.
Did this dream have boundaries?
If every person here had independent thought, and he could move freely anywhere, then this was no different from a new world.
No wonder the author of The Study of the Resurrection Stone had described it as a second life.
Dawn inhaled slowly.
He might truly have underestimated the Deathly Hallows.
After a moment of reflection, he lowered his gaze.
Even if the realism was astonishing, he had experienced something similar before. Acceptance came easily.
Though he did wonder—could the dream from his childhood, the one that had felt like a previous life, also be connected to the Resurrection Stone?
He pondered briefly, then looked at the confused officer and smiled.
“Sorry. Just joking. Let’s go.”
If this dream had taken place after 1980, Dawn would have immediately traveled to Kensington in West London to investigate history prior to the world correction.
But it was 1940.
The Richters had not even been born yet. There was nothing to investigate.
So instead of waiting idly for the dream to end—or wandering through a world at war—he might as well try being a detective.
After all, as a Briton, he had always been fascinated by the profession.
Groot, still puzzled by the sudden reversal, dismissed it as a peculiar joke and led him to a black-and-white police car parked below.
The city streets were desolate. Most shops were closed. The few pedestrians who passed hurried along, bundled tightly in coats.
Not surprising.
It was 1940. Britain stood under the shadow of war.
For now, things were relatively calm.
But by September, when the German Luftwaffe began strategic bombing raids on London and other major cities, the intensity would escalate dramatically.
Dawn leaned his elbow against the window and watched the bleak landscape roll by.
War was cruel—but he knew this was a dream. He observed with pure curiosity.
Eventually, the car left the city center and stopped before a private estate on the outskirts.
Dawn stepped out.
As they walked inward, Groot explained the layout and the case.
The estate was moderately large, divided into two residential sections—one east, one west—with gardens and lawns separating them.
Seven people lived here: the master of the estate, his two sons, his daughter, a housekeeper, and two maids.
Only the master lived in the western residence. The other six stayed in the east.
As for the case—
Two nights ago, the three children had been chatting in the eastern residence about the war when thunder struck.
Knowing their father had heart problems and lived alone in the west, they grew concerned and crossed the garden to check on him.
They found the house locked. Despite repeated knocking and shouting, there was no response.
The daughter instructed her brothers to fetch the spare key from the housekeeper while she continued calling out.
When the sons returned with the housekeeper and unlocked the door, they discovered their father dead on the sofa.
Dawn frowned slightly.
“Why did the victim live alone? Wasn’t he elderly? Didn’t he need care?”
“Post-traumatic stress,” Groot explained. “He served in the war, was injured, and retired early. Since then, he preferred solitude.”
He handed Dawn a photograph.
The victim sat twisted on the sofa, head tilted toward a closed window. A dark bullet hole marred the back of his skull.
They arrived at the western house.
It stood separate from the others, surrounded by damp soil and grass.
Groot continued, lighting another cigarette.
“No murder weapon was found at the scene, so we’ve concluded it was homicide. But two problems remain.”
He exhaled smoke.
“First—the room itself. The door was locked. The windows sealed. Only two keys existed: one on the housekeeper, one on the deceased.”
“No signs of forced entry. Which means—it was a perfect locked room.”
Dawn interjected, “So the housekeeper is the killer?”
“Not necessarily.”
“The spare key wasn’t carried around. It was stored in a designated location. Dust indicated it hadn’t been touched before the sons retrieved it.”
Dawn nodded thoughtfully.
Groot handed him more photographs—muddy footprints around the house.
“Second—the lawn. It rained shortly after dinner that night. The soil was wet.”
“We found only the victim’s footprints entering the house, and the children’s when they came over. No others.”
“In other words—we have no idea how the killer crossed the lawn without leaving footprints. Even if he hid there before the rain, how did he leave without traces?”
Dawn raised a brow.
“A double locked-room mystery.”
Groot nodded.
“Any suspects?”
“Yes.”
Groot passed him more photos.
“If we ignore the method, we suspect one of the three children or the housekeeper.”
“The housekeeper was alone after dinner. The children were together but each left briefly at different times.”
“As for the two maids—they were off that day and have solid alibis.”
Dawn asked, “Why rule out an outsider?”
“We found the murder weapon—a pistol with blood—hidden in the nearby garden. If it were an outsider, why leave it behind?”
Fair enough.
Dawn didn’t ask about fingerprints. In 1940 Britain, forensic methods were limited.
He twirled the cane in his hand.
“Where are the suspects now?”
He was ready to solve the case.
As a wizard proficient in Legilimency, he could easily outshine any Muggle detective.
But Groot dampened his enthusiasm.
“They’re handling funeral matters. Should be back around noon.”
Dawn checked his watch.
Over an hour to go.
Instead of waiting, he decided to inspect the crime scene.
Inside the room, police tape had already been removed. Dawn crouched, studying the chalk outline, the lock, the dried blood.
He found nothing.
Apparently, he lacked natural deductive brilliance.
He clicked his tongue.
“Chief, could I have a moment alone?”
Groot hesitated, then agreed and left.
Dawn confirmed he was alone and murmured:
°Rapid Manifestation°
A milky bubble rose from the floor—but it showed a much older scene.
He tried again.
Dozens of attempts later, just as frustration mounted—
Success.
The victim slumped on the sofa, shot in the back of the head. Blood spilled across the carpet.
There were faint movement sounds—likely the killer. But the angle showed only the victim.
Disappointing.
Yet just before the bubble burst—
A sharp clink.
A button bounced into view from the edge of the scene.
Dawn froze.
A button?
Groot hadn’t mentioned one. So the killer must have retrieved it.
He focused intently—and then clarity struck. Most garments with overlapping fronts follow a pattern.
Men’s coats fasten left over right. Women’s garments fasten right over left.
The button had bounced rightward due to fabric tension.
Meaning it had come from the upper left side. Which indicated a right-over-left fastening.
A woman’s coat.
Among the suspects, only the daughter fit that description. Unless one of the men secretly wore women’s clothing—a detail easily verified.
Dawn’s thoughts aligned with satisfying precision.
The door creaked open.
“Sid? Still thinking?”
Dawn sighed as the bubble shattered.
“You should knock first, Chief.”
He turned confidently. “I’ve solved the locked-room mystery.”
Groot’s eyes widened.
“Already?”
“The key was not in the victim’s pocket from the beginning.”
“What?”
Dawn rested a hand on the sofa. “In my view, this is what happened.”
___________
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Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 221 221: The Gryffindor Common Room
- Chapter 220: Rumors and Two Suspicious People
- Chapter 219: Avery and the Twins
- Chapter 218: Speculation About the Resurrection Stone
- Chapter 217: Who Are You?! (Part 2)
- Chapter 216: Who Are You?!
- Chapter 215: Dawn Behind the Door
- Chapter 214: Fudge’s Damned Stroke of Inspiration
- Chapter 213
- Chapter 212
- Chapter 211 211: The Gap
- Chapter 210 210: A Calm and Not-So-Calm Castle
- Chapter 209 209: A Foolproof Method?
- Chapter 208 208: Peeves
- Chapter 207 207: The Consciousness of the Castle
- Chapter 206 206: A Trip into the Forbidden Forest
- Chapter 205 205: The Seer and Two Bracelets
- Chapter 204 204: First Meeting with Grindelwald
- Chapter 203 203: Fortune Drawing
- Chapter 202 202: Back to School Matters
- Chapter 201: A Day in Neville’s Life (Part 2)
- Chapter 200: A Day in Neville’s Life
- Chapter 199: The Dark Side of History
- Chapter 198: The Plague Doctor
- Chapter 197: An Unexpected Gain
- Chapter 196: The Aftermath
- Chapter 195 195: The Curtain Falls
- Chapter 194 194: The Duel
- Chapter 193 193: Encounter
- Chapter 192 192: Another Christmas
- Chapter 191: Time Flies
- Chapter 190 190: The Fall of the Basilisk
- Chapter 189 189: Voldemort Divided into N Pieces?
- Chapter 188 188: The Annual Tradition
- Chapter 187 187: Halloween
- Chapter 186: Much Ado About Nothing?
- Chapter 185 185: Dawn Wants the Invisibility Cloak
- Chapter 184: Verification Within the Dream
- Chapter 183: The Grand Detective’s Final Act
- Chapter 182: The Great Detective’s Debut Case
- Chapter 181: Reborn in Britain as a Detective?
- Chapter 180: Living Thought
- Chapter 179: Possibility or Not
- Chapter 178: An Abrupt End
- Chapter 177: Rapid Manifestation and A Study of the Resurrection Stone
- Chapter 176: A Far-Fetched Reason?
- Chapter 175: A Confused Night and Dawn’s Plan
- Chapter 174: Dawn and Dumbledore, Fundamentally Different
- Chapter 173: Two People Reconnected
- Chapter 172: The Truman Show
- Chapter 171: Jingle Bells (Part Two)
- Chapter 170: Jingle Bells
- Chapter 169: A Sense of Unease
- Chapter 168: The Scarecrow Curse and the Second Attack
- Chapter 167: The Terror of Love
- Chapter 166: Dawn’s Dilemma and the Resurrection Stone
- Chapter 165: An Unaccountable Emotion
- Chapter 164: A Disturbingly Familiar Incident
- Chapter 163: Dreams and Prophecy
- Chapter 162: Three Spells
- Chapter 161: The First Lesson: A Wizard’s Value
- Chapter 160: The Feast
- Chapter 159: Back to School
- Chapter 158: The Nightmare Lamp and a New Idea
- Chapter 157: Idle Talk at the Burrow
- Chapter 156: The Interview in Progress
- Chapter 155: Returning to the Castle
- Chapter 154: Leia Hickman
- Chapter 153: Time in Flight
- Chapter 152: A New Transformation
- Chapter 151: The Fountain of Fair Fortune
- Chapter 150: The Ritual: The Final End
- Chapter 149: The Ritual: The So-Called Cycle
- Chapter 148: The Ritual: January Twentieth
- Chapter 147: The Ritual: Convergence (Part 2)
- Chapter 146: The Ritual: Convergence
- Chapter 145: The Ritual: Death
- Chapter 144: The Ritual: January Nineteenth (Part 2)
- Chapter 143: The Ritual: January Nineteenth
- Chapter 142: The Ritual: Dawn’s January Eighteenth
- Chapter 141: The Ritual: Dumbledore’s January Eighteenth
- Chapter 140: The Ritual: January Seventeenth
- Chapter 139: The Ritual: Final Preparations
- Chapter 138: The Ritual: The Time-Turner
- Chapter 137: The Ritual Begins: A Public Declaration
- Chapter 136: The Ritual Hidden in the Fairy Tale
- Chapter 135: The First Attempt
- Chapter 134: Dawn’s Theory About the Fountain of Fair Fortune
- Chapter 133: Savagery
- Chapter 132: A Strange Sense of Clarity
- Chapter 131: The Banquet
- Chapter 130: Does Jiggs Hate Dawn?
- Chapter 129: A Day When No One Was Happy
- Chapter 128: Escape (Part 2)
- Chapter 127: Escape
- Chapter 126: Sorry, Professor Snape
- Chapter 125: The Bone-Clinging Maggot
- Chapter 124: Do Not Blame Fate
- Chapter 123: Dumbledore’s Power
- Chapter 122: Like Thunder
- Chapter 121: A Moment of Eternity
- Chapter 120: Dumbledore and Dawn’s Reunion
- Chapter 119: The Two of Them
- Chapter 118: Dumbledore and Grindelwald’s Reunion
- Chapter 117: Impending Reunion
- Chapter 116: Dawn’s Method
- Chapter 115: Discovery
- Chapter 114: The Trouble In New Zealand
- Chapter 113: Christmas in England
- Chapter 112: Christmas in Egypt
- Chapter 111: Dumbledore's Guilt
- Chapter 110: William’s Tears
- Chapter 109: The Atmosphere of Quidditch
- Chapter 108: An Airborne Incident
- Chapter 107: News from Britain
- Chapter 106: Leaving the Tomb (Part 2)
- Chapter 105: Leaving the Tomb
- Chapter 104: The So-Called World Consciousness
- Chapter 103: The End
- Chapter 102: Inside the Tomb (Part 2)
- Chapter 101: Inside the Tomb
- Chapter 100: The Stirred World (Part 2)
- Chapter 99: The Stirred World
- Chapter 98: Amir
- Chapter 97: Our Hatred of Death
- Chapter 96: Research in Progress
- Chapter 95: The Theologian (Part 2)
- Chapter 94: The Theologian
- Chapter 93: Dawn’s Method and the Spreading Curse (Part 2)
- Chapter 92: Dawn’s Method and the Spreading Curse
- Chapter 91: British Tradition
- Chapter 90: Felix Felicis and the Fountain of Fortune
- Chapter 89: Olivia’s Past
- Chapter 88: The Unbreakable Vow
- Chapter 87: The Blood Curse
- Chapter 86: Magical Beasts: The Sacred Scarab
- Chapter 85: Investigation
- Chapter 84: Anubis! (Part 2)
- Chapter 83: Anubis!
- Chapter 82: Tutankhamun’s Curse and Another Carter!
- Chapter 81: The Amulet
- Chapter 80: The Egyptian Wizarding World
- Chapter 79: The Pyramid of Khufu
- Chapter 78: The Anonymous Letter and Arrival in Egypt
- Chapter 77: A New Journey
- Chapter 76: Preparations
- Chapter 75: Destination!
- Chapter 74: A Dog Without a Home
- Chapter 73: Dawn’s Decision
- Chapter 72: The Encounter (Part 2)
- Chapter 71: The Encounter
- Chapter 70: A Delicate Web of Public Opinion (Part 2)
- Chapter 69: A Delicate Web of Public Opinion
- Chapter 68: Quirrell Cursed by a Vampire
- Chapter 67: “I’m Just a Farmer!”
- Chapter 66: A Foolish Frame-Up
- Chapter 65: A Blood-Stained Halloween
- Chapter 64: Waiting for the Storm
- Chapter 63: The Portrait
- Chapter 62: The Argument
- Chapter 61: An Unexpected Development
- Chapter 60: The Hidden Door
- Chapter 59: The Silver Star Herb
- Chapter 58: Truth? Or Lies?
- Chapter 57: Donkey?! Donkey!
- Chapter 56: An Excessive Coincidence
- Chapter 55: My Fate
- Chapter 54: Time in Motion
- Chapter 53: Natural Magic
- Chapter 52: The Storm
- Chapter 51: Ritual Magic
- Chapter 50: Professor McGonagall’s Explanation
- Chapter 49: Hermione's Choice (Part 2)
- Chapter 48: Hermione's Choice
- Chapter 47: Transfiguration Exam
- Chapter 46: A Mature Wizard
- Chapter 45: Professor McGonagall’s Invitation
- Chapter 44: Chaos in the Great Hall
- Chapter 43: A Heart of Arrogance
- Chapter 42: Dumbledore’s Return
- Chapter 41: Secrets in History (Part 2)
- Chapter 40: Secrets in History
- Chapter 39: Mad Magic: Blood and Taboos (Part 2)
- Chapter 38: Mad Magic: Blood and Taboos
- Chapter 37: A Night Visit to the Restricted Section
- Chapter 36: Flesh and Flesh, and an Alchemical Attempt
- Chapter 35: A Novel Herbology Experience
- Chapter 34: Snape Doesn’t Want to Dream of the Dark Lord
- Chapter 33: Animagus and Snape’s Targeting
- Chapter 32: Neville's Inferiority
- Chapter 31: Classes and Dilemmas (Part 2)
- Chapter 30: Classes and Dilemmas
- Chapter 29: Right and Wrong – Dawn’s Rebuttal
- Chapter 28: The Traits of the Four Houses
- Chapter 27: The Mirror of Erised
- Chapter 26: Midnight Duel
- Chapter 25: Objective
- Chapter 24: Draco Blocks the Way
- Chapter 23: Magic and Miracles (Part 2)
- Chapter 22: Magic and Miracles! (Part 1)
- Chapter 21: The Marauder's Map and Herbology Class
- Chapter 20: A Glimmer Beneath the Fog
- Chapter 19: Differences and Doubts
- Chapter 18: Research on Potions and Neville Longbottom
- Chapter 17: The Diadem and "The Tales of Beedle the Bard"
- Chapter 16: A Sunday at Hogwarts
- Chapter 15: The Bronze Eagle Knocker
- Chapter 14: The Killing Curse and the Professors' Conversation
- Chapter 13: The Square of Two
- Chapter 12: Mysteries Upon Mysteries
- Chapter 11: Hogwarts
- Chapter 10: My Own Way
- Chapter 9: Sharp-Tongued Dawn
- Chapter 8: On the Train
- Chapter 7: Magical Power Fusion and the First Day of School
- Chapter 6: Giggs and Felix Felicis
- Chapter 5: Snape’s Good Reputation
- Chapter 4: A Miracle Amidst the Magic Surge
- Chapter 3: The Books in the Bedroom
- Chapter 2: Dawn Richter
- Chapter 1: The Strange Child