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- WORLD, Page 37BRITAINWhere Is the Black Queen?
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- Police hope a chess code may unlock the riddle of a woman who
- vanished on a trip through Ireland
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- A missing body, a map, a code. British mystery fans and
- chess buffs alike are turning from P.D. James and Agatha
- Christie this summer to a real-life riddle that police have yet
- to solve. Was Theresa Terry murdered? If so, where is her body?
- The riddle has drawn in the chess columnist for the London
- Times as well as dozens of would-be Sherlock Holmeses.
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- The victim: Terry, 43, was a widely traveled computer
- programmer from Lancashire who had returned to England from
- Australia to investigate the disappearance of funds from her
- bank account. In January, after telephoning a friend to say
- that she was in Ireland with a man, she vanished. In June,
- Lancashire police arrested Terry's 30-year-old traveling
- companion and charged him with fraud related to her $48,500
- savings account.
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- The map: the unnamed suspect told the police that Terry had
- committed suicide and that he had buried her body, but he
- refused to say where. Instead he handed his interrogators two
- sheets of paper. One contained a crude map with three rough
- drawings of what could be outlines of countries. They were
- marked by Roman numerals. The other listed what looked like
- obscure chess moves.
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- The code: detective chief superintendent Roy Fletcher in
- Preston, Lancashire, called on the Times's chess columnist,
- grand master Raymond Keene. At first, Keene was as befuddled
- as the police. Then he recalled that Lewis Carroll's Through
- the Looking-Glass is prefaced by a chess problem in which Alice
- wins in 11 moves after entering a reversed world on the other
- side.
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- Taking a cue from Carroll, Keene read the map as a drawing
- of the British Isles with mirror images of towns outlined on
- opposite sides of a blank, gridless chessboard, which he took
- to be Ireland. Turning to the code, he concluded that WK meant
- white king, representing the police, that BQ (black queen) was
- the missing woman, and that BK (black king) was the suspect.
- Using these clues, Keene deduced that Theresa Terry must be
- buried in the Irish town of Limerick. His theory tallied with
- police discoveries that the suspect had hired a car and used
- credit cards in Ireland. But Keene could not interpret the
- letters HG, which he thought might stand for "her grave" or be
- reverse code for "grievous harm." More important, police have
- yet to find the body; they refuse to say whether they even
- searched for it in Limerick.
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- For the past two weeks, Keene's readers have offered dozens
- of solutions. An Irish barrister suggested that HG referred to
- the Holy Ground public house in the St. John's area of
- Limerick, a desolate place ideally suited for the disposing of
- bodies. To complicate matters, William Hartston, the chess
- correspondent for the rival Independent, proposed that the map
- represented Continental Europe and that Terry's body had been
- thrown from a ferry in the Bay of Naples.
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