Read A Talent For Destruction Online
Authors: Sheila Radley
The Rector's eyes were a vivid, unfocused blue. He hesitated for a moment, and then said loudly and clearly, âI can tell you nothing more.'
âCounty operations room, Inspector Tait here.'
âQuantrill, Breckham. The inquest's over: verdict open, file closed. I tried to get an admission from the Aingers but they wriggled out of it.'
âOh, for God's sake! Didn't you â?'
âDon't let's hold another inquest. I went as far as I could â a lot further than I should have done, considering we've no evidence of a crime â but they were obviously expecting something of the sort and they came prepared. I spoke to them together and separately, but I got nowhere.'
âI knew that I should have been there.'
âWhat the hell do you think you could have done that I didn't? They're not thick, they're an intelligent couple who knew why they'd been sent for and had planned exactly what they were going to say. But I'm not going to leave it at that. They know now that I'm suspicious of them, and I'm going to try to rattle them by letting them see that they're being watched. And for a start, I'm going to watch the Reverend Robin bury what's left of Athol Garrity. Monday morning, nine-thirty at the town cemetery. If you're not on duty, do you want to come?'
â
Now
you ask me,' complained Inspector Tait.
âSuit yourself,' snapped Chief Inspector Quantrill, and slammed down the receiver.
On Sunday night, winter returned briefly to East Anglia. A cold northerly airstream lowered the temperature sharply. Freezing fog gathered, shrouding every hedge and tree so closely that when it dispersed in the early hours it left clinging deposits of rime.
By nine-fifteen on Monday morning, with the low sun shining from a cloudless sky, the landscape was a dazzling white. Hoar frost filigreed every twig and frond, making Breckham Market cemetery seem, for the space of a hour or two, ethereal.
Quantrill chose to arrive early, driving along the infelicitously named Cemetery Road with the sun visor down to keep some of the blinding brightness out of his eyes. The road was semi-rural, used only by local traffic, and the Chief Inspector was able to park close to the cemetery gates, immediately behind the Rector's Morris 1300. His companion, Detective Constable Ian Wigby, got out and went to talk to a cub reporter from the local newspaper, who was loitering for the purpose of extracting as much lineage as possible from his
Skeleton in Parson's Close: Mystery Man from Down Under
story. Quantrill was about to walk through the gates when he saw that Gillian Ainger's father, Henry Bowers, was huddled in the back of the Rectory car.
It was persistence rather than kindness that prompted Quantrill to speak to the old man. Henry Bowers might be decrepit but he was not gaga, and according to Martin Tait he had been lively enough the previous summer. There was a chance that he might be able to remember something useful about the Australian, and Quantrill was determined to cover every possibility before he finally admitted defeat.
He opened the driver's door and put his head inside the car. âMorning, Henry.'
The old man was sitting slack as a turtle inside the gaping neck of his heavy overcoat, staring vacantly into space and sucking a peppermint. When Quantrill addressed him, his body jerked with surprise and his mouth fell open.
âSorry,' apologized the Chief Inspector. âDidn't mean to startle you. Remember me â Doug Quantrill? We had a drink together at the Boot a few weeks ago.'
âOh ar?' mumbled Henry Bowers uneasily. He peered up through the bristle of his eyebrows, wiped his damp mouth and shifted his peppermint into the opposite cheek. âI know, you're the copper. Bought me a nice drop o'whisky ⦠but I didn't talk, did I? Didn't let the family down.'
âNo, you didn't let them down,' Quantrill agreed. He sat himself behind the wheel and closed the door against the cold, turning sideways to talk to the old man. âYou're up and about early today.'
Henry Bowers nodded. âGot to go to the health centre this morning,' he said importantly. âGot to be fitted for a truss. Our Gillian's going to take me as soon as they've finished the funeral.'
âIs your daughter here?' said Quantrill, surprised.
âAr. They're burying the Aussie, and he's got no relations over here so they thought they'd both go. Looks better that way. Looks as though they cared.'
âAnd do they?'
The old man fumbled about in his pocket and produced a pack of peppermints. His shaky fingers had difficulty in tearing the wrapping, and Quantrill had to restrain himself from taking over. âDo they care about the Australian's death?' he persisted.
âNot them. Why should they? Bloody good riddance, if you ask me. Want a peppermint?'
âNot just now, thanks. Look, Henry, I need to know how that man died.'
âThat's no secret, now the coroner's sat on him. All that fizzy canned beer he drank ⦠probably choked hisself to death. That's what it said in the
Daily Press
.' He put another mint, with a piece of wrapper still adhering to it, into his mouth.
âYes, but I want to know what he was doing just before he died. Was he by any chance at the Rectory?'
Henry Bowers's watery eyes were suddenly shrewd. âDidn't think you knew for sure when he did die. Not according to the paper.'
âWe don't. I'm talking about the day when he was last seen, July the 29th last year.'
âOh ar. Well, the Aussie wouldn't have been at the Rectory then, because
he
âd told him to keep away, weeks before.'
âThe Rector had told him?'
âAr. They'd had a row â about brass-rubbing, or something o' the sort. Anyway, the Aussie didn't show his face after that. Bloody good job, too. Couldn't stand the feller. D'y know what he had the nerve to call me?
Grandad
! Bloody Aussie â¦' He sucked vigorously at his peppermint, looked surprised, slowly pushed out his tongue from between his dark lips, and picked off a fragment of wet wrapping-paper with the tough nails of his thumb and forefinger.
Quantrill stared at him thoughtfully. âAnd what about you, Henry? Do
you
know anything about Athol Garrity's death?'
âI could ha'told you about that right from the start. Too much canned beer, that was his trouble. I told him it'd rot his guts.' The old man brightened, and pointed over Quantrill's shoulder at the approaching hearse. âHere he comes! They've taken long enough to get him buried, eh? It's weeks since they found him.'
âHe came to no harm while he waited,' said Quantrill drily. He opened the car door. The conversation, like most of the others he'd had concerning the Australian, had been tantalizingly inconclusive. âAll right, then, Henry,' he said. âMind what you get up to.'
âBetter take a peppermint,' suggested the old man. âIt's always cold enough to perish you in that cemetery.'
Quantrill helped himself from the proffered pack. Henry Bowers was looking not at him but at the hearse as it turned in through the gates. He had on his face a look of sly glee that the Chief Inspector had once or twice before noticed on old people who watched their juniors being buried; presumably a manifestation of triumph at the thought that they had outlived someone younger and stronger. Such childishness was one of the aspects of ageing that Quantrill, at forty-seven, found particularly unattractive. He had long ago decided that he himself would prefer not to live much beyond seventy, although he had sufficient imagination to concede that he might, once he passed sixty, begin revising his idea of what constituted a ripe old age.
He pocketed the peppermint, nodded to Henry Bowers, shut the car door behind him and walked through the cemetery gates. The hearse was travelling decorously up the gravelled centre path, and the Chief Inspector took a short cut over the frosted grass, between two rows of tall white marble Victorian headstones, to reach the area that was in current use.
There were more people present than he had anticipated. Martin Tait had come, and was standing with DC Wigby a short distance from the newly dug grave. The verger of St Botolph's, Edgar Blore, stood in his black cassock on the far side of the grave, with the newspaper reporter, and the man who lived in the lodge at the cemetery gates and trebled as the town's park-keeper, gardener, and grave-digger.
The Reverend Robin Ainger, looking like a '30s film star in the full-length black winter cloak that he wore over his surplice, was waiting beside the path for the coffin to be removed from the hearse. At the graveside, where the relatives would normally stand, were Gillian Ainger and a man of about fifty who looked, with his neatly brushed greying hair, gold-rimmed glasses, and tailored overcoat, like a successful professional adviser.
âMorning, Martin,' Quantrill said as he joined the other policemen. âDoes either of you know the man with Mrs Ainger?'
âNo,' said Wigby, âbut I thought we ought to, so I asked the verger. His name's Reynolds. Don't know his occupation, but he lives somewhere near Yarchester. He's been over here on Sundays quite often during the past six months â he goes to Evensong with Mrs Ainger.'
âHe's either a very good friend,' said Tait, âor a solicitor. I don't see what he's doing out here so early on a Monday morning otherwise.'
The three policemen looked across the intervening low modern headstones at Gillian Ainger and her companion, and were interested to see that she was conscious of their presence. She turned her head to say something urgent to Reynolds, and then moved her position so that she was partly masked from their view by the frost-candied branches of a rose-bush. But they could see enough to observe Reynolds stepping closer to her, and putting a hand under her elbow.
Wigby slapped his sheepskin-gloved hands together. âEither a very friendly solicitor, or a very solicitous friend,' he suggested breezily. Tait, the shorter man, contrived to look down his nose at him.
âI see what you mean, sir,' he said to Quantrill. âGillian certainly seems worried about us.'
âI'd give a lot to know why,' said the Chief Inspector. He reconsidered his offer in the light of his bank balance, and made a hasty amendment. âAt least, I'd be prepared to make a small donation to the church restoration fund out of my own pocket.' He took off his hat and nudged Ian Wigby to do the same; with nothing in the coffin but bones, and no mourning relatives to consider, the detective constable had temporarily forgotten the proprieties.
Preceded by the Rector, the bearers carried the coffin towards the grave. The burial expenses of the stranger were having to be met by the local ratepayers, and so the ceremony was being performed as cheaply as possible. Quantrill approved of it that way, not only in the interests of economy but because it was simple and traditional. The undertaker was a small Breckham builder and joiner, who made coffins as an extension of his trade. He wore the same black suit that he had worn at funerals for the past thirty years, and his hearse was a vintage Daimler; the bearers were his workmen, taken off their regular work for an hour to put on suits and shoulder the coffin.
âAt least he's nice and light,' muttered Ian Wigby irreverently, as Athol Garrity's scant remains were lowered easily into the grave.
The Reverend Robin Ainger, hearing the remark on the still frosty air, hesitated in the middle of
Man that is born of woman hath but a short time to live
. He looked up, and for the first time noticed the stolid row of policemen watching him. He resumed almost immediately, but his recital was mechanical; he glanced anxiously at his wife while he repeated the next two verses, then faltered over
Thou knowest, Lord, the secrets of our hearts
. All three policemen stared at him, willing him to crack. But his wife was looking at him too, willing him to go on, and he seemed to pull himself together. The verger stepped forward to cast earth on the coffin, and Ainger finished the committal service in a firm voice and record time, with his breath going up like smoke in the cold air.
As soon as he decently could, Quantrill clapped his hat back on his head and put Henry Bowers's peppermint into his mouth. As the old man had said, the cemetery was perishingly cold. He watched Robin Ainger and the man called Reynolds walk away briskly, one on either side of Gillian, their feet crunching on the whitened grass. The gravedigger moved in immediately to complete his work, and frozen lumps of earth began to thud down on the coffin.
âWell, what did you make of it, Martin?' asked Quantrill as he began to move towards the gate. But Inspector Tait lingered, studying a new headstone that had caught his eye.
âMichael Dade,' Tait said. âWasn't he the church organist? I met him last summer, and he died in October ⦠that would have been just after I got my promotion and moved to Yarchester. Thirty-one when he died ⦠what was it, an accident?'
âSuicide,' said DC Wigby. âHe was disappointed in love, so he put a plastic bag over his head.'
âI met him just once, at the Rectory,' said Tait. âA small dark nervy man, with a big nose and a bad stammer.'
âThat was him,' said Wigby. He corrected Tait with relish: â
Deputy
organist at the church, though. I did the enquiry into his death â you won't remember it, Mr Quantrill, you were on leave at the time. He got it into his head that some foreign girl had promised to marry him, but then she went off. He kept hoping that she'd come back, or at least write to him, but she didn't. He finally gave up, wrote a note telling his widowed mother to look after herself, put the bag over his head and died of asphyxia. It was a perfectly straightforward case of suicide.'
âWho was the girl?' asked Tait.
âAh, that I didn't find out. According to his mother she was a student at Yarchester. Not that his poor old Mum had ever set eyes on her, because Michael didn't take her home. And he had no real friends, so he didn't confide in anyone.'