Seated once again at the parlour table, they called in Mostyn, the elder of the Evans family. He was a large man, but Crippen felt that he must have lost weight lately, as his wrinkled neck seemed too narrow for the collar of his flannel shirt. A thick thatch of iron-grey hair surmounted a big, craggy face, from which a pair of watery blue eyes looked out with disconcerting directness.
âYou farmed Ty Croes for many years, I understand?' asked the DI, rather deferentially in the presence of this chief of the clan.
âI was born in the room above this one and worked on the land here since I was about four years old, feeding fowls and herding sheep,' he said proudly in a voice that would have earned him a place in the bass section of any choir.
âAnd then you handed it on to your son and your brother's lad?'
Mostyn nodded, folding his large, veined hands placidly in his lap. âI lost interest when my wife died five years ago. The boys will get it all when I die, and they can work it until then. I still lend a hand when necessary, but after seventy-six years I reckon I deserve a bit of a rest.'
Crippen gave an almost imperceptible nod to his sergeant, and Nichols took up the questioning. âI gather you weren't all that keen on Tom Littleman becoming a partner in the machinery business?'
Mostyn shook his leonine head. âIt was alright for him to come here as a mechanic on a wage. I grant you, he knew his stuff where engines were concerned, but he started going downhill as a worker. The boys were daft to cut him into a share of the business. I warned them against him, but they would have their way.'
âWhy were you so against him, Mr Evans?'
The old farmer considered this slowly. He rubbed his hands together and then stroked his bristly chin. âThere was something about him from the first. He was an outsider, see, from up in England somewhere. Never fitted in here, always seemed to hold himself apart from us.'
âI don't quite follow you, Mr Evans,' said Crippen. âDid he cause any trouble?'
Again there was a pause, but shorter this time.
âOnly when his boozing started to interfere with his work. By then, it was none of my business â I'd given the place over to Aubrey and Jeff â but I warned them! We lost some customers over it, and we've got plenty of competitors. Not delivering on time is a serious business. These days since the horses went, a farmer without a tractor is worse than losing the use of his legs!'
John Nichols was busy writing in his notebook, though more formal statements would have to be taken from everyone later.
The detective inspector brought the questioning around to more immediate matters. âYou know, of course, that Littleman was strangled and then an attempt made to cover it up?'
The older man nodded. âMust have been somebody from his past â or his present! God knows what he was up to in Brecon after he left here every day.'
âAnd you've no idea what that might have been? Did he ever let drop anything to you about his private life?'
âNaw, did he hell!' exclaimed Mostyn contemptuously. âTight-mouthed bugger, he was!'
The rest of the interview was barren of anything useful, and soon the father went back to the kitchen for another cup of tea and to discuss his interrogation with Aubrey and the others.
Arthur Crippen stared out of the small parlour window across the muddy yard to the large milking parlour and the cow pen alongside it.
âLike the woman, I reckon our Mostyn could tell us a bit more if he had a mind to,' he said ruminatively.
Nichols nodded. âI got the same impression. Think this Littleman was making a nuisance of himself with the two wives?'
His superior shrugged. âIt bears keeping in mind. We'll be having another go at them later on. Now where's that damned kid Shane. He's the last one, until we start visiting the neighbours, wherever they are.'
As if in answer to his question, he saw a red David Brown Cropmaster drive into the yard, pulling a filthy muck spreader. The tractor itself was not much better, caked in mud and manure. It stopped near the cattle pen and the driver vaulted off, a lanky youth in soiled dungarees with a woollen bob-cap on his head.
âHere he is. Better late than never,' grunted Crippen.
There was a short delay, obviously caused by Betsan forbidding the boy to enter the parlour in such a state. When he put his head around the door and hesitantly entered, he was in a check shirt and brown trousers, with only socks on his feet, his muddy boots having been confiscated.
He sat nervously on the chair between the two police officers, his narrow, wary face regarding them suspiciously. He had an untidy shock of mousy hair hanging over his ears and neck. John Nichols, a former military policeman, grinned to himself when he thought of the National Service haircut that Shane would soon have to endure.
âYou're waiting for your call-up papers, I hear?' he said easily.
The young man shook his head. âI've had me papers already. Got to go to Brecon Barracks at the end of the month.'
This was where the regimental headquarters of the South Wales Borderers was situated.
âNow then, lad, you were the one who found Tom's body?'
The DI made it more of a question than a statement of fact.
Shane scowled. He had seen plenty of police films where the finder was always the main suspect.
âThat don't mean I had anything to do with it,' he muttered.
âNot saying it was, Shane. I just want to get things straight for the record. Now the body was just as we saw it when we came later, was it? You didn't touch anything?'
âNo bloody fear! I took one look and ran like hell to me bike!'
âYou worked with him every day,' said the sergeant. âHow did you get on with him?'
Shane Williams suddenly became animated. âHe was a bastard! I hated his guts!' he snarled.
Nichols raised an eyebrow at his inspector, but Crippen seemed unmoved.
âWhy do you say that, Shane?' he asked softly.
âHe was always at me, complaining and shouting. Sometimes he pushed me around, when he'd had a few too many.'
âDrunk, you mean? Was he incapable, sometimes?'
âNot incapable enough not to clout me across the earhole if I didn't fetch him something quick enough!' whined the youth.
âYou were a sort of apprentice. Didn't he teach you anything?'
âOnly how to keep out of his reach whenever I could,' answered the boy cynically. âI learned bugger all about machinery from him. All I was was a gofer â go for this, go for that!'
âWhat about when Jeff Morton was there? He did a lot of the mechanical work, didn't he?'
The young man sneered. âTom was clever. He never had a go at me when Jeff was there. He could cover up his boozing, too, when either Aubrey or Jeff was around. They don't know the half of it.'
âWhy did you stick it, then? Didn't you complain to the others?'
Shane seemed to pull himself more upright from his usual slouch. âNah, I'm not a sneak! Anyway, I'm leaving the bloody place in a few weeks.' He suddenly realized the changed circumstances. âThat's if I've still got a job here now â and that sod's gone anyway.'
Crippen fixed him with a steely eye. âAre you glad he's dead, Shane?' he demanded.
The lad slumped again. âI hated his guts, but I never wanted him croaked,' he mumbled.
Sergeant Nichols changed direction once again.
âYou were with Littleman every day. Did you ever learn anything about his life away from the farm? Anything that might have a bearing on his death?'
Shane stared suspiciously at the detective. âWhat d'you mean?'
âDo you know what interests he had outside work, apart from drinking? Did he mention women, or gambling or anything like that?'
An almost lecherous grin appeared on the youth's face. âHe was fond of the dames, I reckon. I saw him eyeing Betsan and Rhian when they happened to come down to the barn. That wasn't often, but sometimes they were in the pickup or Land Rover with Aubrey or Jeff.'
âIs that all? Just looking at them?' snapped Crippen, but Shane just shrugged. Then he added another snippet.
âI saw him in Brecon a few times, on the weekend, like. I used to go for a few pints with my pals sometimes and I saw him twice in one of the pubs, with women.'
âAnything odd about that, then?' asked Nichols.
âIt was a different girl each time, half his age and pretty tarty, both of them.'
âWhat about gambling?' asked the inspector, not too concerned with accounts of sitting in pubs with loose women.
âHe was mad on the pools, spent an hour every week filling them in. And he was always reading the racing news in the paper and marking things with a pencil, so I suppose he was having a flutter on the gee-gees or the dogs.'
As they had with the other witnesses, the two officers got virtually nothing more out of him and Shane slouched off to his muck-spreading, as there was no work in the barn until the forensic team and the police had finished with the place.
After yet another cup of tea and a slice of fruit cake supplied by Betsan Evans, the two detectives thanked the family for their hospitality but warned them that they would have to have their statements taken down and signed later that day.
Back in their black Wolseley, Nichols drove down to the barn in time to see the two from the forensic laboratory before they left for Cardiff.
âNot a lot to find, Mr Crippen,' admitted the liaison officer. âWe've taped all the parts that might be involved and found a few fibres on the hook of that hoist.'
Dr Rees looked up from signing exhibit labels on the brown envelopes containing their samples and waved a hand at the interior of the barn, now exposed through the open door. âThere's so much junk in here, we can't possibly cover everything. I suspect you'll have a similar problem with your fingerprints. Probably everyone for miles around has left their dabs here.'
When the laboratory men had packed up and left, Arthur Crippen sat with his sergeant in the car in the yard outside the barn, each having a quiet smoke.
âNot much further forward, are we?' complained John Nichols.
âIt's got to be one of these on the farm,' muttered the DI. âThey're not telling us everything â yet.' He emphasized the last word in a menacing way.
âSo what do we do next?' asked Nichols. âI can't see the lab telling us anything we don't know already.'
Crippen flicked his cigarette end out through the window to join the others that were already squashed into the mud.
âYou'd better organize a house-to-house, I suppose. More like a farm-to-farm out here. Get a couple of DCs on to it, ask about any strangers knocking about, the usual routine â though I suspect it will be a waste of time.'
The sergeant started the car and they began making their way back to Brecon.
âI have to go and bring the DCI up to date,' grunted Crippen. âThen have a look at Littleman's lodgings.'
âWe sent DC Lewis around there last night. The address was in the dead man's wallet and a key was in his pocket. He rented two rooms above that chip shop near the market.'
The inspector sighed as he looked at the green countryside passing the windows. âThis is a bugger of a case! It should be so simple, but I bet it'll be hell to sort out.'
âWe've only got the pathologist's word that it
is
a murder,' observed Nichols. âI hope we're barking up the right tree, so to speak!'
âPryor seems to know what he's talking about,' replied Crippen. âWhat else could it be? The guy couldn't have strangled himself, then failed with a hanging, so then he laid down under a tractor and kicked the blocks away!'
Grudgingly, the sergeant had to agree.
SIX
S
tow-on-the-Wold was an ancient town in the north-east corner of Gloucestershire. Filled with old buildings of Cotswold stone, it was redolent with history. Its churches, hostelries and public buildings owed their existence to its position at the junction of ancient roads and the prosperity brought by the wool trade, the backbone of English commerce through the Middle Ages. It claimed to have the oldest pub in England, going back to the tenth century.
None of this was in Richard Pryor's mind as he parked his Humber in Market Square. It was about sixty miles from Tintern, taking almost two hours to drive through Gloucester and Cheltenham, and he could kill for a cup of tea.
âTime for refreshment, Angela,' he announced, looking at his watch. âWe've got half an hour before we see this chap.'
They walked through the picturesque streets, between the old buildings of yellow-brown stone, and found a cafe of the âolde tea shoppe' variety. He held the door open for his partner, who today was looking even more elegant than usual in a tailored grey suit with a narrow waist and a long pencil skirt. High heels and a small jaunty hat completed the picture, and he wondered if the solicitor would believe that she was a senior scientist of considerable experience.
Angela saw him looking at her and correctly guessed what he was thinking. âToo dressy for the occasion, Richard?' she said sweetly. âA girl's got to put on the style now and then, after sitting for weeks at a bench squirting sera into tubes!'
He grinned and, as they found a table in the window, pulled out a chair for her. âYou look bloody gorgeous, partner!'
Richard knew she was very keen on fashion and spent a lot of money when she had a shopping spree in Bath or London. He suspected that her well-off parents subsidized this, as certainly the income from Garth House in their first six months wouldn't run to the outfit she had on today.