Authors: Catherine Aird
âPoor boy,' said Alison. âI'm glad now his mother isn't still alive.'
âSilly fool,' said Jennifer.
âYou shouldn't say that, Jennifer.' Alison admonished her sister. âWe don't know what makes people be like Derek. It isn't as if he could have helped being like he was.'
âHe knew the score,' said Jennifer Kirk.
âHe knew there was no hope,' said Alison, while Horace spooned a large quantity of sugar into his tea. âThey told him up at the hospital months ago that they couldn't do any more for him.'
âJust to go on taking the tablets,' said Jennifer astringently.
âAnd that wasn't easy,' protested the older and gentler Alison. âHe had to take so many of them you see, Horace. Thirty a day, would you believe it?'
Horace nodded behind his mug of tea.
âBut like it says in the Bible,' said Jennifer, âas you sow, so shall you reap.'
âI really do think you should be a little more charitable, dear,' murmured her sister.
âHe did sow some wild oats, though,' said Jennifer. âAnd in some funny places.'
âAnd how!' muttered Horace under his breath.
Alison, who hadn't heard what he'd said, went on. âDon't forget, Jennifer, that there, but for the grace of God, go us all.'
Jennifer gave a rather unladylike snort. âI think it's really rather unlikely in the circumstances that either of us could ever have behaved like Derek.'
âAnd in any case,' said Alison, ducking this issue, âone shouldn't speak ill of the dead.'
Horace Boller offered what comfort lay within his own hedonistic philosophy. âHe had a good run for his money anyway.'
âYes, that was nice, wasn't it,' said Alison Kirk sentimentally. âThat he could enjoy his last year like he did, I mean. He even gave us some money for the sanctuary.'
âWell, as Derek so often said,' commented Jennifer drily, âhe couldn't take it with him.'
âHe lived it up while he could,' grunted Horace Boller, refilling his mug without asking. âOr so they told me over at the Ornum Arms at Almstone.'
âIt was one of his favourite places,' said Alison wistfully. âHe really liked it there. It was very popular, he told us. Lots of people he knew always in the barâ¦'
Jennifer Kirk remained unimpressed. âDrink never helped anyone. And not him, ever.'
âIf you want all your cats to have a bit of fish,' interrupted Horace Boller, pointing in the direction of the basket he had brought, âthen you'd better get that big ginger tom off it pretty smartish.'
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
âWe've got to go where, sir?' Detective Constable William Edward Crosby, by no means the brightest star in the detective firmament of F Division, was always keen to travel anywhere, provided only that he could drive a police car there at the fastest possible speed.
âThe Greatorex Museum,' said Sloan, adding by way of self-preservation that there was no hurry about getting there. âNo hurry at all, Crosby, seeing that what we're going over to the museum to take a look at has been dead and gone a very long time and is still in its coffin.'
By rights, Detective Sergeant Gelven, competent and experienced, should have been at his right hand but Detective Sergeant Gelven had gone sick of the police palsy or its modern-day equivalent and Sloan had been left with Detective Constable Crosby, inexperienced and incompetent, in his stead.
âAnd what we should actually be doing,' said Sloan tightly, âis anticipating the trouble likely to be caused by a sudden and severe shortage of heroin in our patch and doing something about it ahead of the action.'
âI don't see why that should be our worry, sir.' Crosby pulled the steering wheel round with two fingers of one hand before remembering that both hands should have been on the wheel in the classic ten minutes to two o'clock hold. He hastily assumed this position.
âOh, you don't, don't you?' said Sloan with some acerbity. âAnd why not, may I ask?'
âBecause the junkies can't get their hands on the heroin if it's safely over at the analysts.'
âHad it occurred to you, Crosby, that if the new supplies aren't available, something might happen to the price of what stock the dealers have still got?'
The constable changed down a gear for a tight bend ahead. âIt'll go up, I suppose.'
âIt will go up by leaps and bounds. And,' Sloan forecasted, âsomething else will happen to it, too.'
âSir?'
âIt'll be adulterated down to make it seem to go further. And that, Crosby, means trouble. Big trouble. All round.'
âBut, surely, sir,' Crosby objected naively, âthat's not our problem either.'
âThink again,' advised Sloan.
âIt's not us who are buying the stuff.' He sounded mulish now. âIt's the addicts.'
âFor starters,' spelled out Sloan, âit means much more acquisitive crime in the area to raise money to pay the dealers more for a less pure drugâ¦'
âYes, sir, butâ¦'
âRemember, the heroin habit is still going to need feeding whatever the state of the supply.' The expert who had come down to Calleshire to lecture to the force about drugs had taken a line from one of Shakespeare's sonnets as his text, âFeeding on that which doth preserve the ill', but Sloan forbore to remind Detective Constable Crosby of this. Instead he said, âAnd so it means some addicts will lose their wick without their usual fixes. Turn very nasty, some of them will if they're cut off from the stuff.'
The drugs expert had gone on a bit about fungible economies as well but Sloan had decided that while perishable goods consumed in use might well be a problem down Mexico way, they weren't in Calleshire.
âWe could pick a few of 'em up now, sir,' suggested Crosby with something approaching animation. âBefore they turn nasty. There's that little runt, Goddard, who hangs about under the railway arches most nightsâ¦'
âAh,' said Sloan with satisfaction, âI knew I'd heard the name before. No, Crosby, he's only small fry. And so, in a way, is Horace Boller. The excise people have let him think they've accepted his story about not knowing what was in his lobster pot because it's the big fish we're after. He might even lead us to him,' he added without much hope.
âWe could always arrest Wayne Goddard for possession with intent to supply, sir.'
âIt wouldn't get us any nearer the people we really want.' They hadn't needed that expert on drugs to tell them this in Calleshire.
Crosby's face cleared. âI get you, sir. You want us to sit back and see where any trouble from this missing consignment leads.'
âYou've got it in three,' said Sloan unkindly. âBy the way, Crosby, if you had a vast amount of money in small denomination notes what would you do with it?'
The constable sounded quite reproachful. âBuy a blue Jaguar XKR, sir, naturally.'
âNaturally.' Sloan sighed. âLook, there's the road for the Greatorex.'
âSo why are we going there, then, sir?' asked the constable, disappointed. Granary Row, where the Greatorex Museum was situated, was nowhere near far enough away from the centre of Berebury for his taste. Crosby liked long, fast journeys against the clock, or, better still, hot pursuits; not sedate progresses round the built-up parts of the market town at moderate speed.
âI think we could call it an ego trip,' murmured Sloan caustically. As far as he was concerned he would only be really interested if the mummy were stuffed full of heroin.
âIf I had lots and lots of money, sir,' said Crosby, as they entered the museum car park, âreally lots, then I'd have one of those, too.' He pointed to a vintage green Bentley with polished coachwork and gleaming chrome headlamps. âJust for show, of course.'
âNaturally,' said Sloan again. âAnd a TVR Grantura for Sundays, I suppose.'
The curator of the museum, like Sloan, lost no time at all in categorizing the police visit as a sheer waste of time and public money. âIt's bureaucracy gone mad, Inspector,' declared Marcus Fixby-Smith heatedly. He turned to his deputy, a thin colourless woman, who flanked his desk. âI've never heard such utter nonsense, have you, Hilary?'
Hilary Collins shook her head.
âI can assure you, Inspector,' said the curator, âthat every single piece of Colonel Caversham's legacy to the museum here is only of archaeological interest.'
âAnd archival,' put in his deputy in support. âI'm afraid, though, we haven't had time to go through all of the written material yet, let alone begin to catalogue the collection. There's rather a lot of it.'
âThe colonel's early travels are particularly well documented,' said Fixby-Smith. âHe was a pioneer in his day.'
âA true explorer,' said Hilary Collins reverently. âThey don't come like that any more.'
âWhich is why we're so pleased to have this legacy of all the artefacts in his collection,' said Fixby-Smith. He gave Sloan a remarkably shrewd look. âI promise you, Inspector, that it's got very little intrinsic value outside the museum world.'
Detective Inspector Sloan, who had been a policeman long enough to know that everything â but everything â had some value to someone, somewhere, duly made a note.
âPresumably,' went on Fixby-Smith, âthat's why he left it all to the Greatorex in the first place.'
âThe family might have chucked it, you mean?' asked Detective Constable Crosby insouciantly.
âThey might,' Fixby-Smith said, adding disparagingly, âYou never can tell with people who don't know the first thing about artefacts.'
âBut the relations get the real money, do they?' enquired the detective constable.
The curator stiffened. âI couldn't tell you who the residuary legatees are. We at the museum haven't been informed.'
âI don't think that's our concern anyway, at this stage, sir.' In principle, Detective Inspector Sloan was all in favour of âblue skies research' â finding out all you can before you begin an inquiry â but that was something that didn't seem to apply here.
Hilary Collins said diffidently, âBut surely, Inspector, we can do what the coroner wants and certify that the mummy is merely an ancient survival? After all, even if we don't know the exact provenance we do know that it's Egyptian.'
âI'm afraid, madam,' said Detective Inspector Sloan with genuine regret, âthat the coroner requires rather more than your formal certification.'
âAncient isn't the right word anyway,' interrupted Marcus Fixby-Smith. âEven without seeing any radiocarbon datings I am prepared to state on paper, on the basis of its style and condition alone, that the mummy in question is definitely in the region of three thousand years old. Isn't that good enough for the man?'
âWhat the coroner is asking for,' said Sloan, euphemistically paraphrasing as best he could as he went along, âis the written opinion of a registered medical practitioner.'
âThen I only hope,' said Fixby-Smith acidly, âthat that practitioner has some idea of how much damage can be done to a mummy like this just by starting to open it up in the wrong way. I've been in touch with a palaeo-pathologist who's an acknowledged authority on the subject. Miles, that is, Professor Upton, advises me that the whole procedure calls for very great care.'
âI'll tell the doctor that,' promised Sloan. âYou must understand,' he hastened on, âthat we're not in any way doubting the professional expertise of either of you here.' Sloan looked from one curator to the other and said, âBut surely, at the moment, your opinion could be based only on a view of the outer coffin?'
âYes, but no one's going inside it, no one at all,' Fixby-Smith started up again with vigour, âdoctor or not, until it's been properly X-rayed first. I hope that's clearly understood. And that whoever does the X-rays is familiar with radioactive isotope techniques.'
âI'll be sure to pass your message on to Dr Dabbe, sir.'
âDr Dabbe?' said Fixby-Smith.
âHe's the Consultant Forensic Pathologist to the Berebury and District Hospital Trust,' said Sloan.
âThen, perhaps,' suggested Miss Collins timidly, âhe might be able to tell us the cause of death of the mummy at the same time.'
Chapter Four
Stained
âI would be the first to agree, Sloan,' said Dr Dabbe, with whom the two policemen were discussing the problem, âthat the cause of death can often be determined in really old bodies.'
âEven after three thousand years, doctor?' asked Sloan. He and Detective Constable Crosby were sitting in the consultant pathologist's office at the hospital in Berebury.
âYou can tell a lot about illness from some mummies,' said the doctor. He nodded in the direction of the mortuary beyond his office. âMore than you can from some modern bodies.'
âI don't see how that's possible, doctor.' Crosby was at his most mulish. As far as the police constable was concerned, being in the pathologist's office was better than being in the actual mortuary â but only just. âOur doctor doesn't even know what's wrong with my granny's stomach and she's still around.'
âAh, that's because mummies are dead before they're examined,' said the pathologist by way of professional solidarity. âEasier to get at the evidence so to speak. The abdomen in the living is
terra incognita.
In the dead it's terra firma.'
The constable looked unconvinced.
âBut,' continued Dabbe, âit's only in theory, gentlemen, that you can tell a lot about mummiesâ¦'
âIn theory, doctor?' Sloan hastened into speech before Crosby's grandmother's illness could come back into the exchange.
âIn theory,' repeated the pathologist firmly. âAnd that's only if we were to open up that mummy over at the museum and I was to examine the remains for you.'