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Authors: S. T. Haymon

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Chapter Twenty Six

Anna March hadn't blessed him – far from it – when he had emerged, fuming and frustrated, into the Coachyard, leaving Winter and Mrs Coryton – the one ashy-grey, the other banded with purple across nose and cheek, staring at each other as though each were seeing a new species. Afterwards, the detective decided that she must have been looking out for him, the door to her workshop ready locked, the security shutter in place. At the time, watching her bearing down on him, sibylline in her draperies, his only thought had been: ‘Christ – not now!'

‘Hi, there!' he greeted her, overcompensating.

There was no returning smile.

‘I really do think,' she began, in that hectoring tone he had, upon no evidence whatever come to associate with low church and high fibre, ‘that you might at least have had the decency to come yourself and let me know about Mike Botley having taken my earrings, instead of leaving it to Jane Coryton to tell me.'

‘Give us a chance!' Jurnet protested. ‘I've just this minute found out myself.'

‘Oh –' the woman looked taken aback, but only for an instant. That she should be put into the position of needing to apologise appeared to be only additional cause for dissatisfaction. ‘Our wonderful police force! I must say it seems funny you had to get Jane to do your work for you.'

Jurnet swallowed hard. He said easily: ‘All complaints to be addressed to the Chief Constable.' Adding, and, for Danny's sake, even managing a grin: ‘First time anyone's complained because an Inspector
hasn't
called!'

‘I wish you wouldn't make a joke out of everything. Danny's very upset with you. He can't bear to see me unhappy, and what was I to think when it was as plain as pikestaff you didn't believe a word I told you about the earrings, and about Chad – oh, and everything! My work's suffered, I haven't been able to settle to anything. Even Tommy's sensed something's wrong and has gone right off his food –'

Tommy as well! Jurnet thought. She wants it all, the greedy cow, she grudges every last crumb. Wishing with all his heart that he could imagine Miriam so ferociously possessive, he said, still making himself sound amicable: ‘Well, now you're off the hook you must all be feeling fine again. All three of you.' He did not feel it necessary to add that, in his book, nobody who had become, however, peripherally, caught up in a murder investigation was ever off the hook until the culprit was delivered up to justice.

‘Danny's gone in to Angleby. I haven't had the chance to tell him yet.' Spoken as if this too were the detective's fault.

‘Never mind. Pleasure in store.'

Anna March said angrily: ‘I know you think he's dim. Believe me, Ben Jurnet, he can see through
you
!'

‘I should hope so,' the other returned simply. ‘I've never pulled any blinds down, where Danny is concerned.'

Behind him, perched on the defunct fountain in the centre of the yard, the peacock let out a despairing cry.

The detective wheeled about in the baking glare.

‘Doesn't anyone ever think to give that blinking bird a drink of water?'

He had earlier noticed a standpipe in one corner of the yard, with a bucket hung over the tap. Now, thankful for the excuse to cut short the conversation, he went over and filled the bucket; brought it back to the centre of the yard and tipped the water into the basin. The peacock, perched on the rim, supervised the operation with what seemed to the detective sardonic amusement.

No wonder. As fast as he poured, the water found its way through the cracked stone, and spread itself out on the cobbles. Jurnet could feel it soaking into his socks.

Anna March was laughing, the sharp-nosed cow.

Jurnet waved to her cheerily.

‘Now you know why I never joined the Scouts! Give Tommy my love!'

On the drive in front of the house, parked next to his own car, and in front of the stone bulls guarding the bridge over the moat, Jurnet had come upon the two Hungarians, Ferenc Szanto and Jeno Matyas, unloading their gear from the latter's small Renault. Which was to say, Szanto was doing the unloading, watched by his friend propped on his sticks, shoulders hunched, his face shaded by a straw hat whose underbrim had been lined with some green material which imparted to the pale skin something of the faint, unearthly glow Jurnet had sometimes noticed in corpses on the point of putrescence.

‘The Detective-Inspector!' Szanto had hailed him jauntily. ‘Just the man I wanted to see! I have made a discovery of the greatest interest!' He put down a canvas holdall in order to clasp the detective's hand and shake it warmly. ‘Tell me – do the police know that madness is catching? Because – can you believe it? – thanks to this lunatic here, I, a man hitherto sound in all my faculties, have just spent hours, starting from before daybreak, bent double in a wooden box, horseflies biting, my spine fractured with the weight of binoculars, one cup of instant coffee, and a sandwich filled with sand – for what? To peep at young girls dancing naked on the beach, perhaps? In that would be sense. No, Inspector – to look at birds! Birds! Flap, flap, they fly. Flap, flap, they sit down again. I tell Jeno the excitement is killing me. Especially since, for most of the time, I do not even see this miraculous flap, flap, which sends him into ecstasies. Perhaps you do not know that there is on binoculars a little wheel you must turn: – too much one way is all fuzzy one way, too much the other way is all fuzzy the other way. In between is all fuzzy also. I tell you, Inspector, only a madman can see through binoculars, and not until the afternoon – by which time I am become as mad as Jeno – do I see without fuzzy. And then, what do I see? Flap, flap, sit!'

Jeno Matyas looked at his friend with affection.

‘He comes because he doesn't want me to carry things, and because he's afraid I may be taken ill out there alone on the marshes, with no one to help me.'

‘Nonsense!' the other protested. ‘I come because I cannot believe that, mad or sane, he goes all the way to Hoope just for flap, flap. I want to know who is the beautiful lady he goes to meet. Is she a mermaid, perhaps, or a foreign spy who comes ashore from a waiting submarine? All I know, Inspector – and you, as a policeman, will understand my feelings – it is very suspicious!'

The bookbinder said: ‘In a little while the terns will be leaving. We think it's hot, still high summer, but they know better. One of these mornings they'll be off – a few at first, the over-anxious or the impatient ones – then more and more until it is hard to remember they were ever there.' In a voice devoid of all self-pity, he concluded: ‘We know, of course, that next year they'll be back again, so why make a song and dance about it? What we can't be sure of is that we'll be here to welcome them.'

Jurnet, a little at a loss, turned to Ferenc Szanto.

‘Want me to give you a hand with that stuff?'

‘You hear that, Jeno?' the big Hungarian demanded. ‘What a country it is, this England, where, without loss of face, a Detective-Inspector can offer himself as a baggage boy! I'm honoured beyond words, my dear sir, but I'll not hear of it. Give me the keys, Jeno. I'll see you home first, then come back for all this. I'll be needing the car keys for tonight, anyway.'

The other handed over the car keys as requested, but announced stiffly: ‘I don't need any help, thank you.' With a brief nod in Jurnet's direction, he moved slowly away.

‘A porcupine has not more prickles,' Ferenc Szanto remarked, watching the painful shuffle. ‘I tell him, you fill in a form and there is a special card you can get to put in the car window, lets you park in special places only for the disabled. But he says no, he will not – there is on the card a picture of a cripple in a wheelchair, and he is not a cripple.' With a shake of the head: ‘A young man, still. It is a tragedy.'

‘Is there any prospect of a cure?'

The other shrugged his shoulders, and went back to the task of removing binoculars, cameras and tripods from the car.

‘He, as you say, bites my head off when I try to ask. So I don't ask.'

Jurnet asked: ‘Why do you need the car tonight, if you don't mind my asking?'

‘Aha!' The big man straightened up, twinkling. ‘So you have not found your murderer while we were gone.'

‘'Fraid not.'

‘You still think you will find him?'

‘I know we shall.'

‘Bravo! And yet –' the Hungarian swung round and stared at Bullen Hall as if he had never seen it before – ‘one more little murder in all the long perspective of history – Is it truly worth all your effort?'

Jurnet said: ‘I'm not much of a one on perspective. I reckon we only live – or die – one minute at a time.'

‘How typically English! And how strange when you, Inspector, if you will allow me once again to say so, look yourself so un-English. But perhaps that is the essence of Englishness – disguises, always disguises.' Eyes still on the house: ‘How typically English, eh, the old bricks, the little turrets, the lawns and trees, the lake with waterfowl. And how typically English the worm in the apple, the violence which lies concealed within the so peaceful exterior! The Queen Anne and her brother, my black-hearted friend Laz, poor Mr Shelden – and that is to speak only of what we know –'

‘Enough to be going on with.' Jurnet refused to be deflected. ‘The car, sir. You were saying –'

‘I see you are not to be put off. I shall have to confess, Inspector, and hope you will let me off lightly. As an antidote to a day of lunacy I propose to spend my evening in the company of the sanest people who ever lived – the Marx Brothers. You know them? Fantastic! They are on tonight at the Classic in Angleby.'

‘Something the matter with your own car, is there?'

‘I have no car. I share with Steve the jeep, bought from the American air base – very strong, but with the steering wheel on the wrong side. Or perhaps it is your English roads which are on the wrong side, I am not sure which. All I know, when your police constables see me in the distance they sharpen their pencils and turn over a clean page in their notebooks. They have even learnt, with practice, to spell my name! So, when he is not using it, I borrow Jeno's car, which is made with the wheel, and the roads, in the right place.' With a broad grin: ‘OK?'

‘OK!'

It had begun to rain; a noisy, intemperate storm as overdone as the heat it displaced. Jurnet went round the flat hauling in the drenched curtains, shutting the windows he had earlier thrown wide. As he reached for the bar which anchored the small casement in the bathroom, the cat he had seen on the forecourt scrambled over his bare forearm and plopped down softly on to the vinyl floor.

The detective finished fastening the window, and went into the kitchen; filled a bowl with milk and called ‘Puss, puss!' feeling pretty sure, however, that his uninvited guest was not the kind of cat to come when called. Sure enough, no animal materialised, then or later. Jurnet looked under the bed, the gas cooker, everywhere. No cat. Had he not borne the proof of two long scratches on his right arm he would have thought he had imagined it.

Feeling rejected by the world, human and animal alike, he went and lay down on the bed, counting the interval between lightning and thunder as he had always done, ever since he was old enough to count. One, two, three, four miles away. The familiar ritual soothed him and, for all the racket and flash outside, he fell asleep, a descent into a limbo empty alike of dreams and vague half-thoughts that floated tantalisingly just out of reach. When he awoke, the rain had quietened to a muted strumming, and the telephone was ringing. The bedside clock showed 3.47.

His caller was Mollie Toller. No need to ask how Mollie came to know his home number. She had begged it from him back in the days when Percy had stumbled from disaster to disaster. Now, as always in the past, she began with an apology for bothering him outside working hours; a set piece, her voice soft, the accent posh: and, as always, Jurnet waited, not interrupting, until the thin shell which encased her mounting hysteria cracked, and an anguished wail came over the wire.

‘He hasn't come home, Mr Jurnet! Perce hasn't come home!'

Chapter Twenty Seven

At Headquarters he picked up WPC Frampton, a sensible girl not given to small talk. The duty sergeant who had taken the detective's earlier call and put the necessary wheels in motion was able to pass on the news that there was no news – no accident involving anyone answering to Percy Toller's description, no one of that name in custody anywhere in the region; no break-in bearing the unmistakable marks of the little man's genius for making an almighty botch of it.

On the rain-slashed drive out to Bullensthorpe Jurnet tried to convey to the quiet girl at his side something of his feeling for the ex-burglar: only to shut up in mid-sentence when he suddenly realised he was speaking in the past tense.

Every light in ‘Pippins' was on, flooding out to the garden. Mollie Toller had the door open before the two police officers had got the garden gate off the latch; and they ran through the downpour and into the little hall like children rushing in from school.

‘If it's all the same to you,' said Mollie Toller, ‘I'll have your coats. No point in getting the upholstery damp.'

Her voice was level, her hair combed, her flowered housecoat buttoned from throat to hem. No trace of the distraught woman on the telephone. There was even a hint of a smile upon discovering that the Detective-Inspector had thought fit to bring along a chaperone. This appearance of normality struck ice into the detective's heart. It could only mean that Mollie had given up her husband for dead, and was already concentrating on hiding her grief from the impertinence of official commiseration.

She said: ‘Lionel brought me home. He's my nephew, just become a father for the first time. A lovely little girl. They've asked me and Percy to be godparents. But now –' she paused, as if contemplating with composure an unavoidable change of plan. ‘Half-nine, it must have been,' she went on, ‘or a little before. Lionel 'd remember, probably, though he's so cock-a-hoop about the baby he hardly knows what day of the week it is, let alone the time. Dark, anyway: darker than you'd expect because the storm clouds were already piling up, and the first drops began to fall just as I came through the door. I knew it was Percy's night for his tutorial, so of course I didn't think anything of it till half-past ten, when I thought, well, he's late tonight and no mistake. Though, even then, I wasn't too surprised because I knew he was to take his finished essay in for sending off to Milton Keynes, and he's always full of himself when he's just got a bit of his work signed, sealed and delivered. He and Miss Grant – that's his tutor's name – always go at it hammer and tongs, in the nicest possible way, of course. “I don't know about the others,” I always used to say to him, ‘but she earns her money with you.”'

BOOK: Stately Homicide
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