The Price of Butcher's Meat

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Authors: Reginald Hill

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General

BOOK: The Price of Butcher's Meat
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P

THE PRICE

F

BUTCHER’S

MEAT

REGINALD HILL

To Janeites everywhere

and in par tic u lar to those who ten years ago in San Francisco made me so very welcome at the Jane Austen Society of North America’s AGM, of which the theme was “Sanditon—A New Direction?” and during which the seeds of this present novel were sown.

I hope that my fellow Janeites will approve the direction in which I have moved her unfinished story; or, if they hesitate approval, that they will perhaps recall the advice printed on a sweatshirt presented to me (with what pertinence I never quite grasped) after my address to the AGM

—run mad as often as you chuse, but do not faint—

and at least agree that, though from time to time I may have run a little mad, so far I have not fainted!

Aye—that young Lady smiles I see—but she will come to care about such matters herself in time. Yes, Yes, my Dear, depend upon it, you will be thinking of the price of Butcher’s meat in time.

J A N E A U S T E N
S A N D I T O N

Contents

Epigraph
iii

Volume the First

1

1

Hi Cass!

3

2

Omigod Cass! I must be psychic! OK—you say hes not…

11

3

Ho’d on. How the fuck do I know this bloody…

19

4

Hi! 29

5

There! What do you think of that, Mildred?

40

6

Had a little sleep there. Bloody pills!

45

7

Hi Cass!

61

8

Hi! 67

9

Morning, Mildred!

75

10

Okay, Mildred, I should have listened to you and put…

77

11

Hi! 79

12

Hi! Still no word. Working on the Headbanger principle that…

89

13

How do, Mildred!

94

14

Hi! 99

15

Hi again!

110

16

Hi! 119

17

Well, Mildred, here I am, back from my first official…

132

18

Oh, Mildred, what have I done?

148

19

Cass—omigod I was so wrong—nobody kills anyone in Sandytown I…153

Volume the Second

163

1

“And you’re sure this is our Franny Roote?” said Pascoe,…

165

2

Some thirty minutes before Pascoe arrived in Sandytown, Detective Constable…

172

3

Hat Bowler’s smile had not been the subtle attempt at…

182

4

Dennis Seymour drove slowly along Seaview Terrace.

191

5

Pascoe stood and looked down at the mortal remains of…

195

6

There was a uniformed constable standing guard at the front…

203

7

The room he entered was of a different order from…

213

8

As Shirley Novello left Kyoto House, she felt reasonably pleased…

227

9

“You have arrived,” said Posh Woman’s voice confidently.

235

10

As Peter Pascoe approached the Avalon Clinic, he had a…

248

11

I’m sorry to trouble you, Superintendent.

253

12

The Fat Man switched off the recorder.

260

13

After interviewing Sidney Parker, Hat Bowler had planned to drive… 265

Volume the Third

275

1

Disaster!! 277

2

Could hardly keep me eyes open after Pascoe left last…

282

3

Hi! 297

4

I need to watch myself!

310

5

Andy! I didn’t hear you knock.

312

6

Well now, Mildred, that made interesting listening, didn’t it? So…

321

7

Pet! There you are, lass. All right if I come in?

325

8

So what do you make of that, Mildred? I could…

334

9

Hi! 336

Volume the Fourth

343

1

“Peter! Salvere iubeo! Willkommen! Bienvenu! In any language, I am…

345

2

Sergeant Wield had had a trying morning.

357

3

Hat Bowler greeted him with a smile too bright to…

366

4

When Charley entered the lounge, Dalziel, occupying one of Tom… 374

5

After Peter Pascoe set off down the drive, Franny Roote…

390

6

Once again Pascoe arrived at Sandytown Hall to find Wield…

393

7

In the large drawing room, the late Sir Henry Denham…

408

8

Charley and George sat on the lawn and talked. Occasionally…

420

9

Dennis Seymour wasn’t good with hospitals. When his twin daughters…

432

10

Seymour was by nature and by nurture an honest, straightforward…

437

11

Pascoe had his strategy all carefully worked out as he…

444

12

As they approached the gate of Sandytown Hall, Sammy Ruddlesdin’s…

450

13

Sergeant Jug Whitby was not a revolutionary. No way was…

462

14

Andy Dalziel sat in the morning sunshine on the doorstep…

469

Volume the Fifth

473

1

Hi Cass!

475

2

Right, Mildred. This is the last time you and me…

479

3

Cass, I lied! Next time Id be writing from home—I…

483

Volume the Sixth

493

1

It was late afternoon when Andy Dalziel got back to…

495

2

Good day to you, Andy.

497

3

Andy Dalziel walked clockwise three times round the room then…

513

About the Author

Other Books by Reginald Hill

Credits

Cover

Copyright

About the Publisher

VOLUME THE FIRST

Every Neighbourhood should have a great Lady.

1

FROM:

[email protected]

TO:

[email protected]

SUBJECT: cracked jugs—daft buggers—& tank traps Hi Cass!

Hows things in darkest Africa? Wierd & wonderful—I bet—but not so w&w as what weve got here at Willingden Farm. Go on—guess! OK—give up?

House guests!

& I dont mean awful Uncle Ernie on one of his famous surprise visits.

These are strangers!

What

happened—at last after our awful wet summer Augusts turned hot—not African hot but pretty steamy by Yorkshire standards. Dad & George were working up in Mill Meadow. Mum asked if Id take them a jug of lemon barley—said it would please dad if I showed willing. Weve been in armed truce since I made it clear my plans hadnt changed—ie do a postgrad thesis instead of getting a paid job—or better still—a wellpaid husband—& settling down! But no reason not to show willing—plus it gave me an excuse to drive the quad—so off I went.

Forgot the mugs—but dad didnt say anything—just drank straight out of the jug like he preferred it—so maybe mum was right & he was pleased. In fact we were having a pleasant chat when suddenly old Fang let out a growl.

Lost half his teeth & cant keep up with the sheep anymore—but still manages a grand growl. Dad looked round to see what had woken him—& his face went into Headbanger configuration.

—whats yon daft bugger playing at?—he demanded.

Youll recall that in dads demography anyone living outside Willingden 4

R E G I N A L D H I L L

parish is a daft bugger till proved innocent. In this case I half- agreed with him.

The DB in question was driving his car fast up the lane alongside Mill Meadow. How he got through the gate I dont know. The HB had to take his chain & lock off after the Ramblers took him to court last year—but hes fixed a catch like one of them old metal puzzles we used to play with as kids.

Maybe the DB just got lucky—he thought!

He was driving one of these new hybrid 4 × 4s—you know—conscience without

inconvenience!—& when he saw how good the surface was—

(tractor tyres dont grow on

trees!—remember?)—he mustve thought—

great!—now for a bit of safe off-roading.

What he didnt reckon on was what George calls dads tank trap—the drainage ditch where the lane bends beyond the top gate & steepens up to the mill ruin.

New tourist map came out last year—with water mill marked—no mention of ruin. Result—a lot of DBs decided this meant Heritage Centre—guided tours & cream teas! After losing out to the Ramblers—dad was forced to accept “bearded wierdies” trekking across his empire—but the sight of cars crawling up his lane drove him crazy. So one day he got to work with the digger—& when hed

finished—the drainage ditch extended across the lane—a muddy hollow a hippo could wallow in—the tank trap!

Most drivers flee at the sight of it—but this DB obviously thought his hybrid could ford rivers & climb Alps—& just kept going.

Bad decision.

For 30 secs the wheels sent out glutinous brown jets—like a cow with colic—then the car slipped slowly sideways—finishing at 45 degrees—driver side down.

—now hell expect us to pull him out—said the HB with some satisfaction.

Moment later the passenger door was flung back. First thing out was a floppy brimmed sunhat—sort posh lady gardeners wear in the old Miss Marple movies. Beneath it was a woman who started to drag herself out—followed by a scream from below—suggesting shed stood on some bit of the driver not meant to be stood on.

T H E P R I C E O F B U T C H E R ’ S M E AT 5

She looked round in search of

help—& there we were—me—dad—

George—& Fang—staring back at her from 50 yds.

—help!—she called—please—can you help me?—

George & me looked at the HB—G because he knows his place—me because I was curious what hed do.

If it had been a man I doubt hed have moved—not without serious negotiation. But this was a woman doing what women ought to do—calling for male assistance.

—reckon wed best take a look—he said—we meaning him & George—of course.

He drained the lemon barley—thrust the jug into my hands like I was a docile milkmaid—& set off toward the accident—G close behind—even old Fang got to go.

I dropped the jug onto the grass. Sods Law—hit a stone & cracked.—O

shit!—I said. It was that old earthenware one thats been around forever. I knew the HB would reckon bringing out the lemon barley in anything else would be like serving communion wine from a jam jar. O well—from now on hell have to make do with a plastic bottle!

I set off after them. This was the first mildly interesting thing to happen since I came home—& I wasnt going to miss it.

Woman was thin & wispy—bonnet askew—big straw shoulder bag round her neck like a horses feed sack. She looked so worried I thought the driver must be seriously injured—but now I know its just a couple of notches up from her normal expression of unfocused anxiety. Another thing I noticed—words sprayed on the car door—pro job—elegant cursive script—Sandytown—Home of the Healthy Holiday.

She was saying—please can you get my husband out? I think hes hurt himself—

—no—Im fine—came a mans voice—really—just a sprain—nothing in the world to worry about dear—aargh!—

As he spoke his head had appeared at his wifes waist level. Gingery hair—soft brown eyes in a narrow mobile face—not bad looking even with a bloodied nose—mid to late 30s. He was trying a social smile—till presumably he put more weight on his ankle than it could take.

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