Read Winding Up the Serpent Online
Authors: Priscilla Masters
âMonths ago.' Evelyn shrugged her shoulders âIt was a long time ago, anyway. And he never stayed. The van pulled up. He offloaded the piece and then he was off again. Quick as anything.' She gave a surprisingly coarse cackle. âToo quick for a lover.'
âAnyone else?'
âShe said' â Evelyn's eyes narrowed â âshe said her boyfriend was married. I never believed her.'
Joanna felt cold. Something had touched her in the bedroom, the fornicating pose, the clothes meant to seduce. All for a married man? âDid she say anything more about him?'
âHe didn't exist,' Evelyn said. âThere was no married man.'
âAny cars ever parked outside?'
âI'm telling you ...' Evelyn was almost shouting. âThere weren't anyone.'
Joanna dropped the subject. She looked through the window. She could see the corner of the red brick house. âNice place,' she said. âExpensive house for a nurse to buy.' She waited for the other woman to find her cue.
âNow there I can help you,' Evelyn said. âHer mother died. She came into a lot of money. A few years ago.' She too looked at the house.
âHow do you know her mother died?'
âShe told me,' Evelyn said. âShe told me all about it. Ill she was, in a nursing home. Draining away all her inheritance. Then she died â quite suddenly. Marilyn even went away for the funeral. In black,' she added defensively. âIn black.'
Joanna recalled the letters. Number 6 Bute Street hardly sounded like a nursing home. And Marilyn's mother, she was sure, was not dead.
âWhen did you last see Marilyn?'
âMonday,' Evelyn said without hesitation. âShe didn't see me. I saw her through the window, getting into that car of hers. She was in her uniform. She looked sort of â pleased with herself â jaunty. Made a lot of noise with the engine. She knew it annoyed me,' she said simply. âThat's why she did it.'
The police had names for people like this. Natural victims ... blame themselves for all that goes wrong, expect people to pick on them, wait for trouble. And hey presto, Joanna thought, trouble hunts them out as though it could smell them.
âThen what?' she asked.
âShe sat in the car with the radio on very loud. She liked to do that. It made Ben mad. It upset him. She loved to tease him, you see. She loved to see him upset. He'd foam at the mouth â bark â try to jump over the fence.' Evelyn glanced at Joanna. âHe couldn't, of course. The fence was too high. Then she'd laugh and mock him, sometimes dangle a bone over the fence and laugh while he tried to catch it in his teeth.' She blinked. âThere was a very mean side to Marilyn, Inspector,' she said. âShe could be cruel ...'
âYou live alone, Mrs Shiers?' She changed tack.
An expression of extreme distaste crossed the woman's face. âI do,' she said.
âA widow?'
âMy husband and I are ...' there was a quick, hesitant pause, âseparated.'
Joanna drew out her notebook and pencil. âFor how long?' She looked up, waited for the woman's reply.
âFour years.'
âAnd where is he now?'
Evelyn looked furious. âI don't know,' she said. âI don't care. He isn't here.'
âSo where is he?'
Now the look of the frightened fox was back. She was cornered. âI can't tell you ... I don't know where he is.'
Joanna watched the bristles on her chin. Her head jerked to and fro. Evelyn Shiers was rattled.
She sighed. More questions ... more investigations. And she had the feeling it would all be very hard work. But not now. She stood to leave and watched the other woman's shoulders drop in relief.
âBy the way,' she said at the doorway. âWe don't know how Marilyn died. Lock your doors, Mrs Shiers. If you see anythingâ'
âWhat sort of thing?' the woman demanded.
âAnything. And ring us immediately, if you do.' Joanna gave her the number of the police station and her own extension number. âI'm Detective Inspector Piercy. And I'll be interested if you remember anything that could have a bearing on this case.' She opened the front door. âI'll probably call round again.'
âIs that the truth, then, Mike?'
They were sitting in her office, drinking coffee.
âWas she just a plump, lonely woman who spun stories, lived in make-believe land, dressed to kill and died?'
He was frowning. âIt could be,' he said cautiously. âThere was nothing in the house to suggest anything else.'
âWhere did all the money come from? The antiques ... plastic surgery ... the house? Her mother isn't dead, is she? So she wasn't left anything.'
Her hand rested on the pile of letters. âMaybe we'd better read these.' She picked one up and handed him another. Her eyes wandered down the page. âA little more money ... I saw the vicar calling in next door last Wednesday. I don't think it's quite nice for him to call, so late at night, a man of the cloth ... and she was looking very tidy ... Mrs Tolley, three doors away goes out every single Friday night, you know, Marilyn. She thinks I don't see but a car drops her off. I went for a walk myself last Friday just to the end of the road. To get a bit of air. And there he was â the one man in the car. Nobody I recognized. But if Mr Tolley should find out ...'
Joanna slammed the letter down in disgust. She could sense the relish. She picked up another and read more. There were pages and pages of gossip, prying, intimate and insinuating. She dropped the letters and looked at Mike.
âWhat utterâ'
âCrap,' he said. âShe was just a nosy old bag.'
âBut she's alive all right â alive and prying. Like mother like daughter?'
âPerhaps we'll find out more tomorrow.'
She toyed with her pen before mentioning yet another point which had been bothering her. âAnd what about the dog, Mike? I don't believe anyone could have got past Ben.'
âMaybe if she'd let someone in,' Mike said slowly, âthe dog would have been calmed.'
âMaybe.' She was not convinced. âBut would it have let someone out without Marilyn's presence?'
She looked at him. âA lover? But no intercourse.'
âLesbian?' he queried, then gave a lopsided grin. âThere wouldn't be any need for contraception then.'
âYes,' she said. âTrue.'
She cupped her chin in her hand, elbows on the desk, and gazed at Mike. âWhat do we go on?' she said. âThe absence of a cause of death or the absence of signs of foul play?'
Mike was silent for a minute and then said carefully, âThe only reason we believe it was foul play is her clothes. We know she liked attention. What if she wore them to gain it?'
She sighed. âI don't know ...'
She doodled for a while on the pad. âAny more thoughts, Mike?' Before he had a chance to answer she gave a wry smile. âSod's law,' she said. âI could really have done with a nice, clean murder for my first serious investigation. What's this going to amount to? A missed diagnosis? At best a sordid little sex crime.'
He stood up and tapped her on the shoulder. âI think we should ask a few questions,' he said. âThe doctor she worked for ...'
He grinned. âNever did trust the medical profession,' he said.
âThe trouble is,' she said, âwe haven't really found anything suspicious, have we? We just can't find a cause of death. That's all.'
He picked up her notebook. âAnd what about the missing Mr Shiers?'
âWe'll get a couple of the blokes to ask around,' she said. âMaybe he did run off with another woman.'
âMaybe he didn't,' he said. âMaybe the two things are connected.' He pulled the pad towards him and drew a picture of two houses â crude pictures, like a child's.
âI know this sounds a bit farfetched,' he said. âBut what if... Look. House one â man disappears. House two. We know Marilyn had a nasty streak in her â wasn't above manipulation â dirty tricks. What if she knew something?'
She was tempted to laugh. It sounded melodramatic â detective novel stuff. But Mike's dark eyes were deadly serious and he was staring at her.
âHow?'
He shrugged his shoulders. âPoison,' he said. âIt was poison.'
âSo why hasn't Matthew found it?'
Again Mike's eyes were fixed on her. âDo a bit of digging,' he said. âDigging. I reckon Dr Levin knows a bit more about our friend than he's letting on.'
She let out the breath she had been holding and knew this was what had lain at the back of her mind all day.
There were questions she knew she should ask but was frightened to. She didn't really want the answers. But she had gained the distinct impression that Matthew had wanted her to drop the case. Why?
âMatthew's ringing me later on,' she said. She stood up. âI'm going to call in at the surgery,' she said. âI want to speak to Dr Wilson again.'
He was sitting in his room, staring out of the window, his face lined and grey, when the receptionist showed her in. He stood up courteously.
âWhen will this nightmare end?'
âI'm sorry.' She sat down. âSudden death â as I'm sure you understand â is never pleasant. There are often unanswered questions. Sometimes we never get the answer, Dr Wilson. But apart from having failed to discover the actual cause of death there are certain anomalies in this case.'
He looked wearily at her. âIt isn't always possible to discover the cause of death,' he said.
She nodded. âWe know that, Doctor. But Marilyn was dressed in a ... suggestive costume. We simply want to make sure.'
His voice cracked. âYou haven't got a perverted rapist on the loose.'
âShe wasn't raped,' Joanna said quietly.
The doctor ran his fingers through his greying hair. It was sticking up like a cartoon character's. âThen why?' he said. âShe wasn't robbed, was she?'
âWe don't even know how they got in,' she said.
He suddenly frowned. âAnomalies?' he queried.
âMore money than she should have had ...'
âHer mother ...'
âWe're going to check it out.'
She crossed her legs. âNow I just want to ask a few routine questions. Do you cover all your own nights, Doctor?'
He gave a tired smile. âGod â no,' he said. âI join up with Sammy Bose's practice by night. There are four of them,' he added, âso it works out quite well. A one in five rota.'
Something jerked in Joanna's mind. âDoes that mean,' she asked slowly, âthat on the nights you were on call you were Marilyn's doctor too?'
He laughed. âI suppose I was,' he said. âI never thought about it. I suppose I was,' he said slowly. âShe never called me ...'
âAnd you were on call the night she died?'
Jonah Wilson looked uneasy. âNow hang on, Inspector,' he said. âIf you're suggestingâ'
âI'm not suggesting anything,' she said. âI'm merely trying to gather facts.'
âWell yes, then â I was.'
âWas it a busy night?'
âA few calls.' His tone had changed. He was no longer the friendly doctor, employer of a dead woman. He was a suspect, rattled and defensive. âI've told you. I had to go out to Onecote.'
âAt what time?' Joanna was writing in her book.
âAbout eleven...' He gave the address. âI was gone about three-quarters of an hour. She thought she had meningitis.'
âAh yes, I remember. And it was a false alarm.'
âYes. A bloody headache.'
Joanna made a mental note to follow it up.
She found the receptionists drinking coffee in the square room where the notes were kept. The room went quiet the instant she walked in. But when they offered her a cup she accepted and they began to relax. She looked at them curiously. âWhat was she like?' she asked.
The tall redhead, Sally, took down a photograph pinned to the noticeboard. âThis was Marilyn,' she said.
There were four people in the picture: the two receptionists standing stiffly in paper hats, glasses in their hands. A plump woman, heavily made up, was draped around Dr Wilson. And even though the quality of the picture was poor Joanna could see that the doctor was as uneasy about the situation as Marilyn Smith was relishing it. Joanna looked closer.
There was a lascivious smile on the woman's face. Glossy lipstick, frizzled hair and her mouth slightly open. She was wearing a very short, tight black dress, which revealed inches of deep cleavage and rolls of fat around the waist. Red fingernails hung down the doctor's tweed jacket. Marilyn was looking at him. He was staring unhappily into the camera.
Sally looked over Joanna's shoulder. âGod,' she said quietly. âIf ever a woman had an obscene passion for a man, she did. Worshipped him. Made every sort of play she could. Gave the poor doctor no peace. No peace at all.'
âDid he enjoy the attention?' Joanna said, concealing her surprise.
Sally looked back at the photograph. âWhat do you think?' she asked. âHe found her repulsive. He was married. Mrs Wilson may have her problems, but they were a happy couple. He couldn't wait to get home to her at night. He had no time for Marilyn.'
âHe must have found it difficult,' she said. âEmbarrassing.'
Maureen nodded. âHe would squirm sometimes.'
âBut he kept her on as his nurse.'
Sally grimaced.
âMay I borrow this photograph?'
Maureen shrugged her shoulders. âHave it,' she said. âWe don't want it back.' At Joanna's look of surprise she said aggressively, âLook â we don't want to be reminded of her. We couldn't stand her.'
âWe don't want to speak ill of the dead,' the other said, âbut this place will be happier without her. She manufactured trouble. Always told you the nasty things people might have said about you. Always made life difficult. Some people,' she said, âwon't be missed.' She glanced back at the photograph. âShe's one of them.'