Authors: Reginald Hill
'What kind of artist are you, Mr Uniff?' asked Dalziel.
'What kinds of artist are there, man?' replied Uniff.
'Well,' replied Dalziel, irritated, 'there's con-artists, and there's shit-artists, and there's . . .'
But his catalogue of abuse was interrupted by the forecast disaster. Tillotson drove the punt forward into a half-submerged hedge, the bows rose in the air, Tillotson screamed and went over the side, Uniff and Dalziel fell together in a tangled heap from which Dalziel recovered just in time to see his suitcase slowly toppling into the water.
Furious, he rose and put his huge hand into the face of Tillotson who was trying to clamber back on board.
'My case!' he yelled. 'Get my bloody case!'
Recognizing that this was an essential condition of readmittance, Tillotson pursued the case which had floated only a few feet but was sinking fast. Dalziel took it out of his hands and tried to drain it as, unassisted, the blond youth dragged himself on board, his exertions freeing the punt from the hedge. Uniff all the while took pictures, including one of the pole which for once had not become embedded in the mud but was floating away at a distance of some twenty feet.
Dalziel banged his case down with a force that nearly brought on a new disaster.
'Mr Dalziel, sir,' said Uniff, still photographing. 'By the ancient laws of the sea, I elect you captain. What now, man? Are you going to run a tight ship?'
Dalziel swallowed the anger which he realized would not be particularly productive at the present time.
'I might just marry you to this goon,' he said, 'and see if you could fuck some sense into him.'
Instead he swung his wellingtoned foot at the narrow planks which formed the cross seat and his fierce onslaught quickly loosened one sufficiently for it to be torn free. Then, using this as a paddle, he sent the punt in pursuit of the pole.
Uniff now put away his camera and rescued the pole from the water. Tillotson with the natural gallantry of the aristocrat offered to resume his post, but Dalziel with the equally natural bluntness of the peasant told him to keep his hands on his knees and his bum on the floor and not to move on peril of his manhood.
Uniff stepped to the back of the punt and with a vigorous driving stroke which more than made up in efficiency what it lost to Tillotson's in style, he sent the punt scudding over the surface at such a rate that they were only fifty yards behind the rowing-boat as it reached the farther boundary of the water.
There was a lake here, Dalziel surmised, which had overflowed its banks and joined its waters with those of the stream running parallel to the road more than a quarter of a mile behind them. A small landing-stage, waterlogged by the rise in the level of the lake, led to some steps set into a steep sloping garden which rose to a substantial nineteenth-century house in a state of dilapidation not wholly explained even by three days of incessant rain. It was the house he had noticed earlier from the bridge to nowhere and, though close to it lost most of its fairy-tale-castle quality, it still had a solid, fortified look about it.
The other party had disappeared into the house by the time the punt reached the landing-stage and Dalziel did not stand upon ceremony but, using Tillotson's head as a support, he stepped ashore, strode grimly up the garden steps and entered the house without waiting for an invitation. Now he paused, not because of any late revivings of social courtesy but because it was far from clear to him where everyone had disappeared to.
A large entrance hall stretched before him. What might have been elegant wood-panelling had been ruined by the application everywhere of dark brown paint. It was to Dalziel like a nightmarish blow-up of the narrow lobby of his grandmother's house which family loyalties had required must be visited every Sunday although the Presbyterian conscience forbade that anyone should gain pleasure from such a visit. Momentarily he felt like Alice, reduced in scale to a position of total vulnerability.
A door opened. Instead of a monstrous grandmother, Mrs Fielding emerged and made for the staircase.
Dalziel coughed and she stopped.
'Yes?' she said. 'Oh, it's you. There's the telephone. Help yourself.'
She turned to go but Dalziel detained her with another thunderous cough.
'I'd like to dry my things,' he said. 'Get changed. A hot bath would be welcome too.'
She looked at him with puzzled, rather disdainful eyes.
'Look, we're
all
wet, but this isn't a hotel,' she said. 'You might find a towel in the kitchen.'
Again she turned.
'Hold on,' said Dalziel.
She ignored him and started climbing the stairs.
'Look!' he bellowed after her, losing his patience. 'I've been punched on the nose by your daughter, I've been stranded by your boatman, and I've had my case dumped in the water by that long streak of nowt you left in charge of the punt!'
She stopped four stairs up. He couldn't see her face in the shadows, but he got the impression that she was smiling.
'It was your choice to accept the lift,' she said reasonably.
'Lady,' he answered, 'I didn't know what I was doing. But you did. You must have known I'd have had more chance of getting here safely if I'd set out to walk across the blasted water.'
Now she laughed out loud.
'We're warned about turning away angels unawares,' she said. 'I see how easy it could be. Come along, Mr . . . ?'
'Dalziel,' said Dalziel and followed her upstairs, his case leaving a trail of drips which ran parallel to that cast by his sodden coat.
On the landing she paused uncertainly.
'We're a bit crowded at the moment,' she explained. 'It's a big house, but half the bedrooms haven't been used for years. I wonder . . .'
She opened a door and went in. The room was in darkness but a couple of moments later she opened wide the curtains and beckoned Dalziel in from the threshold.
'You're not superstitious, are you?' she asked. 'This was my husband's room. Well, it's got to be used again, I suppose. You don't mind?'
The last question might have been ironical as Dalziel had already opened his suitcase and begun to empty its damp contents on to the bed.
'Not at all,' he said. 'Very kind.'
'There's a bathroom through that door. It communicates with my room, so if it's locked, it'll be because I'm in there.'
'Thanks,' he said, starting to remove his coat. But she did not leave immediately.
'You said something about being punched on the nose,' she prompted.
'It was nothing,' he said generously. 'A misunderstanding.'
'I see. Well, our children seem determined to be misunderstood, and usually it's someone else who gets hurt. Don't you agree, Mr Dalziel?'
'I'm not married,' said Dalziel, unpeeling his huge sports jacket and revealing broad khaki braces. 'And I've no kids.'
'Oh. The last of the line, Mr Dalziel?' she said.
'Aye. You could say. Or the end of the tether.'
With neat efficient movements she gathered the damp clothing from the bed, an act of conservation as well as kindness.
'I'll see to these,' she said. 'You look as though you could do with a hot bath straight away.'
Dalziel was touched by this concern with his health till he saw her gaze fixed on his right hand which had unconsciously unbuttoned his shirt and was presently engaged in scratching his navel.
'Thanks,' he said and began to take off his shirt.
The water in the antiquated bathroom was red hot both to the touch and to the sight. Having seen the brown peat water used in the manufacture of the best whisky, Dalziel did not anticipate harm from a little discoloration and wallowed sensuously in the huge marble tub, his feet resting on brass cherubim taps which time and neglect had verdigrised to a satyric green.
From what he had seen so far of the house, he surmised that the Fielding family had been going through bad times. You needed a lot of cash to keep up a place like this these days. This didn't necessarily mean they were poor, not by his standards. It did mean that probably they had been living beyond their means, or rather that as far as the house was concerned their means had lagged behind their rapidly growing expenditure. He was rather surprised to find himself being so charitable towards the idle rich but whatever the failings of the younger members of the household, Mrs Fielding had struck him as a pleasant intelligent woman. And handsome with it. Not a word much used of female attractiveness nowadays. You couldn't call loose-haired kids with consumptive eyes and no tits handsome. But Mrs Fielding was. Oh yes.
One of the cherubim seemed to leer at him with unnecessary salaciousness at this point. A trick of the steam. He got out and towelled himself vigorously.
Back in the bedroom he discovered that his tin of foot powder had become a runny blancmange, so he opened the bathroom cabinet in search of a substitute. There was a mixture of male and female cosmetics and a variety of pill bottles. Either Mrs Fielding or her late husband was a bit of a hypochondriac, thought Dalziel. It was difficult to tell from the scrawl on the labels. Even the printed words were difficult. Boots of Piccadilly he could manage. But Propananol . . . could that be for athlete's foot? Piles, more likely. There was a tap on the communicating door.
'Just finishing,' he called.
'Your trousers were soaking,' Mrs Fielding answered, 'so I've put them with the rest to dry. You'll find some things in the wardrobe to wear for the time being if you like. There're hot drinks downstairs.'
'Ta,' he called. A kind and thoughtful woman, he decided. Once she had made up her mind to be welcoming she carried it through.
Mr Fielding had clearly not been as fat as Dalziel but he had been tall and broad-shouldered. The trousers wouldn't fasten at the waist, but a long nylon sweater stretched over the cabriole curve of his belly and covered the shameful schism. An old sports jacket, also unfastenable, and a pair of carpet slippers completed the robing and it was time to descend.
Downstairs no sounds offered him a clue to the location of the hot drinks, but after three false starts he at last opened a door into an inhabited room.
'Who the devil are you?' demanded the old man, glaring at him through the steam rising from a mug held at his thin bluish lips.
'Andrew Dalziel. I was given a lift. My car broke down. Can I have some of that?'
He advanced to the broad kitchen table on whose scrubbed wooden top stood a steaming jug.
'No. That's mine. You'll find some on the hob through there.'
There
was the adjacent back kitchen where on a gas stove coeval almost with the house Dalziel found a pan of what his mother would have called 'nourishing broth'.
He plucked a large mug from a hook on the wall, filled it and tasted. It was good.
He returned to the other room. Probably nowadays an estate would call it a breakfast-room, but the plain wooden furniture pre-dated the studied pseudo-simplicities of modern Scandinavian pine. These chairs threatened real painful splinters to the unwary. Dalziel sat down cautiously.
'Those are my son's clothes you're wearing!' exclaimed the old man. 'I recognize them. Even the slippers. Ye gods, ye gods, how little time it takes!'
'My clothes were wet,' explained Dalziel, thinking that someone ought to have persuaded the old man also to a change of clothing. The raincoat and umbrella had not been able to protect the bottom of his trousers and his shoes from a soaking.
'I'm sorry about your son,' he said.
'Why? Did you know him?'
'No. How could I? I'm here by accident.'
'So you say. So you say. Men come, men go, and it's all put down to accident. Have you known Bonnie long?'
'Your daughter-in-law? I don't know her at all, Mr Fielding,' averred Dalziel. 'I don't know anyone here.'
'No?' The emphasis of Dalziel's answer seemed almost to convince the old man. But only for a moment.
'You're not from Gumbelows, are you?' he suddenly demanded. 'Or television? I have positively interdicted television.'
Dalziel's patience was wearing thin, but now the door opened and the stout youth who must be Bertie Fielding came in. He ignored the inmates and passed straight through into the back kitchen, returning a moment later to stare accusingly at Dalziel.
'That's my mug. You've taken my mug.'
Dalziel blew on his soup till he set the little globules of fat into a panicky motion.
'Sorry,' he said.
Bertie turned once more and went back to the stove.
'My grandson is an ill-mannered lout,' said Mr Fielding sadly.
'Can't think where he gets it from,' answered Dalziel.
Bertie returned, drinking soup from what appeared to be an identical mug.
'I hear Charley sank your case,' he said, more amicably now. Like a baby who doesn't really mind what teat gets stuck in his mouth, thought Dalziel.
'Mr Tillotson? Aye, there was a spot of bother,' he answered.
'There would be,' said Bertie maliciously. 'Evidence of divine whimsy is Charley. Looks like a Greek god but things happen to him like Monsieur Hulot.'
'You haven't quite got the balance right,' mocked Mr Fielding, explaining to Dalziel, 'Bertie likes to rehearse his witty abuse till he's got the lines off pat.'
Bertie smiled angrily.
'Still can't bear a rival near the throne, Grandpa?'
'Rival?' exclaimed the old man, pushing himself upright. 'When has the eagle considered the boiling fowl a rival? Or the antelope the hog? Good day to you, Mr Dalziel. If you are as uninvolved in our affairs as you claim to be, it seems unlikely that we shall meet again. On the other hand . . .'
He walked stiffly from the room, his shoes squelching gently on the stone-flagged floor.
'Your grandfather seems a bit upset,' probed Dalziel, sucking in a noisy mouthful of broth.
'Yes, he usually does, these days. It's not surprising, I suppose, when you've lost your last surviving child. Especially as he thinks I killed him.'
The door opened again at this point and the arrival of Tillotson, Louisa Fielding, Uniff and the Indian Maid masked Dalziel's surprise and prevented him from following up Bertie's statement.