Authors: Margaret Mayhew
He said quietly, âTell me about it.'
âGunilla used to go to the Hollands' barn . . . to meet men. She'd play a silly make-believe thing . . . pretending to be a prisoner up in the hayloft and they'd have to climb up the ladder to rescue her.'
âHow did you know this?'
âSome of them bragged about it in the bar. And Roy told me himself . . . afterwards.'
âWhat did he tell you exactly?'
âHe said he followed her to the barn one afternoon. She was on her own, he said . . . she didn't go to meet anyone that time. He watched her climb up the ladder to the hayloft and lie down with her hair hanging over the side, playing that game of hers. Some sort of old fairy tale.'
âAnd then?'
âShe caught sight of Roy. She teased him, like she always teased them all . . . said if he climbed all the way up, he could have her as a reward. He was fit enough then, so it wasn't difficult for him . . . but when he got to the top she wouldn't let him near her. Told him he disgusted her and she'd sooner be dead than have him touch her, and she'd tell me that he'd tried to rape her. She made him so angry that he put his hands round her throat. He swore he didn't mean to hurt her . . . that he let her go at once.'
âDid you believe him?'
âYes. I know he was telling me the truth. He said she got into a terrible panic and rushed to climb down the ladder, but somehow she slipped and fell. When he reached her, he found the back of her head had hit a flint stone. She was dead.'
âWhy didn't he report the accident to the police?'
âThere were red marks round her throat from his hands . . . he said they'd never believe he hadn't killed her with the stone . . . never believe it was an accident. He thought he'd be arrested and tried for murder.'
âSo, he buried her in the barn?'
âHe dug a hole with the flint stone â they're sharp, you know, they make good tools. It wasn't very deep but it was enough to hide her. We didn't think she'd ever be found.'
She might well not have been, the Colonel thought, if it hadn't been for Cornelia's bright idea of having a sprung dance floor.
âWhat about her belongings?'
âWe put them all in her suitcase. Roy got rid of it in a pond miles away from King's Mowbray.'
âAnd the flint stone?'
âHe threw it into a stream. We told everyone that Roy had given her the sack and that she'd packed and left. Most of them were glad, you know . . . she'd upset too many people.'
He was silent for a moment.
Maureen Barton was looking at him. âYou must do what you think best, Colonel. Tell the police, if you want. I don't care now. It doesn't matter any more. Roy and I never had children and there's no other family left.'
She turned her head away.
He clasped her hand before he stood up and moved quietly towards the door.
She spoke again, quite clearly.
âRoy was in the army, like you, Colonel â before we started with the pub. He was in the Devon and Dorsets. He always said they were the best years of his life. You'd understand that.'
âYes,' he said. âIndeed, I do.'
âHe was a good man.'
âI'm sure he was.'
As he left the ward, the same nurse accosted him.
âI hope you didn't upset her.'
âNo,' he said. âAs a matter of fact, I think she was quite glad to talk to me.'
The Colonel drove back to King's Mowbray, taking his time. Maureen Barton had believed her husband's story without question; he wasn't quite so sure that he did and he doubted that Detective Chief Inspector Rodgers, with his sardonic reference to fairy tales, would have believed a word of it.
You must do what you think best. Tell the police, if you want. It doesn't matter any more.
He had been in a similarly tricky situation before, where someone guilty of a crime had confided in him. This one was no easier. The truth always mattered, but sometimes it could never be known. Or need never be known. Whatever had happened, Roy Barton was beyond the reach of the law, and so was his dying wife. And nothing could restore Gunilla Bjork to her uncaring family. Nor did there seem much point in hampering Chief Inspector Rodgers's steady progress towards a blissful retirement with his irises.
The Range Rover was parked outside the house and he found Cornelia sitting on the sofa, drink in hand. Her third, at least, he reckoned, by the look of her.
âCome and join me, Hugh. I need cheering up.'
He fetched a whisky. âWhat's the trouble?'
âHoward's coming home in two days.'
âIsn't that a cause for celebration?'
âNot exactly. He's in a foul mood about everything. You'd think that finding the skeleton was all my fault. As though I'd put the bloody thing there myself, just to annoy him.'
He smiled. âI know that you didn't, Cornelia.'
âNice of you to be so sure, Hugh. We'll probably never find out who did, will we?'
âI shouldn't think so.'
âAnyway, who cares? Howard refuses to come down here any more, so I'll be going back to London. Good riddance to the place!'
He'd be glad to be rid of it himself.
âWhat about the Swiss couple? Aren't they arriving soon?'
âThey'll come to London with me. I don't suppose they'll mind. They're being paid enough.' She raised her glass to him unsteadily. âThanks for everything, Hugh. I'll miss you most terribly. You've been a wonderful comfort and I couldn't have managed without you.'
âI'm glad to have been of help.'
âOh, by the way, I almost forgot . . . some woman phoned for you. She said she was your next-door neighbour. Voice like a foghorn.'
âDid she leave a message?'
âShe wanted you to call her. Something about a cat.'
D
amn! Damn! Damn!
He should never have left Thursday for so long. He should have gone home days ago instead of playing at being Sherlock Holmes, as well as cook/companion/comforter to Cornelia who, whatever she pretended, could have managed perfectly well without him.
â
Now?
'
she'd said, looking at him as though he'd gone mad. âYou're rushing back to Dorset for a
cat
?'
âYes, Cornelia, I am. For a cat.'
âCan't it wait till morning?'
âNo, it can't.'
âBut what about me?'
âYou'll be fine,' he'd said, knowing that she would be.
When he had rung Naomi, she had sounded breezily cheerful.
âJust thought I'd better let you know, Hugh. Thursday hasn't been around for three days. I've had a search through the house and the garden and kept calling him, but no luck so far. I shouldn't worry too much, he'll come back when it suits him.'
That was just the trouble, the Colonel thought. If Thursday took it into his head that he'd been deserted, then it wouldn't at all suit him to come back. He'd move on, just as he would have moved on throughout his long cat life, which must have included some very hard times. Thursday was like Kipling's cat that walked by himself, and all places were alike to him.
He drove much faster than his usual pace, taking corners at a lick, roaring down the straight bits. The Riley responded as though it understood the urgency. It was still light when the Colonel arrived back in Frog End, the summer evening fading towards dusk. The food that Naomi had left out lay untouched in the bowl marked DOG beside the kitchen door. He went out and walked down to the far end of the garden, calling the cat's name, hoping that he would suddenly make an appearance. He even checked the padlocked shed which he noticed bore distinct signs of Naomi's inquisitive presence with the excuse of the mower. Tins and jars not put back in their proper place, the work stool slightly askew. After that, he searched the cottage from top to bottom, opening cupboard doors, looking under beds, behind furniture, on window seats, anywhere that Thursday might conceivably be curled up asleep.
When he rang Naomi, she answered almost at once.
âSaw your car outside, Hugh. Any luck?'
âI'm afraid not.'
âI'm very sorry about it. I feel it's my fault.'
She sounded upset and he said quickly, âOf course it wasn't, Naomi. It's entirely
my
fault for leaving him for too long. It was stupid of me.'
âWell, he'll probably come back as soon as he realizes you're home again. You know how cats are . . . they've got a sixth sense, besides the nine lives.'
He didn't really know how cats were, never having owned one, and he certainly didn't own Thursday. For some mysterious reason, the battle-scarred old warrior, down on his luck, had chosen to throw in his lot with him â subject to satisfaction, of course, which he had signally failed to provide.
âI hope you're right.'
âBy the way, what happened about the skeleton in the barn?'
âThe police took it away. They're still investigating. Somehow, I don't think they'll ever solve the mystery.'
âWhy not?'
He shrugged. âNo hard evidence. Nothing for them to go on. It had been there for six years.'
âDid they find out the cause of death?'
âYou're sounding ghoulish, Naomi.'
âWell, it's a ghoulish story. Did they?'
âShe died from a blow to the skull.'
âShe?'
âIt turned out that the skeleton belonged to a young Swedish girl who had worked at the local pub. Apparently, she was in the habit of meeting admirers in the barn.'
âWell, there you are.'
âWhere am I, Naomi?'
âOne of them killed her. That's obvious.'
âYou may well be right.'
âOf course I'm right. Even the police, slow as they are, ought to have worked out which one by now. You always seem to be getting mixed up with dead women, Hugh. First Ursula Swynford, then that actress â whatever her name was â then this foreign girl. I don't know how you do it.'
âI don't do anything.'
âIt could become a habit.'
âI'll see if I can make it a man next time.'
âThat would be a change. How's your friend, by the way? It must have been jolly unpleasant for her. Nobody wants a body to turn up in the barn.'
âShe's getting over it. Her husband's due back from his business trip soon.'
âI was afraid she might get her hooks into you.'
He smiled. âYes, I know you were. There was no likelihood of that, I can assure you, Naomi. I'm not in her league.'
She snorted. âTake a good look in the mirror some time, Hugh.'
He rang off and went out into the garden again. The light was going fast. Soon it would be too dark to see. He fetched a torch and did another patrol, poking about among bushes with a stick. He remembered reading an article about old lions always going off to die alone in a hidden place. If small cats were the same as big cats, then Thursday could have done the same. He might never be found.
Finally, he went back into the cottage, switched on the sitting room lamps, poured himself a large whisky and sat down in the wing-back tapestry chair by the inglenook. The sofa opposite was where Thursday spent a great deal of his time, especially in winter when the log fire was lit. It looked bare without the customary ball of black and tan fur, and the house felt depressingly empty.
When the telephone rang, he got up wearily to answer it.
âHallo, Father.'
He could tell from his daughter-in-law's agitated tone that he was in deep trouble.
âHow are you, Susan?'
âWe've been very worried about you, Father . . . where on earth have you been? We've tried ringing you ever so many times but there's never any answer.' Her voice was even louder than Naomi's at her worst. âWe were thinking of calling the police.'
âI've been away,' he said. âStaying with a friend.'
âYou ought to have told us, then we wouldn't have worried.'
âThere was no need to worry. I do go away sometimes, you know.'
âWill you be sure to tell us, in future?'
He suppressed his irritation, knowing that she meant well. âI'll try to remember.'
âHow are you, then?'
âPerfectly well, thank you. How are you all?'
âWell, Eric's got over his cold but Edith's caught it now.'
âI'm sorry about that. I hope you and Marcus didn't catch it too.'
âNo, but we're both very tired. Edith's been very chesty and waking up a lot at night. We have to take it in turns to sit with her.'
He sympathized, remembering the nights when he and Laura had done the same with Alison and Marcus when they were ill. âShe'll get over it soon.'
âI hope so. Have you had your supper, Father?'
âYes,' he lied.
âDid you try the pasta?'
âNot yet.'
âAre you taking those multivitamin pills we sent you?'
He had no compunction in lying again. âYes, indeed.'
âThey're very important for your health.'
âYes, I know.'
âEspecially at your age.'
âI'm aware of that.'
She changed tack abruptly, veering on to another course. âWho did you go and stay with?'
âAn old friend.'
âOh?'
He knew that she wanted to know more. Was the old friend a woman, and, if so, was she a widow or a divorcee and therefore, in Susan's eyes, a potential predator? As she had once pointed out to him, he had to be careful. Careful of what? he had asked innocently and much to her discomfort. He had no intention of satisfying her curiosity this time, or any other.
âWell, thank you for ringing, Susan. I'm just off to bed.'
âOh . . .' The wind was temporarily out of her sails but she came around fast. âBy the way, that nice bungalow down the road that I told you about is still on the market. You really ought to come and view it, Father. It would be much better if you were living near us.'