THREE
Saturday noon
T
he pub had a Georgian frontage, but the building behind it was ancient, consisting of a series of small rooms on different levels. An extensive garden at the back boasted a stretch of lawn dotted with picnic tables, each with its own umbrella. All the tables were occupied on this fine summer's day.
Bea found her appetite had returned and enthusiastically ordered a steak and kidney pie with vegetables, but she refused to sit outside in the sun. âAnts,' she said. âWasps. If there are any within fifty miles, they'll make straight for me. No, we'll find ourselves a table inside like civilized people.'
âCheer up,' said Oliver, handing Zander and Bea halves of bitter. He never drank alcohol when he was driving. âAnd listen up, for do I have a tale to tell! There's no shop in the village unfortunately, but down the road I spotted a woman struggling to put up a trestle table outside her front gate. Naturally I went to her assistance, being the kind, courteous soul that I am.'
Zander attempted a smile, and Bea did the same.
âShe was selling plants and windfall apples, which I helped her to barrow from the garden at the back and to arrange on the table. I bought some of her apples, and she offered me a cuppa. I said she was the light of my life, so she brought me out a mug of some peculiar brew which she claimed was coffee but might have been tea. I couldn't tell which it was but, never mind, I drank it. I told her I was hanging around waiting for my boss to return the Lord of the Manor's effects to his widow. She straightened up like she'd been ramrodded and went all tight-lipped on me. But then curiosity got the better of her, and she unbuttoned.'
âMixed metaphors,' said Zander, with a better attempt at a smile.
âSo what? Did I get the low-down, or did I? My informant has lived in the village all her life, and her father and mother before her down to the twentieth generation, or so she said. Mr Faulks-Pennington â or whatever his name wasâ'
âNear enough,' said Zander. âThe Honourableâ'
âShe said he should have been called “Dishonourable”, but apparently he did have some title or other. He bought the old manor house for his wife some ten years ago. It was a complete wreck, and they've been doing it up ever since. His wife boasts that her family once lived there, though my informant begs leave to doubt that. I'm not sure why. Apparently the Lady of the Manor was married before, perhaps to someone else with a title? However it was, she kept the title when she remarried and insists on being addressed as “Lady Honoria”, or “my lady”. My informant pulled a sour face when she mentioned this.'
The food came. Delicious. Bea was, indeed, hungry. âHold on a minute. She asked us â no, ordered us â to address her as “Lady Honoria” which means she must be the daughter of a duke, a marquess or an earl. Denzil must have been the younger son of a nobleman too, if he claimed to be an Honourable.'
âMy informant says that she's Lady Muck, and no one calls her anything else behind her back though to her face they're polite enough. She's pure poison, they say.'
Zander grunted. âShe is that.'
âAnd, wait for it,' Oliver reached the climax of his story, âthey all think she murdered him.'
âWhat?' said Bea.
Zander shook his head. âOh, come on!'
Bea was indulgent. âOliver loves a good murder.'
âNo, no!' said Oliver, waving his hands about. âYou haven't heard the rest of it. They say he was a miserable creature, totally under her thumbâ'
âI can believe that,' said Zander. âHe threw his weight about at work, but no, he wouldn't have lasted two rounds with her. She's a heavyweight.'
âSo he came down here to the pub every night to drown his sorrows. Zander; you might be sitting in the very place he used to occupy, night after night, with the two dogs under his feet.'
Zander's arm jerked, and he looked around as if expecting his old boss to appear and turf him out of his chair.
âAnd,' said Oliver, âhe was supposed to be having an affair with one of the barmaids here.'
Zander and Bea both craned their heads to see who was serving drinks at the bar. A big, pot-bellied man, and a woman of perhaps forty, dressed like a teenager in an off-the-shoulder, skimpy T-shirt and very tight, low-slung jeans. A lot of lipstick, a lot of eye make-up, and not much chin. A laugh to frighten.
Zander and Oliver both looked at Bea, and she looked back at them. She shook her head. âDon't even think it. Oliver is letting his imagination run away with him. By all accounts the Honourable Denzil was an unpleasant man to work for, and we've seen today that she's no better. He's dead, rest his soul, and we have to move on. Zander has to make up his mind whether to continue working for her or notâ'
âI think not,' said Zander, setting down his empty glass. âLife's too short.'
Bea reminded him, âYou could get her under the Race Relations Act. I could be your witness.'
He shook his head. âI might get compensation, but it would mean going through a court case, and I'd still lose my job. One way or another, whistle-blowers lose out.'
Bea got to her feet. âWell, I'm fresh out of ideas. Suppose we have a coffee, and then make our way back. Order one for me, will you, Oliver, while I go to the loo?'
She felt bleak. Yes, some part of her agreed with Oliver that something was very wrong at the Trust, but there didn't seem to be anything obvious that they could do about it. She agreed with Zander that he ought to get out of there, but . . . If only God had given her some idea of what to do or say . . . but he hadn't. So she might as well call it a day.
She had to duck her head under a low lintel to get into the ladies, and once there she had to edge her way round a young girl who was hogging the washbasin. And crying, while trying to bathe an eye that was rapidly developing into a shiner.
âOh, my dear,' said Bea. âAre you all right? Silly question, of course you're not. Can I fetch someone for you?'
The girl shook her head. Yellow hair all over the place in bird's nest fashion, pouting lips, too much make-up, too much flesh showing, a pretty bust. Very young.
âDon't fetch no one. He's gone and good riddance. What am I going to do? Me mum'll kill me.'
âI'm sure she won't. Here, let me look.'
One eye painted like a panda, one partially cleaned of make-up, the eyelid reddened and swelling. Bea sat the girl down on a stool and finished bathing the afflicted eye.
âHow old are you?'
âEighteen.'
A lie. Possibly seventeen? Possibly even younger.
The girl sniffed. âLike, I didn't think he'd go off and leave me. How ever am I to get home now?'
âPerhaps he's waiting for you outside, to apologize.'
âNot him. Went off on the bike, sticking his fingers up.' She looked in the mirror and howled. âWhatever do I look like? And I haven't got me eyelash curlers with me. I can't face everyone like this, can I? And me mum'll kill me.'
âBest wash the whole lot off, then.' Bea cleaned the girl's face as tenderly as she could. Without make-up the girl looked even younger. âWhere do you live? If it's not too far away, perhaps I could give you a lift home.'
âOver the hill. If I'd known he was going to walk out on me, like, I'd have worn me ballerinas.'
She was wearing four-inch, spiky heeled sandals. Her toes and heels were already chapped and rubbed raw. Her toenails had been painted black, as were her bitten fingernails. All chipped. She was a mess.
Bea said, âYou live up by the manor house? We were there this morning, taking some stuff back belonging to the owner.'
âLike, you're having me on, aren't you? Me mum cleans for the old witch, twice a week. Can't please her, not anyhow. Last week Her Highness wanted to dock Mum's wages, and they had a right old to-do. She says Mum was spying on her, but she was only looking for his cigarettes, which he always used to let her have a couple, but that was before he copped it. Mum reckons she's so tight with money she'd steal the tartar off your teeth, if she could.'
âYou knew them both?'
âEveryone knows them. Poor old git! I quite liked him. And if he wanted the odd fumble, then it was only to be expected, like, seeing as they've always slept separate, though I can't say I'd have gone that far with him.'
âEr, no. So you knew him quite well?'
A shrug. âRandy old goat. Hands up your skirt soon as look at you, breath like a distillery, but give him his due, he always paid his way.'
âHow?' Though Bea could guess.
âHow d'you think? Like, half an hour's chat and a hand on your knee, and it's a fiver. An hour or so and a cuddle, it's ten. A couple of kisses and a hand up your bra in his car, and it's fifteen. It helped the cash flow, didn't it? He used to come down here every night, twice at weekends. My boyfriend that was, has a part-time job here, helping in the bar, washing up and that, so I often come in on my way home fromâ'
Was she going to say âfrom school?' But she went on with hardly a second's pause.
âWork. A friend lives in the village and gives me a lift here and then I wait for Tony â that's me boyfriend that was â to take me home when he's finished.'
âHe didn't mind your flirting with an older man?'
A shrug. âWe shared the takings. Why not? Only today Tony said I should be nice to another old gent that's been eyeing me up, but I couldn't. He stinks, see. Yuk! Tony argued with me, saying he'd promised the old man I'd give him a cuddle, and he took me outside and walloped me one when I wouldn't, and then he got on his bike and went off and left me. And Pat â that's the landlord â he's going to be livid, being left in the lurch like that. And he's going to ban me for being under . . . for being Tony's girl, and me mum's going to kill me!'
Bea bit back distaste. Didn't the girl realize she'd been on the slippery path to prostitution? âMaybe your mum's right, and you could be making better use of your time.'
The girl wriggled, pushing up her bust. âHomework, you mean? I should be so dodo. I know what assets I got, and they're right here, in front. They're what gets me a coupla drinks and some tips. What have I got to look forward to, otherwise? Sitting at a checkout in a supermarket all day? That's what Mum used to do till she got fed up with it and went on to shelf-filling and a couple of cleaning jobs, and if that's all that's coming to me, then I'll take my fun where I can, thank you very much. Now,' she got up, fluffing up her hair in the mirror, âhow about that lift, then?'
âGive me five minutes to drink my coffee, and meet me in the car park.'
When they met up in the car park, the girl looked at the men, who reacted as if they'd been given an electric shock. They recognized what this girl was, far more quickly than Bea had done.
It turned out that Kylie lived not far off their route back to London. Bea suggested that Kylie sit in the back with her. Kylie wasn't too happy about this. She dismissed Oliver after one coquettish glance, but tipped her hip at Zander and moistened her lips, giving him what she thought was a provocative smile. When he failed to respond, she got into the car and slammed the door, saying it was a nice car but not exactly new, was it?
Bea decided to ignored that. âSo, Kylie, what did you think when you heard the old man had upped and died?'
A grimace. âI was sorry, a bit. Most people thought it was funny like, joking that she'd frightened him to death. Pat, the landlord, he said she could frighten for England. Poor old Dishonourable. Always on about his heart, taking pills, wouldn't walk further than from the car park to the bar, made the dogs run behind his car to give them their exercise, which he shouldn't have done on these roads, it's dangerous, we all said so. But he wasn't going to listen, was he! Not him! Not the Dishonourable.'
âWas his heart that bad?'
Another shrug. âHe was supposed to be having some operation or other, but it got put off for some reason. Money, I expect. She spends every penny she can get on that old wreck of a house.' She pulled a mirror out of her handbag and yelped. âWhat on earth do I look like? If I get in before Mum, I can put some more slap on, and maybe she won't notice. She'll kill me when she finds out I've busted up with Tony.'
âDon't tell me; you divide your takings three ways? Tony, your mum, and you?'
âI have to be nice to Pat, as well.' The girl humped a shoulder. âWhat's it to you? And you can drop me off here, like it's only just round the corner, and I don't want no questions about why I'm coming home in a big car with no money to show for it. Er, you couldn't spring to a fiver, could you?'
Bea took one of her business cards and a tenner out of her handbag and held it up. âI'm collecting information about the people at the Manor. If you think of anything more, or your mother has anything to say, would you give me a ring? It will be on a business footing, you understand? Payment by return of post.'
Kylie snatched the money without making any promises and got herself out of the car. All three watched her rump twitching up and down as she minced her way out of sight. Neither man commented. Bea felt like saying a whole lot of stuff about poverty and education and the unnecessarily hopeless view of life taken by some, but got tangled up in so many conflicting thoughts that she kept silent.
Oliver drove smoothly off, taking them back to London by the quickest route.
Saturday evening
Bea paced up and down the garden. Surely she'd soon be tired enough to sleep. Across the back of the house she strode, between the huge pots which Maggie had planted up with Busy Lizzies, petunias and geraniums. Past the ironwork staircase that curled up to the kitchen on the first floor . . . along the flagstones to where a garden shed crouched in the shadow of the brick wall . . . across the garden to the sycamore, where the folding chairs sat neglected . . . and back again to the house.