The Food Detective (8 page)

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Authors: Judith Cutler

Downstairs, then.

To my amazement Sue was ferreting through his bureau. ‘Address book. Bank details. The police’ll need them.’

And would have been happy to find them themselves, no doubt. However, her good-heartedness gave me the chance to look at his books – he had a row of what looked like first editions of scientific books, with a scattering of philosophy – not at all what I’d have expected. If ever a man was a porn man, it was Fred. I’d bet a week’s takings there’d be some highly dubious stuff on the hard disk of the state of the art computer sitting uneasily on a fifties table next to a well-worn armchair. I could almost see him sitting there perving away. What I couldn’t work out was why a professional man with a decent small animal practice, not to mention his farm work, should live in such a museum piece. What did he spend his money on? Not clothes, not car, certainly not home.

‘Have you found anything?’

Sue shook her head. ‘I wonder where else I should look.’ She peered round the room.

‘His dispensary? I mean, he’d have to keep all his practice records somewhere – perhaps he lumped everything together.’ I went through into the hall and stared at the door. It had a couple of serious locks – all the drugs he needed to keep, I suppose. I put my nose to one of the keyholes and sniffed. No, nothing but the smell of doggy wee that veterinary disinfectant never quite
eradicates
. Not a body, I’d stake my life on it.

There was a loud rattle at the front door. Sue and I grabbed
each other. I twigged first. ‘Post, I suppose.’ I toddled off to have a look. Yes, a heap of what looked like circulars, nothing personal. I leafed through it twice, just to make sure.

Shrugging, I called, ‘Time we left the experts have a go, Sue.’

She followed me reluctantly, hugging her coat round her and slipping her shoes on as slowly as a bullied kid on the way to school. She was clearly in two minds over the key. With an ambiguous glance at me, she replaced it under the pot.

‘You said you’d told him off,’ she said, turning back slowly to the street.

‘I found him with his hand in Lindi’s knickers. Literally. Broad daylight. Stupid girl stood there giggling. God knows why she didn’t tip his drink over his head. I would have.’

She laughed, the sound brushed away by the wind. ‘I’ll bet you would.’

Tuesday night was WeightWatchers night in Taunton, and it would take more than a drop of rain to put me off. Actually, it was rather more than a drop. It hadn’t stopped all day. Much to my disappointment at lunchtime the snug had been almost empty – I’d have loved a good turnout of settle men, all seething with speculation about Fred and eyeing me meaningfully. I doubted if there’d be many more that evening. All the regulars knew there wasn’t much in the way of food on Tuesdays, and there’d be no passing trade, not if people had any sense. So I took myself into Taunton early, scuttling to the library so I could carry on checking Luke Greville. Actually, now I’d met his mother, I didn’t want him to be an out and out villain. Perhaps if he’d just committed a sexual peccadillo with a consenting adult I wouldn’t have objected. Especially one with a happy ending. But it was frustrating, all the same, to find that although the Fraud Squad had reportedly investigated his affairs, no charges were ever pressed. The papers were very cagey about making direct allegations – hadn’t they ever heard of
Publish and be damned?
There was nothing obvious about Nick Thomas, either, though I noted a number of crimes in Brum that had been dramatic enough to creep into the
Times
. I’d get Nesta on to all of them.

After a cup of tea – yes, literally that, no milk, no sugar and
certainly
no sticky bun – I dropped into the WeightWatchers session and had the satisfaction of having lost another two pounds and a bit of an ounce. I stopped long enough for a natter with a couple of women I know by sight, before paddling back to the car.

Despite my elation, I wondered if I’d been foolish to come out. No. I didn’t wonder. I knew. The A road was awash, and we got diverted well before Kings Duncombe. It was hard to tell road from puddle, and at times I was scared by the feeling that the car was being sucked away even as I drove. On one corner the flashing lights of a fire engine illuminated the ghostly figures of householders trying to rescue their furniture as their house was pumped out. Poor sods. Thank God the White Hart stood at the higher end of the village. I wouldn’t give much for the shop’s chances if the stream overflowed its banks.

Someone from the council, swifter to respond to an excess of water than the water company had been to an excess of colour in water, had already dropped off ROAD CLOSED signs. I got diverted several more times, before I saw the lights of the village ahead. Even as I pulled into the pond that was my car park, they started to gutter. Candles? Yes, I had plenty of those. Open fires. Food. Drink. No problem. I could hole up here as long as it took, and make the White Hart the centre of the community it was supposed to be. My predecessor had boasted that he’d never closed even when the village was cut off for eight days by six feet of snow. If he could do it, I could do it. Even if the water lapped and swirled round my feet as I stepped from the car, it was well clear of the four steep steps to the back door.

I stepped into total darkness and a girl’s scream.

‘Lucy? Is that you?’

‘Mrs Welford?’ A hand gripped my arm. ‘It’s only you!’

‘Who were you expecting it to be?’

‘I dunno. But –’

‘Just pass me the torch from the hall table. Where it always is. Thanks. There, that’s better. Hang on, what the hell’s that lot?’ I pointed the torch at a heap of white at her feet.

‘Sheets, Mrs Welford. And blankets, like. I’ve been airing
them.’

‘Airing them? Why? And why you? Where’s Lindi? Oh, light some candles, girl, and then you can tell me exactly what’s been going on.’

‘It’s not Lucy’s fault,’ a gruff voice from the darkness said.

I swung the torch. ‘Nick Thomas!’ The beam must have hurt his eyes. After a moment I shifted it. ‘What are you doing here?’ If I’d expected anyone to be needing a bed it might have been Tom Dearborn’s girl, Sharon. So why hadn’t she come? I must phone Tom. ‘The candles are under the bar, this end, Lucy. And matches.’ I pointed with the torch.

‘Orphan of the storm,’ he said, his clothes dripping on to the flagstones. Had he been swimming? He couldn’t have been
wetter
. ‘And Lucy said she was sure since you did B and B, you’d put me up for the night.’

Lucy returned, looking like Lorna Doone in the glow of a pair of candles she’d had the sense to put in pint glasses. As if in role, she almost curtseyed. ‘I was just making up one of the en suite rooms.’

‘Good girl.’ I smiled, but seethed. It wasn’t me but my
predecessor
but one who’d put up the B and B sign. I didn’t know how he’d dared. I’d hung up a ‘No vacancies’ notice, but someone had absconded with it and I hadn’t got round to replacing it.

The rooms were in a very poor state, and I didn’t like to charge for them. I had nowhere to offer a guest breakfast – you could cut up the stale air in the bar and carry it out in chunks. This might pass as rustic atmosphere if you were downing a lunchtime drink but wouldn’t go with cereal and skimmed milk. On the other hand, if I offered Nick free accommodation, it might put us both in an awkward situation.

‘Leave one of those candles down here,’ I said, passing her the bundle of bedclothes. ‘Good girl. Careful how you go.’ She was half way up the stairs when I realised something was wrong. ‘Where’s Lindi?’

The poor kid said awkwardly, ‘She phoned to say… she
couldn
’t come tonight.’

Did she indeed? ‘Well, it was considerate of her to warn me. And to have the gumption to phone you. Off you go.’

Nick didn’t watch her up the stairs. Brownie points for that, at
least – unless he was afraid I’d throw him out if he did. ‘The campsite’s flooded. I waded over to get out as much as I could, but then the caravan just floated away, boxes and all.’ He was
taking
great pains not to let his voice break.

All those little things he couldn’t bear to leave in store. If I was kind, he might weep. I was brisk. ‘Clothes?’

You could see the deep breath, the brace of the shoulders. ‘Got a rucksack full. And some photos and things. But most of it’s gone.’ He swallowed hard.

I couldn’t help myself. ‘You poor bugger. Go on, upstairs with you. Lucy’ll run you a hot bath and then I’ll rustle up some food for you. No, leave all those wet things down here – I’ll stow them in the boiler room. Oh, for God’s sake, man – don’t you think I’ve seen a man in the dark in his knickers before?’

At which point the lights came back on.

 

The really wet stuff still dripping in the boiler room, and his shoes stuffed with yesterday’s
Guardian
, I’d ended up putting all the stuff in his rucksack through the tumble dryer. Though I drew the line at ironing it myself, I was happy to provide him with the wherewithal. I set up the board at one end of my own kitchen, and busied myself starting the living room fire – not so much to keep us warm as insurance against another power cut – and then preparing vegetables. He’d have to eat what I was going to eat, which was not necessarily stuff I served in the bar. Not that there were any clients tonight. If any was fool enough at this stage to venture out for a drink, Lucy could call me. Otherwise she could sit in front of the fire and do her homework
uninterrupted
, which may have been the reason she volunteered to take Lindi’s shift. As for getting her home, I supposed I’d better chauffeur her. Usually she was happy to walk, on the
understanding
that her dad would meet her halfway, but I didn’t see him leaving his fireside just for my peace of mind. His line was that Lucy was used to being on her own. He regarded as downright eccentric my city take on girls wandering solo down lonely lanes.

‘The funny thing,’ Nick said, resplendent in my black silk kimono, ‘is that the far end of the village – you know, the shop end – is dry.’

‘Torrential rain apart.’

‘OK, not actually flooded. The stream’s fuller than you said it was earlier, but certainly not to overflowing. Whereas this end, where you’d have expected it to be flood-free, the lanes are like sluices.’

‘Not funny at all if someone rearranges the watercourse,’ I said. ‘Which is what I bet your nice Mr Bulcombe was doing when I saw him.’

‘Why should he want to do that?’ A rare smile told me I was interesting him.

‘Come on, you’re the copper – work it out. Either he doesn’t want other people to know that the stream’s running pink, so he sends the water another way. Or he’s found out what you really do – and not, before you ask, from me – and he wants you out of here.’

‘You sound like a cop yourself,’ he said, taking the hanger I passed him.

‘You spend as long as I did with a man the wrong side of the Law, you learn to think like a cop. Studying the opposition’s
tactics
, you might say.’

‘Sounds reasonable.’

‘So who knows you’re with the Food Standards Agency? No, don’t tell me – Fred Tregothnan. Well, you were a fool to tell him.’

‘I didn’t tell him. One area of our work is meat hygiene. He’s the vet responsible for checking a food packing company’s
premises
near Barnstable.’

‘Which you had to check out?’

‘In a friendly sort of way, I told him I’d be paying a visit in the next few months.’

‘If that was the conversation I saw you having last Friday morning it didn’t look very friendly. Watch your iron, Copper! That’s a decent shirt.’ So he was rattled, was he? Any moment now I’d find myself offering. ‘Was he upset enough to do a bunk?’

‘What the hell do you mean?’

I passed him another hanger. ‘Only that Fred’s gone walkabout
– and the police have logged him as a Missing Person.’

His reaction was much the same as mine had been. ‘Misper? But he’s a grown man – they don’t usually start worrying this early.’

‘Perhaps they know things about him we don’t. Or I don’t?’

He concentrated on the next shirt, taking great pains with the right sleeve.

‘Come on, Copper, any moment now your little pals’ll come knocking on the door asking what you were arguing about –’

‘Why? Who’ve you told?’

‘All those years married to Tony, and I tell anyone anything I don’t have to? But it stands to reason, doesn’t it – if I saw you, half the village will already have blabbed. They’re probably after me, too, because Fred and I had a pretty audible row about five hours after yours. He was groping young Lindi.’

‘Which might explain why she didn’t turn up tonight and Lucy filled in?’

‘If she’d been upset. She seemed more anxious about my yelling at him than about having his fingers up her bum. Tried to say it was only a bit of fun,’ I added in a Lindi-bleat.

‘Did she mean it or was she afraid of offending Tregothnan?’

‘She made me sound like a spoilsport,’ I admitted. ‘How much more ironing have you got to do? When the end’s in sight, I can start on the supper. While it cooks, I’ll run Lucy home – I’ll put you in charge of the bar while I’m off.’

‘Honoured, I’m sure. Wouldn’t it make more sense,’ he said, putting the iron on its heel and switching off, ‘if I took her? Hell, Josie, don’t look at me as if I’m some bloody paedophile. She’s younger than my own daughter.’

‘I’m sure that’s what they all say.’ I reached for my keys.

‘I was hoping,’ he said, suddenly as bright-eyed as the kid policeman I’d once thrown my stilettos at, ‘to try out my new toy. You probably didn’t see it. It’s parked at the front, because I wasn’t sure how big your yard is. Or how big the toy is.’

‘Not another one with a bloody gas-guzzler! Jesus, you
people
! Have you no idea how much pollution they push out?’ Not nearly as much as my chopper rides, truth to tell, but no one
knew about those.

His face fell.

I might have gratuitously smashed a kid’s train set. ‘But at least you have the excuse that you need it for your job,’ I conceded without waiting for him to plead, ‘not just for the school run. And presumably you know how to drive the thing – unlike all the mothers round here who think they’re giant dodgems.’

His smile was bleak. What nerve had I touched this time? ‘It’s the greenest I could find,’ he mumbled.

‘Well, why not give it a spin?’ I checked my watch. ‘There won’t be any customers now. If there are, tough. I’ll just give Lucy a shout.’

 

‘Will you be doing the cooking for this restaurant of yours
yourself
?’ asked Nick, now fully dressed again in garments so drab I almost wanted to tell him to slip the kimono on again. He broke a five minutes’ silence. He leaned back from the table, dabbing his lips with the linen table napkin, smug as a paterfamilias at his board.

Double-damask linen tablecloth. Silver cutlery. Bone china. Well, the food deserved it. As for the decorative candles in silver candlesticks, they weren’t meant to be romantic – they were there in case of another power failure.

‘Some of the time,’ I agreed. ‘After all, I do pretty well
everything
now.’

‘I should think you’re guaranteed a regular clientèle, then.’ He managed a smile.

‘Local fresh vegetables, local free range chicken cooked in good quality wine –’

‘Local?’ He must be feeling better to try teasing me.

‘My preference is New Zealand. It’d be hard not to make a meal taste good,’ I said, clearing the dishes on to a tray – I’d never been good at clever waiting with plates stacked along my arm, especially with my own china.

When I returned from the kitchen, he asked, ‘So you’ll be going for a niche market?’

‘For the restaurant. And as good as I dare for bar meals. You’ve barely touched that wine.’

‘Best on a full stomach,’ he said, drinking quite deeply. ‘You neither, actually.’

‘Best for a flat stomach. But I wouldn’t object to another glass. There are times I’d love to go on a bender and eat and drink a whole week’s worth of points in one sitting.’

‘Why don’t you?’ He was topping up my glass, but paused to look at me.

‘Because you don’t lose as much as I’ve lost without a good deal of will power. And there’s another stone to go. And it’ll take even more will power not to pile it all on again. I’ve seen it dozens of times. The scales. The panic. The diet. And then you get bored or upset or plain greedy and on it all goes again. And then it’s the scales, the panic and the whole lot all over again. Which is why I don’t just diet, I exercise. Which is why I saw the pink water and the barbed wire on the footpath and Bulcombe armed with a spade. You’re in a better position than I am to find how all these are connected. But I’ll start you off. Your first weekend here, you found yourself flattened into the hedge. By a large, unlit lorry, Sue said. Which road, Copper?’

‘The obvious one. The one leading directly from here to the campsite.’

I stood up to reach out my large-scale ordnance survey map, spreading it on the table in front of him. ‘I can’t see anything on here to attract large unlit lorries. Can you?’

He looked furtive, then embarrassed. ‘Not without my reading glasses, I can’t.’

‘Go and get them then. That’s how you’re singing for your supper tonight – by helping me work this out.’

I’d loaded the dishwasher by the time he returned, clutching a swish-looking laptop, plus his reading glasses. He installed
himself
at the dining table again, checking for a place mat to go under it before I could even yell.

‘I use this for the job,’ he said. ‘It’s not got just large-scale maps, you can enlarge whole sections. And there’s another
programme
that gives you aerial views of everything. Want to see?’ He vacated his chair so I could look at the screen – I’ve never worked out why you can only see from one angle. Something to
do with the plasma, I suppose.

‘So you need aerial views for your work?’

‘Hardly. But I do need the maps. And a handy in-car guide to where I am and how to dodge traffic jams. A manor this big, I can justify a few bells and whistles.’ He paused. Was he waiting for me to apologise? He ought to have known by know that Josie Welford didn’t do apologies.

‘“People muthst be amuthsed”,’ I muttered.

He looked at me sharply. ‘Orwell?’

‘Dickens. So this is the White Hart, God’s eye view?’

‘Right. And here it is’ – he leant across me – ‘on the OS map. And this is how you enlarge it. See?’

‘Clever,’ I conceded. ‘Tell me, does that chariot of yours have one of those on-board computers to say if you’re parking safely?’

‘Yep. And it changes out of four-wheel drive when I don’t need it.’

‘So it’s got more whistles and bells than the Last Night of the Proms,’ I said, amused and almost approving. ‘And your campsite is here? And the road runs here. So what we need to look for is where your road intersects with my path. Right?’

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