[Wexford 01] From Doon & Death (15 page)

‘I
?' As he spoke the monosyllable Quadrant's voice was almost hysterically incredulous. Then he began to rock with laughter. It was a soundless cruel mirth that seemed to send an evil wind through the room. He made no noise, but Wexford felt scorn leap out of the laughing man like a springing animal, scorn and contempt and the wrath that is one of the deadly sins.
‘I
,
know
her?
In that sort of way? I assure you, dear Chief Inspector, that I most emphatically knew her not'

Sickened, Wexford turned away. Mrs Quadrant was looking down into her lap. It was as if she had withdrawn into a sort of shame.

This Drury

Wexford said, 'do you know if she ever called him Doon?'

Was it his imagination or was it simply coincidence that at that moment Quadrant's laughter was switched off like a wrenched tap?

‘D
oon?' his wife said. 'Oh, no, I never heard her call anyone Doon.'

She didn't get up when Wexford rose to go, but gave him a dismissive nod and reached for the book she had been reading. Quadrant let him out briskly, closing the door before he reached the bottom of the steps as if he had been selling bru
shes or reading the meter. Dougi
e Q! If there was ever a fellow who could strangle one woman and then make love to another a dozen yards away
...
But why? Deep in thought, he walked down the Kingsbrook Road, crossed to the opposite side of the road and would have passed Helen Missal's garage unseeing but for the voice that hailed him.


Did you see Douglas?' Her tone was wistful but she had cheered up since he had last seen her. The bikini had been changed for a printed silk dress, high-heeled shoes and a big hat.

The question was beneath Wexford's dignity.

'Mrs Quadrant was able to fill in a few gaps,' he said.

‘F
abia was? You amaze me. She's very discreet. Just as well, Douglas being what he is.' For a moment her pretty face
was swollen with sensuality. H
e's magnificent, isn't he? He's splendid.' Shaking herself, she drew her hand across the face and when she withdrew it Wexford saw that the lust had been wiped away. 'My Christ

she said, once more cheerful and outrageous, 'some people don't know when they're well off!

She unlocked the garage doors, opened the boot of the red Dauphine and took out a pair of flatter shoes.

‘I
had the impression

Wexford said, 'that there was something else you wanted to tell me

He paused. 'When your husband interrupted us

'Perhaps there was and perhaps mere wasn't. I don't think I will now.' The shoes changed, she danced up to the car and swung the door open.

'Off to the cinema?' Wexford asked.

She banged the door and switched on the ignition.

'Damn you!' Wexford heard her shout above the roar of the engine.

Chapter 10

We were young, we were merry, we were very very wise. And the door stood open at our feast
...

Mary Coleridge,
Unwelcome

Nectarine Cottage lay in a damp hollow, a bramble-filled basin behind the Stowerton Road. The approach down a winding path was hazardous and Miss Clarke was taking no chances. Notices pencilled on lined paper greeted Burden.at intervals as he descended. The first on the gate had commanded
Lift and
push
hard;
the second, some ten feet down the path.
Mind
barbed
wire.
Presently the brambles gave place to faint traces of cultivation. This was of a strictly utilitarian kind, rows of sad cabbages among the weeds, a splendid marrow plant protected from the thistles by a home-made cloche. Someone had pinned a sheet of paper to its roof.
Do
not
remove glass.
Evidently Miss Clarke had clumsy friends or was the victim of trespassers. This Burden could understand, for there was nothing to indicate habitation but the vegetables and the notices, and the cottage only came into view when he was almost upon it at the end of the path.

The door stood wide open and from within came rich gurgling giggles. For a moment he thought that, although there were no other houses in the lane, he had come to the wrong place. He rapped on the door, the giggles rose to a gale and someone called out

Is that you. Dodo? We'd almost given you up

Dodo might be a man or a woman, probably a
woman. Burden gave a very masculine cough. 'Oh, gosh, it isn't,' said the voice.
‘I
tell you what,

Di. It must be old Fanny Fowler's cop, a coughing
cop.'

Burden felt uncommonly foolish. The voice seemed to come from behind a closed door at the end of the passage.

He called loudly. Inspector Burden, madam!'

The door was immediately flung open and a woman came out dressed like a Tyrolean peasant Her fair hair was drawn tightly back and twisted round her head in plaits.

'Oh, gosh,' she said again.
‘I
didn't realize the front door was still open.

I was only kidding about you being Miss Fowler's cop. She rang up and said you might come

'Miss Clarke?'

'Who else?' Burden thought she looked very odd, a grown woman dressed up as Humperdinck's Gretel. 'Come and pig it along with Di and me in the dungeon,' she said.

Burden followed her into the kitchen.
Mind
the steps,
said another notice pinned to the door and he saw it just in time to stop himself crashing down the three steep steps to the slate-flagged floor. The kitchen was even nastier than Mrs Parsons' and much less clean. But outside the window the sun was shining and a red rose pressed against the diamond panes.

There was nothing odd about the woman Miss Clarke had called Di. It might have been Mrs Parsons' double sitting at the table eating toast, only this woman's hair was black and she wore glasses.

‘D
i Plunkett, Inspector Burden

Cl
are Clarke said. 'Sit down, Inspector - not
that
stool. It’
s got fat on it -and have a cup of tea.'

Burden refused the tea and sat on a wooden chair that looked fairly clean.

'I've no objection if you talk while I eat

said Miss Clarke, bursting once more into giggles. She peered at a tin of jam and said crossly to her companion: 'Confound it! South African. I know I shan't fancy it now.' She pouted and said dramatically, 'Ashes on my tongue!' But Burden noticed that she helped herself generously and spread the jam on to a doorstep of bread. With h
er mouth full she said to him: ‘F
ire away. I'm all ears.'

'All I really want to know is if you can tell me the names of any of Mrs Parsons' boy friends when she was Margaret Godfrey, when you knew her.'

Miss Clarke smacked her lips.

'You've come to the right shop

she said. I've got a memory like an elephant.'

^You can say that again

said Di Plunkett, 'and if s not only your memory.' They both laughed, Miss Clarke with great good humour.

‘I
remember Margaret Godfrey perfectly

she said. 'Second-class brain, anaemic looks, personality both prim and dim. Still,
de
mortuis
and all that jazz, you know. (Prang that fly, Di. There's a squeegy-weegy sprayer thing on the shelf behind your great bonce.) Not a very social type, Margaret, no community spirit. Went around with a female called Bertram, vanished now into the mists of obscurity. (Got him, Di!) Chummed up with one Fabia Rogers for a while - Fabia, forsooth! not to mention Diana Stevens of sinister memory -'

Miss or Mrs Plunkett broke in with a scream of laughter and waving the fly-killer made as if to fire a stream of liquid at Miss Clarke's head. Burden shifted his chair out of range.

Ducking and giggling, Clare Clarke went on:
'...
Now notorious in the Stowerton rural district as Mrs William Plunkett, one of this one-eyed burg's most illustrious sons!'

'You are a scream, Clare

Mrs Plunkett gasped. 'Really, I envy those lucky members of the upper fourth. When I think of what we had to put up with-

'What about boy friends. Miss Clarke?'

'Cherchez
l
'homme,
eh? I said you'd come to the right shop. D'you remember, Di, when she went out with him the first time and we sat behind them in the pictures? Oh, gosh, I'll never forget that to my dying day.'

Talk about sloppy,' said Mis Plunkett '"Do you mind if I hold your hand, Margaret?" I thought you were going to burst a blood-vessel, Clare.'

'What was his name?' Burden was bored and at the same time angry. He thought the years had toughened him, but now the picture of the green and white bundle in the wood swam before his eyes; that and Parsons' face. He realized that of all the people they had interviewed he hadn't liked a single one. Was there no pity in any of them, no common mercy?

'What was his n
ame?' he said again wearily. ‘Du
dley Drury. On my sacred oath, Dudley Drury

'What a name to go to bed with,' Mrs Plunkett said.

Clare Clarke whispered in her ear, but loud enough for Burden to hear: 'She never did! Not on your sweet life

Mrs Plunkett saw his face and looked a little ashamed. She said defensively in a belated effort to help:

'He's still around if you want to trace him. He lives down by Stowerton Station. Surely you don't think he killed Meg Godfrey?'

Clare Clarke said suddenly: 'She was quite pretty. He was very keen on her. She didn't look like that then, you know, not like that ghastly mockery in the paper. I think I've got a snap somewhere. All girls together.'

Burden had got what he wanted. Now he wanted to go. It was a bit late in the day for snaps. If they could have seen one on Thursday it might have helped but that was all.

Thank you. Miss Clarke,' he said, 'Mrs Plunkett. Good afternoon.'

'Well, cheeri-bye. If s been nice meeting you.' She giggled. 'If s not often we see a man in here, is it, Di?'

Half-way down the overgrown path he stopped in his tracks. A woman in jodhpurs and open-necked shirt was coming up towards the cottage, whistling. It was Dorothy Sweeting.

Dodo, he thought. They'd mistaken him for someone called Dodo and Dodo was Dorothy Sweeting. From long experience Burden knew that whatever may happen in detective fiction, coincidence is more common than conspiracy in real life.

'Good afternoon. Miss Sweeting.'

She grinned at him with cheerful innocence.

'Oh, hallo,' she said, 'fancy seeing you. I've just come from the farm. There's a blinking great crowd like a Cup Final in that wood. You ought to see them.'

Still not inured to man's inhuman curiosity. Burden sighed.

'You know that bush where they found her?' Dorothy Sweeting went on excitedly. 'Well, Jimmy

Traynor's flogging twigs off it at a bob a time. I told Mr Prewett he ought to charge half a crown admittance

‘I
hope he's not thinking of taking your advice, miss

Burden said in a repressive voice.

There's nothing wrong in it I knew a fellow who had a plane crash on his land and he turned a whole field into a car park he had so many sightseers

'

Burden flattened himself against the hedge to let her pass.

'Your tea will be getting cold, Miss Sweeting,' he said.

'
Whatever next?' Wexford said. ‘If
we don't look sharp they'll have every stick in that wood uprooted and taken home for souvenirs.'

'Shall I have a couple of the lads go over there, sir?' Burden asked.

'You do that, and go and get the street directory. Well go and see this Drury character together.'

'You aren't going to wait to hear from Colorado, then?'

'Drury's a big possibility, Mike. He could well be Doon. I can't help feeling
that
whatever Parsons says about his wife's chastity, when she came back here she met up with Doon again and succumbed to his charms. As to why he should have killed her - well, all I can say is, men
do
strangle women they're having affairs with, and Mrs P. may have accepted the car rides and the meals without being willing to pay for services rendered.

The way I see it, Mike, Doon had been seeing Mrs P. and asked her out on Tuesday afternoon with a view to persuading her to become his mistress. They couldn't meet at her home because of the risks and Doon was going to pick her up on the Pomfret Road. She took the rain-hood with her because the weather had been wet and she didn't bank on being in the car all the time. Even if she didn't want Doon for her lover she wouldn't want him to see her with wet hair.'

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