Ollie said he thought hed gone off swimming with some kids and he knew where he left his clothes in the house. I sent him off there to fetch summat of Denhams we could leave around to fool the cops and while he were gone I dragged the body away from the hut. When Ollie came back with that fancy watch Denham wears I told him to bugger off and say he went to shelter somewhere away from the machnry because of the lightning. Then I snagged the watch on Lady Mucks clothes and headed off myself leaving her lying in the grass. How she got in the hog roast cage I don’t know unless Ollie sneaked back and put her there for some reason. But he said it werent him when I found him at Witch Cottage. I wanted to be sure hed stick to his story but the soft bugger had got himself in such a state he said he were going to see Whitby and tell him everything soon as Miss Lee got back and took the needles out. He said hed mek sure the police understood it had been an accident. I said you stupid sod how the fuck can you strangle some bugger by accident? And I felt the blackness coming over me again and I picked up one of them needles and stuck it right into his back. Didn’t mean to kill him like I didn’t really mean no harm to Daph Brereton not to start with anyway but I can see how its going to look.
All ive lived for these past years is to get Millstone back for myself and now Ive got it but for how long? They’ll lock me up for sure and mebbe they wont even let me keep Millstone if I live long enough to get out again. So fuck them all. If I cant live here at least I can die here.
Fuck you all
“Poor old sod,” said Dalziel.
Whitby looked at him in surprise, then nodded his head and repeated, “Aye, poor old sod. What do we do now, sir?”
He was in Dalziel’s hands. There’d been no thought of contacting anybody else till he’d spoken to the Fat Man.
Dragged from his bed, Dalziel’s sleep-slurred voice had said, “This had better be bad, Jug.”
But when he heard how bad it was, the slur had been replaced by a cold clarity.
“He’s dead?”
“Definite.”
“And there’s a note?”
“Aye. On the kitchen table under an empty whisky bottle.”
“Bag the note, get out of the house, wait for me.”
He’d borrowed Pet Sheldon’s car. Looking at his face, she hadn’t asked for an explanation. As he drove out of the Avalon gate, he’d met the local newsagent’s van coming in with the morning papers. He’d stopped him and helped himself.
One look at the front page of the Mid-York News was enough. Without actually stating that a formal charge had been made, Sammy Ruddlesdin was once more giving the impression that it was safe to walk the streets of Mid-Yorkshire again as DCI Pascoe, the county’s answer to Poirot, had got the titled perpetrator (and his accomplice) under lock and key.
“Oh, Pete, Pete,” groaned Dalziel. “I warned you. Ignore their shit and eventually it’ll drop off you. It’s the buggers’ praise you can never quite scrape away!”
The one good thing was that it was only the Mid-York News that had jumped the gun so dramatically and he didn’t doubt that the other papers would be only too glad of a chance to make one of their own look an arsehole. So there was still plenty of time for Pascoe to regroup. Arresting the Denhams was fine. They had, after all, admitted a serious offense. But with just a little shuffling of the facts-and Pete was a very fine shuffler! — it should be easy to present their transfer to HQ as a subtle ploy to divert the press from Sandytown so that the local man on the spot could follow his instructions and bring the case to a satisfactory conclusion. Dan Trimble would be delighted. Case solved, full confession, perp dead, no trial. What could be more satisfactory?
“What do we do now?” he echoed Jug Whitby. “You ring Mr. Pascoe.”
“Me? I though mebbe that you…”
“No. Your patch, Jug. Your local knowledge that brought you here. Any credit going should be thine. And Mr. Pascoe’s. You’ll tell the press that you were here following Mr. Pascoe’s instructions, right? And it is right, isn’t it? ’Cos he never told you to stop looking for Hen.”
“Aye, sir, but it was you-”
“I’ve not been here, Jug. I’m in bed fast asleep. I’m a convalescent invalid, remember?”
He rose from the step and stretched himself in the sunlight.
Pascoe would be up now, he didn’t doubt, eager to get back to the Denhams, hoping-believing! — that, with a little more pressure, a little more cunning, he could get the answers that would make the headlines he had probably just read with his breakfast come true.
The news about Hen Hollis would come as a shock, then as a relief.
But it had better not come from Dalziel.
No way he could pass on the news without it sounding like a gloating I told you so!
“Which,” said the Fat Man to the unheeding sun, “I bloody well did, too!”
VOLUME THE FIFTH
Miss Heywood, I astonish you.-You hardly know what to make of me.-I see by your looks you are not used to such quick measures.
1
FROM: charley@whiffle.com
TO: cassie@natterjack.com
SUBJECT: farewell amp; festival!
Hi Cass!
My last mail from Sandytown! Like I told you after the great anticlimax, I was ready to head straight back home amp; immerse myself in the serene certainties of life at Willingden Farm. Ordinary-run-of-the-ruined-mill-boring-had never seemed more attractive. But Tom amp; Mary were so pressing-Id lived through the dark days-surely I wanted to see the dawn-that sort of thing-at least that was Tom. Mary was more-of course you want to get back to your family but I hope now we are family too-sort of-at least thats how I think of you- amp; Minnies really going to miss you-I know I am-but please dont feel any pressure!
Shes never said anything-but I think deep down in the middle of the night Mary may have been having nightmares that Tom was somehow mixed up in Lady Ds death-or maybe it was her own dislike amp; distrust of the woman making her feel guilty- amp; now the crisis is past-as often happens-the strain begins to show!
How could I abandon her straightaway! So I said OK-but Ive promised to be home for the Bank Holiday-if Im not there at the Willingden Country Show on Monday to see dad snapping up prizes for the Sexiest Heiffer- amp; mum for the most scrumptious Victoria Sponge-Ill get the gold medal for the Blackest Sheep of Family Heywood!
So Ive agreed to stay till today Saturday-for the Grand Opening of Sandytowns first ever Festival of Health. What better time amp; place for a wounded community to start its healing-says Tom-I think hes practicing his opening speech on me! — but he may have a point. Certainly Sandytowns showing remarkable resilience-only 4 days since they found poor Hen amp; already the locals have moved from shock! horror! to a kind of knowing fatalism-the Hollises a doomed clan-not marked for happiness-only Alan at the Hope amp; Anchor seems to have escaped the curse-maybe his ma played away! I even heard someone say-Hen always said he were born at Millstone- amp; no bugger-not God in His Heaven nor yon old cow at the Hall-were going to stop him dieing there!
Ive made a lot of notes-might do a little paper sometime-tragedy amp; the mass consciousness-not snappy enough? — OK-how about pigs amp; needles amp; two yards of rope! Sorry. You can see Im doing it too-turning tragedy into a topic.