âAnd they've all got to begin somewhereâ¦'
âOf courseâ¦'
âEven the least promising.'
âThem, too,' said Sloan fervently.
Detective Constable Crosby, who was standing in front of him now, was a case in point. He was the least bright star in the detective firmament of âF' Division, the police equivalent of being all fingers and thumbs in whatever he did.
âIn my opinion,' said the ACC loftily, âit's never a bad idea for beginners to cut their teeth on something not too important.'
âOf courseâ¦'
âCases where the outcome isn't vital to law and order.'
âI think I take your point, sir.'
âAfter all, he â I mean, any inexperienced young constable â could make mistakes in putting a case together.'
âEasily, sir.'
âAnd even accidentally let fall things he â or she, of course â shouldn't.'
âIt has been known, sir.'
âAnd afterwards he â or she, of course â could be shown what he â or she, of course â had done shall we say less than well rather than wrong.'
âIf they had,' pointed out Sloan.
âOn the other hand, Inspector, no way must we fail to honour our obligations under paragraph forty of Magna Carta.'
âI can't quite recallâ¦'
â“To no one will we sell, to no one deny or delay right or justice”,' declared the ACC in ringing tones, thus clearing his own decks and handing the problem straight back to Sloan.
Sloan passed a modified version of this on to Detective Constable Crosby â jejune but eager â and sent him off to take statements all round and prepare the case against Herbert Bates.
âIt's all yours, lad,' said Sloan basely. âSee how you get on for startersâ¦'
Detective Inspector Sloan's highly confidential filing was almost finished by the time the young Detective Constable reported back the next day.
He looked crestfallen. âI'm sorry, sir,' he mumbled, âbut there isn't going to be a case after all.'
âHow come?'
âLarky Nolson has withdrawn the charge.'
âTell me.'
âIt's like this, sir,' said Crosby very apologetically, âI took some of the soil off Larky's shoes and matched it with that in Mr Bates's garden, although I know that doesn't actually prove anythingâ¦'
âNo.'
âAnd the shoe matched the footprints in Mr Bates's ground, although they are four days old and it's only circumstantial evidence anyway.'
An uneasy thought occurred to Sloan, as ever worried by possible allegations of police irregularities. âHow did you get Larky to take his shoe off?'
âI accidentally spilt some hot tea on his foot, sir. It didn't scald him,' he added hastily, on catching sight of his superior's expression.
âAnd?' Heroically, Sloan refrained from comment.
âI got the remains of some cooked cauliflower from Larky's dustbin.'
âWithout his permission?'
âI got it from the corporation waste collection van. Yesterday was collection day.'
âYou did, did you?'
âI understand, sir,' he said anxiously, âthat once the contents have been taken by the binmen, the owner has voluntarily surrendered his rights to them. I did check that with the council, sir.'
âThat's not proof positive either.'
âNo, sir. So I got a sample of the cauliflowers in the supermarket. It's the only place where you can buy them in the town.'
âNow that all the greengrocers have goneâ¦' No shopper himself, Sloan knew this from his wife.
âYou remember that bit in the local paper complaining that they mostly sell foreign greengrocery there, sir?'
âI'm beginning to get your drift, Crosby.'
âSo I got Forensics to check, sir.'
âDifferent cauliflowers?' So vegetable as well as animal did come into the equation, after all.
âVery. And, sir, they could tell which had been treated with commercial chemicals and which hadn't.'
âHerbert Bates's?' Larky could have bought his cauliflowers outside the town, of course, but it wasn't all that likely.
âYes, sir. He doesn't use chemicals.'
âWonderful what scientists can do these days. Now, when I was first on the beatâ¦' He stopped. The luxury of reminiscence could wait. âThen what, Crosby?'
âI drew Larky Nolson's attention to my findings, sir, and he decided against proceeding with the charge against Herbert Bates.'
âAnd are we now faced with Herbert Bates bringing a counter-charge for theft against Larky Nolson?'
âNo, sir.'
âHow can you be so sure?'
âThe Forensics people told me that Herbert Bates's cauliflowers were on the list of varieties that can no longer be marketed under European regulations, sir.' He looked at Sloan and asked anxiously, âDo you want chapter and verse on that, sir?'
âHeaven forbid,' said Sloan speedily. âBut Herbert isn't into marketing, surely?'
âThere was a board by his gate with a chalk message on it to the effect that cabbages could be boughtâ¦'
Sloan scratched his chin, a little puzzled. It was something he had never noticed himself.
Crosby put his notebook down on Sloan's desk. âI'm very sorry, sir, but nobody seems to be charging anybody now. Is that all right?'
By the same author
The Religious Body
A Most Contagious Game
Henrietta Who?
The Complete Steel
A Late Phoenix
His Burial Too
Slight Mourning
Parting Breath
Some Die Eloquent
Passing Strange
Last Respects
Harm's Way
A Dead Liberty
The Body Politic
A Going Concern
Injury Time (short stories)
After Effects
Stiff News
Little Knell
Amendment of Life
âA Change of Heart', âChild's Play',
âCoup de Grâce',
âDead Letters', âA Different Cast of Mind', âDummy Run', âExamination Results', âExit Strategy', âLosing the Plot', âPreyed in Aid', âA Soldier to the Queen', âTime, Gentlemen, Please', âTouch Not the Cat' (this story produced in abridged audio format as part of
Cats, Cats and More Cats:
HighBridge Company, US, 1997), âThe Trouble and Strife', âThe Widow's Might', âThe Wild Card.' Copyright © 2003; âCold Comfort', âDue Diligence'. Copyright © 2000; âChapter and Hearse', âHandsel Monday.' Copyright © 1998; âLike to Die'. Copyright © 1997; âGold, Frankinscense and Murder'. Copyright © 1995;
CHAPTER AND HEARSE
Copyright © 2003 by Catherine Aird. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews. For information, address St. Martin's Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.
ISBN 0-312-29084-5
First published in Great Britain by Macmillan an imprint of Pan Macmillan Ltd
First St. Martin's Minotaur Edition: February 2004
eISBN 9781466841857
First eBook edition: March 2013
*
Frances Rose-Troup,
Exeter Vignettes
(Manchester University Press, 1942).
*
Hilaire Belloc,
The Four Men: A Farrago
(London: Nelson, 1912).