Murder at the Maples: A Flora Lively Mystery

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Authors: Joanne Phillips

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BOOK: Murder at the Maples: A Flora Lively Mystery
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Murder at the Maples

A Flora Lively Mystery: Book 1

by

Joanne Phillips

Table of Contents

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Epilogue

Acknowledgements

 

This novel is entirely a work of fiction. The names, characters, localities and incidents portrayed in it are the product of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or events or localities is entirely coincidental.

 

Mirrorball Books

An imprint of Bostock Publishing

www.bostockpublishing.co.uk

Kindle Edition 2013

Copyright © Joanne Phillips 2013

 

Joanne Phillips asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work. All rights reserved in all media. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the author and/or publisher.

Cover design by Blondesign

Chapter 1

‘Are you sure it’s safe?’ Flora looked out of the window and up the cliff face. The other carriage seemed suspended above them. How on earth had she let Joy talk her into this?

‘Oh, Flora, you’re such a wimp.’ Joy sat back with a smile and patted the bench by her side. ‘Come on, it only lasts a minute.’

So does plummeting to your certain death, thought Flora, but she tucked herself in next to Joy anyway and began a head count of the other passengers.

Visiting the cliff railway at Bridgnorth was a special treat for her friend’s eightieth birthday – Flora’s idea of a fun day out was shopping for vintage clothes or taking to the hills with a backpack. Not risking life and limb for a trip down memory lane. Flora stowed her tote bag between her sandaled feet and began to read the guidebook with determined interest.

‘It was right here,’ Joy said dreamily, ‘where Eddie proposed to me. The fourth of May, nineteen fifty-one. The happiest day of my life.’

‘It says here that the passenger cars were replaced in nineteen fifty-five, so it wasn’t this actual carriage, in fact.’ Flora looked up in time to catch Joy’s withering glare.

‘Flora, sometimes I despair of you. You are entirely devoid of romance.’

While Joy continued her reverie, Flora dropped the book into her bag and absently chewed on a bitten-down nail. She’d counted eighteen people squashed into the tiny carriage, and presumably there were another eighteen coming down the cliff at the same time. Thirty-six lives in the hands of a couple of ambitious Victorian engineers.

‘How does it work, exactly?’ she asked the conductor. He was standing in the wooden doorway, his hat placed at a jaunty angle. He shrugged his shoulders. ‘Beats me.’

Oh, very reassuring, thank you. Flora craned her neck to get a better view of the steep track that climbed up the cliff, and then immediately wished she hadn’t bothered. She ran a hand through her cropped brown hair – back to its natural colour now the bleached blonde had grown out – then placed both her hands very carefully on top of her tensed thighs.

‘It’s something to do with wheels and pulleys,’ said a voice by her side. A bespectacled child with a Hello Kitty rucksack perched on her lap was looking up at Flora with a serious expression.

‘Pardon?’

‘You were wondering how it works. We did it in a school project. The Victorians.’

‘You mean ropes and things?’

The girl nodded solemnly.

‘Great,’ said Flora under her breath.

Joy laughed and bounced in her seat. She laid a white-gloved hand across Flora’s clenched fists and stage-whispered, ‘Hold on tight.’

The carriage lunged forward with a sickening jerk and began to trundle up the rails. Flora watched layers of carved rock slide past the windows as they rose higher and higher up the cliff.

‘Wave hello!’ someone called out, and Flora turned in time to see the other carriage pass them on its way down. A fleeting glimpse of expressionless faces, and then they were gone. The little girl with the glasses was rummaging in her rucksack, oblivious to the entire journey, while Joy sat on Flora’s other side with her eyes closed, a secret smile turning her lips up at the corners. Flora began to hum, blocking out the rumbling of the silly train as it was pulled up and up by ropes and pulleys and, by the looks of it, blind faith. The carriage smelt of hot wood and oil. She focused on a patch of flaky blue paint above her head and imagined herself elsewhere. Anywhere else would be fine.

And then, with another stomach-churning jolt, it was over.

‘That wasn’t so bad, was it?’

Flora waited until they were clear of the ticket station at the top of the cliff, then she leaned against the wall with her back to the view and said, ‘I am never bringing you on a day out again, Joy it’s-nothing-like-a-cable-car Martin.’

Joy snickered and rolled her eyes. ‘For a young person, Flora, you aren’t very adventurous. You’re twenty-nine, not ninety-nine! Anyway, this is nothing by today’s standards. These days you’ve got all those roller coasters and white-knuckle rides for excitement. When Eddie and I first came here, oh, it was considered very daring. We would just stand and watch the carriages going up and down for hours.’

‘And they say there was nothing to do before TV.’

‘Flora, don’t be a wet blanket. Come and look at the view.’

‘I’m not being a wet blanket, Joy. I don’t like heights, okay?’

‘Well, that’s plain silly. You can’t fall from here. Come and have a look.’

‘No.’

Flora could feel her friend’s eyes upon her, but she didn’t turn her head.

‘I had no idea you were afraid of heights. I guess the funicular railway wasn’t much fun for you, was it?’

You think?
Flora shook her head, smiling in spite of herself. This last six months she’d grown to care about Joy like a surrogate grandmother, but you couldn’t deny the old woman was in a world of her own. When Shakers Removals had moved Joy into her new home at the Maples Retirement Village last November, Flora had been blown away by the older woman’s resilience. Never mind that she’d buried her husband of nearly sixty years the month before – never mind that she was moving out of her beloved family home and into a one-room unit with no garden – Joy Martin had remained cheerful and spirited throughout.

‘The next time I move house it’ll be me in a box, not ornaments and picture frames and knick-knacks,’ Joy had joked, nudging Marshall in the ribs for good measure.

Marshall’s face had been a study of embarrassment, much to Flora’s amusement. He still struggled with the British sense of humour – especially the morbid kind.

Which wasn’t the only thing he struggled with, of course. Having to work for Flora had to be top of the list.

Joy pulled Flora’s attention back to the present with a sharp tug on the strap of her bag. ‘You really should take a look down here. It’s amazing. The people are so tiny they look like toy soldiers, and that man there … Why, what on earth is he doing?’

Flora swung around, her curiosity captured, and found Joy leaning out dangerously over the low wall.

‘For God’s sake, you crazy old woman, get back will you?’ Flora grabbed Joy’s arm and gripped it tightly. Joy gave a mischievous laugh.

‘Made you look though, didn’t I?’

The girl with the glasses skipped past, holding an ice cream in one chapped-looking hand and her mum’s sleeve in the other. She stared at Flora’s shoulder, openly curious. Flora tugged down the cap sleeve of her T-shirt, but not before the child’s mother had given her the once-over, taking in the skull-and-hearts tattoo and the beaded jewellery and the many-patched vintage jeans with fraying hems. She pulled a face of disapproval, then the two of them skipped away along the walled path, leaving Flora feeling suddenly and unaccountably annoyed.

She knew people made judgments about her based on how she looked – her dressed-down style and the tattoo; the spiky hair she used to dye a different colour every month; her vintage skirts and jewellery and wacky floral bags – but all this said nothing about her as a person. If they thought she was tough they were right to a point, but they were also dead wrong.

‘Do I look like a freak or something?’ she grumbled, turning back to Joy. ‘These jeans were actually really expensive.’ But what a person to ask: Joy was hardly a fashionista in pale blue comfort-fit old lady trousers and a matching flowered blouse, her white fluffy perm showing pink scalp with every gust of wind.

‘You look very lovely, dear,’ Joy said, peering at Flora’s face. ‘Although you’d look even more lovely if you wore a little make-up from time to time.’

Flora shrugged and looked around to get her bearings. She was starting to regret bringing Joy out, birthday or not. Of course, she should have known that with a name like the funicular railway it wasn’t going to be just any normal train journey. She should have known, with Joy involved, that there would be a catch.

Marshall was right: she was a soft touch. ‘You treat these old people like they’re family,’ he’d said when Shakers Removals got the contract for the retirement village. ‘You get too attached to people, Flora. That’s your problem.’

Well, it was true. She did. But look at them, she’d argued. Look at them with their crinkly eyes and their cardigans in odd pastel colours, their ugly pets and their ancient, dusty furniture that they just would not admit was surplus to requirements. Not even now that they had moved from their vast family homes and would be living in a room – one room – with a kitchenette and an en suite shower for the rest of their lives. If they were lucky. If they didn’t get carted off to the third floor for Special Care: Joy’s biggest fear these days.

And look at Joy, leaning over the wall to see down the cliff as if she could lean back through time and grab her dead husband by the hand and wrench him back to life again. She was full of energy, incorrigible, never moaning about being lonely, although Flora knew she must be, deep down. What sacrifice was a day off, really? For someone as special as Joy.

Flora sighed and tapped her friend on the arm. ‘Come on. Let’s go and have a cup of tea.’

‘Oh, can we? I know you prefer your coffee, but in the tea rooms just here you can see the winding gear with the ropes and everything. I read about it on the internet.’

Flora smiled. ‘Fine. But I’m not going back down the cliff in that thing, okay? I’m walking back to the Low Town – next time you’re on your own.’

***

Joy fell asleep on the bus back to Shrewsbury. Not five minutes into the journey she was snoring softly, her thin lips parted, the lipstick she’d worn especially for today worn off around the edges but still bright pink in the middle. A thin sliver of drool crept down to her chin, following the creases in her papery skin. Flora smiled, her eyes soft with concern. Lately Joy had been on her mind a lot, and not just because it was coming up to what would have been Joy and Eddie’s sixtieth wedding anniversary. She was, Flora feared, starting to lose it a bit. Just the odd comment here and there, things that didn’t add up.

For example, she’d completely taken against a new resident, a Mr Felix, who Flora and Marshall had moved into the Maples only a month ago. Mr Felix was a harmless little man in his seventies, short and starchy-looking with pale ginger hair swept across a pink and freckled bald patch. He used a mobility scooter, or else hobbled around on Maples-issue crutches.

‘He’s got shifty eyes,’ Joy said when Flora pressed her to explain why, that very morning, she had turned full circle and refused to walk through the communal area until the poor man had gone. ‘And his trousers are too long.’

Well, that may be true, but was it any reason to act so disgusted? Flora felt embarrassed for him, although it was a fact that he hadn’t been overly friendly on moving day. When Flora had offered to set up his kitchenette for him, and maybe even cook his dinner if he was very tired, he had looked affronted and told her no, thank you, and would they mind hurrying up, please. Flora hadn’t been able to meet Marshall’s eyes the entire rest of the afternoon – she just knew what he was thinking.

That was the trouble with Flora’s line of business: it was hard not to get personal with people. You came across them at times of such importance: moving into their first homes, with barely a stick of furniture but so proud of their boxes marked “Kitchen!” and “Bedroom!”, all jaunty writing and exclamation marks. Or moving up from their first home to something bigger and better (and more expensive, a drain and a burden, Marshall would say), with tiny babies bundled up in blankets and flustered-looking mothers saying, ‘Now, where did I put those scissors exactly ...?’ Or simply walking from room to room with the baby on a hip, their faces blank and bewildered.

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