[Wexford 01] From Doon & Death (8 page)

BOOK: [Wexford 01] From Doon & Death
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Burden checked the bus times at the garage and found that the five-thirty-two had left Stowerton dead on time. Moreover, the conductress on the Kingsmarkham bus, the one that left Stowerton at five-thirty-five, remembered seeing Parsons. He had asked for change for a ten-shilling note and they were nearly in Kingsmarkham before she got enough silver to change it.

‘F
un and games with Mrs Bloody Missal,' Wexford said when Burden walked in. 'She's one of those women who tell lies by the light of nature, a natural crook.'

'Where's the motive, sir?'

'Don't ask me. Maybe she was carrying on with Parsons, picked him up at his office on Tuesday afternoon and bribed the entire Southern Water Board to say he didn't leave till after five-thirty. Maybe she'd got another boy friend she goes out with on Wednesdays, one for every day of the week. Or maybe she and Parsons and Mr X, who shall be nameless (God Almighty!), were Russian agents and Mrs Parsons had defected to the West. If s all very wonderful, Mike, and it makes me spew!'

'We haven't even got the thing she was strangled with,' Burden said gloomily. 'Could a woman have done it?'

'Crocker seems to think so. If she was a strong young woman, always sitting about on her backside and feeding her face.'

‘L
ike Mrs Missal.'

'We're going to get down there tonight, Mike, and have the whole thing out again in front of her old man. But not till tonight. I'm going to give her the rest of the day to sweat in. I've got the report from the lab and there's no cow dung on Mrs Missal's tyres. But she didn't have to use her own car. Her husband's a car dealer, got a saleroom in Stowerton. Those people are always choppin
g and changing their cars. That’
s another thing we'll have to check up on. The inquest's tomorrow and I want to get somewhere before then.'

Burden drove his own car into Stowerton and pulled into the forecourt of Missal's saleroom. A man in overalls came out from the glass-walled office between the rows of petrol-pumps.

Two and two shots, please,' Burden said. 'Mr Missal about?'

‘H
e's out with a client'

That’
s a pity,' Burden said. 'I looked in on Tuesday afternoon and he wasn't here
...'

'Always in and out he is. In and out.
‘I’ll
just give your windscreen a wipe over.'

'Maybe Mrs Missal?'

Haven't seen her inside three months; Back in March was the last time. She come in to lend the Merc and bashed the grid in. Women drivers!'

'Had a row, did they? That sounds like Pete.'

'You're not joking. He said, never again. Not the Merc or any of the cars

'Well, well

Burden said. He gave the man a shilling; more would have looked suspicious. 'Marriage is a battlefield when all's said and done.'

‘I’ll
tell him you came in.'

Burden switched on the ignition and put the car in gear.

'Don't trouble

he said.
‘I’m
seeing him tonight

He drove towards the exit and braked sharply to avoid a yellow convertible that swung sharply in from Maryfield Road. An elderly man was at the wheel; beside him, Peter Missal.

There he is, if you want to catch him

the pump attendant shouted.

Burden parked his own car and pushed open the swing doors. He waited beside a Mini-car revolving smoothly on a scarlet roundabout. Outside he could see Missal talking to the driver of the convertible. Apparently the deal was off, for the other man left on foot and Missal came into the saleroom.

'What now?' he said to Burden.
‘I
don't like being hounded at my place of business

‘I
won't keep you

Burden said.
‘I’m
just checking up on Tuesday afternoon. No doubt you were here all day. In and out,
that
is.'

If s no business of yours where I was

Missal flicked a speck of dust from the Mini's wing as it circled past. 'As a matter of fact I went into Kingsmarkham to see a client. And
that’s
all I'm telling you. I respect personal privacy and if s a pity you don't do the same

In a murder case, sir, one's private life isn't always one's own affair. Your wife doesn't seem to have grasped that either

He went towards the doors.

'My wife
..

Missal followed him and, looking to either side of him to make sure there was no one about, hissed in an angry half-whisper: 'You can take that heap of scrap metal off my drive-in. If s causing an obstruction

Chapter 6

Who was her father?

Who was her mother?

Had she a sister?

Had she a brother?

Or, was there a dearer one

Still, and a nearer one

Yet
,
than all other?

Thomas Hood
,

The
Bridge
of
Sighs

The murder books had been taken away and the top shelf of the bookcase was empty. If Parsons was innocent, a truly bereaved husband. Burden thought, how dreadfully their covers must have screamed at him when he came into the shabby dining-room this morning. Or had he removed
them
because they had served their purpose?

'Chief Inspector

Parsons said,
‘I
must know. Was she
...
? Had she
...
? Was she just strangled or was there anything else?' He had aged in the past days or else he was a consummate actor.

'You
can set your mind at rest on that score

Wexford said quickly. 'Your wife was certainly strangled, but I can assure you she wasn't interfered with in any other way

He stared at the dull green curtains, the lino that was frayed at the skirting board, and said impersonally, "There was no sexual assault.'

"Thank God!' Parsons spoke as if he thought there was still a God in some nonconformist heaven and as if he was really thanking Him.
‘I
couldn't bear it if there had been. I couldn't go on living. It would just about have killed Margaret' He realized what he had said and put his head in his hands.

Wexford waited until the hands came down and the tearless eyes were once more fixed on his own.

'Mr Parsons, I can tell you that as far as we know mere was no struggle. It looks as if your wife was sleeping until just before she was killed. There would have been just a momentary shock, a second's pain -and then nothing.'

Parson's mumbled, turning away his face so that they could catch only the last words,'... For though they be punished in the sight of man, yet is their hope full of immortality.'

Wexford got up and went over to
the bookcase. He didn't say anything about the missing library of crime, but he took a book out of one of the lower shelves.

‘I
see this is a guide to the Kingsmarkham district.' He opened it and Burden glimpsed a coloured photograph of the market place. 'It isn't a new book.'

'My wife lived here - well, not here. In Flagford it was - for a couple of years after the end of the war. Her uncle was stationed with the R.A.F. at Flagford and her aunt had a cottage in the village.'

Tell me about your wife's life.'

'She was born in Balham

Parsons said. He winced, avoiding the Christian name. 'Her mother and father died when she was a child and she went to live with
this
aunt. When she was about sixteen she came to live in Flagford, but she didn't like it Her uncle died - he wasn't killed or anything - he died of heart disease, and her aunt went back to

Balham. My wife went to college in London and started teaching. Then we got married. That's all.'

'Mr Parsons, you told me on Wednesday your wife would have taken her front-door key with her. How many keys did you have between you?'

‘J
ust the two.' Parsons took a plain Yale key from his pocket and held it up to Wexford. 'Mine and -and Margaret's. She kept hers on a ring. The ring has a silver chain with a horseshoe charm on the end of it' He added simply in a calm voice:
‘I
gave it to her when we came here. The purse is a brown one, brown plastic with a gilt clip.'

‘I
want to know if your wife was in the habit of going to
Prewett’
s farm. Did you know the Prewetts or any of the farm workers? There's a girl there called Dorothy Sweeting. Did your wife ever mention her?'

But Parsons had never even heard of the farm until his wife's body had been found there. She hadn't cared much for the country or for country walks and the name Sweeting meant nothing.

‘I
)o you know anyone called Missal?'

'Missal? No, I don't think so.'

'A tall good-looking woman with red hair. Lives in a house opposite The Olive and Dove. Her husband's a car dealer. Big bloke with a big green car.'

'We don't
...
we didn't know anyone like that' His face twisted and he put up a hand to hide his eyes. They're a lot of snobs round here. We didn't belong and we should never have come.' His voice died to a whisper. If we'd stayed in London,' he said, 'she might still be alive.'

'Why
did
you come, Mr Parsons?'

If s cheaper living in the country, or you think if s cheaper till you try it'

'So your coming here didn't have anything to do with the fact that your wife once lived in Flagford?'

'Margaret didn't want to come here, but the job came up. Beggars can't be choosers. She had to Work when we were in London. I thought she'd find some peace here

He coughed and the sound tailed away into a sob. 'And she did, didn't she?'

‘I
believe there are some books in your attic, Mr Parsons. I'd like to have a good look through them

'You can have them,' Parsons said. 'I never want to see another book as long as I live. But there's nothing in them
.
She never looked at them

The dark staircases were familiar now and with familiarity they had lost much of that sinister quality Burden had felt on his first visit. The sun showed up the new dust and in its gentle light the house seemed no longer like the scene of a crime but just a shabby relic. It was very close and Wexford opened the attic window. He blew a film of dust from the surface of the bigger trunk and opened its lid. It was crammed with books and he took the top ones out. They were novels: two by Rhoda Broughton,
Evelina
in the Everyman's Library and Mrs Craik's
John
Halifax, Gentleman.
Their fly-leaves were bare and nothing fluttered from the pages when he shook them. Underneath were two bundles of school stories, among them what looked like the complete works of Angela Brazil. Wexford dumped them on the floor and lifted out a stack of expensive-looking volumes, some bound in suede, others in scented leather or watered silk.

The first one he opened was covered in pale green suede, its pages edged with gold. On the fly-leaf someone had printed carefully in ink:

If
love
were
what
the
rose
is, And
I
were
like
the
leaf, Our
lives
would
grow
together In
sad
or
singing
weather
...

And underneath:

Rather
sentimental,
Minna,
but
you
know
what
I
mean. Happy,
happy
birthday.
All
my
love,
Doon.
March 21st,
1950.

Burden looked over Wexford's shoulder. 'Who's Minna?'

'Well have to ask Parsons

Wexford said. 'Could be second-hand. It looks expensive. I wonder why she didn't keep it downstairs. God knows, this place. needs brightening up.'

'And who's Doon?' Burden asked.

'You're supposed to be a detective. Well, detect.' He put the book on
t
he floor and picked up the next one. This was the
Oxford
Book
of
Victorian
Verse,
still in its black and pearl-grey jacket, and Doon had printed another message inside. Wexford read it aloud in an unemotional voice.

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