Authors: Sheila Radley
And so how much worse it must be for Felicity Goodrum! Bad enough for her to have had her happy marriage brought to such a shatteringly sudden end; bad enough for her to have seen her husband die. But to have seen him murdered ⦠to have been splattered with the contents of his skull ⦠that was beyond Hilary's imagining. Suppressing a shudder, she clasped Felicity's hand in sympathy and was glad to feel a tentative response.
But there was work to be done. Considerate but firm, she took her witness through the events of the previous evening. Mrs Goodrum's voice, though toneless and barely audible, was reasonably steady, but her eyes remained downcast. Then Hilary came to the critical period.
âAnd so your husband stood in the open doorway of the lighted conservatory and shouted, “Who's there?” or words to that effect. What happened then?' she asked.
Felicity's face remained stiff, mask-like. Her swollen eyelids were lowered so far that they might have been closed. She made two attempts to speak, sipped some water from the glass that Hilary offered her and then, hardly moving her lips, whispered âThere was a flash ⦠and a roar ⦠and everything blew apart â¦'
âAnd you saw no one? Before the flash, I mean.'
âNo one.'
âBut why do you think it happened? Why do you think anyone would want to kill your husband?'
Painfully, as though her eyelids were fastened together with lashes made of velcro, Felicity forced herself to open them. Her eyes, brown as her son's but dulled and bloodshot, stared at nothing but horror and desolation.
âI have no idea â¦'
Nothing could persuade Felicity Goodrum that her husband might have had enemies. He had never claimed to her that he was a saint, but she knew for a fact that he was honest, reliable and considerate. She believed him to have been a good (though no doubt mischievous) youngster, a good (though no doubt exacting) employer, and a good (though strangely unappreciated) first husband. And she knew that he was kind: the kindest man she had ever met.
No, she had seen none of Jack's former business associates. All his affairs, whether in connection with business or with his first marriage, were dealt with through his solicitor and his accountant. Jack had wanted to keep their life at The Mount private. As far as Felicity knew, no one had ever called there to see him, and no one had telephoned asking to speak to him personally. He had not seemed worried by anything, not even by the burglary; annoyed, but not worried.
âHow did his first wife take their divorce?' asked Hilary.
âBadly, I believe.' Felicity was talking more easily now. âI can't blame her for that ⦠But Jack was very good to them financially, of course. He settled their house and its contents on her, as well as making provision for all of them.' A peripheral anxiety deepened the lines on her face: âHe has two grown-up daughters. They've never bothered to keep in touch with their father, but they must be told â¦'
The Chief Inspector assured her that it would be done. âAnd that's a fine young son you have,' he said, hearty now that the emotionally charged interview was over. âAbout the same age as my own boy.'
And if Matthew was anywhere near as difficult, surly and uncooperative as Peter, Quantrill reflected, a fat lot of comfort he'd be. But it would hardly do to imply that. âHe'll be a great comfort to you, I'm sure,' he asserted, and escaped into the corridor, leaving Hilary to do and say all the appropriate, police-womanly things in farewell.
Quantrill had intended, anyway, to have a word with the boy, but it was Matthew who interrupted PC Brown's eleventh jolly anecdote and made the approach.
âExcuse me, sir,' he said, diffident and anxious. âI'm Matthew
Napier
, not Goodrum. It wasn't
my
father who was killed.'
âSo I understand,' said Quantrill. He looked the boy over approvingly, glad that his haughty appearance was countered by good manners.
âI thought I'd better tell you,' went on Matthew. âI didn't want you to think there was anything ⦠well, suspicious about my being dry-eyed. I mean, I'm sorry for my mother, of course, but â'
âYou've no need to explain. I don't suppose you had time to get to know your stepfather very well?'
âNo, I'd already started boarding school when they were married. I stayed with them at The Mount for the half-term holiday, last month, and that's the most I ever saw of him.' Matthew frowned, obviously wanting to say more, but intent on choosing his words carefully. âJack was very ⦠generous.'
âSo I understand from your mother. She either can't or won't believe that he had any enemies, but the fact that he was murdered disproves that. And what I'd like to ask you, Matthew â' the Chief Inspector gave the boy an avuncular smile' â since you're a dispassionate observer, is whether you think Jack Goodrum
knew
that somebody was after him? Did he give you the impression, when you were there at half-term, of being worried, or wary? Did he seem uneasy when the doorbell or the telephone rang?'
Matthew shook his head. âI don't think anyone came to the door while I was there. I don't remember hearing the telephone, either â but I do know that Jack had asked for their number to be kept ex-directory.'
âWhy was that, d'you think?'
âMy mother said it was because they wanted to make a fresh start.' Matthew paused, his eyelids lowered as hers had been. Choosing his words again, he stood scraping the toe of his shoe on the polished floor of the hospital corridor. âI suppose he might have been trying to shake someone off â¦'
âAnd you know who that was?'
âI can guess.'
The boy looked up, his brown eyes hot and unhappy. Then he said, plunging into the narrative: âMy father came to see me at school last Wednesday week â the 12th. He's Austin Napier QC. He took me out to lunch and told me he was still married in God's eyes to my mother, and that we had to go back and live with him in Highgate. I told him that we didn't have to do as he said any more, and then he started to smarm me up. I knew I wasn't supposed to tell him my mother's new name, or where she was living, but he tricked it out of me. He's brilliant at that kind of thing â¦'
PC Brown, who had been listening, fascinated, couldn't contain his incredulity. âYour father's a
barrister
? And you're suggesting that he went after your stepfather with a shotgun â?'
Matthew dismissed the constable haughtily. âNot in person, no. I don't suppose my father knows how to handle a shotgun,' he told Quantrill. âHe certainly doesn't possess one. But â look, sir, if he wanted murder done, he'd know how to find someone to do it.'
âOh yes?' said the Chief Inspector drily. He was interested, but not sure how far Matthew Napier was telling the truth. If the boy disliked his father â held him responsible for the break-up of the family, perhaps â the accusation could be nothing more than an act of vindictiveness.
Matthew reddened with vexation.
âYes,'
he insisted, almost tearfully. âI'm not making this up, you know â my father's capable of anything! He's mad â I mean
seriously
mad. If you don't believe me, read these!'
He pulled from his pocket a bulky manilla envelope and thrust it at the Chief Inspector. Mystified, Quantrill discovered that it contained cuttings, six months old, from most of the national newspapers. They turned out to be reports, in gleeful detail, of the unsuccessful appeal of a London barrister against a divorce that had previously been granted to his wife on the grounds of his unreasonable behaviour.
The reports were headed by separate photographs of the couple. The woman was Matthew's mother, looking a good deal older and more strained than the happy woman Quantrill had first met as Jack Goodrum's wife. The barrister was unfamiliar. But he answered to the description of the stranger who, on the afternoon of Wednesday November 12th, had asked a Breckham Market newsagent for the address of the man whose murder Quantrill was now investigating.
Shortly after midday, Chief Inspector Quantrill and Sergeant Lloyd set out for London to interview Felicity Goodrum's first husband.
Quantrill decreed that they would go by train rather than by car. He saw no shame in admitting that he didn't know his way round the capital, but when Hilary said she had a street map and offered to navigate he was quick to assert that the journey would be faster by train. What worried him about driving in London was the possibility that he might make a fool of himself in front of her by getting stuck in the wrong traffic lane; much better for his image to use trains and taxis â and if the Super wouldn't wear his subsequent claim for expenses, he'd gladly bear the cost himself.
It was a very long time since Quantrill had been to London. The capital was less than two hours by direct train from Breckham Market, but he saw no reason to go there if he could help it. A dirty, noisy, overcrowded place, in his opinion, and populated almost exclusively by foreigners. Even some of the graffiti were in Arabic â¦
It was even longer since he'd been on a train. When he heard the cost of the tickets, he blenched. But he had been impressed by British Rail's advertising campaigns for their high-speed inter-city service, and he looked forward to travelling in executive comfort with Hilary by his side, and to buying her a really good Sunday lunch in the restaurant car.
What had not occurred to him was that the high-speed inter-city service didn't extend to the Eastern region. The rolling stock on the Yarchester-Breckham Market-London line was some high-speed region's cast-off, shabby and unreliable; and although a restaurant car service was advertised on the Sunday lunch-time train, it was not available on that particular day.
âIt's not your fault,' Hilary pointed out as he apologised for the second time. âAnd at least,' she said philosophically as they joined the queue for light refreshments in the buffet car, âwe can get a drink.'
âI've never heard you say that before,' Quantrill said, surprised. âI thought you didn't drink anything but wine â¦'
Hilary looked at him gravely. âOn days when I've had to help account for the scattered pieces of someone's head â especially someone I'd met and rather liked, even though he might have been a villain â I go for the hard stuff.'
The sergeant lunched on brandy with a splash of dry ginger, and a quarter of a small packet of cheese-flavoured biscuits. The Chief Inspector â reluctant to be seen making a pig of himself, but he couldn't help the fact that he was both hungry and thirsty â consumed two cans of beer and a pork pie.
It was while he was enjoying the pie, which his wife would never allow him to eat, that he realised he'd forgotten to tell Molly his whereabouts. She knew that when he was on a murder enquiry she could expect him home when she saw him, but he wouldn't ordinarily take off for London without letting her know.
Today wasn't ordinary, though. Today he was going to spend four uninterrupted hours on trains with Hilary, and it was a perfect opportunity to establish a more personal relationship. He pushed aside his cardboard plate, with a remnant of pastry to indicate that he wasn't really greedy, leaned forward with his elbows on the table and gave her his warmest smile.
âFeeling better?'
Her own smile was a good deal more circumspect. âYes thanks. Did you remember to ring your wife before we left, by the way?'
He could have done without the reference to his marital status. âShe wouldn't expect me to,' he said untruthfully. âWe're ⦠well, we're not that close any more â¦'
Hilary's mouth twitched. âWould that be anything to do with last night, when you couldn't be found at the Town Hall because you'd sneaked off to the pub instead of watching
My Fair Lady
� If that put you in the dog-house, I'm not surprised.'
âRon Timms as well, I shouldn't wonder,' Quantrill said. âWe could have got away with it if the performance had been interrupted just once, but twice was bound to mean trouble.' He sighed, for effect. âAre you thinking of getting married, Hilary?â he asked, with a casual don't-do-it air that he hoped would conceal the importance, to himself, of the question.
âOh yes â I quite often think about it,' she said lightly. âIn general terms, that is.'
âYou're not actually engaged then?' he persisted, indicating the ring on the third finger of her left hand. Its significance had always puzzled him.
Hilary looked at her diamond eternity ring with something like surprise. Obviously it was so familiar to her that she no longer noticed she was wearing it.
âThat's ⦠different,' she said. âMore of a grand romantic gesture, made when I was very young.'
Quantrill knew that that he'd already overstepped the bounds of politeness. Hilary's private life ought to be none of his business. But having trespassed as far as this, he couldn't stop himself from asking a final question.
âSo there isn't anyone ⦠special, at the moment?'
âWhen would I find the time?' She laughed as she said it, but he detected a warning of frost.
âAnother brandy?' he said hastily.
âNo thanks. Coffee would be a good thing, though. I'd better keep a clear head for our interview with Felicity Goodrum's ex.'
When Quantrill returned from the buffet car balancing waxed-paper cups of coffee for them both, he found Hilary re-reading the newspaper cuttings about the Napiers'divorce.
âIt was an impossible marriage, wasn't it?' she said. âAustin Napier's obviously a very difficult man. And I don't suppose he'll take kindly to being interviewed.'
âWhat seems so odd,' said Quantrill, âis that if he did sus out for himself where Goodrum lived, and then sent a yob a few days later to burgle and foul the house, the yob should have had to go to a pub and ask where he could find Mr Goodrum. That doesn't make sense. And of course it doesn't make Napier a murderer either. He'll certainly deny that.'