A Cold Coffin. Gwendoline Butler

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make up his mind whether to be a doctor or an actor.’

      He could tell she liked him. Well, he was a good-looking, taking lad.

      Stella studied her husband’s face. He looked tired. ‘You miss Archie Young.’

      Archie had been gone about six months.

      Coffin smiled. ‘I’m glad he got the promotion he deserved. I wanted him to have it.’

      ‘Nice man,’ said Stella reflectively. ‘Tough, though.’

      ‘We had to be,’ said Coffin.

      ‘I know that. I was alive then, too, remember.’

      ‘And I don’t know that times have changed, either. May have got worse.’ He looked towards Stella. ‘I might need your help through this, Stella. You will help me, won’t you?’

      She nodded. ‘It’s the child, isn’t it?’

      Coffin nodded. ‘All the children, but that later one especially.’ He stood up. ‘Something terrible lies behind that head, and it didn’t happen thousands of years ago, either.’

      ‘That’s just a guess.’

      ‘I’m a good guesser. It comes with experience.’

      Stella watched him carefully for a moment. ‘Dearest . . .’

      Coffin stirred. She wasn’t great at endearments. The love was there, but she didn’t put it into speech. He thought that acting had cured her of showing love with words. Real love, not the stage variety.

      ‘Dearest, this couldn’t have anything to do with the Minden Street murders. They were too recent.’

      Slowly Coffin said, ‘I’ve always thought, I’ve known, there was another generation of death behind Minden Street.’

      Stella, no cook – after all, you can’t be a performer and a cook, and I am, she said to herself, a performer – had ordered in from their favoured restaurant a fine meal of roast duck, green peas and salad.

      ‘Let’s eat.’

      They went through to the small dining room, whose window overlooked the theatre. Three theatres in fact, one of which was dark at present. The other two had big successes and royalty was coming to one for charity. Tickets were sold out.

      This was an agreeable room, with white walls and golden curtains. Stella studied herself in the large looking-glass on the wall opposite, where she could see that her latest extravagance, a silk trouser suit from a tailor who had worked at Prada, was probably a success. You had to be cautious, because you had to grow into clothes. The important thing, after a certain age, possibly any age, was to control waist and bottom. The bust didn’t matter, because a good bra controlled it. Good meant expensive, she meditated. Her gaze flicked towards her husband, sitting there, face caught in a frown. Husbands had a risk factor too: waists were the trouble there. Fortunately, owing to the stresses of his life. Coffin lost weight rather than put it on, lucky thing.

      There was a pucker on his mouth now.

      ‘Wine all right?’ she asked a little nervously. The wine was a claret; Coffin always said he was just a London copper who knew nothing about wine and had no palate, but he could be very testy if the wine did not come up to some invisible standard he had set for himself.

      ‘Not bad at all.’

      ‘I wondered about boiling it,’ said Stella.

      ‘Good idea,’ said Coffin absently.

      Stella started to laugh.

      Coffin apologized. ‘Sorry. The wine is splendid although perhaps better not boiled . . . I’m worried.’

      ‘That much I had grasped.’

      ‘I am sure I saw blood. Or a trace of it.’ He got up.

      ‘You’re not going to look,’ she protested.

      He shook his head, taking out his mobile phone which he kept in his pocket; he liked to feel it was close. A neurosis? Probably. His responsibilities did weigh on him.

      Stella shook her head. ‘I never know if that thing is a good thing or a curse.’ It sometimes seemed almost an extension of his body.

      ‘You use yours often enough.’ He was dialling a number. Stella watched him.

      While he waited for the answer to his call, he studied her trouser suit. ‘That’s new, isn’t it?’

      Stella nodded. Well cut, expensive and made for her, that was the way to get good clothes, she thought. Anyway, after a certain age. She knew this splendid tailor for women (you had to have one who understood the female figure, or they got the legs and bottom wrong) and as a bonus there was a little shop nearby where you could buy a thick, rich, violet essence. Rose too, if you preferred rose, which she hardly ever did herself.

      ‘I like it. If you’d told me before, I would have taken you out to show it off.’ He put out his hand to her. There had been times in the not so distant past when their relationship had been troubled. Two hard-working, ambitious people, both pushing careers forward, sometimes left love aside.

      There was a pause. ‘The duck can wait. Won’t spoil,’ said Stella softly.

      Then Phoebe’s voice, deeper and huskier than usual, floated out of the telephone.

      ‘Sir?’ And into the silence, ‘Sir? Phoebe Astley here. You called?’

      Behind they could hear a female voice proclaiming it was a wrong number and not to answer.

      ‘Is she still living with that girl who used to run a dress shop and then took a job in the theatre wardrobe?’ Stella allowed herself this query, although she knew the answer was no.

      ‘Oh, it’s none of our business,’ said Coffin irritably, in an aside.

      ‘Can you hear a cat crying?’ asked Stella.

      ‘No,’ said Coffin briefly. ‘Phoebe? The Chief Commander here.’

      As if I didn’t know, thought Phoebe swiftly. And CC too, not just, ‘Coffin here.’ It’s serious then. But it always was, one way and another, with him.

      The voices in the background on both sides died away.

      ‘I want you to get the forensics team down to the skulls under water. Also a photographer and SOCO.’

      ‘But I thought,’ began Phoebe . . . She could almost hear

      Coffin saying, ‘Don’t think, just do as I say.’ ‘I thought the archaeologists wanted to be first,’ she persevered.

      ‘The forensics first, please, Phoebe. I think there may have been a crime.’

      The conversation was over, as Phoebe recognized.

      ‘No sex,’ she said, turning towards her companion. ‘No sex till morning.’

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