The Death on the Downs. Simon Brett
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‘Have you had approaches from some of the chains?’
‘Oh yes, plenty.’
‘From Home Hostelries?’
‘Not yet. The Crown and Anchor’s not quaint enough for them. They prefer something a bit older, more rustic. But other groups have been sniffing around. Not a great building architecturally, but the Crown’s got a good position in Fethering. Someone with half a million could turn it into something extremely bijou.’ He shuddered at the thought and was silent. Then he asked, ‘What’s the matter, Carole?’
‘Matter? What do you mean?’
‘You’re upset. Something’s upset you.’
Not for the first time, she was surprised at his perception. Ted Crisp’s aggressive manner masked an unexpected sensitivity to the people around him.
Carole’s instinctive reaction would normally have been to deny there was anything wrong, but the brandy had lowered her guard. Besides, she did want to talk about what she’d seen. Ideally, she wanted to talk about it to Jude, but Ted’s large bulk felt reassuringly trustworthy.
‘I found some human bones in a barn,’ she said. The rest of her narrative didn’t take long. There wasn’t really much to say. Indeed, the smallness of the initial incident seemed disproportionate to the shock she was feeling. She included what she had heard from Graham Forbes in the pub and his potential identification of the victim. ‘Do you know anyone in Weldisham, Ted?’
He shook his head. ‘Hardly ever go up there. I think Jude’s got some friends in the village, though . . .’
‘Has she? Did she mention any names?’
Another shake of the head. ‘When is it she’s back?’
‘Early next week? I’m not sure.’ Suddenly Carole couldn’t wait to see Jude. There was so much she needed to discuss. ‘Did she tell you where she was going, Ted?’
She’d felt a sudden pang of jealousy at the thought Ted might have received confidences denied to her. But it was quickly dissipated by his reply. ‘No. Never gives away much about what she’s up to, does she?’
‘Do you think that’s deliberate?’
‘What do you mean?’
‘Do you think Jude deliberately withholds information? That she’s secretive?’
In the oncoming headlights Carole could see his face screw up as he tried to get the right words for his answer. ‘No, it’s not deliberate. It’s not devious, certainly. I’m sure if you asked a direct question, she’d give you a direct answer. I think it’s more that Jude has a lot of different parts of her life and she doesn’t really see the necessity for them to overlap.’
Ted’s answer had the effect of making Carole feel even more jealous. Not jealous of him, just jealous of the rare serenity that surrounded Jude. They’d been next-door neighbours for nearly four months. Carole felt cautiously that she could describe Jude as a friend; and she was confident Jude would have no hesitation in describing Carole as her friend. But she still knew distressingly little about the new arrival in Fethering. She didn’t even know whether Jude had ever been married, for God’s sake. Was she divorced? Did she have a permanent boyfriend? Somehow the cues for such basic questions never seemed to arise. Jude wasn’t evasive, she was very honest; but an air of mystery still clung around her. Mystery and serenity. Carole would have given a fortune to know the source of Jude’s inner peace.
They’d arrived outside Carole’s house, High Tor, in Fethering High Street. ‘I’d invite you in for a drink or . . .’
‘No. No. Got to get back to the Crown. Before the brawls break out. Doesn’t take much to get the old geezers hitting out with their crutches, strangling each other with the cords of their hearing aids . . .’
Carole chuckled. ‘Can’t thank you enough for picking me up.’
‘No problem. You going to be all right to get up there for your car in the morning?’
She was tempted to see if he’d actually offer to take her. But no, she’d already presumed too much on his goodwill. ‘Yes, I’ve got that sorted, thank you,’ she lied. Organize a cab in the morning.
He was silent. ‘And you’re sure you’re all right?’
‘Absolutely fine, thanks. Hot bath, early night, be as good as new.’
‘Great.’ Another silence. ‘Well, it’s been very good to see you again, Carole.’
Surely she was wrong to detect a reluctance in Ted to let her go. No, that’d be ridiculous. She reached for the door handle. ‘Good to see you too. And I can’t thank you enough.’
‘Keep me up to date,’ he called out, as she stepped into the cold February night. ‘When you find out who owns dem bones, dem bones, dem dry bones . . .’
‘Course I will,’ said Carole.
She waved as his car drew away. Gulliver, alerted by the click of the garden gate, set up a reproachful barking from the hall. He only did that for her. She never knew how he recognized her step. He never barked for anyone else. Burglars could come and go into High Tor unserenaded.
But as Carole walked up the path to her front door, she felt strangely elated.
Chapter Six
On the Saturday morning, the village of Weldisham looked apologetically picturesque, shamefaced about the bad weather of the day before. The sky was a clear pale blue, rinsed clean by the recent rains. Thin winter sunlight glinted off the stone facings of cottages, warmed the green of lichen-covered clay tiles and gilded the outlines of the naked trees.
As her cab drove up the lane from the main A27, Carole could see no evidence of police presence. She looked along the track up which she had walked the afternoon before, but again could see nothing. South Welling Barn itself was out of sight, tucked away in the folds of the Downs. They must still be investigating there, she thought, wondering whether the bones remained where she had found them, or whether they had been spirited off to reveal their secrets under the intense interrogation of a forensic laboratory.
It was half past nine when she arrived, but already the area in front of the Hare and Hounds had been neatly swept. In summer, like the garden adjacent to the car park behind, this space would be full of wooden table and bench units of the kind that can’t easily be removed by the unscrupulous in search of garden furniture. Now there was just one low bench in front, on which customers could sit to obey the printed injunction ‘Please remove all muddy boots and shoes.’ By the locked pub door was a row of metal rings to which leads could