Not In The Flesh_ A Wexford Novel - BestLightNovel.com
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"You're saying we can start on the taxi firms or those which were operating eleven years ago?" Wexford almost groaned, remembering past investigations, questioning cab drivers, checking times. "I suppose Damon could do it or the new chap. But is it likely, is it even possible, any driver would remember that far back? Would you remember the face of a driver who picked you up in a taxi at Kingsmarkham station in 1995?"
"Probably not, but that's rather different. How many people look at taxi drivers' faces? But they look at ours. I think we should try it."
Flagford was on the edge of the fruit-growing area, and for some reason it was particularly suited to apples, pears, plums, and soft fruit, in the midst of dairy farming. Of the two fruit farms, Morella's was the bigger, with a thriving farmer's market and a juice-production plant as well as acres of orchards and strawberry fields. In recent years, these last had been covered in glittering polytunnels, which in midsummer looked like sheets of ice melting in the sun but which now were fallow fields where nothing grew. In the orchards all the apples and pears had been picked weeks before. The rows of trees were in the process of being pruned. Damon drove himself and Barry along a lane that led between rows of alders to a building that housed the offices of the chief executive and the administrative staff.
It appeared that Morella's had come a long way since the day Bill Runge had come here with his wife and daughter. The chief executive, a man called Graham Bailey, said they now employed people from Eastern Europe, mostly Romanians and Bulgarians, from June till October, housing them in what he called "hostels," and pointed out of the window. Six trim buildings now stood on the field where fruit-pickers had once camped, concrete paths linking each one to its neighbor and to the forecourt and shop. Bailey said proudly that every building was equipped with "bathroom facilities," showers, and a self-service laundry.
"Did you ever employ itinerant workers?"
"Gyppos?" said Graham Bailey. "Not in my time. I've only been here three years. There were some who used to come here and camp over there. That was before we put up the hostels." He took Barry and Damon into the farmer's market store and called over an a.s.sistant who, he said, had worked there for fifteen years, first on the land and later when the store originally opened.
The shop sold cakes and pies and frozen food, ice cream and elaborate desserts, as well as fruit and vegetables. Everything was pristine and neatly kept. Damon, always hungry, asked if he could buy a black-currant pie, a request that earned a frown from Barry and a sharp suggestion that they should move on. They were taken into an administrative office, Bailey telling them with excusable pride that the names of everyone who had ever worked for them were kept on record, names and home addresses even if their homes were (as was the case recently) in Sofia or Krakow or on the Black Sea coast.
One of the women seated at a computer offered to produce a printout of the list of names and addresses for September 1998 and handed Barry a sheet of paper with a formidable catalog of workers on it. A quick glance told him that none of these people hailed from Eastern Europe. Well, a lot had happened in those intervening eight years.
"A good many of the people here have no home addresses," he said.
"Well, they wouldn't, would they? Not if they were travelers."
Barry counted twenty-two names, of whom twelve were women. As far as he could see, there was no way of telling which his man was-even supposing he had worked for Morella's.
"I know this is a question I can't expect you to answer," Damon said, "but would any of you remember a man in a T-s.h.i.+rt with a black scorpion and the name 'Sam' in red on it?"
"Funny sort of pet," said the woman who had done the printout, "but I suppose it takes all sorts to make a world."
When the laughter had died down, Damon explained that the scorpion wasn't real but printed on the fabric, and he showed them the photograph. They all looked at it, Bailey with rather more concentration than the others. But, "No," he said for all of them. "No, it doesn't ring any bells."
A phone call from his daughter Sheila was what determined Wexford's evening task. "Have you read that book I gave you yet, Pop?"
"The First Heaven? No, I haven't." He added, like the little boy he had once been, "Do I have to?"
"Well, I should think you'd want to, considering I'm starring in the film."
"I'll give it a go," he said rather disconsolately. It was a funny thing how the time came when your children started talking to you the way your parents had. And you answered them much as you had answered your parents. There was only quite a short gap between acquiescing to the strictures of Mum and Dad and placating and obeying your children. He had hoped to spend this rare free evening sitting beside Dora and watching a DVD of Don't Look Now. Don't Look Now. Instead he helped himself to the essential gla.s.s of claret and opened Instead he helped himself to the essential gla.s.s of claret and opened The First Heaven. The First Heaven.
A man he knew very well without quite being able to call him a friend was Burden's brother-in-law, who was a publisher. Or, more correctly, a publisher's editor. Wexford had often thought what a bore and a ch.o.r.e it must be for such people, not to be able to read what they chose, as was the case with him when he had the time, but always to be obliged to read the ma.n.u.scripts of authors whose books they published. Amyas, Burden's brother-in-law, had told him the only chance he got to reread Anthony Powell, his favorite writer, was when he was away on holiday.
Thinking of Selina Hexham's Gone Without Trace, Gone Without Trace, which hadn't been his chosen reading matter, he reflected that he was fast going that way himself. He began to read. When he reached the foot of page one he remembered another thing Amyas had said, that an experienced editor could tell from the first page whether a novel was any good or not. Well, he wasn't an experienced editor or any sort of editor at all and he couldn't tell. Perhaps it was only that he didn't care for fantasy. The fantasy here made itself plain from halfway down that first page. And by the time he came to the end of chapter one, Tredown was showing his predilection, if not for characters from Genesis and Kings, for biblical language. There were a great many "hast thous" and "whence comeths," and in chapter two even the animals addressed one another in this manner. which hadn't been his chosen reading matter, he reflected that he was fast going that way himself. He began to read. When he reached the foot of page one he remembered another thing Amyas had said, that an experienced editor could tell from the first page whether a novel was any good or not. Well, he wasn't an experienced editor or any sort of editor at all and he couldn't tell. Perhaps it was only that he didn't care for fantasy. The fantasy here made itself plain from halfway down that first page. And by the time he came to the end of chapter one, Tredown was showing his predilection, if not for characters from Genesis and Kings, for biblical language. There were a great many "hast thous" and "whence comeths," and in chapter two even the animals addressed one another in this manner.
He could appreciate some of the descriptions of a prehistoric earth. They were on a grand scale and showed that an exceptionally fertile imagination had been at work. But they went on and on and sometimes in the minutest detail so that he found himself skipping whole paragraphs. When Tredown began describing the appearance of Baal, of Ashtaroth and Dagon, he closed the book, fetched himself another gla.s.s of wine, and went to find Dora. He had missed only a quarter of an hour of Don't Look Now, Don't Look Now, which mattered hardly at all as he had seen it before. which mattered hardly at all as he had seen it before.
At about two in the morning he woke up. The germ of an idea had awakened him and now it began to grow and flourish. Suppose it was for Athelstan House that Hexham had been bound that rainy afternoon? Suppose he was on his way to see Tredown to undertake research for him. Tredown wanted someone who could advise him in two areas, mythic deities and prehistoric creatures. Maybe more than that. It should include basic biology and the origin of life.
Wexford had read that note in Hexham's handwriting so many times that now he had it off by heart. "Fact-finding? Proofreading? Editing?" And above that a list of names of publishers and authors. Tredown hadn't been among them, but that meant very little. When Hexham made the list he might never have read anything of Tredown's. But suppose, when he did, that he discovered inaccuracies or anachronisms? He might then have thought that this particular author was in need of advice and have offered his services. The trouble with this theory was that while Hexham was the ideal adviser on the prehistoric fauna and the deities in The First Heaven, The First Heaven, as far as Wexford knew he wasn't an expert on Bible history. The picture his daughter had presented of him made it extremely unlikely this was the case. as far as Wexford knew he wasn't an expert on Bible history. The picture his daughter had presented of him made it extremely unlikely this was the case.
But things would look very different if Hexham had written to Tredown correcting inaccuracies in the writer's description of Baal wors.h.i.+p or Dagon rituals, both of which figured in The Queen of Babylon, The Queen of Babylon, suggesting he needed help in these areas. And Tredown might have replied to this letter, telling Hexham that he planned an ambitious novel, combining the theory of evolution with Middle Eastern mythology, and would very much appreciate the services of a researcher. There were holes in this reconstruction, but still Wexford liked it. Researching would account for what Hexham was doing in that tiny box room if not for the secrecy. But some people simply were secretive, though it was difficult to justify keeping such an innocent occupation from a beloved wife. suggesting he needed help in these areas. And Tredown might have replied to this letter, telling Hexham that he planned an ambitious novel, combining the theory of evolution with Middle Eastern mythology, and would very much appreciate the services of a researcher. There were holes in this reconstruction, but still Wexford liked it. Researching would account for what Hexham was doing in that tiny box room if not for the secrecy. But some people simply were secretive, though it was difficult to justify keeping such an innocent occupation from a beloved wife.
Selina or Vivien might have the answers.
Chapter Nineteen.
Everyone has a phone, Lyn told herself. Whatever they lack, they have a phone. These days even those who live permanently on camping sites have mobiles. Seated in front of her computer for long hours-absently helping herself to sugar-free sweets from a pack on her lap-Lyn found only two phone numbers among the men on the list. One was for an address in Stockton-on-Tees, the other in Penzance. Not much to her surprise by this time, a woman answered in each case. In the case of the former man, a William Green, the woman, who sounded very old, was his aunt. Of course. These men were permanently on the road. If they gave addresses, they would be those of their relatives and sure to be women, Lyn thought. Men tended to be rovers, wild, not anch.o.r.ed, while women clung to their homes. This wasn't s.e.xist thinking. Lyn had been too thoroughly indoctrinated by Hannah to fall into that trap. It was a good thing, a sane sensible thing, to want to have your own place, your nest, your refuge.
William Green's aunt, his late uncle's widow, also called Green, could tell her very little about her nephew. In her quavering voice she said she hardly ever saw him, she didn't know where "the lad" was now, the last time she had seen him was six years ago. That was enough for Lyn. The man in Grimble's cellar had been dead two years by then. The other man, Frank Maniora, had given the address of a closer relative, his sister. This time she was surprised. Fernanda Maniora spoke with a Caribbean accent. For some reason she couldn't now account for, Lyn had a.s.sumed without thinking much about it that everyone on the list was white.
Miss Maniora called her "darling" in every sentence she spoke. She talked at great length about her brother, which was something Lyn could have done without. If the man in the cellar had been black, everyone in Flagford would have noticed and remembered him. She asked, really for something to say, if Fernanda Maniora had seen her brother lately, to be told that he had dropped in only last week, darling, and what a joy it was to see him.
Might he know something about the other men he had worked with at Morella's? She knew for a fact he had been there eight years before. "Where is he now, Miss Maniora?"
"He said he'd made a lot of money, darling. G.o.d bless him. He was going to Spain for a holiday. He'll be there now, you know."
"Have you an address?"
But Frank Maniora's sister hadn't.
Still, talking to these women had given Lyn an idea. It was the women workers at Morella's she should be getting in touch with. For one thing, women noticed men and for another, women were simply more observant. Phone numbers for them were much easier to find. As she had thought, some had given mobile numbers. Eight years ago-would they still be the same? She could only try.
Exactly what he had expected had happened. Reading that book he had antic.i.p.ated a ch.o.r.e, a bit of a bore, a slog, it was so long, more than five hundred pages. A slog it was and he put it down, never to take it up again, long before page 516 was reached.
The story he could have summarized if he had to. There was no need to read those last five chapters. The First Heaven The First Heaven was about the world before there were people in it. No people, no animals, and no birds, only sea creatures and insects, the whole ruled over by G.o.ds and G.o.ddesses, some with well-known names, some invented, but all with an Old Testament flavor. These deities behaved like human beings in that they loved and hated, committed crimes and performed heroic deeds, but were apparently immortal and therefore could watch the process of evolution, the gradual change of the tiny swimming things into land creatures and flying creatures. As the millennia pa.s.sed, the G.o.ds foresaw the appearance on earth of man by a process of evolution but were powerless to stop it, though they knew it would mean an end to their immortality. It would mean a Gotterdammerung. was about the world before there were people in it. No people, no animals, and no birds, only sea creatures and insects, the whole ruled over by G.o.ds and G.o.ddesses, some with well-known names, some invented, but all with an Old Testament flavor. These deities behaved like human beings in that they loved and hated, committed crimes and performed heroic deeds, but were apparently immortal and therefore could watch the process of evolution, the gradual change of the tiny swimming things into land creatures and flying creatures. As the millennia pa.s.sed, the G.o.ds foresaw the appearance on earth of man by a process of evolution but were powerless to stop it, though they knew it would mean an end to their immortality. It would mean a Gotterdammerung.
By this time he had forgotten that he had begun to read Owen Tredown's book to please Sheila. She didn't let him forget and was on the phone early the next morning.
"Great, isn't it, Pop?"
"Not in my opinion. I said I wouldn't like it and I didn't. I don't know how many times I've told you I don't care for fantasy."
"I would never have said you were bigoted. You made up your mind you weren't going to like it, so you didn't. That's my last word on the subject."
"That's a blessing anyway," said Wexford, "though I doubt it's true. You know what they say. Good books make bad films and bad books make good films. I expect it will pull millions into the world's cinemas."
Sheila began listing all the people she knew who had "adored" The First Heaven: The First Heaven: Paul, of course, her sister Sylvia, the producer of the forthcoming film, its director. He covered his mouth to silence the sound of his yawn. Paul, of course, her sister Sylvia, the producer of the forthcoming film, its director. He covered his mouth to silence the sound of his yawn.
When she paused for breath, he said, "This producer, does he use advisers and researchers?"
"Well, of course, Pop."
So Tredown surely must have. He didn't say this aloud. After she had rung off he fetched The Son of Nun The Son of Nun-noting that it was overdue to the public library-and The Queen of Babylon The Queen of Babylon and leafed through them, looking for points of resemblance, while believing he wouldn't find any. There he was wrong. The subject matter was quite different or so it seemed at first. But it was as he had thought. Tredown appeared very interested in strange G.o.ds and their wors.h.i.+p, in rituals, in sacrifice, in Baal and Dagon and Ashtaroth, the deities he mentioned in and leafed through them, looking for points of resemblance, while believing he wouldn't find any. There he was wrong. The subject matter was quite different or so it seemed at first. But it was as he had thought. Tredown appeared very interested in strange G.o.ds and their wors.h.i.+p, in rituals, in sacrifice, in Baal and Dagon and Ashtaroth, the deities he mentioned in The First Heaven. The First Heaven. He recognized that, for those who liked this sort of thing, this book was more exciting and suspenseful than either of the biblical epics Wexford had read, but there was a kind of flavor or atmosphere about it that made it recognizable as Tredown's work. Perhaps it was in the sort of phrasing he used, the recurrence of certain favorite words, even the way he chose to describe his leading characters. He recognized that, for those who liked this sort of thing, this book was more exciting and suspenseful than either of the biblical epics Wexford had read, but there was a kind of flavor or atmosphere about it that made it recognizable as Tredown's work. Perhaps it was in the sort of phrasing he used, the recurrence of certain favorite words, even the way he chose to describe his leading characters.
"The First Heaven was published in the mid-nineties," he said to Dora. "Have you read any of his later ones?" was published in the mid-nineties," he said to Dora. "Have you read any of his later ones?"
She hadn't. "I can get one out of the library tomorrow, if you like."
"I'd just like to know if he reverted to his old favorites or if The First Heaven The First Heaven marked a sort of turning point in his career. Are there any sequels, for instance?" marked a sort of turning point in his career. Are there any sequels, for instance?"
"I'll get you the lot," Dora said, eyebrows raised.
Privately, Barry Vine believed putting a name to the body in Grimble's cellar was unimportant. He had been a traveler or gypsy or itinerant, whatever you liked to call him, had trespa.s.sed on someone else's property and been shot by some old lunatic. But it was crucial to police work, and Wexford thought it of the first importance, which was why Barry and Lyn were off to see a woman in Maidstone who might know a woman whose boyfriend had left her in September 1998 and just might . . .
"It's worth giving it a go, isn't it, Sarge?" said Lyn whose researches had found Lily Riley.
"It's my daughter who knew her," Lily Riley said in the living room of her little house, bringing them cups of tea the color of mulligatawny soup. "Her and this Bridget used to go fruit picking together. Mostly it was up near Colchester, but one year they come down here so Mich.e.l.le could stop with me. Not Bridget, though. She had her own van."
Looking at her list, Lyn said, "That would be Bridget Cook and Mich.e.l.le Riley?"
"That's right, love. Bridget brought her down in her van along with her boyfriend-I mean, Bridget's boyfriend. I only saw him the once. He'd been to Flagford before, Mich.e.l.le said, three or four years before for the strawberries. This time it was plums they was picking, Victorias."
"Do you remember his name, Mrs. Riley?"
"Dusty, they called him. Well, not Bridget. She had another name for him, but I disremember what it was. Them two, Dusty and Bridget, they stopped in the van. Mich.e.l.le was in here with me."
"You said you saw him, Mrs. Riley. What was he like?"
"Good-looking," she said. "Well, I reckon you could call him good-looking. Mind you, he always looked dirty to me, but I dare-say I'm fussy. Bridget kept on telling him to wash himself. I'll tell you one thing, he was always knocking his head on the ceiling in that van, he was so tall, you see."
Mrs. Riley insisted on a second round of tea and went to refill their cups.
"It's him, Sarge," Lyn said excitedly. "Six feet four, the chap in the cellar was."
"It looks like it," said the more cautious Barry, "but let's not jump to conclusions yet."
The tray once more set down on the table, Lily Riley began getting into her stride. "Him and Bridget was talking of getting married. What I do remember was Bridget saying to Mich.e.l.le as he was too young for her, really, being only forty and her getting on for fifty. A funny thing was she said he wrote poems to her. It was romantic, she said. Anyway, they stopped a couple of days, and then they went off to this Flagford, all three of them."
Lyn was suspicious. "How come you remember all this, Mrs. Riley?"
Lily Riley spoke huffily. There had been an imputation in Lyn's tone she hadn't liked. "I'll tell you how come. He left Bridget, this Dusty did. They was going to get married, the date was fixed and all. They said to me, you've got to come to our wedding, Lily, and I said okay, I would.
"Well, they'd been picking plums all day at Morella's, Mich.e.l.le said, and they come home to the van and Dusty said he had to go out, he'd be gone an hour at the most, and off he went but never come back. That's how I remember it. Mich.e.l.le was so upset. She's got a soft heart, my girl, and she was in tears. He broke poor Bridget's heart, that man."
Barry came to the crucial question. "Do you know his other name, Mrs. Riley? Could it have been Sam?"
"Dusty, they called him. I don't know what else. I never heard it. I know he come from somewhere in London. Same with Bridget, somewhere in London."
"That wasn't much help, Sarge," Lyn said when they were outside.
"You've done a good job finding that Mrs. Riley, Lyn," said Barry, "but that's where you're wrong. When they call a man Dusty it's usually because his surname's Miller. Like a man called Grey is Smoky and a man called White is Chalky or Snowy but someone called Miller is always Dusty. So now you know."
"If you say so, Sarge. I thought it might be because he looked dirty like Mrs. Riley said."
The Family Records Centre showed a large number of Millers but, because this man had been forty, it was possible to narrow it down to those born in the late fifties and early sixties.
"I suppose I can put each one of these into the Web," Lyn said, "and get a search engine to track him down. But if he's who we think he is, our man's dead. He's been dead eight years and he won't be on an electoral register anymore. Maybe it would be better to find dead Millers."
"Are we looking for a connection between these two men?" Burden asked. "I mean, are we working on the premise that the chap in the cellar wasn't the only one Ronald McNeil killed? That he also shot Alan Hexham?"
"That's why I'm going to see Irene McNeil again now that she's home," said Wexford. "But I don't think so, do you? There's no question of Hexham trespa.s.sing anywhere."
"Adam's talked to all the taxi firms who were here eleven years ago, he's been very thorough, I must say. But it was always a hopeless task. What kind of a miraculous memory would someone have to have to remember that far back?"
"I don't know. I don't see how there can be a connection, yet if there's not it's too much of a coincidence. But I'm sure Hexham came here and came to see Tredown. I think he came to do research for Tredown's book The First Heaven. The First Heaven. I've left a message on Selina Hexham's voice mail"-Wexford was proud of himself for knowing the term and bringing it out with such ease-"but she hasn't called me back yet." I've left a message on Selina Hexham's voice mail"-Wexford was proud of himself for knowing the term and bringing it out with such ease-"but she hasn't called me back yet."
Irene McNeil had spent two days in a private nursing home since what she called her "ordeal" at Kingsmarkham police station. Since her return home, showing she wasn't always the helpless creature she seemed to be, she had engaged a full-time carer. This was a young man of daunting efficiency who had transformed the soulless cupboard-lined house with bowls of flowers and jardinieres of houseplants. The place smelled of lemon air freshener. A boy in jeans and T-s.h.i.+rt was the last kind of person Wexford supposed Mrs. McNeil would find to tend on her, but he began to see that his a.n.a.lysis of her character had been wide of the mark. She might be old-fas.h.i.+oned and prudish, a stickler for manners and a sn.o.b, but she was very much an upper-middle-cla.s.s woman of her generation too, one who had always had a man about the house-first her father, then her husband-and who bitterly missed the masculine presence. No doubt, also, whatever she said, she would have liked a son. Greg the carer answered a deeply felt need. Wexford suspected it was he who had painted her fingernails a silvery rose-pink, and it amazed him that Mrs. McNeil let him call her "Reeny."
She still had her feet up, but now she was reclining on a sofa, her legs discreetly covered with a blanket. Rather to his surprise she made no reference to their previous meetings but instead was fervent on the subject of Greg, his excellences and his charm.
"Of course, having him here wouldn't have done at all when I was young," she said. "I may be older than he"-as if there was any doubt about it-"but that would have made no difference. If one was a woman alone, one simply could not have a man staying overnight and that was all there was to it. It would have caused talk. Oh, thank you so much, Greg."
The carer had brought not tea but a gla.s.s of what looked like iced coffee and a plate of the kind of biscuits you can only buy in delicatessens. "And what can I get you, sir?"
Wexford thought it might have been the first time in his life-at any rate for a long time-that anyone but the members of his team had called him "sir," and even they now mostly called him "guv," thanks to Hannah. "A cup of tea would be good," he said, thinking Greg would be more likely to understand "good" than "nice."
"Isn't he perfect?" Like a woman in love, Mrs. McNeil watched Greg depart for the kitchen, closing the door quietly behind him. In more mundane accents she asked Wexford what she could do for him. "Can I update you?" wasn't the kind of question she would have asked before the advent of Greg.
"The man your husband shot-" he began but Irene McNeil interrupted him.
"In self-defense!"
"Yes, well-you must have got a good look at him."