Authors: Catherine Aird
Mr Fournier's colour, already florid from the sun and unusual exertion, turned a shade still more puce. âShe took me to the consistory court â¦'
âDid she, indeed?' murmured Sloan. It was a court in which he had never given evidence. So far. âWhat for?'
âRemoving the War Memorial from the Lady Chapel without a faculty.' The rector said tonelessly, âI lost.'
âTell me,' said Sloan, a detective on duty, âwas there a member of her family commemorated there?'
âNot to my knowledge, Inspector.'
âSo?'
âHad to get it put back as it was,' Edwin Fournier said, head down over the mower.
âI understand,' said Sloan, âthat nevertheless she asked particularly for you to take her funeral.'
âWanted the last word, I suppose,' said the rector ungraciously. âDifficult to the end, if you ask me.'
âIf you ask me, sir,' said Detective Inspector Sloan, policeman first but gardener a close second, âwhat that machine needs is â¦'
âYes?' said the man of peace eagerly.
âA little less of the tickler and a bit more of the strangler.'
SEVENTEEN
Farewell, sweet ginger, dead in thy beauty
.
Shirley Doves looked up from the basket of washing which she was hanging out in her back garden. âSeen you before, haven't I?'
âYou have,' said Detective Constable Crosby.
âGo on,' she said, gripping a clothes peg with her teeth. âSay “once seen, never forgotten”.'
âIn a manner of speaking,' said Crosby, âthat's what I've come about.'
âOnce seen, never forgotten? Get away.'
âThe man in the Dog and Duck who made you a bit late at the Grange, Thursday night â¦'
âYou still on about that?'
âDid you know him?'
Shirley Doves shook her head. Since she had added yet another clothes peg to her mouth the effect was macabre. âNever seen 'im before. Nor since, come to that, seeing as the old lady's gone.'
âWhat were you drinking Thursday?'
Shirley pegged out two towels before she answered Crosby. âI was on lager and lime and Ron was drinking bitter.'
âAll the time?'
âUntil this fellow asked us to celebrate with him. Just as we were going.'
âCelebrate what?'
Shirley Doves looked blank. âDunno. He just said he'd had a bit of luck and what would we like.'
âGo on,' said Crosby.
âWell,' she said glibly, watching his face, âRon was driving so he just had another bitter â¦'
âDrinking and driving's not my department,' he said sturdily.
âBut this fellow asked what I really liked. It was a big celebration, he said, and I was to say whatever I wanted.'
âAnd you said â¦?'
âA whisky mac,' said Shirley Doves promptly. âAnd blow me, that's what he bought me. I didn't think I should be so lucky.'
âWhat did he look like?'
âOrdinary sort of bloke.' She screwed up her eyes. âDressed a bit nunty perhaps, that's all â¦'
âNunty?'
âYou know â sort of old-fashioned, like.'
Crosby didn't know but conscientiously made an entry in his notebook.
âYou going to the funeral, then?' he said.
âCourse I am,' she said, affronted. âI always go to my old ladies' funerals.'
Michael Harris sent for his director of finance on the Tuesday morning with something less than enthusiasm. Clever and hard-working the man might be, tactful he was not.
âOur broker tells me,' Harris said to him, âthat the price of Chernwoods' “A” Ordinary Shares has fallen back a bit since Friday.'
âOnly to be expected,' responded David Gillsans. âWe weren't in the market yesterday and we're the only people who want to buy and why we do is beyond â¦'
âAll right, all right.' Harris stayed him with his hand. âIt does mean that buying will be cheaper for us, though.'
âIt means that there aren't quite so many other investors jumping on your take-over bandwagon as you might have expected, that's all,' said Gillsans, adding privately that they had more sense.
Harris scratched his chin.
âAnd you can't buy any more shares now, whatever the price, without either declaring your intentions or breaking the law,' Gillsans added unequivocally. David Gillsans, as befitted an accountant, was a black and white man, not interested in a variety of shades of grey.
âI know, I know,' Harris said eagerly, âbut when we do come to buy over the limit it'll cost us less.'
Gillsans said tonelessly: âThat is one way of looking at the picture.'
âThey may be worth a lot less by then, too â¦'
Gillsans looked up sharply but said nothing.
âA lot less,' said Harris craftily.
âThe argument against buying at all remains the same,' said Gillsans.
âBut you remember â the shares went down all right after they were up in court a couple of times.'
âThat's only natural,' said Gillsans and stopped, deciding that if Harris was up to some mischief then he'd rather not know about it.
âThen I think,' said Harris mysteriously, âthat we should wait until next week before taking any further steps to buy.'
Gillsans nodded. Any time was too soon for him but next week was better than now. For once he wished that there was still a Marsh in the firm with whom he could have reasoned but the Marsh of Harris and Marsh's was as dead as Mr Scrooge's long gone partner, Jacob Marley.
âI shall be going to the funeral, of course,' said Harris, revealing what it was about this week that encouraged delay. âI've arranged for a wreath to be sent â¦'
âI know,' said the accountant unkindly. âThey've charged it to the advertising budget.'
âIt's very kind of you to come here, Mr Henryson â¦'
âDr Phoebe's our doctor, Miss Kennerley,' said the bookseller obliquely, handing over a book. âMy wife won't see anyone else at the surgery.'
âBut what about Undertones of War?'
He gave her a deprecating smile. âMy customers don't mind having to come back, you know. They're enthusiasts and time doesn't matter too much to them. Besides,' he bowed his head, âyou said it was important.'
âIt is.' Amelia said: âIt may seem silly, Mr Henryson, but I do really need to know the names of the soldiers in the Fearnshires who were killed in the last war, probably in 1940.'
âAh, then I think this will help you.' The bookseller opened the book. âTheir regimental history â¦'
âMarvellous! Do let me see â¦'
âThe Fearnshires had rather a bad time in France in 1940,' said Mr Henryson. âAfter the fall of France,' said Mr Henryson, âthe 2nd Battalion were trapped between two advancing German forces. They were far too far south, you see, to make for Dunkirk â¦'
âWhere they might have got away.' Amelia had that epic firmly in her mind.
âThey might,' agreed Mr Henryson. âThey might possibly have been trying to break through to St Valery-en-Caux â they were hoping at one time to evacuate some men from there â¦'
âThey didn't, though, did they?'
Mr Henryson shook his head. âNo. The Fearnshires held out for as long as they could, of course' â there was a wealth of military meaning in that
of course
â âbut in the end â¦'
âYes?'
The military bookseller said: âSuperior forces prevailed â¦'
âAs they usually do,' said Amelia logically.
âNot always,' said Mr Henryson, amateur historian. âThere were David and Goliath, you know. However, I fear the 2nd Battalion of the Fearnshires were either killed or taken prisoner at a village called Hautchamps.' Mr Henryson pointed to the volume he'd brought. âIt's all in that history there. A little place called Hautchamps is where they made their last stand.'
âIs there a memorial there?' Amelia opened the history and began to turn the pages.
Mr Henryson said he was pretty sure that there would be, and there was certainly another in the form of a Scottish cairn at their battalion headquarters because he'd seen it.
A big one.
He was sure, he said, that she knew the origin of the cairn as a memorial and the significance of its size.
âThe bigger the battle, the bigger the cairn?' hazarded Amelia with half her mind, turning the pages of the history as quickly as she could.
âNot quite,' said Mr Henryson. âIt dates from the days before muster rolls â¦'
The Fearnshires, decided Amelia, would seem to have had cannon to the right of them and cannon to the left of them in that dreadful Maytime.
âWhen a Highlander leaving for a battle left a stone on a pile before he went,' continued the bookseller, âand â¦'
The Fearnshires, read Amelia, had had trouble defending their rear, too.
âAnd,' said the indefatigable Mr Henryson, âwhen â if â the soldier came back home he collected his stone. So the greater the pile of unclaimed stones, the greater the number of casualties â¦'
Amelia interrupted his disquisition. âMr Henryson, what does “enfiladed” mean?'
âFire from artillery which sweeps a line of men or buildings from end to end,' responded Mr Henryson promptly.
âI thought it might,' said Amelia, suddenly sad. She read out: â“On the evening of 10th June 1940, the men were rallied and reformed at the Hautchamps crossroads by Second Lieutenant E. H. Goudy of the 2nd Battalion, the Fearnshires, after being raked by enemy fire.”'
â
Nec temere, nec timide
,' observed Mr Henryson. âThat was what you were looking for, wasn't it?'
Amelia read on. â“Second Lieutenant Goudy was among those killed by mortar fire at first light the next morning.”'
The bookseller looked at her. âIs that who you were looking for?'
Amelia blinked away a sudden mist in her eyes and nodded without speaking.
âBattles long ago and far away are best,' offered Mr Henryson, although he didn't think she was listening.
Mr Nicholas Cochin lived in Calleford in a bungalow on the edge of the town. The two policemen found his house without difficulty. There was just the one impediment to interviewing him and that was that he and his wife were in Canada visiting a married daughter.
Their next-door neighbour had undertaken the care of their house plants and the forwarding of mail. He told Sloan that there had indeed been other callers at the house, to whom they had given the same information but no more than this.
No, the other callers had not given their names ⦠but had said that they would pay another visit when the Cochins were back home again.
No, the neighbour couldn't describe any of them.
The police fared rather better with their next call.
Martin Didot lived in Luston in his retirement and was a spry old man with all his wits still about him. Though he was old he was not yet really old nor what the geriatricians fashionably now call old, old.
âChernwoods' in the war, Inspector? Yes, I worked there all right. Man and boy, you might say. That was when the last of the Chernwood family were still there. They were great days, you know. It was never the same after the new management took over.'
âNo, sir, I'm sure, but â¦'
âThey were in the papers a while back when someone sued them for wrongful dismissal.' He regarded Sloan straightly and said severely: âThat sort of thing would never have happened in the old days, you know. It's not good for a firm, that sort of thing.'
âNo, sir,' agreed Sloan, âit isn't.'
âAnd then, not so long ago, they had a fire.'
âThat was bad luck,' said Sloan.
âIf you ask me,' said Didot, âit was arson.'
âWas it now â¦' Sloan made a mental note to look into that later.
âI went down the next morning to have a look at the old place myself. Works were a right mess and swarming with fire scientists and insurance assessors â¦'
Detective Inspector Sloan made yet another note in his book.
âSeems to me, lad,' said Didot, âthat there's someone wanting to do the old firm an injury â¦'
âWhat I've come to ask you, sir,' said Detective Inspector Sloan briskly (he hadn't been called âlad' for many a long year), âis something about Hut Eleven.'
Sloan found himself being surveyed by a remarkably shrewd â if rheumy â pair of eyes. He said quizzically: âYou, too, Inspector?'
âThere have been others, then?'
âOh, yes,' he nodded, âthere have been others. From the management and from who knows where. And â¦'
âAnd?'
âThey all want to know what we were doing in Hut Eleven then.'
Sloan leaned forward. âAnd what do you tell them, Mr Didot?'
âThe truth, Inspector. That I was only the lab boy there. Then they usually go away.'
âBut you knew about OZ?' persisted Sloan, who wasn't going to go away.
âI knew about it, Inspector, but that's all.'
âGo on.'
âThat is to say, I knew about it to the extent of being able to say I knew that there was research being done under that name but not exactly what it was.' He looked out of the window. âIt was all a very long time ago, now, you know.'
âThat is one of the difficulties,' said Sloan, undeterred. The long arm of the law had reached backwards before now. And further.
âAnd,' Didot said in a matter-of-fact way, âI wasn't educated like the others were. They were mostly trained scientists, you know, recruited straight from the universities as soon as the war got going.'
âMrs Garamond knew all about it, though, didn't she?' suggested Sloan. The neat little terraced house, polished to perfection, seemed totally remote from war-time research into anything.
âOh, yes, but then it was her discovery, wasn't it?'