âWas this as a direct result of her illness or was there a real problem?'
âHer doctor thought it was a mixture of both.'
âDo you remember a woman by the name of Imelda Burnside working here?'
âHow did you find that out?' he asked hoarsely.
âFrom her sister.'
âLook, if it emerges thatâ'
âThe murder victim was on your payroll?' I finished for him. âNot good for business, eh?'
âIt's just thatâ'
âMr Turner, this is a murder investigation. Was there a problem concerning the two women?'
He remained silent for a moment and then reluctantly said, âThere was. I believe Miss Bennett discovered that the Burnside woman was going out with her nephew. She was furious, shouting that she was common and after his money. But, you must understand, this was not instrumental in her wanting to leave.'
âNo?'
âNo. After words were exchanged the carer, Burnside, was consigned to other clients. Things settled down for a while. We just had to make sure they did not come face to face.'
âSurely Imelda was upset by this reaction.'
âProbably, but she cooperated with the new arrangements. There are always difficulties with people suffering from dementia.'
âWhen Miss Bennett walked out where did she end up?'
âOnce or twice back at the sheltered accommodation where she had lived previously, then at that house you mentioned she owned, and on the last occasion the police found her wandering in Victoria Park. She had been missing for hours and I'm afraid that was when we told her nephew she had to be moved to somewhere where her needs were better served.'
âWas Imelda Burnside still working here after Miss Bennett left?'
âNo, she'd left about a fortnight before this final episode.'
âDo clients have their own rooms or do they share?'
âThey have their own. It's one of our advantages over other care homes.'
âAnd you visit them?'
âNot in their rooms. I chat to them in the lounges and they can request a private interview if they wish.'
âDid you
ever
go into Miss Bennett's room?'
He began to weary of me. âIs this reallyâ'
âPlease answer the question.'
âYes, I did. On the last occasion when she'd gone off on her own.'
âDid you notice an old police truncheon on display anywhere? It had belonged to her great-grandfather.'
âNo.'
âAre you sure?'
âWe don't encourage clients to bang nails in the walls.'
âIt could have been anywhere.'
âIf it was there I didn't see it.'
I thanked him and left.
TWENTY
I
t has become important to me, whenever possible, to do my thinking at the scene of the crime and this time I was going to have to be very professional and detached. Making no reference to my previous offer on the house, I merely showed my ID to the woman in the estate agents, someone I had not seen before, and came away with the keys.
The weather had turned wet and gloomy as only the West Country can sometimes be and I anticipated that the little house would be even darker with the creepers and other plants rampant across the windows. Not so, I saw as I parked the car. Everything had been cut back, the shrubs in the front garden pruned, alas cutting off most of the flower buds, and the tiny lawn had been mowed, scalped actually.
There was a car parked right outside and the front door was open. Sounds of activity were coming from within and the tiled floor just inside the front door was wet. I already knew that the knocker was seized solid with paint or dirt so rapped on the open door with my knuckles.
Hot and bothered, David Bennett poked his head around a corner and then frowned deeply. âWhat do you want?'
âI'm not here in any official capacity,' I said, wondering whether I ought to go away, right now.
âWhat capacity are you here in then?' he demanded to know.
âIt was me who found the body. But I live locally and had already put in an offer for the place.'
He emerged, wet patches on his clothes, holding a dripping scrubbing brush. âYou can give me a hand if you like.'
âNo, thanks.'
Coming right up to me he said, âD'you still want to buy it?'
âI might. But someone's put in a higher offer.'
âAs of yesterday I've got power of attorney. Auntie's worse, bananas, so it's me who decides. And no one's said anything to me about higher offers.'
âMay I have another look round?'
âPlease do,' he said eagerly. He stood aside but I indicated that he should lead the way. I was not going to turn my back on this man.
âThe place was filthy.' Bennett said chattily. âAll the buyers seemed to have gone cold so I thought I'd better do something about it. The agent was a bit sniffy about the state of it too. Bloody great spiders. I got some spray stuff and polished them all off, I tell you.' He turned to leer at me. âI know how all you ladies hate creepy-crawlies.'
I never thought that I would mourn the death of a spider.
Downstairs, I followed Bennett from room to room and was forced to admit that he had done a lot of cleaning. With the vegetation removed from the windows everywhere was now starkly light which unfortunately showed up the cracks in the plaster of the walls and ceilings and the woodworm holes in the floorboards. I saw with dismay that there was a large damp patch that I had not noticed before on the wall above the fireplace in the right-hand living room and when we reached the kitchen could hardly fail to notice that the dry rot, or whatever it was, was escaping from the cupboard under the sink and creeping across the bare boards of the floor. There was a lingering smell of decomposition.
âNeeds a lot of money spending on it,' Bennett said gloomily. âBut it'll be great when it's finished. She never spent a penny on the place herself and it got to the stage where it wasn't fit to live in. She's always been odd, frankly.'
âThat's what Imelda's sister thought.'
âOh, she did have a sister then,' Bennett said in offhand fashion.
I leaned on the larder door,
the
larder door. âBe honest with me. Do you think Imelda really wrote that letter saying that she was going to live with her or did someone else?'
âI think . . .'
âYes?'
âSomeone else might have done.'
âAnd you're positive you received it?'
âYou said this wasn't an official visit.'
âIt isn't, but if I'm to buy this house I need to know the full story, don't I?' I conjured a jolly smile.
âYes, it was left here, on the mantelpiece. But I'd never seen Imelda's handwriting so it's possible she didn't write it.'
âWhat kind of state was your aunt in just over twelve months ago?'
âNot too bad. But trying to leave where she was. She didn't like it there.'
âShe found out you were going out with Imelda.'
â
Did
she?'
âPerhaps Imelda told her herself â she was working there.'
âOh, yes, I suppose she was.'
âApparently she was furious.'
âAuntie was like that.'
âMr Bennett, didn't Imelda say anything to you about this?'
âEr, no, we weren't really speaking then on account of her still living here when I'd asked her to go.'
âAnd you'd had words.'
âYes.'
âAnd you'd hit her.'
âNo!'
âFunny, DCI Carrick said that you'd admitted you had.'
âLookâ' Bennett began angrily.
âAre you covering up for your aunt? Did she so bitterly resent the fact that her carer â she'd been shouting that Imelda was common and only after your money â had lived here with you that she came here and battered her with her great-grandfather's police truncheon?'
Bennett stared at me.
âAnd then in her confused, no, crazy state, she found a knife in the kitchen and cut off her head, putting that in the cupboard upstairs and the body here in this larder. To get her revenge as well as give you a horrible shock. Because she hates everybody.'
âShe might have done,' he agreed.
âI suggest that you know she did.'
There was a protracted silence before Bennett said, âOK, she did. I'd had a call from the home to say that Auntie had gone walkabout again so I first called in where she'd been the last time, at the sheltered accommodation, no luck, and then came here. The place was in a real mess, blood everywhere. Auntie was standing like something turned to stone, over there by the sink. She was covered in blood too. The knife was still in her hand and she'd obviously been trying to wash the blood off it. She wouldn't speak to me.'
âWhere was the body?'
âShe must have already dealt with it. I didn't want to look for it, believe you me. I suppose I panicked. I gave her a coat of Imelda's and told her to take off her outer clothes so I could burn them. Then I took her back to the home and told them I'd found her just wandering around. They said that was the last straw, they couldn't cope with her any longer.'
âThen you came back, cleaned up the house, shifted out all the furniture and got rid of it having first disposed of Imelda's car.'
âThat's right.'
âWhy?'
âEh?'
â
Why?
If you'd gone to the police without touching anything and told them the truth the outcome would have merely been that your aunt was sent to a secure mental hospital.'
âAs I said, I panicked. I thought I'd be number one suspect.'
âBecause of your criminal record for violence against women.'
âYes.'
âWhat did you do with the car?'
âSold it. It was mine. She'd only been using it.'
âA set of keys for it was found in her bag buried, together with her clothes, in the garden. Did you really think that you were going to succeed in making this woman just disappear?'
âI've told you â I panicked.'
âNo, actually, you're lying. Forensic tests have proved that Imelda wasn't killed in the house, but probably in the garden which is where her head was cut off.
You
battered her to death and did what followed in order to shift any blame on to your aunt, the act of a deranged woman, should you subsequently find yourself charged with the murder. There was no letter saying she was going to live with her sister, who insists such a move was never mentioned. And that night when your aunt wandered off she was found by the police in Victoria Park.'
He was still staring at me.
âImelda was quite a big, strong girl,' I continued, watching him carefully. âCarers have to be in order to be able to lift people. Your aunt would never have been able to move her body, even with the head removed, let alone wrap it in bedding and put it in the larder. You hit Imelda and when she ran into the garden to try to escape you killed her. On one of the rare occasions you'd visited your aunt you'd helped yourself to the truncheon, no doubt thinking it might be worth something and you could sell it. And that gave you the idea.'
âYou can't prove any of this,' Bennett whispered.
âAnother thing is that I'm still mulling over what you said just now about not knowing about offers on this house. Someone accepted my original offer and then went on to tell that estate agent to tell me I could have it for a lot less. In a panic then, were you in anticipation of your power of attorney? Sell the place with poor auntie not able to understand what's happening and then hightail it back to New Zealand with the money? I think you'll find that the police have a pretty good case against you.'
He came a bit closer. âWhat if I did kill her? She was just a bloody nuisance â you're a bloody nuisance.'
âYou admit it then?'
âWhy not, just between us two. It is just you, isn't it? You haven't told anyone else what you think.'
He was blocking the doorway into the hall and I was hoping I could make it through the back door and get over the high wall in the garden before he could grab me. âThis isn't my theory. My colleague reckons you're guilty and, in roughly his words, you made the killing look as though it had been done by some nutter.'
âYour colleague?' Bennett said blankly.
âRemember me?' Patrick said, appearing behind him. He gave me a big smile. âI thought we could have lunch.'
Bennett moved quickly to stand by the back door, probably thinking himself now out of range and having visibly changed his mind about trying to bulldoze the newcomer out of the way.
âI heard most of what was said,' Patrick informed him. âYou've been tailed ever since you were first pulled in for questioning, Bennett, and the guy whose turn it was rang in pronto when the two of you were here together. Carrick rang me and will soon be here. It's his case and he can arrest and charge you.'
Patrick had already been in the city centre so had grabbed a taxi and arrived before the DCI, neither he nor James wanting to take any risks. Carrick arrived about two minutes later and we all went to the nick where I was requested to put the case as I saw it on record. Bennett meanwhile was apparently raging around a cell, shouting obscenities and promising what he would do to me should we ever meet again. I was beginning to think that Hilda Bennett was not the only one in her family to be mentally unbalanced.
âThat was as good as a whodunnit play,' I said over lunch at The Moon and Sixpence. âYour entry I mean. A Not Quite Inspector Calls. A bit over the top if you ask me.'