Dying in the Wool (46 page)

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Authors: Frances Brody

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Traditional, #Traditional British, #Women Sleuths, #Historical, #Cozy

BOOK: Dying in the Wool
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I stood by Joshua Braithwaite’s grave one Sunday in August, with Gregory Grainger who had come north to give a fund-raising talk about the planned opening of the Maudsley. Along with Sykes, we had called for Beatrice and Frederick Horrocks.

On the way over, Beatrice thanked me for finding out that the cottage in Robin Hood’s Bay had been in Agnes’ name and would come to Frederick, along with a small legacy – a codicil to Braithwaite’s will.

Gregory and I went to pay our respects at the memorial to the firemen who lost their lives in the explosion.

As we walked back through the cemetery, Gregory said, ‘I know you’ll probably say no, but I hope you’ll say yes.’

‘You’re not still wanting me to intercede with Josephine Tuffnell?’

‘That didn’t work out. And to be honest, it was never really on the cards. If you’d given me even one nod of encouragement I wouldn’t have mentioned Josephine Tuffnell.’ His hand brushed mine.

‘To what will I say no?’

‘I’ve leave due. Would you like to motor up to the Lake District with me?’

I wanted to say yes. My body said yes, and that took me by surprise because it was the first time in a long while I had thought I might truly come back to life.

Gregory took both my hands in his and we smiled. ‘Well then, what do you say, Kate?’

‘I can’t.’

He sighed his disappointment. ‘May I ask why not?’

‘It’s too complicated.’

‘If it’s because …’

I put my finger to his lips. ‘Don’t. Best not.’ On such moments, lives turn.

There would be too much between us when I looked at him. If only he had managed to hold onto Joshua
Braithwaite at Milton House, the man might have lived and so might Paul and Lizzie Kellett.

On the morning of the Kelletts’ funeral, when I had inexpertly tried to console Evelyn for her loss of Gregory and had tried to suggest Neville was much more the man for her, she had said that it just was not possible. Now, of course, I knew why. They would look at each other and see blood.

If I looked at Gregory, I would see Tabitha’s misery, Kellett’s scalded body, Mrs Kellett’s bird-like hands and wrinkled stockings. I would see an exhausted, undefeated Joshua Braithwaite running across the skyline of the fells. Attractive as Gregory could be, there was too much deceit between us, too many ghosts.

One piece of news did cheer me at the end of that summer. I came second in the All British Photographic Competition, with a stunningly sharp photograph of Mrs Sugden by her dung heap, alongside a gnome-like old chap who had come to shovel the manure into a rusty wheel-barrow for his allotment. I called my photograph “Muck Shovelling”.

Acknowledgements
 

My research began with a visit to Armley Mills Museum, Leeds. Staff there and at Bradford Industrial Museum were most helpful. Eugene Nicholson, Curator of the Industrial Museum, guided me through archive material and publications. Former overlookers Mark Astley, once of Salts Mill, and Greg Kotovs, patiently answered questions about processes and machinery.

Mark Keighley, author of
Wool City
, shed light on wool production and manufacture.

Through the Society of Dyers and Colourists, in whose offices my sister Pat once worked, I was advised by Mr J M Crabtree, creator of the fastest black dye in England, and Andrew Filarowski, Technical Director. Dr Ian Holme, textile chemist and colourist, kindly supplied copies of his relevant publications.

Retired police officer Ralph Lindley, and Mary Lindley, helped bring to life the workings of law and order in a Yorkshire village. Sylvia Gill, whose family worked in the mills, offered sterling support.

The Low Moor explosion of Monday 21 August 1916 took place just a few miles from where I once lived. This tragic event has been documented by Ronald Blackwell and The Bradford Antiquary.

Thanks to my steadfast agent Judith Murdoch for her encouragement, and to Emma Beswetherick and Donna Condon of Piatkus who made the editing process a great pleasure.

Other Piatkus titles to watch out for
:

BLACK HILLS

Nora Roberts

New York Times
bestselling author Nora Roberts takes us deep into the rugged Black Hills of South Dakota where the shadows keep secrets, hunters stalk the land and a childhood friendship matures into an adult passion.

Lil Chance fell in love with Cooper Sullivan pretty much the first time she saw him, an awkward teenager staying with his grandparents on their cattle ranch in South Dakota while his parents went through a messy divorce. Each year, with Coop’s annual summer visit, their friendship deepens – but then abruptly ends.

Twelve years later and Cooper has returned to run the ranch after his grandfather is injured in a fall. Though the memory of his touch still haunts her, Lil has let nothing stop her dream of opening the Chance Wildlife Refuge, but something – or someone – has been keeping a close watch. When small pranks and acts of destruction escalate into heartless killing, the memory of an unsolved murder in these very hills has Cooper springing to action to keep Lil safe.

They both know the dangers that lurk in the wild landscape of the Black Hills. And now they must work together to unearth a killer of twisted and unnatural instincts who has singled them out as prey …

978-0-7499-2926-8

INSPECTOR SINGH INVESTIGATES: A MOST PECULIAR MALAYSIAN MURDER

Shamini Flint

The first instalment in Inspector Singh’s celebrated new series, where he travels throughout Asia busting crimes!

Stop No. 1: Malaysia …

Inspector Singh is in a bad mood. He’s been sent from his home in Singapore to Kuala Lumpur to solve a murder that has him stumped. Chelsea Liew – the famous Singaporean model – is on death row for the murder of her ex-husband. She swears she didn’t do it, he thinks she didn’t do it, but no matter how hard he tries to get to the bottom of things, he still arrives back where he started – that Chelsea’s husband was shot at point blank range and that Chelsea had the best motive to pull the trigger: he was taking her kids away from her.

Now Inspector Singh must pull out all the stops to crack a crime that could potentially free a beautiful and innocent woman and reunite a mother with her children. There’s just one problem – the Malaysian police refuse to play ball …

978-0-7499-2975-6

ARCADIA FALLS

Carol Goodman

The flashlight flies out of my hand, rolls into the woods and goes out, leaving me in the pitch black dark. But not alone. Now that the noise of my steps is silenced I realise that I hadn’t been imagining the sound of footsteps after all.

When Meg Rosenthal gets an offer to teach folklore at Arcadia College – an overpowering Gothic hall nestled in the mountains – it seems the ideal escape from a life that’s fallen apart. She hopes, too, that the town of Arcadia Falls will be a place where she and her daughter can find peace and reconciliation.

But even though the location proves more beautiful than Meg imagined, it is hardly peaceful. The story behind the school, steeped in folklore and fairytale, conceals deceit, betrayal, and perhaps even murder. And very soon Meg begins to fear that by coming to Arcadia Falls she’s put herself – and her daughter – in very grave danger …

978-0-7499-4237-3

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