Read Mrs. Pargeter's Plot Online
Authors: Simon Brett
âDon't worry, you will, Mrs Pargeter. I guarantee you will.' Gary caressed the steering wheel lovingly. âFancy a quick spin, do you?'
âWell . . .' She was tempted. âWhat about Denise, though? Won't the mind? Won't she want to come too?'
âNo worries. She'll be asleep by now. Come on, just a quick circuit of the lanes.'
âOK.' Mrs Pargeter sat back luxuriously as the powerful engine took command.
The ride was as smooth as a dream of flying. Very relaxing. Mrs Pargeter knew that she would sleep even better than usual that night. (Not that she ever actually had trouble sleeping. At ease with herself, Mrs Pargeter's nights were always as sleek as the sheen on her silk stockings.)
Only as they drew up once more outside the cottage, while Gary was deliberating whether to leave the Roller outside or lock it up for the night, did a troubling thought enter Mrs Pargeter's mind. âGary,' she said, âyou remember Fossilface O'Donahue, don't you?'
âOf course.'
âAnd you know that he's embarked on this orgy of misguided charity, bringing “restitooshun” to everyone he's wronged in the past?'
âYeah, I heard a bit about that.'
âWell, I've suddenly remembered that your name was on the list of people he wanted to make “restitooshun” to.'
âOh. Right. I'll be on the lookout.'
âSo I was wondering . . . what wrong did he do you in the past? I mean, if we know the area in which he might be trying to make it up to you, perhaps we'll have a chance of stopping him from messing anything else up.'
âGood thinking. All right, well . . . Fossilface O'Donahue done the dirty on me in connection with a matter of transport. Bound to be, wasn't it?'
âOh yes, I remember you mentioned something. About a getaway car. He didn't drain the petrol tank, did he?' asked Mrs Pargeter, thinking of what had happened to Hedgeclipper Clinton.
âNo, no, it was different from that. Quite as destructive, mind you. What Fossilface done was, he put nails in the tyres . . . not so's to puncture them straight away, but so's the nails'd work themselves in once you was up and running. I was up and running fast â doing ninety in the outside lane of the M1 â when the first tyre went. Dead hairy, swirling round like Torvill and Dean I was, nearly lost control. Tell you, Mrs P., if your husband hadn't insisted on me doing that skid-pan training before he let me work for him, I'd've been a goner. He was a really caring employer, you know, Mr Pargeter was. Thought of everything.'
âTrue,' his widow replied distractedly. She was too concerned with thoughts of Fossilface O'Donahue to take much notice of yet another compliment. âHm, so knowing the way Fossilface's mind works â or trying to get into the perverse workings of Fossilface's mind â maybe we should be on the lookout for some kind of “restitooshun” involving tyres?'
âAny idea what?'
Mrs Pargeter shrugged. âIf I had the skills to predict that, I'd win the National Lottery every week.'
âRight.' Gary yawned. âI'm for bed. It's a mild night. Maybe I will leave the Roller out forâ'
âI'd lock it up if I were you,' said Mrs Pargeter firmly. âI'm not having my investment put at risk.'
She went back to the cottage and bed. Gary drove the Rolls-Royce into the converted barn, and locked the large doors front and back. Then he too went to bed.
Neither Mrs Pargeter nor Gary knew that all their actions were still being watched.
The next stage of Truffler Mason's enquiries, forced on him by the loss of his archives, brought him up against that common British phenomenon, middle-class upward mobility. In all their researches into tribes from Poluostrov Tajmyr to Papua New Guinea, anthropologists have yet to discover a less secure social grouping than the British middle class. The status of this section of society is always fluid. They cannot find stasis, as the aristocracy and the genuine working class frequently do. The middle classes are never able to forget where they've come from, and spend all their time in heart-searching assessment of the number of degrees by which they are on the way up or down from that starting point.
The dilemma was well expressed by the household in which Truffler Mason found himself. Stan Gertler â known professionally as Stan the Orang-Utan, for reasons which you will either understand instinctively or which you don't need to know about â was definitely born âlower middle class'. In fact, the young Stan might have slipped back quite comfortably into the working class, but for an aspiring mother who was determined to make something of her husband and her child. For there is nothing more daunting in the world than an aspiring mother with middle-class ambitions.
Stan Gertler's social instability was then aggravated by his own marriage. Rita, with whom he fell in love as suddenly and heavily as he habitually knocked over nightwatchmen, regarded herself as âmiddle class' â though she would more accurately have been described as âupper lower middle class' â and, needless to say, her only ambition was to become âupper middle class'.
To this end, she moved her husband away from his Stoke Newington roots to the nice genteel suburb of Muswell Hill, and never did anything so lower-class as to ask him where his money came from but instead proceeded to spend a great deal of it on stripped pine, spice racks and Laura Ashley curtains.
When their son was born, she branded him for life with the hopefully classy name of Sebastian, and tried to use him as a crampon to pull the family further up the sheer cliffs of middle-class fulfilment. This involved sending the boy to a public school to develop both his vowels and his inbuilt antennae for the recognition and avoidance of anything âcommon'.
It had been Mrs Gertler's hope that in time her son would meet a nice girl from the âupper upper middle class' â or even, dare one hope it, âthe aristocracy' â to produce a new generation of children who, instinctively and without prompting, would for the rest of their days treat au pairs and waiters like dirt.
But her fond aspirations did not look likely to be realized. Sebastian was a sad disappointment to his mother. Even his expensive vowels had become deliberately roughened by that inverted snobbery to which public school boys are so prone. And his taste in women was proving to be decidedly down the tacky â not to say ârough trade' â end of the market.
Thank goodness Rita Gertler didn't know that her son was currently spending his days menacing motorists with a squeegee, thought Truffler Mason as she dispensed dry sherry and gave him a guided tour of her taste in interior decor.
âOf course,' she was saying, in an accent that still remained more broken glass than cut glass, âthe sideboard's Regency.'
âOf course.' Truffler looked appraisingly at the item in question. âVery nice, Rita. Stan always did have a wonderful eye for antiques, didn't he?'
âOh, I'll say.'
âKnew how to pick them. Knew what he wanted, and didn't bother with any of the other stuff.'
âThat's so true.'
âWherever he went in, he always knew what to take and what to leave.'
Rita cleared her throat, indicating that the boundary of some middle-class prohibition was being approached a little too closely. Then she moved on. âI like to think Sebastian's inherited some of his father's flair.'
Sebastian, incarcerated for his mother's benefit in a tweed sports jacket, checked shirt and paisley tie, smiled weakly.
âOh, what?' asked Truffler. âYou mean flair forâ'
Rita came in firmly to divert the direction of the conversation. âFlair for spotting antiques. Sebastian's doing a Fine Art course at university . . . aren't you, Sebastian?'
âYes, Mummy,' he replied, uncomfortably back in his best public school accent.
âVery nice.' Truffler looked blandly across at the young man. âThat all he's doing at the moment then, is it?'
Sebastian eased an awkward finger round the inside of his collar, as his mother said, âOh yes. In three years' time he'll have a degree. That's how universities work, you know.'
âReally? I'd often wondered.' She was unaware of his irony, as Truffler went on, âSo his dad'll just be out for the ceremony, won't he?'
Rita pursed her lips, leaving Truffler in no doubt that his remark had not been in the best of taste. He hastened to cover over the gaffe. âKeeping well, is he . . . Stan?'
âVery well, thank you.'
The response was rather curt, but she softened when Truffler continued, âAnd you're looking very good yourself.'
Slightly preening, she simpered back, âHow kind. Anno Domini marches on, but one . . . endeavours to do one's best.'
â'Course.' He slid the conversation seamlessly into the next stage of his investigation. âLook like you've caught the sun too, Rita. That all been in this country, has it?'
âOh yes. Just here, sitting out on the patio.' She pronounced the word to rhyme with âratio'.
âAh, right. So you haven't been abroad since . . .' there was a conscious effort of tact, â. . . since Stan's been away?'
âWell . . .' Rita confided, âI did have one rather enjoyable little trip . . .'
âReally?' Truffler's response was casually poised, as if the subject held only the mildest of interest for him.
âIt was what I believe is vulgarly known as a “freebie” . . .'
âNice.' Then, as if his enquiry arose out of mere politeness, he asked, âLong way away, was it?'
âYes, it was, actually, Truffler. Rather an exotic location, as it happens . . .'
âThis all sounds very mysterious, Rita.'
She gave a coy flutter of the eyelashes, attracted to the idea of being a woman of mystery. âWell . . .'
âPerhaps you'd like to tell me about it?' Truffler suggested.
He and Sebastian leant forward together, as Rita Gertler prepared to tell all.
That morning Gary's cottage remained in audition mode. When viewed from the other side of the road, a slight haze of mist still blurred the cottage's outline, but that seemed only to make the archetypal scene more beautiful (or it would have done to a watcher with more aesthetic sensitivity than Blunt). And the mist was of the kind that would soon be burnt away by the midday heat of another perfect summer day.
This was good news for the bride and groom in whose honour Gary was tying white satin ribbon across the bonnet of his new Rolls-Royce. Their special day, which would be immortalized in endless photographs â and probably a video â was going to be a perfect English summer day. If the marriage subsequently went wrong â and of course one in three marriages do â at least they wouldn't be able to blame the weather.
The doors of the barn adjacent to the cottage were open. The building had double doors front and back; from the front the vehicles would drive out proudly on their various missions; while the back led to a yard where necessary maintenance was carried out. On the gravel drive Gary, neat in his uniform, seemed almost umbilically attached to his precious Rolls-Royce. Two other drivers, equally smart, adjusted white satin bows and buffed the already glasslike bonnets of two lesser limousines. The wedding was a good booking for the company.
Gary's wife Denise came out of the cottage, dressed in a smart turquoise suit and white hat. It was her friend who was getting married. Gary had also been invited as a guest, but preferred to be present in his professional capacity.
âLook great, love,' he said to Denise, as she approached the car. âI'd marry you any day.'
âWell, forget it,' she said tartly. âI'm already married.'
âDamn, always a snag, isn't there?' Gary gave his wife an affectionate peck on the cheek. âBetter be off then, had we?'
She looked at her watch. âMm. Don't want to make the bride more nervous than she already will be.'
âOK.' With elaborate ceremony, he opened the back door of the Rolls-Royce and ushered his wife inside. He turned and waved to the two chauffeurs behind. âTime to hit the road, fellers.'
The elegant convoy of gleaming cars eased effortlessly off the gravel and on their way. Their departure was noted with approval by the two men sitting in the parked Jaguar under the trees on the other side of the road.
âOff to his wedding booking . . .' said Clickety Clark, who had arrived secretly in the middle of the night.
Blunt grunted.
â. . . leaving Mrs Pargeter and Tammy Jacket on their own,' the photographer continued gleefully.
Blunt grunted again.
âShall we move in then?'
A third grunt, then Blunt turned the key in the ignition. The Jaguar was about to leap forward, when Clickety Clark held up a cautionary hand. âHang about.'
Driving along the road towards the cottage was a battered old brown Maxi. They watched it park on the gravel, and saw the tall man who uncoiled himself from the driver's seat.
âTruffler Bloody Mason,' Clickety Clark murmured.
âHe still wonky?' asked Blunt.
âNo. Bloody gone straight, hasn't he? Private detective set-up he's got now. Mason De Vere he calls himself. Works a lot with Mrs Pargeter, I've heard.'
Blunt watched the tall figure stoop under the low doorway as he was let into the cottage. âShall we go and nail him too while we got the chance?'
The photographer shook his head. âNo. Don't want to take on three if we can avoid it. Give them half an hour. If he's not out by then, we'll think again.'
Blunt gave a curt nod and switched off the engine.
Unaware of the continuing surveillance of the cottage, Mrs Pargeter and Truffler sat at the rustic table in the back garden. Tammy Jacket was once again lying in the hammock, and once again fast asleep. The previous evening Mrs Pargeter had provided a couple of sleeping pills to relax her. Tammy had got up that morning for breakfast, but as soon as she lay down in the hammock, sleep had reasserted its control. Good thing too, thought Mrs Pargeter. More sleep she gets the better. Wash away all those nasty memories of what'd happened to her house.