Read Murder on the Old Road Online
Authors: Amy Myers
âFred Miller?' Peter suggested, to draw him out.
âNo.'
âThen it was Clive Moon.'
âYes,' Julian unwillingly admitted.
âDo you have evidence, or is it only your opinion?'
âHe was the obvious candidate. He was a bad-tempered sullen man when I knew him, and I can't imagine he was much different at the time of my father's death. He certainly loathed him.'
âAnd he led the protest march, I understand.'
âIn my opinion that's why he did it. He wasn't the sort of man to get worked up about the future of the village, especially as his trade would not be affected. But the chance of revenge on Hugh Wayncroft would be irresistible.'
âBut why then and in such a public place?' Georgia asked.
âThere had been an incident the night before at the after-show party when Clive perhaps thought he had been publicly humiliated. My mother's patience snapped, and she poured a glass of wine over Clive's wife, whom she saw as her rival. Clive would not have taken that in his stride. So that, Peter, Georgia, is my view on my father's death.'
âDoes your mother have the same view?'
âYou may ask her, but please do not upset her. She may not talk of it, as I suspect she feels a degree of responsibility because of that incident. But I am as certain as I can be that it was Clive.'
âBut partly linked to the heritage question, as you said.'
A fractional pause before Julian's reply. âIf I said that, I was wrong.'
Retreat was good, thought Georgia. It meant Peter could make the running.
âCan you talk about it openly?' Peter asked innocently. âOr is it forbidden territory for non family members?'
This caught Julian on the raw. âYes â no.
Yes
. It's the eldest son's responsibility, and no one else's concern. I can only refer to it in the most general terms.'
âResponsibility towards whom or what? The Becket ruins?'
Julian seemed reasonably happy with this question. âYes, but in my case the situation was different. I was under two years old when my father died, and so my uncle resumed the responsibility until I was twenty-one.'
âAnd then he coached you?'
âYes. Nowadays the heir knows in general terms what's involved, but when he inherits there may be specific instructions. In this case, came the shock that he'd left the ruins to Anne.'
âWithout any intimation that they might one day return to you?'
âNo,' he said shortly. âAnd before you condemn me for supporting their development, I would point out that it is the only way of preserving them for the nation. And preserving Chillingham Place.'
Julian was in full lord of the manor flow, but too late he must have seen the pitfall ahead. âAnd if you think this provides your
link
to Anne's death, you are mistaken, and furthermore my father's death is an entirely different situation.'
âIn what way? The trouble is,' Georgia put in earnestly, âthere's a flaw in what you're saying. The heritage, as you describe it, is fairly straightforward, but the legalities surrounding it seem to imply a much more formal obligation.'
Julian managed a laugh. âBelieve me, Georgia, I'd like nothing better than to be able to tell you of priceless relics handed down in secrecy to the Wayncroft heir. Perhaps you'd like me to produce a golden chalice with St Thomas's DNA on it? Alas, I fear not.'
âI was thinking of something just as valuable,'Georgia said.
A raised eyebrow. âAnd that would be . . .?'
âBecket's bones.'
That laugh again. âThe old chestnut. I told you my uncle believed the bones might be here, but he told me that with a pinch of salt.'
âYour half-brother seems more committed.'
A frown. âVal? What do you mean?'
Georgia decided to forget Jessica's request for silence. âI met him at the Becket ruins late on Sunday night.'
Julian looked astounded. âWhat the hell was he doing there? What were
you
doing there, come to that?'
âI saw a light flickering and went out to investigate.'
âAnd you assume he was looking for Becket's bones? Did he say so?' Julian asked sharply.
âNo, but it's possible. Finding them would be a linchpin for your publicity.'
Surprisingly, Julian did not shout her down. âI'll ask him about it. Anyway, they'd be impossible to authenticate.'
âLike the remains of the wooden St Thomas figure I believe you have,' Peter said.
Julian stiffened. âYou're well informed on our affairs. They, too, I agree, are impossible to authenticate, but the wood is thirteenth or fourteenth century.'
âHave you ever had them looked at by the Church or British Museum?'
âNo.' Julian was definitely holding back now, although he was not, Georgia thought, hostile.
âCould we see them?' Peter asked.
That produced a stronger reaction. âNo. They're with the heritage papers.'
A split second silence before Peter gently enquired, âAnd they are?'
âNot for outsiders,' Julian blustered.
âEven if they hold the clue to your father's death?'
âThey don't.'
âThey might.'
A hesitation now. âMy father died over forty years ago. Let it rest.'
âIt's rested long enough. And Anne Fanshawe died possibly as a result.'
âKeep her out of it.'
âThe police won't,' Peter countered. Will was pitted against will now, and Georgia would not intervene.
âAre you threatening me?' Julian asked, almost wearily.
âNo. Telling you that there really could be a link.'
âI will therefore tell
you
that I believe Clive Moon killed my father. I admit, however, that although personal motives were behind it, the Becket development might also have played a part. And for that I do have evidence.'
âThank you,' Peter said simply. âCan we see it?'
Julian wavered. âI can't bring it down here . . .' He looked at the wheelchair.
âThat's OK. I'm used to that. You go, Georgia,' Peter said. Thus boxed into a corner, Julian surrendered, and Georgia followed him upstairs to his living room. Peter was well used to such frustrations, but nevertheless Georgia felt for him as she saw his downcast face as they left.
Julian led her across the room to a small door at one end, so well disguised that she had not spotted it.
âIt once served as a small chapel and priest's hole combined when religious times were tough,' Julian explained stiltedly. She could see that he was an unwilling guide. âWe Wayncrofts are good at surviving. We got through the Reformation and the Civil War. We lost the baronetcy, but kept our heads. The last baronet was Sir Bevis, in the mid seventeenth century. He began to get cold feet about where the family might be heading, so he decided to record the traditions, just in case the eldest son ended up on the chopping block. It was just as well because he was murdered by his younger brother. My father and Robert got on rather better, thankfully.'
The room was about ten feet square, and Georgia looked around it in fascination. Chapel it might once have been, but now it was a glory-hole of books, papers, and more paintings â a Wayncroft treasure house. Julian marched over to a bookshelf on which stood a large wooden box, which he brought over to a small table. He opened it to reveal what looked little more than a collection of small branches and pieces of bark at first glance. Then she noticed the woodworm holes as she picked out a piece that could have been a thumb and part of a forefinger, then another that could be part of a long robe.
âDo you think these are genuine?' she asked.
Julian hesitated, but must have decided he had nothing to lose. âThe wood is. But they were Clive Moon's work. Evidence, Georgia, the evidence you wanted. When we begin our development it won't include these. Far too risky nowadays. My mother admitted they were fakes when I was grown up enough to hear the truth. Clive Moon was a brilliant carpenter, and he concocted these out of authentic wood, not hard to get in a village of this age. They were all part of the earlier development plans, but after my father's death and my uncle's stance on the ruins, they were locked away. Now can you believe how eager Clive was for personal revenge?'
âDid you ever talk to him in later years about these fakes?'
âI did. He told me with great pride that he'd used no tools that weren't authentic to the period. The only modern addition was pesticides for the wormholes. When I told my unscrupulous brother that these were fakes, however, he suggested we ask Matthew Moon to produce a declared modern replica of what the figure would have been like.'
âHold on. There was no such figure, was there?'
âNo. It would be a replica of a fake idea, and therefore I have vetoed the suggestion. The ruins have plenty to say of their own, without resorting to such means.'
âAnd the bones? He doesn't want to fake them too, does he?'
âNo. They will be declared as legend â unless, of course, they really do turn up,' Julian replied.
âI take it there's no mention of them in the Wayncroft papers?'
She had thought this would receive a prompt and dismissive reply, but to her surprise Julian beckoned her over to a modern desk in one corner. He pulled open a drawer and withdrew a box file, inside which was a small pile of paper sheets. âOne of my ancestors fortunately made transcripts of the papers, and the originals have now vanished. The transcripts themselves are locked away; these are photocopies taken ten years or so ago.'
âCould we take these down to show Peter?' she asked.
âNo. They stay in this room.'
Co-operation was only going so far then. Julian was adamant, and there would be no point arguing about it. There were about ten sheets covered in copperplate handwriting, and with Julian breathing down her neck all she could glean was that they seemed to go on
ad nauseam
about the duty to protect and preserve the saint's memory, relics and buildings. There was nothing, as Julian had said, about his bones, unless they were included under ârelics'. Again, she could not see that, even if the bones were unearthed, it could help Marsh & Daughter's work. The last page ended up with: âYour heritage is wisdom. Guard it and honour it until the true faith is restored and St Thomas returns to claim his own.'
A clarion call to the Wayncrofts, but she was no further forward.
âPray tell me everything, daughter mine,' Peter said as soon as they were back in the car. âSpare not a single word.'
âClive Moon faked the medieval St Thomas figure remains. He admitted it to Julian himself, and I can't see any reason that Julian would be lying about it.'
âWhich backs up Julian's theory about Moon killing Hugh Wayncroft, but doesn't prove it to the slightest extent.'
âIt does hang together as a story.'
âDoesn't it just. Almost too well. He was very anxious to dwell on Hugh's death, not Anne's, wasn't he?'
âWe let him,' she said in Julian's defence. âWe could have pressed him harder.'
âWe could, though we would have got precious little out of him in my view. Did you see those heritage papers?' he asked, turning left out of the drive. âLunch, I think. The Three Peacocks. You do have something more to tell me, I trust?'
âNot much.' As he pulled into the car park, she described as fully as she could what she had read.
âWisdom,' he said thoughtfully. âPresumably wisdom in dealing with the ruins and/or simmering threats to the Wayncrofts practising their faith. As regards the ruins, that wording might give them licence to restore and develop them of course, so why, I wonder, did Robert and Hugh so adamantly interpret it as leaving the ruins as they were?'
âBecause of the bones?' she asked hopefully.
âThat surely implies that the clue to where the bones are would be in the recorded traditions somewhere.'
âThere didn't seem to be.'
âLeaving it to the heir to interpret as he will. The primal curse.'
âWhat is?'
âIn this case, the curse of being the eldest son.'
âRelevance?'
âI don't know. There's always the primal curse of the murder of Abel by Cain in Genesis. Murder of the younger brother.'
âIf you're thinking Robert killed Hugh, no way,' she replied. âHe was abroad.'
âThere's our two half brothers, Val and Julian,' he ruminated. âNo love lost there.'
âJulian was in the dark over Val's excursion to the ruins on Sunday. He wasn't pleased.'
âAm I my brother's keeper?' Peter quoted with relish. âSibling rivalry breaks out no matter what Wisdom says.'
âIrrelevant, however, for Hugh Wayncroft's murder, and
that's
our focus.'
âAs Julian is all too eager to make clear.'
âCould I remind you that all the Wayncroft family have an alibi for Anne's murder? They're known to have been in the pub long enough for Anne to reach the farmhouse.'
âUnless, of course,' Peter said, âshe came back to the pub. Let's go in and eat.'
âBeen to Chillingham Place, I heard,' Lisa greeted them as she brought the menu over.
âNews travels fast.' Georgia laughed, hoping the news did not include the discussion of Clive Moon.
âVic's a speedy worker,' Lisa agreed. âWent to see Mrs Jessica and heard you were with Mr Julian. He remembers the upset in sixty-seven, especially where Mrs Wayncroft was concerned. She was beside herself, he said. Natural enough because of Hugh's death â and what it meant.' Lisa grinned. âThe estate going back to Mr Robert. Couldn't have expected that, could she, him being the younger brother? Now, what can I get you?'
She busied herself with writing down their order, but Georgia could see there was something else on her mind.