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Authors: Ann Granger

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BOOK: Rattling the Bones
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I recalled Ganesh scoffing at my theory that all this business might be about a will. But perhaps I’d been on the right lines. Where there’s money there’s motive for murder.

 

The front door was opened as we got out of the car. A briskly efficient woman appeared, looking as though she might be part housekeeper and part nurse.

 

‘He’s feeling quite bright today,’ she said to Adam and extended her smile to me, something I appreciated after Adam’s attitude towards me. No one likes being treated like something the cat dragged in. ‘Just go on up.’

 

So far, thank goodness, there had been no sign of Becky.

 

I followed Adam up the staircase and he led me down a corridor to a bedroom door. He tapped, opened it and put his head through the gap.

 

‘OK, Gramps? I’ve got the woman private detective here, the one I told you about.’

 

An elderly voice murmured a reply.

 

The door was pushed wide open by Adam who gestured to me to enter. I walked past him and into a large, light room which had been converted from bedroom into a first-floor sitting room. There was not a great deal of furniture, just a couple of chairs, a television console and a bookcase. Nor was there any carpet. The floorboards had been sanded and stained. By the far window, looking out, sat a man who made no effort to get up and turn to see the new arrival. I could only see the back of his head. The rest of him was hidden by the invalid chair he occupied. That explained why he hadn’t got up and also why the room was half empty and there were no rugs to impede the chair’s progress. Mr Culpeper needed space to manoeuvre.

 

In a sudden movement the chair spun round with a soft electric purr. He was facing me and I saw the nature of the surgery that had left him disabled. Both lower legs had been amputated and a blanket lay across the remaining stumps. Whether all of this drastic surgery had been carried out recently or over a period of time, or what had necessitated it, I had no idea. But I could well understand why Culpeper had days when he’d no wish to be badgered by people he didn’t know and why he chose his grandson as his messenger.

 

He had not spoken but sat watching me thoughtfully; perhaps wishing to see in my face how the sight of his mutilation affected me. I realised I was expected to make the first move and that a great deal depended on it. I had to get it right. I decided on the more formal and old-fashioned approach.

 

I walked across and held out my hand. ‘Good afternoon, Mr Culpeper. Thank you for agreeing to see me.’

 

His reply was a question. ‘Do you like my view?’

 

I was a little startled and turned my gaze to the window. It was easy to understand why he sat here. From this vantage point he looked over the long, well-established garden to the canalside mooring. There were trees and shrubs and lawns and a little gazebo. It was beautiful, peaceful and timeless. I did wonder what kind of security was down there to prevent intruders entering the property from the rear. Having seen the security gate out front, I was sure something lay hidden among the bushes: photo-sensitive scanners of some kind, floodlights, automatic alarms? There was probably a direct link to the local cop shop and the moment whistles started blowing, bells ringing, lights flashing or whatever would happen if an unauthorised foot was set on the turf, half the local force would be crawling over the place.

 

I wrenched my gaze away and turned it to my host. He was watching me now with a touch of amusement and also with pleasure. He knew the effect his view had on visitors and liked it. He presented quite an interesting sight himself. He must once have been an imposing figure of a man. Even in the chair he dominated the room. He’d been handsome, too, and still had a fine head of silvering hair and keen eyes pouched in wrinkled skin. Oddly, there was something familiar about him although I couldn’t ever have seen him before. It must be a shared likeness with Adam or Becky, I thought.

 

‘It’s beautiful,’ I said sincerely.

 

I realised with another start that I still held out my hand. Before I could withdraw it, he took it in a firm grip and held it while he subjected me to a further assessment. Eventually he released it.

 

‘Adam,’ he said, ‘perhaps you’d tell Alice we’d like a cup of tea?’

 

I had passed whatever test had been set me. I felt a spurt of relief. But I knew the last thing Adam wanted was to leave me alone with his grandfather. I took great pleasure in seeing him sidle out with a glare at me.

 

‘Pull up a chair,’ invited Culpeper. ‘I’m sorry to be a poor host.’

 

‘Look,’ I said, after I moved over a chair to join him, ‘I really am sorry to be a nuisance—’

 

He waved a hand to interrupt me. ‘If you were a nuisance, I wouldn’t have agreed to meet you. I’m glad you’ve come. I am not able to go out so I depend on people coming to see me.’

 

I decided to get in as much as I could before Adam came back.

 

‘Mr Culpeper, can we get down to business? I understand you engaged the detective agency run by Lottie Forester and her late boyfriend Duane Gardner to find Edna Walters.’

 

He nodded but said nothing.

 

I pressed on. ‘I’ve known Edna, on and off, for quite a while.’ I explained about the squat and Edna living in the churchyard.

 

Culpeper began to look distressed and I was alarmed. I didn’t want to be responsible for causing him to have some sort of funny turn. He turned his gaze away from me to the window. ‘I’m sorry to hear that,’ he said quietly. ‘No one should be living like that and certainly not Edna.’

 

A prickle of tension ran down my spine. There was a note in his voice when he spoke Edna’s name which indicated some deep emotion. At least his words indicated some far-off old acquaintance with her.

 

‘She’s much better off now living in a hostel, as you probably know,’ I said. ‘The people who run it are quite young and very conscientious. They’re nice.’

 

He moved his thin hands on which the distended veins formed a network of blue-tinged cords beneath the skin. ‘So I’ve learned.’

 

‘Did Duane tell you?’ I asked, ‘or was it Jessica Davis?’

 

‘Ah, Jessica,’ he said. He turned his gaze, sharp again, back to me. ‘Have you mentioned Jessica’s activities to Adam or to that girl, Lottie Forester?’

 

‘Not to Adam,’ I said, ‘I didn’t think it necessary.’

 

He smiled, and it was a really charming smile. ‘Quite right,’ he said. ‘It’s not necessary. I’d be grateful if you don’t mention it to him, or to little Becky.’

 

I wouldn’t but Lottie might.

 

‘But Jessica is, um, enquiring on your behalf?’ I persisted gently, just to get the matter absolutely clear.

 

‘In a manner of speaking. Her - enquiries are not quite the same as those I asked Adam to set in train via the agency run by young Lottie. I was far from sure I should employ a private detective. Forgive me, but I’ve always thought of it as rather a seedy occupation. I’ve read too many Raymond Chandler books, perhaps!’

 

‘It is a seedy occupation,’ I told him. ‘But life is pretty seedy sometimes and someone has to get out there and deal with it.’

 

He nodded. ‘Down those mean streets . . .’ he quoted. He became brisker. ‘At any rate, when Adam told me about Lottie’s agency I was happy for him to hire it for me. I’ve known that girl since she was a baby.’ He chuckled suddenly. ‘To think of her being a detective! I did fancy she might be my granddaughter-in-law at one point, some years ago. But she and Adam didn’t make a go of it and later on she took up with that very strange young fellow, Duane Gardner.’

 

Henry sat here, a virtual prisoner in this lovely house, but he knew what was going on and who was out there. Who kept him in touch? Adam and Becky? Jessica Davis? A whole network of spies? For a moment I had an uneasy feeling that he was like an elderly spider sitting in the middle of his silken web and waiting.

 

‘Duane was a good detective,’ I said. ‘He found Edna for you.’

 

‘Yes, and then, as I understand it, you found
him
!’ The keen old eyes rested on my face.

 

Before I had a chance to reply, there was a tap at the door which opened before Culpeper could call out, and Adam entered carrying a small table. Behind him came Alice bearing the tea tray.

 

‘Here we are,’ said Adam rather too heartily, positioning the table by his grandfather and me. He took the tray from Alice and set it down. ‘Do you want me to stay, Gramps?’

 

His grandfather ignored the hopeful plea. ‘That will be all right, Adam. Fran and I will just chat for a few more minutes. Thank you for the tea, Alice.’

 

Adam stalked out.

 

‘Heh!’ I wanted to shout after him. ‘That’s what it’s like being dismissed! How do you like it?’ I had to content myself with smiling sweetly at Adam as he turned in the doorway to give me a last minatory look. The smile turned the expression on his face to something indicating imminent meltdown.

 

When we were alone again, Culpeper indicated the tea tray and said, ‘Perhaps you’d do the honours, Fran?’

 

I obeyed. ‘Mr Culpeper,’ I began again when we had a cup of tea apiece. ‘I don’t have the right and I don’t
want
to enquire into any private matter of yours. But I am concerned for Edna’s welfare.’

 

‘That’s good of you, my dear. But you need have no fears. I will see that something is done for Edna.’

 

He wasn’t going to volunteer his reasons for his interest in Edna but I couldn’t leave it at that.

 

‘Mr Culpeper, it isn’t going to be that easy. I realise that you’re pretty well informed in general terms. But, forgive me, sitting here and hearing about it isn’t the same as being out there . . .’ I waved at the window. ‘I don’t mean to be tactless but I really don’t think you’d be so calm about it all if you were able to get a feel of things from being amongst people.’

 

I feared he might take what I had said as ill-mannered but he didn’t turn a hair.

 

‘That’s what Jessica is supposed to be doing for me,’ he said with a touch of humour.

 

‘Yes, well, maybe she is and maybe not. Has she told you that Edna is currently in hospital?’

 

The teacup rattled in Culpeper’s hand and I hastened to rescue it.

 

‘I’m sorry,’ I apologised as I mopped up the tea that had spilled on his jacket. ‘That was pretty ham-fisted of me. She’s all right. She - she had a fall in the street.’

 

I thought telling him about the motorcyclist might not be a good idea. Anyway, if he contacted the police or hospital about it, that’s what they’d tell him: an old lady had tripped over her own feet. I was the only one who thought someone had tried deliberately to run Edna down.

 

But I had successfully destroyed the cosy atmosphere.

 

‘I must get in touch with Jessica,’ he muttered. He was beginning to sound agitated and fretful, his air of control over the situation evaporating.

 

It was time I left. I stood up, then leaned over and took his hands in mine. ‘Mr Culpeper, don’t worry. I’m keeping a close eye on Edna.’

 

‘Thank you,’ he murmured, still distracted. ‘Thank you very much.’

 

Adam must have been lurking in the corridor. As soon as my hand touched the door handle it was seized on the other side and the door was pushed open with such force I was propelled back into the room.

 

He marched past me across to the window. ‘Do you need anything, Gramps?’

 

I could no longer see Culpeper, only the back of his chair again, but his hand appeared to one side, waving a negative. ‘No, no, just tell Alice she can come and fetch the tray.’ The elderly voice sounded tired.

 

Adam marched back to me and pushed me ahead of him down the corridor to the stairs. For two pins I think he would have pushed me straight down those as well.

 

‘You’ve upset him!’ he snarled. ‘I knew you would.’

 

‘No, I haven’t!’ I denied, although it wasn’t altogether true. ‘We got on fine.’

 

Or we did until I told Culpeper about Edna being in the hospital.

 

Alice had appeared and Adam relayed the message about the tray. She set off upstairs.

 

‘Well?’ demanded Adam as we left the house and Alice couldn’t overhear us. ‘What did you say to him? What did
he
say?’

 

But I’d learned a thing from Lottie and Duane. ‘Confidential,’ I said.

 

‘Bloody hell!’ he exploded. ‘It’s not confidential from
me
! You’re working with Lottie and I hired the blasted agency!’

 

‘No,’ I told him, ‘your grandfather hired it.You were just his mouthpiece. I’ve made my report to Mr Culpeper and that should fulfil any contractual obligation you have with Lottie’s agency.’

BOOK: Rattling the Bones
11.93Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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