Authors: Minette Walters
The Tinder Box
Also by Minette Walters
THE ICE HOUSE
THE SCULPTRESS
THE SCOLD'S BRIDLE
THE DARK ROOM
THE ECHO
THE BREAKER
THE SHAPE OF SNAKES
ACID ROW
FOX EVIL
DISORDERED MINDS
First published in Dutch 1999 by dc Boekerij by, Amsterdam
First published in English 1999 in Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, New York
This edition published 2004
byBCA
by arrangement with Macmillan
an imprint of Pan Maemillan
CN 128552
Copyright © Minette Walters 1999
The right of Minette Walters to be identified as the
author of this work has been asserted by her in accordance
with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
All rights reserved. No part of this public.irion m.iy he
reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or
transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical,
photocopying, recording or otherwise) without the prior written
permission of the publisher. Any person who does any unauthorized
act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal
prosecution and civjj cJaims for damages.
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Printed and bound in Germany by
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For our goddaughters
Holly, Laura and Olivia,
Author's Note
In 1998 CPNB, the Organization for the Promotion
of Books in the Netherlands, invited me to write a
promotional suspense novella for the 1999 Book Week.
I called the story The Tinder Box and it first appeared in
Dutch translation under the title De Tondeldoos. I was
already working on ideas for my next novel, Acid Row, and I took the opportunity of the novella to explore
themes of prejudice, incitement and vigilantism that
would re-occur in the novel. The Tinder Box portrays
immigrant Irish tinkers as hate figures in a wealthy
Hampshire village, but a similar hatred is demonstrated
against a convicted paedophile in a sink estate in Acid
Row. Both stories depict the dangers of ignorance,
and how unrelated, misunderstood events combine to
trigger violent reactions. Re-reading The Tinder Box for
this publication, I was struck by how little human nature
changes. When I conceived the idea for the plot, the
Good Friday Peace Accord had just been signed, and
the people of these islands were optimistic that terrorism
was at an end. How quickly that optimism was dashed
when the twenty-first century exploded in flames across
our television screens.
Minette Walters
One
Daily Telegraph - Wednesday, 24 June 1998
Sowerbridge Man
Arrested
Patrick O'Riordan, 35, an unemployed Irish
labourer, was charged last night with the
double murder of his neighbours Lavinia Fan
shaw, 93, and her live-in nurse, Dorothy Jenkins,
67. The murders have angered the small
community of Sowerbridge, where O'Riordan
and his parents have lived for fifteen years.
The elderly victims were brutally battered to
death after Dorothy Jenkins interrupted a robbery
on Saturday night. 'Whoever killed them
is a monster,' said a neighbour. 'Lavinia was a
frail old lady with Alzheimer's who never hurt
a soul.' Police warned residents to remain calm
after a crowd gathered outside the O'Riordan
home when news of the arrest became public.
'Vigilante behaviour will not be tolerated,' said
a spokesman. O'Riordan denies the charges.
Monday, 8 March 1999, 11.30p.m.
Even at half past eleven at night, the lead news story
on local radio was still the opening day of Patrick
O'Riordan's trial. Siobhan Lavenham, exhausted after
a fourteen-hour stint at work, listened to it in the
darkness of her car while she negotiated the narrow
country lanes back to Sowerbridge village.
' O^Riordan smiled as the prosecution case unfolded...
harrowing details of how ninety-three-year-old Lavinia
Fanshaw and her live-in nurse were brutally bludgeoned
to death before Mrs Fanshaw's rings were ripped from
her fingers . . . scratch marks and bruises on the defendant's
face, probably caused by a fight with one of the
women . . . a crime of greed triggered by O'Riordan's
known resentment of Mrs Fanshaw's wealth . . . unable
to account for his whereabouts at the time of the murders
. . . items of jewellery recovered from the O'Riordan
family home which the thirty-five-year-old Irishman still
shares with his elderly parents . . .'
With a sinking heart, Siobhan punched the Off
button and concentrated on her driving. ''The Irishman . . .' Was that a deliberate attempt to inflame
racist division, she wondered, or just careless shorthand?
God, how she loathed journalists! Confident of
a guilty verdict, they had descended on Sowerbridge
like a plague of locusts the previous week in order to
prepare their background features in advance. They
had found dirt in abundance, of course. Sowerbridge
had fallen over itself to feed them with hate stories
against the whole O'Riordan family.
She thought back to the day of Patrick's arrest,
when Bridey, his mother, had begged her not to
abandon them. 'You're one of us, Siobhan. Irish
through and through, never mind you're married to
an Englishman. You know my Patrick. He wouldn't
hurt a fly. Is it likely he'd beat Mrs Fanshaw to death
when he's never raised a hand against his own father?
Liam was a devil when he still had the use of his arm.
Many's the time he thrashed Patrick with a stick when
the drunken rages were on him, but never once did
Patrick take the stick to him.'
It was a frightening thing to be reminded of the
bonds that tied people together, Siobhan had thought
as she looked out of Bridey's window towards the
silent, angry crowd that was gathering in the road.
Was being Irish enough of a reason to side with a man
suspected of slaughtering a frail bedridden old woman
and the woman who looked after her?
'Patrick admits he stole from Lavinia,' Siobhan had
pointed out.
Tears rolled down Bridey's furrowed cheeks. 'But
not her rings,' she said. 'Just cheap trinkets that he
was too ignorant to recognize as worthless paste.'
'It was still theft.'
'Mother of God, do you think I don't know that?'
She held out her hands beseechingly. 'A thief he may
be, Siobhan, but never a murderer.''
And Siobhan had believed her because she wanted
to. For all his sins, she had never thought of Patrick
as an aggressive or malicious man - too relaxed by
half, many would say - and he could always make her
and her children laugh with his stories about Ireland,
particularly ones involving leprechauns and pots of
gold hidden at the ends of rainbows. The thought
of him taking a hammer to anyone was anathema to
her.
And yet. . .?
In the darkness of the car she recalled the interview
she'd had the previous month with a detective
inspector at Hampshire Constabulary Headquarters,
who seemed perplexed that a well-to-do young
woman should have sought him out to complain
about police indifference to the plight of the
O'Riordans. She wondered now why she hadn't gone
to him sooner.
Had she really been so unwilling to learn the
truth . . .?
I
Wednesday, 10 February 1999
The detective shook his head. 'I don't understand
what you're talking about, Mrs Lavenham.'
Siobhan gave an angry sigh. 'Oh, for goodness
sake! The hate campaign that's being waged against
them. The graffiti on their walls, the constant telephone
calls threatening them with arson, the fact that
Bridey's too frightened to go out for fear of being
attacked. There's a war going on in Sowerbridge
which is getting worse the closer we come to Patrick's
trial, but as far as you're concerned it doesn't exist.
Why aren't you investigating it? Why don't you
respond to Bridey's telephone calls?'
He consulted a piece of paper on his desk. 'Mrs
O'Riordan's made fifty-three emergency calls in the eight months since Patrick was remanded for the murders,'
he said, 'only thirty of which were considered
serious enough to send a police car to investigate.
In every case, the attending officers filed reports
saying Bridey was wasting police time.' He gave an
apologetic shrug. The realize it's not what you want to
hear, but we'd be within our rights if we decided
to prosecute her. Wasting police time is a serious
offence.'
Siobhan thought of the tiny, wheelchair-bound
woman whose terror was so real she trembled constantly.
'They're after killing us, Siobhan,' she would
say over and over again. 'I hear them creeping about
the garden in the middle of the night and I think to
myself, there's nothing me or Liam can do if this is
the night they decide to break in. To be sure, it's only
God who's keeping us safe.'
'But who are they, Bridey?'
'It's the bully boys whipped up to hate us by Mrs
Haversley and Mr Jardine,' wept the woman. 'Who
else would it be?'
Siobhan brushed her long dark hair from her forehead
and frowned at the detective inspector. 'Bridey's
old, she's disabled, and she's completely terrified. The
phone never stops ringing. Mostly it's long silences,
other times it's voices threatening to kill her. Liam's
only answer to it all is to get paralytically drunk
every night so he doesn't have to face up to what's
going on.' She shook her head impatiently. 'Cynthia
Haversley and Jeremy Jardine, who seem to control
everything that happens in Sowerbridge, have effectively
given carte blanche to the local youths to make
life hell for them. Every sound, every shadow has
Bridey on the edge of her seat. She needs protection,
and I don't understand why you're not giving it to
her.'
'They were offered a safe house, Mrs Lavenham,
and they refused it.'
'Because Liam's afraid of what will happen to
Kilkenny Cottage if he leaves it empty,' she protested.
'The place will be trashed in half a minute flat... You
know that as well as I do.'
He gave another shrug, this time more indifferent
than apologetic. 'I'm sorry,' he said, 'but there's
nothing we can do. If any of these attacks actually
happened . . . well, we'd have something concrete
to investigate. They can't even name any of these
so-called vigilantes . . . just claim they're yobs from
neighbouring villages.'
'So what are you saying?' she asked bitterly. 'That
they have to be dead before you take the threats
against them seriously?'
'Of course not,' he said, 'but we do need to be
persuaded the threats are real. As things stand, they
seem to be all in her mind.'
'Are you accusing Bridey of lying?'
He smiled slightly. 'She's never been averse to
embroidering the truth when it suits her purpose, Mrs
Lavenham.'
Siobhan shook her head. 'How can you say that?
Have you ever spoken to her? Do you even know her? To you, she's just the mother of a thief and a
murderer.'
'That's neither fair nor true.' He looked infinitely
weary, like a defendant in a trial who has answered the
same accusation in the same way a hundred times
before. 'I've known Bridey for years. It's part and
parcel of being a policeman. When you question a
man as often as I've questioned Liam, you get to
know his wife pretty well by default.' He leaned