Death of a Perfect Wife (8 page)

BOOK: Death of a Perfect Wife
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The car in front was travelling very fast. It went around the roundabout and headed out on the A9 towards Perth. Hamish put on the siren but the car in front only seemed to go faster.

He caught up with it twenty miles out on the Perth road and signalled to the driver to halt. The driver, a small, ferrety, red-haired man rolled down the window and the reason why he had not heard the police siren became apparent as a blast of sound from his tape deck struck Hamish like a blow.

‘What is it?’ said the man crossly.

‘You were doing over the limit for a start,’ said Hamish. ‘Where did you get that chair?’

‘At the auction rooms in Inverness. I’m a dealer.’ He handed over a grimy business card.

‘Get out and let’s have a look at it and I’ll maybe forget about the speeding.’

‘I’ll just lift up a corner of the sheeting,’ said the dealer, whose name was Henderson. ‘Don’t want it to get wet.’

Hamish peered under the plastic. It was the Brodies’ chair that he had last seen when Trixie had been carrying it along the road.

‘How much did you pay for it?’ asked Hamish.

‘A hundred and fifty.’

Hamish whistled. ‘And where are you taking it?’

‘Down to London eventually. I’ve got several more auctions to go to. Get a better price for it there. It’s a Victorian nursing chair. Good condition. Look at the bead work.’

‘Do you know where it came from?’

‘Auctioneer said some knocker from the north brought it in.’

‘Knocker?’

‘One of those women that goes around houses spotting antiques where the owners don’t know the value. Usually offers them a fiver for something worth a few hundred.’

‘Or gets it for nothing,’ said Hamish, half to himself. Aloud he said, ‘I won’t be booking you this time, Mr Henderson, but go carefully. I might be getting in touch with you.’

‘It isn’t stolen, is it?’ asked the dealer anxiously.

‘No, but don’t sell it for another week. It may be connected with a murder.’

Hamish drove back. The rain was coming down heavier than ever. He remembered Priscilla and put his foot down on the accelerator.

She was not in the car park. He went into the station and looked around. No Priscilla. He looked at the indicator board and saw a train for the north was just leaving. He ran to the platform in time to see the back of it disappearing around the curve of the track.

So much for
Brief Encounter
, he thought miserably.

He drove to the auction rooms and found that Trixie had put the chair in for sale along with some other pieces of furniture and china ornaments.

‘We had an auction last evening,’ said the auctioneer. ‘I was about to send Mrs Thomas her cheque.’

‘How much?’

‘Nearly a thousand pounds. She could have got a lot more in London but I wasn’t about to tell her that.’

Hamish told him to hold the cheque until they found out if Trixie had left a will.

He drove through the slashing rain and winding roads until he reached the police station at Lochdubh.

He phoned Tommel Castle and asked for Priscilla without remembering to disguise his voice. ‘Miss Halburton-Smythe is not here,’ said Jenkins.

Hamish wondered whether she was still waiting in Inverness.

He phoned the castle again and, disguising his voice, stated he was John Burlington. This time Priscilla answered the phone.

‘Oh, it’s you, Hamish,’ she said in a flat voice.

‘I’m awfully sorry, Priscilla,’ said Hamish. He told her about the chair.

‘That’s all right,’ said Priscilla, although her voice sounded distant. ‘There’s a little bit of information that might interest you. Jessie, the maid, says she saw Trixie going over to the seer’s at Coyle. You could ask him what he told her.’

When Hamish put down the phone, he thought about going over to the seer’s that evening, but decided to leave it till the morning. Angus Macdonald, the seer, had built up a reputation for being able to predict the future. Hamish thought he was an old fraud, but the local people were proud of him and believed every word he said. On the other hand, it would be unlike Trixie to go alone. She probably had taken some of her acolytes with her. He asked Angela Brodie, Mrs Wellington, and several others but they knew nothing about it. He asked Mrs Kennedy and the boarder, John Carter, and then Paul, without success.

Then he remembered that Colonel Halburton-Smythe had said he was going to take Trixie over to Mrs Haggerty’s old cottage. He looked at his watch. They would be finishing dinner at the castle and so the colonel could not accuse him of scrounging and perhaps he could talk to Priscilla and apologize again for having left her in Inverness.

But the colonel was determined Hamish was not going to be allowed anywhere near his daughter.

He told Hamish curtly that Trixie had taken several bits and pieces of old furniture.

‘I’d better go and look at the place,’ said Hamish, ‘if that’s all right with you.’

‘I suppose I’d better let you have the key,’ said the colonel, ‘but I can’t see what it’s got to do with a murder investigation.’

‘I’ll look anyway,’ said Hamish. ‘She sold some of that furniture and a chair that Angela Brodie gave her for nearly a thousand pounds at the auction in Inverness.’

‘I find that hard to believe,’ blustered the colonel. ‘Fine woman, she was. Very womanly, if you know what I mean. That lout of a husband probably sold the stuff when he was down at the dentist’s. She would not have tricked me.’

‘Maybe. Let me have the key anyway. Did she say anything about going over to Angus Macdonald?’

‘Not that I remember. I hope that’s an end to your questions, Macbeth. If I thought for one moment you suspected me of this murder, I would report you to your superiors.’

Hamish sadly left the castle. Priscilla must know he had been visiting for the servants would have told her. But there was no sign of her. The castle door slammed behind him, a bleak finality in the sound. He was disgusted with himself. He thought of his fevered fantasies at the station, of the way that kiss had started him dreaming again, and put Priscilla Halburton-Smythe firmly from his mind.

But there seemed to be a great black emptiness there for she had occupied his thoughts for so long.

I know of no way of judging the future
but by the past.

– Patrick Henry

Hamish was just moving out of the police station in the Land Rover in the morning when Blair appeared, holding up a beefy hand.

‘I hear ye’re going to consult the oracle,’ he said with a grin.

‘Meaning what?’

‘It’s all over the village that Angus Macdonald is going tae solve the case by looking at his crystal balls.’

‘Want to go yourself?’ asked Hamish.

‘I’ve got mair to dae with ma time. Typed out your report frae the dentist?’

‘Why bother?’ said Hamish laconically. ‘It’s the same stuff you got from the police in Inverness. But there’s something you should know.’ He told Blair about the dealer.

‘Bugger it,’ said Blair. ‘That complicates things. She’d probably made off with some-one’s family heirloom.’

‘You should ask Halburton-Smythe,’ said Hamish maliciously. ‘He was driving her around while she looked for antiques.’

Blair’s face darkened. The Daviots had been bragging about their dinner at the castle and he had no desire to run foul of the new super by putting the colonel’s back up. ‘Aye, well, I might send Anderson up. This is the devil of a case. There was nae arsenic in that curry. Must hae been in something else.’

Towser, who was sitting beside Hamish, growled softly.

‘You look right daft with that mongrel beside you,’ sneered Blair.

‘This is a highly trained police dog,’ said Hamish, ‘and I’ve already been offered five hundred pounds for him.’

Blair’s mouth dropped in surprise as Hamish drove off.

‘It wasn’t really a lie,’ Hamish told Towser. ‘If they had any sense in this place, I’m sure they would have given me an offer for you.’ Towser lolled his tongue and put a large affectionate paw on Hamish’s knee.

‘Should be a woman’s hand on my knee,’ said Hamish, ‘and not a mangy dog like yourself.’

The seer lived in a small white-washed cottage on the top of a round green hill with a winding path leading up to it. It looked like a child’s drawing. Hamish parked his vehicle at the foot of the path and began to walk up. Black storm clouds rolled across the heavens and the wind roared through a pylon overhead with a dismal shriek. At least the wind is keeping away the flies and midges, thought Hamish, leaning against its force as he walked towards the cottage. A thin column of grey smoke from one of the cottage’s chimneys was being whipped and shredded by the wind.

Angus Macdonald was a tall, thin man in his sixties. He had a thick head of white hair and a craggy face with an enormous beak of a nose. His eyes were very pale grey.

He opened the door as Hamish reached it. ‘So ye’ve come at last,’ he said. ‘I knew you’d be by. Cannae solve the case?’

‘And I suppose you can,’ said Hamish, following the seer into his small kitchen-cum-living room.

‘Aye, maybe, maybe,’ said Angus. ‘Whit have ye brought me?’

‘Nothing. What did you want? Your palm crossed with silver?’

‘Folks aye bring me something. A bit o’ salmon, or a piece of venison or a homemade cake.’

‘I am here to ask you to tell me as an officer of the law what you know about Trixie Thomas.’

‘She’s dead,’ said the seer and cackled with laughter.

‘When she came to see you, what did you tell her?’

Angus lifted a black kettle from its chain over the open fire and took it over to the sink and filled it with water and then hung it back on the hook. ‘I’ve a bad memory these days,’ he said. ‘Seems tae me that there’s nothing like a wee dram for bringing it to life.’

‘I haven’t brought any whisky with me,’ said Hamish crossly.

The seer turned from the fire and bent a penetrating gaze on Hamish. ‘She’ll never marry you,’ he said.

The Highland part of Hamish repressed a superstitious shudder. The policeman part decided to be diplomatic.

‘Look, you auld scunner,’ he said, ‘I’ll be back in a bit with a dram. You’d better get your brains working by then.’

Angus smiled when Hamish had left and then set about making a pot of tea. The wind howled and screeched about his cottage like a banshee. He could hear nothing but the fury of the wind. He hoped Hamish would be back soon with that whisky. The wind depressed him. It seemed like a live thing, some monster howling about his cottage, seeking a way in.

It was probably playing havoc with his garden at the back. He put the teapot on the hearth beside the fire and then opened the back door. His raspberry canes were flattened and the door of his garden shed was swinging wildly on its hinges. He went out into the small garden and shut the shed door and wedged a brick against it.

A fitful gleam of watery sunlight struck through the clouds as he turned around and shone on something lying beside his back door. He went and looked down. A full bottle of whisky.

He grinned. Just like devious Hamish Macbeth. Leaving the whisky and hoping he’d get well oiled before the constable came back to ask his questions.

He carried the bottle inside. Time to switch on the television and watch the long-range forecast. People were always amazed at his ability to predict the weather so accurately although they watched the same programme themselves. He settled down in his battered armchair by the fire and poured himself a glass of whisky, noticing that the top had already been opened. ‘Decided to have a dram himself and thought the better of it,’ reflected Angus with amusement.

The wind increased in force and shrieked and battered at his cottage like a maniac. As he raised his glass to his lips, the room whirled away and he suddenly saw his long dead mother. She was looking surprised and delighted, the way she had looked when he had unexpectedly come home on leave during the war. And then the vision faded. He sat very still and then put the glass down on the floor beside him with a shaking hand.

As a youth, he had been sure he had been gifted with the second sight, as that ability to see into the future is called in the Highlands. He had had it during the war. He had seen in his mind’s eye his friend getting shot by the Germans and sure enough that’s exactly what had happened. He had gradually built up the reputation of a seer. The gift had never come back, but he had found it easy to impress the locals as he knew all about them anyway and listened to every bit of gossip.

He was sitting, staring into space, when Hamish came back.

‘Here’s your whisky,’ said Hamish, holding up a half bottle. ‘Why, you greedy auld pig, you’ve got a whole bottle there.’

‘It’s death,’ said the seer in a thin voice. ‘Oh, tak’ it away, Hamish. I saw death in it.’

He was white and trembling.

‘Where did you get it from?’ asked Hamish sharply.

‘It was outside the kitchen door – at the back. People aye leave me things, you know that, Hamish. I didnae hear anyone because o’ that damn wind.’

‘And what stopped ye?’ asked Hamish, looking at him intently.

Angus shook his head as if to clear it. ‘I saw my mither,’ he said. ‘She was standing by the door and she looked surprised tae see me as if I’d jist crossed over tae the other side.’

‘And ye hadn’t been drinking anything before that?’ asked Hamish cynically.

‘No, man, no. I swear it.’

Hamish took out a clean handkerchief and lifted the bottle of whisky. ‘Have you a bit o’ kitchen paper or something so I can take the glass as well?’ he asked.

Angus nodded in the direction of the sink where there was a roll of kitchen paper standing on the draining board.

‘I’ll just be off,’ said Hamish, tenderly carrying both glass and bottle.

‘Dinnae leave me,’ wailed Angus, getting to his feet.

‘Aye, I suppose ye’d better come with me to Blair, although what he’s going to make of this, I shudder to think.’

Blair was in the police station office when Hamish returned with the seer. The police station, like most of the houses in Lochdubh, was hardly ever locked.

‘I know you’re not staying at the hotel,’ said Hamish crossly, ‘but I thought Johnson had given you the free use of a room.’

‘Aye, well I jist happened to be passing and needed tae use the phone. Who’s he? And whit are ye daein’ stinking o’ whisky?’ Hamish was carefully carrying a glass of whisky and the bottle he had taken from Angus.

Hamish and the seer sat down and Hamish in a colourless voice recounted Angus’s vision.

Blair laughed and laughed, slapping his knees in delight. ‘Daviot’s arrived from Strathbane. He’s along at the hotel now tae see how the investigation’s going on. Wait till he hears aboot this?’

Blair gleefully picked up the phone and started to dial. If ever the superintendent needed extra proof that Hamish Macbeth was a simpleton, this was it.

‘You’ll never guess what I have tae tell you, sir,’ said Blair. ‘Macbeth has brought the local seer, Angus Macdonald in. Someone left this local weirdo a bottle o’ whisky on his doorstep and he’s about to drink some of it when he sees his dead mither calling to him from the other side and decides it’s poisoned.’ Blair laughed and laughed. The voice on the other end of the phone squawked and the laughter died on Blair’s lips. Mr Daviot was a Lowland Scot in love with the Highlands and everything Highland. Seers were Highland and therefore to be treated with respect. ‘Well, if you say so, sir,’ mumbled Blair and put the phone down.

‘I’ve to take this whisky tae Strathbane fur analysis,’ he growled, ‘and you and Macdonald here are tae go along to the hotel and see the super. They’ll be naethin’ in that bottle but straight Scotch, and then you’ll look like the fools you are.’

Mr Daviot treated Angus with great courtesy, ushering him tenderly to an armchair and handing him a cup of coffee.

Angus told his story to an appreciative audience this time. ‘And I gather that Macbeth here went to see you to ask what Mrs Thomas had wanted to know,’ said Mr Daviot. ‘Did you tell him?’

‘I was about to,’ said Angus, ‘when I got that fright. Och, she didn’t want to know anything. She offered me a fiver for thae wally dugs on my mantel, but I ken they’re worth a bit these days. I told her greed would be the end of her.’

‘And why did you say that?’ asked Mr Daviot sharply.

‘I hae the second sight,’ said the seer.

‘You may just have had it today,’ said Hamish. ‘But it’s my guess you’d heard about Trixie already and you were cross because she was trying to cheat you out of your china dogs. I’d better take you back, and look about and we’d better get forensic up to your cottage.’

‘You gang along yourself,’ whined the seer. ‘I’ve a mind tae stay here wi’ Mr Daviot. He has the sign of greatness in his face.’

That was enough for Mr Daviot so Hamish left with only Towser for company.

The wind had dried the ground and he was doubtful whether the forensic team would be able to find a footprint. The path to the back door was formed of paving stones and outside the back gate was springy heather moorland.

If someone had tried to poison Angus then that someone must have known Hamish was going to call on him. But according to Blair, the whole village knew of Hamish’s proposed visit. He strolled over the moorland at the back of the cottage and found himself looking down on Iain Gunn’s farm. He wondered whether either Blair or his detectives had interviewed Gunn. He had not told Blair about the bats, having felt it to be of not much importance. Now with the cloud shadows chasing each other across the moorland and with the soughing of the wind, Iain Gunn seemed like someone who ought to be taken seriously. All he would have had to do was to run up the hill to the back of the seer’s cottage and leave that whisky. Hamish suddenly remembered the look of hate on Iain’s face as he watched Trixie leaving. He would need to tell Blair and Blair would rightly point out that he had been withholding valuable information.

Iain Gunn was in his farmhouse kitchen, just removing his Wellington boots, when Hamish arrived. His son, a tall, gangling youth, was sitting at the kitchen table and Mrs Gunn was stirring something in a pot on the stove.

‘It’s yourself, Hamish,’ said Iain cheerfully. ‘Sit down.’

‘I would like a wee word with you in private,’ said Hamish.

Iain and his wife exchanged an odd look and then he said slowly. ‘Come ben.’

Hamish followed him through to the living room. It was bleak and cold and had a little-used look despite the new, fitted carpet on the floor, the plastic flowers in vases, the noisily patterned nylon curtains at the window, and the three-piece suite of acid green uncut moquette.

There was a large television set in one corner but Hamish was sure the Gunn family hardly ever had time to look at it. They all worked hard.

‘What’s the trouble?’ asked Iain.

‘Trixie Thomas’s death’s the trouble. I have to interview everyone who might have had a grudge against her. Now Angus Macdonald is swearing blind someone left a poisoned bottle of whisky outside his back door today.’

‘Angus drinks so much it’s no wonder that whisky tastes like poison to him now,’ said Iain. ‘And what could I have had to do with that silly bitch’s death?’

‘With her out of the way, you could go ahead and bulldoze that ruin,’ pointed out Hamish.

Iain gave a derisive laugh. ‘That damn fool bird society she started has no doubt written letters to every other bird society, telling them about the bats. I’ll have bird watchers trekking over my land and making a pest of themselves. Do you mind the days, Hamish, when bird watchers were nice kindly people you were glad to see? Oh, a lot of them are still fine, but there’s a new breed o’militants. The men have got beards and wear camouflage jackets and those wee half-moon glasses and they’ve got bad teeth and the women have got their fat bums stuffed into jeans and wear anoraks covered with badges. I’d shoot the lot of them if I thought I could get away with it. No, I didn’t poison Mrs Thomas, Hamish.’ He leaned forward. ‘Look, just think of all the hassle a man has to put up with from the government these days. Look how Scotland has changed with value added tax hit squads and petty little bureaucrats enjoying throwing their muscle around. There’s a lot more folk I had better reason to kill than Trixie Thomas. You’ll probably find her man bumped her off. It’s aye the husband.’

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