Authors: Catherine Aird
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Injury Time
Collected Mysteries
Catherine Aird
For Brian
in appreciation
CONTENTS
The Man Who Rowed for the Shore
STEADY AS SHE GOES
âThe facts of the matter,' declared Superintendent Leeyes, âare quite simple.'
Detective Inspector Sloan waited without saying anything. In fact, had there happened to have been a salt-cellar handy in the Superintendent's office in Berebury Police Station he might very well have taken a pinch from it. In his experience, open-and-shut cases seldom came his way anyway and never if the Superintendent had had a hand in matters to date.
âThe deceased,' said Leeyes, âdied from poisoning by antimony.' He grunted and added, âAccording to Dr Dabbe, that is.'
Sloan made a note. In his book, if not in the Superintendent's, that constituted a solid fact. Dr Dabbe was the Consultant Pathologist for their half of the County of Calleshire and not a man to say antimony when he meant arsenic.
âThe doctor,' swept on Leeyes, who was inclined to treat medical pronouncements as the starting point for discussion rather than the end of it, âsays in his report that the Reinsch test was positive for antimony.'
Detective Inspector Sloan made another note. By rights it was Detective Constable Crosby sitting by his side who should have been taking the notes but unfortunately as it happened the detective constable actually was a man to write alimony when he meant antimony and Sloan thought in a case of poisoning it was better to be on the safe side and do it himself.
âThe deceased's sister,' growled the Superintendent, âalleges that the poison was administered by the husband â¦'
âMost murderers are widowers,' remarked Detective Inspector Sloan, that most happily married of men. âAnd certainly almost all male murderers are.'
The Superintendent rose effortlessly above the Home Office's statistics. âAnd,' he continued with heavy irony, âthe husband is insisting that the sister did it.'
âHasn't that got a funny name, sir?' Detective Constable Crosby's wayward attention seemed to have been engaged at last.
âFunny!' barked the Superintendent. âSince when, may I ask, has there been anything funny about murder?'
âNot murder itself, sir,' responded Crosby earnestly. âI meant that I thought that the word for that sort of murder was a funny one.'
âMurder is always murder,' Leeyes was at his most majestic, âwhatever Defence Counsel chooses to call it at the trial.'
Detective Inspector Sloan's hobby was growing roses and he was just thinking about the parallel where they smelt as sweet by any other name when Crosby put his oar in again.
âThey said so, sir,' persisted the Detective Constable with all the innocence of youth, âat the Training College.'
âFratricide,' managed Leeyes between clenched teeth. Older and wiser men than Crosby knew better than to mention Police Training College to the Superintendent. Not only was the very concept an anathema to him but there was nothing in his view better than the time-honoured walking the beat with a sergeant or âsitting next to Nellie' way of learning.
âBut that's when you kill your brother, isn't it, sir?' persisted Crosby. âShouldn't it be “sorocide” if it's your sister? Or is that satricide?'
âThe word “homicide” will do, Crosby,' interposed Detective Inspector Sloan swiftly before either of the other two thought about the killing of satyrsâor kings, come to that. He enquired if such a thing as a motive for the poisoning existed.
âAccording to the sister, yes. According to the husband, no.'
âGain?' suggested Sloan, veteran of many a domestic murder. So far the case hadn't struck him as âopen-and-shut' in any way at all.
âThe love of money is the root of all evil,' quoted the Superintendent sententiously.
This seemed to be the view, too, of Miss Kirsty McCormack, sister of the late Mrs Anna Macmillan.
She was a thin, rather dowdy woman, with thick glasses, living in a modest bungalow set in a very large garden on the outskirts of Berebury. Miss McCormack seemed only too anxious to talk to the two policemen.
âWe came here about twelve years ago, Inspector, Mother and I,' she said, ushering them into a preternaturally neat and tidy sitting-room. âWon't you sit over there, Constable? On the settee. Inspector, I think you'd be more comfortable in Mother's old chair by the fire.'
âThank you, miss.' Sloan could not think at first what it was that was so odd about the room and then it came to him. All the walls were bare. There was a not a picture or a photograph to be seen.
âIt was after her first heart attack that we moved. We thought she would be better not having to climb the stairs.'
âYou've got rather a lot of land, though,' observed Sloan, no mean gardener.
âIndeed, yes, although as you can see I had to let it go.' She sighed. âThe garden is part of the trouble.'
âUpkeep?' suggested Sloan, not unsympathetically. âIt would be considerable.'
âOh, no, Inspector. It's much too big even to try to keep it up without help. Besides, I was too busy looking after Mother, especially towards the end.'
âQuite so, miss.' He waited. âAnd â¦'
âAnd then Mother died,' she said flatly.
Sloan coughed. âShe can't have been young.'
âShe wasn't. I decided to moveâthere was a dear little flat on the market in Calleford and I'd always wanted to live over there.'
âA very pretty city,' said Sloan, who would have found it stifling himself.
âThat's when the trouble started.'
âTrouble?' Sloan's head came up like that of an old war-horse and even Crosby looked faintly interested.
âWe found that this dreadful old garden was just what the developers had been looking for.'
âI see, miss.' Detective Inspector Sloan, husband and father, who had to think carefully each autumn how many new roses he could afford to add to his collection, wasn't sure that he did.
âAnna and I suddenly became rather well off,' she said.
This time Sloan thought he was beginning to understand. âYou and your sister were coheirs, I take it?'
âThat's right, Inspector.' She looked him squarely in the eye. âSo Paul had quite a lot to gain from killing Anna.'
âHer share of your mother's estate,' hazarded Sloan, âwould come to him in the ordinary way should his wife die?'
âExactly,' said Miss McCormack. A glint of amusement crossed her flinty features.
âUnless she had willed it to you,' pointed out Sloan.
âShe hadn't,' said Miss McCormack. âIf Paul outlived her it was to go to him.'
There was a small movement from the direction of the settee. âAnd if he didn't?' asked Detective Constable Crosby.
âIt came to me.' There was no mistaking the sardonic amusement in Miss McCormack's expression now. âThere are no children, you see.' She gave a wintry smile and said, âPaul, of course, insists that the same argument about gain applies to me.'
âAnd does it?' enquired Sloan.
âEither Paul would have to be found guilty of Anna's murder or I would have had to kill them both to inherit.'
On the settee Detective Constable Crosby stirred. âAnd did you try?'
All trace of amusement vanished from Miss McCormack's face and she looked merely sad and weary. âNo, Constable, I didn't. And I don't know either how Paul killed Anna but I can tell you one thing. He did it before my very eyes and I can't for the life of me think how.'
âPerhaps,' said Detective Inspector Sloan, falling back on formality, âyou would tell us about the day in question â¦?'
âI'd gone over to their house after teaânot that they were tea drinkersâat about a quarter past five. Paul was there but Anna hadn't come home from the hairdressers'âshe was a bit later back than she expected. The traffic's always pretty bad then, you know.'
âWe know,' said Sloan moderately.
âPaul said he'd only just got back from the office and he hadn't been home in the middle of the day because he'd had a business luncheon.'
âSo there was no way that he could have given his wife any poison before you came?' said Crosby. âIs that what you mean?'
They hadn't, apparently, taught the Detective Constable at the Police Training College anything about not accepting statements by interested parties at face value but Sloan let that pass for the time being.
âExactly,' said Miss McCormack as if to a promising pupil. âAnyway, Anna came in just then, very smart from the hairdressers' and with loads of shopping, and said she was dying for a drink.'
âAnd die she did,' said Crosby incorrigibly.
Sloan decided that there was perhaps something to be said for the âsitting next to Nellie' school of learning after all. No self-respecting mentor would have let him get away with that.