Death Line (19 page)

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Authors: Geraldine Evans,Kimberly Hitchens,Rickhardt Capidamonte

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #British Detectives, #Cozy, #Police Procedurals, #British mystery writer, #Geraldine Evans, #Death Line, #humorous mysteries, #crime author, #Rafferty and Llewellyn, #Essex fiction, #palmists and astrologers, #murder, #police procedural, #crime queens, #large number in mystery series, #English mystery writer

BOOK: Death Line
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“Sure and you could do a lot worse yourself than let me find a nice little girlfriend for you,” she told him tartly. “But no, not you-”

They'd had this conversation too many times for Rafferty to want to hear it again. “Anyway,” he told her firmly, “Dafyd's not in charge. The case is my responsibility and it has to take priority over anything else.” Even your quest for grandchildren from your eldest son, Rafferty silently added.

Bested for now, his ma made a moue of annoyance. But it didn't stop her scrutinising the letters that Rafferty had stuck behind the clock. Obviously, his being there was cramping her style, for she suggested he get some clothes on.

Rafferty left her to continue her snooping. When he returned, the tea was poured and she had collected his scattered doodles from the carpet. He stood in the doorway watching her as she quickly perused them. “Hoping for love letters, Ma?”

“Do you have to come creeping up on a body?” she demanded. “And it's only tidying up, I am. What was all this rubbish doing round the floor, anyway?” she asked as she glanced down at the sheets. “Doodling, is it?” Her eyes twinkled wickedly. “Did you know a man reveals a lot in his doodles. Take yours for instance-”

Rafferty plucked the sheets out of her hands. “They're not doodles,” he told her firmly. “If you must know, that's what Jasper Moon scrawled on his office wall just before he died. I copied it last week at the scene of his murder and have been trying to see what else I can make out of it ever since. Dafyd thinks it's a toss-up between an 'I” and a “T'. Someone's initial, you see. I reckon he's right.”

“God bless us and save us,” she muttered. “Sure and anyone with a brain in his head could see it's nothing of the kind,” she told him. “I'd have thought Dafyd, at least would-”

“All right, Miss Marple,” he broke in irritably. “Tell the thick detective what you reckon it is.”

“If you'll give me a minute, I'll not only tell you, I'll show you.” She began to hunt through her capacious handbag. “I know what you think of my little hobby, so I don't suppose you'll believe me till you've seen the evidence with your own eyes. Wait now till I find it.”

Rafferty folded his arms as pale blue knitting wool for the latest grandchild, her worn tobacco pouch, several spectacle cases and packets of extra-strong mints were all emptied onto the carpet before she found what she was looking for. “There, Mr Detective.” She opened a magazine and triumphantly thrust it at him. “Take a look at that.”

Rafferty took the magazine. He looked. He blushed.

“Well might you blush. Now will you be telling me I don't know what I'm talking about?”

With mock humility he shook his head and told her, “Not me, Ma. Not ever again.” Grinning, he gave her a smacker on the cheek, picked her up and swung her round. “You're a wonder, that's what you are.”

“And so are you – a wonder to me I ever gave birth to you. Now, put me down and drink your tea.”

He did so and held up the magazine. “Can I keep this?”

She nodded. “But I'll want it back, mind. I haven't read it yet.” She returned her belongings to her bag, stood up and gulped down the rest of her tea. “And now that I've solved your murder for you, is there any chance we can make tracks for Madame Crystal's and get a few answers from your daddy?”

Rafferty
breezed into his office the next morning, told a startled Llewellyn that the case was as good as solved, and handed him his ma's astrology magazine. “Take a look at that.”

Llewellyn glanced briefly at the page indicated, before he turned to the front of the magazine, raised his eyebrows, and asked perceptively, “Do I detect the assistance of the indomitable Mrs Rafferty in the matter?”

“You do,” Rafferty told him sheepishly. “We now know what that symbol means. It wasn't an attempt at an initial, at all, but the astrologer's way of writing the sign for Gemini. Jasper Moon was a professional astrologer – what more natural than for him to scrawl the identity of his murderer in the astrological language he used every day? Which is what ma kept repeating all the way to that damn clairvoyant's last night. As I told her, perhaps if he'd written it more clearly we'd have got there quicker and without her assistance.” Still,' he rubbed his hands gleefully. “All we have to do now is find out which of our suspects is a Gemini and we've cracked it.”

“Gemini.” Llewellyn frowned as he studied the page. “But this says that the sign covers the end of May and most of June.”

“That's right,” Rafferty agreed. He felt a moment's anxiety at Llewellyn's doubtful expression, but even Llewellyn couldn't argue with accepted astrological fact, he reminded himself.

“No, it's wrong,” Llewellyn contradicted. “Because none of our suspects was born during those weeks. I've got all their details in here.” He patted his breast pocket where he kept his notebook with its neatly recorded information.

Rafferty stared at him. “One of them must have been,” he insisted. “Obviously, whoever killed him, recognised the significance of Moon's clue and lied to you. You're too trusting, man. You shouldn't believe everything you're told.”

Llewellyn's lips thinned. “No-one lied to me. I checked their details. You know I always check everything.”

That was true, Rafferty knew. Llewellyn might frequently be a pain in the behind, but he was a painstaking pain.

“Virginia Campbell subtracted a few years from her age but she didn't worry about the month. The others didn't even bother to lie about the year.” It was Llewellyn's turn to look smug. “Not one of our suspects was born during the dates given here. None of them is a Gemini.” Llewellyn took out his notebook, found the appropriate page and handed it to Rafferty with a flourish.
“Ecce signum
. Look at the proof.”

Rafferty snatched the notebook and studied it, before throwing himself into a chair, all his jovial bonhomie sunk to his boots. He'd been so sure he was on the right track at last. He lost his temper and scowled at Llewellyn. “You needn't look so bloody cocky. How many bright ideas have
you
come up with?” he demanded. “All I get from you is smart-arse quotes. Why don't you try this one for size?
Dun an doras mas e do thoil e.
” His pronunciation was shaky; luckily Llewellyn wouldn't know that.

Llewellyn raised his eyebrows in that superior way he had. “Irish?” Rafferty nodded. “Would you care to translate?”

“You're damn right I would. It means, put a lump of wood in the hole.”

“Pardon?”

“Shut the bloody door, man,” Rafferty translated again. “And make sure you're the other side of it!”

His expression injured, Llewellyn retreated to the doorway, from where he fired a parting salvo. “At the risk of getting my head bitten off, I was going to tell you that I finally got an answer from those Memory Lane video people. They said Moon ordered four copies of the video and paid by credit card. The videos were posted to his office the week before his murder. Makes you wonder what happened to the other copies.”

No it doesn't, Rafferty muttered to himself. Between clients that don't exist and blood-red clues that make no sense, I'd rather have a rest from wondering.

As the door shut softly behind his sergeant, Rafferty slumped. He already regretted his outburst, but sometimes Llewellyn got right up his nose. Angry with himself, Rafferty took his temper out on the other departed; it was the only way he could be sure of having the last word. “Not up to much, were you, Jasper old love?” he taunted the glossy photograph of Moon which he had pinned to the noticeboard at the start of the case. “Not only did you fail to predict your own death, you couldn't even manage to give us a halfway decent clue.”

CHAPTER NINE
 

Demoralised after
receiving such a knock-back, Rafferty gave himself a pep-talk. You're a copper, he reminded himself. And coppers 'cop', not cop-out. You've still got a case to investigate; still got suspects with shaky alibis, so get on with it. You can start by having another word with Ginnie Campbell.

As
Rafferty opened the door of The Psychic Stores, he snatched a glance at Llewellyn's face. The Welshman, still put out over Rafferty's angry outburst that morning, was barely talking to him. Even an apology had done little to thaw the air. But instead of throwing him deeper into the glooms, Llewellyn's 'nasty smell under the nose' expression filled Rafferty with a new determination to catch Moon's killer. It was just going to take longer than he'd thought, that was all.

There was music playing in the background. Strangely soothing, it sounded like a rushing wind interspersed with the cries of sea birds and the calls of whales and dolphins.

“Do you like it, gentlemen?” Mercedes Moreno materialised beside them and fixed Rafferty with her great dark eyes.

“It's – unusual.”

“It's designed to relax the stressed mind,” she told him. “Would you like a copy? It's a very reasonable price.” She paused and added softly, “I'm sure even Edwin would be happy to offer a discount in your case, especially if it calms your mind sufficiently to enable you to catch Jasper's murderer.”

Rafferty smiled. “Very good of him. But I think it will take more than my listening to the dolphins' greatest hits to secure a conviction.”

“I see you are a sceptic, Inspector. Perhaps our stones and crystals would be more to your taste?”

Rafferty, remembering the claims for these trinkets painted on the shop window, shook his head. “I don't think so. I don't believe in such things.”

Mrs Moreno stared at him as if he'd just uttered the psychic equivalent of blasphemy, before commenting, “Even a sceptic can't totally deny the wonderful properties of crystals. Their use in radios and watches; their ability to "oscillate" at specific vibratory rates. Surely you're aware of this?”

Rafferty was forced to admit that he was.

“Then why are you so ready to reject their powers in other areas of life? It is not logical.”

Llewellyn could have told her that logic had never been one of his strong points, but as this would have forced him out of his standoffish mood, he said nothing, and merely twitched his lips downwards in a way that more than adequately expressed his thoughts on the subject. Rafferty ignored him.

“You must at least let me try to convince you of their qualities before you reject them,” Mrs Moreno insisted. Her voice filled with the fanatical conviction of the true believer. “Tell me what areas of your life are causing you anguish, and I will tell you which of our gems and crystals has the power to help you. If you have money problems, you should wear Jade as it promotes a long and prosperous life; if you have love problems,” she gestured at a stone with a pale, pearly sheen, “a Moonstone exchanged with your lover will ensure your passion is returned; if you have health problems,” she pointed at another stone, “a Bloodstone will stimulate physical strength.”

From childhood, Rafferty had rejected the Catholic Church's automatic assumption that they owned his mind, his soul, and any other bits they fancied. Now, as a matter of bloody-minded principle, he always firmly resisted the arrogant insistence from any other empirical quarter that he should do this, think that, believe the other. To reinforce his stance, he brought out his sharp cynic's pin and applied it. “I've got a murder to solve,” he reminded her bluntly. “I don't think trinkets will help me with that.”

It seemed he'd only succeeded in pricking her professional pride, for her voice rose on a triumphant note, as she told him, “That is where you are wrong. I shall prove it to you.” She looked down at the selection of gems and crystals displayed on the counter. “I will prescribe for you a suitable stone.” After a few moments, she placed a violet-pink stone in his hand and commented, “Most people, at first, do not believe in the power of the stones. I simply tell them to wait and let the stones convince them.”

A likely story, thought Rafferty. And if they needed further convincing, no doubt she bashed them over the head with the biggest stone in the shop. The threat of physical violence was the greatest persuader of all, as most of the world's religions had discovered centuries ago.

She glanced down. “This is
Sugalite
. It aids in the development of the Third Eye seeing or inner vision. It unclogs the mind and enables it to get to the heart of things. You will find it beneficial, of this I am certain.” She closed Rafferty's fist over the stone and moved his hand close to his head. After a few moments, she asked, “Do you get any sensation from it?”

Rafferty was about to deny it, but then he became aware that his heart had begun to flutter and that the hairs on his arms were standing on end. The stone seemed to generate a warmth on his palm and now he realised that the headache that had been nagging at him earlier had faded. Irritated, and feeling slightly foolish at the admission, he told her what he felt.

Half expecting a triumphant 'Hallelujah', Rafferty was surprised that she restricted herself to a more restrained response.

“That is good,” she told him. “It indicates there is a rapport between you.” He went to give the stone back to her, but she closed his hand over it and told him. “Keep it. Carry it with you always. Call it my contribution to your investigation.”

Rafferty simply nodded. Apart from any other consideration, he sensed it would be foolhardy to offend the intense South American woman. She reminded him of an iceberg, nine-tenths hidden, and he wondered what lay concealed beneath that cool white exterior?

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