Authors: R. A. Spratt
âI need you to find out who it is,' said the Headmaster.
âCan you show me one of the letters?' asked Friday.
âNo, I don't have copies,' said the Headmaster. âYou'll have to go and see the teachers.'
âWhere are they?' asked Friday.
âMost of them have gone home,' said the Headmaster. âBut a few stalwarts have taken up residence in town at the pub.'
âIf you give us a lift into town we'll talk to them,' said Friday.
âCan't you ride a bicycle?' asked the Headmaster. âLast time I went into town they egged my car.'
âAll right,' said Friday. âBut bicycle-riding will increase my fee.'
âYour fee?!' exclaimed the Headmaster. âWhere is your school pride? Won't you do this for Highcrest Academy?'
âI'll do it for one semester of free board and tuition,' said Friday. âThat'll have me paid up until halfway through next year.'
âHow can I be expected to run a school if I give board and tuition away?' asked the Headmaster.
âIf you don't get your teachers back, you won't have a school,' said Friday. âSo not paying me would be a false economy.'
âAll right, I agree to your terms. Get going, then,' said the Headmaster.
âYou're forgetting something,' said Friday.
âI am?' asked the Headmaster.
âYou need to lend us a bicycle,' said Friday.
It turned out that the only bicycle at the school was a 1950s tandem cruiser, which was probably a good thing because there was no way Melanie had any intention of doing any pedalling. Luckily, the town was only five kilometres away and most of the journey was downhill, so it took Friday and Melanie an hour and a half to get there. This may seem like a long time to cycle five kilometres, but they did fall off twice. The second time they punctured a
tyre and Melanie fell asleep in the grass while Friday was changing the inner tube. Then it took some time for Friday to wake Melanie up enough for her to be able to balance in her seat.
When they finally rolled into town Friday was sweaty, dirty and very scratched up. Somehow, despite sleeping in a ditch and falling off a bicycle twice, Melanie managed to look relaxed and well presented.
âThere are the teachers,' said Friday.
Several members of the teaching staff were sitting in the beer garden out the front of the pub. It was a beautiful sunny day. The pub looked very hospitable. Although Mr Maclean had taken his shirt off and was sunbathing.
âEw,' said Melanie.
âI know,' said Friday. âRemind me to report him to the police before we go back.'
âHello!' called Mrs Cannon, waving to the girls. âHave you come for a chat? Let me buy you both an orange juice.'
âThis isn't a social call,' said Friday. âThe Headmaster has hired me to investigate the forged termination letters.'
âHa!' said Mrs Cannon. âHe's still using that excuse, is he?'
âIt's not my fault I have ringworm!' declared Mr Maclean. âMy union representative says it's not grounds for termination.'
âMy name is Mrs Cannon,' said Mrs Cannon. âStop calling me “your union representative”. It makes me sound like I'm concerned for your welfare, and I can assure you I'm not.'
â
You're
the union representative?' asked Friday.
âI am,' said Mrs Cannon.
âBut you hate doing things,' said Melanie.
âI know,' said Mrs Cannon. âWhich is why I care so passionately about the union movement. The only thing that galvanises me into action is when someone wants me to do more work.'
âHave you got one of the termination letters?' asked Friday. âPerhaps it holds a clue.'
âI'm reluctant to show them to you, girls,' said Mrs Cannon. âThey are all deeply personal, offensive and dangerously truthful. Who knew the staff at Highcrest Academy had done so many dreadful things in the past?'
âI didn't mean to poison the Indonesian ambassador,' said Mrs Marigold, the school cook, bursting into tears.
The tears shocked Friday and Melanie more than the revelation that the school cook had poisoned someone. Mrs Marigold was such a battleaxe and it took a lot to rattle her.
âThere there, dear,' said Mrs Cannon. âNo one blames you. If they are going to sell rat poison in boxes the same size and shape as sea salt, what can they expect?'
âBesides, it only qualifies you more for cooking at Highcrest,' said Mr Maclean. âThere are so many students who deserve to be poisoned.'
âMr Maclean, shame on you! Threatening a culinary assault on children will not help our cause,' said Mrs Cannon. âPutting your shirt back on might, though.'
âThere must be one letter we can look at,' said Friday.
âI suppose you can look at mine,' said Mrs Cannon. âThe accusations of espionage have all been a matter of public record, anyway. If anything, the letter is a sad reflection on the former headmaster's ability to do background checks. But I was very thin and pretty thirty years ago, so I can't blame him for his high opinion of my other assets.' Mrs Cannon
reached into her handbag and pulled out a pink sheet of paper.
âAt least they used pretty stationery,' said Melanie.
âIt's traditional for termination letters to be printed on pink paper,' said Friday.
âIt's helpful, really,' said Mrs Cannon. âIt saves you from having to read the letter. You can just start crying as soon as you see the colour of the paper. Although, of course, it can make Valentine's Day very awkward.'
Friday scanned the letter. âIt all looks very straightforward,' she said. âApart from the shocking details of your sordid past, this is a perfectly formal standard termination letter.'
âThe stationery looks authentic,' said Melanie. âWith the school crest embossed in the letterhead.'
Friday ran her hand over the raised print.
âSomeone could have stolen the stationery,' said Melanie.
âThe school council wouldn't have had sixty sheets of pink letterhead,' said Friday. âThey would have had to get it printed specially.' She held the sheet of paper up so the sun shone through it.
âWhat are you looking for?' asked Melanie.
âWatermarks,' said Friday. âAll good-quality
stationery has a semi-transparent watermark made into the paper. Oh dear â¦'
âWhat is it?' said Mrs Cannon.
âI can't tell exactly,' said Friday, âbecause the passage about you teaching Fidel Castro the lambada is obscuring the picture. Mr Maclean, show me your letter.'
âI will not,' said Mr Maclean. âIt is very rude.'
âShow her your letter,' said Mrs Cannon, âor I'll tell her about the time you nearly got fired for skinny-dipping in the swamp.'
âThat's a breach of confidentiality!' protested Mr Maclean. âBesides, I was not skinny-dipping. IÂ had my underwear on. I just didn't want to get my chinos wet when I was caught out by rising tidewater on the far side of the swamp.'
âThat's what they all say,' said Mrs Cannon, grabbing Mr Maclean's shirt from the back of the chair it hung on and fishing the letter out of the top pocket.
âHey!' yelled Mr Maclean.
âThat will serve you right for sunbathing in a public place while people are trying to keep their breakfast down,' said Mrs Cannon, handing the letter over to Friday.
Friday held up Mr Maclean's letter. The watermark was clearer in this one.
âCan you see anything?' asked Melanie.
âYes,' said Friday. âA face.'
âReally?' said Melanie.
âTake a look,' said Friday. âDoes it remind you of anyone?'
Melanie looked at the watermark.
âBeautiful smile, piercing eyes, floppy hair â it looks like ⦠Ian!' said Melanie.
âAnd can you read the writing beneath?' said Friday.
â
Ego omnes seducti estis
?' said Melanie. âWhat does that mean?'
âIt's Latin,' said Friday. âIt means, “I fooled you all”.'
âOh, Ian,' said Melanie. âSo this means he's the one who forged the letters?'
âI can't believe he would do something so large-scale,' said Friday.
âWell, that's because you weren't here,' said Melanie. âYou didn't see how lost he was without you.'
âDon't start that again,' said Friday.
âHe missed you dreadfully,' said Melanie. âHe barely said anything sarcastic. And when he did, none of us were smart enough to understand what he was talking about. He must have cooked all this up for fun.'
âHe certainly seemed to be enjoying the catapult back at the school,' said Friday, âbut this seems too cruel for him.'
Melanie put her arm around Friday. âThat's because you love him, so you are blind to his weaknesses.'
âJust like me and Fidel,' said Mrs Cannon.
âYou loved Fidel Castro?' asked Friday.
âNo,
he
was in love with
me
,' said Mrs Cannon. âJust because he's a communist dictator, doesn't mean he can't have good taste in ladies.'
âI suppose I'll have to tell the Headmaster,' said Friday glumly.
âNo need,' said Mr Maclean, tucking his mobile phone into his trouser pocket. âI just texted him what you uncovered. I told him we would all be ready to resume work first thing tomorrow.'
âYou are such a goody-two-shoes,' said Mrs Cannon.
âWe'd better get back to the school,' said Friday, âbefore the Headmaster overreacts. I'm sure there must be more to this.'
Melanie and Friday jumped back on their bicycle and hurried back to the school as fast as they could. Unfortunately this was not terribly fast. Going back was mainly uphill. And their legs were tired from the downhill ride into town. It was two hours before they cycled painstakingly slowly up the gravel driveway to the administration building, lumbered off the bicycle and staggered inside to confront the Headmaster.
âHeadmaster,' said Friday, struggling for breath, âyou mustn't overreact.'
âHow dare you barge into my office!' barked the Headmaster. âJust because you're in here all the time from causing trouble, doesn't mean you can waltz in whenever you like.'
âI think there's more to this than meets the eye,' said Friday.
âI'm very grateful to you for finding the culprit
and resolving the industrial dispute,' said the Headmaster. âYou'll get your board and tuition covered. Isn't that enough?'
âI don't believe Ian would do this,' said Friday.
âOh, I see,' said the Headmaster. âYou didn't realise it was your boyfriend you were dropping in it.'
âHe's not my boyfriend,' said Friday.
âYes, yes,' said the Headmaster, âyou can delude yourself, but you can't expect the rest of us not to notice what we see with our own eyes.'
âMy opinion is based on fact and reason,' said Friday.
âAnd just a little bit of warm affection,' said Melanie. âIan is seriously handsome. It's hard to believe someone so good-looking would do something so ugly.'
âI'm just asking you to wait while I investigate further before you take action,' said Friday.
The Headmaster sighed. âYou're too late,' he said. âI confronted Wainscott immediately. He laughed. He didn't deny it.'
âWhat would be the point when there was so much evidence against him,' said Friday sadly.
âThat's exactly what he said,' said the Headmaster. âIt's unnerving how simpatico you two are.'
âSo you suspended him?' asked Friday.
âHe sacked the entire staff two days ago!' said the Headmaster. âSeveral of them have found other jobs. Some have taken off on holidays, leaving no contact details. And Vice Principal Dean was so devastated to be fired that he ⦠well, that's none of your business.'
âHad a mental breakdown?' guessed Friday.
âHow did you know?' asked the Headmaster.
âI didn't,' said Friday. âBut it makes sense. He was never very stable.'
âEven when the teachers come back tomorrow it will take weeks, if not months, before things return to normal,' said the Headmaster, slumping in his seat.
âWhat are you saying?' asked Friday, although her blood chilled as she feared the worst.
âWainscott has been stripped of his scholarship and expelled,' said the Headmaster. âI called a taxi for him. He packed his things and left an hour ago.'
Friday's vision began to blur and the room started to spin. She fainted.