The Body on the Beach (31 page)

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Authors: Simon Brett

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Far too fast. Rory Turnbull misjudged the corner and bounced off a concrete bollard. The BMW spun crazily before smashing into the Second World War mine that was used as a charity collecting
box. With the impact, the car burst into flames.

When the wreckage was examined by the police, their first impression was that there were two near-identical bodies in the burnt-out car. In the mouth of one of them was a dental plate which had
been specially made for Rory Turnbull.

Detailed post-mortem examination, however, revealed that the body with the dental plate had been dead for at least a week before the crash which killed the dentist.

 
Chapter Forty-one

‘The ironical thing is,’ said Ted Crisp, ‘that because Rory died in a car crash, rather than in an apparent suicide, Barbara will actually benefit from his
insurance policies.’

‘And presumably inherit all that money he’d salted away,’ said Jude.

‘Except,’ Carole pointed out, ‘all that money is in accounts that he’d opened using Sam Kent’s passport and so probably in Sam Kent’s name.’

‘Does that mean the Kents’ll benefit? That’d be wonderful news. At least they’d get something positive out of the whole ghastly experience.’

But Carole threw a wet blanket over Jude’s optimism. ‘No. The accounts would have been set up illegally. I’m sure it’ll all go back to Barbara in the end.’

Ted Crisp shook his shaggy head. ‘Whole thing’ll take one hell of a lot of sorting out. Still, I should think Barbara and Winnie are ecstatic. They’ve got shot of Rory and the
details of what he was up to will never become public knowledge. Their version of events will become the official version. As Winnie will continue to say to anyone who’ll listen, Barbara was
just very unlucky in her choice of husband.’

Jude picked up the train of thought. ‘The poor woman worked valiantly to “make something of him”, but sadly “you can’t make silk purses out of sow’s
ears”. Barbara and Winnie’s image of middle-class gentility will survive untarnished. The high values of the Shorelands Estate will be maintained.’

The landlord shuddered. ‘When I think what that poor bastard Rory must’ve suffered in that marriage. Being diminished all the time, having every last shred of confidence removed by
those two harpies.’ Another tremor went through him. ‘Sorry, it’s a man thing. You two haven’t got the physical equipment to understand what it’s like to be
systematically emasculated.’

‘No,’ Jude agreed softly, ‘but we can empathize. Anyone who’s been in a relationship where one partner blames the other for their own inadequacies knows the kind of pain
involved. Strange how it keeps happening. There are enough unpleasant people out there in the world to cut you down to size. What everyone needs at home is someone to support and bolster
them.’

Carole had got so used to these enigmatic references to Jude’s past that she no longer felt a burning urge to ask the instinctive supplementary questions. Well, that is to say, she still
felt the urge, but now automatically curbed it.

A week or so had passed since the dramatic events on the sea wall. Carole was wearing her freshly cleaned Burberry. The dry-cleaning, she was delighted to find, had not affected its waterproof
qualities at all.

‘Have you seen Maggie again, Jude?’

‘Yes. I dropped in this afternoon.’

‘How’s she coping?’

Jude grimaced. ‘It’s going to be tough, but she’ll come through it.’

‘Yes.’

‘And Nick?’

‘He’s being brilliant, she said. He’s a good, bright boy. Whatever else all this has done, it’s certainly brought those two closer together.’

‘Excellent.’ Carole wondered whether the boy would ever tell his mother the worst part of his nightmare, witnessing the mutilation of what he later found to be his own father’s
body. Probably not, she thought. But that would be Nick Kent’s own decision, and she reckoned that when the time came he’d be mature enough to make it.

Carole considered whether she herself should call on Maggie. No, probably not. Jude was the one with people skills, after all. ‘And any news been heard of Tanya?’

Jude shook her head. ‘I haven’t heard anything. Ted?’

‘Nothing definite. Denis Woodville said he’d tried ringing and got someone else on her number. New tenant. So no idea where she’s gone.’

They were silent, all wondering whether the poor kid had actually set off to France, to wait for the lover who would never now be coming to join her. They imagined Tanya becoming disillusioned
and deciding that no men really cared, whatever they said, whatever they promised, whatever plans they made for you. And then her baby would be born, another child with a single parent, another
statistic with limited prospects.

‘It’ll be tough for Tanya.’ Jude shook her head sadly. ‘It’s always tough to bring up a kid on your own.’

Her sympathy sounded so heartfelt that Carole wondered whether that too came from personal experience. Had Jude been a mother? Carole still knew almost nothing about her neighbour’s
background. Whenever they got on to personal matters, however much she tried to resist the temptation, Carole always seemed to end up talking about herself.

And there does come a point when you know someone too well to be able to ask about the basic facts of their life. Carole had decided she’d have to set up a dinner party for Jude and a
couple of the nosier denizens of Fethering. The village was rich in the expertly curious. Yes, if she invited people who hadn’t met the newcomer before, they might be able to winkle out all
the details that Carole had so signally failed to uncover. It remained deeply frustrating for her to know so little.

Recognizing that she wasn’t going to get any more of Jude’s history at that point, Carole moved the conversation on. ‘What’s sad about the whole Rory Turnbull story is
that his plan was so preposterous. The chances of it working even first time round were minimal. I’m sure a basic post-mortem would have revealed the burnt-out body wasn’t his. And by
the time the corpse was a week old, he had no chance of getting away with it.’

Jude shook her head grimly. ‘But by then he was so caught up in his plan that he couldn’t let go.’

‘He’d already committed murder, apart from anything else,’ said Ted. ‘He had to go through with it.’

‘But why go through all that rigmarole? Why on earth didn’t he just dump his wife and go off with a younger woman – like thousands of other married men before him?’ asked
Carole, with the bitterness of experience.

‘You underestimate the hold Barbara had on him. I asked him that very question in Tanya’s flat and I’ve never seen a man’s face lose colour the way his did. He was
literally terrified of his wife.’

Another tremor passed through Ted Crisp’s body. ‘Sorry. Man thing again.’

They heard the pub door open. Spot on cue, Bill Chilcott appeared. As ever, he was dressed in quasi-nautical style. And there was a smug smile on his root vegetable face. ‘Evening, mine
host.’

‘Evening, Bill.’ There was a mumble of greetings from the others. ‘Your customary half?’

‘I thank you kindly. And my customary half-hour away from my other half – from the little woman, that is.’ Bill Chilcott chuckled, then turned to Jude. ‘Or is it
politically incorrect to make such a remark in the presence of a liberated woman
de nos jours
?’

‘I can assure you, it’s no more politically incorrect than anything else I’ve heard you say.’

Carole held her breath, but Jude’s accompanying sweet smile somehow convinced Bill Chilcott that what she’d said was a compliment. ‘Oh well, there you go. Of course, I’ve
never spoken a word of criticism of Sandra. She’s extremely attractive and highly intelligent – for a woman.’

Over Bill’s chuckle, Ted passed across the ‘customary half’. ‘You seem remarkably chipper this evening.’

‘Yes, well, I do have the satisfaction of having achieved a small victory.’ He beamed, waiting to be prompted to his revelation.

Carole obliged. ‘This wouldn’t have anything to do with Denis Woodville, by any chance, would it?’

‘As a matter of fact it would. A small matter of trespass. I have warned the old fool often enough. He can’t claim to be surprised by what’s happened.’

‘So what did happen?’ Carole asked dutifully.

‘You know he’s had that wretched dinghy cluttering up his front garden for months?’

‘Yes.’

‘Apparently he’s trying to sell it now. Fallen on hard times, I’m afraid, our Mr Woodville. Insufficient pension arrangements.’ The complacency with which this was said
left no doubt that Bill and Sandra Chilcott’s pension arrangements were immaculate. ‘Can’t even afford to pay for the boat’s space at the Yacht Club. That’s rather
funny, isn’t it? Calls himself Vice-Commodore and puts on airs and excludes perfectly qualified yachtsmen from Fethering Yacht Club membership –’ he spluttered at the
recollection, but quickly recovered himself – ‘and yet he can’t afford even to keep his own boat there.’

‘So what happened?’ asked Carole, keen to cut through the gloating to the facts.

‘Someone came to see the dinghy this afternoon with a view to buying it and, in the course of the potential purchaser’s inspection, the boat got moved around a bit.’ Bill
Chilcott snickered in anticipation of his pay-off. ‘In fact, it was left with six inches of the mast projecting over the hedge into our garden. Which, as I have made clear to Mr Woodville on
numerous occasions, constitutes an act of trespass. Well, you’ll never guess what I did . . .’

No one gave him the satisfaction of a response, so he had to deliver his punchline unprompted. ‘I got a hacksaw . . . and I cut off the offending six inches of mast!’ He
looked round for response. ‘Then I threw the offcut into Mr Woodville’s front garden. Result – end of trespass!’

He rubbed his hands together gleefully and burst out laughing at the extent of his own cleverness. As he laughed and laughed, his tuber face took on the aspect of a white-rooted beetroot.

Carole, Jude and Ted Crisp didn’t share the joke. They exchanged looks, and all their thoughts went along the front to the Fethering Yacht Club. There they imagined the plotting of revenge
by the Vice-Commodore and his band of cronies. Wartime parallels would be being drawn, cunning deeds of sabotage recalled to provide the means for Denis Woodville to get his own back. And no doubt
someone would be recalling a similar incident that happened while he was stationed out in Singapore.

The feud between Bill Chilcott and the Vice-Commodore would go on until one or other of them died, and even then the badmouthing would continue until all three – including Sandra –
were dead. The two old men’s cooperation to save Nick Kent might never have happened.

The old ways of Fethering had reasserted themselves. As they always did. As they always would. Senior citizens would continue to weave their strange square dance around the pillars of
Allinstore. Bill Chilcott would appear in the Crown and Anchor at the same moment every evening for his ‘customary half’. And in the Fethering Yacht Club the Vice-Commodore and his
cronies would detail how much better a place the world would be if only they were in charge of it.

And Dylan, or someone like him, would be there as a hazard to the young people of the area. And peer pressure and consumerism would work their evil, and most of the young would survive them, and
develop into adults no worse and no better than the current residents of Fethering.

But there’d be a few casualties. Like Aaron Spalding. And Sam Kent.

And Rory Turnbull. A dreamer, consumed – literally – by the fantasy that he could change everything in his life by one final throw of the dice.

For the remainder of his customary half-hour in the Crown and Anchor that evening, Bill Chilcott continued to recapture details of his triumph, unaware of, or unworried by, the lack of response
from those around him. Then, having rationed his half-pint by the minutest calibrations of sips, he looked at his watch. ‘Still, better go back to the little woman. Time, tide and Sandra wait
for no man, eh?’ He chortled. ‘So . . . cheerio, ladies. And cheerio, mine host.’

‘Good night,’ Ted Crisp called out to the closing door, adding without enthusiasm, ‘See you tomorrow.’

‘God,’ said Carole, ‘it’s so petty. Why don’t they just stop the whole feud?’

‘Because they enjoy it,’ replied Jude. ‘Only thing that keeps them alive – well, together with the line-dancing and the swimming in the Chilcotts’ case.’

‘Yes, you’re probably right. Depressing, isn’t it?’

A melancholy had settled on them. Ted Crisp tried to break it with forced geniality. ‘Hold it right there – as the bishop said to the actress. What we all need is another drink. What
d’you reckon? Landlord’s treat again.’

‘Really?’ Jude grinned. ‘You know, you always say that as if it’s rarer than a total eclipse of the sun. And yet you keep on doing it. You keep on buying us drinks. Your
trouble, Ted, is that beneath that gruff exterior, you’re a total pussycat.’

He looked at her belligerently. ‘If you wasn’t a woman, you wouldn’t get away with saying that. Now do you want this bloody drink or not?’

‘Oh, certainly. I’ll seize the moment while it lasts. Large white wine, please.’

‘Carole?’

She looked at her watch. ‘No, thanks, Ted. Better get back. I’m expecting a phone call.’

‘If you’re not there, they’ll call back some other time, won’t they?’ As Carole rose from her seat, Jude grinned one of her big, easy grins.

Carole was torn. There was no phone call she was expecting. All that lay ahead of her was an evening watching television with Gulliver. She knew there’d be nothing much on. Nothing of any
interest apart from the news, really. And that was becoming less interesting, as world powers mired themselves ever deeper in crises they did not understand and could not solve.

‘Come on, Carole. Like I said, landlord’s treat. Large white wine, isn’t it?’

‘Oh, very well, Ted.’ She sank back into her seat. ‘Thank you very much.’

Of course, Carole Seddon would never be a natural ‘pub person’, but it didn’t do any harm to behave against character . . . just once in a while.

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