Read The Price of Butcher's Meat Online
Authors: Reginald Hill
“Miss Heywood's e-mails. You didn't really think I'd not let you see them? I made a copy for you.”
“But you didn't know I were coming down here,” I protested.
“Of course I didn't, Andy,” he said, still grinning. “Like I don't know the swallows are coming in the spring.”
Oh, you clever bugger! I thought as I left. What'll you be like when time's set a grizzle on your case?
Sooner I get back on the job the better, else I might be finding the place filled!
Hi!
Im really frustrated. Lots happeningâsome fascinating stuffâits like being in a Miss Marple movieâbut the screen goes fuzzy when youre not actually in shot!
Breakfast was a bit of a scratch affair.
Tom gobbled his then shot off to see what he could find outâ& more important to reassure his troops that the violent events of the previous day were just a glitch in the triumphal progress of Sandytown! Mary made polite conversationâtrying not to sully the ears of the children. Neednt have bothered. The younger kids had decided whatever was going on was adult stuffâdisregardable so long as it didnt get in the way of their own plansâ& they shot off outside as soon as theyd stuffed their faces.
Minnie of course was having none of thatâ& it took a couple ofâfor Maryâsharp rebukes to keep her from cross examining Clara.
Then we heard the sound of a car coming up the drive & Min looked out of the window & screamedâits Novelloâcome to take me for my interview!â
Mary ordered her to sit still & went to the doorâ& we all waitedâwith bated breathâto see how she would handle things. If Tom had been homeâIm sure thered have been a confrontationâbut Mary kept her voice low & a few moments later she reappeared with Novelloâlooking a bit chastenedâby her side.
Min jumped upâface bright with expectationâbut it was me the DC was looking at.
Good morning Miss Heywoodâshe saidâvery formalâthat should have warned meâMr Pascoe our DCI would like to talk with youâ
âhere?âI said stupidlyâlike he might be traveling in the boot of her tiny car.
ânoâdown at the hallâas soon as you canâif thats OKâ
I shrugged & saidâwhy not?
Minâwho was standing there like an actress whos got to her feet in anticipation of winning an Oscar only to hear someone elses nameâburst outâbut you promised wed go swimming!â
âlaterâI saidâI dont expect Ill be longâwill I?â
I looked at Novello who shrugged.
We went out to her car. Behind usâfrom the doorstepâMary saidâyou will remember what I said Constable Novello?âIf at any time in the future you should wish to talk to any of my childrenâI would appreciate it if you contacted myself or their father firstâ
No special voice hereâjust her normal gentle conversational toneâbut I saw Novello wince like shed been whipped. She turned & began to speakâbut Mary was already closing the door.
On the way down the hillâI saidâwhats this all about Shirley? Is it true youve arrested Mr Godley?â
âsorryâI cant discuss the caseâshe saidâstill formal. I put it down to being told off by Maryâ& we did the rest of the short trip in silence.
I expected to find the police had taken over the hall. Instead I was taken to a flat above the stables block. Looked in on Ginger. Seemed like someone had remembered to feed & water himâso not all townie morons!
The flat was a decent size but run down. First room I entered looked like it had been a living roomânow it had computers & telephones & display boards on all the walls. There I met 2 men. One was thickset with the kind of face people will eventually be paying me good money not to dream of! By contrast anyone would have looked goodâbut the other really was quite dishyâslimâmid 30sâa shock of pale brown hair either attractively disheveledâor carefully arrangedânarrow intelligent faceâbright blue eyes that ran
me up & down without undressing meâwhich I found rather disturbingâor disappointing?â& a nice smile as he saidâMiss Heywood? Im DCI Pascoeâ& this is Detective Sergeant Wieldâso good of you to comeâ
So this was the supersleuthâI thought. Easy to believe now Id seen himâexcept of course I was still certain hed got it dead wrong with regard to poor Mr Godley.
He took me into another roomâbedroom I supposeâpeeling wallpaperâsmell of dampâjust enough room for a small kitchen tableâseveral hard chairsâa clutter of recording equipment on a recessed shelf.
The ugly sergeant was with usâbut not Novello.
We sat downâme opposite Pascoeâthe sergeant to one side.
For a few moments no one spokeâold psychologists trickâtrying to let silence push me into speechâsoâchildishlyâI resolved not to say anything before he did.
Finally he opened a folder hed brought with him & spilled onto the table several sheets of closely printed paper. Even upside down I recognized them. The printouts of my emails that Id given to Novello. Suddenly I had a bad feeling & forgot my resolve.
I saidâwhere did you get those?â
He saidâfrom DC Novello of courseâwhere else?â
I thoughtâthat dykey cow! (sorryâbut even psychologists relapse into nonâPC thinking at moments of stress!) No wonder she was a bit off with me this morning. Guilt!
I saidâwell hold on there. I want to make it clearâI let DC Novello look at them on the strict understanding that shed only extract from them anything she thought might be useful & not pass it on without keeping me informedâ
âindeedâhe saidâso we may assume she found it all usefulâ& as for keeping you informedâthats whats happening nowâisnt it?â
This with the smile againâbut I was on to him now. He wasnt trying to charm me into accepting Novellos shattering of my foolish trust. Noâhed probably listened to her account of me & decidedârightlyâI wasnt going to fall for the all mates together line again. Soâget in my faceâprovoke a reactionâget it out of the wayâthen down to business.
Not bad psychologyâI thought. OKâI wasnt going to forgive bitch Novello
in a hurryâbut he knew thatâ& why should he care? In fact her getting all the crap left a clear field for him to be nice cop & get all the benefit of my interesting insights!
I gave him a faint smileâ& could see he was pleased.
But every
quid
has a
quo
âas the HB used to sayâ& always make sure you see the
quo
before you let any sod get his hand on your
quid
â
Not big on double entendre our dadâ& Im sure hed have been shocked to have heard you & me giggling every time you came home from a first date & Id ask how big was his
quo
â& did he get his hand on your
quid
!
I saidâbefore we startâis it true youve arrested Mr Godley?â
âhes been helping us with our inquiriesâyesâhe said.
âthen you must be madâI said. If he wanted bluntâhe was going to get it!
âwhy?â
âcos theres as much chance of him committing murder as the pope!âI said.
âwhich pope would that be?âhe saidâJohn Paul the 2nd? Or Alexander the 6th?â
I didnt get the reference but did get the messageâI was dealing with a real clever bugger hereâa category that ranks just above daft buggers on the HBs hit list!
He hadnt finished either. He went onâin any case Miss Heywoodâwhy would you think it impossible that a man you find distinctly oddâ
mad as a hatter
was your description I seem to recallâshould commit murder?â
I saidâyoure right Mr PascoeâI did find him oddâstill doâbut ifâas I presumeâyoure trying to impress me with your total recall of what youve read in my private emailsâyou will also have noticed I modified my first impression considerably as I came to see his oddness was mainly the oddness of goodness & innocence in a corrupt & guilty worldâ
There! Let him see he wasnt the only clever bugger around!
Of course all I was sayingâwhen you dumped the fancy packagingâwasâdont know how I know it but I just
know
Mr Godley couldnt kill anyone!
He gave me a
get-her!
kind of lookâthen saidâgoodness & innocence can be motives tooâbut lets not get bogged down in psychology & meta
physicsâlets look at the facts. Godley was found by 2 police officers beside Hollis's bodyâwith his hand on the instrument that killed him. My officer searched the house immediately after the discovery. There was nobody else thereâ
âwhich indicatesâif you know your Agatha ChristieâI interruptedâthat he certainly did not do it!â
A stupid thing to sayâbut he nodded as if really pleasedâ& saidâyou read Christie do you? I collect her first editionsâIve got one or two raritiesâ
ânoâI dont read the booksâbut Ive seen a lot of the moviesâI said.
âyesâlike Jane Austen she films surprisingly wellâhe saidâBut you will recall that occasionallyâas in
The Hollow
âthe character you dismiss from the frame because theyve been caught apparently in flagrante can turn out to be the perpetrator after allâ
âyoure suggesting Mr Godley let himself be caughtâto divert suspicion!âI mocked.
âin a wayâyesâhe said. His story isâhe called at Witch CottageâMiss Lee was outâhe let himself inâsat in the living room to await her returnâthought he heard a noiseâgot upâwent across the hall into the consulting roomâdiscovered Ollie Hollis on the treatment tableârealized there was something wrong & was just on the point of trying to remove the fatal needle when interrupted by two of my officersâ
âits a good storyâI saidâbut I expect youve got a better oneâ
âan alternative certainlyâhe saidâMr Godley enters the cottageâdiscovers Hollis on the tableâkills him with a needleâthen hears my officers car pull up outside. The house has no rear exit. He could of course have let himself be discovered in the living room & claim he knew nothing of the body in the consulting roomâbut he knows what forensic science can do & he has not had time to reassure himself he has left no traces of his presence on or near the corpse. So he grasps the nettleâ& the needleâ& lets himself be discovered allegedly trying to pull it out of Hollis's backâ
âthis is Mr Godley youre talking aboutânot Professor MoriartyâI saidâwhy on earth do you imagine he would want to kill Ollie?â
âperhaps because of something Mr Hollis saw at the hog roast?âhe suggested.
I was gobsmacked.
âyou mean you think Gordon had something to do with Lady Denhams murder?âI criedânow youre being really crazy!âwhat the hell could put a stupid idea like that into your head?â
âwellâfor a startâ
you
âhe saidâshuffling the email printoutsâfirst you mention seeing Godley & the victim having an argumentâan incident confirmed by several other witnesses. Thenâafter the discovery of the bodyâyou describe how you found yourself being comforted by Godleyâ& he was dripping wetâ
âit had been raining!âI yelledârain makes you wetâor havent you noticed?â
âindeedâ& the normal reaction is to head for shelterâhe saidâunless you have some good reason to stay out in the downpourâ
âanyone can get caught in the rainâI protestedâwhat does he say?â
âhe says that he was preoccupied with his thoughts & did not notice it was rainingâtill he was soaked to the skinâ
â& whats wrong with that?âI demandedâare you so completely unimaginative that youve never got so deeply involved in something you didnt notice the weather?â
âoh yesâhe saidâlast time it happened I was lying in wait for a murdererâ
I suddenly realizedâfor a long time now hed been totally in controlâwhile Id been on the defensiveâwith lots of yellingâ& heavy sarcasm.
I took a deep breath & saidâso that was his motive for killing Ollieâbut what would be his motive for killing Lady D?âHed only ever seen her twice!â
âtwice when youd been presentâyou mean?âhe said.
âwell yesâI saidâbut I know he had never been to Sandytown till Tom Parker persuaded himâ
âyou knowâhow?â
âbecause he hadntâI said feebly.
âI seeâbut didnt you think it odd that he hadnt when clearlyâas you yourself so astutely observedâhis relationship with Miss Lee was soâ¦
He was shuffling through the printouts again.
â
lovey-dovey
âhe readâ
bit of mutual alternative therapy going on there perhaps?
âsoâ2 people in a close personal relationshipâliving within half an hours journey of each otherâyet ignorant of the significant details of each others life? Doesnt seem likelyâdoes it?â
He was rightâit didnt.
I saidâOKâbut it seems to me that its Miss Lee you should be looking atâif youve been reading my private correspondence as closely as you claim youll have noticed she wasnt exactly Lady Ds greatest fan!â
He smiledâturned to the ugly guy & saidâNovello was right sergeantâMiss Heywood would make a very good detectiveâ
I noted the subtle attempt to repair feet-of-clay Novelloâmaybe he hopes I can be set up again for her all-girls-together act. Well forget it fellow! Remember Suzie Bogg who threw my favorite Barbie in the duck pond when I was 7? I still hear the splash every time I see her in the village.
I saidâso whats her story then?â
âshe says that Mr Hollis came to her in the throes of a bad asthma attackâshe alleviated the worst symptoms by her usual treatment then had to go out for a regular appointment with some old lady who suffers badly from arthritisâ
âyouve checked this?âI said.
That got another approving smile & nodâ& he went onâshe left Mr Hollis on the table in the treatment roomâshe had no concern about doing this as in Mr Hollis's case retention of the needles for up to ninety minutes had proved to be efficaciousâ& she expected to be back within the hour. Mr Godley meanwhile had been having problems with his motorbike. Realizing he couldnt fix it himself he abandoned it at a local garageâwhich was closedâwith a note asking them to check it out in the morning. Thenâneeding a bed for the nightâhe walked to Witch Cottage. When he realized Miss Lee wasnt homeâhe let himself inâ¦