Amanda Cadabra and The Hidden Depths Holly Bell (top rated ebook readers .txt) đ
- Author: Holly Bell
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Flossie paused and took a cautious sip of her hot tea. Trelawney was sure that the meat of the story was about to be served.
âNow, Tom, I donât suppose youâd know the inside of that place, but the side window at Dr Martinâs looks out onto a little sort of service road.â
âSlipper Way?â
âZackly, itâs the only place you could have seen it from.â
âIt?â
âWhat I see that day. There it was: the car. Hedrok Flamgoyneâs. He was parkinâ. He must have come round by the coast road to avoid goinâ through the town. Well, I had nothinâ else to do while I waited for your great-uncle in with the counsellor, and was just idly watchinâ Flamgoyne in âis car.â
âYes, I see.â
âThen a woman come from the other end of Slipper Way. I remembered her. She had this hair like there was sunshine in it and a black raincoat on and a hat that couldnât hide all that hair.â
âDid you know her?â asked Trelawney.
âNot personally, but being an artist, Iâd always noticed her hair.â
âHer name?â
âIâve been trying to remember ⊠Elizabeth ⊠Iâm pretty sure Iâm right about that. Elizabeth ⊠and her surname ⊠a Cornish word. Stret? Street? Hyns ⊠path âŠ. road, no âŠ. Perhaps itâll come back to me.â
âAll right, Gran, youâre doing very well. What did the woman do?â
âShe got into the car. She and Flamgoyne started talkinâ and then he looked around and saw me watchinâ. He sort of froze, I saw his lips move and a flash of somethinâ in his hand and then I donât remember any more ... I sat and read a newspaper. The counsellor and Wella came out. We all arranged for more sessions. And we left. Drink your tea while itâs hot, Tom.â
He took a sip and then asked,
âAnd Great-uncle Wella?â
âHe was as good as his word. I gave the casino their money, Wella kept up the therapy and I donât think heâs spent as much as a tuppenny bit in an arcade since. He paid me back too. Took him quite a while, but he did us both proud. And that was that.â
âHm, I see why you wanted to keep this confidential.â
âThe odd thing is,â pondered Flossie, âI hadnât thought about it in years, that business with Hedrokâs car and so on. In fact, Iâm pretty sure I didnât even remember it until you asked. Still, thatâs not so unusual, is it? No reason to think on it, was there?â She seemed to want reassurance.
âNo, of course not,â Thomas responded warmly, and yet ⊠it sounded familiar. However, he returned to more concrete matters. âThe woman, can you remember her age, height, anything else?â
âAbout 30, average height, maybe shorter. She had a family, I think âŠâ
âParents? Siblings?â
âA husband and a baby, I believe ⊠not sure âŠâ
âDoes she still live here?â
âNo, no they left soon after, moved up North.â
Up North meant one thing to the English but something different to the Cornish. He checked,
âAcross the Tamar?â â the river dividing Cornwall from the rest of mainland Britain.
âThatâs right,â agreed Flossie.
âAny idea where?â
âNo. Could âave gone abroad, I sâpose,â she suggested.
âHm. Well, thank you, Gran, youâve been very helpful. If thereâs nothing else, I must get ââ
âJust you hold on there, little lad.â Gran Flossie was holding up a finger. She spoke firmly, but with a twinkle in her eye âIf Iâm a C.I., I should get paid, shouldnât I? Thatâs âow it works.â
Thomas chuckled. âWhat can I get you?â
âCream tea and a chocolate Ă©clair to finish off, thank you very much, Tom.â
âComing up!â
***
On the way back to Parhayle police station, Trelawney mulled over his suspicions. Of course, it might have been just the passage of years that had dulled Granâs memory of that day, but somehow ⊠that movement of Flamgoyneâs lips sheâd seen ⊠Of course, the man could have just been talking to his companion. But whatever words heâd uttered, coupled with the wave of something in his hand, that sounded a lot like someone casting a spell. A forgetting spell.
It was the one spell he knew something about. It was hard to be sure. If only Miss Cadabra were here. She could deal with all this magical business. Trelawney sighed. Just as heâd thought he was doing some good old-fashioned police work, enchantment reared its ugly head.
Still, once this case was solved â and they were getting closer all the time â heâd have to get used to dealing with things without Miss Cadabra. Suddenly, curiously, he didnât like the idea of that ⊠he didnât like it all ⊠in fact, it made him feel âŠ
But this was no time for feelings, Trelawney told himself, as he drove into the station carpark. He now had evidence of Flamgoyneâs presence in Parhayle around the time of the cliff murders, and that Hedrok had had a meeting with a mystery woman. Could she have been connected to Senara Cadabra in some way? Was she the one with inside knowledge of what Senara intended, the one who had sent the poison pen letters? He had to get back to Sunken Madley and Miss Cadabra â Mrs Cadabra, he meant, of course âŠ
Chapter 26
Jonathanâs Library, and Mr Gibbs Lands
Amanda hurried through the glass doors of the Sunken Madley library and went in search of Jonathan. He was by himself, shelving returned books and checking them for any repair or replacement needs. âHello, Jonathan.â
âOh, hello, Amanda.â
âThank you for telling me about ⊠your experience.â
âHas it helped?â
âIt may do.â
âDid you tell the inspector?â Jonathan asked, a shade nervously.
âErm, no. Iâm not sure heâd consider it ⊠material. But there is something I forgot to ask you. May I now?â
There was no one nearby, so no need to make it a formal interview in seclusion.
âOf course, Amanda.â
âWell, Mr Frumbling, you know?â
âAh, yes.â
âHe mentioned that you have a library, a collection of books down in the stacks. Have I understood that correctly?â
âYes,
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