A Body in the Village Hall Dee MacDonald (the best e book reader .txt) đ
- Author: Dee MacDonald
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âYeah, and it donât matter to them Greys that Fenella was drivinâ and not Kev. They still killed him.â
âBoth the Greys?â
âYeah, both the Greys. He disappears for years on end and then â the moment Kev gets out â back comes Billy Grey, bastard that he is. Have you seen him?â
âNo,â Kate admitted, âI havenât had that pleasure.â
âAnyway, we know now it was him. And she probably helped him.â Jess took another gulp of tea and started on a second chocolate biscuit. Her appetite didnât appear to be affected by her angst.
âI should never have let him out the door Saturday night,â she went on. âHe fancied goinâ along to The Tinners for a pint, but I was knackered cos Iâd been workinâ all day. So I says to him, âYou go, Kev, and Iâll just put me feet up in front of the telly.â To be honest I wanted to watch Love Island and he didnât go much for that. And then I went to bed but I didnât worry cos I knew heâd probably got in with a crowd of his mates and theyâd be celebratinâ him beinâ home or somethinâ and theyâd be drinkinâ late. I were a bit worried when he werenât around in the morninâ but then I thought heâd be sleepinâ it off somewhere so I went over to me mumâs for Sunday dinner.â
âHe didnât phone you?â
âNo, cos he didnât have his phone on him cos heâd locked it away safe, see. Then you found him on Sunday eveninâ. Heâd left the pub late but he never got home.â
âI guess you knew him for a long time?â Kate was intrigued and determined to find out more.
âSince school,â Jess replied through a mouthful of biscuit. âI always fancied him.â She swallowed. âNeither of us was the brain of Britain, but we got by. Know what I mean?â
Kate nodded.
âIt all went wrong when he went to work for that bloody Fenella,â Jess went on. âDid you ever meet the cow?â
âNo,â Kate replied, thinking it best not to say âonly when she was deadâ.
âSheâd got more blokes than youâve had hot dinners,â Jess said. âShe were one of them women that was needinâ sex every five minutes. She werenât bad-lookinâ, I suppose, but her was old! Mustâve been about sixty but that didnât stop her, did it? Youâd think the old cow would have dried up by then, wouldnât you?â
Dried up at sixty? Kate decided not to comment.
âSheâd got plenty money though. Went all the way to Exeter every week to get her bleedinâ hair done. Dyed, of course, and Iâm bloody sure she had them whatâs-it injections in her face, not that youâd notice cos she didnât smile much. Maybe she couldnât smile much, ha! She sure knew how to perform though.â
âAnd you knew all along that it was her â not Kevin â who was driving that day?â
ââCourse I did! We reckoned it might be worth a few years in the nick to get some decent money at the end of it. Five hundred thousand quid she promised him. We couldâve bought a bleedinâ palace down in Spain for that money!â She paused. âThing is, we never thought heâd get such a long sentence. We thought maybe heâd get seven years and be out in three or four. We heard later that the judge had lost his grandson in a hit-and-run accident and was handing out sentences like bloody sweeties.â
âWhy did Kevin go to work for her in the first place?â Kate asked, wishing she could record this conversation herself. Sheâd try to remember as much of what Jess said as she could.
âWhy? Cos she was offerinâ good money, thatâs why. Only trouble was her wantinâ him to live in, and I didnât want him doinâ that.â
âCouldnât you have lived up there with him?â
âNot bloody likely. Didnât like her and donât like that place. Anyway, Iâd just been given a nice flat by the council and I wasnât about to be leavinâ that. So he said heâd try it for a few months, did Kevin. See how it goes, was what he said.â
âSo Kevin was her chauffeur?â
âHe ended up beinâ the chauffeur, gardener, handyman, you name it. She got her moneyâs worth, I can tell you. And thatâs not all.â Here Jess pursed her lips and took a deep breath. âBut I ainât sayinâ no more.â
âMore tea?â asked Kate.
âNo, Iâd best be goinâ. I do a bit of cleaninâ at The Gull and down at The Locker CafĂ©. Just thought Iâd ask about Kev⊠you know?â
âI know,â Kate said.
âAnd now at least everyone knows that neither Kevin or me killed Fenella Barker-Jones,â Jess said as she stood up. âIâd bloody felt like it often enough but I never killed nobody.â
In spite of the double negative Kate believed her. âWell, any time you want to pop in,â she said, âIâm usually home by four. And Iâm a good listener.â
Jess sniffed. âYeah, thanks, I might do that. And you can tell that bleedinâ detective friend of yours that if I was goinâ to kill the bitch Iâd have done it bloody years ago.â
Kate was astounded. How on earth did Jess know about her friendship with Woody?
âWhat do you mean â âthat detective friend of mineâ?â she stuttered after a moment.
As she reached the door Jess said, âThere ainât much goes on round here without the whole village knowinâ. Thanks for the tea and that. See yuh!â
With that she mounted her bicycle, which had been leaning against the wall, and was gone.
Kate badly wanted to speak to Woody about Jess Davey landing on her doorstep. She felt deeply sorry for Jess, whoâd lost not only her partner but also her long-held dreams of a life in the sun with no money worries. That dream must have kept both her and Kevin going through the long dark years of his
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