The Distant Dead Lesley Thomson (best romance ebooks txt) đ
- Author: Lesley Thomson
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âYouâve put March close to you, was that deliberate?â Janet took a picture of the diagram on her phone.
âI didnât mean to, but actually he did sit nearer to me than anyone else did around the table.â
âTo hear Mrs Wren, first name Gladys, youâd think the sun shone of out Marchâs everything.â Janet sat back with her coffee. âHeâd take her shopping, do the bins, sit up drinking sherry which, Roderick, as she called him, always brought himself. Such a lovely fella. He told her he wasnât the marrying kind, I said get away with you.â
âThey never said they knew each other, although I did notice Gladys liked Roddy.â Janetâs bad imitation of Gladysâs accent made Stella feel protective of the only member of the group who she had liked. âFelicity was cross when she thought Roddy came with me â maybe he warned Gladys it was best to pretend they were strangers.â
âMrs Wrenâs nest is a tall rickety house opposite the Tudor House Hotel. From the outside itâs a dump, but it looked like you had waved a wand in there. The five-star hygiene rating put me to shame,â Janet said. âApart from Gladys Wren and Roderick March, did you get the sense any of them already knew each other?â
âI thought I was the only stranger. Iâm sure Joy and Clive did, they were quite offhand with each other.â Stella looked at her diagram. âJoyâs patience with him was thin, but it was with Gladys too. Andrea the gardener didnât know anyone. I got the strong feeling she wished she hadnât come. It was Felicityâs first time, and she got annoyed that everyone kept straying off death; Joy was the only one who answered the questions properly.â
âFelicity Branscombe, retired Home Office pathologist, sheâs lived in Tewkesbury for five years. This will make you laugh, she told me when she was an âeminent pathologistâ her nickname was Cat Woman. Tony my sergeant said itâs in a true-crime book on that Salt Cellar Murder in the eighties which was solved because of her autopsy.â
âShe told us she was known as Cat Woman at the Death CafĂ©.â Stella felt less amused than surprised. Felicity had struck her as not the sort to accept a nickname. Stella wouldnât mind being known as Cat Woman.
âIn her youth, she was as agile as a cat and wore close-fitting black. She reckoned it was important to stand out from the men.â Janet pulled a face. âNot a bad idea, I thought. I looked her up. Felicity Branscombe was considered the cream of her generation.â Janet was reading from her notes. âShe didnât seem bothered that Roddy March crashed her Death CafĂ©. But if she had been, it hardly merits murder. Unless she planned a Burke and Hare body snatch for old timesâ sake. She actually offered to come out of retirement and do his PM. Sheâs seventy-odd.â
âI doubt sheâs lost the skill. I read Felicity does world lecture tours.â Stella couldnât admit it was Lucie whoâd googled.
âSlap my ageist wrist. Why not? Sheâs brighter than I feel.â Janet tapped Stellaâs diagram. âJoy Turton was on the organ when you got there. That puts her in the abbey with March if it was him on the other side of the pillar. You said she stopped then began practising chords so she had the opportunity.â
âThe interval between the music and the chords seemed short, it was silent in that time. Wouldnât Roddy have shouted out when he was stabbed?â
âHe was stabbed in the back. The blade went right through.Initially he may not have comprehended heâd been stabbed.â Janet walked her fingers on the chequered tablecloth. âThen Joy scoots away and lands back at the organ where, flustered, she can only bash out chords.â Like Janet, Terry had brainstormed crime scenarios with Stella as bedtime stories. Stella loved hearing them, but her mum had said it was one good reason for leaving him.
âOr she chose chords because they are louder. The organ was deafening.â Stella couldnât see Joy getting flustered.
âFelicity the Facilitator can obviously wield a knife, but since she left after you, how did she get past you?â
âI would have seen her,â Stella agreed.
âI see what you meant about that Andrea Hammond, the gardener. Boy, was she hard work. However, for all sheâs a sulky bitch with a pruning knife, CCTV backs up her story that she was cycling off along the high street before you called it in. Oh, and she did know people, she too lodges with the redoubtable Gladys Wren. She had passed March on the landing by the bathroom, but claims not to have said more than hello. I didnât get the sense Mrs W was keen on Andrea, but I also got the sense that she likes blokes better.â Janet moved her finger around Stellaâs diagram of the Death CafĂ© table. âThat clock man, Clive Burgess, is as thin as a pin, but weâve established it doesnât take strength to stick even a strapping man like March in the back. He said he hadnât seen March before that night and I tend to believe him. Gladys Wren had more to lose than gain by Marchâs death, no more gratis sherry, sheâs lost a lodger and her tears were definitely real. Of all of you, sheâs the only one who seems genuinely sorry.â
âI donât see her killing anyone.â Stella resented the implication she wasnât sorry.
âThat leaves the perfect stranger.â Janet groaned. âA copperâs nightmare.â
It was all a nightmare. For the umpteenth time, Stella wished sheâd stayed in the flat. Takeaway, chat with Lucie, bed, then up early to cleanâŠ
ââŠaccording to the tox report, Roderick Marchâs
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