The Distant Dead Lesley Thomson (best romance ebooks txt) đ
- Author: Lesley Thomson
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âA stupid mistake â Banks and Cottonâs superior had dealt with Cotton. They dismissed it as a trivial matter compared to the pummelling the Germans are giving us. Cotton is to be farmed out to his allotment. As a pioneer in his field, Aleck is indispensable to the war effort.
âWhoever reads this, I will secrete it in Gilesâs favourite hidey-hole where Aleck wonât find it. For Giles it was sweets; for me it is the revelation of a woman scorned. Whenever you read this, please take it to George Cotton who I trust will seek justice. Should he no longer be alive it must go to Downing Street and straight into the hands of Mr Attlee, another good man, and despite what Alecks says, far superior to Mr Churchill.
âJulia Northcote. New Yearâs Day 1940.
âPS: Wolsley Banks will accept that I died by my own hand. But if I am dead it is because my husband wanted me dead. I pray it does not come to that.â
Although she knew the contents, after he had finished reading Beverly looked as stunned as Jackie felt. She said, âPresumably it was never given to Cotton or to Clement Attlee.â
âItâs my guess that Roddy was the first to read it. For some reason he chose to leave it where he found it,â Jack said.
âIt was Aleck Northcote who got the rope from the shed and strung his presumably unconscious wife from the top banister.â Beverly had gone pink. âHe knew how to make it look like suicide, but heâd never have been doubted. If it had been ruled murder, Northcote would have been the prime suspect; awkward since theyâd already got him off the hook for Maple Greenhillâs murder.â
âWe found the inquest report on the National Archives database before you arrived. Northcote reported returning from work to find his âbeloved wife suspended by a rope from the banister. I began to cut her down but knew I lacked the strength to haul her over the balustrade. I couldnât let her fall to the hall below.ââ Jack spoke in a monotone.
âHe should have known to leave her until the police came.â Jackie had the bug â she too was ready to fight for Julia Northcote.
âNorthcote told the inquest that the balance of her mind was disturbed by the Blitz and the blackouts. The press took Northcoteâs side, his wife had abandoned her family,â Beverly said. âHer death went badly with a public expected to rally round the flag and be âin it togetherâ.â
âVirginia Woolf killed herself a couple of months later and the papers gave her a hard time for jumping ship,â Jack said. âYet again, Northcote got away with murder. He was knighted, as was Banks the coroner. Cottonâs boss Robert Hackett got a CBE for services to his country.â
âCan we try to trace this Inspector Cotton?â Jackie said. âSounds like he was the fall guy.â
âIf George Cotton were alive, heâd be a hundred and twenty-six. Unfortunately, he died ages ago in 1979 in his eighties. And hereâs another sign, heâs buried in your cemetery,â Jack said. âWe are meant to solve this case.â
âIt might be opposite our house but itâs not my cemetery.â Jackie was sharp. âOK, guys, I have to ask, how did you find this?â
Jackie kept her face blank as Jack confessed to finding Beverly in Northcoteâs old house in Ravenscourt Square where he too had planned to sneak in and find what Roddy March had been looking for.
âHow did Roddy March know the box was hidden there?â
âI rang Geo-Space, the company who made the virtual tour, just before you arrived. March wasnât down as the photographer, but there had been a Wolsey Banks who did a brief stint for the company.â Beverly paused for Jack to make the connection.
âIf he was considering removing it, then someone interrupted him.â
âDid Marchâs killer think he had Juliaâs letter and try to get it from him?â
âThat presupposes Roddy and his killer knew about her letter,â Jack said.
âIf the murderer knew the letter was in the house, why not take it? That they didnât suggests they were unaware it was there.â Jackie knew they were too polite to say they had been over this ground.
âMeanwhile, Lucie has texted saying the police are thinking it a stranger murder. Theyâre looking for the gang members responsible for the spate of muggings and robberies in the areas. Which means,â Beverly clapped her hands, âweâre on our own with this case.â
âNot quite.â Jackie began gathering up the papers. She stowed them in their cardboard box. âTake that with you.â
âTake it where?â Jack and Beverly asked at once.
âTewkesbury.â Jackie laid the box on Stellaâs desk. âWe are in this together and weâll come out of it together. You go and join Stella and Lucieâs team and, this time, donât take no for an answer.â
Chapter Thirty-Two
2019
Stella
Roddyâs room was, as Stella had expected, sealed with police tape. Relieved, Stella was horrified when Gladys peeled off the tape and unlocked the door. âThat lady detective wonât know. Lord knows when I can get on with reletting it. Although the very idea of a stranger in Roderickâs bedroomâŠâ She rubbed her hip which if, as Roddy had promised and now Lucie was rashly promising too, would be replaced when Lucieâs true-crime book was a bestseller.
âHis mum and dad arenât even allowed in,â Gladys announced as they stood in the bedsit breathing stale air. Hearing this, Stellaâs horror that they were trespassing shot sky high.
The smell of dirty washing, dominated by socks. The shape of Roddyâs head was outlined on the pillow. Stella imagined him hunched over his laptop pecking out his podcast script with one finger. Sprawled on the bed recording the podcast which, heâd promised Gladys, would change their lives. Stella pictured Roddy slamming shut the laptop, snatching his combat jacket and hurrying to the Death CafĂ©.
With no idea it was
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