A Grave Coffin. Gwendoline Butler

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A Grave Coffin - Gwendoline  Butler


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You’re off to Coventry, did you say? It’s a Tim Kelso there, remember.’ He wanted to get away.

      ‘Hang on,’ said Coffin. ‘What are the names of the women you have working in this organization?’

      ‘Felicity Fox in Cambridge, Leonie Thrupp in Coventry and Margaret Grayle is what I call a mobile … lives in Oxford, works where required.’ Ed Saxon put the receiver down hard.

      Two of those names had earned a question mark: Fox and Thrupp.

      Coffin heard the bang. ‘I hit a nerve there. Can’t be the Cassington lad or Maisie, so what?’ he asked himself. ‘He’s hiding something, I’m sure of it, and it isn’t just a tumble in bed that his wife doesn’t know about.’ He considered what Saxon had said. ‘I must take a look at Thrupp in Coventry. Then there was a question mark for Fox in Cambridge which was the centre for the Anglia outfit of TRANSPORT A. So one of the ancient university towns had a question hanging over it. Ancient but not innocent?

      He thought for a moment about Stella, perhaps even then undergoing surgery. Hope she doesn’t have her nose altered. I like that nose.

      He looked at his diary. He could go to Coventry almost at once. It would mean a shuffling of appointments, but Paul Masters would do that for him, and he could spend some of the time beforehand studying the records left behind by Harry, which would not be a long job.

      He could tell already that either Harry had not kept many or he had destroyed them.

      The names of those with question marks were made a note of and he would be checking on them. In Coventry he would be seeing Leonie Thrupp and the man operating in that area. What was it now? He turned back to his own notes:

      Tim Kelso in Coventry.

      Peter Chard in Oxford.

      Felicity Fox in Cambridge, which was the East Anglia area.

      Joe Weir in Newcastle, which Ed Saxon, more romantic than Coffin could have guessed, had wanted to call by the area’s old-English name of Deira.

      He did not know any of them, but none had won a question mark, whatever it might mean, good or bad, from Harry.

      Just as he was thinking that he ought to get in touch with Inspector Larry Davenport, who was investigating the murder of Harry, the man himself was on the telephone.

      ‘Hello, sir. Remember me, Larry Davenport … Inspector, CID now.’

      Ed Saxon must have telepathy, Coffin told himself, or else he knew you were about to ring.

      ‘We both have an interest in Harry Seton.’

      ‘So we do.’ Coffin was brief. Let Davenport be expansive if he liked.

      ‘Thought we ought to get in touch, sir.’ You help me, I’ll help you, the breezy voice hinted. ‘We’ve got East Hythe in common, too, sir. Nasty business about the boy.’

      ‘It is. Not too good about Harry Seton. How are you getting on?’ Bet you won’t tell me.

      Neither did he. ‘Not much to say, unluckily, at the moment … Have you got any help for me, sir?’

      ‘Not yet.’ After all, this was not his case.

      ‘We ought to keep in touch, don’t you agree, sir?’

      Of course, Coffin thought crossly. ‘How did he die? Anything new there?’

      ‘Blow to the head … then cut up when dead. Freshly dead.’ That was the kind of detail that Davenport relished.

      ‘Would it have taken a lot of strength?’

      ‘Well, no, but a frail old lady couldn’t have done it. What there would have been was a lot of blood. All over the place, and we are keen to find that place. Haven’t yet.’

      Like Devlin in the Second City, thought Coffin, a nasty parallelism, but police work could be like that.

      ‘How did the body get to the park, and then to the bandstand?’

      ‘Must have been by car, not something you could carry through the street wrapped in brown paper … it was wrapped, by the way, but in a sheet. The park gates are open all night, in fact, I think it’s years since there was a gate. The bandstand is derelict, never used. As for the rest … well, there are urban foxes round there, a real, rough breed down by the river. I heard they had mated with wolves from Russia.’ He laughed heartily at his own joke.

      ‘I’ll keep in touch.’ Coffin did not laugh.

      Paul Masters came back with Augustus, both of them refreshed by their walk. Augustus bustled up smelling of dog, and grass and earth.

      ‘Had a good time, did he?’

      Augustus answered for himself with a feathery wagging tail, and positioned himself at Coffin’s feet ready for another walk.

      ‘Oh Paul, I may be away from the office for about two days, but I will get back sooner if I can. You can always get me on my mobile … And I will phone you as and when.’

      Paul Masters was too discreet to ask any questions, but having copied the files for Coffin could make a guess what it was about.

      He also had his own private theory: he gets fidgetty when She is away.

      ‘I’ll see you get to know everything important, sir.’

      ‘And nothing that is not.’

      Goes without saying. But he did not say it aloud, contented himself with his polite, enigmatic smile (Go on smiling like that, his wife had said, in that tart voice that occasionally made him feel like straying, and they will think you are hiding the secret of the Third Man, or was it Fourth and Fifth) and went away. He knew his smile, which he had worked upon before perfecting it, was a good, workable professional tool which would see him through many a crisis.

      ‘And you can wipe that smile off your face,’ said Coffin, as the door closed behind Masters. ‘I’m getting fed up with it.’ He too had watched its progress during the last few months.

      He gathered up his papers, put Augustus on the leash, then walked homewards at such a pace that Augustus began to lag behind, pointing out that he was a peke with little legs, not a bloody Great Dane.

      Back at his home in St Luke’s, he fed the dog, and considered making himself a meal. He was a passable cook if the frying pan and the grill were used. Then he stopped, changed into something more casual than his dark working suit (Makes you look like a coroner’s favourite pathologist, Stella had said once, which had rankled) and prepared to go to Max’s restaurant. Not the one in the theatre, but the bigger and grander one round the corner. Max, as chef and proprietor, had started small and was getting bigger every day.

      He went down his winding staircase with Augustus following him at every step. He manoeuvred himself to the door before shutting in a protesting peke face.

      ‘Don’t go on like that, Gus, or I will buy you a cat to keep you company.’

      In Max’s newly redecorated restaurant, the proprietor stood in a welcoming way at the door. Max had got plumper and greyer and more prosperous in the years since he had set up; over these same years, his family had shrunk, then grown again. The daughter they called the Beauty Daughter had married and gone away, then another daughter had departed, leaving numbers seriously low, but now both girls were back without husbands but with several offspring.

      Max approached Coffin with a sympathetic smile. He knew that Stella was away, everyone knew, and he let Coffin see that he understood loneliness. Not that he suffered much from it himself, especially at the moment with four grandchildren taking up what felt like unofficial residence, but still … a man could imagine.

      He led Coffin to a table nicely placed near the window. ‘Miss Pinero not back yet?’ he said, as he handed Coffin the menu.

      As if you didn’t know. Coffin muttered inside, as he took the menu. He pretended to study it, but he always


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