Read Agatha Raisin and the Love from Hell Online
Authors: M.C. Beaton
It was dated the Friday of the previous week. ‘Dear James,’ she read. ‘We really must sit down and talk. I hope you’re back by now. I’m sorry I told Agatha about your illness, but how could I possibly guess you had not told her yourself? You must come and see me. We have been intimate together, you’ve made love to me, you can’t just walk away and not see me again. Do please ring me, darling, or come round. Your Melissa.’
Agatha’s hands shook as she read the letter. A great wave of fury swept through her. She had almost been sanctifying James since his disappearance, crediting him with affections and little tendernesses that he had never demonstrated, blaming herself bitterly for everything. Despite what she had previously said, she had come to the conclusion that James had never been unfaithful to her. Such a straight, upright man would not. But now here it was. Proof. She forgot about his cancer. She only thought that he had cheated her. By God, she had to find him and tell James Lacey exactly what she thought of him. He could even be lying about having cancer! The police had checked every hospital in Britain without finding a sign of him.
‘Everything all right?’ called Mrs Bloxby.
‘Yes, sure,’ muttered Agatha. ‘Just some bills to pay.’
‘You do those and I’ll get on with this.’ Mrs Bloxby thought it would be better if she scrubbed out the blood-stains herself.
Agatha took out James’s cheque-book. No reason to pay the damn bills herself. But of course she could not sign one of his cheques. They didn’t have a joint account. Bastard. She should let his gas, water and electricity get cut off.
She went to her cottage and collected her own cheque-book and returned. ‘Don’t you think James would need money?’ she called over her shoulder. ‘I mean, the police must have been watching to see if he cashed any cheques or used one of his credit cards.’
‘Mmm,’ was the only reply she got. Mrs Bloxby scrubbed busily, thinking sadly that if James did not need money, then James was dead.
Agatha finished signing cheques and joined Mrs Bloxby in cleaning and dusting.
Then they went back to Agatha’s cottage for a coffee. ‘Have you seen anything of Melissa lately?’ asked Mrs Bloxby.
Agatha flushed, well aware of that crumpled letter in her handbag. ‘No, and I don’t want to.’
‘Perhaps she is feeling very guilty. She did not attend the ladies’ society meeting last night. And she’s usually always there. No one has seen her for over a week. Her car is still outside.’
‘Why don’t you phone her?’
‘I tried, but there was no reply.’
I’ll go and see her the minute I’ve got rid of you, thought Agatha, engulfed by a wave of anger.
The phone rang. Agatha looked startled and then remembered she had plugged it back in before they had left to clean James’s cottage as a sort of gesture to belonging to the world again.
‘You answer it. I’ll be off,’ said the vicar’s wife.
As Mrs Bloxby waved goodbye, Agatha picked up the phone. ‘Hello, Aggie,’ said Charles’s voice. ‘How are things? I’ve been trying to get you.’
‘I’m all right,’ said Agatha. ‘Still miserable and shocked, as a matter of fact.’
‘No news?’
‘None.’ Agatha thought about that letter and the desire to tell someone overcame her. Sometimes she found Mrs Bloxby almost
too
good. Mrs Bloxby might have sympathized with Melissa and Agatha could not have borne that.
‘Well, just one thing,’ she said. ‘I went along to James’s cottage to clean up and found a letter from Melissa on the doormat. It was delivered last week. They had been having an affair.’
‘I thought you’d accepted that.’
‘NO, I HAD NOT!’ howled Agatha.
‘Careful. You’ll break my ear-drum. You said –’
‘I know what I said. But James assured me they had not been sleeping together and I believed him. More fool me. I’m going to find him.’
‘That’s more like the Agatha I know. I’m bored. I’ll be over in half an hour or so.’
‘But –’ Agatha had been about to put him off because she was dying to confront Melissa, but he had rung off. May as well wait for him.
When Charles arrived, he found the cottage door open and walked in. Agatha was in the back garden, playing with her cats.
‘Oh, it’s you,’ she said, getting to her feet and brushing grass from her skirt.
‘You don’t look too bad,’ said Charles, surveying her critically. ‘I was afraid you might have gone to pieces. So where do we start? With James’s family?’
Agatha shuddered. ‘I’ve had enough of James’s family, what with his aunts and sister implying that if he hadn’t married me he would be all right.’
‘So what about Melissa?’
‘So what about her?’ demanded Agatha truculently.
‘I think you should swallow your pride and we’ll go and see her. I mean, he did tell her he had cancer and didn’t tell you. He may have told her other things.’
‘I was going to wait until your visit was over and then go round there and give her a piece of my mind.’
‘Won’t do. You’d never get anything out of her that way. I mean, do you want to find James or not?’
‘I want to find him and ask for a divorce.’
‘All right, then. Let’s go.’
‘I hate this.’
‘Better than not knowing. Come on, Aggie. Let’s get it over with.’
Agatha walked with him through the village, aware of twitching curtains at windows and curious stares. I am the victim, not James, she told the watchers silently. I have been betrayed and abandoned. Then she thought of the cancerous tumour in James’s brain and groaned inwardly.
Melissa’s cottage, like Agatha’s, was thatched. But where Agatha did not bother much about the little garden at the front of her house, Melissa’s was a riot of roses, pink and yellow and red, tumbling over a white-painted fence. The white-painted door had a brass knocker. Agatha noticed the knocker was dull. That’s odd, she thought. Melissa liked to pride herself on being a first-class housewife.
She seized the knocker and rapped loudly. As they waited, it seemed as if the whole village waited. It was very quiet. No cars drove along the road, no dogs barked, no tractors buzzed around the fields above.
Charles leaned round her and twisted the doorknob and gave the door a tentative push. It swung open.
‘Agatha,’ whispered Charles. ‘I don’t like that smell.’
‘Drains?’ suggested Agatha, although her face had turned white as she sniffed a sweet, rotting smell.
‘I really think we should stop where we are and phone the police,’ said Charles.
But a new burst of rage against Melissa engulfed Agatha. ‘Let’s see. She probably went away and left some rotting food in the kitchen. Damn it, the bitch probably knows where James is and has gone to join him.’
‘Agatha, please stop . . .’
But Agatha walked straight into the cottage, calling, ‘Melissa!’
The smell was getting stronger but fury drove her on. She opened the kitchen door and stood stock still. Melissa was slumped over her kitchen table. Flies were buzzing about her dead body: heavy flies, sated flies. Charles peered over her shoulder. ‘Get the police, Aggie.’
‘Police,’ whispered Agatha through dry white lips. ‘She may just have died.’
‘Under the flies, her head has been bashed in.’ Charles gave her a push. ‘Go, phone.’
Agatha stumbled into the sitting-room. She dialled 999 and gasped out the address and demanded police and an ambulance. Then she lurched out into the front garden and took in great gulps of fresh air. ‘Morning,’ said an old man, peering over the fence at her. ‘Lovely day.’
‘Yes, lovely,’ said Agatha. He looked at her curiously for a moment and went on his way.
Oh, James, thought Agatha, what have you done?
They were gathered in Agatha’s sitting-room later that afternoon, Wilkes, Bill Wong, another detective, and a thin, serious policewoman.
Agatha gave them the letter and she explained her reaction and her desire to confront Melissa. She did not say anything about trying to find James herself. Asked about her movements during the previous days, she said honestly that until Mrs Bloxby had called, she had been too depressed to move much at all.
‘I’ve heard it’s almost impossible to pin-point the exact time of death,’ said Charles.
‘The corpse was cold but not stiff, which means she had been dead over thirty-six hours,’ said Wilkes. ‘Of course, I’m sure the flies will give us some clue.’
‘Flies?’ asked Agatha.
The policewoman, who had not previously spoken, suddenly threw back her head, closed her eyes and began to recite, ‘After death the body begins to smell, and attracts different types of insects. The insects that usually arrive first are the Diptera, in particular the blowflies, and the flesh-flies, or Sarcophagidae. The females will lay their eggs on the body, especially around the natural orifices and in any wounds. Flesh-flies do not lay eggs, but deposit larvae instead.
‘After about a day, depending on the species, the eggs hatch into small larvae. These larvae live on the tissue and grow fast. After a short time, they moult, and reach the second larval stage. They continue eating and moult to the third stage. This takes about four to five days. When the larvae are fully grown, they become restless and begin to wander. They are now in their pre-pupal stage, about eight to twelve days after the eggs were deposited. Typically it takes between eighteen and twenty-four days from the eggs to the pupae stage. The exact time depends on the species and the temperature in the surroundings, so by estimating the age of the insects, the scientist can estimate the time of death.’
She closed her mouth like a trap. ‘Are you for real?’ demanded Agatha.
‘
Thank you
, Constable Morrison,’ said Wilkes. ‘But I think this is neither the time nor place for a forensic lecture.’ He turned to Agatha. ‘The hunt has now intensified for your husband.’
‘You think James did it, don’t you?’ said Agatha. ‘I thought so at first. But why?’
Constable Morrison threw back her head again. ‘Crime of passion,’ she said.
‘We don’t know who did it,’ said Bill Wong. ‘We have to look into Melissa Sheppard’s background, see what, if any, enemies she had. Mr Lacey’s disappearance and her death may not be related.’
The following day, Harriet Comfrey, her rotund figure bulging over a swim-suit, was relaxing on the deck of the
Sleeping Princess
in the harbour at Honfleur.
She saw her husband coming along the harbour, clutching a sheaf of newspapers. When he joined her, Harriet said crossly, ‘You’ve broken our holiday agreement. No newspapers!’
‘I didn’t mean to buy them,’ said Tubby, ‘but James’s face is all over the front page. Look!’
Harriet picked up the
Daily Express
. There, sure enough, was a photograph of James Lacey. She quickly scanned the story. Some woman called Melissa Sheppard had been found battered to death. Police were anxious to contact Mr Lacey to help them with their inquiries. Mr Lacey had disappeared some weeks ago after evidence of a fight in his cottage at Carsely, Gloucestershire. He was wounded and believed to be suffering from a brain tumour.
Harriet raised shocked eyes to her husband’s face. ‘And we helped him out of the country! We’d better go to the police. Anyway, we may do him some good. We can tell them he left with us before this murder.’
‘Who’s to say he didn’t go back?’ said Tubby gloomily. ‘I mean, he got me to row him ashore at that rocky beach down the coast. Imagine what the police will say. Why didn’t you come forward before? You say he had a wound in his head? Aiding and abetting a criminal. All that stuff. Bang goes our holiday.’
Harriet bit her lip. ‘Better say nothing about it, then. I mean, he didn’t go through any passport control.’
‘But they’re bound to get him. Then they’ll ask him how he got to France and he’ll say it was us.’
His wife’s face took on a stubborn look. ‘Let’s just forget about it. We don’t want to be involved. And no more newspapers, Tubby.’
The press and television had come and gone. Carsely settled into a summer torpor. James had not been found.
Agatha and Charles had tried to get information about Melissa out of Bill Wong, but all he would say was that it was more than his job was worth to tell them anything. His bosses said they had suffered interference from them in the past. He was instructed not to tell them anything.
‘The newspapers might have something,’ said Agatha, two weeks after the murder of Melissa. ‘I mean, I’ve got to get something. I’m still a suspect. Even Bill looks at me in a funny way. They say she must have been lying there dead for five days. We don’t have a milkman round here any more, and she picked up her papers from the village shop. If we still had milk delivered around here, then people would have noticed bottles piling up on the step.’
‘What do you mean, the newspapers might have something?’ asked Charles. ‘We’ve read them all, day in and day out.’
‘What I mean is this. A couple of days after Melissa’s murder, there was that awful shooting at Mircester School. Five children dead. Awful. But it wiped Melissa’s murder off the papers. Now some reporter may have been working away at the background and then gets told to drop it. We could go to the
Mircester Journal
and ask.’
‘Sounds a bit far-fetched.’
‘You forget, I worked with the press for years. Anyway, it’s better than doing nothing.’
Charles made a steeple of his fingers and studied them while Agatha waited impatiently. It was at times like this that she wondered if she really knew Charles at all. Self-possessed as a cat, expensively tailored, sensitive face, but unreadable eyes under smooth fair hair.
‘All right,’ he said. ‘It’s better than sitting here.’
The editor of the
Mircester Journal
looked more like Agatha’s idea of an accountant than an editor. Mr Jason Blacklock was dry and precise, with strands of brown hair combed neatly over a pink scalp and gold-rimmed glasses perched on the end of a long thin nose.
‘I gather you want my help, Mrs Raisin,’ he said, addressing Agatha. ‘I agreed to see you because there might be a story in it for us.’
‘If you help us,’ said Agatha, ‘we’ll give you an exclusive when we’re ready. Deal?’