Authors: Gillian Linscott
âDid she say how?'
âNo.'
âBut you didn't think she could do it. You still ran away.'
âI thought she would. Then, on the Monday morningâ¦' She took a deep breath. âThey were moving that cabinet and I heard his voice down in the workshop here, helping them move it out to the cart. There he was, inside our own house. She hadn't made him go away after all. So I had to go. I took the baby and went.'
âWithout seeing Daisy?'
âI never saw Daisy.'
âWhat happened to her wasn't your fault. None of this was your fault.'
Which was as near true as it needed to be. In all the various neglects and betrayals of Daisy, her sister's had been the most excusable. The two of them needed time together, so I said I must go. Walter Sutton came down the stairs after me. The workshop was empty. Through the window we could see the craftsman and apprentices out in the yard. I expected Walter to show me out but he led the way to the dark back of the workroom.
âHow did she die?'
âHer throat was cut. She was by the pond. I think she must have gone to meet him.'
His big body sagged. He let himself sink down on a low table like something melting.
âWhy didn't she come to me?'
The mirror frame he'd carved so carefully was standing on the top of a chest of drawers between us and the light, the beautiful cupped hands in silhouette. I thought of how they'd held the reflection of Carol's face and the way he'd looked at her. Pride in his own craftsmanship, I'd thought. Now I guessed it had been a lot more than that.
âYou loved her?'
âYes.' It came out as a groan, but he couldn't stop himself glancing upstairs to where Janie and the baby were. âShe doesn't know. We wouldn't have hurt her, neither of us, not for the world.'
âAnd Carol loved you?'
A nod. âYes. I couldn't believe it. She'd done so much for us, done everything. She was so good to us, so beautiful, I just couldn't believe it. There was one day â we were working on a piece together and our hands touched and ⦠it wasn't taking anything from Janie, not anything. It was just different, that's all.'
âUpstairs just now, you thought I was going to tell Janie.'
He nodded.
âI'm not going to. I hope she never knows.'
âWhere did it happen? Where did he kill her?'
âBy the pool at the bottom of the coppice. I think she'd arranged to meet him there in the middle of the night. She took your best knife to protect herself. She picked it up from your bench, the night she came in and took her own money. Did you guess that?'
âNot till now, no. I can see now. I can see it all now.'
âI think she needed the money because Fardel was blackmailing her. Why? Had he seen the two of you together?'
âIt was worse than that. It was a lot worse than that.'
Silence. The sweet smell of wood was all round us, from upstairs the sound of the wooden cradle rocking.
âWill you look after Janie and the baby?' he said. âSomebody's got to look after them.'
âBut why? You're not going away, are you? She needn't know about you and Mrs Venn.'
âWhen I'm in prison, I mean.'
âYou won't go to prison. It's not a legal offence to love another man's wife.'
âI don't mean that. I mean they'll say I killed Daisy'
âNo. Carol Venn did. You've known that all along, haven't you?'
âThat Sunday, when she brought Janie back, she told me what had happened. I wanted Fardel to go back where he came from and stop scaring Janie. She wanted Daisy to go back where she came from because of all the trouble she was causing in the family. So she said if he'd come to get Daisy he could take her and go, best thing for everybody all round. The only thing was bringing the two of them together, but Carol had an idea about that.'
She would, of course, Carol the cool solver of everybody's problems.
âWhat was the idea?'
âShe got a message to Daisy at the camp saying her sister was here and wanted to meet her in the wood by the church. She wouldn't be, of course. Janie didn't know anything about it. Then she said she'd find out where Fardel was and let him know to be there at the same time so that he could come across Daisy there and take her back. As it turned out, she didn't have far to look for him because Bestley went and hired him to help take the cabinet up.'
âShe did see him that morning, then?'
âOf course she did. It went well enough, at first. Daisy came to the coppice and Carol kept her talking, waiting for him. We'd arranged I'd be there watching from behind a tree in case he caused any trouble.'
âDid you know she'd brought a gun with her?'
âNever in the world.'
âSo then what happened?'
âWhen Fardel arrived, Daisy screamed and tried to get away. Fardel grabbed her and was getting rough with her and Carol tried to stop him. Once she saw how scared Daisy was of him and how she didn't want to go back with him, she changed her mind. She got the gun out and shouted to him to let Daisy go. I was running out, trying to help her, then the gun went off. Carol was only trying to scare him, but he twisted round and it was Daisy who got shot.'
âWhat did you do?'
âWe were scared, all of us. We hoped she was just hurt, but she was dead. It was Fardel's idea to bury her under a lot of leaves in the old quarry, then when we'd done it, he ran off. We thought ⦠Carol thought when she was missed people would just think she'd wandered off back home.'
Such a small hole in the world Daisy made, no wonder Carol thought it.
âWe went away, but he must have had another thought about it and come back and put Daisy's body in the cabinet deliberately to scare Mrs Venn, put the blame on her.'
Or his way of claiming his twenty pounds. Goods returned, payment expected.
âDid you know he was blackmailing her?'
âNo. I wish she'd come to me. But by then I was so worried about Janie going I suppose she didn't like to. I knew the sort of man he was, you see. I really thought he'd killed Janie.'
Footsteps and voices sounded from outside: the craftsman and apprentices on their way back in.
âWhat shall I do?' he said. âShall I go to the police and tell them?'
âNot yet.' Not ever, if I can help it. âFor now, go to Janie and the baby.' I watched him going back up the stairs as the men came in.
âAll right now, then?' a craftsman asked me cheerfully.
I don't know what I answered, if anything, because I'd turned again to look at the love gift of clasped hands. There was a little corner of paper sticking out from under the base and I pulled at it, thinking: She's left him a letter. If so, I'd have to find a time to let him know when Janie wasn't there. It was an envelope, with neat italic handwriting that might well be Carol's and a name, only the name wasn't Walter Sutton's, it was her husband's.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Beside the road up to the Venns' house a farmer had already started ploughing, two great horses, one grey and one bay, drawing a gleaming line through silver-yellow stubble, a few seagulls following as if they expected herring to leap out of the furrow. The windows of the house were blank and dark, the sun not on them.
Rounding the curve in the drive I found three vehicles parked outside the front door, two gigs and the police motor car. The door was ajar. I knocked, got no answer and walked in. Part of my mind that still hadn't caught up with things still expected to hear Carol's steps on the stairs and see her looking over the banister at me. No sign or sound of anybody. I walked slowly towards the studio, pushed open the door. Adam was sitting on the sofa, staring at the woman in the tapestry.
âShe left you a note,' I said.
I gave it to him and watched while he read. He blinked, put it in his pocket.
âWhere was it?'
âIn the workshop. I think if things had gone differently she'd have gone back and taken it.'
âSo you were right, then,' he said, not looking at me. âHe was out there all the time. He killed Carol.'
âYes. But not Daisy.'
âThey'll hang him in any case when they find him, so does it matter?'
âDid you know she was going out last night to try to buy him off?'
âNo, I'd have stopped her.'
âShe had to steal her own money back from the workshop because Fardel was blackmailing her for anything he could get. She took the knife from there too. Up to the end, she might have been wondering whether to use it on herself or Fardel. Don't you think so?'
âShe wouldn't have killed herself. She promised me she wouldn't kill herself.'
âDid you know he was blackmailing her?'
He shook his head.
âBut the restâ¦?'
âYes ⦠afterwards. On the Tuesday morning afterâ¦'
âAfter we found Daisy's body in the cabinet. No wonder she broke down. So she confessed to you that she killed Daisy?'
âShe didn't mean to. She was trying to protect Daisy.'
Which fitted with Walter's story, but I didn't tell him so.
âPoor Daisy,' I said. âWe thought she was too timid to go anywhere on her own. But can you imagine how pleased she must have felt when Carol went to her and said her half-sister was in the village and wanted to meet her. So she left the other girls and went to the coppice and instead of her sister there was the man she never wanted to see again.'
The cruelty of it still amazed me.
âShe was trying to do her best for all of us,' Adam said.
âSo she brought the gun back and hid it in the summer-house. Did Felicia really just find that as she said?'
âYes.'
And I was the one who jumped to the wrong conclusions, making both Daniel and Felicia suspects. I wasn't pleased with myself and I couldn't be angry with Adam any more. He'd had to sit there and see both his brother and his mistress coming close to a murder charge, facing an intolerable choice.
âFelicia thought you'd killed Daisy,' I told him.
âI know.'
âAnd you said nothing when the police arrested Daniel?'
âIt's the hardest decision anybody could have to make. I wouldn't have let him go to trial. Neither of us would. We just hoped ⦠I suppose hoped something would happen.'
âThat I'd find Fardel? Pin the whole blame on him?'
âThe blame should be on him. He's a monster.'
I said nothing, noting that he hadn't mentioned that Sutton was there when Daisy was killed. Carol hadn't told him. Sutton was the person she'd been trying to protect all along. It was as if even after her death she'd passed that responsibility on to me â still posthumously arranging things.
âYou hate us all, don't you?' he said. âYou blame us all.'
âIs that the point now? The question is, what we're going to do. When the police catch Fardel, it will all come out anyway.'
âThey won't believe anything he says.'
âSo he'll be charged with two murders when he only committed one?'
A constable put his head round the door. Inspector Bull would be grateful for another word with Mr Venn. Also, the inspector had noticed me coming up the drive and would I please see him before I left. While I was waiting on my own I heard the sound of wheels on gravel, then Daniel's and Galway's voices in the hall sounding subdued, asking Annie where Adam was. Probably Galway had managed to arrange bail on compassionate grounds, but the charge against Daniel would soon be dropped in any case. He'd have to know why, but this time I wouldn't be the one who had to break the news. Every time I looked up, the woman who was so much like Carol was staring at me from the tapestry. It was almost a relief when the constable came back to say Inspector Bull was ready for me.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Our last meeting took place in the same upstairs room as the first one, with a different constable. It took a long time to get my statement down, from Fardel coming out of the carrier's cart to finding Carol's body. At the end of it he looked at me.
âWell, what are you hiding this time?'
âShe killed Daisy. She didn't mean to and I didn't know until this morning.'
It had been another decision. If they never caught Fardel, if Adam had decided to say nothing about the note, nobody need ever know. Daisy would be tidied out of all our lives. It was only after I'd made the decision and spoken that I noticed the corner of Carol's envelope sticking out from under the inspector's papers. Perhaps he'd meant me to see it. He was nodding.
âDid Mr Adam Venn tell you that?'
âYes,' I said. âJust now.'
Not a lie, as it happened, and it meant I could leave out Sutton. I asked him if they were still looking for Luke Fardel.
âOh, didn't I tell you? He was arrested on the road to Moreton-in-Marsh a couple of hours ago. Apparently he had a collision with a young lady on a horse.'
âBobbie Fieldfare.' I was certain of it. âWas she hurt?'
âI don't know the young lady's name, but there were no reports of any injuries. Not to her at any rate.'
It was the best news I'd had in weeks. I signed the statement and went downstairs and out. As I walked down the drive I saw two people in the garden. Daniel and Felicia walking slowly, heads down, a little distance between them. I guessed she was telling him about Adam and hoped for both their sakes that Carol had been right about her walking out of earthquakes.
Chapter Twenty-Four
I
FOUND BOBBIE SITTING ON MRS
Penny's doorstep in her brown check riding habit, with Mrs Penny peering round the curtains from inside as if under siege from some exotic and alarming animal.
âDon't you ever do what you're told?' I said.
âBut I did. You told me to look out for him. I'd have had him yesterday only he got away with the hook, when I tried to reel him in.'