Read Death of an Avid Reader Online
Authors: Frances Brody
âNo, and if he knew I had seen them or was showing them to you, he would be furious.'
âWhat do you make of them, and what do you think he makes of them?'
âI wish I knew. He is not popular, like Dr Potter. Perhaps he took it to mean that he should stay in his present situation and not let himself be considered for the post of vice chancellor.'
âThese notes are so amateurish, like a student prank.'
âI am glad to hear you say that. I would hate to think someone intended to kill him. Do you think Dr Potter received similar threats?'
âI don't know.'
âOf course, Theodore pretends he does not want the vice chancellorship. He was most annoyed when I talked about the possibility of moving, and what a difference it would make, how we would need to entertain and so on. He quite blew up on me.'
âWhat did he say?'
She threw out her chest and pulled back her shoulders, pursing her mouth to ape pomposity. âThis is what he said. “I am a geographer. My study is the Earth's crust and the glory of the crust distilled. Such an appointment would interfere with scholarship.” Or words to that effect.'
âThen why did he not withdraw from consideration?'
âBecause he would love to be vice chancellor. He would kill for the opportunity.' Her hand flew to her mouth. âI didn't mean that of course. He and Dr Potter never saw eye to eye on any matter, except evolution and even then they took different views, though don't ask me to explain beyond saying that Theodore allowed for God. Underneath it all, I believe they held each other in high regard. It made Theodore despair. He knew that Dr Potter would win any argument, not on logic or reason but because he was witty and charming.'
âThere can't be any connection between these threatening messages and Dr Potter's death, not if the two of them were on different sides on just about every question. Why would someone want to kill both of them?'
âI don't know, unless it is someone who dislikes university men.' Once Miss Merton begins, she keeps up the momentum. âMy brother is a dear man, but difficult. He thinks too much. It is like living in the midst of an electrical storm â unless an electrical storm is what we mere mortals call a storm. Is it? I don't know, but I should imagine the prickly tension, the oppressive sense of thunder about to clap, the expectancy of lightning, is much the same as living with a man who permanently thinks on a high plane. He loses things and accuses me of moving them â papers, lumps of metal, measuring devices, lengths of wire, never fossils, of course, which he keeps under lock and key, as if they were diamonds.'
âHe brings his work home?'
âAnd carries it back. Back and forth, hither and thither, sometimes trotting across to the university in the middle of the night. And as if geography wasn't enough now it is wireless sets. He is very interested in the latest developments in broadcasting, but he hates it as well. It will deteriorate into endless chatter, he says. No one will be able to think for the noise and the self-congratulation of nonentities who will creep into our living rooms across the wires. I ignore him most of the time. I have my kitchen, my favourite chair, my G K Chesterton.'
There is no point in trying to hurry Miss Merton. After a deviation in which she related the plot of a story she had just read, in which a Catholic priest turned out to be a fraud, Miss Merton finally said, âI can see you wonder what I am building up to.'
âIt crossed my mind that you may have something to tell me.'
âYou are correct.'
âAbout your brother?'
âNot exactly, or at least not only about him. About the discussions between him and Dr Potter about possible changes at the library, a removal to new premises. They were at loggerheads over whether the library should stay in its present premises or remove.'
âYes I did hear something about that. I thought they were of one mind.'
âSo they were, in the beginning. They were trusted to recommend a reasonable course of action, which would be to do nothing. Theodore was all for staying. At least he was consistent. Dr Potter changed his mind and became an enthusiastic remover. I am afraid people may draw the wrong conclusions and believe that their rivalry and disagreements may have led to violence. They were at daggers drawn over the matter.'
She had given me something to think about. In real life, no one would kill to have their way about a library staying where it is, or removing. Academics and people who work in libraries have a different set of priorities. I tried to allay her fears, even while my own increased.
âSurely they were friendly rivals. Academic men are like that are they not?'
âGood heavens no. Believe me, Mrs Shackleton they are not. It became very bitter, the question of staying in the present library building or removing. Dr Potter tried to persuade Theodore. He came and ate with us one evening, mutton pie. They started arguing before I brought in the jam roly poly and of course being so caught up in their own ideas, they forgot my presence. And then they went into the study, to talk, and raised their voices too.'
âWhen did Dr Potter change his mind?'
âI don't know. But this is written by Dr Potter. It was screwed in a ball. Theodore had thrown it in the coal scuttle.'
She placed a sheet of paper between us on the kitchen table. It was written in a crabbed hand.
Reasons for removal
Premises outlived usefulness 50 years ago.
Commercial Street now Leeds equivalent of Piccadilly, no longer suitable for professional purposes
Offer of moving expenses by prospective purchaser
Albion Place site perfect
Present building will never provide sufficient shelf space; lady proprietors must have novels. What abt yr own sister and G K Chesterton?
A look of deep sadness came into Miss Merton's eyes. âI never knew I told Dr Potter about my love for G K Chesterton.'
âOh I'm sure you did.' I had no other basis for this statement, except knowing that she told everyone a great deal about a whole manner of subjects.
She folded the paper and put it in her pocket. âTheodore was surprised that Dr Potter changed his mind so thoroughly.'
âWhy were they chosen, your brother and Dr Potter? I know they are clever and well thought of, but so are many of the proprietors. Some have far more leisure for committees.'
She shrugged. âWell, you know, my brother is a geographer so can be expected to be aware of shapes and how many shelves fit in a room, though in truth he is better about land, sea and rocks, and how many strata it takes to create a coal field. Dr Potter was a mathematician. It is surprising how many people think that subject qualifies a man for making pronouncements in relation to finances.'
âYes, I suppose so.'
âWhat are you thinking, Mrs Shackleton?'
âIt may be nothing, but the real reason Mrs Sugden and I came over was because we saw someone look through your front window and come into your back garden. He ran away when we came.'
She laughed. âIs that all? Some naughty children have been helping themselves to our logs. Theodore has locked the logs in the shed so we should be all right now.'
âThis was a man, a young man I think.'
âYou don't surprise me. They never grow up, not when it comes to making a bonfire. There's a lot of competition as to who will have the best fire.' She was trying to make light of the intruder, but I could see that she was upset.
If she wanted to make light of it, so would I. âYou're probably right. We're all a little on edge after what has happened.'
I crossed back to my own house wondering about her brother, the professor. Was he a potential victim, or a killer?
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
I must have raised my voice much higher than I imagined because the monkey, entertaining itself by sliding down the banister, Umberto's waistcoat under its abdomen, pricked up its ears and looked at me with saucer eyes.
Mrs Sugden called from the kitchen. âI'm in here.' She was standing at the table, slicing a very big potato. âThought I'd do egg and chips.'
âI don't want egg and chips.'
âYou have to eat.' She continued slicing.
âGet rid of that gun. I want it out of the house.'
âWasn't in the house. Was in my quarters.'
âYour quarters? This is my house. I will not have the place used as an arsenal.'
âI saw him off didn't I? Saved us all from being slaughtered in us beds.' She let out a cry of alarm.
She had sliced into her finger. Blood spurted across the chipped potatoes. I turned on the tap and manoeuvred her to the sink. âStick it under there.'
Blood and water swirled into the basin. âThe man was unarmed.'
âHe had a big stick. It looked like a rifle.'
âIf your eyesight is so bad that you can mistake a stick for a rifle you need a white stick yourself.'
âIt was dark.'
âAll the more reason to be cautious. You could have killed him.'
âI shot his leg. If I'd wanted to kill him, I'd have aimed at his head.'
âFor all I know you did, and missed.'
âI did not. I know how to shoot.'
âOh do you?'
âYes I do.'
âWhere did you learn?'
âI'm not telling.'
âSecret is it? Something you did in the war. Go on, tell me you're of Russian ancestry and you enlisted with Maria Bochkareva's Women's Battalion of Death.'
âI don't know what you're on about.'
âWhat then? No wonder you never talk about your past.' I produced a hanky and handed it to her. âWrap that round.'
She made a poor fist of folding the hanky.
âGive it to me.' I refolded the hanky. âI took you on trust and now you pull out a gun.'
âYou took me because I was the first one through the door and you were that busy listening for the telephone, waiting for a footstep on the path, you didn't pay attention to no one. You only set me on because your mother wanted to scoop you up and take you to Wakefield. This place was a pigsty.'
âYou're avoiding the question.'
âWhat question?'
âWhere did you get the gun and where did you learn to shoot?'
âMy husband Ronnie brought it back from the war.'
âLots of people brought guns back. They don't all carry bullets in their apron pocket and take pot shots.'
âIt wasn't a pot shot. Ronnie taught me, when we lived beyond Ripon.'
âWhy?'
âWhy do you think? We were planning to rob a bank if you must know.'
âI can believe that, after tonight.' I pulled out a chair. âSit down for heaven's sake.'
âAnyone else would give me smelling salts.'
âAnyone else would throw you out without notice. You probably did rob banks.'
âOh aye. That's why I'm still here. I'm waiting for people to calm down over the gold bullion I took from the Bank of England. Once they stop looking, I'll be off.' She stared at her finger. âIf I was a destitute organ grinder, you'd apply lint and a bandage.'
âAnd if your victim bleeds to death, the hangman will apply a rope to your neck.'
âI know what I'm doing with a gun. Ronnie taught me to shoot rabbits.'
âYou don't shoot rabbits with a pistol.'
âNever said you did. The pistol were an additional skill, to come in handy if we were waylaid by outlaws.'
âIn the North Riding?'
âWe had it in mind to emigrate, and to have some land of our own. I was saving for our passage. That's why I went to work in munitions.'
âI didn't know you worked in munitions.'
âI was at Barnbow, number two filling station.'
âThat was where Mrs Bradshaw worked, Sophia's mother.'
âWell before you ask, I didn't know her. That place was bigger than a small town.'
âIs that where you got your supply of bullets?'
âNo. Ronnie and his pal Fred brought them back.'
She looked so pale that I went into the dining room and brought a bottle of brandy from the cabinet. I poured her a glass. âWhen did Ronnie die?'
âTwo weeks before I came to see you about this job. Influenza.'
âI had no idea it was so recent.'
âI thought it best not to say, to give the impression it was in the past.'
That explained why for that first year I sometimes thought I had employed a silent ghost.
Taking a taper from the mantelpiece, she held it to the flame of the fire, crossed the kitchen and lit the gas ring. It popped into blue life. She put the chip pan on the ring.
I went across and switched off the gas. âSit down. Tell me how you found your way to somewhere beyond Ripon after you'd worked at Barnbow.'
She wound the white hanky tighter round her finger. It was turning red with blood. âBy the time Ronnie was demobbed, I'd been given notice at Barnbow. Neither of us could find work. His pal said why not do some potato picking for this farmer he knew, and that there was a caravan he had use of, a battered old thing on the edge of a field. It let in the rain. But we enjoyed it, being out in the open, picking spuds.'
âIt's a big jump from picking potatoes to robbing a bank.' I went to the sink, turned on the tap. âGive your finger another rinse.'
She let the water run over her finger, leaving swirls of red in the sink. âThey lost money on a horse. We were on our uppers. Again. After a fine week or so, it did nowt but rain, chucking it down day after day. Fields turned to mud. Summat in Ronnie snapped, as if it'd been waiting to snap, and then it did. I think it was Fred, to jolly him along, said what about robbing a bank. One of them things a person might say.'
The water was running clear. I turned off the tap, and took the iodine from the cupboard.
As I dabbed the iodine on her cut, she winced. âFred had meant it half in jest, about the bank, but Ronnie took it to heart. So Fred started to plan. Picked his bank, this bank in Ripon. He picked his day, the morning after market day. He and Ronnie would be there when the manager opened the door. They'd pull on balaclavas and be right behind him, gun in his back, not to hurt him, but to make him open the safe. I told them it was stupid, but they wouldn't stop talking about it, drawing diagrams. It was all that kept Ronnie going. He said my part was to be nearby with a shopping basket and take the money. No one would suspect a woman with a shopping basket.