Hamish Macbeth 18 (2002) - Death of a Celebrity (18 page)

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Authors: M.C. Beaton,Prefers to remain anonymous

BOOK: Hamish Macbeth 18 (2002) - Death of a Celebrity
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She leaned forward. “I’ll tell you, but you’re not to tell a soul, mind.”

“I cannae promise that, Jeannie, if it’s anything to do with the murder.”

“Nothing at all. I won the lottery.”

“Neffer! What did you get? Millions?”

“No, no, it was the second prize. Two hundred and fifty thousand pounds.”

“Barry must have been right sore at you taking off with the money.”

“He didn’t know! I always bought a lottery ticket when I visited Elsie in Strathbane. The minute I got the money, I left him. I’ve been wanting to leave him for years. I’m off to stay with my daughter in the States.”

“Good for you. So when did Barry come round? What time would that be?”

“It must have been about nine o’clock.”

“Was he ever violent?”

“Not with his fists, but he had a right nasty tongue on him. Picking on me from morning till night. I tell you, Hamish, the thought of never having to listen to that voice again makes me feel like a new woman.”

Hamish left her and headed back to Lochdubh and then on to Barry McSween’s croft. He heard a frantic bleating from the field closest to the croft house as he climbed down from the Land Rover. He sprinted across the field and found a sheep on its back, and he hoisted the animal upright. Then he wiped his hands on his uniform and headed for the house.

An unkempt and unshaven Barry McSween answered the door to him. “Barry, one of your beasts was out there up on its back,” admonished Hamish. “You should be out there, taking care of them.”

“Is that why ye came?” demanded Barry truculently. “To tell me one o’ thae useless beasts was on its back?”

“Let’s go inside,” said Hamish. “I’ve got more questions to ask you.”

Barry shrugged and led the way in. “The wife’s left me,” he said, sinking down into an armchair.

“That’s why I’m here,” said Hamish. “I’ve been down to see Jeannie, and she tells me that on the night Felicity Pearson was murdered, you were down in Strathbane, yelling outside her sister’s house.”

“Was I?” said Barry wearily. “I cannae remember. To tell the truth, I had the drink taken. I ‘member driving back and then going into a ditch near Sean Fitzpatrick’s house. I wanted him to get his tractor and pull me out, but he made me sleep in an armchair.”

“And what time would that be?” asked Hamish.

“Ask him,” said Barry. “I cannae remember.”

“I will. How did you feel when that television lassie, Amy Cornwall, got on to you about that old business when you were charged with dynamiting the salmon pool on the Crumley estate?”

“How the hell do you think I felt, man? They’d already made a right fool o’ me. I told her I would wring her neck if she came round here again.”

“I’ll need to take your guns, Barry.”

“It wasnae me.”

“Nonetheless, I need your guns. I’ll give you a receipt for them.”

He rose wearily and took a key out of a drawer. “You’ll find the gun cabinet over there on the wall. Help yourself.”

Hamish unlocked the gun cabinet, put on a pair of thin plastic gloves and took out two shotguns and a rifle. “Got a gun bag?”

“On the floor, over to your left.”

Hamish carefully lifted the guns into the gun bag and hoisted it on his shoulder. “I’ll take these over to headquarters.” He wrote out a receipt and handed it to Barry. “And I’ll be checking with Sean.”

“Do that,” said Barry, sunk in gloom. “Why did she leave me, Hamish? I was a good husband.”

“It might be a good idea to get cleaned up and go down there sober and ask her.”

Hamish drove straight to Sean Fitzgerald’s cottage. “I heard him go into the ditch about ten o’clock,” said Sean. “I made him black coffee and told himself to make himself comfortable in the armchair and sleep it off.”

“Have you heard anything else that might be of interest?” asked Hamish.

“Nothing at all. They’re not scared in the village. They’re convinced it was one of those television people.”

“I hope so,” said Hamish fervently. “I would hate it to be one of us.”

He drove on to police headquarters in Strathbane and turned the guns over to be sent to the lab for analysis. Then he went into the detectives’ room and asked if he could use a computer.

“Help yourself,” said Jimmy Anderson ungraciously. “Everything must be done to help Carson’s pet.”

“I bet you’re wishing Blair were back to keep me in my place,” said Hamish amiably. He sat down and typed out his report on Barry McSween.

When he had finished, Jimmy said, “That Finlay Swithers has been brought in for questioning, and his wife, too.”

“They can’t make anything stick,” said Hamish. “They’ve only got her word against his. She even might cave in and deny everything.”

“I doubt it. She turned up with a monster of a woman friend who seems determined to nail Swithers.”

“Doesn’t matter. It’s all too long ago.”

“So what are you going to do next?”

“Go and see the Harrisons, and I’m not looking forward to it. I don’t like her and I don’t like her sons. What about Mrs. McClellan’s body? When is it going to be released for burial?”

“I think in a few days’ time.”

“Give me a ring when you find out,” said Hamish. “The village wants to give her a big send-off.”

“Fat lot o’ good that’ll do her now,” said Jimmy heartlessly. “Oh, by the way, policewoman Maggie’s right sore at you. Says you took her out to dinner and romanced her and you had a girlfriend all along.”

“That’s rubbish,” said Hamish, turning red. “Where is she?”

“Downstairs in the ops room.”

Hamish clattered down the stairs and went into the ops room. Maggie was just taking off her headphones and saying to a colleague, “Thank goodness that shift’s over.” She stood up and turned round and saw Hamish.

“A word with you, Maggie, in private,” said Hamish sternly.

They walked out to the reception area. The desk sergeant looked at them curiously. “Outside,” ordered Hamish. “Just for a minute.”

They walked outside and Hamish turned to face her. “What’s all this rubbish you’ve been telling folk about me romancing you? I asked you out to find out the details of Felicity Pearson’s murder, that’s all.”

Maggie tossed her head defiantly. “You were sending out the vibes.”

“Oh, I was, was I?” demanded Hamish. “I thought you were an attractive girl, yes, but it was purely business.”

“So you say,” said Maggie.

“Yes, it was.”

“And is she your girlfriend?”

Hamish saw the easy way out and took it. “Yes, we’re going to get married.”

“I hope you’ll be very happy,” said Maggie stiffly, and she walked back into the police station.

Women, thought Hamish. I cannae figure them out at all. You want them, they don’t want you, you don’t want them, they want you. I’m sick of the lot of them.

He drove back through Lochdubh and out to Braikie and on to the Harrison boys’ croft.

They were loading feed out of the back of a battered old van when Hamish arrived.

Iain and Jamie Harrison turned to face him, their faces marred by identical scowls. “You been bothering Ma?” asked lain.

“Not yet,” said Hamish. “Where were you on Monday night, the night Felicity Pearson was murdered?”

They looked at each other and then Jamie said, “We were both down at Strathbane at the ten-pin bowling.”

“Times?”

“We got there about eight and left at eleven and came back here.”

“Witnesses?”

“Ask at the ten-pin bowling alley. It was full. Lots of people saw us.”

“I’ll do that. I’ll need your guns.”

“Whit for?” asked Jamie.

“I have to check they haven’t been fired. I’ll give you a receipt.”

Once again Hamish had to stack guns in a gun bag, hand out a receipt, and head back to Strathbane. The light was fading and frost was beginning to glitter on the road.

He handed over the guns and put in another report. But he did not go to the ten-pin bowling alley. Let Strathbane police check that out. He was weary and he still had to see Mrs. Harrison in the morning.

He raced back to the police station, anxious now about Lugs being out in the cold. But when he got there, the dog’s feeding bowl was full and there was no sign of Lugs.

He phoned the Italian restaurant but was told they hadn’t seen the dog. He walked along to Elspeth’s flat and rang the bell. “Have you come for Lugs?” she asked when she opened the door. “I went to the police station to speak to you. I found Lugs looking miserable and the night was getting cold, so I took him home.”

“You might have left a note,” grumbled Hamish.

“I did. I shoved one through the door. You probably walked over it with your great boots. Come in.”

She was wearing a short skirt and black stockings with her usual boots, and a man’s shirt under a blue sweater. She led the way upstairs to her flat.

Lugs rushed forward to greet his master. “Cosy here,” said Hamish, looking around. A fire was burning in an old Victorian tiled fireplace. The furniture looked shabby but comfortable. The bookcase was stuffed with paperbacks and the coffee table covered in magazines.

“Sit down and tell me how you got on,” said Elspeth. “I was just about to eat. Want some?”

Hamish’s stomach rumbled. He had not eaten since breakfast. “Aye, that would be grand. If you have enough, that is.”

Elspeth smiled at him. She had no intention of telling him that she had been cooking since she got home from work. She set the dining table in the corner of the room and then carried in a casserole and opened a bottle of wine.

“Come and sit down,” she said.

“What is it?” asked Hamish.

“Coq au vin. Lugs isn’t having any. He’s already had two pieces of liver and three large sausages.”

“If this goes on, he’ll never touch dog food again.” Hamish shook out his napkin and tackled his food.

Elspeth waited until he had cleared his plate and asked again. “How have you been getting on?”

Hamish sighed. “Interviewing a lot of people and getting nowhere.”

“Tell me about it?”

“You’ll keep it to yourself?”

“Haven’t I always?”

“Here goes, then.”

He told her about his interviews.

She leaned her elbows on the table. “I wonder…” she said.

“Wonder what?”

“Well, you say that Finlay Swithers is a wife beater and a drunk. But he enjoyed beating his wife. A man like that wouldn’t want to kill her, unless…” She took a sip of wine.

“Unless what?” demanded Hamish impatiently.

“Unless he had her heavily insured.”

TWELVE

Above thy deep and dreamless sleep

The silent stars go by
.

—Philips Brooks

H
amish stared at her. “There’s a thought. If he had, it would be interesting to find out. I’ve got to see Mrs. Harrison tomorrow and then I’ve got to go to Bonar Bridge again.”

“I’ll phone round the insurance companies for you. Tomorrow’s a quiet day,” said Elspeth.

“That’s good of you. I must say, Elspeth, you’re a right brick the way you’ve kept everything I’ve told you out of print.”

She laughed. “It’s easy. We’re a weekly family paper. People can get all the hard news from the nationals. What they want from us is the local stories—you know, school sports days, Highland Games, all with as many photographs as possible—and recipes and gossip. If I started to write what you’d told me, I would lose a good friend.”

Her eyes were very large and silver in her gypsy face. He felt a tug at his heart immediately followed by a cold feeling of distaste. Where had involvements with women ever got him? Better to keep it light and friendly.

He returned to the subject of Swithers. “Even if he did insure his wife heavily, we still can’t get him on it. Still, it would be nice to know. Because if he’s still got her heavily insured, he might be daft enough to try again. But hadn’t I better contact the insurance companies myself? They would tell a policeman but not you.”

“I have useful friends.”

“I’ll leave you to it and if you don’t get anywhere, I’ll take over.”

“Coffee?”

“No, I’d best be going. Thanks for a grand meal. What about me taking you out to the Italian restaurant tomorrow night?”

“Great. I’ll see you there at eight.”

Hamish stood up. “Come on, Lugs. Time to go home.”

She followed him to the door and then put her hand on his arm and looked up into his face. He ducked his head in an embarrassed motion and said gruffly, “Aye, well, good night then,” and clattered down the stairs with Lugs pattering after him.

The following morning he bearded Mrs. Harrison in her dingy shop. “Oh, you’re back,” she said sourly.

“What were you doing on Monday night, the day Felicity Pearson was killed?”

“I was at home at the croft. The boys were in Strathbane, as you know, at the bowling alley. I was watching the telly with my neighbour, Betty Murray. Go and ask her.”

“I will,” said Hamish. “Address?”

She gave it to him, her old eyes gleaming with mockery as if amused at his pursuit.

He left and checked with Betty Murray, who confirmed that Mrs. Harrison had been with her up until nearly midnight and added that Mrs. Harrison could not drive.

Hamish then drove across country to Bonar Bridge to see Jessie Gordon. But the house had a dead, empty look and no one answered the door. He was turning away when a woman next door called to him. “Are you looking for Jessie?”

“Aye.”

“She’s in hospital in Inverness. I found her lying in her garden and called the ambulance. I phoned the hospital. They said she might pull through. Bad case of alcohol poisoning.”

“When was this?” asked Hamish.

“I found her last Sunday morning. She must have been lying there all night, they said. It’s a wonder she’s still alive.”

Hamish thanked her and walked back to the Land Rover. Lugs gave a bark of welcome from the front seat. Hamish had decided to take him along for company.

When he got back to the police station, he sat at his desk and began to take notes. The Harrison boys’ alibi was not foolproof. They could have left the bowling alley, gone to the docks, and shot Felicity. He would need to wait for a report from the lab on the guns.

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