Read Guilt in the Cotswolds Online

Authors: Rebecca Tope

Guilt in the Cotswolds (24 page)

She let herself and Hepzie into the car, but sat motionless for another minute. She wanted very much to phone someone. Just to hear a voice and feel less alone with such a terrible burden of knowledge would be a great relief.

But then something better happened. A car appeared, and pulled up beside her. At the same moment, the door of the house opposite opened and Norah Cookham approached her. She wound her window down.

‘I called them,’ Norah said, nodding to where DI Higgins was getting out of the vehicle just arrived. ‘I didn’t want to, but I saw no alternative. I’ve had a long email from Rita, just now. And another from Brendan Teasdale. I saw you talking to his father. And then you came back, looking so downcast. I couldn’t just leave it all alone.’ She gave a rueful smile. ‘I expect I did the wrong thing again.’

‘What did Rita say?’ Higgins was close by now, and Thea opened the car door.

‘She understands that the trouble is all her doing. She’s shouldering all the blame. She mentioned you. Said you’d been a very good listener and she was hoping you might be able to put a few things right.’ Norah looked at Higgins with exaggerated deference. ‘Inspector,’ she said. ‘I have a feeling this lady might want to talk to you. She’s carrying quite a load, I believe.’

Then she retreated to her house again, and nobody tried to stop her.

‘She called us, and I’ve dashed over here, and now she just leaves us to it,’ said Higgins, rubbing his head. ‘That’s not the way it’s meant to go.’

‘Were you at the barn?’

‘I was, as it happens. Wrapping it all up for the night. Nothing more to be gained there.’

‘Have you got any new evidence?’

He sighed, and gave her a schoolmasterly look. ‘You know I can’t answer that.’

‘I take that as a no,’ she said. ‘You haven’t arrested Brendan Teasdale, have you?’

‘We haven’t arrested anyone. I doubt if we’re going to. If we did, it might well be you, for wasting police time.’

She didn’t argue. ‘That’ll please Millie, at least. The thing is, Drew and I were wrong. That means you were right. Nobody murdered the wretched man. He brought it all on himself.’ She deliberately avoided looking at Martin’s car, hoping he wouldn’t come back from the church just yet.

‘And yet his head contained fragments of wood. How did that happen?’

‘Have a close look at a low beam up in the roof. I think perhaps he bumped his own head up there, and that made him wobbly. And then he fell off and died. Accidentally.’

Higgins scowled at her, more angry than she had ever seen him. ‘Which would have been our conclusion, if we had never listened to you.’

‘I know. I’m sorry,’ she said humbly. ‘I feel awful about it.’

‘Well, that’s the way it goes sometimes,’ he said reluctantly. ‘Nobody’s really guilty, after all.’

Nobody except Rita and Martin and me and Drew and Brendan and even Bloody Norah,
thought Thea.

She didn’t phone Drew, but drove down to Somerset, arriving just before nine o’clock. The children were in bed, and he was showing signs of following them before very long. He opened the door before she could knock, and swept her in without a word.

He made her some coffee and stood back while she emptied the last of some dry dog food into a dish for Hepzie. It was gone in seconds. Then all three of them sank into Drew’s old sofa, and gradually relaxed.

‘I have to hear the end of the story,’ he said after a little while.

‘The short version is that Richard picked a fight with Martin at the barn, and fell off the platform. The fall killed him. We were wrong from the start. He wasn’t murdered.’

‘But neither did he commit suicide.’

‘True.’ She went quiet, before going on, ‘The real guilt lies with Rita, originally.’ She explained. ‘But Richard was a fool to hold onto childhood jealousy like that, just
because Rita had a special affection for Martin. Richard didn’t lose by it. Finding out who his father really was didn’t help at all. It just reawakened all the same old grievances. He put everything onto Martin, quite unfairly. He wrecked his marriage for nothing. He was an idiot.’

‘You’re too hard on him. Where does Brendan fit in? And Millie?’

‘Nowhere, really, as I understand it. They’ve both been affected by the animosity between the half-brothers. Brendan was the key to Richard discovering the secret about his father. Millie has been too self-absorbed to notice her father’s state of mind. She might have done something to help him if she’d been a better sort of person. She’s just a giddy girl, enjoying the reflected glory of her famous friend.’

‘So Norah turned out to be a goodie. What else?’

‘Remember that picture from the attic? Martin’s got it in the back of his car. Or something very like it.’

‘I suppose it does rather symbolise the whole miserable story. The two sisters, with the world at their feet. Men were going to fall for them, they’d marry well and remain good friends. And then one of them dies leaving a sad little boy to be rescued by the other.’

‘And a useless man who fathered two boys and didn’t do a bit of good to either of them.’

‘Poor Rita,’ sighed Drew. ‘She’s the one I care most about.’

Thea turned her head and looked at him. She had heard depths and echoes in his voice. ‘What are you thinking?’

‘That I have a few things in common with her. I’m in danger of making the same mistake, aren’t I? Favouring one child over the other. Building up all sorts of future trouble as a result. I’ve got to change before it’s too late. There’s no excuse for it. It began badly, and I never did enough to put it right.’

‘I’ll help you. There’s plenty of time. Kids can be very forgiving.’

‘Unless they turn out like Richard Wilshire. Poor Rita,’ he said again.

‘I know. She’s in a bad way. I doubt it’ll be long before you have to do her funeral.’

He sat up straighter, one hand clamped decisively onto the arm of the sofa. ‘Then that settles it,’ he said. ‘We move heaven and earth to open the Broad Campden burial ground within the next six months. No more procrastination or excuses. Whatever it takes, that’s what we’ll do. I’ll phone Andrew Emerson tomorrow and tell him he’s got a job if he still wants it.’

‘I’ve just realised you’ll be Drew and Andrew. That’s funny.’

‘We can make a thing of it, somehow. I think he’s going to be a keeper. We’ll need to generate enough business to justify him, of course.’

‘We?’ she echoed. ‘That’s definite, is it?’

‘If that’s what you want.’

‘Of course it is. My life is worthless, pointless, empty without you.’ A tear slid down her cheek. ‘I was afraid I’d blown it this time.’

‘So was I. I don’t know how I could have just gone off and left you the way I did this afternoon.’

‘You had no choice. I should have come with you.’

‘We do what we have to do. You know what I keep thinking about?’

‘What?’

‘The way you spoke up to that Mr Shipley. Remember? At the Broad Campden house. You gave him a clear manifesto for the rest of our lives. I keep hearing your words in my head.’

‘Well, we’d better be sure to live up to it then,’ said Thea.

No more house-sitting
, she thought joyfully. Instead, a whole new chapter, working with Drew, the green undertaker. Any lurking apprehensions about dead bodies, demanding clients, night-time calls and financial straits were quickly dismissed. It would be
fun
, she decided. The Cotswolds had earned a large place in her heart over the past three years, despite encountering so many dark seething reasons for committing murder lying behind the handsome stone facades, the ubiquitous human mixture of malice and benevolence causing so much confusion. None of that would change, but with Drew by her side, she might achieve a better relationship with the place.

With Drew by her side, she repeated to herself, what could possibly go wrong?

 

 

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T
HE
C
OTSWOLD
M
YSTERIES

 

A Cotswold Killing

A Cotswold Ordeal

Death in the Cotswolds

A Cotswold Mystery

Blood in the Cotswolds

Slaughter in the Cotswolds

Fear in the Cotswolds

A Grave in the Cotswolds

Deception in the Cotswolds

Malice in the Cotswolds

Shadows in the Cotswolds

Trouble in the Cotswolds

Revenge in the Cotswolds

Guilt in the Cotswolds

 

T
HE
W
EST
C
OUNTRY
M
YSTERIES

 

A Dirty Death

Dark Undertakings

Death of a Friend

Grave Concerns

A Death to Record

The Sting of Death

A Market for Murder

 

T
HE
L
AKE
D
ISTRICT
M
YSTERIES

 

The Windermere Witness

The Ambleside Alibi

The Coniston Case

The Troutbeck Testimony

The Hawkshead Hostage

Allison & Busby Limited
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London W1T 6DW
allisonandbusby.com

First published in Great Britain by Allison & Busby in 2016.
This ebook edition published in Great Britain by Allison & Busby in 2016.

Copyright © 2016 by R
EBECCA
T
OPE

The moral right of the author is hereby asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

All characters and events in this publication other than those clearly in the public domain are fictitious and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition being imposed on the subsequent buyer.

A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

ISBN 978-0-7490-1909-9

 

If you enjoyed
Guilt in the Cotswolds
,
read on to find out about more books
by Rebecca Tope…

 

THE WINDERMERE WITNESS
THE FIRST LAKE DISTRICT MYSTERY

 

Following a personal tragedy, florist Persimmon ‘Simmy’ Brown has moved to the beautiful region of the Lake District to be nearer her charismatic parents. Things are going well, but the peace she has found is shattered when, at the wedding of a millionaire’s daughter, the bride’s brother is found brutally murdered in the lake.

 

As one of the last people to talk to Mark Baxter alive, Simmy gradually becomes involved with the grief-ridden and angry relatives. All seem to have their fair share of secrets and scandals. When events take another sinister turn, Simmy becomes a prime witness and finds herself at the heart of a murder investigation. The chief suspects are the groom and his closely knit band of bachelor friends. They are all intimidating, volatile and secretive – but which one is a killer?

A DIRTY DEATH
THE FIRST WEST COUNTRY MYSTERY

 

When irascible farmer Guy Beardon meets a very dirty death in his own farmyard, at first it seems like an accident – despite the fact that he was widely disliked. Only his daughter Lilah is prepared to defend his memory. And when, slowly, she begins to suspect foul play, no one is eager to help her investigate. Suspicion becomes certainty when two more deaths occur – both of them are unmistakably murder.

 

The difficulty lies in discovering who, among Guy’s many enemies, hated him enough to want him dead – and who went on killing to conceal the truth. There is certainly no shortage of suspects and it falls to local policeman Den Cooper to investigate the mysterious deaths …

MORE COSY CRIME AT ALLISON & BUSBY
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With her intimate knowledge of the private lives of those connected to the case, Rose must work hard not to jump to conclusions about the innocence of those she knows. As the crimes become more serious, both newcomers to the area and familiar faces become suspects. But who should Rose – and Jack – believe?

BURIED IN CORNWALL
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Rose Trevelyan lives peacefully in Cornwall after the death of her husband, working as an artist and photographer. But when she hears terrified screams as she paints the rugged Cornish countryside, and a local woman is reported missing, Rose finds herself suddenly caught at the centre of a police investigation.

 

With so many people who trust her, Rose is – reluctantly, at times – privy to the secrets of many. When the things she is told in confidence appear connected to the investigation, Rose must decide how far the bonds of friendship reach.

CAUGHT OUT IN CORNWALL
JANIE BOLITHO

 

When Rose Trevelyan sees a young girl being carried away by someone who appears to be her father, she thinks nothing of it. Until, that is, the appearance of a frantic mother who cannot find her child. Beth Jones is only four years old, and her mother is adamant that the man Rose saw taking her away must be a stranger.

 

Wracked with guilt for not intervening, Rose once again finds herself entangled in a criminal investigation. As time passes, it becomes clear that the chances of getting Beth back unharmed are very bleak indeed …

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