Read Mrs. Pargeter's Plot Online
Authors: Simon Brett
Table of Contents
The Mrs. Pargeter Mystery Series
A NICE CLASS OF CORPSE
MRS., PRESUMED DEAD
MRS. PARGETER'S PACKAGE
MRS. PARGETER'S POUND OF FLESH
MRS. PARGETER'S PLOT
MRS. PARGETER'S POINT OF HONOUR
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This title first published in Great Britain in 1996
by Macmillan London Ltd
ebook edition first published in 2012 by Severn Select an imprint of Severn House Publishers Limited
Copyright © 1996 Simon Brett.
All rights reserved.
The moral right of the author has been asserted.
A CIP catalogue record for this title is available from the British Library.
ISBN-13: 978-1-4483-0020-4 (epub)
Except where actual historical events and characters are being described for the storyline of this novel, all situations in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to living persons is purely coincidental.
This ebook produced by
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Falkirk, Stirlingshire, Scotland.
To Beth Porter,
WHO HAD FAITH
âAnd this, Gary, is where I'll be living,' said Mrs Pargeter, as the limousine came to a halt by the gate.
âVery nice position.' The young chauffeur tipped his cap back and looked appreciatively up at the four-acre plot. It was still only a field, sloping indulgently down towards them. In a central position â surrounded by cement mixers, diggers and strapped piles of bricks â the foundations of a substantial dwelling were outlined by wooden posts and trenches. When it was completed, the house would command magnificent views over the valley below. Its outlook would be green, pastoral, with artlessly scattered clumps of trees in the folds of hills, quintessentially English.
âNever really seen you as a country person, Mrs Pargeter,' Gary went on.
âDon't know till you try, do you? That's true of everything.' The plump white-haired widow chuckled. âMight be just the thing for my declining years â little old lady devoting her life to breeding roses and bottling chutney.'
âCan't see it.'
âWell, no, nor can I â not instinctively, like. But you never know.' The lids wrinkled round Mrs Pargeter's violet-blue eyes as she tried to make the effort of imagination. Not achieving instant results, and not too worried by the lack of them, she moved cheerily on. âIt's only just over an hour from London, anyway. I can always escape when the birdsong and pure country air become too oppressive. Get back to my natural environment â where I can hear the birds cough, eh?'
âSuppose so, yes. I like the country,' said Gary, âthat's why Denise and me've moved out â but I reckon it might be a bit quiet for you, after the life you've led.'
Mrs Pargeter was imperturbable, as she smoothed down the bright silk skirt over her substantial thighs. âIt'll be fine. Anyway, it makes sense â economically. I've never wanted any of my money just to lie idle.' A little blush. âAnd it makes sense sentimentally, too.' She responded to Gary's quizzical look. âMy husband bought the plot years ago. One of his pipe dreams, this was. Always planned that we'd build a house here for our retirement, but . . . it was not to be.'
The chauffeur nodded soberly. âHe was a saint, your husband, Mrs Pargeter.'
She indulged herself in a moment of dewy-eyed retrospection. âOh yes. Yes, he was.'
âMind you, can't see him having found much to do in the country either.'
âThere was a side of Mr Pargeter you never saw,' Mrs Pargeter reproved. âA quieter, less flamboyant side. A side that would really have responded to country life and country pursuits.'
Gary chuckled. âHuntin', shootin' and fishin', eh? Well, I can believe he might have enjoyed the shootin' bit, but . . .' In the rear-view mirror he caught the glacial violet-blue stare from his employer's eyes, and the words dried up.
Further embarrassment was fortunately prevented by the approach from the opposite direction of a mud-spattered green Range Rover. âAh, this'll be Concrete,' said Mrs Pargeter.
The Range Rover stopped almost bumper to bumper with the limousine, and a burly man in a checked shirt got out. He had thinning ginger curls and skin the colour of the bricks that were his stockin-trade. He came forward with hand outstretched to greet Mrs Pargeter as she emerged from the limousine.
âBloody marvellous to see you, Mrs P. How've you been?'
âGreat, thank you, Concrete. Don't think you know Gary . . .'
The chauffeur, also by now out of the car, shook the builder's hand heartily. âNever actually met, have we, Concrete . . . but I've heard a lot about you.'
âNothing bad, I hope?'
âNo, no. Good news all round. Everyone who worked for Mr Pargeter said Concrete Jacket was a real craftsman.'
âOh.' The builder shrugged modestly. âWell . . . always did my best.'
âPeople still talk about that tunnel you built under the Nat West bank in Chelmsford. And the safe deposit box you fixed into the side of Chelsea Barracks.'
The builder's face turned a deeper brick-red. âYeah, I was quite pleased with those, and all.'
âBest builder around, I heard.'
Concrete Jacket shrugged again. In spite of his embarrassment, he was enjoying this.
Mrs Pargeter's next words, however, cut him down to size. âBest builder around â when you
are
around, yes.' Concrete looked aggrieved as she explained to Gary: âTrouble with most builders â they're always away doing other jobs. With Concrete, though, he was always being
put
away after doing other jobs.'
âDid have a run of bad luck,' the builder conceded.
âBad luck? You were in and out of prison like Lord Longford.'
âWell, yes, it was difficult. After your husband died, I got in with some bad company andâ'
âIt meant all the jobs you started kept having two-or three-year interruptions in the middle of them.'
âAll right, I know. But that's all changed now. Totally different. I tell you, now I've started on this house for you, Mrs Pargeter, nothing â nothing on earth â is going to interrupt it till the job's good and finished.'
âI hope you're right,' she said darkly.
âTrust me.'
They paced through the relief map formed by the foundations. Concrete's steel-toed boots splashed unconcerned, while Mrs Pargeter's high heels and Gary's shiny black shoes negotiated the mud more circumspectly. As she looked around, Mrs Pargeter felt a little bubble of excitement at the thought of the house that would rise from these footings. It would be her dream home, her bolt-hole, a place that really expressed her personality. âSo, Concrete, I just walk out of the sitting room
here
into the dining room
here
for an elegant dinner . . .'
âExactly.' The builder was all smiles now he was back in her good books. âNot forgetting to pick up a nice bottle of plonk from the wine cellar.'
âThere's a wine cellar?'
âYou bet.' He pointed to a square opening in the ground which was covered over by a couple of planks. âYour husband always used to say every house should have places where you can hide stuff.'
Mrs Pargeter smiled ingenuously. âDid he? I wonder what on earth he meant . . .'
Concrete Jacket went on, âAnd I can do the parquet flooring lovely so's nobody'd ever know the entrance was there.'
Still looking innocent, she asked, âWhat would be the point of that, Concrete?' She moved forward, as if to lift up the covering. âNow I'd really like to see howâ'
Concrete tried to intercept her. âOh, I wouldn't look under there ifâ'
But he was too late. Mrs Pargeter had shifted the planks aside and was looking down into the void. âSo this is going to be . . .?'
But something she saw in the embryo wine cellar caused her words to evaporate into silence.
The builder and the chauffeur moved quickly forward and they too looked down.
âOh, my God,' Gary breathed softly.
In a pool of water that had gathered at the bottom of the bricked-in space lay a man's body. His hands had been tied behind him and in the nape of his neck was the discoloured puncture of a gunshot wound.
âOh, my good Gawd,' said Concrete Jacket. âI never knew I was going to find that here.'
Mrs Pargeter looked at him, and the builder's eyes shifted away from her piercing gaze. She was about to speak, but was distracted by the sound of approaching sirens. They all looked down the hill to where two police cars were screeching to a halt beside the limousine and the Range Rover.
âWell,' said Gary, picking up on Concrete's last words. âIt looks as if someone else knew you were.'
The limousine drew up on a double yellow line outside a betting shop in South London. âI'll come in with you,' said Gary, as he helped Mrs Pargeter out of the back.
âSure. Car be all right here, will it? Don't want to waste all your profits in parking tickets, do you, Gary?'
âBe fine.' The chauffeur reached into the back door's side pocket, extracted two items and placed them on the shelf under the rear window. They were a copy of the current
Police Gazette
and a Metropolitan Police Commissioner's cap.
Mrs Pargeter grinned and led the way into the betting shop.
It was mid-afternoon and the assembled punters perched in excitement, or lounged in lethargy, on round-topped stools. She was reminded of Dr Johnson's description of a second marriage as the triumph of hope over experience. The wall-speakers crackled with the latest betting; on coloured monitors horses milled around starting stalls; the air was heavy with cigarette smoke and disappointment. The litter of crumpled and torn betting slips on the floor bore witness to the continuing and inexorable rise in the bookmakers' profits.
Mrs Pargeter's high heels picked their way daintily through the debris. Gary's neat grey uniform and peaked cap attracted more attention than her ample figure in its bright silk dress. In spite of her handsome appearance and colourful taste in clothes, Mrs Pargeter rarely looked out of place in any environment.