Agatha Raisin: As The Pig Turns (8 page)

Hadn’t Dolly Parton once said something like ‘It takes an awful lot of money to look this cheap,’ thought Agatha, for there was something rather
tawdry
about Amy that
day. She was wearing high-heeled pink shoes, a tight pink sweater and pink pedal pushers.

‘So it was not your husband that suggested you have plastic surgery?’

‘No, of course not.’

‘But he suggested it to his previous wife. Is he a bully?’

‘Oh, no, my Bunchie’s the sweetest, dearest man.’

‘Okay. Let’s get back to Gary. You said he gave you a lot of money for the divorce. A cheque?’

‘No, it was cash.’

‘How much?’

‘I c-can’t remember.’


Amy!

‘It was about ten thousand in an envelope. He said, “Take it and come with me to the lawyer’s, but don’t mention the money. Tell him you don’t want anything from
me. Get it!” So I went along with it.’

‘But you surely had a lawyer of your own.’

‘There was one in the same building.’

‘Who are these lawyers?’

‘Crumley, Fatch and Blinder.’

‘And where are they?’

‘They’re out in the industrial estate. Lot thirty-one.’

‘That’s a damned odd place for lawyers’ offices. But you produced the divorce papers when you went to register your marriage to Tom Richards.’

‘That’s the oddest thing. I couldn’t find them anywhere. I asked Gary and he said he gave them to me and I must have lost them. My passport was still in my maiden name and
Bunchie said that and my birth certificate would be enough.’

‘Didn’t you go to the lawyer and ask for a copy?’

‘Bunchie said there was no need to bother.’

‘When Gary gave you the ten thousand, where did he get it from? Did he have a safe?’

‘Nothing like that. He just produced an envelope. He said he wanted the house for himself.’

‘And where did Bunchie really meet you?’

‘At the supermarket. I knew the money wouldn’t last all that long these days. I got a room at the Y.’

‘Amy, think carefully. Gary did not earn much as a copper. How could he be getting extra money?’

‘I dunno. He kept telling me he was doing a lot of overtime.’ Amy waved her slim arm and a heavy silver bracelet with several objects dangling from it flashed in the electric
light.

‘Here’s an odd thing. May I see your bracelet?’

‘Okay. I had a friend make it up for me. She’s ever so clever. She just uses all little odd bits of silver.’

Agatha studied the bracelet carefully, turning it in her fingers. ‘There’s a key here,’ she said. ‘An odd-shaped key. It looks like my bank deposit key.’

‘Well, I never.’

‘Where did Gary bank?’

‘I think it was at the Mircester and General.’

‘Did Gary make a will?’

‘Yes, I’ve got a copy of it somewhere. It’s one of those wills you do yourself. He left everything to me, but under my maiden name, Amy Tubb. He said he made it out just before
we got married.’

‘And your passport is still in your maiden name?’

‘Yes, I never got around to changing it.’

‘Right. Get your coat. We’ll try the bank first. Bring the will and the death certificate and your passport.’

Agatha waited impatiently while Amy teetered about on her high heels, opening and shutting drawers. Eventually she found everything in a file in the bottom drawer of her husband’s
desk.

 

Chapter Five

Once in the office, relieved to find it deserted except for Mrs Freedman, Toni turned to the secretary. ‘Mrs Freedman, I’ve given Agatha a month’s notice.
Should I type out a letter?’

‘Oh, dear. If she knows, then I don’t think you should bother. Where will you go?’

‘Probably to another detective agency or maybe to the police.’

Mrs Freedman peered over her spectacles at Toni. ‘There isn’t another agency around to match this one. If you join one of the lesser ones, it’ll be dogsbody work, you being so
young. Then, there’s the police. Off to Hendon or somewhere for training. Maybe refused on the grounds of your colour.’

‘What?’

‘One of my nephews got turned down. Gloucester police have to take a quota of Asians and Jamaicans and so on. Ethnic diversity, it’s called. He’s with the transport police in
London now. Even if you got a job here, don’t judge them by Bill Wong. Lot of chauvinist pigs, that’s what they are. If you keep them off, they’ll damn you as a lesbian and start
putting nasty things in your locker.’

‘Mrs Freedman, I think your loyalty to Agatha is why you are making things up.’

‘Yes, loyalty’s a great thing,’ said Mrs Freedman. She put her glasses back on her small nose and began typing again.

Agatha rang Toni and told her that she was with Amy and that they would meet her in the square. Although she felt there was no need for the girl to come along, Agatha was
determined to involve her whenever anything that looked important came up, in the hope that Toni might change her mind and stay on.

‘Where are we going?’ asked Toni breathlessly as she got into the back seat of Agatha’s car.

‘The Mircester and General Bank,’ said Agatha. She explained rapidly about the key.

They all got out of the car and entered the bank, which stood between two shuttered shops. More failed businesses, thought Agatha. Town high streets are dying and all because we’ve become
lazy and prefer to do our shopping in one go at one of the big supermarkets on the outskirts. It was also the fault of various councils who had a penchant for turning high streets into pedestrian
areas and then charging high fees for parking at the nearest available car park. No one wanted to walk any more, carrying heavy bags of groceries and moving from little shop to little shop. Maybe
in the end, high streets would be turned into museums with people in twentieth-century dress parading up and down.

Agatha asked to speak to the manager. They were told to wait.

Snow began to patter against the high windows. I should have bought snow tyres, mourned Agatha, but they’d take so long to arrive at the garage, and surely spring would come soon.

At last they were summoned to the manager’s office. He was small, balding and fussy.

After Amy had explained her visit, he examined the will, the passport and the key with maddening slowness, occasionally shaking his head and murmuring, ‘Dear, dear.’

Agatha, who had been painfully trying to practice tolerance, burst out with, ‘What? What’s taking you so long? How long are we supposed to sit here waiting while you
procrastinate?’

‘I have tae be sure,’ he said crossly. ‘There are a lot o’ bad, bad people about. Oh, yes.’

‘You’re not from Auchtermuchty, or one of these godforsaken places?’

‘I am from Stornoway and proud o’ it. I will get Gladys to take ye to the safe-deposit box.’ He pressed a buzzer on his desk.

A blonde, so pale she looked as if she had been bleached all over, told them to follow her. They descended stairs to a cavernous basement. Gladys opened one of the doors with two keys.

‘What is the number of the box?’ she asked.

‘I don’t know,’ wailed Amy.

Back up the stairs again to wait for the manager, Mr Macleod. Then much humming and hawing and form signing before the number was released. Gladys appeared again like a pale ghost leading them
to the nether regions. ‘You just shut the outside door behind you when you leave,’ she said. ‘It will lock automatically.’ She pulled out the box and set it on a metal table
in the middle of the room and then left them to it. Agatha drew out three pairs of latex gloves and said they’d better put them on.

‘Here, you do it.’ Amy handed Agatha the key.

Agatha unlocked the box and opened the lid.

The three women stared down at the contents in amazement. There were four passports, all in different names but all bearing the late Gary Beech’s photograph. A pair of underpants, which
Agatha unwrapped, revealed a small pistol. All that was left in the box was a small leather bag with a drawstring top. Toni opened it and peered in and then shook some of the contents out on her
hand.

‘Pebbles,’ said Amy bitterly. ‘What’s he doing putting nasty dirty stones in a safe-deposit box?’

‘Wait a bit,’ said Toni excitedly. ‘I think they’re uncut diamonds. I saw a programme on diamonds, and this is what they look like in the raw. We’d better take them
to the police. They could be conflict diamonds.’

‘What are you talking about?’ demanded Agatha crossly, forgetting that she had resolved to be sweetness and light to Toni on every occasion.

‘Conflict diamonds or blood diamonds are used to fund rebel groups in places like Sierra Leone or Angola.’

‘But what on earth would a village copper be doing getting involved in anything at all going on in Africa?’ asked Agatha.

‘Probably nothing,’ said Toni. ‘Maybe just a criminal payoff for something. We’d better take this lot to the police.’

‘Must we?’ said Amy. ‘I mean, if they’re rough, they could be polished up by a jeweller friend of mine.’

‘No,’ said Agatha firmly. ‘They’ve got to be examined by the police.’

Amy’s eyes were suddenly as hard as the uncut diamonds. ‘First, it’s my property, see? I’m taking it and that’s that.’

‘We’ll have to report it nonetheless,’ said Toni.

‘Don’t rate your lives very high, do you?’ sneered Amy.

‘You knew what Gary was up to all along,’ said Agatha. ‘Out with it!’

‘Get stuffed. You’re fired.’ Amy swept everything into a capacious handbag and marched out.

‘Right,’ said Agatha as Amy flagged down a cab outside the bank. ‘We’d better get to police headquarters.’

‘I think we should follow her,’ said Toni.

‘Why? She’s got a cosy marriage with a rich husband.’

‘I think she only married him because he was rich, and it does appear he’s a bit of a bastard.’

Agatha wanted to argue but remembered in time that Toni’s value as a detective was often her clear and practical view of things. ‘All right,’ she said. ‘Let’s see
what she’s going to do.’

But when they arrived at Amy’s house, her car had gone and the house had an empty air.

They waited an hour or so, and then Toni said, ‘I think, after all, we’d better go to the police. My bet is she’s not going near that husband of hers.’

Agatha was sick and tired of being interrogated by the time she left the police station and dropped Toni off at her flat. The gritters had been out, as a supply of salt had
arrived from abroad, so she was able to make it back to her cottage without slipping. There was a note for her on the kitchen table from Charles: ‘Can’t stand this beastly weather. Gone
to the South of France. Luv, Charles.’

Agatha, still worried about Toni, felt lonely. She called the vicarage but was told that Mrs Bloxby was visiting a relative in Bexhill in Sussex. She then phoned Roy Silver to see whether he
would like to visit at the weekend, but he said he was going to a simply fabulous party and wouldn’t be free.

Her cats were sleeping peacefully. The house seemed unnaturally quiet.

She felt in the need of action. There was a bag of empty cans of various sorts on the kitchen floor, along with a crate of empty bottles. The council had supplied householders with black boxes
for the tin cans and the bottles, but Agatha had lost both. She would take them down to Tesco’s supermarket in Stow-on-the-Wold and dump the lot in their special bins and then draw some money
from the hole in the wall. The snow was light and looked as if it were about to slacken off. A thin disk of a moon was appearing behind the clouds. The village of Carsely was shrouded in snow,
wrapped in snow and wrapped in silence. Agatha glanced at her watch. It was just after midnight.

She drove down to the back of the supermarket. The bottles went into the bins with the satisfying sound of breaking glass. Must be a hooligan inside all of us, thought Agatha.

Then she got rid of the tin cans. She drove carefully round to the cash machine, bumping over the ruts of frozen snow. Supermarket car parks were private property, and she had been told that if
they cleared them themselves and someone slipped and fell, they would have to pay compensation.
But
if someone slipped and fell in the uncleared car park, it was their own bloody fault.

She parked in front of the cash machine. Beside the cash machine and beyond a stack of supermarket trolleys were two rides for small children. One periodically emitted bursts of supposedly
childish laughter, but Agatha thought it sounded more like malicious elves watching someone come to grief.

She drew out a hundred pounds and was just tucking it away in her wallet when her eye caught what looked like a heap of clothes lying between the two small rides for children.

Why me? wondered Agatha. If that’s some drunk sleeping it off, I’ll need to get help for the poor sod.

She walked round the row of trolleys and bent down. Whoever it was was completely covered by a blanket. Agatha pulled the blanket away from the face.

The moon shone down. The hellish children’s voices cackled out. And Agatha stared down at the dead face of Amy Richards.

Inside the supermarket, although it was closed, she could see the shelf stackers at work.

She hammered on the glass doors. Faces turned towards her. A security man came to the door and waved at her to go away.

Agatha took out her notebook and printed in large letters: DEAD BODY IN CAR PARK.

 

Chapter Six

Agatha had to stop the security guard from trying to resuscitate Amy. ‘Leave her,’ she yelled, dragging him off. ‘Any idiot can see she’s stone dead.
You’re tampering with evidence.’

Feeling sick and shaken, Agatha, who had phoned the police, heard the wail of sirens, and then police cars, marked and unmarked, poured into the car park. A grim-faced policewoman whom Agatha
did not know began to question her and then said she was to go in a police car to headquarters and wait there to make a statement.

Agatha phoned her lawyer, a mild man called inappropriately Bill Sykes, and told him to meet her at headquarters. Agatha had previously used him to make out her will. He protested that he did
not handle criminal law, to which Agatha snapped, ‘Then get down here and learn.’

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