I'm feeling a little 'Charles Dickensesque' with this weekly story telling. Thank you for all the positive feedback so far. You don't realise how important it is to me! Anyway, here we go with Part 3 - a couple of new characters and a hint of something not quite right...
Police
Sergeant Keiran Phelps glanced briefly at the body on the slab. He opened his
notebook and wrote, ‘5/6/19’ at the top of a fresh page
'What do you
reckon?' he said, pointing his biro at the body.
'Definitely
dead,' said the pathologist.
Sergeant
Phelps forced a tight-lipped smile. ‘Ha ha. Cause?’
‘Internal
bleeding mostly.’
‘Mostly?’
The
pathologist nodded. ‘Interesting brain lesions, too. Big one from the impact
with the car, of course…’
Sergeant Phelps spoke out loud as
he noted in his book – 'Cause of death: brain lesions.'
The
pathologist, on his way to dump bloodied instruments into a stainless steel
sink, looked over the sergeant’s shoulder. 'That's not what I said,' he said.
'I said, 'interesting brain lesions.' I didn't say anything about them being
the cause of death.'
'But he was
hit head on by a motor vehicle,’ said Phelps.
'No buts,'
said the pathologist. 'People can have evidence of brain lesions for all sorts
of reasons: vascular, abscess, previous knocks and bumps, even genetic. Of
course,' he said, peeling off his latex gloves and flicking them with practised
ease into a flip top bin, 'the impact from the accident was significant. Might
have been the thing that killed him outright. But these previous lesions could
make the evidence err on the inconclusive side for the coroner. Was our man a
boxer, maybe? Footballer with a penchant for heading goals?’
'You mean,
this case isn't as straightforward as an RTC?' said Phelps, his inner detective
flickering with interest. This could be it. This could be his big break into
the world of the plain-clothes detective. This could be the moment when he
could show his bosses that he had that ability to think outside the box.
'I mean,'
said the pathologist, 'that this man had evidence of brain injury prior to the
RTC. Whether he would have survived the impact with the car if he hadn't
received these previous injuries is guesswork, I'm afraid. But internal
bleeding is certainly the significant contributary factor to the death of Mr
Thing. What you personally want to read into this is up to you. I shall make my
report based on my findings. I am not at home to Mr Speculate.'
* * * * *
'Oh!' said
Min, opening the front door. She had glimpsed through the drawing room window
the arrival of a transit van with 'WD Reginald' painted on the side and had
gone to greet it.
'Hello!'
said WD Reginald. 'Mrs Thing?'
'Miss
Thing,' corrected Min. And then, 'You're a girl.'
WD Reginald
laughed. 'I am,' she said. 'A lady decorator. Who'd have thought it?'
Some might have construed the
introduction as somewhat sarcastic, but Min laughed. 'Quite,' she said. 'Come in.'
WD Reginald
left her shoes in the porch and stepped into the hallway. She held out her
hand, which Min shook, immediately appreciating the cool, firm grip. You could
tell a lot about a person from their
handshake. She hated it when someone’s handshake was so limp it slid from your
own hand like slimy lettuce. Limp handshake, limp character.
'Willow
Reginald,' said the lady decorator. 'Odd smell. Sorry...did I say that out
loud?'
'You did,'
said Min. She glanced upstairs. 'My brother's study, I'm afraid. The door has
been open. It hasn't had a good airing for
years. I closed it though. Because of the smell…’
'Aah,' said
Willow. 'And that's the room you want redecorating, yes?'
'I want the
whole house redecorating,' said Min. She glanced again at the cool, firm hands
of Willow Reginald. They seemed far too smooth of skin and neat of nail to have
dealt with the manual labour associated with painting and decorating.
Willow
raised an eyebrow. 'The whole house?'
'Is that a
problem?' said Min.
Willow shook
her head. 'No...it's just that my diary is pretty busy at the moment.'
'I thought
we were in a recession,' said Min.
'We are,'
said Willow. 'People are preferring to renovate and redecorate their houses
rather than sell and move. Cheaper, you see.'
'Ah,' said
Min. 'I can see how that makes sense.'
'Anyway,'
said Willow. 'Shall I take a look around? Do you have any ideas about what
you'd like done?' She unfolded what Min thought was a notebook but turned out
to be a small tablet computer.
'Modern
technology, eh?' she said, nodding at the tablet.
'Wouldn't be
without it,' said Willow. 'It's got paint samples, paper samples, a room design
app, spreadsheets, everything. I can access websites, get prices for customers
straight away, place immediate orders on sale goods...'
'Will it get
rid of the stench of cigarette smoke?' said Min. 'Painting and papering, I
mean.'
'Mostly,'
said Willow. 'I'd recommend a deep steam clean of the worst surfaces before we
start. That'll help.'
Min nodded.
'Only it's the smell of cigarettes,' she said. 'I need to get rid of it. I'm
going to turn this place into a business...' She stopped short. A business?
Where did that come from? The house smiled and nodded.
'Oh yes?'
said Willow. 'What kind of business?'
What kind of
business indeed, thought Min. 'Not sure yet,' she admitted. 'Does it make a
difference?'
Willow
smiled. 'Might do,' she said. 'I mean, if you're going to set up an alternative
health centre, for instance, you don't want to be papering everything black and
red like a cheap bordello, do you? You want something fresh and restful – blues
and greens...'
'Ah,' said
Min. 'I see. Well, how about you do a basic estimate for the middle range of
paint and paper, for each room. It'd be a starting point.'
And so Min
followed Willow from room to room. Willow did most of the talking. She tippetty
tapped on her tablet, showed Min a variety of colours and designs, door
furniture and soft furnishings. Min would like to have said it was all
fascinating stuff, but it wasn't. Her mind was
locked on other matters. A business? Where had that notion sprung from?
'And what
about this room?' said Willow. They had reached Clive's hobby room and Willow's
hand was resting on the door knob.
'NO!' said
Min, rather too loudly. She collected herself. 'I mean, sorry, no. Not for
now...you see, that's my brother's room...my brother, Clive... he died in a
traffic accident.'
'Oh,' said
Willow. 'I'm sorry.'
'Yesterday
morning, in fact,' said Min, thinking she might as well play the sympathy card
whilst she could. 'It's just that the lady at the hospital said I should come
home and do something, instead of come home and wait. So I did. I mean, I came
home and the first thing I thought of doing was to get rid of this horrible
tobacco smell, and the next thing I know I'm calling you, and now you are
here.'
Willow
removed her hand from the brass door knob and placed it instead on Min's arm.
'Could you still be in shock?' she said, softly. 'Why don't I make you a cup of
tea, and then arrange to come back another day. You know, when things aren’t so…raw.'
By 'things',
Min supposed, Willow meant 'the funeral' and 'the grieving' and 'the disposal
of the possessions of the life of the deceased.' It would be the normal
'thing', the expected 'thing' to do she supposed.
'Yes,' she
said. 'You're right. But don't worry about making tea. You go. You're busy, you
said so yourself.'
‘I have time
for a cup of tea,’ said Willow. ‘Wouldn’t be a very good painter and decorator
if I didn’t, would I?’
And so Min
led Willow to the kitchen and sat at the table whilst Willow took over tea
making duties, and they ate cake and didn’t say much to each other, but the
silence was companionable and not embarrassing because all the while Min could
hear the house chuntering to her in the back ground, about new beginnings, and
business opportunities, and being given the freedom to at last live her life how she wanted to live it.
'How about I
come back this time next month?' said Willow. Her hand hovered over the
keyboard of her tablet where she had open a page of an appointment calendar.
'Right,'
said Min, shaken from her reverie by the sound of Willow’s voice. 'Yes. Good
idea.'
'I'll pencil
you in for 8th July,' said Willow. 'And I'll call a couple of days
beforehand, just to see how things are. Sometimes you never know where you are
going to be from one day to the next, do you?'
How true,
thought Min, as she led the way from the kitchen to the front door. Just one
day ago, she and Clive had shared a
breakfast - a rare occurrence - and she had complained about his habit of
leaving the cereal box open on the counter again, when really it was a very
simple task to replace it in the cupboard. And then they had left the house to
walk the short distance into town, and then he'd dropped his tobacco tin and...
Min shook
her head. She smiled as Willow said goodbye and that she hoped all would go
well with, you know, things. And then, of course, thought Min, you also never
know what you are going to find when you break down the door of your brother's
hobby room.
* * * * *
'Just a quick
statement, Miss Thing,' said Sergeant Phelps. He sat at the kitchen table and
placed his notebook and pen before him. No fancy technology here, thought Min.
'I gave all
the information to the hospital,' she said.
'Yes, we'll
get a copy of that,' said Phelps. 'But you may have remembered something
important since yesterday. I know it's painful, but can you describe to me
exactly what you remember happening?'
Min looked
at the officer who had arrived on her doorstep just as she was about to prepare
an omelette for lunch. The female uniformed constable who accompanied him was
sitting beside her, staring with a look of concern that was almost genuine. The
official tear-mopper, thought Min.
'Well,' she
said. 'There isn't much to tell really. Clive and I were heading into town
and...
'Where
exactly were you going?' interrupted Phelps.
'Sorry?'
'What was
the purpose of your journey into town?' he rephrased.
'Clive was
going to collect a costume from ‘Dance and Disguise’ and I wanted to go to the
library. I have a week of holiday from work. I want to catch up with some
reading,' said Min. 'As the weather was dry we decided to walk in and share a
taxi back.'
‘And Mr
Thing? Was he on holiday from work, too?’ said Phelps.
‘He was on
permanent holiday,’ said Min. ‘He lived on benefits and selling occasional bits
of original artwork on Ebay…’
'Benefits?'
Phillips interrupted. ‘Why?’
‘Anxiety and
depression mostly,’ said Min. ‘He had bouts of liver inflammation, too, which
caused him mild pain and tiredness. He wasn’t often keen to leave the house. He
preferred to be…at home.’
‘I see,’
said Phelps. ‘And you say he was collecting a costume?’
Min sighed.
'Yes, a costume,' she said. 'Clive belonged to the local amateur dramatic
society. He was collecting his costume for his next role. Nanki Poo.'
Phelps smiled.
'Something
funny, sergeant?' said Min. What patience she had remaining was fast running
thin. Yesterday had been a long and wearisome day and whilst she, as his
sister, was allowed to be amused by Clive's pastimes, an interfering stranger
certainly was not.
'Nothing,
Miss Thing,' said Phelps. 'Nothing at all. So Mr Thing suffered anxiety,
depression and recurring pain because of his liver yet was able to perform on
stage in a production?’
Min’s
patience was stretching thinner by the question. ‘Yes. It was his counsellor’s
suggestion. To join a club to get him out of the house and mixing with people.
This was to be his first on-stage role. Previously he’d stuck to backstage
roles, like making and painting scenery…’
‘I see,’
said Phelps again. What was he seeing exactly, wondered Min. ‘And the name of
this amateur dramatic society, please?'
'The
Chelwood Operatic Performance Society. C.O.P.S,' said Min, without a hint of irony.
'Thank you,'
said Phelps. 'And you say you were making the most of a week of holiday to
visit the library?' His pen hovered over his note book.
'Yes,’ said Min. 'I wanted to take out some
books.'
'That is why
one usually visits a library,' said Phelps, smiling.
‘Then why
are you asking?’ said Min.
Phelps coughed. 'Any books in particular?' he
said.
'No,' said
Min. 'A novel or two. Something to fill the evenings.’
'And what is
your line of work, Miss Thing,' said Phelps.
Really,
thought Min, this is quite enough. ‘Am I under arrest, officer?’ she said.
‘Only I do not see what my choice of reading material nor my occupation has to
do with my brother’s death in an accident.’ And she emphasised the word
‘accident’ just to make a point.
Phelps coughed. He was getting carried away
with himself, with the thought he could be on to something more sinister than a
simple accident. He needed to guard himself. ‘I apologise, Miss Thing. You are
quite right. And I won't disturb your day much longer. Just one more question.
Could you just tell me how your brother seemed yesterday morning? Before you
set off on your journey into town?'
'Seemed?'
said Min.
'His mood,
Miss Thing...especially given his mental health status. His anxiety and
depression?’
Min
considered the question. 'Ebullient,' she said. 'His mood was ebullient.'
'Ebullient?'
said Phelps.
Min sighed.
'Yes, Sergeant,' she said. 'It means cheerful and enthusiastic. Would you like
me to spell it for you?' She nodded at the sergeant's pen, which seemed stuck
to the paper.
'No thank
you,' said Phelps. He snapped shut the notebook and tucked it in his pocket. 'I
think that will do for now. I'm sorry for your loss.'
It took Min
a few moments to realise that the loss to which Phelps was referring was Clive.
A sudden thought caused her eyes to narrow. ‘Sergeant, I hope you’re not
suggesting my brother’s death was an act of suicide,’ she said.
‘I’m not
suggesting anything, Miss Thing,’ said Phelps, rising to his feet and nodding
at his colleague that they were about to depart. ‘I am merely considering all
possibilities for my report.’
Comments
Thank you.
Kindest regards,
Maureen