Omens of Death

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Omens of Death Page 23

by Nicholas Rhea


  ‘He is not our killer, I am sure of that, but I fear he could be the next victim, Wayne, unless we find him very soon, Come along, no time to waste.’

  ‘But why, sir ... why Purslane?’

  ‘On Friday morning I saw a black beetle crawling across his shoe, Wayne. A black beetle running over someone’s shoe is an omen of death, yet, oddly enough, it is unlucky to kill a black beetle. Purslane did not kill it — I saw him flick it away with a newspaper and thus he retained the good fortune implied by that move. But one cannot ignore the underlying threat of evil, Wayne, which in this case is the fact that the beetle did crawl across his boot. It is a serious omen, Wayne, and I fear that unless we prevent it, he could die — either that, or someone closely connected with him could die.’

  ‘Oh, blimey, he’s at it again,’ muttered Wayne Wain beneath his breath as he hurried to locate the official car. If he told any of his mates he’d worried about the life of a grown man because a black beetle had crawled over his shoe ...

  Purslane’s paper shop opened on the morning of the Sabbath to dispense the Sunday papers, but closed during the afternoon. Consequently it was closed when Pluke and Wain arrived. ‘Where to now, sir?’ asked Wain anxiously.

  ‘His house, Wayne.’

  Pluke’s local knowledge took them directly to the semi-detached house of Mr and Mrs Purslane. Mrs Purslane, a pretty forty-year-old in tight-fitting shorts and a T-shirt, was in the garden enjoying the heat of the day while tending her borders and removing weeds. She looked up and smiled as the police car eased to a halt. Wayne Wain thought she was gorgeous; how on earth her husband could make those awful films, which involved having congress with other women, was beyond him ... did she know what he got up to? pondered Wain.

  ‘I’d like to have a chat with Samuel, Mrs Purslane,’ said Pluke without any sign of urgency, for he did not wish to alarm this cheated woman unduly.

  ‘He’s gone off with some friends, Mr Pluke,’ she said. ‘Twitching.’

  ‘Twitching?’ puzzled Wayne Wain.

  ‘Rushing off and looking for rare birds,’ interpreted Pluke, not noticing the double entendre.

  But Wayne Wain understood the message. ‘Where did he go?’ he asked with just a hint of concern.

  ‘I don’t know. When he got home, he said they’d rung him at his shop this morning to say there was a melon-breasted cocotte in Priory Woods, just arrived from France, they’d told him, a very rare sighting. They’re usually seen on the Mediterranean beaches, so they said.’

  ‘Did he describe it as a French bird?’ asked Pluke.

  ‘Yes, that might have been what he said. A French bird.’

  ‘Did they collect him from home?’ asked Pluke.

  ‘No, he went by himself, Mr Pluke. Only a few minutes ago, you’ve just missed him.’

  ‘Did he take his own car?’ continued Pluke.

  ‘No, he said somebody would pick him up at the War Memorial, so he went off with his binoculars and camera. He said he’d be back for supper unless it meant chasing the bird a long way. Is it something important, Mr Pluke?’

  ‘I would like to have words with him as soon as possible,’ was all Pluke felt inclined to say in the circumstances. ‘If he does come home, ask him to call the office, would you? Just to let me know he’s back? They’ll radio me if I am out of my office and I have no objection to him ringing me at home.’

  ‘Yes, all right.’ Mrs Purslane smiled, bending to deal with a sanicula europaea, her actions prompting palpitations in all sorts of private places within Wayne Wain’s anatomy, particularly around the region of his groin. She was a handsome woman, was Mrs Purslane, mature yet fascinating, and she made a fantastic job of giving shape to her shorts.

  ‘Shall we try Priory Wood?’ suggested Wayne Wain.

  ‘Most definitely, but how does one, with limited resources, search a large wood for someone who does not wish to be found? It is high summer, remember, with the floor of the wood thick with vegetation and cover. So, in order to have more information before me in advance of our visit to the wood, Wayne, I would like to call on George Dunwoody,’ announced Pluke.

  ‘Dunwoody, sir? Have we time?’

  ‘My knowledge of the geography of the wood and the layout of the priory it contains leads me to conclude that we do have a little time, Wayne, but apart from that, I wish to see whether he is involved in this expedition. You see, Dunwoody is my chief suspect and I fear he might have abducted Samuel with a view to executing him.’

  ‘Dunwoody, sir? Good God! Why him?’

  ‘I believe he wishes to silence anyone who knows that he killed Tracy Bretton.’

  ‘I thought she died naturally, sir?’

  ‘She did, but I am sure that Dunwoody thinks he killed her, which is why he panicked and killed Stephen Winton — who knew what had happened — and then, for like reasons, he had to dispose of Moses ...’

  ‘Good God, sir! All them? I can’t see how you think it could be Dunwoody, sir.’

  Already, Wayne was speeding the car towards the Dunwoody bungalow at No. 11a Padgett Grove and as they rushed through the quiet Sunday streets, Pluke said, ‘Winton was evil, Wayne, I could sense his evil during our very first visit to the Druids’ Circle. In his wake, there was a perception of evil, Wayne, rather as some people leave behind the scent of perfume or tobacco, but in this case infinitely more subtle and not even as tangible as an aura. I could sense it, however, and it was confirmed by a flight of swifts as we carried out our inspection. And we now know about his previous convictions. But Winton was not the killer, Wayne.

  ‘The killer of Tracy Bretton is very superstitious. Of that I am positive. In both the Crowther bungalow and Stephen Winton’s flat, all the mirrors were covered up with towels or sweaters or something similar. I am sure you recall that, and I am sure the Scenes of Crime teams have recorded that MO. Those mirror covers were not put there to dry, Wayne, as most police officers might think. They were put there by someone highly superstitious who believes that if a person catches sight of a reflection of himself in a mirror while there is a dead body in the room, that person will die soon afterwards. It’s an old belief, Wayne, one which is still extant in some places, and that provided me with my main clue.

  ‘Another one concerns the position of each of the dead bodies. It’s a longstanding belief that it is unlucky to walk past a murdered body, especially when it is lying on the ground. Our killer placed all his victims so that he need not walk past them: they were all in corners; and at the hospital, Tracy was in a filing cabinet on the wall. He did not have to walk past her either. The positions of the bodies therefore provided another clue.

  ‘A further one came from the glove that was found in the woods near the Druids’ Circle. It was in good condition and we had every reason to believe it was dropped by the killer. I believe it was — and who wears black gloves in summer? Undertakers and their assistants, Wayne. Smart men in black suits carrying coffins. Or those helping them, as Dunwoody does. But why did he not pick it up? I will explain. There is an old notion that if you drop a glove, you should never pick it up because it would bring bad fortune — you let someone else pick it up because that brings good fortune. But the killer, in the midst of disposing of the body, would hardly want to attract bad fortune, so he took the calculated risk of the glove not being found or identified and therefore left it where it fell. I am sure he felt that an anonymous black glove, with no means of identification, would not be regarded as important — but we know that any clue is important, Wayne. And we know that a local supplier stocks gloves of an identical kind.

  ‘Now, to continue. You may recall that when I mentioned to Dunwoody about the girl’s body being transported to the Druids’ Circle, he commented that the route taken might become a public right of way, even though it traverses private premises. Well, Wayne, that is an old superstition too, and the basis of the many so-called corpse roads which cross our countryside.’

  ‘And I suppose he had all the opportunit
ies, sir, being a freelance taxi driver and man-of-all-parts. But you continue to refer to the killer of the girl found at the Druids’ Circle, sir, while we know that Tracy died naturally.’

  ‘I have already said I believe that Dunwoody thought he had killed the girl, and his subsequent behaviour is a direct result of that. Remember, I did tell him that I was hunting a murderer, and I did that quite deliberately. He has gone berserk since then ...’

  ‘You’re not saying your actions are responsible for these deaths, sir?’

  ‘Of course not. He was responsible for those deaths, not me. And who knows what goes through a killer’s mind? My task is to keep this town as free from crime and criminals as I can. Now, back to the Dunwoody theory — we know that he has the means of travelling out of town to all sorts of places while no one considers his movements odd, whatever time of the night or day they occur.

  ‘I saw his taxi in town in the early hours following the night Winton was killed. His landlady heard a car engine left running an hour or so prior to that. And taxis do stand outside houses with their engines running. Taxis were also seen outside No. 15 Padgett Grove during filming sessions and what better way for the film-makers to move around a location individually than by local taxi? It is a system widely used by the television and film industry. Was it one taxi seen several times, or several taxis? If Dunwoody was hired regularly by the pornographic film-makers, he would know their routines, their locations, the personalities involved, the houses they used ... And I think the message about the French bird was a secret way of telling Samuel that a willing woman had been found and that his presence was required for filming. It was a ploy, of course, but one that convinced him that his attendance was needed. A melon-breasted cocotte is just another way of describing a high-class prostitute ... a cocotte is the French for prostitute, you see, Wayne, and we all know what melon breasts are like ... even I know that — and the term “French bird” is often used to describe any bird that is unusual in any way ... like a white blackbird or even a hen blackbird, which is brown ...’

  ‘Hang on, sir, you’re ahead of me, a long way ahead. What makes you think Dunwoody is superstitious? Covered-up mirrors, fallen gloves and an old notion of corpse roads are not totally convincing reasons.’

  ‘Very true, Wayne. Apart from the things I have mentioned, he has numbered his house 11a instead of 13 for one thing,’ said Pluke. ‘He deals with his boiled-egg shells by crushing them in exactly the same way our ancestors did when trying to avoid witches; he touches wood for good luck; he refuses to allow red and white flowers in the house, just as hospitals won’t allow them inside the wards ... he’s superstitious all right, Wayne. And remember how the girl’s body was laid, feet together to prevent the egress of evil spirits, while poor old Moses Nettlewren was laid with his head towards the rising sun. And another thing, Wayne, why were such elaborate steps taken to conceal the body of Moses Nettlewren? It was, I believe, because there was a very likely chance that, in such a remote place, he would lie unburied on a Sunday. If a funeral is postponed for any reason, it means others in the vicinity will die within a week, or certainly within three months, and this is especially the case if a body remains unburied over a Sunday. So our superstitious killer, thinking of his own skin, made sure Moses was buried beneath that heap of stones before the arrival of Sunday.’

  They were now approaching Padgett Grove and Wayne drove into the drive of No. 11a. There was no sign of activity at the house, but Pluke knocked on the kitchen door and soon Ada Dunwoody appeared.

  ‘Oh, hello, Mr Pluke. I thought for a moment it was May and Cyril coming to say they were back after their holiday.’

  ‘Is Mr Dunwoody around?’ asked Pluke.

  ‘No, he’s had to do a run, a taxi run. Some bird-watching fanatics ...’

  ‘Where to? Did he say?’

  ‘No, he just said he had to meet somebody at the War Memorial and off he went ...’

  ‘How long ago?’

  She glanced at her watch. ‘Not long, Mr Pluke, ten minutes, no longer.’

  ‘Thanks,’ said Pluke, shouting at Wayne, ‘War Memorial, Wayne. It’s him!’

  ‘Mr Pluke, what is it?’ called Ada as the detective in the funny coat ran towards his car. But she got no reply and when they reached the War Memorial there was no sign of Samuel Purslane or of George Dunwoody and his taxi.

  ‘Shouldn’t we circulate a description for all mobiles to keep observations, sir?’ suggested Wayne Wain.

  ‘Yes, we shall require their support, Wayne. Place them on the alert, will you, by radio, but stress that they must keep away from all routes into Priory Wood until I order otherwise. I do not want Dunwoody to know we’re on to him, Wayne. A surfeit of rushing police officers might precipitate some illogical actions on his part and put Purslane at a greater risk. Remember, Dunwoody has used a gun and I am sure he is still in possession of one.’

  ‘He’s not on our list of firearms holders, sir, I checked,’ stated Wayne Wain.

  ‘No, he’s not. But one of the men used for making those films was the secretary of the Crickledale Rifle and Pistol Club, Wayne, and a rifle was used in at least one of the films. I am sure he was, shall we say, persuaded to let the film people use weapons from the club armoury — and then allow himself to be rewarded by favours from attractive girls — and it would not surprise me at all to learn that Dunwoody, who taxied such people around, was able to acquire such a firearm — even that very one — nor that, if we examine the club’s records right now, we should find one .22 weapon missing, but we have no time at this moment.’

  ‘But, sir, where do we begin? There’s a lot of countryside out there ...’

  ‘The priory in Priory Wood ... Mrs Purslane mentioned Priory Wood. Remember the two films yet to be made? Naughtiness in the Nunnery and Virgins in the Vaults or something like that, you said. If the film-makers are planning two more films at the remaining two of Crickledale’s Nine Sights, one must have surely been planned at the old nunnery in Trattledale, Wayne. That being so, consider how easy it must have been for our killer to persuade poor old Moses Nettlewren that he was required there for a filming session, with all the pleasures that promised him, and how easy it would have been to take him there by taxi to be shot. So that Sight has now been used — by the killer, that is.’

  ‘Point taken, sir, and Priory Woods?’

  ‘Our superstitious killer will not want a body unburied on a Sunday, so he has decided to kill him and place him in a ready-made grave, Wayne. A vault. You know and I know that there are vaults at the old priory. I have, in the course of my historical researches, examined the vaults in some detail, Wayne, without finding a horse trough, I might add. So what on earth did the monks’ horses drink from? However, I believe Purslane has been tricked into travelling there by taxi, to meet his death and be buried there ...’

  ‘But it’s Sunday, sir, the place will be overrun with tourists?’

  ‘Precisely, Wayne,’ said Pluke without elaboration. ‘So we must take due cognisance of that fact.’

  With Wayne Wain exercising all his driving skills, they were hurtling towards the old priory in the woods. It was an eight-mile journey, during which Wayne radioed to Control to alert the support services to order them to stand by for a call for assistance with a firearms unit.

  ‘I do not, repeat not, want the teams to join me yet,’ Pluke ordered, taking the handset from his sergeant to address Control. ‘But be prepared for my call and stand by to rendezvous with me immediately — you could muster close to the priory — because I want Purslane to survive.’

  ‘And I want to survive ...’ muttered Wayne Wain as he guided the fast-moving car with all his expertise towards the villainous vaults.

  Chapter 19

  ‘The Crickledale vaults’, said Detective Inspector Montague Pluke as Detective Sergeant Wain eased to a halt in the car-park of Priory Woods, ‘are unique in this country, Wayne. Their design is based on the nave of St Ambrogio at Milan, which was one of
the earliest completely ribbed vaults and dates from the eleventh century. The local vaults extend over a huge area, far larger than the ground floor of York Minster, although only a tiny portion is open to the public. The Norman design, which you can see in some of our abbeys, was based on this style ...’

  ‘Are you saying these vaults date from Norman times, sir?’

  ‘No, Wayne, our vaults are copies of those in Milan which means they are later, but they are most unusual, more so because they are on the North York Moors. Our vaults are believed to have been built in the fourteenth century and the records show that a certain Erasmus Pluke helped with the construction. He was a lay worker at the priory, the prior being Father Jerome from Rome, hence the Italian connection. But, in this case, the Crickledale vaults are of further interest because they are underground and used for the storage of coffins and contents — did you realise that the body of St Teilo of Penally is said to be buried here? I am sure our Welsh friends do not know that. Now, Wayne, the vaults in our cathedrals and abbeys are above ground and do not contain coffins, which makes ours of such importance and interest.’

  ‘So where will Dunwoody be?’ Wayne was getting anxious. Pluke seemed to be acting as if he was on a walking tour rather than in pursuit of an alleged armed murderer.

  ‘We are about to enter via the tourists’ gate,’ said Pluke, who was now standing beside their vehicle. ‘You pay, Wayne, and recover the money through expenses. We will descend the staircase into the vaults ...’

  ‘Sir, we need to plan carefully ... Dunwoody must know we are on to him.’

  ‘I am sure he does not, Wayne. I am sure he has never given that a thought.’

  ‘But we do need back-up, sir! Dunwoody is thought to be armed.’

  ‘He will not enter the vaults via this route, Wayne. He would never bring his intended victim into the vaults through the entrance used by the general public, that would be rank stupidity; besides, it means he would meet others on the staircase, and it is very unlucky to cross on the stairs. Dunwoody will use the other entrance, Wayne, the one that is never used by tourists or paying visitors to the vaults. It lies at the northern boundary, Wayne, an extra drive of some six or seven miles, followed by a long walk across three fields. It is well off the beaten track.’

 

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