Sunday, March 15, 2026

lies in Lashbrook 17

 

Chapter 17

 

Alexander arose to find Mary in a grim mood.

“There’s more of them letters has come overnight,” she said.  “And on a Sunday, too!”

“Not the post, then,” said Alexander. “Someone has been up all night.”

“I don’t suppose we are the only ones targeted,” said Jeff, only slightly behind Alexander in rising. “We have to acknowledge this.”

“No, we don’t, not as someone else doing it,” said Alexander. “We tell everyone that we believe that the person in custody had already paid someone to deliver letters on Sunday, an unknown and innocent delivery agent, whom we are seeking to interview.”

“I like it,” said Jeff. “He should get pretty frustrated.”

“I want to see Dr.  Brinkley before the service, and ask him to make an announcement to this effect,” said Alexander.

“You can’t ask a man of God to lie!” said Jeff, shocked.

“I shan’t ask him to,” said Alexander. “I’ll ask him to make an announcement giving our thoughts on the matter so he reports truth as he knows it; and I’ll take the sin of lying onto my own back.  I’d as soon do that as have someone else killed.  Anyone who saw him would think him a fool, not a knave, and would be less likely to put themselves in harm’s way; and as he wants our suspicion away from Vera Twiddly-bonk and on his ultimate victim, he can’t kill her out of hand without at least some build-up of suspicion towards her. If she supposedly commits suicide confessing in some kind of letter, there will be questions asked if we don’t have her clearly in mind. I don’t care how stupid he thinks us in looking the wrong way at the wrong person when he has so cleverly led us to the ‘right’ person.”

“It’s the way of crooks to think themselves so clever,” said Jeff. “It will frustrate him no end to refuse to believe his clues.”

“If there wasn’t the serious business of a life to save, it would almost be funny, to watch his frustration,” said Alexander, with a snigger. “Mary, I hope you don’t expect the letters to the girls to actually be given to them?”

“No, Mr. Alexander, I picked them up before Ruth or Millie could find them,” said Mary. “I read the one to Ruth, very short, says she’s a scarlet woman.”

Alexander ripped open the letters to Gladys and Ida.

“Much the same; someone was in a hurry,” he said. “Oh, ours are virtually identical, stupid copper, has no idea how the educated can run rings around those who are not.”

“My goodness, I don’t suppose Eton will be happy to know you are thought to be uneducated,” laughed Jeff.

“Winchester, actually, and not for long; only to get me some contacts. I was largely educated by the local grammar school,” said Alexander.

“I stand corrected,” said Jeff.

“But it’s a valid point,” said Alexander. “Anyone who knows me knows I had a good education and have a degree from Oxford from which I planned to make the police force my career, only the Kaiser had other ideas. I did my basic training and about three weeks on point duty, before I decided to volunteer before I was called up. I didn’t want to end up as a grunt with total idiots telling me to do things I knew were stupid, so I went in to the Royal Engineers. They make you pass an exam for that, so I was commissioned right away, and when they wanted volunteers for a secret weapon, I said yes. So, I was one of the thirty-two who drove the first tanks at Flers-Courcelette in September of Sixteen. I hated them with a passion, but they got better.”

“You don’t get commissioned in the Engineers without mathematics,” said Jeff. “Chummy is an idiot.”

“Of course he is. Only idiots reckon that crime is a short cut to wealth,” said Alexander. “But like many other rats, he has low cunning.”

Jeff sniggered.

“The thought of a precious creature like you on point duty, like any other bobby, white sleeves and directing idiots around Oxford Circle is actually quite funny. I can see you correcting the grammar of the costers.”

“I’ll have you know I can do a burst of cockney as well as anyone,” said Alexander.

 

The Heywood Hall party were early to church, and Alexander bearded Dr.  Brinkley in his vestry.

“We think there has likely been an outbreak of poison-pen letters overnight, and wondered if you would care to make an announcement from the police,” said Alexander.

“I will do anything I can to help,” said the vicar. “Oliver received one accusing him of smuggling gin, which he thought amusing, considering he brews his own; and I had one accusing me of interfering with choir boys. Most unpleasant, and one does worry about folk saying ‘no smoke without fire,’ but I preserved it, and Oliver’s missive for you to look over.”

“Thank you,” said Alexander. “And as Tim was one of your choir boys, the idea of him not subsequently nicking you makes a mockery of the suggestion.”

“I was walking out with Sally Braithwaite, as it happens,” said Brinkley. “Not a girl of our class, but a sensible body, which is a good thing in a vicar’s wife; we had some stupid quarrel because I wanted her to have elocution lessons. She broke off the understanding and threw herself into partying. I feel somehow responsible... but the poison-pen has not poked me in the conscience over that.”

“The poison-pen has never been a part of village society per se,” said Alexander. “Unlike you, and the shop-keepers, school mistresses, and those involved in Scouting and Guiding, the party does not know the small gossip that everyone else does.”

“And I suppose you must disregard poor Vera Tweedie-Banks as a suspect now,” said Brinkley.

“Oh, not at all,” said Alexander, praying for forgiveness for blatantly lying to a man of the cloth. “We think that the missives sent out overnight had been pre-arranged, and that a third party who is innocent of wrongdoing took pay to deliver them, or was convinced to do so as a prank or some harmless reason. And I wished you to reassure the congregation of that.”

“Oh! I certainly shall,” said Brinkley.

 

 

The service opened with ‘Be Thou my vision,’ to make sure that the congregation was awake from a good sing-song before Dr.  Brinkley took the pulpit.

“Before the sermon, I want to share with you all that I’ve been speaking with the Scotland Yard officers,” he said. “I suspect that some of you received, as I did, a poison-pen letter this morning.  I have to tell you that the inspectors do not think that this is in any way indicative that they have the wrong person in custody. Mr. Armitage informs me that the force believes that the letters delivered today had already been written, and given to some innocent third party, either for pay, or to deliver as a prank. I have been asked to reassure you that there is nothing to worry about.”

A voice near the back cried, ‘No! They’re wrong!’. Alexander smiled. It was the voice he expected.

Dr.  Brinkley frowned, but moved into his address. He took the text ‘Judge not, lest ye be judged,’ and expanded upon the unfortunate poor sick mind which could see only fault and which reached out with accusations, uninformed and groundless for the most part, from a poor ignorant soul who did not understand the victims of her unstable hatred.

“That’s the closest I’ve ever come to pitying Vera Tweedie-Banks,” rumbled Fred Chaffinch, audibly. “Better orator than that rat-faced little trouble-maker with the pathetic moustache in Germany.”

“Fred!” hissed Polly, repressively.

Dr.  Brinkley regarded Fred over his glasses.

“You should pity her, Fred,” he said. “So much hatred is a blight upon the soul, and only the Good Lord can ease her pain. And the pain is indicated by how she feels a need to strike out blindly, unable to make any guesses at anything known to everyone able to interact socially with the rest of the village. She has alienated herself, and in doing so has thrust away the sympathy she needs to heal her soul. Whether it can be done in this life, who can tell, but if she is also the killer of three women, those of us who mourn them for personal reasons need to pray for the strength to forgive, and let the Good Lord judge her. ‘Vengeance is Mine, saith the Lord, I will repay.’”

“Amen,” said Alexander.

“That dark duty being over, whilst we walk yet in the austerity of Lent, let us remember how our Lord fasted in the wilderness before the ordeal He knew He would face, and sing ‘Forty days and forty nights,” said Brinkley.

Amabel Brinkley launched into the well-known hymn at her usual fast pace. It made it almost jaunty, drawing a slightly pained look from her uncle.

A lesson in the words which the poison-pen would have been wise to take to heart, thought Alexander, pondering on the words at the end of the chorus, ‘Tempted, and yet unbeguiled.’

The Girl Guides trooped to the front of the church, where they sang, ‘All in the April Evening’ with clear young voices.

Alexander frowned.

He shuffled along to Tim Mapp, who was sitting with Maggie Squires.

“Where’s Emma?” he asked, quietly but sharply of Maggie.

Maggie put her hand to her mouth.

“I don’t know,” she whispered. “She got up and went down, but she ran up to bed again, and wouldn’t get up. I thought it was nerves. I told her it was no worse than singing in the chorus for the Mikado.”

“She found a letter,” said Alexander. “Let me through.”

“We’re coming,” said Tim.

Jeff was following, and Alexander waved back the rest of his household. They hurried out of the church.

“Maggie, go home and check if she’s still there,” said Alexander. “Tim, go to the railway station; one of the porters is an atheist, and he holds the fort there. See if she took a train. Jeff, we’ll go down to the weir. If we find nothing, we’ll come back to the empty house, in case she’s hiding.”

They separated, and Jeff followed Alexander slithering down to the river bank from the road bridge, a common enough shortcut to have a rather treacherous path worn in the grass at the side of the bridge. Alexander set up a ground-eating trot, hurrying on to where Theodore Savin had decided to skip church and all the pitying looks to tackle the overgrown trees and bushes. Of Theodore there was no sign at first, then Jeff gave a shout, pointing into the drowning machine below the weir. The ladder Theodore had been using was propped against the bank, hooked, fortunately, on a snag of a cut-down bush. The other end of the ladder churned like one of the new electric mixers, with Theodore’s head and another head, thrashing in the seething waters below the weir.

“Fuck!” said Alexander. He peeled off his jacket and unbuttoned his braces. “Jeff, I’m going along the ladder; join my braces to yours and get them through the back of my belt. You stay on the bank and yell like mad. Tim should be coming back, and should hear you.”

Jeff nodded, taking off his own braces without pausing, and tying a reef knot between the two back parts, and tying another reef knot of the front straps, one of which he passed through Alexander’s belt. He extended it further with a short length of rope Theodore had brought to tie up a bundle of rubbish, putting it through a buttonhole and tying a sheet-bend. He knew he was not a strong swimmer, but he was physically strong. He wrapped the end of the makeshift rope around his wrist, lay down flat, partly on the ladder, his other arm around the stump which held it, and prepared to hang on for dear life, intermittently shouting as loud as he could, “HELP!”

Alexander edged down the ladder, his weight adding to its stability, but dragging it further under water.

“Theodore! Pass her back to me!” he called. For a moment, he thought the man had not heard; and then the sodden head jerked, and Theodore Savin moved with what seemed awful slowness, in pulling the limp body of the young girl back towards Alexander. Alexander realised that Theodore was frozen and exhausted; the river was cold, and he was being continuously ducked and pulled up in the frantic motion of the ladder. He was further down in the water for Alexander’s weight on the ladder, but Alexander knew that the man would drown before he let another young girl go down – if indeed it was not already too late. He edged forward, and managed to grasp the girl’s wrist, and with this tenuous hold, started to move back up the ladder. Theodore was able to now get a second hand on the ladder, as Alexander felt Jeff assist his efforts by pulling. His feet hit the bank, and he let go with one hand, to pass the inert body of Emma Squires back to Jeff, before moving forward again to grab Theodore’s wrists, and half drag the swooning man back to the bank. Jeff landed all three, before turning his attention to Emma, laid on her front, and working her arms back and forth until she coughed, and sicked up a lot of water.

“You’ll have to go and get someone, Jeff; I’m all in,” said Alexander, wrapping the now sobbing Emma in his own jacket. Jeff found Theodore’s jacket and passed it to him, as the man finished vomiting his own load of river water, and passed his own jacket to Alexander.

“Tarpaulin,” croaked Theodore. “Better than sitting on the wet ground.”

Alexander helped Emma onto the tarpaulin on which Theodore had been gathering the cut branches, and turned it over to partly cover them.

“Sorry, Emma, but we’ll have to get uncomfortably close to you to keep warm,” said Alexander.

“Oh! I... I wanted to die, but oh, it was so frightening, and it wasn’t easy like they say drowning is!” sobbed Emma.

“You’re fifteen years old, and nothing is bad enough to need to die,” said Alexander. “What did that awful letter say?”

“You know I have a letter?”

“Other people had letters, mostly telling lies, so I assumed that was what upset you,” said Alexander, through wildly chattering teeth.

Emma sobbed more.

“It said that everyone knew I was making a fool of myself over my sister’s feeongsay,” said Emma, slaughtering the French word. “I tried not to show how I fancy Tim, I did, I did! And now everyone will know!”

“And you’ve done a good job, and even if Tim knows, he won’t say a word because it would hurt you and Maggie,” said Alexander. “And we’ll tell Tim it suggested you were making up to someone, unspecified and that you did not want to be thought a scarlet woman, which is this evil writer’s main comment to women, so you do not need to be embarrassed. Will that help?”

“Oh! You are so kind! And Mr. Savin is so good and kind to risk his life to rescue me!” Emma howled in earnest.

“I saw her jump, and I couldn’t leave her,” said Theodore. “I don’t think she realised I was there. I knew the weir would kill us both if I just went in after her, so I thought of that pesky rowan tree on the edge which let my girl get killed, and which I cut first. The ladder went over the stump. I had no idea that the ladder would thrash about so much. But without it I’d never have got her. I shoved one leg through the rungs and crossed my ankles and dove until I touched something which felt like hair, and I’m afraid I pulled the poor child up by the braid down her back.”

“Better a sore scalp than drowned,” said Alexander.

He could feel the pounding of feet on the path and lay back; he had not swallowed much water, but he felt sick and giddy both from reaction, and from the pull on his belly. It was mostly healed, but extraordinary exertion made him aware of it.

He was not displeased that Jeff and Tim had charged into church and mustered three stretcher parties from the Boy Scouts and that Dr.  Craiggie was waiting in the rectory to look them all over. That wight’s cheerful, matter of fact voice put heart in him, and he suffered having his belly wound examined with care, and his chest sounded.  Maggie and her parents were scolding and hugging Emma in equal measure.

“Don’t fuss her too much,” Tim said, firmly. “I’m sure that we all know that there are times when girls can be more easily upset than others and these letters are pernicious.”

Alexander was being scolded by Ida and Campbell, but he smiled sunnily at both of them.

“One death averted,” he said. “Tell Theodore he might as well come home with us to recover, rather than go home alone; he’s rather battered.”

Then he gave in to the wave of black exhaustion which had been threatening and let himself pass out.

 

Saturday, March 14, 2026

Lies in Lashbrook 16

 I don't know if anyone noticed but I was rather pleased with the title and its double meaning as well as being alliterative - that the truth lies in Lashbrook as well as there being lies in Lashbrook.

Chapter 16

 

Mrs. Tweedie-Banks kept her dustbin in a little alcove in the fencing, with a gate which actually had a window box affixed to it, so that plants in the box hid the gate.

“The lengths some people go to,” said Alexander.

“We have a warrant to search, so we can heave it out, and search,” said Jeff. “And thank you for finding old shirts to put on backwards and gardening gloves this time.”

“I should have thought last time, but we’ll still pull the same trick with the newspaper,” said Alexander.

Two women came and watched. One was a tall, well-built woman with dark hair, the other was small, blonde, and with an air of fragility.

“Is this about poor little Irma?” twittered the blonde. “Will you be searching our dustbins, too?”

“Only if you think it likely that anyone from either of these two cottages put Irma’s diary in it,” said Alexander. The two women exchanged glances.

“Margie, go and get our gloves. I’d rather offer our bin contents voluntarily,” said the blonde.

“Yes, Winnie, I agree,” said her companion. “And more newspaper.”

The newspaper was ‘The Oxford Journal’ and had no holes in it when Winnie Harmon and Margie Goodie laid it out. They emptied their bin.

“We won’t get in your way,” said Winnie Harmon. “Would tea be acceptable or do I need to dig out spirits?”

“Tea would be very welcome,” said Alexander.

“I’ll bring the catering pot and mugs,” said Winnie.

“Bless you!” said Alex.

There was a surreal quality to drinking tea on the grassy verge of a country road, with primroses in the ditch and a few bluebells in the shade, surrounded by rubbish. There was little enough to be found, however, and certainly nothing that might be a diary. Both bins were refilled carefully.

“Is she in jail?” asked Marjorie Goodie.

“She was remanded for contempt of court,” said Jeff. “Thirty days.”

“We’ll put her bin out on Monday and put it away after they’ve been,” said Marjorie.

“Thank you. Very neighbourly of you considering that I believe she has not been a good neighbour to you,” said Alex.

Marjorie shrugged.

“You can’t leave full bins. It’s not healthy,” she said.

 

The two women cleared away the mugs whilst the police trio went inside the house.

“I always feel uncomfortable, turning over other people’s lives,” said Alexander.

“You have an excess of niceness,” said Jeff. “But I suppose it is something of a violation.”

“Leave everything as we found it,” said Alexander.

Vera Tweedie-Banks was an obsessively tidy woman; even her rubbish had been tied up in bags in the bin. They searched rubbish still in the house on the kitchen floor on more newspaper, ‘The Times’ this time, which was neatly stored in a cupboard; and Tim hauled the re-bagged rubbish out to the dustbin.

“No reason to invite the few early flies to lay eggs or rats to come in, my lad,” said Jeff. Tim did not disagree.

“Well, I think we can say that was a wasted afternoon,” said Alexander.

“Not wasted, but just productive in a negative sort of way,” said Jeff.

“Yes, you’re right,” said Alexander. “We have proven that she probably isn’t the poison-pen because she doesn’t even take the ‘Oxford Journal,’ and there is no sign of any construction of letters... there’s a gazebo, though, and we ought to take a look at that.”

The gazebo showed no sign of ever having been used for anything but sitting in the garden. The searchers were glad to drive back, dropping off Tim, and returning to Heywoods Hall.

“Are we going to let the village know we have a suspect?” asked Jeff.

“If they don’t know it by now, the gossip pipeline has sprung a leak,” said Alexander. “But yes. And we’ll talk freely about it at rehearsal tomorrow. Chummie really has to send more notes if he has someone to frame, so it’s another opportunity to trip him up.”

“You’re convinced it’s a man?”

“I’ve been thinking of the letters sent and although pedantic and fussy like a middle aged woman might write, they have innuendo without the gleeful prurience I might expect,” said Alexander.

Jeff nodded.

“I see what you mean,” he said.

 

 

oOoOo

 

The gathering at the village hall on Saturday afternoon was sober, yet had an air of excitement.

“Is it true that you caught the poison-pen, Mr.  Morrell?” asked Maud.

“We have a strong suspect in custody,” said Jeff.  “It became apparent that there was a person who is of the anticipated type, who has demonstrated malice and an antipathy against the murdered women, including Sally Braithwaite. We think we have a strong case against her.”

“Oh, I am so relieved,” said Miss Thripp. “I mean, it’s terrible to be thinking of someone under the weight of so much ill-will, but nice to know that all this will stop. We all have felt under the strain, and under suspicion; why, some of the less pleasant boys in my classes were chanting ‘Poison teacher, poison teacher,’ at me the other day as if they thought that I was the poison pen! It’s going to be very hard to teach next term if this is not cleared up by then if some of them have got hold of such a horrible idea.”

“Indeed, it makes your position quite untenable,” said Alexander. “I am sure it will all be cleared up by then.”

“What if you have the wrong person?” asked her nephew, fondly patting his aunt’s hand. “That could make it worse.”

“It means we keep digging,” said Morrell. “But at least we haven’t had to arrest any of the cast.”

There was laughter at this.

“If it was a detective story, it would be me, as the least likely suspect,” said Fred. “Not that I’m sure how to set about writing such letters; it must make a mess, and my Polly wouldn’t let me do so, I’m sure.”

“So, you think anyone married to, or living as a family member with, the poison-pen would know?” asked Alexander.

“Well, in a two up two down cottage like ours, yes,” said Fred. “We have the kitchen and parlour, and I’m not allowed in the parlour in my boots, and upstairs there’s our bedroom and when it became clear we weren’t going to be blessed with children, the railway had the other bedroom made into a bathroom and enlarged the kitchen into the lean-to.”

“And we’re saving up for when you retire to buy somewhere of our own; we don’t want to spend out on making improvements to a house tied to Fred’s job,” said Polly. “He has his shed in the garden with his toy railway, well, it’s the old air raid shelter he would dig when there were zeppelins going over, so he has plenty of room, and the shed is on top of the entrance for the garden. He’s got a lovely layout down there, and scenery, you could almost believe it was real.”

“I must come and have a look, sometime,” said Alexander. “I’m impressed by people who can make miniatures.”

“Do! Just drop in, no need for ceremony,” said Fred, with enthusiasm. “I have the school children down sometimes.”

“Oh, yes, it is lovely,” said Miss Thripp. “Tiny people made of cardboard which Fred paints himself, and hedges made, I believe, out of sponges painted green.”

“I’m thinking of getting some of the new electric trains, but the track would have to be all new too,” said Fred, wistfully.  “I suppose I could give my old clockwork trains and track to someone.  I wonder if it’s worth starting a model railway club?”

“Definitely,” said Alexander.  “An excellent excuse to start playing with trains before Ida and I even start a family.”

“I wouldn’t mind it, myself,” said Jeff. “I wonder if Millie would be interested.”

“Oh, that’s a good excuse,” laughed Alexander. “Hey, Edgar, do you like trains? Hello, he slipped out.”

“Oh, he’s not really interested in watching us rehearse; he goes home and comes back to collect me,” said Miss Thripp. “He’s missing how strong my voice is getting with your mother’s medicine, Mr. Armitage.”

“I’m glad it’s working,” said Alexander. “Fred, you should celebrate your role as Mikado by having a little figure riding on a buffer of a parliamentary train, stopping at every stop.”

“It’s a damn good punishment for the offence,” said Fred. He boomed out in song,

The idiot who, in railway carriages

Scribbles on window-panes

We only suffer

To ride on a buffer

In Parliamentary trains

 

My object all sublime

I shall achieve in time

To let the punishment fit the crime

The punishment fit the crime;

And make each prisoner pent

Unwillingly represent

A source of innocent merriment!

Of innocent merriment!

 

Alexander raised his own voice in song.

The fool who scrawls nonsense and lies

On malice plainly bent

Is sent to the City to write little ditties

On banal advertisement

Where’ere he sighs to write more lies

To deadlines by decree

On laxative cures or worse, he endures

On ladies’ corsetry.

 

“I’m putting that in,” said Fred. “Write it down, Alex, my boy!”

“Yes, Fred,” said Alexander, meekly. “And keep my addition to Koko’s list song?”

“Yes!” said Fred, hooking his thumbs into his braces, and rocking back on his heels. “We want to make a statement that this village rejects all vile peddlers of lies and innuendo, and that we laugh at poison-pens.”

“Bravo, Fred,” said Miss Thripp.  “That’s the spirit.”

“Well, that’s cheered us all up, so let’s have a full run-through,” said Fred. “Only two more rehearsals and we’ll make them both dress, Monday evening and Wednesday afternoon and a good thing our newest cast members know all the words, for their understudies never have managed it.”

“I’d like a run-through with makeup as well,” said Alexander. “Maybe we can just do that and wigs today?”

“Yes, by all means,” said Fred. “Makes sense. And with dress as well on Monday, when we come in, and get kitted up right away.”

The rehearsal went well, bar Dan freezing at his second big number.

“Were you not to Koko plighted...” Alexander started him off, and Dan picked it up with a surreptitious ‘thumb’s up,’ to Alexander.

“I could be prompt, if you wanted,” said Jeff, when the performance was over.

“Aren’t you supposed to be out there, catching the poison pen? Or do you think the person you arrested is it?” asked Fred.

“I think that chummy is associated with the players,” said Jeff.

“Well, maybe you’re right, and maybe you’re wrong, but it can’t hurt,” said Fred.  “Right, off with makeup, and that’s important too, to know how long we take.”

Alexander went into his dressing-room, a grandiose name for one of the small meeting rooms divided up with screens to give some privacy for the men, and saw an envelope on the desk which served to lay out grease paint and hold a small mirror. It had familiar cut out letters on it saying ‘Mr. Policeman.’ He pushed aside the screen.

“Someone is going to some pains to make sure we know we have the wrong person as poison pen,” he said, to Jeff.

“What shall we do, announce it?”

“No, I think we should keep it quiet,” said Alexander. Jeff went behind the screen with him.

“Hell! This is cramped. If I accidentally goose you, it isn’t deliberate,” he said.

“I shan’t take it as a promise of marriage, then,” said Alexander.

“Fool,” said Jeff. “Shall I open it whilst you take that muck off?”

“Yes, do,” said Alexander.

“It says, ‘You think you’re so clever, mister clever London copper, but you don’t know anything.’ And that’s it,” said Jeff. “Why did he pick you, not me?”

“Because I have a desk on which to leave it; he can see that two square feet of desk means status,” said Alexander. “And you can’t argue with status. I think it was for whichever of us he could get it to.”

“That makes sense, hence the anonymous ‘Mr. Policeman,’” said Jeff.  “And fast on the heels of saying we had caught someone who was possibly chummie.”

“And only really one person it could be, now,” said Alexander. “But it’s a thin story to take to a magistrate for a search warrant.”

“It is,” said Jeff. “I wouldn’t want to present it, though with your élan and ability to play off your come-hithery with the beaks it might get done.”

“Come-hithery, nothing. Some of them have just dandled me on their knee as a baby until I leaked on them,” said Alexander. “But I don’t know as many of them as you seem to think, and I still need enough just cause to go poking about regardless.”                                 

“How are we going to catch him?”

“Watch him,” said Alexander. “And hope that he doesn’t move to kill anyone else.”

“Not going to be easy,” said Jeff.

“I suspect there will be an outbreak of poison-pen letters tomorrow or the next day,” said Alexander. “I wish we could afford to put a watch on him all the time, but all we can do is our best.” 

 

Friday, March 13, 2026

Jurij Korybut, space cadet

 remember I was messing around with the idea of a graphic novel?  well, I've been playing with cartoon style on Night Cafe. The story starts at the bottom and goes to the top; I can't flip it without rearranging every pic.  Anyway, here's the collection if anyone wants to take a look. It's in the 'Happy Jurij' universe at an unspecified sf time period. I'm adding to it as and when. I shall probably turn it into a novel novel sometime perhaps with some of the pics in it.

 

https://creator.nightcafe.studio/collection/pM4mosCTFHngFLKADL6p?ru=CardinalBiggles 

lies in lashbrook 15

 

Chapter 15

 

Alexander stood at the graveside. The Girl Guides had turned out in uniform to follow the coffin of Irma; and the Braithwaite family had come in solidarity.  Alexander could not see anyone there for Violet Savin except her husband. Theodore Savin was sobbing quietly. He had already received a phone call from Superintendant Barrett confirming that Savin had been in the office all day and had not taken French leave at any time.

Alexander put a hand on the man’s shoulder.

“Thanks,” said Theodore. “I appreciate it.”

“I need to ask you for help with Irma’s diary but it will do on Monday,” said Alexander. “After the inquest.”

“God! There’s that, too,” said Theodore.

“Hang on there,” said Alexander. “I take it you had no trouble from work about taking time off?”

Theodore snorted.

“I’m being docked pay.  Having close relatives die is an inconvenience to the firm, and I am made to understand it. But then, I have less to spend it on, so why should I care? Sometimes I have the mad thought of sending in my resignation, but I’m not sure where I would go or what I would do.”

“I understand,” said Alexander. “You have been working hard for your daughter, to give her a good start in life.”

“Yes, you understand,” said Theodore. “I could probably live on my savings if I invested wisely; I don’t need to be beaten down by my superiors. And if I spent them on living, Vera has no chance of challenging any will I might make and getting any of it.”

“I should think there’s no challenge if you left it to your niece and nephews; but don’t let your mind drift towards an early grave for yourself, it’s not healthy,” said Alexander.

“I’ve precious little left to live for,” said Theodore.

“Nine out of ten people who try to commit suicide bungle it badly,” said Alexander. “Then it becomes my job because it’s illegal, and I hate having to arrest people who have crippled themselves or who are dying slowly and painfully because they got an overdose wrong. Please don’t become one of my clients.”

“You know, that’s a more powerful argument than to say that it’s wrong, or that I should find something to live for,” said Theodore. “Really, so many people bungle it?”

“Oh, hell, yes,” said Alexander. “If you overdo an overdose, your body can reject it but still be damaged. If you try to hang yourself and get the knot wrong, someone might easily cut you down, jumping off buildings or bridges can make a mess of your bones without necessarily killing you, so there you are, just as miserable, but stuck in a wheelchair and needing someone to change your underwear when you have accidents because you can’t feel what’s going on down there....”

“Stop! I won’t try,” said Theodore. “I was considering the drowning machine, like Al.”

“At that, if you don’t get the angle right, you can be spat unceremoniously out of it, battered but alive,” said Alexander, mendaciously. It could rarely happen that people survived a drowning machine of a weir, but it was unlikely. However, if it kept Theodore hanging on to life and ready to rebuild, he would lie about it. “Violet may not have been a good wife to you, but there are other women out there.”

“I still loved her, you know,” said Theodore. “I got angry with her often, but I still loved her. I’ll think about it, but not yet.” 

“A word of advice?” said Alexander.

“I’ll always listen.”

“Don’t turn Irma’s room into a shrine,” said Alexander. “Get some of her friends to clear it, and each take a memento. Then you’ll know she will be remembered, but without letting it consume you. Maybe let out the room to students, it’s close enough to Oxford that someone who can’t afford to live in the city would be glad of it, and it would give you some company in the evening”

Theodore nodded.

“I’ll think about that; thank you,” he said. “And a small fee for the room would supplement my income if I left work, which I believe I might.  I did all the work in the garden, I’ve half a mind to set up as a gardener-handyman.”

“If you need a loan for equipment, I’m willing,” said Alexander. “And as our gardener at Heywood Hall is disobliging if it doesn’t involve his idea of seasonal planting, I imagine I’ll be a customer and willing to help out with some of the ideas I have for the place.”

“Well, then! I’ll go back to work next week, after the inquest, to put my affairs in order, which should not take longer than Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, then it’s bank holiday Friday and Monday for Easter, and I’ll call in my resignation on Tuesday third of April,” said Theodore. “I can almost hear Irma approving, she said I gave too much of myself for too little appreciation.”

“And maybe your first job can be for the parish in cutting down those damned bushes on the river walk,” said Alexander. “And that an act for Irma, too.”

“I’ll do that for free over the weekend,” said Theodore. “Gladly and willingly. I don’t want anyone else’s little girl killed in what should be plain sight.”

Alexander hid a smile of satisfaction; he had hoped that Theodore might feel that way, and would distract himself in hard work.

Theodore went to have a word with Mrs. Marion Squires, Maggie’s mother, thanking her and the Girl Guides for turning out, and asking if the girls would care to help strip Irma’s room, taking a keepsake and any clothing they fancied.

“Well, now, Mr. Savin, that’s generous,” said Mrs. Squires, who also answered to ‘Captain’ or ‘Cap.’ “We usually meet on a Tuesday, perhaps though it’s holiday we could have an extra meeting to help you out?”

“Certainly,” said Theodore. “I... I have no objection if the girls would like a bonfire in the garden as well, and I can get in some potatoes and sausages to wrap in foil to bake. Irma loved cook-outs.”

“Well, that’s very generous of you,” said Mrs. Squires. “I’ve a new child, one of eight children and the only girl, her parents farm; could I ask for Irma’s uniform for her? It will be a little large, but she can grow into it.”

“Certainly, and her Girl-Guide handbook, too,” said Theodore. “And her camping handbook; together that’s five bob. Not easy for a poor family to find.  And if there’s anything that the child needs to buy and cannot, let me fund it so she does not feel humiliated.”

“You are all that is good.”

“I recall Irma learning the rules, and that a Guide is a friend and a sister to all guides. I would do as much if Irma had had a sister.”

“I think Irma would be very pleased,” said Mrs. Squires, dabbing at her eyes with her handkerchief.

Theodore also shook hands with all the Braithwaites, a wordless exchange in which all exchanged more than could ever be said. He accepted a hesitant invitation from Braithwaite to take pot luck with them for lunch. Alexander was glad; though he had no objection to inviting Theodore back with him, he was hoping that Jeff and Tim would be at Heywoods Hall for lunch, with a budget of news they could talk about more freely concerningVera Tweedie-Banks than they might in front of her cousin and neighbour.

 

 

Tim greeted Mary and Ruth a bit self-consciously, and flushed when he would have reached for a knife and fork whilst Jeff murmured a grace. Alexander and Ida were used to Alexander’s father saying grace, and if Jeff was willing to do it, they accepted it.

Alexander carved the leg of mutton which Mary had served, passing down slices to the women first, and including Millie in that, and then the men.

“We could do with two sets of cruets, really,” said Alexander. There were nine of them at the table with Gladys and Campbell.

“I’ll get another set out,” said Mary, standing up.

“It’ll do next time,” said Alexander. “We shall just have to plaintively ask for the mint sauce.”

“Oh, now that is in two bowls, Mr. Alexander; the one at your end is hiding behind the potatoes.”

“There now, couldn’t see for looking,” said Alexander, cheerfully. “But I can smell it and it’s tantalising me. Let us do justice to this before giving up your budget of news; thank you, Mary, for filling the inner policeman at midday after a hard morning.”

“I did think that going to a funeral or going to court were equally depressing tasks in need of cosseting,” said Mary.

“I’ll take a funeral every day,” said Alexander. “Assuming they are not bad people, you know where they’re going, which isn’t necessarily true when up before the beak.”

“Mr. Alexander!” said Mary.

Alexander grinned unrepentantly.

“Vi Savin isn’t bad enough to go down, and Irma, poor child, had little opportunity to sin much in this life. Sorry, I’ve been talking Theodore out of suicide, and it makes me facetious when trying to cope with it.”

“What’s suicide?” asked Millie, with devastating clarity. There was a very loud silence.

“Well, Millie,” said Jeff, “It’s really a very grown up thing when grown ups are very sad, and they want to go to sleep for ever and ever and not get on with life.”

Millie digested this.

“I wouldn’t like to do that,” she said.

“No, it doesn’t really solve any problems,” said Jeff. “But that’s one thing policemen are for, to help people to manage without it.”

“Oh!” said Millie. “Can I....”

“May I,” corrected Ruth.

“May I have more peas, please?” asked Millie.

“Goodness, more?” said Ruth, spooning some out for her daughter. “Considering you were eating them raw all morning, while you helped me shell them, I’m surprised you have room.”

“I like peas,” said Millie.

“How do we have peas in late March?” asked Alexander. “These taste fresh, not canned and if Millie has been shelling them....”

“The forcing-house,” said Mary. “We have year round cucumber, too.”

“It works on waste heat from the kitchen and laundry,” said Campbell. “And a southerly aspect carefully angled for the best sun.”

“Well, that stopped a tirade of mine in its tracks,” said Jeff. “Actually, I love the luxury and I’m not going to be a hypocrite about it.”

“It’s not too far to commute by train,” said Alexander. “I’m thinking of taking up cycling so I can take my bike by train into London, and living here if I’m not tied up late on a case.”

“I haven’t cycled in years since I came out by bike to the cottages,” said Jeff. “My backside is still complaining.”

“I haven’t cycled since I was on the beat,” said Alexander. He cocked his head, hearing a loud bicycle bell. “It’ll be good for us.  Now, I can hear the ice-cream man, which I asked to call, so as you’ve finished eating, Millie, perhaps you will take a bowl out, and get a dozen good scoops of ice-cream and nine half-bars of Cadbury’s flake, and you can keep the tenth half flake for running the errand.”

“I’ll go and help her,” said Ruth, sliding off as her daughter took off on sturdy little legs. “She’ll never carry the bowl.”

“No, but I want little pitchers with big ears out of the room,” said Alexander. “Jeff can fill you in later.”

 

“And there’s not much to tell,” said Jeff. “She was expecting to be remanded on bail for the wasting of police time, and for being the poison-pen, and she did not take that well. Her solicitor told her to plead guilty to wasting police time and hope to get off with a fine, but no. She opened that big mouth of hers and told the judge he was a fool and in on a conspiracy to silence her from saying that she knew that Theodore Savin had killed his wife. Well, the beak asked us some questions regarding that, and I told him that Savin had an unassailable alibi which had been checked by Scotland Yard, and that the idea of him murdering his wife was purely in Mrs. Twiddly-bonk’s head. I did remember to call her Tweedie-Banks.”

“Just as well,” said Alexander.

“Yes, I was pleased with myself,” said Jeff.  “And she went on and on about vagrants in the police force eating out of dustbins, and I explained that we were looking for a diary which might contain clues; so she held forth about how there was nothing but squiggles. I told the judge that the girl was studying Pitman’s shorthand, and that breaking and entering to read her diary was part of our case against the accused. So she set up a screech and said it wasn’t breaking and entering if you knew where the key was hidden, and got cagey when the beak asked if she had permission to come and go at will, and asked if she was in the habit of doing this, and after some humming and hah’ing, she admitted it, and he said, ‘A persistent offender, then,’ and she called him an evil old bastard, begging pardon of the ladies, and the upshot was she was sent down for fifteen days for contempt of court, and when she shrieked more, he extended it to thirty days.”

“Did you get a search warrant?” asked Alexander.

“I did,” said Jeff. “This afternoon?”

“Might as well get it over and done with,” said Alexander. “Oh, look! Ice cream and flakes. Splendid!” as Ruth came in carrying the bowl. Millie’s mouth was suspiciously stained with chocolate.

The company tucked into vanilla ice cream with half a flake bar each, and when given permission to leave the table, Millie trotted off on her own small concerns.

“Back to the dustbins, I fear,” said Alexander.

“‘Lay on, Macduff, and cursed be he who first cries ‘hold! Enough,’” said Jeff.

“Have I ever told you about how my ancestor, the Bow Street Runner, tortured two actors into giving their testimony by mentioning Macbeth, or quoting from it every time they turned obstreperous?” asked Alexander.

“No, how did that work? Surely they knew the play,” said Jeff.

“Actors are as superstitious as sailors,” said Alexander. “And they have to go through a ritual of turning around and quoting from ‘Hamlet’ if anyone calls it by name, not ‘The Scottish Play,’ or who quotes from it.”

“How do they rehearse?”

“Apparently, that’s different,” said Alexander. “Tim, are you ready?”

The young policeman gave a shy grin.

“‘When shall we three meet again?’” he quoted.

Jeff and Alexander laughed.

“Now that would be a performance, the three witches all men in drag,” said Alexander. “I wonder if Fred would go for it?”

“If it has comedic value, Fred would go for it,” said Tim.