Saturday, July 23, 2022

the village vicar 12

 

Chapter 12 The devil maketh mischief still for idle hands to do

 

Chaz heard a sound of disapproval from  Rachel as he knelt to remove the ever-encroaching cleavers from his borders, the seeds brought on animal fur or the legs of human visitors, and a never-ending nuisance in any garden. It was halfway between a mew and a growl, and he was always surprised by how loud such a small cat managed to be. There was also the sound of something hitting the stone flags of the path. Chaz stood up, to find Rachel, who had been dozing in the lavender bush, hissing like a tea-kettle at the boy who had apparently just shied a stone at her and had another in his hand. Rachel showed no signs of being hurt, so Chaz shouted,

You, boy! You come right here!”

Apparently Captain Cunningham had not been put back into the box after having been permitted out in the protection of one of his men as the shout was worthy of the parade ground. The boy fled.

Chaz was not about to let this go, and thundered across his lawn, to hurdle the stone wall just in front of the youth, and laid a hand on his shoulder. The boy was lanky but rather skinny, and Chaz judged him to be no more than thirteen.  His hair was dark and messy but he showed no signs of neglect, his skin was as clean as any teen’s, which is to say probably would not stand a close look behind the ears, and his clothes looked well cared for with no more grime than might be explained by a day’s wear.  But Chaz did not recognise him.

“I told you to come here, laddie; wasn’t I loud enough?” he demanded, grimly.

“You can’t whack me or I’ll say you assaulted me,” said the boy.

“Do you think whacking you would stop you, anyway?” asked Chaz, manoeuvring the boy back towards the gate.

“No!” said the boy.

“Then it would be a damned silly thing to do, wouldn’t it?” said Chaz.  “I’m going to introduce you to my cat, whose name is Rachel, and if she scratches in retaliation, you’ll have deserved it. And we’re going to look for that stone you threw. How much do you weigh?”

“About forty-five kilos,” muttered the boy.  “What has that to do with it?”

“Everything,” said Chaz. “Rachel weighs three kilos; she’s a small cat, always has been. It doesn’t stop her being bossy, though, she keeps her brother well under her little paw. Rachel, this is... what is your name?” They had got far enough up the path to be level with Rachel’s lavender bush. She hissed but did not move. She began washing her already immaculate black fur with apparent unconcern. 

“Evan.  Evan Queave,” said the boy. “Me mum’s bossy.”

“Well, you understand Rachel, then,” said Chaz. “Now, this looks like the stone you threw; is it?”

Evan shrugged.

“Yeah, reckon,” he said.  It was a large stone, taken from Chaz’s wall, the vicar thought, a flint nodule easily as big as the hand that had thrown it.

“Right, Evan, come inside and we’ll find my kitchen scales.”

“I ain’t supposed to go inside no-one’s house that I don’t know.”

“A sensible prohibition,  and I swear on all I believe in that I mean you no harm. But I don’t want you scarpering while I get my scales, because if I have to search you out, I won’t be in a good mood.”

“I’ll stay here,” said Evan. “Why do you want your scales?”

“I’ll show you,” said Chaz.

It was a calculated risk to leave the boy, but Chaz decided to trust his word. He was pleased the boy was still there when he came out, albeit with his hands in his pockets and looking sulky.

Chaz set down his scales and placed the stone on it.

“How much does it weigh?” he asked.

“Almost a kilo,” said Evan.

“So a third of what Rachel weighs,” said Chaz. “And you weigh forty-five kilos, so a stone as big to you would weigh fifteen kilos. Now, my sack of fertiliser over there weighs fifteen kilos; will you go and see if you can lift it?”

Evan did so, with a struggle.

“Now, you know how much fifteen kilos weighs. Come and see which of the rocks on my rockery weighs as much,” said Chaz.

Evan tested several, and pointed to one.

“That one,” he said.

“Ah, a nice piece of red granite,” said Chaz. “How would you feel if I were to retaliate for you shying stones at my cat by throwing that one of comparable size to the one you threw at her?”

Evan paled.

“It’d break my leg,” he said.

“And your stone might have broken Rachel’s leg, or her ribs, or killed her,” said Chaz. “Don’t you think I have good reason to be angry on her behalf?”

“Yeah, I guess so,” said Evan.  Chaz waited. The boy shuffled. “I’m sorry, I won’t do it again,” he said. “She looked so self-satisfied and it made me angry. I wanted to disturb her.”

“I fancied that might be something like it,” said Chaz. “Why don’t you nip into the pergola and get out a couple of garden chairs while I get some... let me see, do you drink home-made lemonade?”

“Dunno; never had it,” said Evan.

“Well, I’ll get some, and then we can talk about why you are angry and what I might do to help,” said Chaz.

If Evan wondered why he was meekly obeying, he kept his mouth shut about  it..  Chaz brought out lemonade and some of his iced biscuits on a tray with legs, making a mini table, pouring a glass of lemonade for the boy, and pushing the plate of biscuits towards him.

“Hey, this is good!” said Evan, cautiously sipping the lemonade.

“Thank you,” said Chaz. “I made the biscuits too; I like to cook.”

Evan made approving noises through the crumbs.

Chaz let him scoff, and drink a refill of lemonade.

“I’m bored,” said Evan. “We just moved here, because dad wants to start up on his own with a business putting in patios and things. And he won’t let me help, and I’m not really that interested anyway.”

“What do you want to do?”

“I want to go back to the Isle of Man and be a mechanic for the TT races.”

“You know that only happens for a short while, and then the men and their bikes go away?”

“Yes, but normal folk will want their cars and things fixed,” said Evan.

“That’s the same anywhere.”

“Yes, but I had a friend who worked on the bikes. And I had more boys my age to hang out with.”

“Yes, there is a singular paucity of young folk in the village. Suppose I had a word with Barty Thorpe, who runs the village garage. If he’s agreeable, I can get you a Saturday job working for him. It’ll pay peanuts, but he’ll give you a lot of tips, and if you work hard, he might let you work on the old Bugatti he has in the back, which he’s hoping to get running for the next car rally.” Chaz grinned. “According to Wendel – the vet – Barty has been promising to get it ready for the next car rally for the last ten years at least, but with  a helper, who knows? He might.  And you’ll have my motorbike in there for its service and M.O.T. as well.”

“You have that big Ducati 900, don’t you?”

“I do. I remember Mike Hailwood winning the TT on one, though that’s before your time by a long chalk,” said Chaz. “I’m not convinced the race is safe anymore, too many people, the bikes can go faster now than the roads are designed for, but it thrilled me when I was younger.  I was six when he won the TT and it stuck in my memory.”

“Cor!” said Evan. “I’d love to drive something like that.”

“And you’ll only do so once you’ve worked your way up with smaller machines,” said Chaz.  “Now, how about you come and say sorry to Rachel, and then we’ll walk over and talk to Barty?”

“Thank you, sir,” said Evan. “I... I am sorry. I didn’t think. And I was in such a temper with Mum telling me to go out and do something, and not knowing what. I don’t deserve you being kind.”

“Oh, everyone deserves someone being kind,” said Chaz. “I could see you were miserable. Most people who throw stones or paint nasty graffiti – I don’t include clever pictures – are miserable. Because people who can’t make things die a little bit inside, and start to destroy what others make in defiance. And then, you know, if they get punished without being helped, they only get more angry. You understand that, don’t you?”

“Yes, sir, I do,” said Evan, with feeling.  “There’s boys who spray rude words on the school bus, and laugh if anyone tells them off.”

“Unfortunately, it’s none of my business, but I’d get them painting the bus properly,” said Chaz. “Designing pictures to put on it as well, and then they’d be invested in keeping it nice.”

“I bet there’d be less trouble if you were the headmaster,” said Evan.

Chaz sighed.

“I can’t be everywhere,” he said. “My Boss can, because that’s the nature of God, but He puts men in places to help, and has to rely on them to do His will. And each of us can only do our best.”

“Did I ought to tell them that painting the bus would be hard work?”

“No, they’ll probably beat you up,” said Chaz. “It’s all very well to say doing what is right is better than doing what is easy, which in principle it is, but principle is a bit airy-fairy when you’re in hospital in traction and your words didn’t reach anyone anyway. You have to be practical about these things.”

“You’re awfully sensible for a grown-up,” said Evan.

“I do try to be,” said Chaz.

The garage was one of those places which tend to fascinate small children and not so small children who like mechanical things. There was a small breaker’s yard out the back, as Barty cheerfully bought in any car being scrapped  to cannibalise for parts, some of which he mended and sold on to a larger garage in the nearest town.  Chaz  was pretty sure that they charged as for new, but he had not been able to catch them at it, and suspected that Barty’s methodical reconditioning might provide pieces which were superior to new parts in any case.

The garage itself had been built in the 1930s, and was definitely a fine example of art deco architecture, the poured concrete of its construction featuring the rectangular and triangular patterns on the front and over the big double doors typical of the period. Inside, various cars sat about in various states of disrepair, and right at the back the racing car which had to be contemporary with the garage, and which put Chaz strongly in mind of Captain Hastings from the ‘Poirot’ T.V. series. 

Barty’s daughter Trisha was in here, helping out, covered in greasy overalls as usual, but the overalls not hiding that she was becoming fairly shapely.  Chaz smirked to himself to see Evan noticing her. Being of an age, a friendship between them, with or without any extracurricular snogging, would doubtless be good for both.

 

“I’m not sure, Vicar...” said Barty, when Chaz explained the problem. “They changed the law so you have to be sixteen to work. Not that anyone takes any notice, but there’s that little shit, Sir Tarleton-Rickett, who would make trouble if he could.”

“You could, however, let your daughter’s class-mate help her help out and drop him a little pocket money,” said Chaz.

Barty was dubious, but nodded, slowly.

“Trish, you know Evan?” he asked.

“Yeah, he’s at school with me; new boy,” said Trish.

“Check him out on the Mini to see if he’s worth letting us help with the Bugatti,” said Barty.

“He knows what he’s doing, he crosswired the ignition on all the teachers’ cars so they’d only start if they were holding the horn down,” said Trisha. “The noise was delightful...uh, most terrible,” she amended with a glance at Chaz.

“I can imagine it being a blast,” said Chaz, making her grin.

“Yeah, something like that,” she said. “Old Fink blamed me but I demanded trial by jury as I could be alibi’d all day. And he couldn’t disprove it and he didn’t dare put me in detention or dad would have given him what-for.”

“I suppose I should confess,” said Evan.

“Why? It’s yesterday’s news now,” said Trisha. “We can figure out something really spectacular to do for the end of term now we’ve talked to each other.”

“And don’t discuss it in front of me,” said Chaz, who had very little opinion of Dr. Finklebrand , the deputy head. “And for goodness sake, Evan, do try to keep up with your school work,” he added.

“Why? If I have a job to walk into...”

 “Because in twenty years, you might have changed your mind, and you might even be the next headmaster, if you can keep your studies going. And you need good exams to study engineering at university anyway,” said Chaz. “In twenty years you’ll be almost the same age I am now, and I never planned to be a vicar. I was going to be a career soldier. But God called me, and I packed my kitbag and followed Him into a battleground far more challenging than one where you know the enemy and all you have to do is to shoot them.”

“I’ll work hard at school as well as on cars,” said Evan.

Chaz hoped his enthusiasm would be maintained.

 

Monday, July 18, 2022

The Village Vicar 11

 

Chapter 11 No condemnation now I dread

 

Adam awoke Chaz by barking, while it was still what Chaz, in military parlance, referred to as ‘Oh-too-early hours.’ He seemed eager for the vicar to follow him and paced up and down yipping and growling, his plumy auburn tail wagging as Chaz arose and pulled on jeans and a jacket over his pyjamas to follow. He had gained the habit of wearing pyjamas as an officer, there being strong disapproval of setting bad examples to the men over being improperly dressed – or undressed – and behaviour unbecoming to an officer. Responding to a drill wearing only his boots and rifle had earned him a dressing-down for being undressed down, as the colonel had put it.

Adam all but dragged Chaz over to the church, and inside it.  There was a figure by the altar.

“Fank Gawd!” said a voice well known to Captain Charles Cunningham.

“Pidge?” said Chaz.

“I’m seekin’ sankchery, capting,” said Charlie ‘Pigeon toe’ Blake.

“I don’t think sanctuary works like that, any more, Pidge. But what’s wrong? I’ve never known you not to hold up your hands if it’s a fair cop.”

“Well, it ain’t a fair cop, is it?” said Blake.

“I don’t know; isn’t it?” asked Chaz.

“It ain’t, it ain’t,” said Blake. “I holds up me ‘ands over them robberies; an’ I went once too orften to the well in that MO, account o’ how the coppers couldn’t pin it on me until that ruddy fence squealed so as not to be impliculatated in murder, see?”

“No, I don’t see at all,” said Chaz. “You’re a peaceful man, Pidge, though your looks are against you, and I don’t see you being mixed  up in murder.”

“Well, that’s the problem, see,” said Blake.  “I robbed the old dame – Baroness of Rudford or some such – but I never killed her. But she were killed with my jemmy ‘cos I left it there by accident, like.”

“You are in a pickle,” said Chaz. “Come over to the rectory and I’ll get a cup of tea and some breakfast.”

“Cor, I could murder a bacon sangwidge,” said Blake. “Orl I could fink of while we was stuck in MMFD[1] was how them bloody heathens spurn God’s best food.”

To an enlisted man of limited education, the cultural differences between Bermondsey and Iraq centred around not being able to get his favourite food.

 

Chaz served tea and a bacon sandwich, and when Blake had slurped his way through the former and devoured the latter, gestured to the man to speak.

“Right, well, you knows ‘ow quiet I am,” said Blake. “And I bin doing a series o’ jobs usin’ the  mark’s own ladder, and goin’ in the winder while they’re asleep, right? Seeming people notice hearin’ winders open in uvver parts of the place but not where they’re sleepin’ right? I read some psychology books when I was last doing bird,” he explained. “So I go in, empty out any valuebubbles wot they keeps close by, and out again. And I wears gloves. Well, seems I lef’ some footprints some place or uvver, and I hear they can match the jemmyin’ to the jemmy. But I never killed the old dame, swelp me! She woke up, and I heard her gasp an’ I put an ‘and over ‘er mouf, see? Well she wears stockin’s, so I use one to tie round ‘er mouf as a gag, and one to tie ‘er ‘ands tergivver, to the bed. It bein’ one o’ vem fancy brass jobbies. An’ then I split, and realised when I were down, I’d lef’ my jemmy in ‘er room. But the paper say it were used to slug the old dame, an’ was found on the ground outside covered in blood, and that all her jools was gone. Well, I didn’t stay to nab orl of them, I took the emeralds and that’s all. You do believe me, doncha, capting?”

“I do,” said Chaz.  “Very well; you can go and kip in my spare room, and I’ll drive into the city, and see what I can do.”

 

 

 

Superintendant Murdoch was pleased to see a vicar who said he had information with regards to the Rudford killing

“Before I signed up for the duration with the Almighty, I was in the armed forces, and a certain Charles ‘Pigeon toes’ Blake served under me,” said Chaz. “Now, I might be able to get him to cough to the robberies but he swears blind he did not kill the old woman.”

“If you know where the suspect is, it’s your duty to lay information,” said Murdoch.

“The hell it is,” said Chaz. “My duty is to a man who looks to me to sort out a pickle he finds himself in, accused of murder which he did not commit.”

Murdoch frowned and shrugged.

“His M.O.; his jemmy; his footprints, and he sold the old dame’s necklace.”

“Only the emeralds which was all he had time for. He told me he tied her up.”

“Well, that’s a lie; she was not tied up when we got there, after the maid phoned us, killed in her sleep she was.”

“Inspector, when you know that Blake has never been a violent man, why would he suddenly kill an old woman in her sleep?” said Chaz. “If you charge him on that, without examining all the evidence, I will be giving a character witness, and interviews to the newspapers. Did you check the body for ligature marks? Did you look for skin rubbed off her wrists on the stocking used to tie them, and maybe brasso from the bed as well? And for saliva on the one he gagged her with?”

“Well... no.”

Then why the hell are you not phoning the lab to check right now?”  barked Captain Cunningham’s parade ground voice nine inches from Murdoch’s ear.

Inspector Murdoch was not used to being bullied in his own office.

He was not used to being bullied at all.

He was so taken aback he meekly phoned the lab, and sent someone to collect and bag the stockings as evidence.

“Good,” said Chaz. “When you find evidence of Blake’s story, you can let me know and I’ll talk him into coming quietly while you pick up the murderer.”

“But... hang on, why should he not kill her after tying her up?” said Murdoch.

“Why should he? She was neutralised. And he won’t thank me for telling you this, but Blake is squeamish about blood. I know, ridiculous for a soldier.  But he passes out. He certainly would not be likely to be the cause of bleeding.  If  you ask me, the killer was an opportunist who probably hated the old lady for personal reasons and used the incidence of a robbery to do in the old dame who was held helpless, and then removed the gag and untied the wrists, calmly helped herself to the rest of the jewels, screeched, and phoned 999. Any blood on her could be accounted for by saying she checked to see if her mistress was all right. And then she threw the jemmy out of the window.”

“We don’t appreciate amateurs trying to do our jobs for us,” said Murdoch.

“Oh, but I’m not an amateur; I specialise in souls,” said Chaz. “Blake’s battered soul is larcenous, greedy, and shrewd, if not the sharpest stick in the bundle. And I had already seen the maid on the six o’clock news, and she was enjoying herself telling the story. And when she said ‘Oooh, it were a cruel blow, like someone hated her!’ I thought immediately that she was wishing she had struck it. It’s not too big a leap to speculating that she did. And if she did not, I wager you’ll find it was a boyfriend of hers she called in.”

“Good God!” said Murdoch.

“He is, indeed, very good, and He gathers every straying sinner to His breast when they need succour – even Charlie Blake,” said Chaz.

 

Chaz received a phone call in the rectory later that day.

“The evidence was on the stockings, and she had ligature marks,” said Murdoch. “And my boys overlooked that the stocking tying her up had been cut. Someone in SOCO is going to get a rocket, you may be sure. The ligature marks weren’t obvious until she’d been dead a while. And... we found the other jewels. You were right, but I want Blake.”

“I’ll bring him in,” said Chaz. “He’ll go quietly. Just don’t let him read any more psychology books in jail; he’s sharp enough to use them to change his M.O. regularly enough to stay a step ahead of the law.”

 

He broke the news to Blake.

“I knew you’d sort it out, Capting,” said Blake. “It ain’t no s’prise you turned to God-botherin’ as a career, you allus was omnissiment.”

“God is omniscient, and knows all about you, Pidge,” said Chaz. “But I know you. And I also know that you are inclined to interpret the text ‘God helps those who help  themselves’ rather freely. You can leave my spoons, crucifix, and anything else you picked up on the table.”

“Gawd, Capting! I wouldn’t touch your cruzy-fix, not after ‘im Upstairs ‘elped you git me aht o’ vat fix!” said Blake, with feeling. “Oh, all right.”

He emptied a pocket full of silver spoons.

“Good. Let’s go,” said Chaz.

 



[1] British army slang for ‘Miles and Miles of F***ing Desert

Sunday, July 17, 2022

some dolls house furniture...

 




this one was going to be a cupboard with four doors but I didn't leave enough room for hinges so I made them false doors and turned it into a chest.


this and the one below are the first pic before being painted


waiting to be painted, I've subsequently maid chaises longues and recamiers using 'wicker work' [sewing canvas] as it bends more readily about the curves