After that, back to the boring old bank, I thought. But David said why not come and stay with him for a while, I deserved a rest, and having his sister about the vicarage might help fend off all the lady parishioners who were determined to marry him off.
So I came to Cothersley. That was three years ago. My rest didn’t last long, I’m a busy bee by nature and very soon I was helping out with things—parish finances, timetables, fêtes, that sort of thing—till eventually I found I was doing what felt like a full-time job, except of course I got nothing for it, except my keep.
I kept telling myself I had to break away, get out and find a real job again, but I can’t say the thought of going back to the bank really turned me on. David said, “Hang on, don’t rush into anything, something is sure to turn up.” And it did!
I’d got to know Pal as a neighbour and also as one of my brother’s parishioners, though really I didn’t see much of him except when I was doing the rounds with my collecting box when he was always very generous. Then one day I was in town, shopping for a birthday present for David, and I saw this little musical box in an antique shop window, and I went inside, not really registering the shop’s name, and Pal said, “Well, hello, this is nice,” like we were old friends. The box was a lovely thing, early nineteenth-century, silver with beryls and topazes, and it played a sweet little tune which Pal said was by Haydn, but its price was far more than I could afford even when he offered me a discount. Well we chatted about antiques for a while—Mother had been interested so I knew a little bit—then suddenly he asked if I’d be interested in a job. He was looking for someone to help him in the shop, someone he could rely on to take over while he was away on buying trips. Sue-Lynn, his wife, helped sometimes but he said she wasn’t really interested and if I could see my way …
I didn’t hesitate. The thought of being at least partially independent again was marvellous. I said, “Yes please. How much will you pay me?” And he laughed and said if I was going to be an antiques dealer, I’d have to learn a better haggling technique than that.
So I took the job, and it was great. I really enjoyed it and after a while I think I became pretty good at it.
That was just over eighteen months ago. The sex began three or four months later.
It wasn’t an affair. It was never an affair, not like in Brief Encounter, which was Mother’s favourite movie—in the end I knew the script by heart—no, this was certainly nothing like that. One day in the shop he touched me. Not an accidental brush. No ambiguity. A hand on my … you know. Well, I didn’t know what to do. So I touched him back. He put the closed sign up.
I suppose that was my on your mark, get set, bang!
I wasn’t inexperienced, but for a long time, what with looking after Mother then living in the vicarage, there hadn’t been much opportunity. But this was worth waiting for.
Like the job, it was great. I really enjoyed it. And after a while with Pal’s help I think I became pretty good at it.
The Dolores thing started casually. We asked each other to do various things and the Dolores get-up was one of the things he asked me to do. It was like children dressing up! Well, a bit more than that, of course, but you know what I mean. Then he asked if he could bring a friend. I got rather frightened at this, but he said I should ask myself if that wasn’t Dolly Upshott speaking, and why didn’t I check with Dolores, which was who I’d be to this friend, he need never know anything about Dolly. So I did check, and though it was still a bit scary, Dolores found the prospect rather exciting, and the actual encounter more exciting still.
I hope I’m not shocking you, but you said the franker I was, the less chance there was of David ever needing to hear any of this, and I couldn’t bear that.
Things developed. Pal said the friend would like to be by himself with me. He took a hotel room. I went to it. When he went, he left an envelope by my clothes. I opened it. There was two hundred pounds in it. I was furious and I went to Pal and had a row with him. I asked him what he thought I was. He told me that all that mattered was what I thought I was. If I wanted, he said, he’d give the money back to his friend, but if he could find a girl who left him a couple of hundred quid every time they had a fuck, he’d jump at it. I threw the money at him and said, “There you go then.” And he threw it back at me and told me angrily not to be stupid. And I said, “What’s the difference?” And he said he wouldn’t object to being paid as a stud but he had no ambitions to be a pimp. And we both started laughing.
After that, well, it became … not routine, not even regular, and not for the money either though that was nice … but whenever Dolores felt like it. Dolores was part of me, of course, but only a part, and I, me, Dolly Upshott, was completely separate from Dolores. Pal got me a phone so that his friends—there were two or three of them, no more—could contact me and leave a message, and I could get back to them if I wanted to. And sometimes I did and sometimes I didn’t. But with Pal, I always wanted to.
Sorry, I’m boring you a bit, aren’t I? It’s information you want, not analysis. Trouble is, Dolores doesn’t give a toss what you think, but Dolly would like you to understand …
Anyway, sometimes Pal took me to Moscow House. He told me how it had been put on the market after all these years and his car turning up there wouldn’t draw much attention. It was very eerie going into an old house with a lot of the furniture shrouded in dust sheets, but that only made it more exciting for Dolores. This after all was her kind of territory, though Dolly almost put in an appearance when Pal eventually told me about his father committing suicide there. He went on about it not really being suicide, insisting that his stepmother was somehow responsible. He used to get very angry when he talked about her, but I noticed that he also got very excited too, so I often deliberately brought her into the conversation.
Then he asked if I’d mind if he brought someone else along to Moscow House. I did mind. It was our place. But when he explained it wasn’t like the others, this wasn’t someone who would want to ring me up and fix to meet me in a hotel room and leave an envelope, this was personal, this was family, Dolores got interested and said, “Why not?”
That’s how I met Jason. Jase. You know him? Of course you do. He’s Pal’s brother-in-law and you must have met all the family while you’ve been investigating the case. He is gorgeous, isn’t he? And the sex! Pal once said, “For God’s sake, Jase, slow down, you make me feel like an old man!” So from that point of view it was great. But I always felt there was something else.
Then one night we were all lying there, shagged out—sorry, sounds awful, doesn’t it? But I mean it quite literally. And as well as shagged out, the two chaps were spaced out—they’d got into the habit of doing a line or two of coke, Pal’s treat. He offered me some too, but Dolores wasn’t interested. The sex was enough for her, and besides when they were like this, they’d get to talking like she wasn’t there, and it’s a bit of a giggle eavesdropping on you men when you think you’re all alone.
This time Pal started talking about Kay, that’s his stepmother. Sorry, you know that. Not his usual angry stuff but just sort of dreamily recalling how he reckoned she fancied him when he was in his teens and how there’d been a couple of occasions when they were alone together and he was sure he could have had her, only he was too nervous to try. And Jason said that he’d missed a great chance, on a scale of ten he’d give her ten plus; and Pal said, “You mean, you have had her?” Jason sort of hesitated—I think he was just enough in touch with the real world to think that maybe this wasn’t a road he wanted to go down, not with his wife’s brother—but Pal said something like, “Hey, Jase, it’s OK, buddy, you’re among friends, what anyone says here, stays here.” And Jason relaxed again and he said, oh yes, he’d certainly had Kay, but it was long before he married Helen—that’s Pal’s sister; sorry—in fact it was because of Helen he’d met Kay. She used to come to parent–teachers’ meetings at Weavers School where he taught. Jase had no reason to talk to her—the girls have a
woman PE teacher—but he’d spotted this good-looking bird, as he put it, and he’d caught her eye one night and given her his come-on look, and she’d responded, and not long after the meeting ended, he was having one of the best times he’d ever had.
Pal asked how long this went on and Jase said not long, he never let these things go on long enough to get serious. He tried to sound real casual about it, but somehow I got the impression it was really her who’d done the dumping and she’d made it hurt.
Then Pal asked if it hadn’t been awkward when he started going out with Helen. Jase said that in fact there was no way he’d have started with Helen if he’d realized who she was, but he’d met her in a club, they had a great time, good enough to make him look out for her the following night. This time they exchanged rather more information, but even when she mentioned she’d just left Weavers a few weeks before and had always fancied him, he didn’t make a connection between this Helen Maciver and the Kay Kafka he’d had a fling with, otherwise, he said, he’d have run a mile.
Whatever Kay had done to him, she’d left her mark.
Jase boasted he was used to being fancied by the older girls at school but he made very sure he kept them at arm’s length or even further. He really likes his job and he doesn’t want to risk losing it for something that’s in plentiful supply in the outside world. His words. Once the girls left Weavers, though, they were fair game for a couple of sessions on the training track. His words again.
But after he’d been out with Helen three or four times, he began to think this one might be different. He really liked her. He sounded rather surprised when he said it, as if really liking a woman he’d bedded was a novelty. He listened to her talking about the two of them as an item and found he didn’t mind. Still no notion of her connection with Kay. Helen told him later that her stepmother’s approval meant so much to her, she kept putting off inviting him home for fear things might go wrong. But she was far too close to Kay to keep it secret for long that she’d met the man she loved and wanted to marry, and one day Jase answered the bell to his apartment and found Kay on the doorstep.
When he realized she was Helen’s stepmother, he said he felt the world was coming to an end. What she said made such a deep impression he was still able to quote it verbatim. Me too. I’ve always had a fantastic memory.
She said, “Mr Dunn, I know what you are capable of, in every sense. Helen finds you irresistibly attractive and has got it into her head that you are the man she wants to marry. I think this would be a huge mistake. I haven’t told her this, nor my reasons for so believing, because of the damage it would do to our relationship. In fact I suggested she should invite you round to tea next time you meet. When she does, I would like you to tell her, no way, you’ve no desire whatsoever to get your feet under the table, this thing between you is a casual fling and if she’s got other ideas she’d better disabuse herself. If you fail to do this, I will have to intervene, whatever the consequences. And by the way, one of those consequences would be the loss of your job as I should make it quite clear to the education authorities that this relationship had begun while Helen was still a pupil at Weavers.”
Jase said he was scared shitless—his words—but what was even more scary was he heard himself telling Kay that he didn’t give a toss, she must do whatever she felt she had to do, but even if it meant losing his job and having to start over, Helen was the only girl for him and he was going to marry her, come what may.
He said Kay didn’t speak for a long time, just sat there looking at him, so still and intense he began to think maybe she was going to turn him into a frog.
Then she said, “OK. In that case when she asks you to tea, you’d better come.”
Pal let out a great whoop of laughter and said, “That’s my girl! Nothing but the best for her beloved little Helen. Good stud line, lovely mover, beautifully schooled, top-class foals guaranteed. Only thing she didn’t reckon on was how frisky you might get if deprived of your regular oats.”
Then Pal laughed again, only in a more friendly fashion this time, and said, “No need to look so worried, my son. I know this is just a bit of fun while my kid sister’s out of commission, no harm done. And there won’t be any tales out of school. Dolores and I are as discreet as a pair of dodos, and that’s dead discreet.”
So things went on as before, until last time.
We all used to meet up in the sports centre car park, at the dark end near the river. Jase and I would get into Pal’s car and he’d drive us off to Moscow House so that his was the only car anyone would see going up the drive. Only this night our usual time went by and there was no sign of Pal. Finally I got into Jase’s car so we could decide what to do. I tried to ring Pal on his mobile, but it was switched off. Then I tried the shop, but got no reply. After that Jase used my phone to ring Pal’s home number. He spoke to Sue-Lynn, who had no idea where Pal was. After that we drove to the Avenue and went slowly past the entrance to Moscow House in case Pal had gone directly there for some reason. But it was very misty and, even if it hadn’t been, you can hardly see the house from the road. We turned and came back and this time as we approached we saw a police car turn into the driveway.
This really bothered Jase and he headed back to the sports centre. He dropped me in the car park. He was going to go into the club and do a bit more phoning around to see if he could track down Pal. He said he was sure everything was all right, but I could tell he was worried. He said I should just go home, wherever that was. I almost told him it was the vicarage at Cothersley, just to see his face, but that would have been very silly. I got into my little Fiat. Usually I change in there and get my make-up off, if the car park’s quiet, but tonight I was worried too, so I decided to take another drive down the Avenue.
I got there just in time to see an ambulance with its siren wailing turning into Moscow House. I could see what looked like a police car’s flashing lights up by the house. I parked around the corner and got out and walked back. I knew that a lot of prostitutes hung out along the Avenue, so I thought a woman walking by herself wouldn’t attract any attention, but the place seemed deserted and I realized that at the first sign of the police most of the pros must have realized that business was over for the night and headed off elsewhere.
Gosh it was eerie, but I had to find out what was going on. There was a policeman stationed at the gate. He nearly jumped out of his skin when he saw me, and realizing that he was even more scared than I was gave me confidence. I put on my best Dolores voice and pretended I was one of the Avenue girls rather put out at having her evening’s trade ruined. What he told me really chilled my blood. He said they’d found a dead man in the house, looked like suicide but they didn’t know for certain yet, and the body was still to be identified. I knew it was Pal, I don’t know how, but from the start I was sure.
Some other cars came and I hid. Then I made my way back to my own car and drove back to Cothersley as quickly as I could. I was in such a state I almost forgot to get out of my Dolores gear. Gosh, what a shock it would have given David if I’d walked in dressed like that!
As far as I was concerned that was the end of Dolores. I only got the phone out last night to throw it away and if I hadn’t checked for messages, I wouldn’t be here. But then I suppose you would have come round to the vicarage and that would have been far worse.
Please, I’ve told you everything I know. It hasn’t been easy, but I didn’t want to leave any reason for you to need to question me again ever.
So I’ve done what you asked, as full and frank as I can make it. You look like a good and honest man, to me, Mr Pascoe. Please, can I have your assurance again that this is the last I’m ever going to hear of this business?
3 • middle name
Pascoe paused to get his breath before he passed through the general CID room en route to Dalziel’s office. He didn’t want his subordinates to think he’d been running up the stairs because he was late, but Novello’s welcoming grin gave the impression that she k
new anyway.
To his surprise, Hat Bowler too was sitting at his desk, gazing vacantly at the wall. He looked pale and unhappy.
“Hat, what are you doing here?” asked Pascoe, concerned.
“Super said he thought it would be a good idea, sir. Break myself back in gently.”
“But you’re still on the sick list.”
“Yes, sir. But I’ll be seeing the doc on Monday to get signed off.”
“I think that will be for the doctor to say,” said Pascoe gently.
Now he recalled Dalziel’s concern lest the lad was somehow getting mixed up with funny-bugger business by spending time at Lavinia Maciver’s cottage. And the fat sod accuses me of flights of fancy! thought Pascoe.
But today did not seem a good time to start countermanding orders from the Godhead.
He said, “Well, don’t overdo it,” a comment which brought a cynical snort quickly modified into a sneeze from Novello. Pascoe shot her an admonitory glance and went to meet his doom.
The Fat Man was replacing his phone as Pascoe entered.
“Sorry I’m late, sir, but …”
“Bugger buts. Late’s late,” said Dalziel without any real force. “I’ve just been talking to Kay and told her we’d be out to see her a bit later.”
“But we didn’t have an appointment,” protested Pascoe. “In fact I’d have preferred to take her by surprise.”
“You’d need to get up a bit earlier to do that, lad,” said Dalziel. “Any road, I didn’t ring her, she rang me.”
“How convenient. What for?”
“Two things,” said Dalziel, ignoring the slight sneer. “One was to tell me about what went off at Moscow House last night. Seemed surprised I didn’t know about it. Not as surprised as me, but.”
He looked questioningly at Pascoe who said, “Sorry, sir, just heard what happened from Wieldy myself this morning. I was going to put you in the picture.”
“I really appreciate that, Pete. The other thing she rang about is she’s worried about her husband.”
Good Morning, Midnight Page 35