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The Night They Killed Joss Varran
by
George Bellairs
1
The Waiting Woman
CROUCHED IN a dead hamlet in the harshest part of the Ballaugh marshes, locally known as the Curraghs, Close Dhoo cottage was a sad little place which none of the changing seasons seemed to cheer. Always the same in all weathers, with its desolate front garden, its barren trees and its tightly closed door, with the paint peeling off it. The small windows with their shabby curtains hid all that went on inside. The roof, once thatched, was now covered in tarred corrugated iron through which the rust of decay was beginning to show.
The place, once a croft, occupied a small patch of poor ground of under an acre parallel with a shabby, unmetalled road leading farther into the marshes, with a barren garden behind littered with rubbish – ashes, tin cans, old iron and shards of pottery, and a long alley down the middle receding into the wilderness. Its boundaries were marked by old struggling hawthorn bushes leaning at an angle from the prevailing wind. The garden was completely neglected but, in Spring, the daffodils, planted by occupants long gone, bloomed in profusion and the fuchsias, as old as the house itself, blossomed unseen.
The locality was hushed and seemed to be listening for something. Once, the inhabitants of the now deserted hamlet had, as evening fell, been able to set their clocks by the whistle of the last train to Ramsey leaving the station two miles away. Now they had all gone, railway and people, except the solitary occupant of the lonely house. She was sitting in a plain wooden armchair beside the dying fire of wood in the primitive hearth, waiting. A small, prematurely aged woman, with a resigned weatherworn face in a frame of straight, grey close-cut hair. The fading light of the late autumn day dimly lit up her face and revealed the tight skin showing the bones of the skull beneath, the small thin mouth and the broad snub nose.
The interior of the house consisted of one large room, with a smaller one leading off it and a lean-to kitchen. In the background, a plank ladder led to a trap-door in the loft. The place with its simple old furniture had a dreary look. Full of memories of a departed family. Isabel Varran, the occupant, was one of a family of ten, all scattered except herself and the brother, Josiah, for whom she was now waiting. The walls of the room were decorated with old fly-blown photographs of children, wedding groups posed among absurd Victorian cardboard scenery, or of individual men and women staring with almost frightened looks at the camera behind which the photographer had counted out the interminable seconds to secure the likeness.
A ramshackle green van drew up at the gate and a hefty fat woman in an old coat and with her hair covered by a soiled gaudy scarf, emerged, wobbled up the path and entered the room without knocking at the door. The wind, the muffled drumming of which was rising, entered with her and blew the low fire into flame and drew puffs of aromatic smoke from the smouldering gorse wood into the room.
The newcomer was too inquisitive even to greet the waiting woman.
‘Has Joss come yet?’
She wore old trousers and gumboots and was panting heavily from her efforts. She placed her hands flat on the table and rested her great lumbering body on her powerful arms.
The other slowly raised her head and gave her sister a weary, baffled look.
‘No. I don’t know what . . .’
The other cut her off quickly.
‘Of course, you know as well as I do. The boat arrived in Douglas from Liverpool hours since. He’s stopping at all the pubs on his way here. It’s just like him. You’d think after more than twelve months in gaol for drunken violence, he’d have had enough. But our Joss was always too clever to learn . . .’
She paused to gulp in air.
‘I suppose he’ll be here after the pubs close. Well, I haven’t time to wait. I’m going now. Sydney’s been out all day. He says there’s a farmers’ meeting of some sort in Ramsey, but I don’t know what he’s up to. I’ve had all the milking to do. The doctor told me to take things easy. I expect that one day I’ll drop down dead and that’ll be the end of it.’
And with that depressing prognosis, she left as she had come, without a word of farewell. The rattle of the old van died away in the distance and silence descended again, punctuated by the steady tick-tack of the cheap alarum clock on the dresser.
Left alone, the woman remained in her chair, lost in her own thoughts, her hands together in her lap as if in prayer, except that she monotonously rotated her thumbs round one another, a habit which had been her mother’s, too, when she was anxious about anything. As the last of the sad daylight faded from the room, she rose and switched on the solitary electric light which hung over the table, a single lamp in a cheap pink shade. The lamp illuminated the room more starkly than the struggling daylight and revealed the well-polished Welsh dresser, the oak corner cupboard and the worn rush-bottomed chairs.
She went again to the door, looked out and then shone a torch into the darkness. A damp smell of trees and earth from the garden entered the room. She closed the door again with an anxious forlorn gesture and went to the kitchen and filled an electric kettle and made some tea. Then she cut thick slices of bread and butter, produced some cold cooked sausages from the pantry and set out her meal on one corner of the table under the light in the living-room. She ate her meal, slowly masticating it and washing it down with draughts of tea from a large mug. She seemed lost in thought and took no interest in what she was doing. Only once did she show any sign of where her thoughts were wandering. Half-way through her feeding, she rose, paused and then went to the sideboard and took out a purse, from which she counted twenty one pound notes. She replaced three of these and with the rest in one hand, groped up the chimney of the wide hearth and with the other brought down an old metal teapot. She stuffed the money in it and replaced it. Just in case her brother indulged in his old habit of helping himself to her savings. Then she finished her tea. Twice more in the course of tidying and washing-up she went to the door and looked out into the night. There was nobody about. In the distance a dog barked and far away the headlamps of a passing car shone across the marshes, from which a thin mist was rising, and faded away. She put on a pair of spectacles and sat again in the chair by the fire, which she revived with wood from a box on the hearth, and began to read a book she had borrowed from the country library. Soon she had fallen asleep.
She moved and the book falling from her lap awakened her. She sat up with a start and looked at the clock. Five minutes past ten. She rose in a flurry and hurried to the door, gathering up the torch on her way. Outside it was pitch dark. The wind had dropped and now hissed quietly in the bushes along the road. The woman stood at the door, the light from her torch illuminating the path and the ramshackle wooden gate. She remained there for a minute, lost in thought, wondering when her brother would finally turn up. Then, almost mechanically, she moved into the dark and walked to the gate, struggled briefly with the broken catch and stepped out into the road. She shone her torch here and there and suddenly brought the beam to rest on a huddled bundle under the hedge opposite the house. She hurried across and stooped over it.
For one incredulous minute she examined what she had found and then uttered a shrill wail. It was the body of a man.
The corpse lay face downwards with arms spread above its head. All around the earth was
disturbed, as though there had been a struggle or the murderer had tried to drag him further into the bushes. There was no doubt about the cause of death. There was a gaping wound in the back of the head and a streak of congealed blood running from the skull and round one side of the neck.
The woman stood for a moment panting and whimpering. The flashlight, which was almost played-out and now gave forth a faint red glimmer, fell from her hands. She did not trouble to rescue it, but first ran along the path to the house, illuminated by the light shining through the doorway, and then back to the road and vanished in the darkness.
Even in the dark, the woman knew her way about. As soon as she stepped off the rambling highway of two barely discernible tracks almost obliterated by grass and weeds, a labyrinth of corkscrew paths overhung by marsh shrubs and trees spread in every direction. Without hesitating, she made her way through the wilderness, running and then reducing her speed to a walk as she recovered her breath. Finally, she emerged on a narrow macadamed road. Almost at the junction stood a whitewashed farmstead in a large yard. Before she reached it a dog emerged boiling from his kennel, came to the end of his tether, and hurled himself savagely on his hind legs struggling to get free. As the woman entered the farmyard, a window in the house opened and a man’s voice cursed the dog and yelled at him to be quiet.
Above the noise of the man and dog, the woman tried to make herself heard.
‘Joss is dead. Somebody’s killed him.’
The man at the window leaned out farther, peering into the dark. Suddenly wakened from his first sleep, he was bemused and he half wondered if in the confusion of its furious barking, the dog had started to articulate as well. He shouted back into the blackness.
‘What do you say?’
The woman screamed this time at the top of her voice.
‘Joss has been killed!’
Without another word the head above vanished and the window was slammed. A light went on in the room and was followed by one after another from other windows as the occupants awoke there. Finally, the general turmoil inside seemed to rouse the occupant of a tower erected at one end of the house and the light went on there, too, and joined the rest of the illuminations.
The woman stood motionless and dazed. Now and then she whimpered in protest at the time the occupants were taking to appear.
Suddenly the door opened and a shaft of light shot across the neat path to the large white gate and the forlorn figure of the woman waiting like a ghost near the house.
Silhouetted in the doorway stood a fat, stocky, middle-aged man in pyjama top and trousers with his braces dangling behind him like a tail. He had close-cropped hair, a stubble of iron-grey beard, large ears and a strong short neck. He rubbed the sleep from his eyes.
‘Who is it?’
‘Isabel Varran from Close Dhoo. Joss has been killed.’
The man grunted.
The family at Close-e-Cass scarcely knew their nearest neighbours. The Varrans were reputed to be a queer lot and Isabel was regarded as being the oddest of them.
‘What did you say about Joss?’
‘He’s dead. Somebody killed him.’
‘Where is he?’
‘In the hedge opposite our house.’
‘Are you sure he’s dead?’
Meanwhile other members of the family had gathered round the fat man. Three men, one of whom might have been his brother and the others his sons. Joseph Candell, the fat man, didn’t seem at all pleased by the disturbance and his involvement in it. He was a man of little initiative and hesitated about his next move. Meanwhile, the dog began to bark again. It gave him a chance to vent his feelings and he ran to the kennel and kicked the dog, which ran yelping for shelter.
A bell, dangling from a spring on the wall of the hall began to jangle. It was from the occupant of the strange tower, who rarely left it, and called for attention by the home-made alarm.
An elderly woman appeared, her grey hair in rollers, with a coat over her nightdress.
‘What’s going on here? Grandfather’s getting up.’
‘Go and tell him to keep out of this and be quiet.’
The woman, Candell’s wife, didn’t seem to hear but passed him and went to the solitary figure waiting in the dark for the next move.
‘What is it, Isabel?’
At the sound of the gentle voice of the older woman, the younger one suddenly burst into noisy weeping.
‘Joss is dead . . .’
‘Come indoors out of the cold.’
She laid her hand on Isabel’s shoulder and led her inside. As she passed the group of men she turned on them.
‘Well, what are you lot waiting for? Get along with you to Close Dhoo and see what’s been happening there. I’ll make some tea for her. She can wait here.’
A figure then appeared on the landing of the wide staircase. A fierce-looking old man with a flurry of shaggy white hair, tall and stooping, dressed in a calf-length white nightshirt. It was old Junius Candell, aged about ninety, who years ago had surrendered the running of the farm and a small share of the capital and profits to his eldest son and retired to a tower which he had built on the end of the house. He spent most of his time there watching all that went on in all the fields and buildings.
‘What’s the hullaballo about? Nobody tells me anything.’
Old Junius waved his stick in the air. It had, in days past, been laid so often across his son’s back, that the fat man at the door made an instinctive gesture with his left arm as though to ward off a blow.
The last arrival on the stairs was the fat man’s daughter. She was dressed in a negligée, bought from a mail order firm and certified ‘as worn by famous actresses’. She was pretty and had slant eyes, which made her father sometimes doubt his paternity and jealously dream-up affairs long gone between his wife and proprietors of Chinese restaurants, which seemed to be the only places on the Isle of Man which harboured orientals.
Mrs. Candell appeared to be the only person with any initiative. She turned on the two younger men.
‘Get back to your room and get dressed. Somebody will have to go down to Close Dhoo and see what this is about.’
Then she addressed the slant-eyed girl, who was leaning against the wall half-way up the stairs, breathing on her finger nails and rubbing them on the sleeve of her peignoir, as the advertisement had called it.
‘And you, Beulah, have you nothing better to do? See your grandfather back to his room. He’ll be getting his death of cold. Tell him to get in bed.’
The old man gave the girl a toothless grin as she approached him. She was obviously the apple of his eye.
‘Come on, granda. She says you’re to get back to bed.’
‘Eh?’
He was a bit deaf. She led him away.
The clock in the hall struck midnight. The men, who had scattered when Mrs. Candell told them to go and dress now gathered again at the door. The two sons, tall, heavy, slow moving, looked to their father for his orders. The fat man seemed to realise at last that they had better do something quickly, put on his cap and took a large stick from a collection of many generations in an umbrella stand near the front door.
‘We’d better three of us go. Uncle Tom, stay with the women. We don’t know who’s prowling about. If what the Varran girl says is true, we ought to get the police . . .’
The younger of the sons, in his early twenties, with a beatnik haircut and sideboards, giggled nervously.
‘We ought to be sure she’s tellin’ the truth, oughtn’t we? If Bella Varran has imagined it all, we’ll look daft when the police get here and find it’s nothing but a hoax . . .’
‘You shut up! If we leave a dead man lying in the ditch all night, we’ll be in proper trouble.’
The older son, a smiling, naïve, good-tempered giant, thought he ought to say a word.
‘Had I better take me gun?’
The fat man was out of patience with the whole business and wanted to get back to bed.
‘
What the hell would we want with a gun? Whoever’s done this, if it has been done, will be miles off by now. Let’s get goin’. Bring the big flashlamp . . .’
The fat man walked very fast and with the assurance of one who knew every step of the way. The air was still and cold and the quick clatter of the men’s hobnailed boots against the loose flints of the track made them sound like a group of horses. At first, nobody spoke. The fat man breathed asthmatically through his mouth. He was still half-drunk with sleep and grumbling to himself about the ruin of his night’s rest. The youngest son was talking quietly, pursuing his original train of thought.
‘A lot of fine fools we’ll look if . . .’
‘Shut up and save your breath!’
Nobody knew what Joseph Candell was thinking about. Nobody ever did. He was a lumbering, slow thinking man who spoke little, had difficulty in expressing himself and grew irritable when he could not do so. Now, the pace was too fast for him. He began to wonder why he was hurrying and slackened his steps. His sons followed suit and the younger one paused to light a cigarette. They had reached the long twisting path which led to Close Dhoo and left behind the tunnel of trees which had once been planted as a part of the scheme when the great trench was dug to drain the marshes. As they reached the wider track, above which the stars were now visible, the sky seemed to pale in the direction of Ballaugh, giving an illusion that dawn was near.
A light shone out from a solitary cottage ahead of them.
‘There’s Close Dhoo. She must have left the light on.’
Nobody answered, but they all thought alike. Descended from a race of peasants, all waste was abhorrent to them. The three men reduced their pace, as though reluctant to face what was awaiting them. They felt like intruders in a matter which did not concern them.
The younger son, his hands in his pockets, had been whistling nervously between his teeth.
‘What do we do when we get there?’
The fat man, faced with a decision, grew irritable, as usual.
‘What the hell do you think we’ll do? She said his body was in the ditch opposite the house. You and Baz can go and look for it. I’ll go and see what’s going on in the house.’
The Night They Killed Joss Varran (An Inspector Littlejohn Mystery) Page 1