Dead on Dartmoor
Dead on Dartmoor
STEPHANIE AUSTIN
For Dad, who would have loved this
CONTENTS
TITLE PAGE
DEDICATION
AUTHOR’S NOTE
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
CHAPTER TWELVE
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
CHAPTER NINETEEN
CHAPTER TWENTY
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT
CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE
CHAPTER THIRTY
CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE
CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO
CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE
CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
BY STEPHANIE AUSTIN
COPYRIGHT
AUTHOR’S NOTE
The town of Ashburton is real, and people living there will recognise streets, shops, pubs, cafes and other places of good cheer mentioned in this book, but there are a few foggy areas around the town where fact and my imagination merge, places that will not be found on any map. For taking these liberties, I apologise.
CHAPTER ONE
A week before the murder, my van went up in flames.
It seemed fine in the morning, when I took the dogs out. I only had three to walk that day and I collected them in the van as usual, before their owners left for work, and drove them to the woods beyond the edge of town where they could romp around unfettered.
They raced ahead of me in the cool shade beneath the trees, sniffing at trails left by night-time creatures, snuffling at prints in the soft, dark mud. As I followed, they dashed off through the undergrowth, bursting from beneath the shadows onto sunlit grass and sending strutting black crows flapping into the air. Here, in open pasture, I could launch balls for them to chase. I could see up the valley, fields sweeping upward to the moor, green grass fading to tawny yellow and the granite knuckle of a distant tor. It was going to be another fine day.
Later I deposited two of the dogs back at their homes, using spare keys to let myself in.
I don’t have a spare key for EB, because his mum is always waiting for him at home. But as we approached her front door, I could see a scrawled note taped to the wood. Juno, it read, Alan taken to hospital with chest pain. I’ve gone with him in ambulance. Can you hang on to EB until I get back? I will ring you. Sorry. Elaine x
EB waited patiently by my feet as I read the message, his overarching eyebrows twitching in confusion. He didn’t seem to mind getting back into the van. I let him sit on the front seat with me instead of putting him in the back behind the wire grille where the dogs normally ride. He leant the weight of his warm little body against mine and I turned back to Ashburton, meandering between hedgerows in full green flourish.
It had been a long, hot summer that seemed as if it would never end, sunshine and blue skies lasting through September. But the swallows had flown, and although the sunny weather continued, the green treetops were brushed with bronze and gold; the leaves were on the turn.
I was forced to brake suddenly. A woman was in the road, standing perfectly still, a few inches of floral nightdress hanging down beneath her long blue dressing gown. Her hair was a silver halo but flattened at the back of her skull, as if it had not been brushed since her head left the pillow that morning. I pulled on the handbrake and climbed out, shutting the door on the muzzle of a curious EB. Despite the noise of the van’s approach she seemed oblivious of my presence, staring up at the flickering light through the trees above her, at the shifting shadows, and murmuring quietly to herself.
‘Hello,’ I called out. ‘Are you all right?’ She turned at the sound of my voice, not by twisting her head, but by a series of tiny, rocking steps, until she had manoeuvred herself around to face me. Her eyes were blue, her skin rose petals crushed into a thousand tiny wrinkles. She would have been pretty once.
‘Can I help you?’ I asked.
She scowled at me, didn’t answer. A few hundred yards further along the road was Oakdene, a care home for patients with dementia, and I reckoned I was looking at an escapee. ‘Only, if you’re going for a walk,’ I went on reasonably, ‘I think you’ll need your slippers.’
She gazed down at feet wrapped in woolly bedsocks and wriggled her toes experimentally before returning her gaze to my face. It was an untroubled gaze, full of childlike innocence, as if all care, all stress, had been gently washed away. She reached out. For a moment I thought she was going to slap me, but instead she grabbed a handful of my curls, squeezing lightly with her fingers. ‘All curly,’ she breathed in delight, ‘all red.’
All curly, all red − she’d just about summed up my hair.
‘You’re not Samantha,’ she told me, although she didn’t sound sure.
‘No, I’m Juno. What’s your name?’
‘Marianne,’ she declared after a moment’s thought. ‘Are we going in the little bus?’
I glanced back at the van. It was yellow with black writing on the sides. I suppose it didn’t look unlike a small bus, except for EB frowning at us from behind the steering wheel.
‘Why don’t we?’
She allowed me to lead her to the passenger door and sit her in the seat, despite being hampered by EB, who’d decided that any friend of mine must be a friend of his. Fortunately, Marianne didn’t seem to mind an enthusiastic face licking, and responded with cries of rapture and much patting. In spite of the two of them, I managed to get her seat belt done up and headed for Oakdene, hoping to God that was where Marianne had come from. If she hadn’t, I didn’t have a clue where to take her next, and somehow I had the feeling that she wouldn’t know either.
Thankfully, the next bend revealed two ladies in blue uniforms peering anxiously into the hedgerows as they scurried along, as if hoping to find something hidden amongst the brambles and blackberries. I stopped, flashed my lights and tooted at them. At the sight of my passenger one cried out in relief. ‘Oh, thank God! Judith!’
Judith? What happened to Marianne?
The woman approaching on my side began talking as I wound the window down. The name badge pinned to her ample bosom identified her as Barbara. She was a comfy, little body and was slightly out of breath. ‘Thank you so much! Where did you find her?’
‘Not far,’ I answered as Judith-Marianne climbed out with the help of her colleague, who was younger and taller, her hair scraped back to reveal a large, pale forehead. ‘Has she gone walkabout before?’
‘All the time, bless her! She keeps trying to find her way to her old home … Oxford,’ she added in a whisper.
I’m not sure how many miles away Oxford is, but it’s a long way from Ashburton.
I watched her depart without a backward glance to me or EB, her arm linked companionably with that of the care assistant, the two of them chatting amiably. ‘She seems happy enough.’
‘Oh, she’s a sweetheart,’ Barbara informed me. ‘Anyway, thank you so much … um …’
‘Juno.’
‘Juno,’ she repeated. She hesitated a moment, brows drawn together in a worried frown, her lips compressed in a line. �
��I wonder … our boss doesn’t know she’s got out again. We don’t want to see her locked in her room. I wonder if …’
‘Your secret’s safe with me.’ I didn’t know the boss of Oakdene and I certainly wasn’t about to go round there causing trouble.
‘Thank you,’ she breathed and then hurried off after Judith-Marianne and her colleague.
‘Life is full of strange little happenings,’ I informed a mystified EB, watching them go, and we set off once again towards the town.
I was half an hour late arriving at Old Nick’s because I’d driven home on the way to check my answering machine for any message from Elaine. She might not have been able to contact me on my mobile: the signal is dodgy on Dartmoor, to say the least.
There was no message. I wondered if EB had been fed before we went walkies this morning, or whether he was still awaiting his breakfast, so I stopped at the baker’s in West Street and bought him a jumbo sausage roll.
Old Nick’s has only been open for two months. The shop belonged to an elderly client of mine, Mr Nikolai, who lived in the flat above. He was an antiques dealer. Unfortunately, Nick was a bit criminal around the edges and got himself murdered as a consequence. Why he decided to leave the entire property to me is still a mystery. I suppose he felt I’d earned it; a feeling not shared by members of his family.
Whatever, it is no longer the shabby, run-down old junk shop it once was, but is now freshly painted in pale green, its windows glossy, and Old Nick’s, picked out in gold, swinging on the sign above the door. Each time I draw up outside it I cannot resist a tiny stab of pride and offer up a silent prayer of gratitude to cousin Brian, my one remaining relative, who’d come up with the cash for the makeover.
Unfortunately, no amount of cash could magically transport Old Nick’s from Shadow Lane to North Street or East Street, where it needed to be to bring in the required customers. The little town of Ashburton is one of the four stannary towns on Dartmoor, where locally mined tin used to be stamped and assayed, and the townspeople are proud of its history. It also had a reputation for drunkenness. Nowadays it’s a real tourist trap, with more antique shops than taverns; but Old Nick’s is obstinately stuck around the corner from the scene of all the action. The only other businesses in Shadow Lane are a launderette and an undertaker, so there’s not a lot of footfall. Generally, people who don’t own washing machines are not in the market for the art, crafts and antiques which we sell, and those who need the services of an undertaker have lost interest in buying things altogether. I’ve placed a hopeful cafe board at the corner of the lane, pointing the way for customers. Old Nick’s: Art, Crafts, Books, Antiques and Collectibles.
Another problem is that when Nick died and left me the shop, I already had a business of my own. Not exactly thriving, but it kept body and soul together. Juno Browne, Domestic Goddess – Housework, Gardening, Home Help, Domestic Care, House-sitting, Pet-sitting, Dog walking. No job too small. The legend is still proudly proclaimed on the sides of my van. I don’t want, and can’t afford, to give my business up: I’m too attached to some of my clients, and until there’s sufficient income from the shop I can’t even consider it – and that day, I fear, is a long way off. The stuff I sell is mostly bric-a-brac and the profits so far amount to pocket money, whilst the overheads for the shop are draining money I rely on to live.
One sensible move I could make, apart from just selling the property and pocketing the cash, would be to give up the flat I currently rent from Adam and Kate and move myself into the empty rooms above the shop. But I can’t bring myself to do that. I’m not of a nervous disposition, but I just don’t fancy living in the room where Nick was murdered. Not yet, anyway, not unless I have to.
The lights were on inside the shop when I arrived, and I could see Pat arranging her display of craft items on one of the wide windowsills. She gave me a little wave. I let EB trot into the shop ahead of me. He pattered over to her and began an exhaustive inspection of her trainers. She and her sister and brother-in-law run a sanctuary for abandoned pets and farm animals and her shoes are covered in information of great interest to the canine mind.
I was surprised to see her, though. ‘I thought Sophie was opening up today.’
‘It was her turn,’ Pat stooped to stroke EB as he snuffled around her shoelaces, ‘but she got offered a shift at The Dartmoor Lodge so I said I’d swop with her. I don’t mind.’
Sophie and Pat man the shop on alternate days, instead of paying me rent. They get free space to sell the lovely things they make, and I get the time to keep my business going. The downside is that I don’t get any money.
I’ve divided the shop into several rental units, hoping to attract a variety of sellers under one roof. Sophie and Pat take up the front of the shop, with two other units behind theirs. My own unit is at the back, in what was once the old storeroom. A sign in the corridor points to it: This way for bric-a-brac, antiques and collectibles − an optimistic way of describing a few sticks of junk furniture and an assortment of cheap knick-knacks.
As yet, the only other unit that is taken, and the only one paying me rent, belongs to Gavin, who sailed past the window on his bike at that moment, clad in pointy helmet and full racing gear, like a Lycra-covered stick insect on wheels. I don’t know why he dresses up as if he’s riding in the Tour de France, he only lives five minutes’ ride away. What, I ask, is wrong with cycle clips?
Pat rolled her eyes at the sight of him. ‘He’s driving Sophie up the wall,’ she whispered.
Gavin would be chaining up his bike in the alleyway at the side of the building and would not appear for at least five minutes; even so, I whispered. ‘Is he?’
‘He’s got … you know … a thing about her,’ she mouthed. ‘He won’t leave her alone, always hovering, looking over her shoulder when she’s working.’
Sophie didn’t really like painting in the shop as customers tended to watch her working, which she found unsettling. She was prepared to put up with it if it might lead to a sale, but wasn’t keen on people who hung around too long, stood too close, or chattered too much. She got all three with Gavin.
I could understand why she attracted him. Sophie was twenty-five but could pass for seventeen without make-up − and carried an air of childlike vulnerability. An orphaned seal pup abandoned on an ice floe could not melt your heart more easily than Sophie Child when she turned her big brown eyes on you. They even worked on me, for God’s sake, so what chance did a poor sap like Gavin stand? Gavin, nineteen, but with all the emotional maturity of a twelve-year-old, was no match for her at all.
I looked down at the artwork that currently occupied Sophie’s desk, the thick watercolour paper pinned at the corners. It was one of her hedgerow paintings: a drystone wall, its rough, mossy stones seen through a delicate tracery of wild flowers, some, as yet, white and unpainted.
Gavin appeared in the doorway, tall and bespectacled, carrying his silly helmet. EB let out a little yip and he scowled. I don’t think Gavin liked dogs. ‘Where’s Sophie?’ was his first question.
‘Good morning, Gavin, and how are you?’ I asked pleasantly.
‘Isn’t she coming in today?’ Poor boy, his disappointment was obvious.
‘She’ll be in later. She’s waitressing on breakfasts at The Dartmoor Lodge.’
‘I don’t know why she wants to bother with that,’ he sneered loftily, ‘wasting her talent.’
‘She’s gotta live, Gavin,’ Pat told him flatly. ‘We can’t all go to the bank of Mum and Dad.’
He grunted, colouring slightly, and hurried through the door at the back of the shop and up the stairs, to change. There was a bathroom on the landing, once part of Nick’s flat, and we used his old kitchen for making refreshments.
‘Now he’ll be half an hour changing,’ Pat complained, ‘and then he’ll come down with a cup of coffee, you’ll see. Never offers to make one for anyone else.’
I couldn’t hang around to find out; I had clients to get to. ‘Look, Pat, I don
’t want to leave EB in the van, can I dump him with you? I can put him up in the kitchen if you’d rather.’ But EB had already settled down by her chair and I handed her the slightly greasy paper bag containing his breakfast.
The Brownlows were a husband and wife team of GPs with three teenage children and a breezy, devil-may-care attitude to safety and hygiene in the home that I fervently hoped did not extend into their professional lives. I spent half of my allotted two hours washing dishes – the dishwasher was already full − before I could reach the kitchen surfaces I was paid to clean. But after I’d scraped brown gloop out of a gravy boat and cleared up spattered globules of pink icing after someone who’d made a cake, I attacked the waiting worktops and the floor, and left the kitchen looking sparkling; temporarily, at least. I just had time to call in on Maisie, check her agency carer had arrived to help her bathe and dress, change her bedclothes and stuff them in the laundry basket, before I headed out again. I did an hour’s ironing for Simon the accountant who likes the collars of his shirts just so, and made it back to Old Nick’s a little before midday.
Sophie had obviously arrived, her jacket and bag hanging on her chair; but there was no sign of her. Gavin was sitting at the table of his unit, hidden behind one of his graphic novels, and Pat was concentrating ferociously on counting stitches on her knitting needle. Neither of them spoke. There was, to say the least of it, an atmosphere.
EB skipped over to greet me, his claws clicking on the wooden floor.
‘Where’s Sophie?’ I asked.
‘Upstairs.’ Pat directed a fierce glance at Gavin. ‘Trying to rescue her painting.’
I flicked another look at Gavin, whose ears were suspiciously pink, and climbed the stairs to the kitchen. Sophie was by the sink, her painting laid out on one of the worktops, dabbing at it carefully with a sponge.
‘What happened?’
‘Bloody Gavin,’ she responded, not looking up. ‘He would bring me a cup of coffee. I told him I didn’t want one. Then he put it down on my table and knocked it over with his sleeve.’