The Agatha Raisin Series, page 341
“That would be nice,” said Mrs. Bloxby.
“I’ll get it, darling,” said Phyllis.
“Oh, you are good.” Arthur blew her a kiss.
Agatha decided that Arthur did not need any consoling words, so instead she asked, “I often wondered how you met Trixie.”
“It was just after my second wife died,” said the vicar.
Mrs. Bloxby looked at him nervously. “What did your wives die of?”
Arthur roared with laughter. “Frightened I bumped them off? No, Jane, the first had cancer and Cressida, the second, had a stroke, poor thing. I was holidaying in Brighton and I met Trixie by chance in the hotel lounge. She told me she was just divorced and began to cry. One thing led to another and we got married. Oh, tea. Splendid, splendid.”
“I’ll be through in the bedroom,” said Phyllis, putting down the tray. “I’ll go on packing up the clothes.”
“Good girl. What would I do without you?”
While they drank their tea, Mrs. Bloxby gently turned the conversation to general parish matters until they got up to leave.
“What did you think of that?” asked Agatha eagerly as they drove off.
“I think that Mr. Chance is a very lustful man.”
“A what?”
“Yes, one cannot always go by appearances.”
After Agatha had dropped Mrs. Bloxby off at the vicarage and had gone to her cottage, she found she was plagued with uneasiness.
She began to dread the thought of announcing to the others that Toni was going to start her own agency. They would think she was a jealous, petty woman.
“I think I am,” said Agatha gloomily to her cats. She phoned Toni. “Perhaps this new agency business is not such a good idea,” said Agatha. “Perhaps you should work for me for a few more years and—”
“But it’s a brilliant idea,” cried Toni. “We’ll be ready to start in several weeks.”
“What about Harry? Are you sure he doesn’t have an ulterior motive?”
“Oh, no. He’s as excited as I am. I don’t know how to thank you. If it’s as successful as I hope it will be, I can pay you back all the money you spent on me.”
“That won’t be necessary,” said Agatha. “Good luck.”
She rang off and glared balefully at her cats. “Just thank your stars I’m not a cat-kicking person.”
There was a ring at the doorbell. Agatha rushed to answer it and found Bill Wong on the doorstep.
“Come in,” she cried. “I’ve got some coffee ready.”
“I had a phone call from Toni,” said Bill and Agatha’s heart sank. “She told me all about this new-agency idea, said it was your idea. Why did you want to get rid of your best detective?”
“I felt I was holding her back,” Agatha lied.
“You felt she was stealing your thunder,” said Bill.
“That’s not the reason!”
“Let’s talk about something else. Zak is out on bail.”
“So I heard.”
“Well, he promised to testify against Trixie and bail was part of the deal. Then she confessed, but it was too late to reverse it. Don’t worry. He’s in deep enough trouble without coming after you. Anything else happening?”
Agatha told him about Arthur Chance. “He’ll probably marry Phyllis,” she said.
“He’s old, he’s wrinkled, he’s got grey hair and thick glasses. Why do people like that get all the luck when you and I are stuck with singlehood, Agatha?”
“Think about it, Bill. Would you have married Trixie or given Phyllis a second look?”
He grinned. “Not really. Doing anything today?”
“No.”
“Feel like a trip to Bramley Park?”
“What! The place with the swings and roundabouts and the roller coaster?”
“That’s the place. Come on. I’ve never been on a roller coaster.”
Agatha enjoyed herself immensely and screamed for the whole length of the roller coaster ride.
She drove home in the evening feeling tired and happy.
Agatha checked her answering service. There was one message from Cherry Upfield. She said, “I’ve got some more information on Trixie if you need it. I’ll be home all evening.”
Agatha phoned her to say that she would call on her in the morning but got no reply. She then called Toni. Sharon answered the phone. “She’s not here,” she said. “We were out all day and then she got a phone call from some woman saying she had more information on Trixie, so she’s just shot off.”
Why both of us? wondered Agatha, slowly replacing the phone. Agatha then phoned Bill on his mobile, praying he would answer. Mrs. Wong disapproved of his using his mobile in the house and he usually had it switched off. To her relief he answered and she quickly told him about the message. “I don’t like it,” said Agatha. “I think it might have something to do with Zak.”
“Then stay there,” ordered Bill. “I’ll get some men and go over.”
But Agatha couldn’t rest. She felt sure Toni was in danger. She rushed to her car and set off, driving at furious speed towards Cheltenham.
She parked at the end of the close and cautiously made her way on foot. She walked past Cherry’s house. The lights were on, but the curtains were drawn. Agatha walked to the other end of the close and found a lane leading round to the back.
She looked back and counted the number of houses and then entered the lane, counting her way along until she was sure she was at the back of Cherry’s house.
She tried the garden gate and found it was open. She took a small pencil torch out of her handbag and made her way cautiously up to the back of the house.
I wish I had a gun, she thought. Where are the police?
She tried the handle of the kitchen door. It wasn’t locked. She eased her way in, flicking her torch this way and that, looking for a weapon.
The beam of the torch fell on an overflowing litterbin. Agatha looked around the shelves and took down a bottle of cooking oil and poured it over the contents of the bin. Then she took out her lighter and lit the top of the rubbish.
With the bottle of oil in her hand, she stood behind the kitchen door. The rubbish went up with a roar. “Hurry up,” muttered Agatha. “I’m going to be fried to a crisp.”
She eased the kitchen door open so that the flames could be seen from the living room. She heard a curse and Zak erupted into the kitchen. He opened the back door and kicked the flaming bin of rubbish into the garden. He stood with his hands on his hips and was about to turn around when Agatha struck him on the head with the bottle of oil. He sank to his knees, but he was not unconscious. Terrified, Agatha began to throw everything she could get off the shelves straight at him just as she heard the police come bursting into the house.
“In here!” screamed Agatha, hurling a container of drinking chocolate at Zak, followed by half a dozen eggs.
The police, headed by Bill, charged into the kitchen. Zak was handcuffed and dragged upright, egg and cocoa and other foodstuffs dripping off him.
“Toni!” cried Agatha, pushing her way into the living room.
A policeman was releasing Toni and Cherry, who had been tied to two upright chairs and gagged.
Toni got shakily to her feet. Agatha hugged her and said, “Oh, I couldn’t bear to lose you.”
Toni gave her a watery smile and said, “I didn’t know you cared,” and burst into tears.
It was to be a long night. Agatha was strongly reprimanded for not staying out of it. Toni protested, saying Zak had threatened that as soon as Agatha arrived he was going to break both their legs and flee the country. She said that she was sure when he heard the police arriving, he would have broken her legs and fled out the back way. Cherry said she had been forced at knifepoint into making the phone calls before she, too, had been tied up.
The press had got wind of a story and were waiting outside the police station. Toni, although warned by Collins not to say a word, made a statement saying her life had been saved by the best detective in the world, Agatha Raisin, but that she could not say any more until the trial.
Well, that’s that, thought Agatha as she wearily drove home. Life goes on. All the loose ends tied up except for the death of George’s wife. I’ll probably never know now.
Fred and George Selby were celebrating their honeymoon in a picturesque hotel high on the cliffs near the Cornish village of Tryvithek. George had gone down to the bar for a drink, where Fred was to join him when she was ready.
She was just collecting her handbag when she noticed George had left his mobile phone. Curiosity overcame her. She wondered if he had any text messages. She clicked them on. She stared down at the first one in horror. It read, “Will you really have the money soon, my darling? Can’t wait. Love, Gilda.”
Fred sank slowly down onto the bed. Her knees were trembling. She remembered the article about Gilda. She remembered all the awful rumours about the death of George’s last wife. She thought about the wills they had made out and how they had insured each other’s lives. She began to burn up with a furious rage.
“Hullo, darling,” said George as Fred walked into the bar. “You look a bit pale. Are you all right?”
“I’m fine. Ready for our walk?”
“Don’t you go near the cliffs tonight,” warned the barman. “It’s blowing up something rough and it’s all dark out there.”
“We’ll be fine,” said George, taking Fred’s arm. “We’ll probably walk down to the village.”
If he goes to the village, thought Fred, I might begin to think I imagined that message. He must love me!
But George said, “Look there’s a moon. And I do like to walk the cliffs and see the giant waves pounding at the foot of them.”
“Let go of my arm,” said Fred. “I want to swing my arms as I walk. It’s a bit cold. Let’s go back in.”
“Just a bit further,” said George. He walked to the cliff’s edge, his thick fair hair blowing in the wind. “Come and look at this. The waves are enormous.”
Fred felt a numb, blank misery. Like a sleepwalker she advanced on her husband, who was peering over the edge. With all her strength, she gave him one almighty push. The tussocky grass under his feet was slippery with recent rain. He skidded right over the edge, his cry of despair being lost in the roar of the waves and the screech of the wind as he plunged downwards.
Fred sat down on the wet grass behind a large outcrop of rock and opened her handbag. She took out a packet of skunk, and sheltering it from the wind by opening her coat, she rolled a joint and lit it. She breathed the smoke deep into her lungs.
She smoked on until the whole episode began to seem like a bad dream. Poor silly George, she thought. Gone forever. I’ll give him a nice funeral if they ever find the body.
She peered round the rock and let out a scream. A head and shoulders were appearing above the cliff. George had fallen onto a ledge below. He was bruised, battered, frightened and furious.
Fred ran forward and began to kick at his face. He grabbed one of her ankles. She stamped down ferociously on his other hand. He lost his grip and plunged backwards, taking her with him. Still struggling and cursing, they spiralled down and disappeared beneath the boiling sea.
A day later, Agatha answered her door early in the morning to find Mrs. Bloxby on her doorstep. “Have you seen the news this morning?” cried Mrs. Bloxby.
“No, I’m just up. Come in and tell me about it.”
“It’s about Mr. Selby,” said Mrs. Bloxby.
“Gorgeous George. What about him?”
“He’s dead!”
“How?”
“A local at that place in Cornwall where they were on honeymoon was walking his dog along the cliffs when he heard cries and shone his torch. He saw a man hanging onto the cliff edge for dear life while a woman was stamping on his fingers. He said the man had the woman by the ankle. He ran forward, but they both plunged into the sea. The coastguard are out looking for the bodies. The witness said it looked as if the man had already been over the cliff and was trying to get back up. What do you think of that?”
Agatha sat down at the kitchen table and lit a cigarette. “It looks as if Fred got wised up to him some way. It really looks now as if George might have wound up poor Sybilla to kill his wife. Maybe Fred knew about it and tried to get him first. I never liked that girl, but now I’m heartily sorry for her, and I hope somewhere up in heaven the first Mrs. Selby is having a good laugh.”
“That’s sacrilegious, Mrs. Raisin.”
“That’s human, Mrs. Bloxby.”
Epilogue
AGATHA RAISIN SAT HUNCHED up in a first-class railway carriage as the London-to-Mircester train ploughed on through the fog. Why couldn’t this be the night when the trains were cancelled? she thought. I don’t want to go.
She was heading for James’s engagement party after a rigorous makeover in London. Her hair extensions fell to her shoulders in soft waves. Her face was cleverly made up by an expensive beautician. She had been dieting ferociously and the highly expensive midnight-blue silk dress she had spent a fortune on was extremely flattering.
The train, which was often late, perversely drew into the Gothic splendour of Mircester Station exactly two minutes early.
Agatha longed to forget about the whole thing and go home, go to bed and cuddle up to her cats. But everyone would feel sorry for her and she couldn’t bear that. Toni had said their new premises would be opening with a party in a week’s time. Agatha didn’t want to go to that either.
Agatha took a cab to the George, changing on the short journey out of a pair of flat shoes into a pair of high-heeled sandals.
“Here we go,” she muttered. “Rehearsal’s over. Onstage at last.”
A couple leaving the George gave her a nervous look.
She glanced at the noticeboard in the foyer. “Engagement Party—Betjeman Suite.”
The Betjeman Suite was so called because the famous poet and lover of Victoriana would have adored it. From its faux medieval ceiling to the enormous marble fireplace at one end, it had not been changed since the hotel was built in 1875.
Agatha left her red cashmere cloak in the cloakroom outside the suite, took a deep breath and made her entrance. She was surrounded by familiar faces and cries of “Agatha, you look fabulous!”
Nervously her eyes scanned the room. Charles came to join her. “Where’s James?” asked Agatha.
“He’ll be here shortly. They got held up by the fog. Have a drink.” Charles grabbed a glass of champagne from a passing waitress and handed it to her.
Agatha looked round. Toni was wearing a skimpy black dress with thin shoulder straps. Her fair hair was piled up on her head and shone under the lights from the huge crystal chandelier above her. I’ve lost a good detective, thought Agatha bitterly. I’ve always prided myself on being a good businesswoman and not letting personal feelings get in the way. What went wrong? And so ran Agatha’s troubled thoughts, unaware that her whole life had been propelled by emotion.
A cheer went up and Agatha slowly turned round. James stood beaming in the doorway, Felicity Bross-Tilkington on his arm.
Agatha felt any confidence she had left seeping out through the soles of her shoes. Felicity was exquisite. She had wide-spaced grey eyes in a tanned face. Her thick brown hair cascaded down on her shoulders in an artful arrangement of waves and curls. Straight hair, as Agatha knew, had just been damned as passe. Her figure was slim and showed no signs of rigorous dieting. She was wearing a low-cut gold evening top which showed off the smooth perfection of her genuine tan and the stunning necklace of old gold and rubies around her neck.
James looked as proud as Punch as he gazed down at his fiancee. He never once looked at me like that, thought Agatha, but let’s face it, I never once looked like that. James led Felicity straight up to Agatha and introduced her. “I am so pleased to meet you,” said Felicity. “Goodness, after all James told me about you, I expected to meet someone quite ferocious.”
“Here, have another glass of champagne,” said Charles at Agatha’s side. James introduced him to Felicity. “Come and talk to me, Felicity,” said Charles. “I think we know some of the same people.”
James smiled at Agatha. “You look great. Long hair suits you. So what do you think of Felicity?”
“She is certainly very beautiful,” said Agatha. “Where did you meet?”
“In Paris, at my friend Sylvan’s party. Is he here?” He looked around the room. “He’s probably held up by the fog. So I have your blessing?” asked James, studying Agatha intently.
“Yes, James.”
“You don’t think I’m too old for her? She’s only thirty-two.”
“Doesn’t matter for a man. Has she been married before?”
“No.”
That’s odd, thought Agatha. How does anyone that beautiful get to thirty-two without being married?
Others began to cluster round. Agatha saw Mrs. Bloxby and went over to her. “How do you feel, Mrs. Raisin?” asked Mrs. Bloxby.
Agatha looked at her friend in dawning relief. “Do you know, I feel just fine. I really do. Now that I’m here and I’ve met her, it’s all rather pleasant. James seems like a different person to me now. For the first time in my life, I’m over men.”
They were joined by Bill Wong and the staff of the agency and they all began to talk shop.
Mrs. Bloxby joined her husband, who was standing moodily in a corner of the room.
“Can we go now?” he asked.
“Now, really, Alf. We can hardly go now. The party’s just begun.”
Agatha was aware of James standing beside her and turned round. “Do you really wish me well?” he asked.
“Of course. Were you hoping I would be jealous?”
“Something like that.”
“But you are in love?”
“Oh, yes. She listens to everything I say and takes an interest in my work, particularly military history. Instead of the travel books, I might suggest doing a series of guides to famous battlefields.”












