Towers of Silence - [14]
“Sure.” He turned to the women. “Can you start the windows?”
The small dark haired woman nodded quickly. “Yeah.” The girl beside her, dramatically overweight and with a shy demeanour said nothing.
“Spray a border right along the bottom. Up and down, like mountains. About this high,” he showed them. “We can go in the craft room,” he said to me.
Once seated he listened while I explained the reason for my visit. When I mentioned Miriam Johnstone his eyes softened and he nodded in recognition.
“It was completely out of the blue,” he said when I’d finished. “She was here that morning, smiling and joking, next thing…” He stroked his beard. “It’s hard for those left behind,” he had a soft edge to his voice, a west country lilt, like someone from the Archers. “I’ve worked for most of my life with vulnerable people and sometimes there’s no warning, nothing.”
“And Miriam had been well for some time?”
He nodded. “That’s right. Her death didn’t make sense then, still doesn’t now. I don’t think we’ll ever know what prompted her.”
I murmured my agreement. “I’m trying to find out where she went when she left here. Have you any ideas?”
“No. She usually went home for her lunch, she’d stay here on Tuesdays for the luncheon club. That’s a pensioners group, they have a hot meal in the hall. I could ask around at the Craft Club, you could come and talk to them yourself but it might be easier if I broached it first. It upset everybody and there are some people in the group who might find it very difficult to be reminded of it again.”
I asked him to do that and gave him my card. “I can pop back in, if you could ring me and let me know who I can talk to.”
“Will do.”
He accompanied me back into the foyer.
“Lovely ceramics,” I pointed to the still life.
He smiled, creases fanned the outside of each eye. “Craft Club’s own work. We get an artist in every so often for special projects.”
“Connie said you’d got Lottery money.”
“That’s what built this place. Before we had an old prefab. Leaked like a sieve, break-ins twice a week. All the money went into shoring the place up. And it wasn’t very attractive. Now we can concentrate on the activities.”
“You run the centre?”
“In effect but there’s a management committee of users and funders, they’re officially in charge. They employ me and we’ve Sharon half-time.” He nodded at the woman at reception. “This area was crying out for a decent place where people could meet. You can’t talk about community if there’s nowhere for people to gather.”
He was obviously passionate about the place.
“It’s great.”
“Have you signed our petition?”
“No.”
“The council are talking about cutting back on our core funding, just as we’re getting sorted out, we’re asking them to reconsider… if you…”
“Yes.”
He gestured towards Sharon. “Over here.”
I followed him across, read the text of the petition to make sure I agreed and then added my name and address to the list.
“Withington,” he noted. “I was there for a bit when I first moved here. Do you know Lausanne Road?”
“By the library?”
“Yep. But the lads next door were up all hours, drugs I reckon. I’ve got a nice place in Cheadle now.”
“Quieter,” I smiled.
There was a commotion at the entrance.
“That’ll be the Tai Chi group. Villains the lot of them.”
“I’ll leave you to it,” I smiled.
I made my way out against the flow of elderly people who were streaming into the hall and joshing each other in loud voices. Outside I waited while the two minibuses that had brought them turned and left, before I could drive out.
Had Miriam gone home for lunch that day? Her house in Heald Place was a few minutes from the centre. According to the police her neighbours hadn’t seen her that lunchtime but it was part of my job to double check the facts. It wouldn’t be the first time that a second look revealed new information.
Chapter Eleven
“No, I bloody-well didn’t,” Mr Jones, Miriam’s neighbour, was emphatic and obviously disgruntled at being interrupted. He wore a stained sky blue pullover stretched tight over a large round belly and tweed trousers. He had several badly drawn tattoos on his fingers and forearms. He smelt rank.
“Did you know Mrs Johnstone?”
“Not to speak to.”
“Can you remember when you last saw her?”
“No, I bloody can’t.”
I was relieved to get away and took a couple of gulps of cold, damp air to replace the nauseating smell.
I tried the neighbour on the far side.
Mrs Boscoe invited me in and made me tea. Miriam had been a good neighbour ‘God rest her soul’. She hadn’t seen her that Thursday, she’d told the others, she’d seen her the day before, the Wednesday, just to say hello. Both getting home at the same time, coming down in stair rods so they didn’t linger. She missed her. Missed them all. Roland used to help her, anything heavy to move. Always polite. Brought them up so nice, Miriam did, not like some these days.
I left her my card in case anything else occurred. At the doorway she asked, “What is it you’re actually doing? Is it for the insurance?”
“No, for the family. I’m just trying to find out where she was that afternoon.”
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В основу этой повести положены действительные события. 14 июля 1969 года из историко-художественного музея города Сольвычегодска была похищена пелена «Богоматерь Владимирская», изготовленная в мастерских Строгановых в первой половине XVII века. Долгое время о ней ничего не было известно, пока автор случайно не обнаружил ее в Коряжме в одной частной коллекции.Конечно, последовавшие за этим события несколько изменены, как заменены и имена действующих лиц.
Lori Maddox chooses to spend the year after university travelling and visits China where she finds casual work as a private English tutor. Back in Manchester, her parents Joanna and Tom, who separated when Lori was a toddler, follow her adventures on her blog. When Joanna and Tom hear nothing for weeks they become increasingly concerned, travelling out to Chengdu in search of their daughter. Landing in a totally unfamiliar country, Joanna and Tom are forced to turn detective, following in their daughter's footsteps.
Эта книга от начала до конца придумана автором. Конечно, в ней использованы некоторые подлинные материалы как из собственной практики автора, бывшего российского следователя и адвоката, так и из практики других российских юристов. Однако события, место действия и персонажи, безусловно, вымышлены. Совпадения имен и названий с именами и названиями реально существующих лиц и мест могут быть только случайными.В центре Москвы происходят убийства известных ювелиров. Но близкие уверяют, что из квартир ничего не пропало.