Margaret uncrossed her arms, obviously relieved by the answer. “As you will then, pet. See you later.” She gave Meinwen a final nod and withdrew to the warmth of the café’s well-appointed kitchen. There was already a gaggle of young mothers approaching the door.
Meinwen plodded on, passing the school just as the bell went, forcing her to battle against a minor tide of young mothers and grannies as they swept away from the school gates. She recognized most but acknowledged only those who said hello first. Many people didn’t want it spread about that they frequented the witch’s shop on Knifesmith’s Gate.
It wasn’t until she’d actually pushed open the entrance to her cottage and marched halfway up the long path that she noticed the man lurking at her door. Her step never faltered despite the thrill of fear. If he meant her harm, he wouldn’t skulk about in full sight of the street, surely? Besides, he was quite attractive, in an action-hero kind of way. He had a classic inverted triangle body shape, broad shoulders topping a narrow waist. She was willing the bet he was well muscled under the shabby shirt and jacket. Big hands, too. Big hands generally indicated a big cock. She took a breath to get her thoughts in order. “Can I help you?”
He took a couple of steps forward. “Meinwen Jones?”
She nodded affirmation. “If you’re here about the electric, I paid it the day after tomorrow. If you’re selling anything except religion. I’m not interested and if you’re selling religion, I’m definitely not interested. I’ve nothing worth stealing and the house is rented so I shan’t be buying any guttering or windows and besides, I have some already.”
“I’m not looking to sell you anything. I need your help.”
“Oh?” She ducked out of her bag and fished her keys out of her pocket. “Charms and potions I can do, spells and the like by discussion.”
His face creased as if she’d asked him to explain Euclidean geometry. “Spells? I don’t want any spells, love. Peters sent me.”
“Peter? Peter who?”
“Sergeant Peters at the police station? They say my brother killed himself and I don’t believe a word of it. They won’t reopen the case on my word so he sent me to you. Says you’re a sort of private investigator.”
“Am I indeed?” Meinwen jiggled the key until the door clicked open. It had become troublesome when the latest batch of wet weather had made the door swell, but come the sun and it would shrink again. Until then it was a nuisance she could live with. “And did he happen to mention how much I charge for these private investigations?”
The man grinned. “Truth be told, he said you’d probably do it for nowt.”
“Nothing?” Meinwen sighed. “Not exactly nothing, though I charge less than most. You’d better come in Mister?”
“Fenstone. James Fenstone, though people generally call me Jimmy.”
Chapter 3
“Fenstone?” Meinwen opened the door and pulled her keys out of the lock. “So your brother would be John Fenstone, then? Ashgate Road?” She paused on the doorstep to look at him. He sported a short back and sides she hadn’t seen since her days in Aberdovey Methodist church and several crude tattoos on his hands and wrist. “What were you in prison for?”
Jimmy looked at the ground, scratching the back of his head. “I ran an import-export business for a while.” He looked up again, flashing her a grin. “It was a bit one-sided. Too much export and not enough import. The police took a sudden interest in where the antiques I was shipping came from. They pulled a manifest and matched it to a series of burglaries in Hull.”
“Ah. I can see that might be a problem. Of course, you had no idea.”
“All too much. They matched my dabs to a bottle opener in one of the houses, then my DNA to the bottle of beer I’d filched while the lads were shifting the heavier stuff.” He shrugged. “They got me bang to rights.”
“Burglary? You’re not a violent sort, then?”
“No. You’re quite safe with me.” Jimmy’s smile was lopsided, reminiscent of a boy she fancied at school. One of his incisors was chipped.
“Good to hear. Come along in then.” She pushed the door wider with her bag and barged through, pulling off her walking boots at the threshold and dropping them onto a sheet of newspaper already laid for the purpose. Her bag she carried through to the kitchen, heaving it onto the draining board and dropping her blanket on the floor next to the washing machine. “Pass the kettle, then, let’s have a cup of tea.”
Jimmy glanced around the kitchen and pulled a large brass kettle off the stove. “Have you no electric?”
“Electric, yes. Electric kettle, no. I could never be sure what electricity does to water. I suspect it ionizes it and makes it less palatable, hence my use of the brass.”
“Doesn’t the brass propel dangerous copper oxides into the water instead?”
“Not”–Meinwen took the kettle from him and filled it at the sink–“in this house.”
She plonked the kettle on the hob and switched it on, oblivious to the electric hob invalidating her earlier argument. She shrugged out of her muddy coat, letting it drop to the tiles then turned and picked it up. She passed it to Jimmy. “Go and hang that on the coat hook by the door, would you? I’ll brush off the mud when it’s dry.”
She began emptying the contents of the bag into the sink. Sandwich box, umbrella, tripod, camera, three shaggy ink caps which were a serendipitous find on the way to her vigil the previous night, a small pot of blackberries she’d picked from the clearing in front of the stone, plastic bag for sitting on, a compass which she wiped with a cloth and put to one side, half a box of candles and matches. The broken thermos she dropped into the largest of three bins.
Jimmy returned to stand in the doorway and she gave him an upward nod as she cleaned the mud from the tripod. “Take your coat off and sit awhile. What is it you think I can do that the police haven’t?”
“Find out what really happened.” Jimmy draped his anorak over the back of a chair and pulled it out, wincing at the shriek of protest it made against the tiles. He sat. “John wasn’t the sort to kill himself. He was a contented man. Nothing ever flustered him.”
“How well did you know him?” Meinwen glanced across as she extended the tripod to maximum height. “No offense, but you’ve been away a long time.”
“Is it that obvious?” Jimmy smiled thinly. “Ten years, bar a couple of months, but John used to write to me every week, until last week. I thought that was just because I was about to get out and he was saving the postage. He was good like that. Frugal. He used to save the string from parcels.”
“My mother still does. Or would, if parcels still had string.” Meinwen checked the camera but all it needed was a quick wipe of its case. “When did you last hear from him then?”
“A week last Tuesday.”
“The eleventh?”
“Yes.”
“What did he say? Did he seem in good spirits?”
“Pretty much, yes. He was full of this new love in his life. Though he wouldn’t tell me who it was. Didn’t want to jinx it, he said. Then he went on about work. That was going well. He’d sold two houses and made a pot of commission. He was going to start doing the house up at long last.”
“The house? Ashgate Road, you mean?”
“Yeah. We inherited it when our mam died. I was already in the nick then but they let me come out for the funeral. John was brilliant. Did all the arrangements himself. Didn’t blame me or