Agatha Raisin and the Love from Hell
they’re bound to get him. Then they’ll ask him how he got to France and he’ll say it was us.’
His wife’s face took on a stubborn look. ‘Let’s just forget about it. We don’t want to be involved. And no more newspapers, Tubby.’
The press and television had come and gone. Carsely settled into a summer torpor. James had not been found.
Agatha and Charles had tried to get information about Melissa out of Bill Wong, but all he would say was that it was more than his job was worth to tell them anything. His bosses said they had suffered interference from them in the past. He was instructed not to tell them anything.
‘The newspapers might have something,’ said Agatha, two weeks after the murder of Melissa. ‘I mean, I’ve got to get something. I’m still a suspect. Even Bill looks at me in a funny way. They say she must have been lying there dead for five days. We don’t have a milkman round here any more, and she picked up her papers from the village shop. If we still had milk delivered around here, then people would have noticed bottles piling up on the step.’
‘What do you mean, the newspapers might have something?’ asked Charles. ‘We’ve read them all, day in and day out.’
‘What I mean is this. A couple of days after Melissa’s murder, there was that awful shooting at Mircester School. Five children dead. Awful. But it wiped Melissa’s murder off the papers. Now some reporter may have been working away at the background and then gets told to drop it. We could go to the Mircester Journal and ask.’
‘Sounds a bit far-fetched.’
‘You forget, I worked with the press for years. Anyway, it’s better than doing nothing.’
Charles made a steeple of his fingers and studied them while Agatha waited impatiently. It was at times like this that she wondered if she really knew Charles at all. Self-possessed as a cat, expensively tailored, sensitive face, but unreadable eyes under smooth fair hair.
‘All right,’ he said. ‘It’s better than sitting here.’
The editor of the Mircester Journal looked more like Agatha’s idea of an accountant than an editor. Mr Jason Blacklock was dry and precise, with strands of brown hair combed neatly over a pink scalp and gold-rimmed glasses perched on the end of a long thin nose.
‘I gather you want my help, Mrs Raisin,’ he said, addressing Agatha. ‘I agreed to see you because there might be a story in it for us.’
‘If you help us,’ said Agatha, ‘we’ll give you an exclusive when we’re ready. Deal?’
‘All right. So what is it you want?’
‘I gather you would have had a reporter or reporters working on the murder of Melissa Sheppard.’
‘Of course.’
‘And pulled them off it when the shooting at the school happened?’
‘Yes.’
‘We wanted to find out a bit about Melissa’s background and wondered if one of your reporters would have something.’
‘Why? Are you playing at detectives?’
‘We’re not playing at anything,’ said Agatha sharply. ‘I am still a suspect, as is my husband. I want to know if there was anyone in Melissa’s past life who would want to harm her.’
Mr Blacklock suddenly bellowed, ‘Josie!’
A skeletal girl appeared. She was wearing a purple spangled top over a long black skirt and huge boots.
‘Where’s Colin Jaeger?’
‘Down the pub,’ said Josie laconically.
‘Right. Will you take Mrs Raisin here and Sir Charles Fraith down to the Ferret and Firkin and tell Colin he’s to fill them in on the background of the Sheppard murder.’
‘Okey-dokey.’
Agatha and Charles followed the thin figure of Josie out and down the stairs. Out in the street, Agatha said to Josie, ‘You should eat more.’
Josie flicked back her lank hair and stared insolently at Agatha’s stocky figure. ‘You should eat less, Granny.’
‘You insolent little pig,’ snarled Agatha. ‘Why, I’d like to stuff your skinny, undernourished form down the nearest drain.’
‘Ladies, ladies,’ pleaded Charles. ‘It’s too hot for a row. Here is the pub. Josie, fetch this Colin and then you can go back to work.’
Josie muttered something under her breath but she thrust open the door of the pub and let it swing back in Agatha’s face.
‘You asked for it, Aggie. Calm down. You should know better than to comment on someone’s personal appearance.’ Charles opened the door for her.
Josie was talking to an untidy young man who was standing at the bar holding a tankard of beer.
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