Barnaby stated their business and was admitted. He followed Judy Lessiter across the hall. Her legs, emerging from a shapeless pinafore dress, were really remarkable: hugely wide at the knees then tapering off into sparrow-thin ankles, like upended skittles. She pushed at the sitting-room door and went in, Barnaby close behind.
Doctor Lessiter looked up, then flung his Telegraph down with some annoyance. ‘Good grief - I thought I’d seen the last of you lot.’
‘Yes. I’m sorry, but this sort of inquiry is quite usual -’
‘Turning the whole village upside down.’
‘In the case of an unexplained death -’
‘The woman picked some hemlock by mistake. There’s a large field of it just beyond Church Lane. The seeds blow everywhere. Obviously some went into the garden and took root. I’ve never known such a palaver.’
‘We are asking everyone in the village to account for their movements on the day in question. That is last Friday the seventeenth of July, afternoon and evening.’
The doctor gave an irritated little snort, threw his paper down and stood with his back to them, staring into the fireplace. ‘Well . . . if we must. On my rounds in the afternoons . . . then in the even—’
‘Your rounds are Tuesday and Thursday, Daddy.’ Judy’s tone was calm and reasonable but Barnaby thought he detected a rather unpleasant smile plucking the corners of her mouth.
‘What? Oh . . . yes . . . sorry.’ He picked up a magazine from the log basket and started to flick through it, illustrating his lack of concern. ‘I was here, of course. Bit of gardening but mainly watching the final Test. What a game that was . . . superb bowling . . .’
‘And the evening?’
‘Still there, I’m afraid. A dull day really.’
‘And your wife was with you on both of these occasions?’
‘Part of the evening. She was shopping in the afternoon.’
‘Thank you. Miss Lessiter?’
‘I was working during the day. I’m a librarian. At Pinner.’
‘And in the evening?’
‘. . . here . . .’
Both policemen noticed the rather theatrical start of surprise the doctor gave at this remark, as no doubt they were meant to. Tit for tat, thought Barnaby.
‘Well . . .’ she elaborated, ‘I did go out for a bit of a walk . . . it was such lovely weather.’
‘Do you remember what time that was?’
‘Sorry, no. I wasn’t out long.’
‘Where did you go?’
‘Just down Church Lane, past the fields for about half a mile, then back.’
‘Did you meet anyone?’
‘No.’
‘Did you hear or notice anything out of the ordinary when you were passing Beehive Cottage?’
‘No . . . I think the curtains were closed.’
‘And what time did you return?’
She gave a couldn’t-care-less shrug.
‘Can you be of any help here, Doctor Lessiter?’ asked Barnaby.
‘No.’ The doctor had returned to the settee and reimmersed himself in his newspaper. Barnaby was just about to ask if he could see Mrs Lessiter when she appeared in the doorway behind him. He was made aware of this by a sudden change in the atmosphere. The doctor, after a glance over Barnaby’s shoulder, started reading his paper with a degree of intensity which could only be feigned, Judy glowered at no one in particular and the blood heated up and zipped around under Sergeant Troy’s almost transparent skin, staining it an unbecoming bright pink.
‘I thought I heard voices.’
She dropped into the armchair by the window, put her feet up on a tiny footstool and smiled at the two policemen. She could have stepped straight out of one of his centrefolds, Troy thought, eyeing the ripe curves pressing against a terry-towelling jump suit, the tumbling hair and glossy fondant lips. Her slender tanned feet were in high-heeled golden sandals. Barnaby thought she was not as young as all that hard work and hard cash would have you believe. Not early thirties but mid, maybe even late forties.
In reply to his question she said that in the afternoon she had been in Causton shopping and in the evening she was at home except for a short period when she had gone out for a drive.
‘Was that for any special purpose?’
‘No . . . well . . . to be honest we’d had a little tiff, hadn’t we, Pookie?’
‘I hardly think our domestic squabbles are of any interest to the police, my dear -’
‘I overspent my dress allowance and he got cross so I took the Jaguar and drove around for a bit till I thought he’d’ve cooled down. Then I came home.’
‘And this was?’
‘Was Miss Lessiter here when you returned?’