out of reach of a landline. She was dearly tempted to send her clever box of tricks to Ursula . . . except that, sigh, Diana had given it to her, and it had doubtless cost more than was reasonable for her daughter to spend. And so . . . what we do for our children! . . . Ellie must learn to master at least the basic functions on it. Sheâd send her old one to Ursula tomorrow, which would force her to come to terms with the new.
This settled, Ellie sat in her big chair by the fire, and patted her knee so that Midge understood he could leap on to her lap and spread himself out. Rubbing his head to make him purr, Ellie listened to the sounds every old house makes. A whisper in the central heating, the faintest of murmurs from the television in Roseâs sitting room, the wind gusting around the conservatory. The rumbling purr of the cat.
No sound from upstairs, where Thomas would no doubt have rolled up the carpet sheâd laid down for him, and seated himself in that hard chair to pray. In another age, perhaps heâd have spent his life in a monastery, except â Ellie grinned to herself â that he was satisfactorily enthusiastic in bed, had two grown-up children living in the North to show for it, plus two grandchildren on the way.
Midge pushed his chin at her hand to remind her to continue rubbing. Midge only came to sit on her nowadays if he couldnât get at Thomas, but the room sheâd chosen for Thomasâs retreat had a doorknob and not a handle. Midge could handle handles, so to speak, but doorknobs were, so far, beyond him.
The room was dim and quiet around her until Thomas stole in to sit beside her and reach out for her hand. As usual when heâd been praying, he brought serenity into the room with him.
âAll right?â
She nodded. âAnd you?â
âIâm good.â
She grinned, knowing he hadnât meant it literally. âSo you are.â Teasing him.
He laughed; slapped her hand lightly. âYou know what I mean. Youâve talked to the girl?â
âShe wants me to find her friend Mia, whoâs gone missing.â She told him what Ursula had said.
He stirred, sighing, shaking his head. âSmashing her phone was vindictive. The manâs a bully.â
Ellie discovered that her own doubts about the girlâs story had dissolved. âHer mother, Danâs mother, and your friend the Rev, all accepted that boys will be boys and that girls do go astray. Ursula didnât. She spoke up, and got clobbered. And now sheâs scared.â
âWhistle-blowers do get hurt.â
âSheâs safe enough now sheâs back at university, but sheâs worried about her mother, whoâs had flu. I think I might drop in to see how Mrs Beltonâs getting on tomorrow. Am I being naive, Thomas? Ursula said the Prior boys had threatened to throw her mother out of her job, because Mr P sits on the right committees. Can he really do that? I hate to think that he can.â
Thomas stroked her hand. âIt happens. I hear tales, sometimes. What would you like me to do to help?â
She wanted to say that she hadnât a clue, and that she had never understood why he thought she could tackle problems of this magnitude when she was really only just able to cope with being a housewife. Oh, and grandmother. And a part-time business woman. But deal with crime? Everything sheâd achieved in that direction had been done by chance, by asking around in the neighbourhood and occasionally being able to put two and two together.
Thomas had moved on. âSilly of me. Of course youâll want to find out if the tales about the Priors have any truth in them. And I suppose youâll want to check with the police that they have definitely closed the case.â
It was the last thing she wanted to do. Her relationship with Detective Inspector Willis had started with mutual mistrust and gone downhill from
Joanna Mazurkiewicz
B. Kristin McMichael
Kathy Reichs
Hy Conrad
H.R. Moore
Florence Scovel Shinn
Susanna Gregory
Tawny Taylor
Elaine Overton
Geoffrey Household