After the interview with Abbot, Ramsay and Hunter separated. Hunter was sent to Long Edge Farm to talk to the Richardsons.
“See if you can find out if Richardson knew about Cissie Bowles’s will,” Ramsay said. “If he did I think we’ve lost a motive for murder. He’d surely rather have a festival of New Age travellers once a year, than have the hippies on his doorstep permanently. And see if any of the family knew Val McDougal. The wife, Sue, might have done. They’d be of a similar age. It’s even possible that Peter, the lad, went to Otterbridge FE College before starting at agricultural college.” At this point they were still looking for connections, hoping for luck.
Ramsay picked up Sally Wedderburn from the incident room and took her to interview Win Abbot. He had already established that she would be at home.
“Win?” Abbot had said, dismissively. “Oh yes, she’ll be there. Since the boys were born she’s only worked part-time.”
He must have warned her that the police were on their way because when they rang the doorbell she let them in immediately, without asking what they wanted. Win was a tall, thin woman with wispy hair fixed in a pile on the back of her head with a tortoiseshell comb. The hairstyle and her clothes a long skirt reaching almost to her ankles and a long shapeless cardigan made her seem old-fashioned. Like a character from one of the adaptations of D. H. Lawrence that Prue made him watch, Ramsay thought. Somehow haunted and intense. Certainly she looked very tired. She came to the door carrying a toddler on her hip.
“Come in,” she said, pushing a strand of hair away from her face. “I’m just giving them lunch. We’re in the kitchen.”
The house was one of a stone terrace built into the side of the hill with a long steep garden behind it and a bay window at the front. The kitchen was an extension on the back. Another little boy sat at the table there. Win lifted the toddler from her hip into a high chair. She began to feed him slices of apple and whole meal toast covered with an unappetizing but obviously healthy spread.
“Sit down,” she said. “I’m sorry about the mess.”
She looked around the kitchen as if overwhelmed by the disorder, though Ramsay thought he had seen much worse. Often, for example, in Prue’s home. There was a basket of laundry on the table, a pile of toys on the floor, some nappies steeping in a bucket by the sink. Nothing to explain Win Abbot’s exhaustion.
“It must be a lot of work with two little ones,”
Sally Wedderburn was saying. “And your job at the Alternative Therapy Centre. Do you have any help?”
“No.” The hand twitched nervously back to the escaping hair. “Not now. I had a girl in to look after the boys last summer, but now I try to manage on my own. I only go to the Centre two evenings a week. Daniel has the boys then.” She handed the toddler another finger of toast and watched while he squeezed it back out through toothless gums on to his plastic bib. “Can I get you something?” she asked. “Tea? Coffee?”
Ramsay shook his head.
“The main trouble is that they don’t sleep very well,” she went on. “I always seem to be tired.”
So that was the explanation, Ramsay thought, for her drawn and grey appearance. Not guilt, the torment he’d imagined, but kids who wouldn’t sleep. He should know by now not to jump to conclusions.
“Perhaps you could explain how the Centre is organized,” he said. “You and your husband are partners?”
“With my mother,” she said. “She and Daniel work at the Centre practically full-time. There are three treatment rooms. I use the third for my evenings. When I’m not there we let the room to other practitioners: Sam Lacey’s an osteopath and Billy Brown’s a chiropractor. They have two and a half days each.”
“But they’re not partners? They won’t benefit under the terms of Cissie Bowles’s will?”
“None of us will benefit personally,” she said sharply. “And I’m sure we’ll find a place for them at Laverock Farm.”
“But you will benefit,” he persisted gently. “Surely you’ll have an increased income because of the new patients the centre at Laverock Farm will attract.”
That seemed genuinely not to have occurred to her.
“I suppose it might,” she said. “In the long term.”
“And you’ll split any profit three ways?”
“Oh no,” she said. “I shouldn’t think so. Magda put most money in when we started. It would be fair, I suppose, that she should take most out.”
She leaned forward over the table. “But none of us has been motivated by money, you know. That’s not what it’s all about.” She had the passion of a fanatic.
“What does motivate you?” he asked lightly.
“Healing,” she said. “We want to show people that they can be well. That’s why Laverock Farm’s important. We can reach more people.”
The boys had finished eating. She wiped their faces perfunctorily with a dish cloth and helped them down from the table, then opened the door to let them into the garden. Outside there were tricycles, a scooter. She shut the door on them gratefully.
“Peace,” she said. “For ten minutes at least.
Until they start fighting.”
“You’ve heard from your husband that Mrs. McDougal’s dead?” Ramsay asked.
She nodded.
“Tell me about her. Were you friends?”
“Friends?” The question seemed to bemuse her. She sat with her head on one side, considering it. Her eyes were grey and her skin was sandy and freckled, lined on her forehead with fine wrinkles. Ramsay guessed that she and Daniel were of a similar age but she looked much older. “No,” she said at last. “We weren’t really friends, though I always felt we might be. I was putting it off, if you know what I mean, saving it for when I had more energy and time. Now I suppose it’s too late.”
“Val didn’t make the effort to be friends with you?”
“No, but then she wouldn’t have done. She was very shy.”
“You never saw her professionally?”
“No. She had ten sessions of re birthing with Magda. She came to the retreat at Juniper. I talked to her there, at meals you know, socially. But there was a lot going on that weekend. It was hard to concentrate on getting to know people.”
“I would have thought that was what the weekend would be for.”
“Usually, yes…”
“But something unusual happened that weekend?”
She looked up at him sharply as if the question might be some sort of trick, then paused uncertainly and shook her head. She was lying but he did not push it. There would be other people to ask.
“Do you ever attend your mother’s Insight Group?”
“Occasionally,” she flashed back bitterly. “When I can persuade Daniel to look after the children.”
“Did Mrs. McDougal have any special friends there? Someone she confided in. A man perhaps?”
“She didn’t have a boyfriend, if that’s what you mean.”
“What about Lily Jackman? Were she and Val friends?”
“What is this friendship business about?” Win demanded angrily. “I thought you were a policeman, not a psychologist.”
“If she had any concerns for her safety she may have confided in someone,” Ramsay replied calmly. “That’s why I need to know.”
“I’m sorry,” she said. “I hardly slept at all last night. That’s why I’m so ratty. And the shock, I suppose. Val and Lily seemed to get on very well in the group. They seemed to understand each other right from the start. But I don’t think they ever met away from the Centre. Lily never mentioned it anyway.”
“You’ve been very kind to Lily and Sean,” he said.
“Not really.”
“They come to your house for meals and baths. You found them somewhere to live.”
“Well,” she said, “I suppose I felt a bit responsible for their staying in Mittingford when the rest of the convoy moved on.”
“Why?”
“I’d talked to them a lot about the Centre, how we organize it. I wanted them to see that they could have a lifestyle which didn’t compromise their beliefs but was more purposeful than aimlessly travelling around in an old van.”
She was like a missionary, Ramsay thought. He could see how Lily had been hooked.
“It was awkward,” she said. “I think when the convoy moved on they expected that we’d put them up here. I wouldn’t have minded. We’ve got the room and I’d have liked the company. But Daniel wasn’t keen. He didn’t want us getting too involved…”
“So instead they moved into Mr. Bowles’s caravan.”
She nodded.
“Did you meet any other members of the convoy?” Ramsay asked.
“Yes. They used to come into the Coffee Shop in the Old Chapel. I saw them there occasionally.”
“Do you remember a couple called Wes and Lorna? They might have been driving a blue Transit van. They had a baby, a little girl.”
She shook her head.
“Sorry,” she said. “Lily and Sean were the only people I really got to know.”
“Could you tell me where you were on Saturday night?”
“The night Ernie Bowles was strangled?” There was a brief flash of humour.
He nodded. “It’s a formality,” he said. “We’re asking everyone.”
“I was here. I’m always here.”
“And your husband?”
There was a perceptible pause before she answered: “Yes. He was here too.”
“Thank you,” he said. “You’ve been very helpful.” As they stood to go there was a yell from the garden, followed by the sound of a child sobbing.
“I’ll have to go,” she said, more in resignation than concern.
“That’s all right. We’ll see ourselves out.”
“Poor cow,” Sally Wedderburn said when they were out on the pavement.
“What do you mean?”
“Well, she seems so ground down by it all, doesn’t she? Depressed.”
Sally was right, he thought. There was more wrong with Win Abbot than a few nights’ missed sleep. She might be tied to the children but it wasn’t as if she didn’t get any break at all. There were her two evenings at the Old Chapel and they knew that she’d been in Otterbridge on Monday night with Daniel. Lily was obviously available to babysit and her mother lived in Mittingford. Surely she’d help if Win were desperate.
And she was desperate, he saw now. But why?
When they returned to the incident room Hunter was waiting for them, sitting on Ramsay’s desk with a mug of coffee in his hand.
“Well?” Ramsay said. “How did you get on? How did Mr. Richardson take the news that there’d be a New Age Centre at Laverock Farm?”
“He didn’t set the dogs on me or get out the shotgun,” Hunter said. “Though it was touch and go at first.”
“Did he know already about the terms of Cissie Bowles’s will?”
“He says not and I believe him.” Hunter put his coffee mug on to the desk, leaving a ring in the wood. “At first he was pretty mad. He talked about getting an injunction. Something about a change of use from agriculture being against the planning regulations, but he didn’t really seem to know what he was talking about. His wife soon calmed him down.”
“How?”
“She said she thought the hippies would only be interested in the house, not the land. It was a way of getting a bargain.”
“I had the impression that he has his eye on the farm,” Ramsay said. “For the son.”
“Aye well, it’s the land the son’s interested in too, not a big draughty house. If he marries.
Mummy and Daddy will build him a nice modern bungalow.”
“So Peter Richardson’s done very well out of Ernie’s death, if the Abbots are willing to sell the land.”
“Too bloody right,” Hunter said and slurped the last of the coffee.
“Did any of them know Val McDougal?”
“Never heard of her. So they claim.”