‘I wonder who will take it over?’ I mused – the impressively turreted building was the jewel in Much Hemlock’s not inconsiderable collection of fine buildings. Parts of it dated back to the fourteenth century and some say that the pockmarks in the façade were the result of erratic musket-fire during the Civil War. The marksmanship of parliamentary forces, I figured, was little better than that of
‘Someone like Mr Beeton, I should imagine,’ said Pippa, ‘lots of money, an imperviousness to cold.’
‘… and insanely suspicious of modern plumbing,’ I added, ‘with a fondness for mice and rising damp.’
Pippa smiled and handed me a slice of toast with marmalade before pouring herself another coffee.
‘I was over at Toby’s yesterday evening,’ she said.
‘Ah.’
My relationship with the Malletts, always strained, had become immeasurably more complex since Toby Mallett, Victor’s youngest, had been seeing Pippa on a regular basis. Despite his somewhat difficult family, Toby was handsome and generally well mannered, but I’d never entirely warmed to him. He’d professed vaguely liberal views, but I felt that was for Pip’s benefit, as I knew for a fact his opinions were really more in tune with his father’s. When the village put on a production of
My own feelings aside, she could do a lot worse. She
‘Did you get any feedback over Mr Beeton’s death?’ I asked.
‘No one blamed you,’ she said, as the Malletts would often use Pippa as a conduit of information in my direction. ‘He’d done the
‘I hope everyone else thinks the same.’
‘Aside from us, Mr Beeton wasn’t particularly well liked,’ observed Pippa. ‘D’you remember when he scandalised the village by publicly announcing: “the poor aren’t so bad”?’
‘I liked him for that,’ I said, chuckling at the memory.
‘So did I. But he’ll be forgotten in a couple of weeks. The village takes its grudges seriously. Remember when old Granny Watkins kicked the bucket? I’ll swear most people in the church were only there to personally confirm she was dead.’
Pippa moved herself to the kitchen table and took a sip of coffee.
‘The Malletts had a few choice words over what they saw as your overly generous treatment of the rabbit,’ she added, ‘and within earshot of me so they wanted it repeated.’
‘Oh yes?’ I said, having expected something like this would happen.
‘Yes. Something along the lines of how they generally tolerated your left-wing views, but if you were going to start being “troublesomely ambivalent” towards undesirables there might be consequences.’
I turned from the window to face her.
‘Would you describe me as left-wing, Pip?’
I considered myself centrist, to be honest. Apolitical, in fact. I had no time for it.
‘Compared to the rest of the village,’ she said with a smile, ‘I’d say you’re almost Marxist.’
Much Hemlock had always been a hotbed of right-wing sentiment, something that had strong historical precedent: the village had the dubious distinction of having convicted and burned more witches than any other English town in history. Thirty-one, all told, right up until a dark night in 1568 when they burned a real one by accident, and all her accusers came out in unsightly black pustules and died hideously painful deaths within forty-eight hours. Zephaniah Mallett had been the magistrate during the trials, but in a dark day for evolution he’d had children
‘I’m not troublesome, am I, Pip?’ I asked.
She looked up and smiled, and I recognised her mother. She’d been gone ten years but I’d still not really got used to it.
‘You’re not troublesome, Dad. The Malletts are troublesome. I think Victor thought you’d been unduly accommodating to the rabbit, and that kindness might be misinterpreted as welcoming, and you know what they think about preserving the cultural heart of the village.’