The riddle of the dunes, p.1
The Riddle of the Dunes, page 1
part #3 of Inspector Blade Series

THE RIDDLE OF THE DUNES
A gripping historical murder mystery that keeps you guessing
JAMES ANDREW
Published by
THE BOOK FOLKS
London, 2019
© James Andrew
Polite note to the reader
This book is written in British English except where fidelity to other languages or accents is appropriate.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
CHAPTER TWELVE
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
CHAPTER NINETEEN
CHAPTER TWENTY
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
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CHAPTER ONE
When I returned from the war, things looked simple with no barbed wire to crawl under, no Germans to fight, no shells to avoid, and no bullets to duck. I strolled along civvy street, dressed in my demob suit and feeling like a king – if a badly dressed one. The suit was made of shoddy material and was so poorly sewn it felt ready to unravel at any moment, and it did after a few days. Then I had to use some of my small store of money to clothe myself properly. But the war was over, I told myself. That was what mattered. At least I thought it was – except, when I went to bed, it started all over again in my head and I woke screaming every night.
I don’t know why I killed that young woman on the beach. I do remember her body lying on the sand with that gash in her head and the rock I’d used just beside her. They say anger is all consuming and they are right. The person I once was no longer exists.
I remember the flame of her hair as it caught the setting sun and the redness of the blood seeping out of her, and, as her life left her body, something left mine. Unfortunately, not the anger. Was it recognition of myself?
So, I went away. When I think back, it was the rage I was trying to escape. I travelled in random directions, trying to stamp down the fury with each step away. I tramped mile after mile each day hoping that my weariness would tire out that scream for violence in me, but it didn’t work. I realised I was no longer myself. The anger had become me.
And that was when I found my feet had taken me back.
* * *
Daphne picked up the lead from the sideboard, the dog jumped at her with enthusiasm, and she found herself fobbing him off. As she clipped the lead onto the collar, she ruffled the hair on his head with her hand.
‘Don’t go anywhere near the Ridges,’ Marion said to her. ‘There are plenty of other places to take that dog.’
‘The man who did those murders is gone,’ Daphne replied to her mother. ‘Everybody says so.’
‘Always assume the worst,’ Marion replied. ‘It’s safer that way.’
An impatient frown was on Daphne’s face. ‘You don’t need to fret. I won’t go there,’ she said. ‘But if that worries you, why don’t you get Robert to do his own dog duty?’
‘He does his best,’ Marion replied.
‘Have you any idea where Robert is?’ Daphne asked.
‘At Helen’s, I expect. You should be more patient with him. He’s had his problems,’ Marion said.
‘Don’t we all know it?’
Pooky pulled at the lead. He had no time for arguments like these. Pooky was a mixture between a spaniel and something else. As he was not pure bred, no one had docked his tail, which now wagged its splendid plume hopefully. He was a young dog, only two years old, healthy and robust, of attractive colouring being brown-and-white, but neither Marion nor Daphne were paying attention to him. They stared accusingly at each other.
Marion was a broad-faced, robust-looking woman and, as this was her kitchen and her home, she was used to acting like the mistress of it. Though Daphne was, like her mother, a curly-headed brunette, her physical type was different. There was a slenderness about her figure that had probably never been there in Marion Tanner. When she argued with her mother, there was a querulousness in her voice, but her face looked just as defiant.
‘It’s supposed to be Robert’s job to take Pooky for his walk today,’ she replied.
Another voice entered the fray. This came from a middle-aged man who had been sheltering behind a newspaper. He put it down as he said, ‘You were the one who nagged to get the dog in the first place.’
Slightly built like Daphne, but with thinning fair hair, and a tiredness in his face, this was her father, Pete Tanner. Daphne turned her eyes to meet his. ‘Don’t I know it?’ she said. ‘You remind me all the time.’ Then she turned back to her mother. ‘I’m just back from working in the shop. Don’t I get five minutes to myself?’
‘You’ve had something to eat and a natter with your mother.’ Pete’s voice spoke with weight, which further annoyed Daphne.
‘I don’t know why I’m agreeing to take the dog. Frank said he might call.’
‘We’ll send him after you,’ Pete said.
‘I don’t understand why you bother with Frank,’ added Daphne’s mother.
‘You used to think well enough of him,’ Daphne told her.
‘Used to is right,’ Marion replied. ‘Half the neighbours don’t speak to me because of him.’
Aware of the familiar territory that an argument about taking the dog for a walk was heading towards, Daphne considered her reply. ‘The half that are worth talking to still do,’ she said. ‘There’s nothing wrong with Frank.’
Pete’s voice now took on an appeasing tone. ‘I like Frank myself,’ he said. ‘A well set-up and fine, principled man. Educated too. But it’s an awful pity he became a conchie. I used to enjoy a banter with Albert next door. Now he cuts me dead. I know what your mother means.’
An image came into Daphne’s mind of Albert’s leering looks. She was glad relations with him had become distant. ‘At least Frank’s got manners,’ Daphne muttered.
‘What do you mean by that?’ her father said.
‘Nothing,’ Daphne replied.
‘Frank’s lucky we make him welcome here,’ Marion said.
‘It’s good of you,’ Daphne said, but her voice suggested otherwise.
‘Our Robert was willing to fight out there. Why was Frank too good to do that?’ Daphne noticed the way her mother’s right hand had tensed.
‘It wasn’t that,’ Daphne replied. ‘It was his conscience.’
Marion’s dander was up now. ‘The number of people around here who lost their sons in that war – or had them wounded – and Frank ducked out of it. What do you expect people to feel about him?’
‘They could respect his point of view. He respects theirs.’
‘Most folk think he was scared.’
‘I’ve known him since school. Nothing’s ever scared Frank.’
‘Then, he should have fought.’
Daphne hated conversations like these. Couldn’t her mother see how she felt about Frank?
She took a step back inside the room and closed the door again, the dog whining as Daphne pulled his lead. When Daphne pushed down at Pooky with her hand, he sat with a defeated look.
‘You know I love Frank, don’t you?’ Daphne said to her mother.
‘I wish you’d chuck him,’ Marion said. ‘You don’t know how a mother feels, do you? What Robert lost, and all those others; and you’re going to marry a shirker like Frank. Why does Robert have to put up with him coming around here? Have you any idea how much he hates him for ducking out of things?’
‘He’s told me,’ Daphne said, ‘but it’s not Frank’s fault Robert lost his arm, and I can’t change what I do in my life because of it.’
Marion looked as if there was a lot more she wanted to say. ‘What that war did to Robert–’ she began, but Daphne did not give her the chance to finish. She turned to the dog. Pooky was no longer a duty Daphne was trying to avoid, but an opportunity. She decided to take it, gave the dog a commanding look and a pat on the head, opened the door, and allowed the dog to pull her out. A smile came to her face. Pooky still liked her. If only people were as easy to be with as dogs.
* * *
I hadn’t meant to return. Leaving was such a release. Why was I back? It was a long wandering. I don’t know whose boat I set off in when I left then, but it was untended, and I was glad to be able to make use of it. I rowed along the shore. I was able to follow the thrust of wind at my back as it flicked spume round me, and I leaned into the oars. The pull of arm and leg muscles, the arching of shoulder and back were soothing somehow, almost anaesthetic. All that tension in me. I had to do something with it. When I found myself at Fossmouth, I pulled the boat in among rocks. That was when I started tramping.
Casual work on farms was available and I made use of it, but it was only to get what I needed. A desperation to move onwards always pulled
At times, the image of the dead woman, her red hair catching the dying sun, would return to me; that attractive face of hers, ruined by the gash on her forehead. Underneath her body, the blood-soaked sand; beside it, the rock; and in my ears, the sound of the sea. I could barely remember striking her. And hers was not the only face that haunted me.
I found something approaching peace in the constant moving, but I never felt I escaped the thing inside me that had carried out these killings.
In time, I found company on the road. There were other tramps and I fell in with them and learned their ways. I learned to trudge from one spike to another, which was what they called the casual wards in the workhouses we moved between. When I took off my clothes, washed myself all over, and put on the workhouse garb, I felt as if I might be stepping out of one skin into another before joining the other casuals in the common dormitory, which was something I had the need to do. At least they fed you in the spikes: there was bread, dripping, water, and cheese. I didn’t feel I deserved more, though I soon learned from others the art of begging and supplemented this during the day’s tramp. I gave up on the casual work. I tried to become this new self – the tramp.
I remembered what it had been like when I had been with Pulteney, following on behind a young woman. He had such a fascination with a woman’s voice, and I could see why. There was such lightness in it, an innocence that had never seen the things in battle that I had. I envied it, and admired it, while I hated it. It had something that I wanted for myself, and that I could never know again.
Now, I was back in Birtleby and on the path to the Ridges, and there was another young woman in front of me. This one had dark curly hair, and there was a self-righteousness in her strut that I hated. She had a dog with her, a brown-and-white spaniel cross. He was leading her a dance and did not give her any choice but to follow where he led. He took us all the way back there – where it had all happened.
As I walked behind that young woman, the rage built up inside just as it had done then. It was powerful, much stronger than I was, so irresistible I thought it must destroy me, and I wondered how I could get rid of it. We were now out in the middle of the dunes and I looked around me. There was no one else to be seen.
* * *
Pete had known these beaches boy and man. He had run about here in shorts and rushed into the sea with pals; later, he had strolled arm in arm with Marion. He knew that touch of breeze and tang of sea, and the shifting layouts of the sands; he even had names for some of these rocks. He’d always called that one turtle rock, not that it was exactly a replica of one, but naming it as that had appealed to a boy and the name had stuck; another one he knew as lion rock till Marion renamed it pussy-cat rock after studying the semi-feline outline during one stroll of theirs. Visitors to Birtleby always spent time on these beaches; in summer, there was a mass of beach huts and demurely costumed bathers. As people relaxed, they lay on deck chairs with splayed out legs and arms, often despite the rush of children’s voices and limbs. Stillness, movement, peace, cheerfulness, noise: these things were what this stretch of coast signified to Pete Tanner, before the three Ridges murders. What struck Pete Tanner after those was the silence of the beaches, as visitors and locals alike shunned them. Fear – it stalked Birtleby then, and it had taken a while to be forgotten, but he felt it again now.
Pete Tanner strode forward, eyes searching one way then the other, then back again. He brushed away sweat from his brow as he drew in the long breaths that went with the pace he was setting. He had come out to look for Daphne as Pooky had returned without her. That was something that had never happened before. Where was Daphne? Why had she not come back with the dog?
When the two former soldiers, Harry Barker and Bob Nuttall, had been locked up after the first murder, it had been a relief to everyone, till the second murder was committed. It was a carbon copy of the first, and they were in prison at the time. Then a sailor, Pulteney, was charged with both killings, which was a shock, as he had been one of the main witnesses against Harry and Bob. His hanging ought to have solved everything, but then another young woman was found dead on the sands. Everybody said the police had hanged the wrong man, though this had never been proved, as the killer of the third girl was never found. Whoever that had been walked free to kill again, which fortunately he had not, and slowly people had returned to the beaches thinking the killer must have gone off elsewhere or died.
So, Daphne must be safe, must she not? And she would not have walked along towards the Ridges, would she? Especially after they had told her not to – but young folk, they never did what they were told, did they? Pete walked on with Pooky, as the dog bounded off and raced back, though Pete noticed he did not run off as far as usual. In time, Pete found himself following the animal towards the Ridges as, after all, they had been everywhere else. The dunes began to loom up before them.
Pete stared hard at the dog. Why was Pooky hanging so close to his master’s heels now? Had he picked up on some of the fear that Pete was feeling among these innocent strands of marram grass and soft tumbles of sand, the spot where the murders had been done? What exactly was bothering the dog? Then, Pooky bounded off into the Ridges and Pete lost sight of him, nor could he hear any sound coming from him. Why was that?
Pete trudged over in the direction the dog had gone, his eyes sweeping everywhere. As he rounded a dune, he saw Pooky again. Pooky was pawing at something that lay in the sands, and Pete tried to work out what that was. Oh no, he thought. That was not what it looked like? But it was. Pooky was snuffling and whining at the body of a young woman. Then, Pete forced himself to walk forward. It was someone wearing a fawn jacket and skirt, just like Daphne’s, and it looked like a slim young woman of about five foot six, also just like Daphne. Pete could not make out the face as a hat had been placed over it, one that Pete did not recognize, which gave him hope. Then, he remembered that Daphne had been talking about a new one she had bought. Marion had been greatly interested in this, but Pete had paid less attention. He supposed this could be it. Pete Tanner bent down to lift the hat.
CHAPTER TWO
Inspector Stephen Blades was wondering what kind of ghoulish coincidence this was, as he stood looking down at the body of another young woman in the dunes on the Ridges. His right hand reached up and tugged at his bowler hat as he sighed. He glanced across at Sergeant Peacock, took in the gloomy look on his lean face, then looked down at the body again.
This one wasn’t buried, which was one difference, though there had been the usual attempt to sweep footprints away from the sand near the corpse. The familiar pool of blood lay beneath it. The hat seemed to have been placed beside the body with reverence, and that Blades had not seen before, but from what Blades had been told, it had been put there by the person who found the body. Another young woman, Blades thought, legs crooked, arms flung out, someone who had been in the flush of youth. Was there really nothing he could do to protect them? A swearword escaped his lips, acknowledged with a grunt from Peacock. Blades looked at the fashionable cut of the young woman’s dress, the prettiness of the silver necklace, and the contrasting gash on the forehead. At times like these, Blades hated his job.
Blades took a note of the time as a flashbulb popped from Peacock’s camera – half past four. Peacock was doing his punctilious recording of the scene.
There was a part of Blades that had been hoping the murderer who had defeated him in his first big case would return and give him another opportunity to catch him, which gave Blades a feeling of guilt. There was another young woman dead in front of him, and he might not apprehend the murderer this time either. How many more young women might die because he could not do his job? But was this the same murderer? That was yet to be established.



