interruptions, before it swung open again. Maggie bounded in like an eager spaniel expecting to be taken out for a walk.
‘Are you all right, guv?’
‘Can’t it wait, whatever it is? I’m busy.’
Maggie’s face fell. She threw a reproachful glance at the PC screen, yet to be switched on.
‘I thought you’d want to know.’
‘Fire away, then.’
‘You’ll never guess what’s happened.’
Hannah was about to snap: I’m not into
‘Tell you what, Maggie. Why don’t you pull up a chair, and then break it to me gently?’
‘The boss has gone AWOL, then?’
Alf Swallow’s van and trailer were already outside the front porch when Daniel and Louise arrived. The gardener was a muscular man with a square jaw and features as rugged as the Langdale Pikes. He had close- cropped greying hair and Daniel was sure he’d never tugged a forelock in his life. The rolled-up sleeves of his mud- stained overall revealed brawny arms with blue tattoos. A lifetime spent out of doors in the Lake District meant bad weather didn’t bother him. Probably not much did.
‘He hasn’t answered his phone for twenty-four hours,’ Louise said. ‘Of course, I may be worrying unnecessarily, but…’
Swallow considered her, much as he might assess a choice bloom in a nursery. ‘He’ll be all right, love, don’t fret.’
‘Did he mention going away?’
‘You’d know better than me, love. The boss and I don’t see much of each other. When I’m here, he’s in his office or at court. He leaves it to me to keep these grounds spick and span.’
‘You neatened things up before the New Year’s Eve party, didn’t you?’
‘Tidied all the rubbish people left a couple of mornings later, come to that. I saw the curtains were closed, so I figured out he couldn’t have gone back to work yet. But I didn’t want to disturb anyone. Stuffed my bill through the letter box as usual and went on my way.’
‘You can’t guess where he might be?’
‘Likes to go walking, doesn’t he? Told me once he was a fresh-air fiend.’
He spat on the ground, as if to indicate his private opinion of a soft solicitor who fancied himself as an outdoor type.
‘But he’s disappeared.’
‘Maybe he’s holed up in a B amp;B somewhere. Or a luxury hotel, more like.’
‘He might have tumbled down a gully,’ Louise said.
‘Trust me, love. Stuart Wagg will always fall on his feet.’ A crooked grin. ‘Least, I hope so. Can’t afford to lose a good customer.’
‘Do you have keys to the outbuildings? If he’s had an accident…’
‘Can’t imagine he’s trapped himself in there. But you can have a look, if you like.’
It was clear he thought she was making a song and dance over nothing, but he led the way around the side of the house to the tree-fringed gardens looking out to Windermere. This stretch of the lake had not frozen over, but there wasn’t a single boat on the water. As befitted a house that took its name from a Ransome novel, there was a wooden landing stage where a sleek fibreglass boat was moored. Just for show, Louise said; Stuart Wagg was too often seasick to be much of a sailor. This was the first time Daniel had seen the view in daylight. Crag Gill’s location was perfect. The house crouched on the slope, quiet as a church in prayer.
The grounds were bordered by tall hawthorn hedges; thick but not impenetrable, like the hedge Daniel had squeezed through the previous day. At the end of the drive stood a triple garage linked to a large brick storeroom. Louise murmured. ‘I never went into the garage, I always parked outside. Too afraid of clipping the wing of his bloody car. The other building is full of garden equipment, but we’d better look inside, in case…’
Swallow opened the store and waved them in. There was a sit-on lawnmower and an array of hoes, spades and scythes suspended from a rack that ran the length of one wall, but no Stuart Wagg. Daniel looked through the doorway that gave on to the garage. Parked in a neat line were a rich man’s toys. The Bentley to impress clients, an open-top Mercedes for casual driving and a gleaming Harley Davidson for fun.
‘He takes the bike over to the Isle of Man for the TT races,’ Swallow said. ‘That apart, I doubt if he rides it more than once in a blue moon. Anyhow, you can see he’s gone walking. Else a car or the bike would be missing, wouldn’t it?’
‘I suppose so.’
Louise sounded miserable, as though she guessed that Swallow was laughing to himself at her silliness. She hated making a fool of herself.
‘Suppose you’ll want to see the summer house?’ Swallow’s bushy eyebrows lifted. ‘Make sure he’s not keeled over while he was inside, watching the rain pour down?’
He spat on the path before striding off across the garden in the direction of a pine summer house with a verandah. He was whistling something that sounded like an approximation of ‘The Dambusters March’. A son of the soil, humouring folk who ought to know better.
Daniel whispered, ‘They should have called him Alf Spit, not Alf Swallow.’
Louise didn’t appreciate his attempt to lighten the mood. ‘Something bad has happened,’ she hissed.
She was shivering beneath the heavy fleece. He grabbed her arm, and squeezed it tight. They hurried after the gardener and caught up with him as he rattled a key in the lock securing the summer house. Inside stood a table and a set of stacked garden chairs. Boxes of cutlery and crockery occupied a single shelf at the back of the building. Cobwebs criss-crossed the windows and, when they stepped over the threshold, a cloud of dust blew up and made Daniel sneeze.
‘Bless you,’ Swallow said.
‘Is there anywhere we haven’t searched?’ Louise demanded.
A shake of the head. ‘There’s the well, of course, but no way would he be down there.’
‘Oh God, I’d forgotten the well,’ Louise said. ‘Stuart pointed it out to me, when he showed me round here.’
‘It’s not been used for many a long year. Dates back to when the old house was on this site. It may have been dug out before then, for all I know. Once upon a time there were wells like this all over the countryside.’
‘How deep is it?’ Daniel asked.
‘Thirty feet, maybe less. The bottom’s silted up. The boss talked about filling it in, but we haven’t got round to it yet. It used to be covered with wooden boards, but they were rotting, so I put a new metal sheet over the hole this time last year. Heavy bugger to shift. You needn’t worry, love. Nobody could fall down there by accident.’
‘Let’s have a quick look,’ Daniel suggested. ‘Better not leave any stone unturned.’
Swallow shrugged and led them along a grassy path, past a couple of dense mahonias and into a small clearing with a compost heap, a short distance from the boundary hedge. Daniel wrinkled his nose at the stench of the rotting vegetation. On a small platform of broken house bricks lay a round metal cover showing the first traces of rust.
‘That’s funny,’ Swallow said.
‘What?’ Louise sounded hoarse.
‘I could have sworn the metal sheet wasn’t in that position last time I dumped a barrow load of compost. You’ve got me imagining things myself now.’
‘Can you move the cover?’ she asked in a small voice.
Alf Swallow cast a glance to the heavens. ‘There’s a hell of a lot of weight in that, love. Look at it. No way could anyone shift that bugger by mistake.’
‘I’ll give you a hand,’ Daniel said, moving towards the well. ‘Let’s do it.’
‘You’re all right, mister, leave it to me.’ Swallow’s good humour sounded as though it was wearing thin. ‘Don’t want you to put your back out.’