Her luck was in. The dog the woman was walking – and had just let off the lead – was a Labrador. Younger than Gulliver, but definitely a Labrador. Conversational opening gambits did not come better gift-wrapped than this.

“Good morning. She’s a lovely girl, isn’t she?”

Nothing could go wrong that morning – Carole had got the gender right. “Yes, she’s adorable,” said the woman. “But where’s yours?”

So much for Carole’s image of herself surrounded in a carapace of anonymity. Someone had noticed that she was in the habit of taking Gulliver on to Fethering Beach for a walk every day for the last God-knew-how-many years. Now she looked at the woman, Carole realized that they had passed most mornings with no more than a ‘Fethering nod’.

“Oh, I’m afraid he’s had an accident.” And with no difficulty at all, Carole found herself relating Gulliver’s encounter with the rusty staple, and his hasty removal to the vet’s in Fedborough.

“Saira looked after him, did she? Well, he’s in good hands there. She’s easily the most sympathetic in that surgery. She sorted out Kerry when she had a growth on her leg.”

“My name’s Carole Seddon, by the way.”

“Oh, yes, I know.” Another proof that it was impossible to be anonymous in a village the size of Fethering.

“But I’m afraid I don’t know yours.”

“Ruby. Ruby Tallis. Me and my husband Derek live up on Sea Road.”

“Oh, I’m in the High Street.”

“Yes. High Tor, isn’t it?”

To Carole’s surprise, the fact that everything about her seemed to be public property did not feel like an invasion of privacy. On the contrary, it felt rather comforting, almost as though she were something she never thought she would be – ‘part of the community’. In no time at all, she and Ruby were having quite a voluble conversation about canine ailments and the vagaries of vets. Neither woman suggested sitting down. While Kerry the Labrador snuffled amongst the smells of the shoreline, they just stood and chatted. Yes, chatted. Carole Seddon was actually chatting.

Moving the subject on from vets to recent events at Gallimaufry required no effort at all. Like everyone else in Fethering, Ruby Tallis had plenty of views and opinions about the death of Polly Le Bonnier. Or it might be more accurate to say that her husband Derek had plenty of views and opinions about the death of Polly Le Bonnier, and Ruby just parroted them.

“Derek reckons it was a burglary gone wrong.”

“Oh, does he?”

“Yes, he reckons it was probably a drug addict, keen to get some money for his next fix, and the girl surprised him in the shop and he shot her and then set the place on fire to cover his tracks.”

“But why would Polly have gone there?”

Clearly this was not a subject on which Derek had an opinion. His wife reasserted that he thought the killing had been done by a drug addict, ‘keen to get some money for his next fix’. She seemed to relish saying the phrase.

“Do you know the Le Bonniers?” asked Carole.

No, neither Ruby nor Derek actually knew the family, but that didn’t stop her husband from having opinions about them. “Derek wouldn’t be surprised if that Ricky didn’t have something to do with it too.”

“To do with the murder?”

“Probably not that. But something to do with the burglary.”

“What sort of something?”

Ruby Tallis looked around slyly, as if afraid of being overheard in the empty expanses of Fethering Beach. Then, touching a gloved finger to her nose, she whispered, “Drugs.”

“Oh?”

“That Ricky Le Bonnier works in pop music,” she confided, “and Derek says that everyone who works in pop music has a connection to drugs. Hard drugs.” She nodded sagely to emphasize the point.

“So, even if he had taken drugs, what would Ricky Le Bonnier’s connection be to the burglary at his shop?”

“Ah well, you see, Derek has this theory…he thinks the drug addict who broke into the shop was someone Ricky Le Bonnier knew…someone he used to work with in a pop group, and they used to take drugs together. Derek thinks the man was probably a groupie.” Seeing Carole’s curious expression, Ruby corrected herself. “A roadie. That’s what Derek thinks. And he thinks that Ricky Le Bonnier may have set up this roadie to rob the shop and set fire to it, because it was doing bad business and he wanted to claim on the insurance.”

At last, a part of the Tallis theory which Carole and Jude had also considered.

“Anyway, that’s what Derek thinks, and he thinks it was just bad luck that Ricky Le Bonnier’s daughter was in the shop when the roadie broke in – otherwise she’d still be alive. And Derek reckons Ricky Le Bonnier must be feeling absolutely terrible, because, in a way, it was his fault that his daughter got killed.”

Well…Carole couldn’t have asked for a better demonstration of Saira Sherjan’s concept of the gossip grapevine amongst dog-walkers. She wondered whether everything that happened in Fethering was subjected to the same conjectural analysis – and she rather feared that it might be. What theories had been propounded on Fethering Beach about herself and Jude she didn’t dare to contemplate. No doubt her Home Office background had been transmogrified into working as a spy in the Eastern Bloc, Jude’s theatrical past had converted her into a Playboy centrefold, and the two of them were universally recognized as Fethering’s premier lesbian couple. Carole would have found the idea funny if she hadn’t suspected that comparable fanciful elaborations were actually current in the village.

She felt a bit ungenerous when she asked, “And does Derek have any proof to back up his theories?”

“Not proof as such,” Ruby confided knowingly, “but Derek does have a very profound understanding of human nature.”

Yes, I bet he does, thought Carole. “And you yourself didn’t see anything odd, did you?”

“Odd? When?”

“Well, I was just thinking that you walk Kerry every morning along the beach, don’t you?” Ruby admitted that she did. “So you would have walked along here the morning after the fire at Gallimaufry…?”

“Certainly. There were still flames at the back of the building when I walked Kerry that morning.”

“But you didn’t see anything or anyone doing anything odd?”

“What, like a drug addict running from the building with a gun and throwing it into the sea – something like that?”

“Yes,” said Carole eagerly.

“No,” Ruby replied. “I didn’t see anything like that.”

“And have you asked other people in – ” Carole just stopped herself from saying ‘the dog-walking Mafia’ –  “any other dog-walkers…you know, if they saw anything unusual?”

“Oh yes. I’ve talked about it with lots of people, and they’ve all put in their two penn’orth.” The woman raised a sceptical eyebrow. “Mind you, some of the theories they put forward were pretty farfetched.”

And your Derek’s isn’t? thought Carole. “But none of them,” she asked, “had any proof either…you know, something they might have seen to back up their far-fetched theories?”

“No. Well, except for Old Garge. And it’s never wise to believe anything Old Garge tells you.”

“Old Garge? I’m not sure that I know who you mean.”

“Of course you do. Old Garge with the Jack Russell. The original Fethering beachcomber.”

These details were enough for Carole to know whom Ruby meant. She had frequently seen an old boy who seemed to live on Fethering Beach and was unfailingly accompanied by a Jack Russell. He had grubby white whiskers and hair, on top of which he always wore a faded peaked cap which must once have been blue. Habitually dressed in a canvas coat and torn jeans, his feet were encased in dilapidated trainers which, even at the distance Carole normally kept from him, she felt sure smelt disgusting.

Gulliver and the Jack Russell had had a few barking matches, but Carole’s instinct was always to divert her route away from the man. She found something about him unsettling, and reacted as she might to a person talking

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