you.â
Victoria was somewhere in her eighties with a long face and a long thin nose and large pale eyes.
âOh, I just do my job,â said Agatha.
âBut you have come such a long way from your poor beginnings,â said Victoria.
âWhat poor beginnings?â snarled Agatha. She had been brought up in a Birmingham slum and somehow always dreaded that somewhere, someone would penetrate her lacquer of sophistication and posh accent.
âI heard you came from such a bad start with drunken parents. I do so admire you,â said Victoria, her pale eyes scrutinising Agathaâs face.
âPiss off!â said Agatha furiously and went into her cottage and slammed the door.
Victoria walked off down Lilac Lane feeling happy. She enjoyed goading people.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Inside her cottage, Agatha stared bleakly at her reflection in the hall mirror. She had glossy brown hair and small bearlike eyes, a generous mouth, and although quite small in stature, had long well-shaped legs. Over the years, she had laminated herself with the right clothes, and the right accent. But deep down, she felt vulnerable. She was in her early fifties which she reminded herself daily was now considered todayâs forties.
She knew her ex-husband, James Lacey, a travel writer, had just returned from abroad. He was aware of her background as was her friend, Sir Charles Fraith. Surely neither of them would have gossiped. She had challenged James before and he had denied it. But she had to be sure. That therapist, Jill Davent, who had moved to the village had somehow known of her background. James had sworn then he had never told her anything, but how else would the woman have known?
Agatha had visited Jill, prompted by jealousy because James had been seen squiring her around. She had told Jill a highly romanticised story of her youth, but Agatha had left in a fury when Jill accused her of lying.
âAny odd and sod can call themselves a therapist these days,â she said to her cats. âCharlatans, the lot of them!â
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
She went next door to his cottage and rang the bell. James answered and smiled in welcome. âCome in, Agatha. Iâve got coffee ready. If you must smoke, weâll have it in the garden.â
Agatha agreed to go into the garden, not because she particularly wanted to smoke, but because the inside of Jamesâs cottage with it bachelor surroundings always reminded her how little impact she had made on his life when they were married.
Blackbirds pecked at the shabby lawn. A magnolia tree at the bottom of the garden was about to burst into bloom, raising pink buds up to the pale blue sky.
James came out with two mugs of coffee and an ashtray.
âSomeoneâs been gossiping about me,â said Agatha. âIt must be Jill Davent. Someoneâs found out about my background.â
âI could never understand why you are so ashamed of your upbringing,â said James. âWhat does it matter?â
âI matters to me,â said Agatha. âThe Gloucestershire middle classes are very snobby.â
âOnly the ones not worth knowing,â said James.
âLike some of your friends? Did you tell anyone?â
âOf course not. I told you before. I do not discuss you with anyone.â
But Agatha saw a little flash of uneasiness in his blue eyes. âYou did say something about me and recently, too.â
He ran his fingers through his thick black hair, hair that only showed a little grey at the temples. He cursed Agathaâs intuition.
âI didnât say anything about your background but I took Jill out for dinner and she asked a lot of questions about you, but I only talked about your cases.â
âSheâs counselling Gwen Simple. She knows I was on that case where I nearly ended up in one of her sonâs meat pies.â
Agathaâs last case had concerned a Sweeny Todd of a murderer over at