return.â
âOh.â Muriel Bond gave a brief smile. âSince you put it like that.â
âYes.â Yellich sat forward. âWeâd like to know about James Wenlock.â
âYou know, I thought thatâd be what you wanted to know about.â Muriel Bond nodded. âI saw the news, I read the papers ... I knew thatâs why you called on little me. I am going to go there ... itâs on my bucket list.â
âWhere?â Yellich asked. âWhere are you going to go before you kick it?â
âWenlock Edge,â Muriel Bond replied flatly. âJames said heâd take me there and then he vanished, he did. Now his body has been found I think I will go there and light a candle for him.â
âIt would be a better thing to do than spend your time shoplifting,â Ventnor snarled.
âOh ... Iâll have to go lifting to raise the bus fare, sweetie ...â Muriel Bond winked at Ventnor. âOld Muriel canât raise the money no other way.â
âSo,â Yellich continued, as Ventnor sat back, deflated by her reply, âyouâll know that your husband threatened him.â
âHe did ... and itâs ex-hubby, if you donât mind. I got out of that mess eventually ... after he put me in hospital â it was then that I left. Iâd had a few black eyes and a sore face and bruised ribs, but thatâs marriage, isnât it? You expect that, but when he found out about James, well, I woke up in hospital all plastered up like an Egyptian mummy and I still have no memory of the attack. Thatâs why he got away with it â because I had no memory of it and there were no witnesses; he made sure of that. I was apparently found by the roadside. He took me out of the house, going for a drive, he said ... he just wanted to get me out of the house and into a field ... after dusk. A motorist found me by the roadside and called an ambulance. They thought I was the victim of a hit and run, then they realized the injuries didnât match up to a hit and run â more like an assault. But I didnât remember anything, like I said, and in a field at night, thereâs not many witnesses, darlinâ ... not a lot of eyes. Despite what they say about the woods having ears and the fields having eyes ... there were no eyes in that field that old night â not when Muriel was getting her hiding. He was a trawlerman on the Hull trawlers. A hard man.â
âWas?â Yellich queried.
âYes, darlinâ, was.â Muriel Bond leaned back in her chair, clearly beginning to relax in the officersâ presence. âThe fishingâs gone now. He was on the last of the trawlers. You know, I felt safe with him at first ... I felt I was being totally protected. He was a large man and it was that that made me feel safe but when he turned on me ... and his fist was as big as my face ... then I felt the opposite. Sometimes heâd punch me just because he felt like it or just out of spite. He was that sort of man, Shane Bond. So that was my lot until James Wenlock came into my life like a ray of sunshine ... a rescuer ... but he wouldnât leave his wife. Me, though, I would have left Shane like a shot.â
âShane?â Yellich asked. âYour ex-husband, Shane Bond?â
âYes, darlinâ, Shane Bond.â Muriel Bond smiled. âWhat a silly name; it makes him sound like a cowboy, doesnât it? Shane Bond ... tall in the saddle with his Colt 45s and his Winchester repeating rifle.â
âCan I ask,â Yellich said, âhow long you and James Wenlock were involved with each other?â
âJust a few months, darlinâ. Over the spring and the following summer, so not very long ...â Muriel Bond glanced up at the ceiling. âNo ... no ... longer than that, from the winter into the summer, maybe, but it was definitely less than a year. We met at a singles bar â I might
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