be a bit of a mess now, darlinâ, but I could pull in those days. Caesars Nightclub. Do you know it?â
âNo,â Yellich and Ventnor both replied in unison.
âLucky you two.â Muriel Bond smiled. âItâs where all the lost and the desperately lonely go and itâs there that we met. James ... James ...â She sighed. âHe was just what I was looking for; he was just the opposite of Shane. Shane was large and muscular; James was small and slight. Shane had a rasping voice; James had a smooth, soft voice like a television newscaster. Shane was all beer and cigarettes; James was a little wine and no smoking at all. Shane was football; James was art galleries and museums. Shane was rock music from his youth; James was classical music. Shane would boast about the times heâd been drunk and the fights heâd been in; James wanted to know me as a person. I was on the edge of Shaneâs life but I felt at the centre of Jamesâs. James was like a ray of sunlight into my dark little world and he made me feel so very special; he made me feel as though I really mattered. James rented a flat for us, a little self-contained flat in a large house ... it was what was originally the downstairs living room of a large old house, but we had a double bed and a little cooker and a TV, a couple of easy chairs and it had a solid lock on the door. Weâd meet there, we would ... but James kept the keys ... I couldnât keep them in case Shane found them. We were careful like that â really very discreet, but sometimes weâd go out for the day. Once, one day in the summer, we went to the coast. James made an excuse not to be at work ...â Muriel Bondâs voice tailed off and she looked downwards to her left.
âSomething?â Yellich asked gently. âYouâre remembering something?â
âYes ... yes ...â Muriel Bond took a deep breath. âYes, you see, it was at the coast that day that we were rumbled and it was the end for us. Shane was at sea; we went to Bridlington and we were walking along the promenade at Brid when we met a neighbour and his wife. I mean, one of my neighbours ... not one of Jamesâs neighbours.â
âOh, no ...â Yellich sighed, âI think I know where you are going.â
âOh, yes, darlinâ.â Muriel Bond forced a smile. âOh, yes ... oh, yes ...â She took a deep breath. âWell, what can I say? I knew it was the end. We just glanced at each other, me and my neighbour, as we walked past each other, two couples arm in arm, but a really evil gleam crossed her eyes. Really evil. He looked uncomfortable but his wife looked like a little girl on Christmas morning opening up her presents under the Christmas tree. I told James that sheâd find some way of telling Shane. I knew that her man wouldnât say anything but I also knew that she would ... evil cow that she is, downright evil. I knew sheâd let Shane know somehow; it would be anonymous but sheâd do it. We didnât know what to do but Shane wasnât due back for a few weeks â he was deep-sea fishing in the White Sea â so we carried on seeing each other. I was never worried for James but I knew Shane would have it in for me. I always thought that Shane would keep it between me and him so as to keep the police out of it. I just didnât know how angry heâd get with me, and I never thought heâd go after James at all, never thought that ... never did think that, so help me I didnât. Murder him and then bury him. I never thought heâd do that.â
âSo,â Yellich asked, âwhat happened?â
âWell ... it was just as I thought; in fact, it was worse than I thought: the neighbour played a sly trick,â Muriel Bond explained. âShane had been back for about three weeks and nothing was said. He was getting ready to go to sea again and I was beginning to think that
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