“What do you do when you’re not housesitting?” the tuneless one, Balthazar, asked.
“Gardening, mainly.”
“So do I. Not a lot of gardening to be done this time of year,” little Caspar said.
“You’re wrong about that,” Laura said. “There are no end of jobs. I’ll be out there tomorrow.”
“Cutting some holly and mistletoe?” the vicar said.
“Good suggestion. The house could do with some, as you see.”
“Christmas roses? You’ve got some in the front.”
“If you mean the Helleborus niger, they’re not such good specimens. The ones you buy in florists come so much taller and whiter, thanks to forcing,” Laura said, thinking Rosemary would have been proud of that bit of expertise.
“Nasty things. Poisonous,” Melchior said, slurring his words even more.
“Mistletoe berries are poisonous, too,” Balthazar said.
The vicar decided not to go down that route. “We’d better drink up, gentlemen. Three more houses and a long walk to go.”
“Have you been to Gertrude Appleton?” Laura asked.
“The house afore you. Stingy old mucker,” Melchior said.
“That’s a bit unseasonal, isn’t it?” the vicar said.
“We all know Gertrude,” Caspar said. “Before we get a glass or a bite to eat from her, we have to promise to take her a mince pie after Christmas.”
“And if we forget, she’ll come hammering on our doors,” Balthazar said.
Laura was about to explain that it was a superstition, but stopped herself. These villagers didn’t miss a thing. They’d know all about Gertrude.
“Thanks for these, good lady,” Caspar said as he returned the plate, with ten of the eleven pies remaining. “Sorry we couldn’t all do justice to them.”
Melchior said without warning, “I need to sit down. I’m feeling dizzy.”
“You’d better come in,” Laura offered. “I was wondering about you.”
“And it’s not the wine,” said Balthazar. “He’s a teetotaler.”
Laura gave Balthazar a second look, but he seemed to be speaking in all seriousness. She noticed Melchior didn’t have a glass in his hand.
“Would you mind, Mrs. Thyme?” the vicar said. “I don’t think he’s capable of continuing.” He picked the crown off the fat man’s head. “I’ll have to be Melchior now.” Judged by the speed of the change, he’d wanted a starring role all evening.
Laura took a grip on Melchior’s arm and steered him inside to an armchair. Then she said something she was to regret. “Why don’t you gentlemen finish your round and come back for him?”
“He farms just up the lane,” Caspar said, and Laura thought she detected a suggestion that they might not, after all, return for their companion. “Blackberry Farm. It can’t be more than three hundred yards.”
They waved goodnight.
After closing the door, Laura glanced at her watch. There was still ample time before she needed to collect Rosemary.
Melchior had slumped in the chair and was snoring softly.
“Strong coffee for you,” Laura said.
He made a sound she chose to take as appreciation. It could have been a belch.
In the kitchen, Wilbur was round her feet. She found the store of dog food and opened a tin. She said, “Consider yourself lucky, Wilbur. I’ve got other demands on my time.”
When she took the coffee to Melchior his snoring was heavier and his chin was buried in his chest. This wasn’t good. She didn’t want this overweight man settling into a deep sleep and being immovable just when she needed to drive to Bath. She checked the time again. She really ought to be leaving in less than an hour. She wasn’t certain how long it would take to drive to the station.
“Coffee?”
No response.
“Have some coffee. It’ll brighten you up.”
Wishful thinking. He didn’t make a murmur that wasn’t a snore.
In a louder voice she said, “I made the coffee.”
This was becoming a predicament. She’d have to touch the man’s face or hands to get a response, but she’d only just met him. Didn’t even know his real name. How do I get myself into situations like this? she thought.
She put down the coffee and stood with her arms folded wondering how to deal with this. Wilbur came in and sniffed at the mud on Melchior’s boots.
Fresh air, she decided. She flung open a couple of windows and an icy blast of December ripped through the room.
Wilbur streaked upstairs, but Melchior didn’t move a muscle.
“Come on, man!” Laura said. She found the remote and switched on the television. The Nine Lessons and Carols at full volume. Switched the channel to the Three Tenors.
No result.
In frustration Laura brought her two hands together and slapped her own face quite hard. She’d have to overcome her innate decorum and give him a prod. Alone with a strange bloke in someone else’s house, but it had to be done.
First she switched off the three of them belting out Nessun Dorma. Her nerves couldn’t take it.
Tentatively she put out a finger and touched the back of Melchior’s right hand, resting on the arm of the chair. It remained quite still. She placed the whole of her hand across it and squeezed.
There was a slight reaction, a twitch of the eyelids, but they didn’t open. Laura leaned closer and blew on them. Nothing.
She drew a deep breath and patted his fat face.
He made a sound, no more than “Mm”-but a definite response.
“Wake up, please,” she said. “I don’t want you asleep.”
A triumph. The eyes opened and stared at her.
“It’s no good,” she told him. “You can’t sit here forever. Let’s see if you can walk to the car and I’ll drive you home. Blackberry Farm, isn’t it?”
At the mention of his address, Melchior made a definite effort to move. He rocked forward and groaned. Laura thrust her hand under his armpit and encouraged the movement. Out of sheer determination she got him to his feet. He was still unsteady, but she wrapped his arm around her shoulders and hung on to it and kept him upright.
“The car’s outside. Come on. Start walking.”
It was slow progress and a huge physical effort, but she kept him on the move, talking all the time in the hope that it would keep him conscious. Getting down the two small steps at the front door was hard enough, but the real challenge was hoisting him onto the passenger seat of the Land Rover.
She swung the door open with her free hand. “I’m going to need your help here, Melchior. One giant leap for mankind.”
He moaned a little, maybe at Laura’s attempt to be cheerful.
To encourage him, she curled her hand under his knee and lifted his right leg up to the level of the vehicle floor. It felt horribly limp. She found places for his hands to grip. “On the count of three,” she said, “and I’ll probably end up with a slipped disc. One, two, three!”
If he made some gesture towards the performance it wasn’t obvious. Laura found herself making a superhuman effort. Dignity abandoned, she put her shoulder under his rump and inched him upwards. All those hours of heavy gardening paid off. He got one buttock onto the seat and she rammed him like a front-row forward until he was in a position where she could snap the safety belt across.