us, especially since they moved to Wales. We didnât see her that often â to tell you the truth, neither my wife nor myself were all that keen on her husband. All he seemed interested in was making a fast buck, as they say!â
Richard began to wonder if he had driven almost eighty miles because of a fatherâs dislike of the man who had stolen his daughter, but there was more.
âMarjorie was particularly worried by Lindaâs last letter, about a fortnight earlier,â said Massey in sombre tones. âShe said that Michael was becoming abusive because she refused to even contemplate a divorce and several times had actually shaken and punched her during flaming rows.â
âAnd you think he may have something to do with her death?â concluded Pryor.
Leonard Massey shrugged. âIt may sound far-fetched, but I wouldnât put it past the chap. And I canât rest without at least making every effort to prove that it didnât happen that way.â
Richard thought for a moment. âYou say that the post-mortem confirmed drowning as the cause of death? Nothing else found?â
Massey took a thin briefcase from the floor besides his chair and handed Pryor a sheet of paper. âI saw the coroner on Friday and I copied out the relevant parts of the report he had from his pathologist. He seemed quite satisfied that it was drowning.â
Richard quickly scanned the few handwritten paragraphs.
âThere were some abrasions and bruises recorded, scattered over the body,â he observed.
Massey nodded. âHe explained those by the body being tossed around in the tide for perhaps more than a day. The body was seen by a fisherman at the foot of the cliffs and it was recovered by the coastguards, who said it was in a deep gully between sharp rocks, which could easily have caused those marks.â
Peter Meredith, who had been listening intently to the others, wanted to clarify the time scale.
âYou said she went missing on a Tuesday night â at least, thatâs when her husband said he returned home to find the house empty. And then her body was found on Thursday morning?â
Massey nodded. âHe didnât report her missing until the next evening, because he admits they had some marital problems and he thought she had just up and left him.
âBut when he had no message from her after twenty-four hours, he rang the police â especially as he says that he found that her handbag and almost all her clothes were still there.â
âWas she in the habit of going off alone to swim?â asked Pryor.
âYes, that was true enough. She loved swimming and she loved that coast, she was very happy to move down there from the Home Counties.â
There was another silence as the three men thought about the possibilities.
âSo whatâs the situation at the moment?â asked Richard.
Leonard Massey moved into his courtroom mode again. âI want to be absolutely sure that thereâs no sign of any foul play, Doctor Pryor! Iâve spoken to the coroner and in the circumstances, he has no objection to a private post-mortem examination.â
âHow does the husband feel about that?â enquired Meredith.
âHe has no choice in the matter,â replied Massey, brusquely. âThe inquest has not been held, so the coroner still has full jurisdiction. If the possibility of a non-accidental cause exists, then he is entitled â indeed, he should be obliged â to take all measures to confirm or exclude it.â
There seemed no answer to this, so Pryor confined himself to practicalities.
âWhere was the first autopsy carried out â and by whom?â he enquired.
âIn the public mortuary â a rather primitive place, Iâm afraid. Itâs in Swansea itself, though the coroner whoâs dealing with the matter is in Gowerton, a few miles away. The doctor was a retired pathologist who still does
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