tuyển tập truyện Agatha Christine
bachhop2403 30.04.2009 18:24:41 (permalink)
Mình có bộ truyện của của Agatha Christine gồm 70 truyện dạng doc nén lại bằng rar, chưa dịch, mình không biết gửi lên đây như thế nào vì 1 truyện cũng quá lớn so với cho phép của trang, do vậy mình chỉ gửi lên đây danh sách thôi.Mình muốn có thư địa chỉ của một trong các mod để mình gửi truyện cho mod
<bài viết được chỉnh sửa lúc 02.05.2009 21:08:40 bởi bachhop2403 >
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#1
    bachhop2403 27.05.2009 20:09:38 (permalink)
    Xin lỗi mod, đáng lí mình phải gửi truyện này vào trang tiếng anh nhưng mình nhầm với phần truyện sưu tầm. Nếu các mod có bắt lỗi thì hãy chuyển giùm mình các trang trên vào đúng chỗ, rồi thông báo cho mình để mình gửi tiếp cho đúng chỗ của nó.
    <bài viết được chỉnh sửa lúc 29.05.2009 16:58:34 bởi bachhop2403 >
    #2
      bachhop2403 27.05.2009 20:55:18 (permalink)
       Toward Zero


      Prologue: November 19th
       
      The group round the fireplace was nearly all composed of lawyers or those who had an interest in the law. There was Martindale the solicitor, Rufus Lord, K.C., young Daniels who had made a name for himself in the Carstairs case, a sprinkling of other barristers, Mr. Justice Cleaver, Lewis of Lewis and Trench and old Mr. Treves. Mr. Treves was dose on eighty, a very ripe and experienced eighty. He was a member of a famous firm of solicitors, and the most famous member of that firm. He had settled innumerable delicate cases out of court, he was said to know more of backstairs history than any man in England and he was a specialist on criminology.
       
      Unthinking people said Mr. Treves ought to write his memoirs. Mr. Treves knew better. He knew that he knew too much.
       
      Though he had long retired from active practice, there was no man in England whose opinion was so respected by the members of his own fraternity. Whenever his thin precise little voice was raised there was always a respectful silence.
       
      The conversation now was on the subject of a much talked-of case which had finished that day at the Old Bailey. It was a murder case and the prisoner had been acquitted. The present company was busy trying the case over again and making technical criticisms.
       
      The prosecution had made a mistake in relying on one of its witnesses - old Depleach ought to have realised what an opening he was giving to the defence. Young Arthur had made the most of that servant girl's evidence. Bentmore, in his summing-up, had very rightly put the matter in its correct perspective, but the mischief was done by then - the jury had believed the girl. Juries were funny - you never knew what they'd swallow and what they wouldn't. But let them once get a thing into their heads and no one was ever going to get it out again. They believed that the girl was speaking the truth about the crowbar and that was that. The medical evidence had been a bit above their heads. All those long terms and scientific jargon - damned bad witnesses, these scientific johnnies -always hemmed and hawed and couldn't say yes or no to a plain question -always "in certain circumstances that might take place" - and so on!
       
      They talked themselves out, little by little, and as the remarks became more spasmodic and disjointed, a general feeling grew of something lacking. One head after another turned in the direction of Mr. Treves. For Mr. Treves had as yet contributed nothing to the discussion. Gradually it became apparent that the company was waiting for a final word from its most respected colleague.
       
      Mr. Treves, leaning back in his chair, was absent-mindedly polishing his glasses. Something in the silence made him look up sharply.
       
      "Eh?" he said. "What was that? You asked me something?"
       
      Young Lewis spoke.
       
      "We were talking, sir, about the Lamorne case."
       
      He paused expectantly.
       
      "Yes, yes," said Mr. Treves. "I was thinking of that."
       
      There was a respectful hush.
       
      "But I'm afraid," said Mr. Treves, still polishing, "that I was being fanciful. Yes, fanciful. Result of getting on in years, I suppose. At my age one can claim the privilege of being fanciful, if one likes."
       
      "Yes, indeed, sir," said young Lewis, but he looked puzzled.
       
      "I was thinking," said Mr. Treves, "not so much of the various points of law raised - though they were interesting - very interesting - if the verdict had gone the other way there would have been good grounds for appeal, I rather think -but I won't go into that now. I was thinking, as I say, not of the points of law, but of the - well, of the people in the case."
       
      Everybody looked rather astonished. They had considered the people in the case only as regarding their credibility or otherwise as witnesses. No one had even hazarded a speculation as to whether the prisoner had been guilty or as innocent as the court had pronounced him to be.
       
      "Human beings, you know," said Mr. Treves thoughtfully. "Human beings. All kinds and sorts and sizes and shapes of 'em. Some with brains and a good many more without. They'd come from all over the place, Lancashire, Scotland - that restaurant proprietor from Italy, and that school-teacher woman from somewhere out Middle West. All caught up and enmeshed in the thing and finally all brought together in a court of law in London on a grey November day. Each one contributing his little part. The whole thing culminating in a trial for murder."
       
      He paused and gently beat a delicate tattoo on his knee.
       
      "I like a good detective story," he said. "But, you know, they begin in the wrong place! They begin with the murder. But the murder is the end. The story begins long before that - years before, sometimes - with all the causes and events that bring certain people to a certain place at a certain time on a certain day. Take that little maid-servant's evidence - if the kitchen-maid hadn't pinched her young man she wouldn't have thrown up her situation in a huff and gone to the Lamornes and been the principal witness for the defence. That Guiseppe Antonelli - coming over to exchange with his brother for a month. The brother is as blind as a bat. He wouldn't have seen what Guiseppe's sharp eyes saw. If the constable hadn't been sweet on the cook at No. 48, he wouldn't have been late on his beat ..."
       
      He nodded his head gently: "All converging towards a given spot ... And then, when the time comes - over the top! Zero Hour. Yes, all of them converging towards zero ..."
       
      He repeated. "Towards zero ..." Then gave a quick little shudder. "You're cold, sir; come nearer the fire."
       
      "No, no," said Mr. Treves. "Just someone walking over my grave, as they say. Well, well, I must be making my way homewards."
       
      He gave an affable little nod and went slowly and precisely out of the room.
       
      There was a moment of dubious silence and then Rufus Lord, K.C., remarked that poor old Treves was getting on.
       
      Sir William Cleaver said: "An acute brain - a very acute brain - but Anno Domini tells in the end."
       
      "Got a groggy heart, too," said Lord. "May drop down any minute, I believe." "He takes pretty good care of himself," said young Lewis.
       
      At that moment Mr. Treves was carefully stepping into his smooth-running Daimler. It deposited him at a house in a quiet square. A solicitous butler-valet helped him off with his coat. Mr. Treves walked into his library, where a coal fire was burning. His bedroom lay beyond, for out of consideration for his heart he never went upstairs.
       
      He sat down in front of the fire and drew his letters towards him. His mind was still dwelling on the fancy he had out-lined at the Club.
       
      "Even now," thought Mr. Treves to himself, "some drama - some murder to be -is in course of preparation. If I were writing one of these amusing stories of blood and crime, I should begin now with an elderly gentleman sitting in front of the fire opening his letters - going - unbeknownst to himself - 'towards zero ...'"
       
      He slit open an envelope and gazed down absently at the sheet he abstracted from it.
       
      Suddenly his expression changed. He came back from romance to reality.
       
      "Dear me," said Mr. Treves. "How extremely annoying! Really, how very vexing! After all these years! This will alter all my plans."
       
      "Open the Door and Here Are the People"
       
      January 11th.
       
      The man in the hospital bed shifted his body slightly and stifled a groan.
       
      The nurse in charge of the ward got up from her table and came down to him. She shifted his pillows and moved him into a more comfortable position.
       
      Angus MacWhirter only gave a grunt by way of thanks. He was in a state of seething rebellion and bitterness.
       
      By this time it ought all to have been over. He ought to have been out of it all! Curse that damned ridiculous tree growing out of the cliff! Curse those officious sweethearts who braved the cold of a winter's night to keep a tryst on the cliff edge.
       
      But for them (and the tree!) it would have been over - a plunge into the deep icy water, a brief struggle perhaps, and then oblivion - the end of a misused, useless, unprofitable life.
       
      And now where was he? Lying ridiculously in a hospital bed with a broken shoulder and with the prospect of being hauled up in a police court for the crime of trying to take his own life.
       
      Curse it, it was his own life, wasn't it?
       
      And if he had succeeded in the job, they would have buried him piously as of unsound mind!
       
      Unsound mind, indeed! He'd never been saner! And to commit suicide was the most logical and sensible thing that could be done by a man in his position.
       
      Completely down and out, with his health permanently affected, with a wife who had left him for another man. Without a job, without affection, without money, health or hope, surely to end it all was the only possible solution?
       
      And now here he was in this ridiculous plight. He would shortly be admonished by a sanctimonious magistrate for doing the common-sense thing with a commodity which belonged to him and to him only - his life.
       
      He snorted with anger. A wave of fever passed over him.
       
      The nurse was beside him again. She was young, red-haired, with a kindly, rather vacant face.
       
      "Are you in much pain?"
       
      "No, I'm not."
       
      "I'll give you something to make you sleep."
       
      "You'll do nothing of the sort."
       
      "But -"
       
      "Do you think I can't bear a bit of pain and sleeplessness?"
       
      She smiled in a gentle, slightly superior way.
       
      "Doctor said you could have something."
       
      "I don't care what doctor said."
       
      She straightened the covers and set a glass of lemonade a little nearer to him. He said, slightly ashamed of himself: "Sorry if I was rude."
       
      "Oh, that's all right."
       
      It annoyed him that she was so completely undisturbed by his bad temper. Nothing like that could penetrate her nurse's armour of indulgent indifference. He was a patient - not a man.
       
      He said: "Damned interference - all this damned interference ..."
       
      She said reprovingly: "Now, now, that isn't very nice."
       
      "Nice?" he demanded. "Nice? My God!"
       
      She said calmly: "You'll feel better in the morning."
       
      He swallowed. "You nurses. You nurses! You're inhuman, that's what you are!"
       
      "We know what's best for you, you see."
       
      "That's what's so infuriating! About you. About a hospital. About the world. Continual interference! Knowing what's best for other people. I tried to kill myself. You know that, don't you?"
       
      She nodded.
       
      "Nobody's business but mine whether I threw myself off a bloody cliff or not. I'd finished with life. I was down and out!"
       
      She made a little clicking noise with her tongue. It indicated abstract sympathy. He was a patient. She was soothing him by letting him blow off steam.
       
      "Why shouldn't I kill myself if I want to?" he demanded. She replied to that quite seriously. "Because it's wrong."
       
      She looked at him doubtfully. She was not disturbed in her own belief, but she was much too inarticulate to explain her reaction.
       
      "Well -I mean - it's wicked to kill yourself. You've got to go on living whether you like it or not."
       
      "Why have you?"
       
      "Well, there are other people to consider, aren't there?"
       
      "Not in my case. There's not a soul in the world who'd be the worse for my passing on."
       
      "Haven't you got any relations? No mother or sisters or anything?"
       
      "No. I had a wife once, but she left me - quite right, too! She saw I was no good."
       
      "But you've got friends, surely?"
       
      "No, I haven't. I'm not a friendly sort of man. Look here, nurse, I'll tell you something. I was a happy sort of chap once. Had a good job and a good-looking wife. There was a car accident. My boss was driving the car and I was in it. He wanted me to say he was driving under thirty at the time of the accident. He wasn't. He was driving nearer fifty. Nobody was killed, nothing like that, he just wanted to be in the right for the insurance people. Well, I wouldn't say what he wanted. It was a lie. I don't tell lies."
       
      The nurse said: "Well, I think you were quite right. Quite right."
       
      "You do, do you? That pig-headedness of mine cost me my job. My boss was sore. He saw to it that I didn't get another. My wife got fed up seeing me much about unable to get anything to do. She went off with a man who had been my friend. He was doing well and going up in the world. I drifted along, going steadily down. I took to drinking a bit. That didn't help me to hold down jobs. Finally I came down to hauling - strained my inside - the doctor told me I'd never be strong again. Well, there wasn't much to live for then. Easiest way, and the cleanest way, was to go right out. My life was no good to myself or anyone else."
       
      The little nurse murmured: "You don't know that."
       
      He laughed. He was better-tempered already. Her naive obstinacy amused him.
       
      "My dear girl, what use am I to anybody?"
       
      She said confusedly: "You don't know. You may be - some day -"
       
      "Some day? There won't be any some day. Next time I shall make sure."
       
      She shook her head decidedly.
       
      "Oh, no," she said. "You won't kill yourself now." "Why not?" "They never do."
       
      He stared at her. "They never do." He was one of a class of would-be suicides. Opening his mouth to protest energetically, his innate honesty suddenly stopped him.
       
      Would he do it again? Did he really mean to do it?
       
      He knew suddenly that he didn't. For no reason. Perhaps the right reason was the one she had given out of her specialised knowledge. Suicides didn't do it again.
       
      All the more he felt determined to force an admission from her on the ethical side.
       
      "At any rate, I've got a right to do what I like with my own life."
       
      "No - no, you haven't."
       
      "But why not, my dear girl, why?"
       
      She flushed. She said, her fingers playing with the little gold cross that hung round her neck: "You don't understand. God may need you."
       
      He stared - taken aback. He did not want to upset her child-like faith. He said mockingly: "I suppose that one day I may stop a runaway horse and save a golden-haired child from death - eh? Is that it?"
       
      She shook her head. She said with vehemence and trying to express what was so vivid in her mind and so halting on her tongue: "It may be just by being somewhere - not doing anything - just by being at a certain place at a certain time - oh, I can't say what I mean, but you might just - just walk along a street some day and just by doing that accomplish something terribly important -perhaps even without knowing what it was."
       
      The red-haired little nurse came from the west coast of Scotland and some of her family had "the sight."
       
      Perhaps, dimly, she saw a picture of a man walking up a road on a night in September and thereby saving a human being from a terrible death ...
       
      February 14th.
       
      There was only one person in the room and the only sound to be heard was the scratching of that person's pen as it traced line after line across the paper.
       
      There was no one to read the words that were being traced. If there had been, they would hardly have believed their eyes. For what was being written was a clear, carefully detailed project for murder.
       
      There are times when a body is conscious of a mind controlling it - when it bows obedient to that alien something that controls its actions. There are other times when a mind is conscious of owning and controlling a body and accomplishing its purpose by using that body.
       
      The figure sitting writing was in the last-named state. It was a mind, a cool, controlled intelligence. This mind had only one thought and one purpose - the destruction of another human being. To the end that this purpose might be accomplished, the scheme was being worked out meticulously on paper. Every eventuality, every possibility was being taken into account. The thing had got to be absolutely fool-proof. The scheme, like all good schemes, not absolutely cut and dried. There were certain actions at certain points. Moreover, since the mind was intelligent, it realised that there must be intelligent provision left for the unforeseen. But the main lines were clear and had been closely tested. The time, the place, the method, the victim! ...
       
      The figure raised its head. With its hand, it picked up the sheets of paper and read them carefully through. Yes, the thing was crystal clear.
       
      Across the serious face a smile came. It was a smile that was not quite sane. The figure drew a deep breath.
       
      As man was made in the image of his Maker, so there was now a terrible travesty of a creator's joy.
       
      Yes, everything planned - everyone's reaction foretold and allowed for, the good and evil in everybody played upon and brought into harmony with one evil design.
       
      There was one thing lacking still...
       
      With a smile the writer traced a date - a date in September.
       
      Then, with a laugh, the paper was torn in pieces and the pieces carried across the room and put into the heart of the glowing fire. There was no carelessness. Every single piece was consumed and destroyed. The plan was now only existent in the brain of its creator.
       
      March 8th.
       
      Superintendent Battle was sitting at the breakfast table. His jaw was set in a truculent fashion and he was reading, slowly and carefully, a letter that his wife had just tearfully handed to him. There was no expression visible on his face, for his face never did register any expression. It had the aspect of a face carved out of wood. It was solid and durable and, in some way, impressive. Superintendent Battle had never suggested brilliance; he was, definitely, not a brilliant man, but he had some other quality, difficult to define, that was nevertheless forceful.
       
      "I can't believe it," said Mrs. Battle, sobbing. "Sylvia!"
       
      Sylvia was the youngest of Superintendent and Mrs. Battle's five children. She was sixteen and at school near Maidstone.
       
      The letter was from Miss Amphrey, headmistress of the school in question. It was a clear, kindly and extremely tactful letter. It set out, in black and white, that various small thefts had been puzzling the school authorities for some time, that the matter had been at last cleared up, that Sylvia Battle had confessed, and that Miss Amphrey would like to see Mr. and Mrs. Battle at the earliest possible opportunity "to discuss the position."
       
      Superintendent Battle folded up the letter, put it in his pocket, and said: "You leave this to me, Mary."
       
      He got up, walked round the table, patted her on the cheek and said, "Don't worry, dear, it will be all right."
       
      He went from the room, leaving comfort and reassurance behind him.
       
      That afternoon, in Miss Amphrey's modern and individualistic drawing-room, Superintendent Battle sat very squarely on his chair, his large wooden hands on his knees, confronting Miss Amphrey, and managing to look, far more than usual, every inch a policeman.
       
      Miss Amphrey was a very successful headmistress. She had personality - a great deal of personality, she was enlightened and up to date, and she combined discipline with modern ideas of self-determination.
       
      Her room was representative of the spirit of Meadway. Everything was of a cool oatmeal colour - there were big jars of daffodils and bowls of tulips and hyacinths. One or two good copies of the antique Greek, two pieces of advanced modern sculpture, two Italian primitives on the walls. In the midst of all this, Miss Amphrey herself, dressed in a deep shade of blue, with an eager face suggestive of a conscientious greyhound, and clear blue eyes looking serious through thick lenses.
       
      "The important thing," she was saying in her clear, well-modulated voice, "is that this should be taken the right way. It is the girl herself we have to think of, Mr. Battle. Sylvia herself! It is most important - most important - that her life should not be crippled in any way. She must not be made to assume a burden of guilt -blame must be very, very sparingly meted out, if at all. We must arrive at the reason behind these quite trivial pilferings. A sense of inferiority, perhaps? She is not good at games, you know - an obscure wish to shine in a different sphere -the desire to assert her ego? We must be very, very careful. That is why I wanted to see you alone first - to impress upon you to be very, very careful with Sylvia. I repeat again, it's very important to get at what's behind this."
       
      "That, Miss Amphrey," said Superintendent Battle, "is why I have come down."
       
      His voice was quiet, his face unemotional, his eyes surveyed the schoolmistress appraisingly.
       
      "I have been very gentle with her," said Miss Amphrey.
       
      Battle said laconically. "Good for you, M'am."
       
      "You see, I really love and understand these young things."
       
      Battle did not reply directly. He said: "I'd like to see my girl now, if you don't mind. Miss Amphrey."
       
      With renewed emphasis Miss Amphrey admonished him to be careful - to go slow - not to antagonise a child just budding into womanhood. Superintendent Battle showed no signs of impatience. He just looked blank.
       
      She took him at last to her study. They passed one or two girls in the passages. They stood politely to attention, but their eyes were full of curiosity. Having ushered Battle into a small room, not quite so redolent of personality as the one downstairs, Miss Amphrey withdrew and said she would send Sylvia to him.
       
      Just as she was leaving the room. Battle stopped her.
       
      "One minute, M'am; how did you come to pitch upon Sylvia as the one responsible for these - er - leakages?"
       
      "My methods, Mr. Battle, were psychological."
       
      Miss Amphrey spoke with dignity.
       
      "Psychological? H'm. What about the evidence, Miss Amphrey?"
       
      "Yes, yes, I quite understand, Mr. Battle - you would feel that way. Your - er -profession steps in. But psychology is beginning to be recognised in criminology. I can assure you that there is no mistake - Sylvia freely admits the whole thing."
       
      Battle nodded.
       
      "Yes, yes -I know that. I was just asking how you came to pitch upon her to begin with."
       
      "Well, Mr. Battle, this business of things being taken out of the girls' lockers was on the increase. I called the school together and told them the facts. At the same time, I studied their faces unobtrusively. Sylvia's expression struck me at once. It was guilty - confused. I knew at that moment who was responsible. I wanted, not to confront her with her guilt, but to get her to admit it herself. I set a little test for her - a word test association."
       
      Battle nodded to show he understood.
       
      "And finally the child admitted it all."
       
      Her father said: "I see."
       
      Miss Amphrey hesitated a minute, then went out.
       
      Battle was standing looking out of the window when the door opened again. He turned round slowly and looked at his daughter.
       
      Sylvia stood just inside the door, which she had closed behind her. She was tall, dark, angular. Her face was sullen and bore marks of tears. She said timidly rather than defiantly: "Well, here I am."
       
      Battle looked at her thoughtfully for a minute or two.
       
      He sighed.
       
      "I should never have sent you to this place," he said. "That woman's a fool."
       
      Sylvia lost sight of her own problems in sheer amazement.
       
      "Miss Amphrey? Oh, but she's wonderful. We all think so."
       
      "H'm," said Battle. "Can't be quite a fool, then, if she sells the idea of herself as well as that. All the same, Meadway wasn't the place for you - although I don't know - this might have happened anywhere."
       
      Sylvia twisted her hands together. She looked down. She said: "I'm - I'm sorry, father. I really am."
       
      "So you should be," said Battle shortly. "Come here."
       
      She came slowly and unwillingly across the room to him. He took her chin in his great square hand and looked closely into her face.
       
      "Been through a good deal, haven't you?" he said gently. Tears started into her eyes.
       
      Battle said slowly: "You see, Sylvia, I've known all along with you that there was something. Most people have got a weakness of some kind or another. Usually it's plain enough. You can see when a child's greedy, or bad-tempered, or got a streak of the bully in him. You were a good child, very quiet - very sweet-tempered - no trouble in any way - and sometimes I've worried. Because if there's a flaw you don't see, sometimes it wrecks the whole show when the article is tried out."
       
      "Like me!" said Sylvia.
       
      "Yes, like you. You've cracked under strain - and in a damned queer way, too. It's a way, oddly enough, I've never come across before."
       
      The girl said suddenly and scornfully: "I should think you'd come across thieves often enough!"
       
      "Oh, yes -I know all about them. And that's why, my dear - not because I'm your father (fathers don't know much about their children), but because I'm a policeman I know well enough you're not a thief! You never took a thing in this place. Thieves are of two kinds, the kind that yields to sudden and overwhelming temptation (and that happens damned seldom - it's amazing what temptation the ordinary normal honest human being can withstand) - and there's the kind that just takes what doesn't belong to them almost as a matter of course. You don't belong to either type. You're not a thief. You're a very unusual type of liar."
       
      Sylvia began, "But -" He swept on.
       
      "You've admitted it all? Oh, yes, I know that. There was a Saint once - went out with bread for the poor. Husband didn't like it. Met her and asked what there was in her basket. She lost her nerve and said it was roses - he tore open her basket and roses it was - a miracle! Now, if you'd been Saint Elizabeth and were out with a basket of roses, and your husband had come along and asked you what you'd got, you'd have lost your nerve and said, 'Bread.'"
       
      He paused and then said gently: "That's how it happened, isn't it?" There was a longer pause and then the girl suddenly bent her head. Battle said: "Tell me, child. What happened exactly?"
       
      "She had us all up. Made a speech. And I saw her eyes on me and I knew she thought it was me! I felt myself getting red - and I saw some of the girls looking at me. It was awful. And then the others began looking at me and whispering in corners. I could see they all thought so. And then the Amp had me up here with some of the others one evening and we played a sort of word-game - she said words and we gave answers -"
       
      Battle gave a disgusted grunt.
       
      "And I could see what it meant - and - and I sort of got paralysed. I tried not to give the wrong word -I tried to think of things quite outside - like squirrels or flowers - and the Amp was there watching me with eyes like gimlets - you know, sort of boring inside one. And after that - oh, it got worse and worse, and one day the Amp talked to me quite kindly and so - so understandingly - and - and I broke down and said I had done it - and, oh! Daddy, the relief!"
       
      Battle was stroking his chin.
       
      "I see."
       
      "You do understand?"
       
      "No, Sylvia, I don't understand, because I'm not made that way. If anyone tried to make me say I'd done something I hadn't I'd feel more like giving them a sock on the jaw. But I see how it came about in your case - and that gimlet-eyed Amp of yours has had as pretty an example of unusual psychology shoved under her nose as any half-baked exponent of misunderstood theories could ask for. The thing to do now is to clear up this mess. Where's Miss Amphrey?"
       
      Miss Amphrey was hovering tactfully near at hand. Her sympathetic smile froze on her face as Superintendent Battle said bluntly: "In justice to my daughter, I must ask that you call in your local police over this."
       
      "But, Mr. Battle, Sylvia herself -"
       
      "Sylvia has never touched a thing that didn't belong to her in this place."
       
      "I quite understand that, as a father -"
       
      "I'm not talking as a father, but as a policeman. Get the police to give you a hand over this. They'll be discreet. You'll find the things hidden away somewhere and the right set of fingerprints on them, I expect. Petty pilferers don't think of wearing gloves. I'm taking my daughter away with me now. If the police find evidence - real evidence - to connect her with the thefts, I'm prepared for her to appear in court and take what's coming to her, but I'm not afraid."
       
      As he drove out of the gate with Sylvia beside him some five minutes later, he asked: "Who's a girl with fair hair, rather fuzzy, very pink cheeks and a spot on her chin, blue eyes far apart? I passed her in the passage."
       
      "That sounds like Olive Parsons."
       
      "Ah, well, I shouldn't be surprised if she were the one."
       
      "Did she look frightened?"
       
      "No, looked smug! Calm, smug look I've seen in the police court hundreds of times! I'd bet good money she's the thief - but you won't find her confessing -not much!"
       
      Sylvia said with a sigh: "It's like coming out of a bad dream. Oh, Daddy, I am sorry! Oh, I am sorry! How could I be such a fool, such an utter fool? I do feel awful about it."
       
      "Ah well," said Superintendent Battle, patting her on the arm with a hand he disengaged from the wheel, and uttering one of his pet forms of trite consolation. "Don't you worry. These things are sent to try us. Yes, these things are sent to try us. At least, I suppose so. I don't see what else they can be sent for ..."
       
      April 19th.
       
      The sun was pouring down on Nevile Strange's house at Hindhead.
       
      It was an April day such as usually occurs at least once in a month, hotter than most of the June days to follow.
       
      Nevile Strange was coming down the stairs. He was dressed in white flannels and held four tennis racquets under his arm.
       
      If a man could have been selected from amongst other Englishmen as an example of a lucky man with nothing to wish for, a Selection Committee might have chosen Nevile Strange. He was a man well known to the British public, a first-class tennis player and all-round sportsman. Though he had never reached the finals at Wimbledon, he had lasted several of the opening rounds and in the mixed doubles had twice reached the semi-finals. He was, perhaps, too much of an all-round athlete to be a champion tennis player. He was scratch at golf, a fine swimmer and had done some good climbs in the Alps. He was thirty-three, had magnificent health, good looks, plenty of money, an extremely beautiful wife whom he had recently married and, to all appearances, no cares or worries.
       
      Nevertheless as Nevile Strange went downstairs this fine morning a shadow went with him. A shadow perceptible, perhaps, to no eyes but his. But he was aware of it, the thought of it furrowed his brow and made his expression troubled and indecisive.
       
      He crossed the hall, squared his shoulders as though definitely throwing off some burden, passed through the living-room and out on to a glass-enclosed verandah, where his wife, Kay, was curled up amongst cushions drinking orange juice.
       
      Kay Strange was twenty-three and unusually beautiful. She had a slender but subtly voluptuous figure, dark red hair, such a perfect skin that she used only the slightest make-up to enhance it, and those dark eyes and brows which so seldom go with red hair and which are so devastating when they do.
       
      Her husband said lightly: "Hullo, Gorgeous, what's for breakfast?"
       
      Kay replied: "Horribly bloody-looking kidneys for you - and mushrooms - and rolls of bacon."
       
      "Sounds all right," said Nevile.
       
      He helped himself to the aforementioned viands and poured out a cup of coffee. There was a companionable silence for some minutes.
       
      "Oo," said Kay voluptuously, wriggling bare toes with scarlet manicured nails. "Isn't the sun lovely? England's not so bad, after all."
       
      They had just come back from the South of France.
       
      Nevile, after a bare glance at the newspaper headlines, had turned to the sports page and merely said "Um ..."
       
      Then, proceeding to toast and marmalade, he put the paper aside and opened his letters.
       
      There were a good many of these, but most of them he tore across and chucked away. Circulars, advertisements, printed matter.
       
      Kay said: "I don't like my colour scheme in the living-room. Can I have it done over, Nevile?"
       
      "Anything you like, Beautiful."
       
      "Peacock blue," said Kay dreamily, "and ivory satin cushions."
       
      "You'll have to throw in an ape," said Nevile.
       
      "You can be the ape," said Kay.
       
      Nevile opened another letter.
       
      "Oh, by the way," said Kay. "Shirty has asked us to go to Norway on the yacht at the end of June. Rather sickening we can't." She looked cautiously sideways at Nevile and added wistfully: "I would love it so."
       
      Something, some cloud, some uncertainty, seemed hovering on Nevile's face. Kay said rebelliously: "Have we got to go to dreary old Camilla's?" Nevile frowned.
       
      "Of course we have. Look here, Kay, we've had this out before. Sir Matthew was my guardian. He and Camilla looked after me. Gull's Point is my home, as far as any place is home to me."
       
      "Oh, all right, all right," said Kay. "If we must, we must. After all, we get all that money when she dies, so I suppose we have to suck up a bit."
       
      Nevile said angrily: "It's not a question of sucking up! She's no control over the money. Sir Matthew left it in trust for her during her lifetime, and to come to me and my wife afterwards. It's a question of affection. Why can't you understand that?"
       
      Kay said, after a moment's pause: '"I do understand, really. I'm just putting on an act because - well, because I know I'm only allowed there on sufferance, as it were. They hate me! Yes, they do! Lady Tressilian looks down that long nose of hers at me and Mary Aldin looks over my shoulder when she talks to me. It's all very well for you. You don't see what goes on."
       
      "They always seem to be very polite to you. You know very well I wouldn't stand for it if they weren't."
       
      Kay gave him a curious look from under her dark lashes.
       
      "They're polite enough. But they know how to get under my skin all right. I'm the interloper, that's what they feel."
       
      "Well," said Nevile, "after all, I suppose - that's natural enough, isn't it?"
       
      His voice had changed slightly. He got up and stood looking out at the view with his back to Kay.
       
      "Oh, yes, I dare say it's natural. They were devoted to Audrey, weren't they?" Her voice shook a little. "Dear, well-bred, cool, colourless Audrey! Camilla's not forgiven me for taking her place."
       
      Nevile did not turn. His voice was lifeless, dull. He said: "After all, Camilla's old -past seventy. Her generation doesn't really like divorce, you know. On the whole, I think she's accepted the position very well considering how fond she was of - of Audrey."
       
      His voice changed just a little as he spoke the name.
       
      "They think you treated her badly."
       
      "So I did," said Nevile under his breath, but his wife heard.
       
      "Oh, Nevile - don't be so stupid. Just because she chose to make such a frightful fuss."
       
      "She didn't make a fuss. Audrey never made fusses."
       
      "Well, you know what I mean. Because she went away and was ill, and went about everywhere looking broken-hearted. That's what I call a fuss! Audrey's not what I call a good loser. From my point of view if a wife can't hold her husband she ought to give him up gracefully! You two had nothing in common. She never played a game and was as anaemic and washed up as - as a dish-rag. No life or go in her! If she really cared about you, she ought to have thought about your happiness first and been glad you were going to be happy with someone more suited to you."
       
      Nevile turned. A faintly sardonic smile played round his lips. "What a little sportsman! How to play the game in love and matrimony!"
       
      Kay laughed and reddened.
       
      "Well, perhaps I was going a bit too far. But at any rate once the thing had happened, there it was. You've got to accept these things!"
       
      Nevile said quietly: "Audrey accepted it. She divorced me so that you and I could marry."
       
      "Yes, I know -" Kay hesitated.
       
      Nevile said: "You've never understood Audrey."
       
      "No, I haven't. In a way, Audrey gives me the creeps. I don't know what it is about her. You never know what she's thinking ... She's - she's a little frightening."
       
      "Oh! nonsense, Kay."
       
      "Well, she frightens me. Perhaps it's because she's got brains."
       
      "My lovely nitwit."
       
      Kay laughed.
       
      "You always call me that!"
       
      "Because it's what you are!"
       
      They smiled at each other. Nevile came over to her and bending down, kissed the back of her neck.
       
      "Lovely, lovely Kay," he murmured.
       
      "Very good Kay," said Kay. "Giving up a lovely yachting trip to go and be snubbed by her husband's prim Victorian relations."
       
      Nevile went back and sat down by the table.
       
      "You know," he said. "I don't see why we shouldn't go on that trip with Shirty if you really want to so much."
       
      Kay sat up in astonishment.
       
      "And what about Saltcreek and Gull's Point?"
       
      Nevile said in a rather unnatural voice: "I don't see why we shouldn't go there early in September."
       
      "Oh, but, Nevile, surely - " She stopped.
       
      "We can't go in July and August because of the Tournaments," said Nevile. "But we'd finish up at St. Loo the last week in August, and it would fit in very well if we went on to Saltcreek from there."
       
      "Oh, it would fit in all right - beautifully. But I thought - well, she always goes there for September, doesn't, she?"
       
      "Audrey, you mean?"
       
      "Yes. I suppose they could put her off, but -"
       
      "Why should they put her off?"
       
      Kay stared at him dubiously.
       
      "You mean, we'd be there at the same time? What an extraordinary idea!"
       
      Nevile said irritably: "I don't think it's at all an extraordinary idea. Lots of people do it nowadays. Why shouldn't we all be friends together? It makes things so much simpler. Why, you said so yourself only the other day."
       
      "I did?"
       
      "Yes, don't you remember? We were talking about the Howes, and you said it was the sensible, civilised way to look at things, and that Leonard's new wife and his Ex were the best of friends."
       
      "Oh, I wouldn't mind. I do think it's sensible. But - well, I don't think Audrey would feel like that about it."
       
      "Nonsense."
       
      "It isn't nonsense. You know, Nevile, Audrey really was terribly fond of you ... I don't think she'd stand it for a moment."
       
      "You're quite wrong, Kay. Audrey thinks it would be quite a good thing."
       
      "Audrey - what do you mean, Audrey thinks? How do you know what Audrey thinks?"
       
      Nevile looked slightly embarrassed. He cleared his throat a little self-consciously.
       
      "As a matter of fact, I happened to run into her yesterday when I was up in London."
       
      "You never told me."
       
      Nevile said irritably: "I'm telling you now. It was absolute chance. I was walking across the Park and there she was coming towards me. You wouldn't want me to run away from her, would you?"
       
      "No, of course not," said Kay, staring. "Go on."
       
      "I - we - well, we stopped, of course, and then I turned round and walked with her. I -I felt it was the least I could do."
       
      "Go on," said Kay.
       
      "And then we sat down on a couple of chairs and talked. She was very nice - very nice indeed."
       
      "Delightful for you," said Kay.
       
      "And we got talking, you know, about one thing and another. She was quite natural and normal - and - and all that."
       
      "Remarkable!" said Kay.
       
      "And she asked how you were -"
       
      "Very kind of her!"
       
      "And we talked about you for a bit. Really, Kay, she couldn't have been nicer."
       
      "Darling Audrey!"
       
      "And then it sort of came to me - you know - how nice it would be if - if you two could be friends - if we could all get together. And it occurred to me that perhaps we might manage it at Gull's Point this summer. Sort of place it could happen quite naturally."
       
      "You thought of that?"
       
      "I - well - yes, of course. It was all my idea."
       
      "You've never said anything to me about having any such idea."
       
      "Well, I only happened to think of it just then."
       
      "I see. Anyway, you suggested it and Audrey thought it was a marvellous brainwave?"
       
      For the first time something in Kay's manner seemed to penetrate to Nevile's consciousness.
       
      He said: "Is anything the matter, Gorgeous?"
       
      "Oh, no, nothing! Nothing at all! It didn't occur to you or Audrey whether I should think it a marvellous idea?"
       
      Nevile stared at her.
       
      "But, Kay, why on earth should you mind?"
       
      Kay bit her lip.
       
      Nevile went on: "You said yourself - only the other day -"
       
      "Oh, don't go into all that again! I was talking about other people - not us."
       
      "But that's partly what made me think of it."
       
      "More fool me. Not that I believe that."
       
      Nevile was looking at her with dismay.
       
      "But, Kay, why should you mind? I mean, there's nothing for you to mind about!"
       
      "Isn't there?"
       
      "Well, I mean - any jealousy or that - would be on the other side." He paused, his voice changed. "You see, Kay, you and I treated Audrey damned badly. No, I don't mean that. It was nothing to do with you. I treated her very badly. It's no good just saying that I couldn't help myself. I feel that if this could come off I'd feel better about the whole thing. It would make me a lot happier."
       
      Kay said slowly: "So you haven't been happy?"
       
      "Darling idiot, what do you mean? Of course I've been happy, radiantly happy. But -"
       
      Kay cut in.
       
      "But - that's it! There's always been a 'but' in this house. Some damned creeping shadow about the place. Audrey's shadow."
       
      Nevile stared at her.
       
      "You mean to say you're jealous of Audrey?" he said.
       
      "I'm not jealous of her. I'm afraid of her ... Nevile, you don't know what Audrey's like."
       
      "Not know what she's like when I've been married to her for over eight years?"
       
      "You don't know," Kay repeated, "what Audrey is like."
       
      April 30th.
       
      "Preposterous!" said Lady Tressilian. She drew herself up on her pillow and glared fiercely round the room.
       
      "Absolutely preposterous! Nevile must be mad." "It does seem rather odd," said Mary Aldin.
       
      Lady Tressilian had a striking-looking profile with a slender bridged nose, down which, when so inclined, she could look with telling effect. Though now over seventy and in frail health, her native vigour of mind was in no way impaired. She had, it is true, long periods of retreat from life and its emotions when she would lie with half-closed eyes, but from these semi-comas she would emerge with all her faculties sharpened to the uttermost, and with an incisive tongue. Propped up by pillows in a large bed set across one corner of her room, she held her court like some French Queen. Mary Aldin, a distant cousin, lived with her and looked after her. The two women got on together excellently. Mary was thirty-six, but had one of those smooth ageless faces that change little with passing years. She might have been thirty or forty-five. She had a good figure, an air of breeding, and dark hair to which one lock of white across the front gave a touch of individuality. It was at one time a fashion, but Mary's white lock of hair was natural and she had had it since her girlhood.
       
      She looked down now reflectively at Nevile Strange's letter, which Lady Tressilian had handed to her.
       
      "Yes," she said. "It does seem rather odd."
       
      "You can't tell me," said Lady Tressilian, "that this is Nevile's own idea! Somebody put it into his head. Probably that new wife of his."
       
      "Kay. You think it was Kay's idea?"
       
      "It would be quite like her. New and vulgar. If husbands and wives have to advertise their difficulties in public and have recourse to divorce, then they might at least part decently. The new wife and the old wife making friends is quite disgusting, to my mind. Nobody has any standards nowadays!"
       
      "I suppose it is just the modern way," said Mary.
       
      "It won't happen in my house," said Lady Tressilian. "I consider I've done all that could be asked of me having that scarlet-toed creature here at all."
       
      "She is Nevile's wife."
       
      "Exactly. Therefore I felt that Matthew would have wished it. He was devoted to the boy and always wanted him to look on this as his home. Since to refuse to receive his wife would have made an open breach, I gave way and asked her here. I do not like her - she's quite the wrong wife for Nevile - no background, no roots!"
       
      "She's quite well born," said Mary placatingly.
       
      "Bad stock!" said Lady Tressilian. "Her father, as I've told you, had to resign from all his clubs after that card business. Luckily he died shortly after. And her mother was notorious on the Riviera. What a bringing-up for the girl! Nothing but hotel life - and that mother! Then she meets Nevile on the tennis courts, makes a dead set at him and never rests until she gets him to leave his wife - of whom he was extremely fond - and go off with her! I blame her entirely for the whole thing!"
       
      Mary smiled faintly. Lady Tressilian had the old-fashioned characteristic of always blaming the woman and being indulgent towards the man in the case.
       
      "I suppose, strictly speaking, Nevile was equally to blame," she suggested.
       
      "Nevile was very much to blame," agreed Lady Tressilian. "He had a charming wife who had always been devoted - perhaps too devoted - to him. Nevertheless, if it hadn't been for that girl's persistence, I am convinced he would have come to his senses. But she was determined to marry him! Yes, my sympathies are entirely with Audrey. I am very fond of Audrey."
       
      Mary sighed. "It has all been very difficult," she said.
       
      "Yes, indeed. One is at a loss to know how to act in such difficult circumstances. Matthew was fond of Audrey, and so am I, and one cannot deny that she was a very good wife to Nevile, though perhaps it is a pity that she could not have shared his amusements more. She was never an athletic girl. The whole business was very distressing. When I was a girl, these things simply did not happen. Men had their affairs, naturally, but they were not allowed to break up married life."
       
      "Well, they happen now," said Mary bluntly.
       
      "Exactly. You have so much common sense, dear. It is of no use recalling bygone days. These things happen, and girls like Kay Mortimer steal other women's husbands and nobody thinks the worse of them!"
       
      "Except people like you, Camilla!"
       
      "I don't count. That Kay creature doesn't worry whether I approve of her or not. She's too busy having a good time. Nevile can bring her here when he comes and I'm even willing to receive her friends - though I do not much care for that very theatrical-looking young man who is always hanging round her - what is his name?"
       
      "Ted Latimer?"
       
      "That is it. A friend of her Riviera days - and I should very much like to know how he manages to live as he does."
       
      "By his wits," suggested Mary.
       
      "One might pardon that. I rather fancy he lives by his looks. Not a pleasant friend for Nevile's wife! I disliked the way he came down last summer and stayed at the Easterhead Bay Hotel while they were here."
       
      Mary looked out of the open window. Lady Tressilian's house was situated on a steep cliff overlooking the river Tern. On the other side of the river was the newly created summer resort of Easterhead Bay, consisting of a big sandy bathing beach, a cluster of modern bungalows and a large hotel on the headland looking out to sea. Saltcreek itself was a straggling, picturesque fishing village set on the side of a hill. It was old-fashioned, conservative and deeply contemptuous of Easterhead Bay and its summer visitors.
       
      The Easterhead Bay Hotel was nearly exactly opposite Lady Tressilian's house, and Mary looked across the narrow strip of water at it now where it stood in its blatant newness.
       
      "I am glad," said Lady Tressilian, closing her eyes, "that Matthew never saw that vulgar building. The coastline was quite unspoilt in his time."
       
      Sir Matthew and Lady Tressilian had come to Gull's Point thirty years ago. It was nine years since Sir Matthew, an enthusiastic sailing man, had capsized his dinghy and been drowned almost in front of his wife's eyes.
       
      Everybody had expected her to sell Gull's Point and leave Saltcreek, but Lady Tressilian had not done so. She had lived on in the house, and her only visible reaction had been to dispose of all the boats and do away with the boat-house. There were no boats available for guests at Gull's Point. They had to walk along to the ferry and hire a boat from one of the rival boatmen there.
       
      Mary said, hesitating a little: "Shall I write, then, to Nevile, and tell him that what he proposes does not fit in with our plans?"
       
      "I certainly shall not dream of interfering with Audrey's visit. She has always come to us in September and I shall not ask her to change her plans."
       
      Mary said, looking down at the letter: "You did see that Nevile says Audrey - er -approves of the idea - that she is quite willing to meet Kay?"
       
      "I simply don't believe it," said Lady Tressilian. "Nevile, like all men, believes what he wants to believe!"
       
      Mary persisted: "He says he has actually spoken to her about it."
       
      "What a very odd thing to do! No - perhaps, after all, it isn't."
       
      Mary looked at her inquiringly.
       
      "Like Henry the Eighth," said Lady Tressilian.
       
      Mary looked puzzled.
       
      Lady Tressilian elaborated her last remark.
       
      "Conscience, you know! Henry was always trying to get Catherine to agree that the divorce was the right thing. Nevile knows that he has behaved badly - he wants to feel comfortable about it all. So he has been trying to bully Audrey into saying everything is all right and that she'll come and meet Kay and that she doesn't mind at all."
       
      "I wonder," said Mary slowly.
       
      Lady Tressilian looked at her sharply.
       
      "What's in your mind, my dear?"
       
      "I was wondering -" She stopped, then went on: "It - it seems so unlike Nevile -this letter! You don't think that, for some reason, Audrey wants this - this meeting?"
       
      "Why should she?" said Lady Tressilian sharply. "After Nevile left her she went to her aunt, Mrs. Royde, at the Rectory, and had a complete breakdown. She was absolutely like a ghost of her former self. Obviously it hit her terribly hard. She's one of those quiet self-contained people who feel things intensely."
       
      Mary moved uneasily.
       
      "Yes, she is intense. A queer girl in many ways ..."
       
      "She suffered a lot ... Then the divorce went through and Nevile married the girl, and little by little Audrey began to get over it. Now she's almost back to her old self. You can't tell me she wants to rake up old memories again."
       
      Mary said with gentle obstinacy: "Nevile says she does." The old lady looked at her curiously.
       
      "You're extraordinarily obstinate about this, Mary. Why? Do you want to have them here together?"
       
      Mary Aldin flushed. "No, of course not."
       
      Lady Tressilian said sharply: "It's not you who have been suggesting all this to Nevile?"
       
      "How can you be so absurd?"
       
      "Well, I don't believe for a minute it's really his idea. It's not like Nevile." She paused a minute, then her face cleared. "It's the 1st of May tomorrow, isn't it? Well, on the 3rd Audrey is coming to stay with the Darlingtons at Esbank. It's only twenty miles away. Write and ask her to come over and lunch here."
       
      May 5th.
       
      "Mrs. Strange, m'lady."
       
      Audrey Strange came into the big bedroom, crossed the room to the big bed, stooped down and kissed the old lady and sat down in the chair placed ready for her.
       
      "Nice to see you, my dear," said Lady Tressilian. "And nice to see you," said Audrey.
       
      There was a quality of intangibility about Audrey Strange. She was of medium height with very small hands and feet. Her hair was ash blonde and there was very little colour in her face. Her eyes were set wide apart and were a clear pale grey. Her features were small and regular, a straight little nose set in a small, oval, pale face. With such colouring, with a face that was pretty but not beautiful, she had nevertheless a quality about her that could not be denied nor ignored and that drew your eyes to her again and again. She was a little like a ghost, but you felt at the same time that a ghost might be possessed of more reality than a live human being ...
       
      She had a singularly lovely voice; soft and clear like a small silver bell.
       
      For some minutes she and the old lady talked of mutual friends and current events. Then Lady Tressilian said: "Besides the pleasure of seeing you, my dear, I asked you to come because I've had rather a curious letter from Nevile."
       
      Audrey looked up. Her eyes were wide, tranquil sad calm. She said: "Oh, yes?"
       
      "He suggests - a preposterous suggestion, I call it - that he and - and Kay should come here in September. He says he wants you and Kay to be friends and that you yourself think it a good idea?"
       
      She waited. Presently Audrey said in her gentle, placid voice: "Is it - so preposterous?"
       
      "My dear - do you really want this to happen?"
       
      Audrey was silent again for a minute or two, then she said gently: "I think, you know, it might be rather a good thing."
       
      "You really want to meet this - you want to meet Kay?"
       
      "I do think, Camilla, that it might - simplify things."
       
      "Simplify things!" Lady Tressilian repeated the words helplessly.
       
      Audrey spoke very softly: "Dear Camilla. You have been so good. If Nevile wants this -"
       
      "A fig for what Nevile wants!" said Lady Tressilian robustly. "Do you want it, that's the question?"
       
      A little colour came in Audrey's cheeks. It was the soft, delicate glow of a sea-shell.
       
      "Yes," she said. "I do want it."
       
      "Well," said Lady Tressilian, "well -"
       
      She stopped.
       
      "But, of course," said Audrey. "It is entirely your choice. It is your house and -"
       
      Lady Tressilian shut her eyes.
       
      "I'm an old woman," she said. "Nothing makes sense any more."
       
      "But, of course - I'll come some other time. Any time will suit me."
       
      "You'll come in September, as you always do," snapped Lady Tressilian. "And Nevile and Kay shall come, too. I may be old, but I can adapt myself, I suppose, as well as anyone else, to the changing phases of modern life. Not another word; that's settled."
       
      She closed her eyes again. After a minute or two she said, peering through half-shut lids at the young woman beside her: "Well, got what you want?"
       
      Audrey started. "Oh, yes, yes. Thank you."
       
      "My dear," said Lady Tressilian, and her voice was deep and concerned, "are you sure this isn't going to hurt you? You were very fond of Nevile, you know. This may reopen old wounds."
       
      Audrey was looking down at her small gloved hands. One of them. Lady Tressilian noticed, was clenched on the side of the bed.
       
      Audrey lifted her head. Her eyes were calm and untroubled. She said: "All that is quite over now. Quite over."
       
      Lady Tressilian leaned more heavily back on her pillows. "Well - you should know. I'm tired - you must leave me now, dear. Mary is waiting for you downstairs. Tell them to send Barrett to me."
       
      Barrett was Lady Tressilian's elderly and devoted maid. She came in to find her mistress lying back with closed eyes.
       
      "The sooner I'm out of this world the better, Barrett," said Lady Tressilian. "I don't understand anything or anyone in it."
       
      "Ah! don't say that, my lady; you're tired."
       
      Yes, I'm tired. Take that eiderdown off my feet and give me a dose of my tonic."
       
      "It's Mrs. Strange coming that's upset you. A nice lady, but she could do with a tonic, I'd say. Not healthy. Always looks as though she's seeing things other people don't see. But she's got a lot of character. She makes herself felt, as you might say."
       
      "That's very true, Barrett," said Lady Tressilian. "Yes, that's very true."
       
      "And she's not the kind you easily forget, either. I've often wondered if Mr. Nevile thinks of her sometimes. The new Mrs. Strange is very handsome - very handsome indeed - but Miss Audrey is the kind you remember when she isn't there."
       
      Lady Tressilian said with a sudden chuckle: "Nevile's a fool to want to bring those two women together. He's the one who'll be sorry for it!"
       
      May 29th.
       
      Thomas Royde, pipe in mouth, was surveying the progress of his packing, with which the deft-fingered Malayan No.1 boy was busy. Occasionally his glance shifted to the view over the plantations. For some six months he would not see that view which had been so familiar for the past seven years.
       
      It would be queer to be in England again.
       
      Allen Drake, his partner, looked in.
       
      "Hullo, Thomas, how goes it?"
       
      "All set now."
       
      "Come and have a drink, you lucky devil. I'm consumed with envy."
       
      Thomas Royde moved slowly out of the bedroom and joined his friend. He did not speak, for Thomas Royde was a man singularly economical of words. His friends had learned to gauge his reactions correctly from the quality of his silences.
       
      A rather thickset figure, with a straight, solemn face and observant, thoughtful eyes. He walked a little sideways, crab-like. This, the result of being jammed in a door during an earthquake, had contributed towards his nickname of the Hermit Crab. It had left his right arm and shoulder partially helpless, which, added to an artificial stiffness of gait, often led people to think he was feeling shy and awkward when in reality he seldom felt anything of the kind.
       
      Allen Drake mixed the drinks.
       
      "Well," he said. "Good hunting!"
       
      Royde said something that sounded like "Ah, hum."
       
      Drake looked at him curiously.
       
      "Phlegmatic as ever," he remarked. "Don't know how you manage it. How long is it since you went home?"
       
      "Seven years - nearer eight."
       
      "It's a long time. Wonder you haven't gone completely native."
       
      "Perhaps I have."
       
      "You always did belong to Our Dumb Friends rather to the human race! Planned out your leave?"
       
      "Well- yes- partly."
       
      The bronze, impassive face took a sudden and a deeper brick-red tinge.
       
      Allen Drake said with lively astonishment: "I believe there's a girl! Damn it all, you are blushing!"
       
      Thomas Royde said rather huskily: "Don't be a fool!"
       
      And he drew very hard on his ancient pipe.
       
      He broke all previous records by continuing the conversation himself.
       
      "Dare say," he said, "I shall find things a bit changed."
       
      Allen Drake said curiously: "I've always wondered why you chucked going home last time. Right at the last minute, too."
       
      Royde shrugged his shoulders.
       
      "Thought that shooting trip might be interesting. Bad news from home about then."
       
      "Of course, I forgot. Your brother was killed - in that motoring accident."
       
      Thomas Royde nodded.
       
      Drake reflected that, all the same, it seemed a curious reason for putting off a journey home. There was a mother - he believed, a sister also. Surely at such a time - then he remembered something. Thomas had cancelled his passage before the news of his brother's death arrived.
       
      Allen looked at his friend curiously. Dark horse, old Thomas!
       
      After a lapse of three years he could ask: "You and your brother great pals?"
       
      "Adrian and I? Not particularly. Each of us always went his own way. He was a barrister."
       
      "Yes," thought Drake, "a very different life. Chambers in London, parties - a living earned by the shrewd use of the tongue." He reflected that Adrian Royde must have been a very different chap from old Silent Thomas.
       
      "Your mother's alive, isn't she?"
       
      "The mater? Yes."
       
      "And you've got a sister, too."
       
      Thomas shook his head.
       
      "Oh, I thought you had. In that snapshot -"
       
      Royde mumbled. "Not a sister. Sort of distant cousin or something. Brought up with us because she was an orphan."
       
      Once more a slow tide of colour suffused the bronzed skin.
       
      Drake thought, "Hello-o-?"
       
      He said: "Is she married?"
       
      "She was. Married that fellow Nevile Strange."
       
      "Fellow who plays tennis and racquets and all that?"
       
      "Yes. She divorced him."
       
      "And you're going home to try your luck with her," thought Drake.
       
      Mercifully he changed the subject of the conversation.
       
      "Going to get any fishing or shooting?"
       
      "Shall go home first. Then I thought of doing a bit of sailing down at Saltcreek."
       
      "I know it. Attractive little place. Rather a decent old-fashioned hotel there."
       
      "Yes. The Balmoral Court. May stay there, or may put up with friends who've got a house there."
       
      "Sounds all right to me."
       
      "Ah, hum. Nice peaceful place, Saltcreek. Nobody to hustle you."
       
      "I know," said Drake. "The kind of place where nothing ever happens."
       
      May 29th.
       
      "It is really most annoying," said old Mr. Treves, "For twenty-five years now I have been to the Marine Hotel at Leahead - and now, would you believe it, the whole place is being pulled down. Widening the front or some nonsense of that kind. Why they can't let these seaside places alone - Leahead always had a peculiar charm of its own - Regency - pure Regency."
       
      Rufus Lord said consolingly: "Still, there are other places to stay there, I suppose?"
       
      "I really don't feel, I can go to Leahead at all. At the Marine, Mrs. Mackay understood my requirements perfectly. I had the same rooms every year - and there was hardly ever a change in the service. And the cooking was excellent -quite excellent."
       
      "What about trying Saltcreek? There's rather a nice old-fashioned hotel there. The Balmoral Court. Tell you who keeps it. Couple of the name of Rogers. She used be cook to old Lord Mounthead - he had the best dinners in London. She married the butler and they run this hotel now. It sounds to me just your kind of place. Quiet - none of these jazz bands - and first-class cooking and service."
       
      "It's an idea - it's certainly an idea. Is there a sheltered terrace?"
       
      "Yes - a covered-in verandah and a terrace beyond. You can get sun or shade as you prefer. I can give you some introductions in the neighbourhood, too, if you like. There's old Lady Tressilian - she lives almost next door. A charming house and she herself is a delightful woman in spite of bring very much of an invalid."
       
      "The judge's widow, do you mean?" "That's it."
       
      "I used to know Matthew Tressilian, and I think I've met her. A charming woman - though, of course, that's a long time ago. Saltcreek is near St. Loo, isn't it? I've several friends in that part of the world. Do you know, I really think Saltcreek is a very good idea? I shall write and get particulars. The middle of August is when I wish to go there - the middle of August to the middle of September. There is a garage for the car, I suppose? And my chauffeur?"
       
      "Oh, yes. It's thoroughly up-to-date."
       
      "Because, as you know, I have to be careful about walking uphill. I should prefer rooms on the ground floor, though I suppose there is a lift."
       
      "Oh, yes, all that sort of thing."
       
      "It sounds," said Mr. Treves, "as though it would solve my problem perfectly. And I should enjoy renewing my acquaintance with Lady Tressilian."
       
      July 28th.
       
      Kay Strange, dressed in shorts and a canary-coloured woolly, was leaning forward watching the tennis players. It was the semi-final of the St. Loo tournament, men's singles, and Nevile was playing young Merrick, who was regarded as the coming star in the tennis firmament. His brilliance was undeniable - some of his serves quite un-returnable - but he occasionally struck a wild patch, when the older man's experience and court craft won the day.
       
      The score was three-all in the final set.
       
      Slipping on to a seat next to Kay, Ted Latimer observed in a lazy, ironic voice: "Devoted wife watches her husband slash his way to victory!"
       
      Kay started.
       
      "How you startled me! I didn't know you were there."
       
      "I am always there. You should know that by this time."
       
      Ted Latimer was twenty-five and extremely good-looking - even though unsympathetic old colonels were wont to say of him: "Touch of the Dago!"
       
      He was dark and beautifully sunburnt and a wonderful dancer.
       
      His dark eyes could be very eloquent, and he managed his voice with the assurance of an actor. Kay had known him since she was fifteen. They had oiled and sunned themselves at Juan les Pins, had danced together and played tennis together. They had been not only friends but allies.
       
      Young Merrick was serving from the left-hand court. Nevile's return was unplayable, a superb shot to the extreme corner.
       
      "Nevile's backhand is good," said Ted. "It's better than his forehand. Merrick's weak on the backhand and Nevile knows it. He's going to pound at it all he knows how."
       
      The game ended. "Four-three - Strange leads."
       
      He took the next game on his service. Young Merrick was hitting out wildly.
       
      "Five-three."
       
      "Good for Nevile," said Latimer.
       
      And then the boy pulled himself together. His play became cautious. He varied the pace of his shots.
       
      "He's got a head on him," said Ted. "And his footwork is first class. It's going to be a fight."
       
      Slowly the boy pulled up to five-all. They went to seven-all, and Merrick finally won the match at nine-seven.
       
      Nevile came up to the net, grinning and shaking his head ruefully, to shake hands.
       
      "Youth tells," said Ted Latimer. "Nineteen against thirty-three. But I can tell you the reason, Kay, why Nevile has never been actual championship class. He's too good a loser."
       
      "Nonsense."
       
      "It isn't. Nevile, blast him, is always the complete good sportsman. I've never seen him lose his temper over losing a match."
       
      "Of course not," said Kay. "People don't."
       
      "Oh, yes, they do! We've all seen them. Tennis stars who give way to nerves -and who damn well snatch every advantage. But old Nevile - he's always ready to take the count and grin. Let the best man win, and all that. God, how I hate the public school spirit! Thank the Lord I never went to one."
       
      Kay turned her head.
       
      "Being rather spiteful, aren't you?"
       
      "Positively feline!"
       
      "I wish you wouldn't make it so clear you don't like Nevile."
       
      "Why should I like him? He pinched my girl."
       
      His eyes lingered on her.
       
      "I wasn't your girl. Circumstances forbade."
       
      "Quite so. Not even the proverbial tuppence a year between us."
       
      "Shut up. I fell in love with Nevile and married him -"
       
      "And he's a jolly good fellow - and so say all of us!"
       
      "Are you trying to annoy me?"
       
      She turned her head as she asked the question. He smiled - and presently she returned his smile.
       
      "How's the summer going, Kay?"
       
      "So, so. Lovely yachting trip. I'm rather tired of all this tennis business."
       
      "How long have you got of it? Another month?"
       
      "Yes. Then in September we go to Gull's Point for a fortnight."
       
      "I shall be at the Easterhead Bay Hotel," said Ted. "I've booked my room."
       
      "It's going to be a lovely party!" said Kay. "Nevile and I, and Nevile's Ex, and some Malayan planter who's home on leave."
       
      "That does sound hilarious!"
       
      "And the dowdy cousin, of course. Slaving away round that unpleasant old woman - and she won't get anything for it, either, since the money comes to me and Nevile."
       
      "Perhaps," said Ted, "she doesn't know that?" "That would be rather funny," said Kay.
       
      But she spoke absently. She stared down at the racquet she was twiddling in her hands. She caught her breath suddenly.
       
      "Oh, Ted!"
       
      "What's the matter, Sugar?"
       
      "I don't know. It's just sometimes I get -I get cold feet! I get scared and feel queer."
       
      "That doesn't sound like you, Kay."
       
      "It doesn't, does it? Anyway," she smiled rather uncertainly, "you'll be at the Easterhead Bay Hotel."
       
      "All according to plan."
       
      When Kay met Nevile outside the changing rooms, he said: "I see the boy friend's arrived."
       
      "Ted?"
       
      "Yes, the faithful dog - or faithful lizard might be more apt."
       
      "You don't like him, do you?"
       
      "Oh, I don't mind him. If it amuses you to pull him around on a string -"
       
      He shrugged his shoulders.
       
      Kay said: "I believe you're jealous."
       
      "Of Latimer?" His surprise was genuine.
       
      Kay said: "Ted's supposed to be very attractive."
       
      "I'm sure he is. He has that lithe South American charm."
       
      "You are jealous."
       
      Nevile gave her arm a friendly squeeze.
       
      "No, I'm not, Gorgeous. You can have your tame adorers - a whole court of them, if you like. I'm the man in possession, and possession is nine points of the law."
       
      "You're very sure of yourself," said Kay, with a slight pout.
       
      "Of course. You and I are Fate. Fate let us meet. Fate brought us together. Do you remember when we met at Cannes and I was going on to Estoril and suddenly, when I got there, the first person I met was lovely Kay! I knew then that it was Fate - and that I couldn't escape."
       
      "It wasn't exactly Fate," said Kay. "It was me!" "What do you mean by 'it was me'?"
       
      "Because it was! You see, I heard you say at Cannes you were going to Estoril, so I set to work on Mums and got her all worked up - and that's why the first person you saw when you got there was Kay."
       
      Nevile looked at her with a rather curious expression. He said slowly: "You never told me that before."
       
      "No, because it wouldn't have been good for you. It might have made you conceited! But I always have been good at planning. Things don't happen unless you make them! You call me a nitwit sometimes - but in my own way I'm quite clever. I make things happen. I have to plan a long way beforehand."
       
      "The brainwork must be intense." "It's all very well to laugh."
       
      Nevile said with a sudden curious bitterness: "Am I just beginning to understand the woman I've married? For Fate - read Kay!"
       
      Kay said: "You're not cross, are you, Nevile?"
       
      He said rather absently: "No - no, of course hot. I was just - thinking ..."
       
      August 10th.
       
      Lord Cornelly, that rich and eccentric peer, was sitting at the monumental desk which was his especial pride and pleasure. It had been designed for him at immense expense and the whole furnishing of the room was subordinated to it. The effect was terrific and only slightly marred by the unavoidable addition of Lord Cornelly himself, an insignificant and rotund little man completely dwarfed by the desk's magnificence.
       
      Into this scene of City splendour there entered a blonde secretary, also in harmony with the luxury furnishings.
       
      Gliding silently across the floor, she laid a slip of paper before the great man. Lord Cornelly peered down at it.
       
      "MacWhirter? MacWhirter? Who's he? Never heard of him. Has he got an appointment?"
       
      The blonde secretary indicated that such was the case.
       
      "MacWhirter, eh? Oh! MacWhirter! That fellow! Of course! Send him in. Send him in at once."
       
      Lord Cornelly chuckled gleefully. He was in high good-humour.
       
      Throwing himself back in his chair, he stared up into the dour unsmiling face of the man he had summoned to an interview.
       
      "You're MacWhirter, eh? Angus MacWhirter?" "That's my name."
       
      MacWhirter spoke stiffly, standing erect and unsmiling. "You were with Herbert Clay? That's right, isn't it?"
       
      "Yes."
       
      Lord Cornelly began to chuckle again.
       
      "I know all about you. Clay got his driving-licence endorsed, all because you wouldn't back him up and swear he was going at twenty miles an hour! Livid about it, he was!" The chuckle increased. "Told us all about it in the Savoy Grill. That damned pig-headed Scot!' That's what he said! Went on and on. D'you know what I was thinking?"
       
      "I have not the least idea."
       
      MacWhirter's tone was repressive. Lord Cornelly took no notice. He was enjoying his remembrance of his own reactions.
       
      "I thought to myself: ‘That's the kind of chap I could do with! Man who can't be bribed to tell lies.' You won't have to tell lies for me. I don't do my business that way. I go about the world looking for honest men - and there are damned few of them!"
       
      The little peer cackled with shrill laughter, his shrewd monkey-like face wrinkled with mirth. MacWhirter stood stolidly, not amused.
       
      Lord Cornelly stopped laughing. His face became shrewd, alert. "If you want a job, MacWhirter, I've got one for you." "I could do with a job," said MacWhirter.
       
      "It's an important job. It's a job that can only be given to a man with good qualifications - you've got those, all right - I've been into that - and to a man who can be trusted - absolutely."
       
      Lord Cornelly waited. MacWhirter did not speak. "Well, man, can I depend upon you absolutely?"
       
      MacWhirter said dryly: "You'll not know that from hearing me answer that of course you can."
       
      Lord Cornelly laughed.
       
      "You'll do. You're the man I've been looking for. Do you know South America at all?"
       
      He went into details. Half an hour later MacWhirter stood on the pavement, a man who had landed an interesting and extremely well-paid job - and a job that promised a future.
       
      Fate, after having frowned, had chosen to smile upon him. But he was in no mood to smile back. There was no exultation in him, though his sense of humour was grimly tickled when he thought back over the interview. There was a stern poetic justice in the fact that it was his former employer's diatribes against him that had actually got him his present advancement!
       
      He was a fortunate man, he supposed. Not that he cared! He was willing to address himself to the task of living, not with enthusiasm, not even with pleasure, but in a methodical day-after-day spirit. Seven months ago he had attempted to take his own life; chance and nothing but chance had intervened, but he was not particularly grateful. True, he felt no present disposition to do away with himself. That phase was over for good. You could not, he admitted, take your life in cold blood. There had to be some extra fillip of despair, of grief, of desperation or of passion. You could not commit suicide merely because you felt that life was a dreary round of uninteresting happenings.
       
      On the whole he was glad that his work would take him out of England. He was to sail for South America the end of September. The next few weeks he would be busy getting together certain equipment and being put in touch with the somewhat complicated ramifications of the business.
       
      But there would be a week's leisure before he left the country. He wondered what he should do with that week. Stay in London? Go away?
       
      An idea stirred nebulously in his brain. Saltcreek?
       
      "I've a damned good mind to go down there," said MacWhirter to himself.
       
      It would be, he thought, grimly amusing.
       
      August 19th.
       
      "And bang goes my holiday," said Superintendent Battle disgustedly.
       
      Mrs. Battle was disappointed, but long years as the wife of a police officer had prepared her to take disappointments philosophically.
       
      "Oh, well," she said, "it can't be helped. And I suppose it is an interesting case?"
       
      "Not so that you'd notice it," said Superintendent Battle. "It's got the Foreign Office in a twitter - all those tall thin young men rushing about and saying 'Hush, Hush' here, there and everywhere. It'll straighten out easy though - and we shall save everybody's face. But it's not the kind of case I'd put in my Memoirs, supposing I was ever foolish enough to write any."
       
      "We could put our holiday off, I suppose -" began Mrs. Battle doubtfully, but her husband interrupted her decisively.
       
      "Not a bit of it. You and the girls go off to Britlington - the rooms have been booked since March - pity to waste them. I tell you what I'll do - go down and spend a week with Jim when this blows over."
       
      Jim was Superintendent Battle's nephew. Inspector James Leach.
       
      "Saltington's quite close to Easterhead Bay and Saltcreek," he went on. "I can get a bit of sea air and a dip in the briny."
       
      Mrs. Battle sniffed.
       
      "More likely he'll rope you in to help him over a case!"
       
      "They don't have any cases this time of the year - unless it's a woman who pinches a few six pennyworths from Woolworths. And, anyway, Jim's all right -he doesn't need his wits sharpening for him."
       
      "Oh, well," said Mrs. Battle. "I suppose it will work out all right, but it is disappointing."
       
      "These things are sent to try us," Superintendent Battle assured her.
       
      Rose Red and Snow White
       
      Thomas Royde found Mary Aldin waiting for him on the platform at Saltington when he got out of the train.
       
      He had only a dim recollection of her, and now that he saw her again he was rather surprisingly aware of pleasure in her brisk, capable way of dealing with things.
       
      She called him by his Christian name.
       
      "How nice to see you, Thomas. After all these years."
       
      "Nice of you to put me up. Hope it isn't a bother."
       
      "Not at all. On the contrary. You'll be particularly welcome. Is that your porter? Tell him to bring the things out this way. I've got the car right at the end."
       
      The bags were stowed in the Ford. Mary took the wheel and Royde got in beside her. They drove off and Thomas noticed that she was a good driver, deft and careful in traffic and with a nice judgment of distance and spaces.
       
      Saltington was seven miles from Saltcreek. Once they were out of the small market town and on the open road, Mary Aldin reopened the subject of his visit.
       
      "Really, Thomas, your visit just now is going to be a God-send. Things are rather difficult, and a stranger - or partial stranger - is just what is needed."
       
      "What's the trouble?"
       
      His manner, as always, was incurious - almost lazy. He asked the question, it seemed, more from politeness than because he had any desire for the information. It was a manner particularly soothing to Mary Aldin. She wanted badly to talk to someone - but she much preferred to talk to someone who was not too much interested.
       
      She said: "Well - we've got rather a difficult position. Audrey is here, as you probably know?"
       
      She paused questioningly and Thomas Royde nodded.
       
      "And Nevile and his wife also."
       
      Thomas Royde's eyebrows went up. He said after a minute or two: "Bit awkward - what?"
       
      "Yes, it is. It was all Nevile's idea."
       
      She paused. Royde did not speak, but as though aware of some current of disbelief issuing from him, assertively: "It was Nevile's idea."
       
      "Why?"
       
      She raised her hands for a moment from the steering-wheel.
       
      "Oh, some modern reaction! All sensible and friends together. That idea. But I don't think, you know, it's working very well."
       
      "Possibly it mightn't." He added, "What's the new wife like?"
       
      "Kay? Good-looking, of course. Really very good-looking. And quite young."
       
      "And Nevile's keen on her?"
       
      "Oh, yes. Of course they've only been married a year."
       
      Thomas Royde turned his head slowly to look at her. His mouth smiled a little. Mary said hastily: "I didn't mean that, exactly."
       
      "Come, now, Mary. I think you did."
       
      "Well, one can't help seeing that they've really got very little in common. Their friends, for instance -"
       
      She came to a stop.
       
      Royde asked: "He met her, didn't he, on the Riviera? I don't know much about it. Only just the bare facts that the mater wrote."
       
      "Yes, they met first at Cannes. Nevile was attracted, but I should imagine he'd been attracted before - in a harmless sort of way. I still think myself that if he'd been left to himself nothing would have come of it. He was fond of Audrey, you know."
       
      Thomas nodded.
       
      Mary went on: "I don't think he wanted to break up his marriage - I'm sure he didn't. But the girl was absolutely determined. She wouldn't rest until she'd got him to leave his wife - and what's a man to do in those circumstances? It flatters him, of course."
       
      "Head over ears in love with him, was she?"
       
      "I suppose it may have been like that."
       
      Mary's tone sounded doubtful. She met his inquiring glance with a flush.
       
      "What a cat I am! There's a young man always hanging about - good-looking in a gigolo kind of way - an old friend of hers - and I can't help wondering sometimes whether the fact that Nevile is very well off and distinguished and all that didn't have something to do with it. The girl hadn't a penny of her own, I gather."
       
      She paused, looking rather ashamed. Thomas Royde merely said: "Um, hum," in a speculative voice.
       
      "However," said Mary, "that's probably plain cat! The girl is what one would call glamorous - and that probably rouses the feline instincts of middle-aged spinsters."
       
      Royde. looked thoughtfully at her, but his poker face showed no recognisable reaction. He said, after a minute or two: "But what, exactly, is the present trouble about?"
       
      "Really, you know, I haven't the least idea! That's what's so odd. Naturally we consulted Audrey first - and she seemed to have no feeling against meeting Kay -she was charming about it all. She has been charming. No one could have been nicer. Audrey, of course, in everything she does is always just right. Her manner to them both is perfect. She's very reserved, as you know, and one never has any idea of what she is really thinking or feeling - but honestly, I don't believe she minds at all."
       
      "No reason why she should," said Thomas Royde. He added, rather belatedly, "After all, it's three years ago."
       
      "Do people like Audrey forget? She was very fond of Nevile."
       
      Thomas Royde shifted in his seat.
       
      "She's only thirty-two. Got her life in front of her."
       
      "Oh, I know. But she did take it hard. She had quite a bad nervous breakdown, you know."
       
      "I know. The mater wrote me."
       
      "In a way," said Mary, "I think it was good for your mother to have Audrey to look after. It took her mind off her own grief - about your brother's death. We were so sorry about that."
       
      "Yes. Poor old Adrian. Always did drive too fast."
       
      There was a pause. Mary stretched out her hand as a sign she was taking the turn that led down the hill to Saltcreek. Presently, as they were slipping down the narrow twisting road, she said: "Thomas - you know Audrey very well?"
       
      "So, so. Haven't seen much of her for the last ten years."
       
      "No, but you knew her as a child. She was like a sister to you and Adrian?"
       
      He nodded.
       
      "Was she - was she at all unbalanced in any way? Oh, I don't mean that quite the way it sounds. But I've a feeling that there is something very wrong with her now. She's so completely detached, her poise is so unnaturally perfect - but I wonder sometimes what is going on behind the facade. I've a feeling, now and then, of some really powerful emotion. And I don't quite know what it is! But I do feel that she isn't normal. There's something! It worries me. I do know that there's an atmosphere in the house that affects everybody. We're all nervous and jumpy. But I don't know what it is. And sometimes, Thomas, it frightens me."
       
      "Frightens you?" His slow, wondering tone made her pull herself together with a little nervous laugh.
       
      "It sounds absurd ... But that's what I meant just now - your arrival will be good for us - create a diversion. Ah, here we are."
       
      They had slipped round the last corner. Gull's Point was built on a plateau of rock overlooking the river. On two sides it had sheer cliff going down to the water. The gardens and tennis court were on the left of the house. The garage, a modern after-thought, was actually farther along the road, on the other side of it.
       
      Mary said: "I'll put the car away now and come back. Hurstall will look after you."
       
      Hurstall, the aged butler, was greeting Thomas with the pleasure of an old friend.
       
      "Very glad to see you, Mr. Royde, after all these years. And so will her ladyship be. You're in the east room, sir. I think you'll find everyone in the garden, unless you want to go to your room first."
       
      Thomas shook his head. He went through the drawing-room to the window, which opened on to the terrace. He stood there a moment, watching unobserved himself.
       
      Two women were the only occupants of the terrace. One was sitting on the corner of the balustrade looking out over the water. The other woman was watching her.
       
      The first was Audrey - the other, he knew, must be Kay Strange. Kay did not know she was being overlooked and she took no pains to disguise her expression. Thomas Royde was not, perhaps, a very observant man where
       
      women were concerned, but he could not fail to notice that Kay Strange disliked Audrey Strange very much.
       
      As for Audrey, she was looking out across the river and seemed unconscious of, or indifferent to, the other's presence.
       
      It was seven years since Thomas had seen Audrey Strange. He studied her now very carefully. Had she changed, and, if so, in what way?
       
      There was a change, he decided. She was thinner, paler, altogether more ethereal-looking - but there was something else, something he could not quite define. It was as though she were holding herself tightly in leash, watchful over every movement - and yet all the time intensely aware of everything going on round her. She was like a person, he thought, who had a secret to hide. But what secret? He knew a little of the events that had befallen her in the last few years. He had been prepared for lines of sorrow and loss - but this was something else. She was like a child who, by a tightly clenched hand over a treasure, calls attention to what it wants to hide.
       
      And then his eyes went to the other woman - the girl who was now Nevile Strange's wife. Beautiful, yes. Mary Aldin had been right. He rather fancied dangerous, too. He thought: I wouldn't like to trust her near Audrey if she had a knife in her hand ... And yet, why should she hate Nevile's first wife? All that was over and done with. Audrey had no part or parcel in their lives nowadays.
       
      Footsteps rang out on the terrace as Nevile came round the corner of the house. He looked warm and was carrying a picture paper. "Here's the Illustrated Review," he said. "Couldn't get the other -"
       
      Then two things happened at precisely the same minute.
       
      Kay said: "Oh, good, give it to me," and Audrey, without moving her head, held out her hand almost absent-mindedly.
       
      Nevile had stopped half-way between the two women. A dawn of embarrassment showed in his face. Before he could speak, Kay said, her voice rising with a slight note of hysteria, "I want it. Give it me! Give it me, Nevile!"
       
      Audrey Strange started, turned her head, withdrew her hand and murmured with just the slightest air of confusion : "Oh, sorry. I thought you were speaking to me, Nevile."
       
      Thomas Royde saw the colour come up brick-red in Nevile Strange's neck. He took three quick steps forward and held out the picture paper to Audrey.
       
      She said, hesitating, her air of embarrassment growing: "Oh, but -"
       
      Kay pushed back her chair with a rough movement. She stood up, then, turning, she made for the drawing-room window. Royde had no time to move before she had charged into him blindly.
       
      The shock made her recoil; she looked at him as he apologised. He saw then why she had not seen him; her eyes were brimming with tears - tears, he fancied, of anger.
       
      "Hullo," she said. "Who are you? Oh! of course, the man from Malaya!" "Yes," said Thomas. "I'm the man from Malaya."
       
      "I wish to God I was in Malaya," said Kay. "Anywhere but here! I loathe this beastly, lousy house! I loathe everyone in it!"
       
      Emotional scenes always alarmed Thomas. He regarded Kay warily and murmured nervously: "Ah - hum."
       
      "Unless they're very careful," said Kay, "I shall kill someone! Either Nevile or that whey-faced cat out there!"
       
      She brushed past him and went out of the room, banging the door.
       
      Thomas Royde stood stock still. He was not quite sure what to do next, but he was glad that young Mrs. Strange had gone. He stood and looked at the door that she had slammed so vigorously. Something of a tiger cat, the new Mrs. Strange.
       
      The window was darkened as Nevile Strange paused in the space between the trench windows. He was breathing rather fast.
       
      He greeted Thomas vaguely.
       
      "Oh - er - hullo, Royde, didn't know you'd arrived. I say, have you seen my wife?"
       
      "She passed through about a minute ago." said the other.
       
      Nevile in his turn went out through the drawing-room door. He was looking annoyed.
       
      Thomas Royde went slowly through the open window. He was not a heavy walker. Not until he was a couple of yards away did Audrey turn her head.
       
      Then he saw those wide-apart eyes open wider, saw her lips part. She slipped down from the wall and came towards him, hands outstretched.
       
      "Oh, Thomas," she said. "Dear Thomas! How glad I am you've come!"
       
      As he took the two small white hands in his and bent down to her Mary Aldin in her turn arrived at the French windows. Seeing the two on the terrace she checked herself, watched them for a moment or two, then slowly turned away and went back into the house.
       
      II
       
      Upstairs Nevile had found Kay in her bedroom. The only large double-bedroom in the house was Lady Tressilian's. A married couple was always given the two rooms with communicating door and a small bathroom beyond on the west side of the house. It was a small isolated suite.
       
      Nevile passed through his own room and on into his wife's. Kay had flung herself down on her bed. Raising a tear-stained face, she cried out angrily: "So you've come! About time, too!"
       
      "What is all this fuss about? Have you gone quite crazy, Kay?"
       
      Nevile spoke quietly, but there was a dent at the corner of his nostril that registered restrained anger.
       
      "Why did you give that Illustrated Review to her and not to me?"
       
      "Really, Kay, you are a child. All this fuss about a wretched little picture paper."
       
      "You gave it to her and not to me," repeated Kay obstinately.
       
      "Well, why not? What does it matter?"
       
      "It matters to me."
       
      "I don't know what's wrong with you. You can't behave in this hysterical fashion when you're staying in other people's houses. Don't you know how to behave in public?"
       
      "Why did you give it to Audrey?" "Because she wanted it." "So did I, and I'm your wife."
       
      "All the more reason, in that case, for giving it to an older woman and one who, technically, is no relation."
       
      "She scored off me! She wanted to and she did. You were on her side!"
       
      "You're talking like an idiotic, jealous child. For goodness' sake, control yourself, and try and behave properly in public!"
       
      "Like she does, I suppose?"
       
      Nevile said coldly: "At any rate, Audrey can behave like a lady. She doesn't make an exhibition of herself."
       
      "She's turning you against me! She hates me and she's getting her revenge."
       
      "Look here, Kay, will you stop being melodramatic and completely foolish? I'm fed up!"
       
      "Then let's go away from here! Let's go to-morrow. I hate this place!" "We've only been here four days." "It's quite enough! Do let's go, Nevile."
       
      "Now look here, Kay. I've had enough of this. We came here for a fortnight, and I'm going to stay for a fortnight."
       
      "If you do," said Kay, "you'll be sorry. You and your Audrey! You think she's wonderful!"
       
      "I don't think Audrey is wonderful. I think she's an extremely nice and kindly person, whom I've treated very badly and who has been most generous and forgiving."
       
      "That's where you're wrong," said Kay. She got up from the bed. Her fury had died down. She spoke seriously - almost soberly.
       
      "Audrey hasn't forgiven you, Nevile. Once or twice I've seen her looking at you ... I don't know what is going on in her mind, but something is ... She's the kind that doesn't let anyone know what they're thinking."
       
      "It's a pity," said Nevile, "that there aren't more people like that."
       
      Kay's face went very white.
       
      "Do you mean that for me?" There was a dangerous edge to her voice.
       
      "Well - you haven't shown much reticence, have you? Every bit of ill-temper and spite that comes into your mind you blurt straight out. You make a fool of yourself and you make a fool of me!"
       
      "Anything more to say?" Her voice was icy.
       
      He said in an equally cold tone: "I'm sorry if you think that was unfair. But it's the plain truth. You've no more self-control than a child."
       
      "You never lose your temper, do you? Always the self-controlled, charming-mannered little pukka sahib! I don't believe you've got any feelings. You're just a fish - a damned cold-blooded fish! Why don't you let yourself go now and then? Why don't you shout at me, swear at me, tell me to go to Hell?"
       
      Nevile sighed. His shoulders sagged.
       
      "Oh, Lord," he said.
       
      Turning on his heel he left the room.
       
      III
       
      "You look exactly as you did at seventeen, Thomas Royde," said Lady Tressilian. "Just the same owlish look. And no more conversation now than you had then. Why not?"
       
      Thomas said vaguely: "I dunno. Never had the gift of the gab." "Not like Adrian. Adrian was a very clever and witty talker." "Perhaps that's why. Always left the talking to him." "Poor Adrian. So much promise." Thomas nodded.
       
      Lady Tressilian changed the subject. She was granting an audience to Thomas. She usually preferred her visitors one at a time. It did not tire her and she was able to concentrate her attention on them.
       
      "You've been here twenty-four hours," she said. "What do you think of our Situation?"
       
      "Situation?"
       
      "Don't look stupid. You do that deliberately. You know quite well what I mean. The eternal triangle which has established itself under my roof."
       
      Thomas said cautiously: "Seems a bit of friction." Lady Tressilian smiled rather diabolically.
       
      "I will confess to you, Thomas, I am rather enjoying myself. This came about through no wish of mine - indeed, I did my utmost to prevent it. Nevile was obstinate. He would insist on bringing these two together - and now he is reaping what he has sown!"
       
      Thomas Royde shifted a little in his chair.
       
      "Seems funny," he said.
       
      "Elucidate," snapped Lady Tressilian.
       
      "Shouldn't have thought Strange was that kind of chap."
       
      "It's interesting your saying that. Because it is what I felt. It was uncharacteristic of Nevile. Nevile, like most men, is usually anxious to avoid any kind of embarrassment or possible unpleasantness. I suspected that it wasn't originally Nevile's idea - but, if not, I don't see whose idea it can have been." She paused and said with only the slightest upward inflexion: "It wouldn't be Audrey's?"
       
      Thomas said promptly: "No, not Audrey's."
       
      "And I can hardly believe it was that unfortunate young woman, Kay's, idea. Not unless she is a really remarkable actress. You know, I have almost felt sorry for her lately."
       
      "You don't like her much, do you?"
       
      "No. She seems to me empty-headed and lacking in any kind of poise. But, as I say, I do begin to feel sorry for her. She is blundering about like a daddy-longlegs in lamp-light. She has no idea of what weapons to use. Bad temper, bad manners, childish rudeness - all things which have a most unfortunate-effect upon a man like Nevile."
       
      Thomas said quietly: "I think Audrey is the one who is in a difficult position."
       
      Lady Tressilian gave him a sharp glance.
       
      "You've always been in love with Audrey, haven't you, Thomas?"
       
      His reply was quite imperturbable. "Suppose I have."
       
      "Practically from the time you were children together?"
       
      He nodded.
       
      "And then Nevile came along and carried her off from under your nose?"
       
      He moved uneasily in his chair.
       
      "Oh, well -I always knew I hadn't a chance."
       
      "Defeatist," said Lady Tressilian.
       
      "I always have been a dull dog."
       
      "Dobbin!"
       
      "Good old Thomas! - that's what Audrey feels about me."
       
      "‘True Thomas,'" said Lady Tressilian. "That was your nickname, wasn't it?"
       
      He smiled as the words brought back memories of childish days. "Funny! I haven't heard that for years."
       
      "It might stand you in good stead now," said Lady Tressilian. She met his glance clearly and deliberately.
       
      "Fidelity," she said, "is a quality that anyone who has been through Audrey's experience might appreciate. The dog-like devotion of a lifetime, Thomas, does sometimes get its reward."
       
      Thomas Royde looked down, his fingers fumbled with a pipe.
       
      "That," he said, "is what I came home hoping."
       
      IV
       
      "So here we all are," said Mary Aldin.
       
      Hurstall, the old butler, wiped his forehead. When he went into the kitchen, Mrs. Spicer, the cook, remarked upon his expression.
       
      "I don't think I can be well, and that's the truth?," said Hurstall. "If I can so express myself, everything that's said and done in this house lately seems to me to mean something that's different from what it sounds like - if you know what I mean."
       
      Mrs. Spicer did not seem to know what he meant, so Hurstall went on: "Miss Aldin, now, as they all sat down to dinner - she says 'So here we all are' - and just that gave me a turn! Made me think of a trainer who's got a lot of wild animals into a cage, and then the cage door shuts. I felt, all of a sudden, as though we were all caught in a trap."
       
      "Lor', Mr. Hurstall," said Mrs. Spicer, "you must have eaten something that's disagreed."
       
      "It's not my digestion. It's the way everyone's strung up. The front door banged just now and Mrs. Strange - our Mrs. Strange, Miss Audrey - she jumped as though she had been shot. And there's the silences, too. Very queer they are. It's as though, all of a sudden, everybody's afraid to speak. And then they all break out at once, just saying the things that first come into their heads."
       
      "Enough to make anyone embarrassed," said Mrs. Spicer. "Two Mrs. Stranges in the house. What I feel is, it isn't decent."
       
      In the dining-room one of those silences that Hurstall had described was proceeding.
       
      It was with quite an effort that Mary Aldin turned to Kay and said: "I asked your friend, Mr. Latimer, to dine to-morrow night!"
       
      "Oh, good," said Kay.
       
      Nevile said: "Latimer? Is he down here?"
       
      "He's staying at the Easterhead Bay Hotel," said Kay.
       
      Nevile said: "We might go over and dine there one night. How late does the ferry go?"
       
      "Until half-past one," said Mary. "I suppose they dance there in the evenings?" "Most of the people are about a hundred," said Kay. "Not very amusing for your friend," said Nevile to Kay.
       
      Mary said quickly: "We might go over and bathe one day at Easterhead Bay. It's quite warm still and it's a lovely sandy beach."
       
      Thomas Royde said in a low voice to Audrey: "I thought of going out sailing tomorrow. Will you come?"
       
      "I'd like to."
       
      "We might all go sailing," said Nevile.
       
      "I thought you said you were going to play golf," said Kay.
       
      "I did think of going over to the links. I was right off my wooden shots the other day."
       
      "What a tragedy!" said Kay.
       
      Nevile said good-humouredly: "Golf's a tragic game."
       
      Mary asked Kay if she played.
       
      "Yes - after a fashion."
       
      Nevile said: "Kay would be very good if she took a little trouble. She's got a natural swing."
       
      Kay said to Audrey: "You don't play any games, do you?"
       
      ‘‘Not really. I play tennis after a fashion - but I'm a complete rabbit."
       
      "Do you still play the piano, Audrey?" asked Thomas.
       
      She shook her head.
       
      "Not nowadays."
       
      "You used to play rather well," said Nevile.
       
      "I thought you didn't like music, Nevile," said Kay.
       
      "I don't know much about it," said Nevile vaguely. "I always wondered how Audrey managed to stretch an octave, her hands are so small."
       
      He was looking at them as she laid down her dessert knife and fork.
       
      She flushed a little and said quickly: "I've got a very long little finger. I expect that helps."
       
      "You must be selfish, then," said Kay. "If you're unselfish you have a short little finger."
       
      "Is that true?" asked Mary Aldin. "Then I must be unselfish. Look, my little fingers are quite short."
       
      "I think you are very unselfish," said Thomas Royde, eyeing her thoughtfully.
       
      She went red - and continued, quickly: "Who's the most unselfish of us? Let's compare little fingers. Mine are shorter than yours, Kay. But Thomas, I think, beats me."
       
      "I beat you both," said Nevile. "Look." He stretched out a hand.
       
      "Only one hand, though," said Kay. "Your left-hand little finger is short, but your right-hand one is much finger. And your left hand is what you are born with and the right hand is what you make of your life. So that means that you were born unselfish and have become more selfish as time goes on."
       
      "Can you tell fortunes, Kay?" asked Mary Aldin. She stretched out her hand, palm upward. "A fortune-teller told me I should have two husbands and three children. I shall have to hurry up!"
       
      Kay said: "Those little crosses aren't children, they're journeys. That means you'll take three journeys across water."
       
      "That seems unlikely, too," said Mary Aldin.
       
      Thomas Royde asked her: "Have you travelled much?"
       
      "No, hardly at all."
       
      He heard an undercurrent of regret in her voice.
       
      "You would like to?"
       
      "Above everything."
       
      He thought in his slow reflective way of her life. Always in attendance on an old woman. Calm, tactful, an excellent manager. He asked curiously: "Have you lived with Lady Tressilian long?"
       
      "For nearly fifteen years. I came to be with her after my father died. He had been a helpless invalid for some years before his death."
       
      And then, answering the question she felt to be in his mind: "I'm thirty-six. That's what you wanted to know, wasn't it?"
       
      "I did wonder," he admitted. "You might be - any age, you see."
       
      "That's rather a two-edged remark!"
       
      "I suppose it is. I didn't mean it that way."
       
      That sombre, thoughtful gaze of his did not leave her face. She did not find it embarrassing. It was too free from self-consciousness for that - a genuine, thoughtful interest. Seeing his eyes on her hair, she put up her hand to the one white lock.
       
      "I've had that," she said, "since I was very young." "I like it," said Thomas Royde simply.
       
      He went on looking at her. She said at last, in a slightly amused tone of voice: "Well, what is the verdict?"
       
      He reddened under his tan.
       
      "Oh, I suppose it is rude of me to stare. I was wondering about you - what you are really like."
       
      "Please," she said hurriedly and rose from the table. She said as she went into the drawing-room with her arm through Audrey's: "Old Mr. Treves is coming to dinner to-morrow, too."
       
      "Who's he?" asked Nevile.
       
      "He brought an introduction from the Rufus Lords. A delightful old gentleman. He's staying at the Balmoral Court. He's got a weak heart and looks very frail, but his faculties are perfect and he has known a lot of interesting people. He was a solicitor or a barrister -I forget which."
       
      "Everybody down here is terribly old," said Kay discontentedly.
       
      She was standing just under a tall lamp. Thomas was looking that way, and he gave her that same slow interested attention that he gave to anything that was immediately occupying his line of vision.
       
      He was struck suddenly with her intense and passionate beauty. A beauty of vivid colouring, of abundant and triumphant vitality. He looked across from her to Audrey, pale and moth-like in a silvery grey dress.
       
      He smiled to himself and murmured: "Rose Red and Snow White."
       
      "What?" It was Mary Aldin at his elbow.
       
      He repeated the words. "Like the old fairy story, you know -"
       
      Mary Aldin said: "It's a very good description -"
       
      V
       
      Mr. Treves sipped his glass of port appreciatively. A very nice wine. A very nice wine. And an excellently cooked and served dinner. Clearly Lady Tressilian had no difficulties with her servants.
       
      The house was well managed, too, in spite of the mistress of it being an invalid.
       
      A pity, perhaps, that the ladies did not leave the dining-room when the port went round. He preferred the old-fashioned routine - But these young people had their own ways.
       
      His eyes rested thoughtfully on that brilliant and beautiful young woman who was the wife of Nevile Strange.
       
      It was Kay's night to-night. Her vivid beauty glowed and shone in the candlelit room. Beside her, Ted Latimer's sleek dark head bent to hers. He was playing up to her. She felt triumphant and sure of herself.
       
      The mere sight of such radiant vitality warmed Mr. Treves' old bones. Youth - there was really nothing like youth!
       
      No wonder the husband had lost his head and left his first wife. Audrey was sitting next to him. A charming creature and a lady - but then that was the kind of woman who invariably did get left, in Mr. Treves' experience.
       
      He glanced at her. Her head was bent down and she was staring at her plate. Something in the complete immobility of her attitude struck Mr. Treves. He looked at her more keenly. He wondered what she was thinking about. Charming the way the hair sprang up from that small shell-like ear ...
       
      With a little start, Mr. Treves came to himself as he realised that a move was being made. He got hurriedly to his feet.
       
      In the drawing-room Kay Strange went straight to the gramophone and put on a record of dance music.
       
      Mary Aldin said apologetically to Mr. Treves: "I'm sure you hate jazz." "Not at all," said Mr. Treves, untruly but politely.
       
      "Later, perhaps, we might have some bridge?" she suggested. "But it is no good starting a rubber now, as I know Lady Tressilian is looking forward to having a chat with you."
       
      "That will be delightful. Lady Tressilian never joins you down here?"
       
      "No, she used to come down in an invalid chair. That is why we had a lift put in. But nowadays she prefers her own room. There she can talk to whomsoever she likes, summoning them by a kind of Royal Command."
       
      "Very aptly put. Miss Aldin. I am always sensible of the Royal touch in Lady Tressilian's manner."
       
      In the middle of the room Kay was moving in a slow dance step.
       
      She said: "Just take that table out of the way, Nevile."
       
      Her voice was autocratic, assured. Her eyes were shining, her lips parted.
       
      Nevile obediently moved the table. Then be took a step towards her, but she turned deliberately towards Ted Latimer.
       
      "Come on, Ted, let's dance."
       
      Ted's arm went round her immediately. They danced, swaying, bending, their steps perfectly together. It was a lovely performance to watch.
       
      Mr. Treves murmured: '"Er - quite professional."
       
      Mary Aldin winced slightly at the word - yet surely Mr. Treves had spoken in simple admiration. She looked at his little wise nut-cracker face. It bore, she thought, an absent-minded look, as though he were following some train of thought of his own.
       
      Nevile stood hesitating a moment, then he walked to where Audrey was standing by the window.
       
      "Dance, Audrey?"
       
      His tone was formal, almost cold. Mere politeness, you might have said, inspired his request. Audrey Strange hesitated a minute before nodding her head and taking a step towards him.
       
      Mary Aldin made some commonplace remarks, to which Mr. Treves did not reply. He had so far shown no signs of deafness and his courtesy was punctilious - she realised that it was absorption that held him aloof. She could not quite make out if he was watching the dancers, or was staring across the room at Thomas Royde, standing alone at the other end.
       
      With a little start Mr. Treves said: "Excuse me, my dear lady, you were saying?"
       
      "Nothing. Only that it was an unusually fine September."
       
      "Yes, indeed - rain is badly needed locally, so they tell me at my hotel."
       
      "You are comfortable there, I hope?"
       
      "Oh, yes, though I must say I was vexed when I arrived to find -"
       
      Mr. Treves broke off.
       
      Audrey had disengaged herself from Nevile. She said with an apologetic little laugh: "It's really too hot to dance."
       
      She went towards the open window and out on to the terrace.
       
      "Oh! Go after her, you fool," murmured Mary. She meant the remark to be under her breath, but it was loud enough for Mr. Treves to turn and stare at her in astonishment.
       
      She reddened and gave an embarrassed laugh. "I'm speaking my thoughts aloud," she said ruefully. "But really he does irritate me so. He's so slow." "Mr. Strange?" "Oh, no, not Nevile. Thomas Royde."
       
      Thomas Royde was just preparing to move forward, but by now Nevile, after a moment's pause, had followed Audrey out of the window.
       
      For a moment Mr. Treves' eye, interestedly speculative, rested on the window, then his attention returned to the dancers.
       
      "A beautiful dancer, young Mr. - Latimer, did you say the name was?"
       
      "Yes. Edward Latimer."
       
      "Ah, yes, Edward Latimer. An old friend, I gather, of Mrs. Strange?"
       
      "Yes."
       
      "And what does this very - er - decorative young gentleman do for a living?"
       
      "Well, really, I don't quite know.'"
       
      "In-deed, "said Mr. Treves, managing to put a good deal of comprehension into one harmless word.
       
      Mary went on: "He is staying at the Easterhead Bay Hotel." "A very pleasant situation," said Mr. Treves.
       
      He added dreamily after a moment or two: "Rather as interesting shaped head -a curious angle from the crown to the neck - rendered less noticeable by the way he has his hair cut, but distinctly unusual." After another pause, he went on still more dreamily: "The last man I saw with a head like that got ten years' penal servitude for a brutal attack on an elderly jeweller."
       
      "Surely," exclaimed Mary, "you don't mean -"
       
      "Not at all, not at all," said Mr. Treves. "You mistake me entirely. I am suggesting no disparagement of a guest of yours. I was merely pointing out that a hardened and brutal criminal can be in appearance a most charming and personable young man. Odd, but so it is."
       
      He smiled gently at her. Mary said: "You know, Mr. Treves, I think I am a little frightened of you."
       
      "Nonsense, dear lady."
       
      "But I am. You are - such a very shrewd observer."
       
      "My eyes," said Mr. Treves complacently, "are as good as ever they were." He paused and added: "Whether that is fortunate or unfortunate, I cannot at the moment decide."
       
      "How could it be unfortunate?"
       
      Mr. Treves shook his head doubtfully.
       
      "One is sometimes placed in a position of responsibility. The right course of action is not always easy to determine."
       
      Hurstall entered bearing the coffee tray.
       
      After taking it to Mary and the old lawyer, he went down the room to Thomas Royde. Then, by Mary's directions, he put the tray on a low table and left the room.
       
      Kay called over Ted's shoulder: "We'll finish out this tune." Mary said: "I'll take Audrey's out to her."
       
      She went to the trench windows, cup in hand. Mr. Treves accompanied her. As she paused on the threshold he looked out over her shoulder.
       
      Audrey was sitting on the corner of the balustrade. In the bright moonlight her beauty came to life - a beauty born of line rather than colour. The exquisite line from the jaw to the ear, the tender modelling of chin and mouth, and the really lovely bones of the head and the small straight nose. That beauty would be there when Audrey Strange was an old woman - it had nothing to do with the covering flesh - it was the bones themselves that were beautiful. The sequinned dress she wore accentuated the effect of the moonlight. She sat very still and Nevile Strange stood and looked at her.
       
      Nevile took a step towards her. "Audrey," he said, "you -"
       
      She shifted her position, then sprang lightly to her feet and clapped a hand to her ear: "Oh! my ear-ring -I must have dropped it"
       
      "Where? Let me look -"
       
      They both bent down, awkward and embarrassed - and collided in doing so. Audrey sprang away. Nevile exclaimed : "Wait a sec - my cuff button - it's caught in your hair. Standstill."
       
      She stood quite still as he fumbled with the button.
       
      "Oo - you're pulling it out by the roots - how clumsy you are, Nevile; do be
       
      quick."
       
      "Sorry, I -I seem to be all thumbs.’’
       
      The moonlight was bright enough for the two onlookers to see what Audrey could not see, the trembling of Nevile's hands as he strove to free the strand of fair silvery hair.
       
      But Audrey herself was trembling, too - as though suddenly cold.
       
      Mary Aldin jumped as a quiet voice said behind her: "Excuse me -"
       
      Thomas Royde passed between them and out.
       
      "Shall I do that, Strange?" he asked.
       
      Nevile straightened up and he and Audrey moved apart.
       
      "It's all right. I've done it."
       
      Nevile's face was rather white.
       
      "You're cold," said Thomas to Audrey. "Come in and have coffee."
       
      She came back with him and Nevile turned away, staring out to sea.
       
      "I was bringing it out to you," said Mary. "But perhaps you'd better come in."
       
      "Yes," said Audrey, "I think I'd better come in."
       
      They all went back into the drawing-room. Ted and Kay had stopped dancing.
       
      The door opened and a tall gaunt woman dressed in black came in. She said respectfully: "Her ladyship's compliments, and she would be glad to see Mr. Treves up in her room."
       
      VI
       
      Lady Tressilian received Mr. Treves with evident pleasure.
       
      He and she were soon deep in an agreeable flood of reminiscences and a recalling of mutual acquaintances.
       
      At the end of half an hour Lady Tressilian gave a deep sigh of satisfaction.
       
      "Ah," she said, "I've enjoyed myself! There's nothing like exchanging gossip and remembering old scandals."
       
      "A little malice," agreed Mr. Treves, "adds a certain savour to life."
       
      "By the way," said Lady Tressilian, "what do you dunk of our example of the eternal triangle?"
       
      Mr. Treves looked discreetly blank. "Er - what triangle?"
       
      "Don't tell me you haven't noticed it! Nevile and his wives."
       
      "Oh, that! The present Mrs. Strange is a singularly attractive young woman."
       
      "So is Audrey," said Lady Tressilian.
       
      Mr. Treves admitted : "She has charm - yes."
       
      Lady Tressilian exclaimed: "Do you mean to tell me you can understand a man leaving Audrey, who is a - a person of rare quality, for - for a Kay?"
       
      Mr. Treves replied calmly: "Perfectly. It happens frequently."
       
      "Disgusting. I should soon grow tired of Kay if I were a man and wish I had never made such a fool of myself!"
       
      "That also happens frequently. These sudden passionate infatuations," said Mr. Treves, looking very passionless and precise himself, "are seldom of long duration."
       
      "And then what happens?" demanded Lady Tressilian.
       
      "Usually," said Mr. Treves, "the - er - parties adjust themselves. Quite often there is a second divorce. The man then marries a third party - someone of a sympathetic nature."
       
      "Nonsense! Nevile isn't a Mormon - whatever some of your clients may be!"
       
      "The remarriage of the original parties occasionally takes place."
       
      Lady Tressilian shook her head.
       
      "That, no! Audrey has too much pride."
       
      "You think so?"
       
      "I am sure of it. Do not shake your head in that aggravating fashion!"
       
      "It has been my experience," said Mr. Treves, "that women possess little or no pride where love affairs are concerned. Pride is a quality often on -their lips, but not apparent in their actions."
       
      "You don't understand Audrey. She was violently in love with Nevile. Too much so, perhaps. After he left her for this girl (though I don't blame him entirely - the girl pursued him everywhere, and you know what men are!) she never wanted to see him again."
       
      Mr. Treves coughed gently. "And yet," he said, "she is here!"
       
      "Oh, well," said Lady Tressilian, annoyed. "I don't profess to understand these modern ideas. I imagine that Audrey is here just to show that she doesn't care, and that it doesn't matter!"
       
      "Very likely." Mr. Treves stroked his jaw. "She can put it to herself that way, certainly."
       
      "You mean," said Lady Tressilian, "that you think she is still hankering after Nevile and that - oh, no! I won't believe such a thing!"
       
      "It could be," said Mr. Treves.
       
      "I won't have it," said Lady Tressilian. "I won't have it in my house."
       
      "You are already disturbed, are you not?" asked Mr. Treves shrewdly. "There is tension. I have felt it in the atmosphere."
       
      "So you feel it, too?" said Lady Tressilian sharply.
       
      "Yes, I am puzzled, I must confess. The true feelings of the parties remain obscure, but, in my opinion, there is gunpowder about. The explosion may come any minute."
       
      "Stop talking like Guy Fawkes and tell me what to do," said Lady Tressilian. Mr. Treves held up his hands.
       
      "Really, I am at a loss to know what to suggest. There is, I feel sure, a focal-point. If we could isolate that - but there is so much that remains obscure."
       
      "I have no intention of asking Audrey to leave," said Lady Tressilian. "As far as my observation goes, she has behaved perfectly in a very difficult situation. She has been courteous, but aloof. I consider her conduct irreproachable."
       
      "Oh, quite," said Mr. Treves. "Quite. But it's having a most marked effect on young Nevile Strange, all the same."
       
      "Nevile," said Lady Tressilian, "is not behaving well. I shall speak to him about it. But I couldn't turn him out of the house for a moment. Matthew regarded him as practically his adopted son."
       
      "I know."
       
      Lady Tressilian sighed. She said in a lowered voice: "You know that Matthew was drowned here?"
       
      "Yes."
       
      "So many people have been surprised at my remaining here. Stupid of them. I have always felt Matthew near to me here. The whole house is full of him. I
       
      should feel lonely and strange anywhere else." She paused and went on. "I hoped at first that it might not be very long before I joined him. Especially when my health began to fail. But it seems I am one of these creaking gates - these perpetual invalids who never die." She thumped her pillow angrily.
       
      "It doesn't please me, I can tell you! I always hoped that when my time came, it would come quickly - that I should meet Death face to face - not feel him gradually creeping along behind me, always at my shoulder - gradually forcing me to sink to one indignity after another of illness. Increasing helplessness -increasing dependence on other people!"
       
      "But very devoted people, I am sure. You have a faithful maid?"
       
      "Barrett? The one who brought you up. The comfort of my life! A grim old battle-axe, absolutely devoted. She's been with me for years."
       
      '"And you are lucky, I should say, in having Miss Aldin." "You are right. I am lucky in having Mary." "She is a relation?"
       
      "A distant cousin. One of those selfless creatures whose lives are continually being sacrificed to those of other people. She looked after her father - a clever man - but terribly exacting. When he died I begged her to make her home with me, and I have blessed the day she came to me. You've no idea what horrors most companions are. Futile, boring creatures. Driving one mad with their inanity. They are companions because they are fit for nothing better. To have Mary, who is a well-read, intelligent woman, is marvellous. She has really a first-class brain - a man's brain. She has read widely and deeply and there is nothing she cannot discuss. And she is as clever domestically as she is intellectually. She runs the house perfectly and keeps the servants happy - she eliminates all quarrels and jealousies -I don't know how she does it - just tact, I suppose."
       
      "She has been with you long?"
       
      "Twelve years - no, more than that. Thirteen - fourteen - something like that. She has been a great comfort."
       
      Mr. Treves nodded.
       
      Lady Tressilian, watching him through half-closed lids, said suddenly: "What's the matter? You're worried about something?"
       
      "A trifle," said Mr. Treves. "A mere trifle. Your eyes are sharp."
       
      "I like studying people," said Lady Tressilian. "I always knew at once if there was anything on Matthew's mind." She sighed and leaned back on her pillows. "I must say good night to you now" - it was a Queen's dismissal, nothing discourteous about it - "I am very tired. But it has been a great, great pleasure. Come and see me again soon."
       
      "You may depend upon my taking advantage of those kind words. I only hope I have not talked too long."
       
      "Oh, no. I always tire very suddenly. Ring my bell for me, will you, before you go?"
       
      Mr. Treves pulled gingerly at a large old-fashioned bell-pull that ended in a huge tassel.
       
      "Quite a survival," he remarked.
       
      "My bell? Yes. No newfangled electric bells for me. Half of the time they're out of order and you go on pressing away! This thing never fails. It rings in Barrett's room upstairs - the bell hangs over her bed. So there's never any delay in answering it. If there is I pull it again pretty quickly."
       
      As Mr. Treves went out of the room he heard the bell pulled a second time and heard the tinkle of it somewhere above his head. He looked up and noticed the wires that ran along the ceiling. Barrett came hurriedly down a flight of stairs and passed him, going to her mistress.
       
      Mr. Treves went slowly downstairs, not troubling with the little lift on the downward journey. His face was drawn into a frown of uncertainty.
       
      He found the whole party assembled in the drawing-room, and Mary Aldin at once suggested bridge, but Mr. Treves refused politely on the plea that he must very shortly be starting for home.
       
      "My hotel," he said, "is old-fashioned. They do not expect anyone to be out after midnight."
       
      "It's a long time from that - only half-past ten," said Nevile. "They don't lock you out, I hope?"
       
      "Oh, no. In fact, I doubt if the door is locked at all at night. It is shut at nine o'clock, but one has only to turn the handle and walk in. People seem very haphazard down here, but I suppose they are justified in trusting to the honesty of the local people."
       
      "Certainly no one locks their door in the day-time here," said Mary. "Ours stands wide open all day long - but we do lock it up at night."
       
      "What's the Balmoral Court like?" asked Ted Latimer. "It looks a queer, high Victorian atrocity of a building."
       
      "It lives up to its name," said Mr. Treves. "And has good solid Victorian comfort. Good beds, good cooking - roomy Victorian wardrobes. Immense baths with mahogany surrounds."
       
      "Weren't you saying you were annoyed about something at first?" asked Mary.
       
      "Ah, yes. I had carefully reserved by letter two rooms on the ground floor. I have a weak heart, you know, and stairs are forbidden me. When I arrived I was vexed to find the rooms were not available. Instead, I was allotted two rooms (very pleasant rooms, I must admit) on the top floor. I protested, but it seems that an old resident who had been going to Scotland this month was ill, and had been unable to vacate the rooms."
       
      "Mr. Lucan, I expect?" said Mary.
       
      "I believe that is the name. Under the circumstances, I had to make the best of things. Fortunately, there is a good automatic lift - so that I have really suffered no inconvenience."
       
      Kay said: "Ted, why don't you come and stay at the Balmoral Court? You'd be much more accessible."
       
      "Oh, I don't think it looks my kind of place."
       
      "Quite right, Mr. Latimer," said Mr. Treves. "It would not be at all in your line of country."
       
      For some reason or other Ted Latimer flushed. "I don't know what you mean by that," he said.
       
      Mary Aldin, sensing constraint, hurriedly made a remark about a newspaper sensation of the moment.
       
      "I see they've detained a man in the Kentish Town trunk case - " she said.
       
      "It's the second man they've detained," said Nevile. "I hope they've got the right one this time."
       
      "They may not be able to hold him even if he is," said Mr. Treves.
       
      "Insufficient evidence?" asked Royde.
       
      "Yes," said Kay, "I suppose they always get the evidence in the end."
       
      "Not always, Mrs. Strange. You'd be surprised if you knew how many of the people who have committed crimes are walking about the country free and unmolested."
       
      "'Because they've never been found out, you mean?"
       
      "Not that only. There is a man" - he mentioned a celebrated case of two years back - "the police know who committed those child murders - know it without a shadow of doubt - but they are powerless. That man has been given an alibi by two people, and though that alibi is false there is no proving it to be so. Therefore the murderer goes free."
       
      "How dreadful," said Mary.
       
      Thomas Royde knocked out his pipe and said in his quiet reflective voice: "That confirms what I have always thought - that there are times when one is justified in taking the law into one's own hands."
       
      "What do you mean, Mr. Royde?"
       
      Thomas began to refill his pipe. He looked thoughtfully down at his hands as he spoke in jerky, disconnected sentences.
       
      "Suppose you knew - of a dirty piece of work - knew that the man who did it isn't accountable to existing laws - that he's immune from punishment. Then I hold -that one is justified in executing sentence oneself."
       
      Mr. Treves said warmly: "A most pernicious doctrine, Mr. Royde! Such an action would be quite unjustifiable!"
       
      ‘‘Don't see it. I'm assuming, you know, that the facts are proved - it's just that the law is powerless!"
       
      "Private action is still not to be excused." Thomas smiled - a very gentle smile.
       
      "I don't agree," he said. "If a man ought to have his neck wrung, I wouldn't mind taking the responsibility of wringing it for him!"
       
      "And in turn would render yourself liable to the law's penalties!"
       
      Still smiling, Thomas said: "I'd have to be careful, of course ... In fact, one would have to go in for a certain amount of low cunning ..."
       
      Audrey said in her clear voice: "You'd be found out, Thomas." "Matter of fact," said Thomas, "I don't think I should."
       
      "I knew a case once," began Mr. Treves, and stopped. He said apologetically: "Criminology is rather a hobby of mine, you know."
       
      "Please go on," said Kay.
       
      "I have had a fairly wide experience of criminal cases," said Mr. Treves. "Only a few of them have held any real interest. Most murderers have been lamentably uninteresting and very short-sighted. However, I could tell you of one interesting example."
       
      "Oh, do," said Kay - "I like murders."
       
      Mr. Treves spoke slowly, apparently choosing his words with great deliberation and care.
       
      "The case concerned a child. I will not mention that child's age or sex. The facts were as follows: Two children were playing with bows and arrows. One child sent an arrow through the other child in a vital spot and death resulted. There was an inquest, the surviving child was completely distraught and the accident was commiserated and sympathy expressed for the unhappy author of the deed." He paused.
       
      "Was that all?" asked Ted Latimer.
       
      "That was all. A regrettable accident. But there is, you see, another side to the story. A farmer, some time previously, happened to have passed up a certain path in a wood nearby. There, in a little clearing, be had noticed a child practising with a bow and arrow."
       
      He paused - to let his meaning sink in.
       
      "You mean," said Mary Aldin incredulously, "that it was not an accident - that it was intentional?"
       
      "I don't know," said Mr. Treves. "I have never known. It was stated at the inquest that the children were unused to bows and arrows and in consequence shot wildly and ignorantly."
       
      "And that was not so?"
       
      "That, in the case of one of the children, was certainly not so!" "What did the farmer do?" said Audrey breathlessly.
       
      "He did nothing. Whether he acted rightly or not, I have never been sure. It was the future of a child that was at stake. A child, he felt, ought to be given the benefit of a doubt."
       
      Audrey said: "But you yourself have no doubt about what really happened?"
       
      Mr. Treves said gravely: "Personally, I am of opinion that it was a particularly ingenious murder - a murder committed by a child and planned down to every detail beforehand."
       
      Ted Latimer asked: "Was there a reason?"
       
      "Oh, yes, there was a motive. Childish teasings, unkind words - enough to foment hatred. Children hate easily -"
       
      Mary exclaimed: "But the deliberation of it!" Mr. Treves nodded.
       
      "Yes, the deliberation of it was bad. A child, keeping that murderous intention in its heart, quietly practising day after day and then the final piece of acting, the awkward shooting - the catastrophe, the pretence of grief and despair. It was all incredible - so incredible that probably it would not have been believed in court."
       
      "What happened to - to the child?" asked Kay curiously. "Its name was changed, I believe," said Mr. Treves.
       
      "After the publicity of the inquest that was deemed advisable. That child is a grown-up person to-day - somewhere in the world. The question is, has it still got a murderer's heart?"
       
      He added thoughtfully: "It is a long time ago, but I would recognise my little murderer anywhere."
       
      "Surely not," objected Royde.
       
      "Oh, yes, there was a certain physical peculiarity - well, I will not dwell on the subject. It is not a very pleasant one. I must really be on my way home."
       
      He rose.
       
      Mary said: "You will have a drink first?"
       
      The drinks were on a table at the other end of the room. Thomas Royde, who was near them, stepped forward and took the stopper out of the whisky decanter.
       
      "A whisky and soda, Mr. Treves? Latimer, what about you?"
       
      Nevile said to Audrey in a low voice: "It's a lovely evening. Come out for a little."
       
      She had been standing by the window looking out at the moonlit terrace. He stepped past her and stood outside, waiting. She turned back into the room, shaking her head quickly.
       
      "No, I'm tired. I -I think I'll go to bed."
       
      She crossed the room and went out. Kay gave a wide yawn.
       
      "I'm sleepy, too. What about you, Mary?"
       
      "Yes, I think so. Good night, Mr. Treves. Look after Mr. Treves, Thomas."
       
      "Good night. Miss Aldin. Good night, Mrs. Strange."
       
      "We'll be over for lunch to-morrow, Ted," said Kay. "We could bathe if it's still like this."
       
      "Right. I'll be looking for you. Good night. Miss Aldin."
       
      The two women left the room.
       
      Ted Latimer said agreeably to Mr. Treves: "I'm coming your way, sir. Down to the ferry, so I, pass the hotel."
       
      "Thank you, Mr. Latimer. I shall be glad of your escort."
       
      Mr. Treves, although he had declared his intention of departing, seemed in no hurry. He sipped his drink with pleasant deliberation and devoted himself to the task of extracting information from Thomas Royde as to the conditions of life in Malaya.
       
      Royde was monosyllabic in his answers. The everyday details of existence might have been secrets of national importance from the difficulty with which they were dragged from him. He seemed to be lost in some abstraction of his own, out of which he roused himself with difficulty to reply to his questioner.
       
      Ted Latimer fidgeted. He looked bored, impatient, anxious to be gone.
       
      Suddenly interrupting, he exclaimed: "I nearly forgot. I brought Kay over some gramophone records she wanted. They're in the hall. I'll get them. Will you tell her about them to-morrow, Royde?"
       
      The other man nodded. Ted left the room.
       
      "That young man has a restless nature," murmured Mr. Treves.
       
      Royde grunted without replying.
       
      "A friend, I think, of Mrs. Strange's?" pursued the old lawyer.
       
      "Of Kay Strange's," said Thomas.
       
      Mr. Treves smiled.
       
      "Yes," he said. "I meant that. He would be a friend of the first Mrs. Strange."
       
      Royde said emphatically: "No, he wouldn't."
       
      Then, catching the other's quizzical eye, he said, flushing a little, "What I mean is
       
      "Oh, I quite understand what you meant, Mr. Royde. You yourself are a friend of Mrs. Audrey Strange, are you not?"
       
      Thomas Royde slowly filled his pipe from his tobacco pouch. His eyes bent to his task, he said, or rather mumbled: "M - yes. More or less brought up together."
       
      "She must have been a very charming young girl?"
       
      Thomas Royde said something that sounded like "Um - yum."
       
      "A little awkward having two Mrs. Stranges in the house?"
       
      "Oh, yes - yes, rather."
       
      "A difficult position for the original Mrs. Strange."
       
      Thomas Royde's face flushed.
       
      "Extremely difficult."
       
      Mr. Treves leaned forward. His question popped out sharply.
       
      "Why did she come, Mr. Royde?"
       
      "Well -I suppose -" the other's voice was indistinct "she - didn't like to refuse."
       
      "To refuse whom?"
       
      Royde shifted awkwardly.
       
      "Well, as a matter of fact, I believe she always comes this time of year -beginning of September."
       
      "And Lady Tressilian asked Nevile Strange and his new wife at the same time?" The old gentleman's voice held a nice note of polite incredulity.
       
      "As to that, I believe Nevile asked himself."
       
      "He was anxious, then, for this - reunion?"
       
      Royde shifted uneasily. He replied, avoiding the other's eye: "I suppose so."
       
      "Curious," said Mr. Treves.
       
      "Stupid sort of thing to do," said Thomas Royde, goaded into longer speech.
       
      "Somewhat embarrassing, one would have thought," said Mr. Treves.
       
      "Oh, well - people do that sort of thing nowadays," said Thomas Royde vaguely.
       
      "I wondered," said Mr. Treves, "if it had been anybody else's idea?"
       
      Royde stared. "Who else's could it have been?"
       
      Mr. Treves sighed.
       
      "There are so many kind friends about in the world - always anxious to arrange other people's lives for them - to suggest courses of action that are not in harmony - " He broke off as Nevile Strange strolled back through the French windows. At the same moment Ted Latimer entered by the door from the hall.
       
      "Hullo, Ted, what have you got there?" asked Nevile. "Gramophone records for Kay. She asked me to bring them over."
       
      "Oh, did she? She didn't tell me." There was just a moment of constraint between the two, then Nevile strolled over to the drink tray and helped himself to a whisky and soda. His face looked excited and unhappy and he was breathing deeply.
       
      Someone in Mr. Treves' hearing had referred to Nevile as "that lucky beggar Strange - got everything in the world anyone could wish for." Yet he did not look, at this moment, at all a happy man.
       
      Thomas Royde, with Nevile's re-entry, seemed to feel that his duties as host were over. He left the room without attempting to say good night, and his walk was slightly more hurried than usual. It was almost an escape.
       
      "A delightful evening," said Mr. Treves politely as he set down his glass. "Most -er - instructive."
       
      "Instructive?" Nevile raised his eyebrows slightly.
       
      "Information re the Malay States," suggested Ted, smiling broadly. "Hard work dragging answers out of Taciturn Thomas."
       
      "Extraordinary fellow, Royde," said Nevile. "I believe he's always been the same. Just smokes that awful old pipe of his and listens and says 'Um' and 'Ah' occasionally and looks wise like an owl."
       
      "Perhaps he thinks the more," said Mr. Treves. "And now I really must take my leave."
       
      "Come and see Lady Tressilian again soon," said Nevile as he accompanied the two men to the hall. "You cheer her up enormously. She has so few contacts now with the outside world. She's wonderful, isn't she?"
       
      "Yes, indeed. A most stimulating conversationalist."
       
      Mr. Treves dressed himself carefully with overcoat and muffler, and after renewed good nights he and Ted Latimer set out together.
       
      The Balmoral Court was actually only about a hundred yards away, around one curve of the road. It loomed up grim and forbidding, the first outpost of the straggling country street.
       
      The ferry, where Ted Latimer was bound, was two or three hundred yards farther down, at a point where the river was at its narrowest.
       
      Mr. Treves stopped at the door of the Balmoral Court and held out his hand. "Good night, Mr. Latimer. You are staying down here much longer?"
       
      Ted smiled with a flash of white teeth. "That depends, Mr. Treves. I haven't had time to be bored - yet."
       
      "No - no, so I should imagine. I suppose, like most young people nowadays, boredom is what you dread most in the world, and yet, I can assure you, there are worse things."
       
      "Such as?"
       
      Ted Latimer's voice was soft and pleasant, but it held an undercurrent of something else - something not quite so easy to define.
       
      "Oh, I leave it to your imagination, Mr. Latimer. I would not presume to give you advice, you know. The advice of such elderly fogeys as myself is invariably treated with scorn. Rightly so, perhaps, who knows? But we old buffers like to think that experience has taught us something. We have noticed a good deal, you know, in the course of a lifetime."
       
      A cloud, had come over the face of the moon. The street was very dark. Out of the darkness a man's figure came towards them walking up the hill.
       
      It was Thomas Royde.
       
      "Just been down to the ferry for a bit of a walk," he said indistinctly because of the pipe clenched between his teeth.
       
      "This your pub?" he asked Mr. Treves. "Looks as though you were locked out."
       
      "Oh, I don't think so," said Mr. Treves.
       
      He turned the big brass door-knob and the door swung back.
       
      "We'll see you safely in," said Royde.
       
      The three of them entered the hall. It was dimly lit with only one electric light. There was no one to be seen, and an odour of bygone dinner, rather dusty velvet, and good furniture met their nostrils.
       
      Suddenly Mr. Treves gave an exclamation of annoyance. On the lift in front of them was a notice: LIFT OUT OF ORDER
       
      "Dear me," said Mr. Treves. "How extremely vexing! I shall have to walk up all those stairs."
       
      "Too bad," said Royde. "Isn't there a service lift - luggage - all that?"
       
      "I'm afraid not. This one is used for all purposes. Well, I must take it slowly, that is all. Good night to you both."
       
      He started slowly up the wide staircase. Royde and Latimer wished him good night, then let themselves out into the dark street.
       
      There was a moment's pause, then Royde said abruptly: "Well, good night."
       
      "Good night. See you to-morrow."
       
      "Yes."
       
      Ted Latimer strode lightly down the hill towards the ferry. Thomas Royde stood looking after him for a moment, then he walked slowly in the opposite direction towards Gull's Point.
       
      The moon came out from behind the cloud and Saltcreek was once more bathed in silvery radiance.
       
      VII
       
      "Just like summer," murmured Mary Aldin.
       
      She and Audrey were sitting on the beach just below the imposing edifice of the Easterhead Bay Hotel. Audrey wore a white swim-suit and looked like a delicate ivory figurine. Mary had not bathed. A little way along from them Kay lay on her face exposing her bronzed limbs and back to the sun.
       
      "Ugh!" She sat up. "The water's horribly cold," she said accusingly.
       
      "Oh, well, it is September," said Mary.
       
      "It's always cold in England," said Kay discontentedly.
       
      "How I wish we were in the South of France! That really is hot."
       
      Ted Latimer from beyond her murmured: "This sun here isn't a real sun."
       
      "Aren't you going in at all, Mr. Latimer?" asked Mary.
       
      Kay laughed.
       
      "Ted never goes in the water. Just suns himself like a lizard."
       
      She stretched out a toe and prodded him. He sprang up.
       
      "Come and walk, Kay. I'm cold."
       
      They went off together along the beach.
       
      "Like a lizard? Rather an unfortunate comparison," murmured Mary Aldin, looking after them.
       
      "Is that what you think of him?" asked Audrey.
       
      Mary Aldin frowned.
       
      "Not quite. A lizard suggests something quite tame. I don't think he is tame."
       
      "No," said Audrey thoughtfully "I don't think so, either."
       
      "How well they look together!" said Mary, watching the retreating pair. "They match somehow, don't they?"
       
      "I suppose they do."
       
      "They like the same things," went on Mary. "And have the same opinions and -and use the same language. What a thousand pities it is that -" She stopped.
       
      Audrey said sharply: "That what?"
       
      Mary said slowly: "I suppose I was going to say what a pity it was that Nevile and she ever met."
       
      Audrey sat up stiffly. What Mary called to herself "Audrey's frozen look" had come over her face. Mary said quickly: "I'm sorry, Audrey. I shouldn't have said that."
       
      "I'd so much rather - not talk about it if you don't mind."
       
      "Of course, of course. It was very stupid of me. I -I hoped you'd got over it, I suppose."
       
      Audrey turned her head slowly. With a calm, expressionless face she said: "I assure you there is nothing to get over. I -I have no feeling of any kind in the matter. I hope -I hope with all my heart that Kay and Nevile will always be very happy together."
       
      "Well, that's very nice of you, Audrey."
       
      "It isn't nice. It is - just true. But I do think it is - well - unprofitable to keep on going back over the past. 'It's a pity this happened - that!' It is all over now. Why rake it up? We've got to go on living our lives in the present."
       
      "I suppose," said Mary simply, "that people like Kay and Ted are exciting to me because - well, they are so different from anything or anyone that I have ever come across."
       
      "Yes, I suppose they are."
       
      "Even you," said Mary with sudden bitterness, "have lived and had experiences that I shall probably never have. I know you've been unhappy - very unhappy -but I can't help feeling that even that is better than - well - nothing. Emptiness!"
       
      She said the last word with a fierce emphasis.
       
      Audrey's wide eyes looked a little startled. "I never dreamt you ever felt like that."
       
      "Didn't you?" Mary Aldin laughed apologetically. "Oh, just a momentary fit of discontent, my dear. I didn't really mean it."
       
      "It can't be very gay for you," said Audrey slowly. "Just living here with Camilla -dear thing though she is. Reading to her, managing the servants, never going away."
       
      "I'm well fed and housed," said Mary. "Thousands of women aren't even that. And really, Audrey, I am quite contented. I have" - a smile played for a moment round her lips - "my private distractions."
       
      "Secret vices?" asked Audrey, smiling also.
       
      "Oh, I plan things," said Mary vaguely. "In my mind, you know. And I like experimenting, sometimes - upon people. Just seeing, you know, if I can make them react to what I say in the way I mean."
       
      "You sound almost sadistic, Mary. How little I really know you!" "Oh, it's all quite harmless. Just a childish little amusement." Audrey asked curiously: "Have you experimented on me?"
       
      "No. You're the only person I have always found quite incalculable. I never know, you see, what you are thinking."
       
      "Perhaps," said Audrey gravely, "that is just as well."
       
      She shivered and Mary exclaimed: "You're cold."
       
      "Yes. I think I will go and dress. After all, it is September."
       
      Mary Aldin remained alone, staring at the reflection on the water. The tide was going out. She stretched herself out on the sand, closing her eyes.
       
      They had had a good lunch at the hotel. It was still quite full, although it was past the height of the season. A queer mixed-looking lot of people. Oh, well, it had been a day out. Something to break the monotony of day following day. It had been a relief, too, to get away from that sense of tension, that strung-up atmosphere that there had been lately at Gull's Point. It hadn't been Audrey's fault, but Nevile -
       
      Her thoughts broke up abruptly as Ted Latimer plumped himself down on the beach beside her.
       
      "What have you done with Kay?" Mary asked.
       
      Ted replied briefly: "She's been claimed by her legal owner."
       
      Something in his tone made Mary Aldin sit up. She glanced across the stretch of shining golden sands to where Nevile and Kay were walking by the water's edge. Then she glanced quickly at the man beside her.
       
      She had thought of him as nerveless, as queer, as dangerous, even. Now for the first time she got a glimpse of someone young and hurt. She thought: "He was in love with Kay - really in love with her - and then Nevile came and took her away...."
       
      She said gently: "I hope you are enjoying yourself down here."
       
      They were conventional words. Mary Aldin seldom used any words but conventional ones - that was her language. But her tone was an offer - for the first time - of friendliness, Ted Latimer responded to it.
       
      "As much, probably, as I should enjoy myself anywhere." Mary said: "I'm sorry."
       
      "But you don't care a damn, really! I'm an outsider - and what does it matter what outsiders feel and think?"
       
       
      "I couldn't tell you offhand. In the neighbourhood of a hundred thousand pounds, I believe."
       
      "In-deed. To each of you?" "No, divided between us." "I see. A very considerable sum."
       
      Nevile smiled. He said quietly: "I've got plenty to live on of my own, you know, without hankering to step into dead people's shoes."
       
      Inspector Leach looked shocked at having such ideas attributed to him.
       
      They went back into the dining-room and Leach said his next little piece. This was on the subject of fingerprints - a matter of routine - elimination of those of the household in the dead woman's bedroom.
       
      Everyone expressed willingness - almost eagerness - to have their fingerprints taken. They were shepherded into the library for that purpose, where Detective Sergeant Jones was waiting for them with his little roller.
       
      Battle and Leach began on the servants.
       
      Nothing very much was to be got from them. Hurstall explained his system of locking up the house and swore that he had found it untouched in the morning. There were no signs of any entry by an intruder. The front door, he explained, had been left on the latch. That is to say, it was not bolted, but could be opened from outside with a key. It was left like that because Mr. Nevile had gone over to Easterhead Bay and would be back late.
       
      "Do you know what time he came in?"
       
      "Yes, sir. I think it was about half-past two. Someone came back with him, I think. I heard voices and then a car drive away and then I heard the door close and Mr. Nevile come upstairs."
       
      "What time did he leave here last night for Easterhead Bay?" "About twenty past ten. I heard the door close."
       
      Leach nodded. There did not seem to be much more to be got from Hurstall at the moment. He interviewed the others. They were all disposed to be nervous and frightened, but no more so than was natural under the circumstances.
       
      Leach looked questioningly at his uncle as the door closed behind the slightly hysterical kitchen-maid, who had tailed the procession.
       
      Battle said: "Have the housemaid back - not the pop-eyed one - the tall thin bit of vinegar. She knows something."
       
      Emma Wales was clearly uneasy. It alarmed her that this time it was the big square elderly man who took upon himself the task of questioning her.
       
      "I'm just going to give you a bit of advice. Miss Wales," he said pleasantly. "It doesn't do, you know, to hold anything back from the police. Makes them look at you unfavourably, if you understand what I mean -"
       
      Emma Wales protested indignantly, but uneasily: "I'm sure I never -"
       
      "Now, now." Battle held up a large, square hand. "You saw something or else you heard something - what was it?"
       
      "I didn't exactly hear it -I mean, I couldn't help hearing it - Mr. Hurstall, he heard it, too. And I don't think, not for a moment I don't, that it had anything to do with the murder."
       
      "Probably not, probably not. Just tell us what it was."
       
      "Well, I was going up to bed. Just after ten it was - and I'd slipped along first to put Miss Aldin's hot-water bottle in her bed. Summer or winter she always has one, and so of course I had to pass by her ladyship's door."
       
      "Go on," said Battle.
       
      "And I heard her and Mr. Nevile going at it hammer and tongs. Voices right up. Shouting, he was. Oh, it was a proper quarrel!"
       
      "Remember exactly what was said?"
       
      "Well, I wasn't really listening, as you might say."
       
      "No. But still you must have heard some of the words."
       
      "Her ladyship was saying as she wouldn't have something or other going on in her house, and Mr. Nevile was saying, 'Don't you dare say anything against her.' All worked up he was."
       
      Battle, with an expressionless face, tried once more, but he could get no more out of her. In the end he dismissed the woman.
       
      He and Jim looked at each other. Leach said, after a minute or two: "Jones ought to be able to tell us something about those prints by now."
       
      Battle asked: "Who's doing the rooms?"
       
      "Williams. He's a good man. He won't miss anything."
       
      "You're keeping the occupants out of them?"
       
      "Yes, until Williams has finished."
       
      The door opened at that minute and young Williams put his head in.
       
      "There's something I'd like you to see. In Mr. Nevile Strange's room."
       
      They got up and followed him to the suite on the west side of the house.
       
      Williams pointed to a heap on the floor. A dark blue coat, trousers and waistcoat.
       
      Leach said sharply: "Where did you find this?"
       
      "Bundled down into the bottom of the wardrobe. Just look at this, sir."
       
      He picked up the coat and showed the edges of the dark blue cuffs.
       
      "See those dark stains? That's blood, sir, or I'm a Dutchman. And see here, it's spattered all up the sleeve."
       
      "H'm." Battle avoided the other's eager eyes. "Looks bad for young Nevile, I must say. Any other suit in the room?"
       
      "Dark grey pinstripe hanging over a chair. Lot of water on the floor here by the wash-basin."
       
      "Looking as though he washed the blood off himself in the devil of a hurry? Yes. It's near the open window, though, and the rain has come in a good deal."
       
      "Not enough to make those pools on the floor, sir. They're not dried up yet."
       
      Battle was silent. A picture was forming itself before his eyes. A man with blood on his hands and sleeves, flinging off his clothes, bundling the bloodstained garments into the cupboard, sluicing water furiously over his hands and bare arms.
       
      He looked across at the door in the other wall.
       
      Williams answered the look.
       
      "Mrs. Strange's room, sir. The door is locked."
       
      "Locked? On this side?"
       
      "No. On the other."
       
      "On her side, eh?"
       
      Battle was reflective for a minute or two. He said at last: "Let's see that old butler again."
       
      Hurstall was nervous. Leach said crisply: "Why didn't you tell us, Hurstall, that you overheard a quarrel between Mr. Strange and Lady Tressilian last night?"
       
      The old man blinked.
       
      "I really didn't think twice about it, sir. I don't imagine it was what you'd call a quarrel - just an amicable difference of opinion."
       
      Resisting the temptation to say: "Amicable difference of opinion, my foot!" Leach went on: "What suit was Mr. Strange wearing last night at dinner?"
       
      Hurstall hesitated. Battle said quietly: "Dark blue suit or grey pinstripe? I dare say someone else can tell us if you don't remember."
       
      Hurstall broke his silence.
       
      "I remember now, sir. It was his dark blue. The family," he added, anxious not to lose prestige, "have not been in the habit of changing into evening dress during the summer months. They frequently go out after dinner - sometimes in the garden, sometimes down to the quay."
       
      Battle nodded. Hurstall left the room. He passed Jones in the doorway. Jones looked excited.
       
      He said: "It's a cinch, sir. I've got all their prints. There's only one lot fits the bill. Of course, I've only been able to make a rough comparison as yet, but I'll bet they're the right ones."
       
      "Well?" said Battle.
       
      "The prints on that niblick handle, sir, were made by Mr. Nevile Strange."
       
      Battle leant back in his chair.
       
      "Well," he said, "that seems to settle it, doesn't it?"
       
      IV
       
      They were in the Chief Constable's office - three men with grave, worried faces.
       
      Major Mitchell said with a sigh: "Well, I suppose there's nothing to be done but arrest him?"
       
      Leach said quietly: "Looks like it, sir."
       
      Mitchell looked across at Superintendent Battle.
       
      "Cheer up. Battle," he said kindly. "Your best friend isn't dead."
       
      Superintendent Battle sighed.
       
      "I don't like it," he said.
       
      "I don't think any of us like it," said Mitchell. "But we've ample evidence, I think, to apply for a warrant."
       
      "More than ample," said Battle.
       
      "In fact, if we don't apply for one, anybody might ask why the dickens not?"
       
      Battle nodded an unhappy head.
       
      "Let's go over it," said the Chief Constable. "You've got motive - Strange and his wife come into a considerable sum of money at the old lady's death. He's the last person known to have seen her alive - he was heard quarrelling with her. The suit he wore that night had bloodstains on it; of course, most damning of all, his fingerprints were found on the actual weapon - and no one else's."
       
      "And yet, sir," said Battle, "you don't like it, either."
       
      "I'm damned if I do."
       
      "What is it exactly you don't like about it, sir?"
       
      Major Mitchell rubbed his nose. "Makes the fellow out a bit too much of a fool, perhaps?" he suggested.
       
      "And yet, sir, they do behave like fools sometimes." "Oh, I know -I know. Where would we be if they didn't?" Battle said to Leach: "What don't you like about it, Jim?" Leach stirred unhappily.
       
      "I've always liked Mr. Strange. Seen him on and off down here for years. He's a nice gentleman - and he's a sportsman."
       
      "I don't see," said Battle slowly, "why a good tennis player shouldn't be a murderer as well. There's nothing against it." He paused. "What I don't like is the niblick."
       
      "The niblick?" asked Mitchell, slightly puzzled.
       
      "Yes, sir, or, alternatively, the bell. The bell or the niblick - not both."
       
      He went on in his slow, careful voice.
       
      "What do we think actually happened? Did Mr. Strange go to her room, have a quarrel, lose his temper, and hit her over the head with a niblick. If so, and it was unpremeditated, how did he happen to have a niblick with him? It's not the sort of thing you carry about with you in the evenings."
       
      "He might nave been practising swings - something like that."
       
      "He might - but nobody says so. Nobody saw him doing it. The last time anybody saw him with a niblick in his hand was about a week previously when he was practising sand shots down on the sands. As I look at it, you see, you can't have it both ways. Either there was a quarrel and he lost his temper - and, mind you, I've seen him on the courts, and in one of these tournament matches these tennis stars are all het up and a mass of nerves, and if their tempers fray easily it's going to show. I've never seen Mr. Strange ruffled. I should say he's got an excellent control over his temper - better than most - and yet we're suggesting that he goes berserk and hits a frail old lady over the head."
       
      "There's another alternative, Battle," said the Chief Constable.
       
      "I know, sir. The theory that it was premeditated. He wanted the old lady's money. That fits in with the bell - which entailed the doping of the maid - but it doesn't fit in with the niblick and the quarrel! If he'd made up his mind to do her in, he'd be very careful not to quarrel with her. He could dope the maid, creep into her room in the night - crack her over the head and stage a nice little robbery, wiping the niblick and putting it carefully back where it belonged! It's all wrong, sir - it's a mixture of cold premeditation and unpremeditated violence -and the two don't mix!"
       
      "There's something in what you say. Battle - but - what's the alternative?" "It's the niblick that takes my fancy, sir."
       
      "Nobody could have hit her over the head with that niblick without disturbing Nevile's prints - that's quite certain."
       
      "In that case," said Battle, "she was hit over the head with something else." Major Mitchell drew a deep breath. "That's rather a wild assumption, isn't it?"
       
      "I think it's common sense, sir. Either Strange hit her with that niblick or nobody did. I plump for nobody. In that case that niblick was put there deliberately and blood and hair smeared on it. Dr. Lazenby doesn't like the niblick much - had to accept it because it was the obvious thing and because he couldn't say definitely that it hadn't been used."
       
      Major Mitchell leaned back in his chair.
       
      "Go on. Battle," he said. "I'm giving you a free hand. What's the next step?"
       
      "Take away the niblick," said Battle, "and what is left? First, motive. Had Nevile Strange really got a motive for doing away with Lady Tressilian? He inherited money - a lot depends, to my mind, on whether he needed that money. He says not. I'd suggest we verify that. Find out the state of his finances. If he's in a hole financially, and needs money, then the case against him is very much strengthened. If, on the other hand, he was speaking the truth and his finances are in a good state, why, then -"
       
      "Well, what then?"
       
      "Why, then, we might have a look at the motives of the other people in the house."
       
      "You think, then, that Nevile Strange was framed?" Superintendent Battle screwed up his eyes.
       
      "There's a phrase I read somewhere that tickled my fancy. Something about a fine Italian hand. That's what I seem to see in this business. Ostensibly it's a blunt, brutal, straightforward crime, but it seems to me I catch glimpses of something else - of a fine Italian hand at work behind the scenes ..."
       
      There was a long pause while the Chief Constable looked at Battle. "You may be right," he said at last. "Dash it all, there's something funny about the business. What's your idea, now, of our plan of campaign?"
       
      Battle stroked his square jaw.
       
      "Well, sir," he said. "I'm always in favour of going about things the obvious way. Everything's been set to make us suspicious of Mr. Nevile Strange. Let's go on being suspicious of him. Needn't go so far as actually to arrest him, but hint at it, question him, put the wind up him - and observe everybody's reactions generally. Verify his statements, go over his movements that night with a toothcomb. In fact, show our hand as plainly as may be."
       
      "Quite Machiavellian," said Major Mitchell with a twinkle. "Imitation of a heavy-handed policeman by star actor Battle."
       
      The Superintendent smiled.
       
      "I always like doing what's expected of me, sir. This time I mean to be a bit slow about it - take my time. I want to do some nosing about. Being suspicious of Mr. Nevile Strange is a very good excuse for nosing about. I've an idea, you know, that something rather odd has been going on in that house."
       
      "Looking for the sex angle?"
       
      "If you like to put it that way, sir."
       
      "Handle it your own way, Battle. You and Leach carry on between you."
       
      "Thank you, sir." Battle stood up. "Nothing suggestive from the solicitors?"
       
      "No. I rang them up. I know Trelawny fairly well. He's sending me a copy of Sir Matthew's will, and also of Lady Tressilian's. She had about five hundred a year of her own - invested in gilt-edged securities. She left a legacy to Barrett and a small one to Hurstall, the rest to Mary Aldin."
       
      "That's three we might keep an eye on," said Battle. Mitchell looked amused. "Suspicious fellow, aren't you?"
       
      "No use letting oneself be hypnotised by fifty thousand pounds," said Battle stolidly. "Many a murder has been done for less than fifty pounds. It depends on how much you want the money. Barrett got a legacy - and maybe she took the precaution to dope herself so as to avert suspicion."
       
      "She very nearly passed out. Lazenby hasn't let us question her yet."
       
      "Overdid it out of ignorance, perhaps. Then Hurstall may have been in bad need of cash for all we know. And Miss Aldin, if she's no money of her own, might have fancied a bit of life on a nice little income before she's too old to enjoy it."
       
      The Chief Constable looked doubtful.
       
      "Well," he said, "it's up to you two. Get on with the job."
       
      V
       
      Back at Gull's Point, the two police officers received Williams' and Jones' reports.
       
      Nothing of a suspicious or suggestive nature had been found in any of the bedrooms. The servants were clamouring to be allowed to get on with the housework. Should he give them the word?
       
      "Might as well, I suppose," said Battle. "I'll just have a stroll myself first through the two upper floors. Rooms that haven't been done very often tell you something about their occupants that's useful to know."
       
      Sergeant Jones put down a small cardboard box on the table.
       
      "From Mr. Nevile Strange's dark blue coat," he announced. "The red hairs were on the cuff, blonde hairs on the inside of the collar and the right shoulder."
       
      Battle took out the two long red hairs and the half-dozen blonde ones and looked at them. He said, with a faint twinkle in his eye: "Convenient. One blonde, one red-head and one brunette in this house. So we know where we are at once. Red hair on the cuff, blonde on the collar; Mr. Nevile Strange does seem to be a bit of a Bluebeard. His arm round one wife and the other one's head on his shoulder."
       
      "The blood on the sleeve has gone for analysis, sir. They'll ring us up as soon as they get the result."
       
      Leach nodded.
       
      "What about the servants?"
       
      "I followed your instructions, sir. None of them is under notice to leave, or seems likely to have borne a grudge against the old lady. She was strict, but well liked. In any case, the management of the servants lay with Miss Aldin. She seems to have been popular with them."
       
      "Thought she was an efficient woman the moment I laid eyes on her," said Battle. "If she's our murderess, she won't be easy to hang."
       
      Jones looked startled.
       
      "But those prints on that niblick, sir, were -"
       
      "I know -I know," said Battle. "The singularly obliging Mr. Strange's. There's a general belief that athletes aren't overburdened by brains (not at all true by the way), but I can't believe Nevile Strange is a complete moron. What about those senna pods of the maid's?"
       
      "They were always on the shelf in the servants' bathroom on the second floor. She used to put 'em in to soak midday, and they stood there until the evening, when she went to bed."
       
      "So that absolutely anybody could get at them! Anybody inside the house, that is to say."
       
      Leach said with conviction: "It's an inside job, all right!"
       
      "Yes, I think so. Not that this is one of those closed circle crimes. It isn't. Anyone who had a key could have opened the front door and walked in. Nevile Strange had that key last night - but it would probably be a simple matter to have got one cut, or an old hand could do it with a bit of wire. But I don't see any outsider knowing about the bell and that Barrett took senna at night! That's local, inside knowledge!"
       
      "Come along, Jim, my boy. Let's go up and see this bathroom and all the rest of it."
       
      They started on the top floor. First came a box-room full of old broken furniture and junk of all kinds.
       
      "I haven't looked through this, sir," said Jones. "I didn't know -"
       
      "What you were looking for? Quite right. Only waste of time. From the dust on the floor nobody has been in here for at least six months."
       
      The servants' rooms were all on this floor, also two unoccupied bedrooms with a bathroom, and Battle looked into each room and gave it a cursory glance, noticing that Alice, the pop-eyed housemaid, slept with her window shut; that Emma, the thin one, had a great many relations, photographs of whom were crowded on her chest of drawers, and that Hurstall had one or two pieces of good, though cracked, Dresden and Crown Derby porcelain.
       
      The cook's room was severely neat and the kitchen-maid's chaotically untidy. Battle passed on into the bathroom, which was the room nearest to the head of the stairs. Williams pointed out the long shelf over the wash-basin, on which stood tooth glasses and brushes, various unguents and bottles of salts and hair lotion. A packet of senna pods stood open at one end.
       
      "No prints on the glass or packet?"
       
      "Only the maid's own. I got hers from her room."
       
      "He didn't need to handle the glass," said Leach. "He'd only have to drop the stuff in."
       
      Battle went down the stairs, followed by Leach. Halfway down this top flight was a rather awkwardly placed window. A pole with a hook on the end stood in a corner.
       
      "You draw down the top sash with that," explained Leach. "But there's a burglar screw. The window can be drawn down only so far. Too narrow for anyone to get in that way."
       
      "I wasn't thinking of anyone getting in," said Battle. His eyes were thoughtful.
       
      He went in the first bedroom on the next floor, which was Audrey Strange's. It was neat and fresh, ivory brushes on the dressing-table - no clothes lying about. Battle looked into the wardrobe. Two plain coats and skirts, a couple of evening dresses, one or two summer frocks. The dresses were cheap, the tailor-mades well cut and expensive, but not new.
       
      Battle nodded. He stood at the writing table a minute or two, fiddling with the pen tray on the left of the blotter.
       
      Williams said: "Nothing of any interest on the blotting paper or in the waste-paper basket."
       
      "Your word's good enough," said Battle. "Nothing to be seen here." They went on to the other rooms.
       
      Thomas Royde's was untidy, with the clothes lying about. Pipes and pipe ash on the tables and beside the bed, where a copy of Kipling's Kim lay half open.
       
      "Used to native servants clearing up after him," said Battle. "Likes reading old favourites. Conservative type."
       
      Mary Aldin's room was small but comfortable. Battle looked at the travel books on the shelves and the old-fashioned dented silver brushes. The furnishings and colouring in the room were more modern than the rest of the house.
       
      "She's not so conservative," said Battle. "No photographs, either. Not one who lives in the past."
       
      There were three or four empty rooms, all well kept and dusted ready for occupation, and a couple of bathrooms. Then came Lady Tressilian's big double room. After that, reached by going down three little steps, came the two rooms and bathroom occupied by the Stranges.
       
      Battle did not waste much time in Nevile's room. He glanced out of the open casement window, below which the rocks fell sheer to the sea. The view was to the west, towards Stark Head, which rose, wild and forbidding, out of the water.
       
      "Gets the afternoon sun," he murmured. "But rather a grim morning outlook. Nasty smell of seaweed at low tide, too. And that headland has got a grim look. Don't wonder it attracts suicides!"
       
      He passed into the larger room, the door of which had been unlocked.
       
      Here everything was in wild confusion. Clothes lay about in heaps - filmy underwear, stockings, jumpers tried on and discarded - a patterned summer frock thrown sprawling over the back of a chair. Battle looked inside the wardrobe. It was full of furs, evening dresses, shorts, tennis frocks, playsuits.
       
      Battle shut me doors again almost reverently.
       
      "Expensive tastes," he remarked. "She must cost her husband a lot of money." Leach said darkly: "Perhaps that's why -" He left the sentence unfinished.
       
      "Why he needed a hundred - or rather fifty thousand pounds? Maybe. We'd better see, I think, what he has to say about it."
       
      They went down to the library. Williams was despatched to tell the servants they could get on with the housework. The family were free to return to their rooms if they wished. They were to be informed of that fact and also that Inspector Leach would like an interview with each of them separately, starting with Mr. Nevile Strange.
       
      When Williams had gone out of the room, Battle and Leach established themselves behind a massive Victorian table. A young policeman with notebook sat in the corner of the room, his pencil poised.
       
      Battle said: "You carry on for a start, Jim. Make it impressive." As the other nodded his head. Battle rubbed his chin and frowned.
       
      "I wish I knew what keeps putting Hercule Poirot into my head." "You mean that old chap - the Belgian - comic little guy?"
       
      "Comic, my foot," said Superintendent Battle. "About as dangerous as a black mamba and a she-leopard - that's what he is when he starts making a mountebank of himself! I wish he was here - this sort of thing would be right up his street."
       
      "In what way?"
       
      "Psychology," said Battle. "Real psychology - not the half-baked stuff people hand out who know nothing about it." His memory dwelt resentfully on Miss Amphrey and his daughter Sylvia. "No - the real, genuine article - knowing just what makes the wheels go round. Keep a murderer talking - that's one of his lines. Says everyone is bound to speak what's true sooner or later - because in the end it's easier than telling lies. And so they make some little slip they don't think matters - and that's when you get them."
       
      "So you're going to give Nevile Strange plenty of rope?"
       
      Battle gave an absent-minded assent. Then he added, in some annoyance and perplexity: "But what's really worrying me is - what put Hercule Poirot into my head? Upstairs - that's where it was. Now what did I see that reminded me of that little guy?"
       
      The conversation was put to an end by the arrival of Nevile Strange.
       
      He looked pale and worried, but much less nervous than he had done at the breakfast table. Battle eyed him keenly. Incredible that a man who knew - and he must know if he were capable of any thought processes at all - that he had left his fingerprints on the instrument of the crime - and who had since had his fingerprints taken by the police - should show neither intense nervousness nor elaborate brazening of it out.
       
      Nevile Strange looked quite natural - shocked, worried, grieved - and just slightly and healthily nervous.
       
      Jim Leach was speaking in his pleasant West Country voice. "We would like you to answer certain questions, Mr. Strange. Both as to your movements last night and in reference to particular facts. At the same time I must caution you that you are not bound to answer these questions unless you like, and that if you prefer to do so you may have your solicitor present."
       
      He leaned back to observe the effect of this. Nevile Strange looked, quite plainly, bewildered.
       
      "He hasn't the least idea what we're getting at, or else he's a damned good actor," Leach thought to himself. Aloud he said, as Nevile did not answer: "Well, Mr. Strange?"
       
      Nevile said: "Of course, ask me anything you like."
       
      "You realise," said Battle pleasantly, "that anything you say will be taken down in writing and may subsequently be used in a court of law in evidence."
       
      A flash of temper showed on Strange's face. He said sharply: "Are you threatening me?"
       
      "No, no, Mr. Strange. Warning you."
       
      Nevile shrugged his shoulders.
       
      "I suppose all this is part of your routine. Go ahead."
       
      "You are ready to make a statement?"
       
      "If that's what you call it."
       
      "Then will you tell us exactly what you did last night. From dinner onwards, shall we say?"
       
      "Certainly. After dinner we went into the drawing-room. We had coffee. We listened to the wireless - the news and so on. Then I decided to go across to Easterhead Bay Hotel and look up a chap who is staying there - a friend of mine."
       
      "That friend's name is?" "Latimer. Edward Latimer." "An intimate friend?"
       
      "Oh, so-so. We've seen a good deal of him since he's been down here. He's been over to lunch and dinner and we've been over there."
       
      Battle said: "Rather late, wasn't it, to go off to Easterhead Bay?" "Oh, it's a gay spot - they keep it up till all hours." "But this is rather an early-to-bed household, isn't it?"
       
      "Yes, on the whole. However, I took the latchkey with me. Nobody had to sit up."
       
      "Your wife didn't think of going with you?"
       
      There was a slight change, a stiffening in Nevile's tone as he said: "No, she had a headache. She'd already gone up to bed."
       
      "Please go on, Mr. Strange." "I was just going up to change -"
       
      Leach interrupted: "Excuse me, Mr. Strange. Change into what? Into evening dress, or out of evening dress?"
       
      "Neither. I was wearing a blue suit - my best, as it happened, and as it was raining a bit and I proposed to take the ferry and walk the other side - it's about half a mile, as you know - I changed into an older suit - a grey pin-stripe, if you want me to go into every detail."
       
      "We do like- to get things clear," said Leach humbly. "Please go on."
       
      "I was going upstairs, as I say, when Barrett came and told me Lady Tressilian wanted to see me, so I went along and had a - a jaw with her for a bit."
       
      Battle said gently: "You were the last person to see her alive, I think, Mr. Strange?"
       
      Nevile flushed.
       
      "Yes - yes -I suppose I was. She was quite all right then."
       
      "How long were you with her?"
       
      "About twenty minutes to half an hour, I should think, then I went to my room, changed my suit and hurried off. I took the latchkey with me."
       
      "What time was that?"
       
      "About half-past ten, I should think. I hurried down the hill, just caught the ferry starting and went across to the Easterhead side. I found Latimer at the hotel, we had a drink or two and a game of billiards. The time passed so quickly that I found I'd lost the last ferry back. It goes at one-thirty. So Latimer very decently got out his car and drove me back. That, as you know, means going all the way round by Saltington - sixteen miles. We left the hotel at two o'clock and got back here somewhere around half-past, I should say. I thanked Ted Latimer, asked him in for a drink, but he said he'd rather get straight back, so I let myself in and went straight up to bed. I didn't see or hear anything amiss. The house seemed all asleep and peaceful. Then this morning I heard that girl screaming and -"
       
      Leach stopped him.
       
      "Quite, quite. Now to go back a little - to your conversation with Lady Tressilian -was she quite normal in her manner?"
       
      "Oh, absolutely."
       
      "What did you talk about?"
       
      "Oh, one thing and another."
       
      "Amicably?"
       
      Nevile flushed.
       
      "Certainly."
       
      "You didn't, for instance," went on Leach smoothly, "have a violent quarrel?"
       
      Nevile did not answer at once. Leach said: "You had better tell the truth, you know. I'll tell you frankly some of your conversation was overheard."
       
      Nevile said shortly: "We had a bit of a disagreement. It was nothing."
       
      "What was the subject of the disagreement?"
       
      With an effort Nevile recovered his temper. He smiled.
       
      "Frankly," he said, "she ticked me off. That often happened. If she disapproved of anyone she let them have it straight from the shoulder. She was old-fashioned, you see, and she was inclined to be down on modern ways and modern lines of thought - divorce - all that. We had an argument and I may have got a bit heated, but we parted on perfectly friendly terms - agreeing to differ." He added, with some heat: "I certainly didn't bash her over the head because I lost my temper over an argument - if that's what you think!"
       
      Leach glanced at Battle. Battle leaned forward ponderously across the table. He said: "You recognised that niblick as your property this morning. Have you any explanation for the fact that your fingerprints were found upon it?"
       
      Nevile stared. He said sharply: "I - but of course they would be - it's my club - I've often handled it."
       
      "Any explanation, I mean, for the fact that your fingerprints show that you were the last person to have handled it."
       
      Nevile sat quite still. The colour had gone out of his face.
       
      "That's not true," he said at last. "It can't be. Somebody could have handled it after me - someone wearing gloves."
       
      "No, Mr. Strange - nobody could have handled it in the sense you mean - by raising it to strike - without blurring your own marks."
       
      There was a pause - a very long pause.
       
      "Oh, God," said Nevile convulsively, and gave a long shudder. He put his hands over his eyes. The two policemen watched him.
       
      Then he took away his hands. He sat up straight.
       
      "It isn't true," he said quietly. "It simply isn't true. You think I killed her, but I didn't. I swear I didn't. There's some horrible mistake."
       
      "You've no explanation to offer about these fingerprints?"
       
      "How can I have? I'm dumbfounded."
       
      "Have you any explanation for the fact that the sleeves and cuffs of your dark blue suit are stained with blood."
       
      "Blood ? " It was a horror-struck whisper. "It couldn't be!" "You didn't, for instance, cut yourself -" "No. No, of course I didn't." They waited a little while.
       
      Nevile Strange, his forehead creased, seemed to be thinking. He looked up at them at last with frightened, horror-stricken eyes.
       
      "It's fantastic!" he said. "Simply fantastic. It's none of it true." "Facts are true enough," said Superintendent Battle.
       
      "But why should I do such a thing? It's unthinkable - unbelievable! I've known Camilla all my life."
       
      Leach coughed.
       
      "I believe you told us yourself, Mr. Strange, that you come into a good deal of money upon Lady Tressilian's death?"
       
      "You think, that's why - But I don't want money! I don't need it!" "That," said Leach, with his little cough, "is what you say, Mr. Strange." Nevile sprang up.
       
      "Look here, that's something I can prove. That I didn't need money. Let me ring up my bank manager - you can talk to him yourself."
       
      The call was put through. The line was clear and in a very few minutes they were through to London. Nevile spoke: "That you, Ronaldson? Nevile Strange speaking. You know my voice. Look here, will you give the police - they're here now - all the information they want about my affairs - yes - yes, please."
       
      Leach took the phone. He spoke quietly. It went on, question and answer. He replaced the phone at last. "Well," said Nevile eagerly.
       
      Leach said impassively: "You have a substantial credit balance, and the bank have charge of all your investments and report them to be in a favourable condition."
       
      "So, you see, it's true what I said!"
       
      "It seems so - but, again, Mr. Strange, you may have commitments, debts -payment of blackmail - reasons for requiring money of which we do not know."
       
      "But I haven't! I assure you I haven't. You won't find anything of that kind."
       
      Superintendent Battle shifted his heavy shoulders. He spoke in a kind, fatherly voice.
       
      "We've sufficient evidence, as I'm sure you'll agree, Mr. Strange, to ask for a warrant for your arrest. We haven't done so - as yet. We're giving you the benefit of the doubt, you see."
       
      Nevile said bitterly: "You mean, don't you, that you've made up your minds I did it, but you want to get at the motive, so as to clinch the case against me?"
       
      Battle was silent. Leach looked at the ceiling.
       
      Nevile said desperately: "It's like some awful dream. There's nothing I can say or do. It's like - like being in a trap and you can't get out."
       
      Superintendent Battle stirred. An intelligent gleam showed between his half-closed lids.
       
      "That's very nicely put," he said. "Very nicely put indeed. It gives me an idea ..." VI
       
      Sergeant Jones adroitly got rid of Nevile through the hall and then brought Kay in by the trench window, so that husband and wife did not meet.
       
      "All the better," said Battle. "It's only this one I want to deal with whilst she's still in the dark."
       
      The day was overcast, with a sharp wind. Kay was dressed in a tweed skirt and a purple sweater, above which her hair looked like a burnished copper bowl. She looked half frightened, half excited. Her beauty and vitality bloomed against the dark Victorian background of books and saddleback chairs. Leach led her easily enough over her account of the previous evening.
       
      She had had a headache and gone to bed early - about quarter-past nine, she thought. She had slept heavily and heard nothing until the next morning, when she was wakened by hearing someone screaming.
       
      Battle took up the questioning.
       
      "Your husband didn't come in to see how you were before he went off for the evening?"
       
      "No."
       
      "You didn't see him from the time you left the drawing-room until the following morning. Is that right?"
       
      Kay nodded.
       
      Battle stroked his jaw.
       
      "Mrs. Strange, the door between your room and that of your husband was locked. Who locked it?"
       
      Kay said, shortly: "I did."
       
      Battle said nothing - but he waited - waited like an elderly, fatherly cat - for a mouse to come out of the hole he was watching.
       
      His silence did what questions might not have accomplished. Kay burst out impetuously: "Oh, I suppose you've got to have it all! That old doddering Hurstall must have heard us before tea and he'll tell you if I don't. He's probably told you already. Nevile and I had had a row - a flaming row! I was furious with him! I went up to bed and locked the door, because I was still in a flaming rage with him!"
       
      "I see -I see," said Battle, at his most sympathetic. "And what was the trouble all about?"
       
      "Does it matter? Oh, I don't mind telling you. Nevile has been behaving like a perfect idiot. It's all that woman's fault, though."
       
      "What woman?"
       
      "His first wife. She got him to come here in the first place."
       
      "You mean - to meet you?"
       
      "Yes. Nevile thinks it was all his own idea - poor innocent! But it wasn't. He never thought of such a thing until he met her in the Park one day and she got the idea into his head and made him believe he'd thought of it himself. He quite honestly thinks it was his idea, but I've seen Audrey's fine Italian hand behind it from the first."
       
      "Why should she do such a thing?" asked Battle.
       
      "Because she wanted to get hold of him again," said Kay. She spoke quickly and her breath came fast. "She's never forgiven him for going off with me. This is her revenge. She got him to fix up that we'd all be here together and then she got to work on him. She's been doing it ever since we arrived. She's clever, you know. Knows just how to look pathetic and elusive - yes, and how to play up another man, too. She got Thomas Royde, a faithful old dog who's always adored her, to be here at the same time, and she drove Nevile mad by pretending she was going to marry him."
       
      She stopped, breathing angrily.
       
      Battle said mildly: "I should have thought he'd be glad for her to - er - find happiness with an old friend."
       
      "Glad? He's as jealous as Hell!"
       
      "Then he must be very fond of her."
       
      "Oh, he is," said Kay bitterly. "She's seen to that!"
       
      Battle's finger still ran dubiously over his jaw.
       
      "You might have objected to this arrangement on coming here?" he suggested.
       
      "How could I? It would have looked as though I were jealous!"
       
      "Well," said Battle, "after all, you were, weren't you?"
       
      Kay flushed.
       
      "Always! I've always been jealous of Audrey. Right from the beginning - or nearly the beginning. I used to feel her there in the house. It was as though it were her house, not mine. I changed the colour scheme and did it all up, but it was no good! I'd feel her there like a grey ghost creeping about. I knew Nevile worried because he thought he'd treated her badly. He couldn't quite forget about her -she was always there - a reproachful feeling at the back of his mind. There are people, you know, who are like that. They seem rather colourless and not very interesting - but they make themselves felt."
       
      Battle nodded thoughtfully. He said: "Well, thank you, Mrs. Strange. That's all at present. We have to ask - er - a good many questions - especially with your husband inheriting so much money from Lady Tressilian - fifty thousand pounds -
       
      "Is it as much as that? We get it from old Sir Matthew's will, don't we?" "You know all about it?"
       
      "Oh, yes. He left it to be divided between Nevile and Nevile's wife after Lady Tressilian's death. Not that I'm glad the old thing is dead. I'm not. I didn't like her very much - probably because she didn't like me - but it's too horrible to think of some burglar coming along and cracking her head open."
       
      She went out on that. Battle looked at Leach.
       
      "What do you think of her? Good-looking bit of goods, I will say. A man could lose his head over her easy enough."
       
      Leach agreed. "Doesn't seem to me quite a lady, though," he said, dubiously.
       
      "They aren't nowadays," said Battle. "Shall we see No. 1? No, I think we'll have Miss Aldin next, and get an outside angle on this matrimonial business."
       
      Mary Aldin came in composedly and sat down. Beneath her outward calmness her eyes looked worried.
       
      She answered Leach's questions clearly enough, confirming Nevile's account of the evening. She had come up to bed about ten o'clock.
       
      "Mr. Strange was then with Lady Tressilian?" "Yes, I could hear them talking." "Talking, Miss Aldin, or quarrelling?"
       
      She flushed, but answered quietly: "Lady Tressilian, you know, was fond of discussion. She often sounded acrimonious when she was really nothing of the kind. Also, she was inclined to be autocratic and to domineer over people - and a man doesn't take that kind of thing as easily as a woman does."
       
      "As you do, perhaps," thought Battle.
       
      He looked at her intelligent face. It was she who broke the silence.
       
      "I don't want to be stupid - but it really seems to me incredible, quite incredible, that you should suspect one of the people in this house. Why shouldn't it be an outsider?"
       
      "For several reasons, Miss Aldin. For one thing, nothing was taken and no entry was forced. I needn't remind you of the geography of your own house and grounds, but just bear this in mind. On the west is a sheer cliff down to the sea; to the south are a couple of terraces with a wall and a drop to the sea, on the east the garden slopes down almost to the shore, but it is surrounded by a high wall. The only ways out are a small door leading through on to the road, which was found bolted inside as usual this morning, and the main door to the house, which is set on the road. I'm not saying no one could climb that wall, nor that they could not have got in by using a spare key to the front door or even a skeleton key - but I'm saying that as far as I can see no one did anything of the sort. Whoever committed this crime knew that Barrett took senna pod decoction every night, and doped it - that means someone in the house. The niblick was taken from the cupboard under the stairs. It wasn't an outsider, Miss Aldin."
       
      "It wasn't Nevile! I'm sure it wasn't Nevile!"
       
      "Why are you so sure?"
       
      She raised her hands hopelessly.
       
      "It just isn't like him - that's why! He wouldn't kill a defenceless old woman in bed - Nevile!"
       
      "It doesn't seem very likely," said Battle reasonably, "but you'd be surprised at the things people do when they've got a good enough reason. Mr. Strange may have wanted money very badly."
       
      "I'm sure he didn't. He's not an extravagant person - he never has been." "No, but his wife is."
       
      "Kay? Yes, perhaps - but, oh, it's too ridiculous. I'm sure the last thing Nevile has been thinking of lately is money."
       
      Superintendent Battle coughed.
       
      "Kay told you, I suppose? Yes, it really has been rather difficult. Still, it's nothing to do with this dreadful business."
       
      "Probably not, but all the same, I'd like to hear your version of the affair, Miss Aldin."
       
      Mary said slowly: "Well, as I say, it has created a difficult - situation. Whosoever's idea it was to begin with -"
       
      He interrupted her deftly.
       
      "I understood it was Mr. Nevile Strange's idea?"
       
      "He said it was."
       
      "But you yourself didn't think so?"
       
      "I - no - it isn't like Nevile somehow. I've had a feeling all along that somebody else put the idea into his head."
       
      "Mrs. Audrey Strange, perhaps?"
       
      "It seems incredible that Audrey should do such a thing."
       
      "Then who else could it have been?"
       
      Mary raised her shoulders helplessly.
       
      "I don't know. It's just - queer."
       
      "Queer," said Battle thoughtfully. "That's what I feel about this case. It's queer."
       
      "Everything's been queer. There's been a feeling -I can't describe it. Something in the air. A menace."
       
      "Everybody strung up and on edge?"
       
      "Yes, just that ... We've all suffered from it. Even Mr. Latimer -" She stopped.
       
      "I was just coming to Mr. Latimer. What can you tell me, Miss Aldin, about Mr. Latimer? Who is Mr. Latimer?"
       
      "Well, really, I don't know much about him. He's a friend of Kay's."
       
      "He's Mrs. Strange's friend. Known each other a long time?"
       
      "Yes, she knew him before her marriage."
       
      "Mr. Strange like him?"
       
      "Quite well, I believe."
       
      "No - trouble, there?"
       
      Battle put it delicately. Mary replied at once and emphatically: "Certainly not!"
       
      "Did Lady Tressilian like Mr. Latimer?"
       
      "Not very much."
       
      Battle took warning from the aloof tone of her voice and changed the subject.
       
      "This maid, now, Jane Barren, she has been with Lady Tressilian a long time? You consider her trustworthy?"
       
      "Oh, absolutely. She was devoted to Lady Tressilian." Battle leaned back in his chair.
       
      "In fact you wouldn't consider for a moment the possibility that Barrett hit Lady Tressilian over the head and then doped herself to avoid being suspected?"
       
      "Of course not. Why on earth should she?"
       
      "She gets a legacy, you know."
       
      "So do I," said Mary Aldin. She looked at him steadily.
       
      "Yes," said Battle. "So do you. Do you know how much?"
       
      "Mr. Trelawny has just arrived. He told me."
       
      "You didn't know about it beforehand?"
       
      "No. I certainly assumed, from what Lady Tressilian occasionally let fall, that she had left me something. I have very little of my own, you know. Not enough to live on without getting work of some kind. I thought that Lady Tressilian would leave me at least a hundred a year - but she has some cousins, and I did not at all know how she proposed to leave that money which was hers to dispose of. I knew, of course, that Sir Matthew's estate went to Nevile and Audrey."
       
      "So she didn't know what Lady Tressilian was leaving her," Leach said when Mary Aldin had been dismissed.
       
      "At least, that's what she says."
       
      "That's what she says," agreed Battle. "And now for Bluebeard's first wife."
       
      VII
       
      Audrey was wearing a pale grey flannel coat and skirt. In it she looked so pale and ghostlike that Battle was reminded of Kay's words, "A grey ghost creeping about the house."
       
      She answered his questions simply and without any signs of emotion.
       
      Yes, she had gone to bed at ten o'clock, the same time as Miss Aldin. She had heard nothing during the night.
       
      "You'll excuse me butting into your private affairs," said Battle, "but will you explain just how it comes about that you are here in the house?"
       
      "I always come to stay at this time. This year, my - my late husband wanted to come at the same time and asked me if I would mind."
       
      "It was his suggestion?"
       
      "Oh, yes."
       
      "Not yours?"
       
      "Oh, no."
       
      "But you agreed?"
       
      "Yes, I agreed ... I didn't feel - that I could very well refuse."
       
      "Why not, Mrs. Strange?"
       
      But she was vague.
       
      "One doesn't like to be disobliging."
       
      "You were the injured party?"
       
      "I beg your pardon?"
       
      "It was you who divorced your husband?"
       
      "Yes."
       
      "Do you - excuse me - feel any rancour against him?"
       
      "No- not at all." 178
       
      "You have a very forgiving nature, Mrs. Strange."
       
      She did not answer. He tried silence - but Audrey was not Kay, to be thus goaded into speech. She could remain silent without any hint of uneasiness. Battle acknowledged himself beaten.
       
      "You are sure it was not your idea - this meeting?"
       
      "Quite sure."
       
      "You are on friendly terms with I-he present Mrs. Strange?"
       
      "I don't think she likes me very much."
       
      "Do you like her?"
       
      "Yes. I think she is very beautiful."
       
      "Well - thank you -I think that is all."
       
      She got up and walked towards the door. Then she hesitated and came back.
       
      "I would just like to say -" She spoke nervously and quickly. "You think Nevile did this - that he killed her because of the money. I'm quite sure that isn't so. Nevile has never cared much about money. I do know that. I was married to him for eight years, you know. I just can't see him killing anyone like that for money - it -it - isn't Nevile. I know my saying so isn't of any value as evidence - but I do wish you would believe it."
       
      She turned and hurried out of the room.
       
      "And what do you make of her?" asked Leach. "I've never seen anyone so - so devoid of emotion."
       
      "She didn't show any," said Battle. "But it's there. Some very strong emotion. And I don't know what it is ..."
       
      VIII
       
      Thomas Royde came last. He sat, solemn and stiff, blinking a little like an owl.
       
      He was home from Malaya - first time for eight years. Had been in the habit of staying at Gull's Point ever since he was a boy. Mrs. Audrey Strange was a distant cousin - and had been brought up by his family from the age of nine. On the preceding night he had gone to bed just before eleven. Yes, he had heard Mr. Nevile Strange leave the house, but had not seen him. Nevile had left at about twenty-past ten or perhaps a little later. He himself had heard nothing during the night. He was up and in the garden when the discovery of Lady Tressilian's body had been made. He was an early riser.
       
      There was a pause.
       
      "Miss Aldin has told us that there was a state of tension in the house. Did you notice this, too?"
       
      "I don't think so. Don't notice things much."
       
      "That's a lie," thought Battle to himself. "You notice a good deal, I should say -more than most."
       
      No, he didn't think Nevile Strange had been short of money in any way. He certainly had not seemed to. But he knew very little about Mr. Strange's affairs.
       
      "How well did you know the second Mrs. Strange?" "I met her here for the first time." Battle played his last card.
       
      "You may know, Mr. Royde, that we've found Mr. Nevile Strange's fingerprints on the weapon. And we've found blood on the sleeve of the coat he wore last night."
       
      He paused. Royde nodded.
       
      "He was telling us," he muttered.
       
      "I'm asking you frankly: Do you think he did it?"
       
      Thomas Royde never liked to be hurried. He waited for a minute - which is a very long time - before he answered: "Don't see why you ask me. Not my business. It's yours. Should say, myself - very unlikely."
       
      "Can you think of anyone who seems to you more likely?"
       
      Thomas shook his head. "Only person I think likely can't possibly have done it. So that's that."
       
      "And who is that?"
       
      But Royde shook his head more decidedly.
       
      "Couldn't possibly say. Only my private opinion."
       
      "It's your duty to assist the police."
       
      "Tell you any facts. This isn't facts. Just an idea. And it's impossible anyway."
       
      "We didn't get much out of him," said Leach when Royde had gone.
       
      Battle agreed.
       
      "No, we didn't. He's got something in his mind - something quite definite. I'd like to know what it is. This is a very peculiar sort of crime, Jim, my boy -"
       
      The telephone rang before Leach could answer. He took up the receiver and spoke. After a minute or two of listening he said "Good," and slammed it down.
       
      "Blood on the coat sleeve is human," he announced.
       
      "Same blood group as Lady T's. Looks as though Nevile Strange is for it -"
       
      Battle had walked over to the window and was looking out with considerable interest.
       
      "A beautiful young man out there," he remarked. "Quite beautiful and a definite wrong 'un, I should say. It's a pity Mr. Latimer - for I feel that that's Mr. Latimer -was over at Easterhead Bay last night. He's the type that would smash in his own grandmother's head if he thought he could get away with it and if he knew he'd make something out of it."
       
      "Well, there wasn't anything in it for him," said Leach. "Lady T's death doesn't benefit him in any way whatever." The telephone bell rang again. "Damn this phone, what's the matter now?"
       
      He went to it.
       
      "Hullo. Oh, it's you, doctor. What? Come round, has she? What? What?"
       
      He turned his head. "Uncle, just come and listen to this."
       
      Battle came over and took the phone. He listened, his face as usual showing no expression. He said to Leach: "Get Nevile Strange, Jim."
       
      When Nevile came in, Battle was just replacing the phone on its hook.
       
      Nevile, looking white and spent, stared curiously at the Scotland Yard superintendent, trying to read the emotion behind the wooden mask.
       
      "Mr. Strange," said Battle. "Do you know anyone who dislikes you very much?" Nevile stared and shook his head.
       
      "Sure?" Battle was impressive. "I mean, sir, someone who does more than dislike you - someone who - frankly - hates your guts?"
       
      Nevile sat bolt upright.
       
      "No. No, certainly not. Nothing of the kind."
       
      "Think, Mr. Strange. Is there no one you've injured in any way -" Nevile flushed.
       
      "There's only one person I can be said to have injured, and she's not the kind who bears rancour. That's my first wife, when I left her for another woman. But I can assure you that she doesn't hate me. She's - she's been an angel."
       
      The Superintendent leaned forward across the table.
       
      "Let me tell you, Mr. Strange, you're a very lucky man. I don't say I liked the case against you -I didn't. But it was a case! It would have stood up all right, and unless the jury happened to have liked your personality, it would have hanged you."
       
      "You speak," said Nevile, "as though all that were past."
       
      "It is past," said Battle. "You've been saved, Mr. Strange, by pure chance."
       
      Nevile still looked inquiringly at him.
       
      "After you left her last night," said Battle, "Lady Tressilian rang the bell for her maid."
       
      He watched whilst Nevile took it in. "After. Then Barrett saw her -"
       
      "Yes. Alive and well. Barrett also saw you leave the house before she went in to her mistress."
       
      Nevile said: "But the niblick - my fingerprints -"
       
      "She wasn't hit with that niblick. Dr. Lazenby didn't like it all the time. I saw that. She was killed with something else. That niblick was put there deliberately to throw suspicion on you. It may be by someone who overheard the quarrel and so selected you as a suitable victim, or it may be because -"
       
      He paused, arid then repeated his question: "Who is there in this house that hates you, Mr. Strange?"
       
      IX
       
      "I've got a question for you, doctor," said Battle.
       
      They were in the doctor's house after returning from the nursing home, where they had had a short interview with Jane Barrett.
       
      Barrett was weak and exhausted, but quite clear in her statement.
       
      She had just been getting into bed after drinking her senna when Lady Tressilian's bell had wrung. She had glanced at the dock and seen the time -twenty-five minutes past ten.
       
      She had put on her dressing-gown and come down. She had heard a noise in the hall below and had looked over the balusters.
       
      "It was Mr. Nevile just going out. He was taking his raincoat down from the hook."
       
      "What suit was he wearing?"
       
      "His grey pinstripe. His face was very worried and unhappy-looking. He shoved his arms into his coat as though he didn't care how he put it on. Then he went out and banged the front door behind him. I went on in to Her Ladyship. She was very drowsy, poor dear, and couldn't remember why she had rung for me - she couldn't always, poor lady. But I beat up her pillows and brought her a fresh glass of water and settled her comfortably."
       
      "She didn't seem upset or afraid of anything?"
       
      "Just tired, that's all. I was tired myself. Yawning. I went up and went right off to sleep."
       
      That was Barrett's story, and it seemed impossible to doubt her genuine grief and horror at the news of her mistress's death.
       
      They went back to Lazenby's house, and it was then that Battle announced that he had a question to ask.
       
      "Ask away," said Lazenby.
       
      "What time do you think Lady Tressilian died?"
       
      "I've told you. Between ten o'clock and midnight."
       
      "I know that's what you said. But it wasn't my question. I asked you what you personally thought."
       
      "Off the record, eh?"
       
      "Yes."
       
      "All right. My guess would be in the neighbourhood of eleven o'clock."
       
      "That's what I wanted you to say," said Battle.
       
      "Glad to oblige. Why?"
       
      "Never did like the idea of her being killed before ten-twenty. Take Barrett's sleeping-draught - it wouldn't have got to work by then. That sleeping-draught shows that the murder was meant to be committed a good deal later - during the night. I'd prefer midnight myself."
       
      "Could be. Eleven is only a guess."
       
      "But it definitely couldn't be later than midnight?"
       
      "No."
       
      "It couldn't be after 2.30?"
       
      "Good heavens, no."
       
      "Well, that seems to let Strange out all right. I'll just have to check up on his movements after he left the house. If he's telling the truth he's washed out and we can go on to our other suspects."
       
      "The other people who inherit money?" suggested Leach.
       
      "Maybe," said Battle. "But, somehow, I don't think so. Someone with a kink, I'm looking for."
       
      "A kink?"
       
      "A nasty kink."
       
      When they left the doctors house they went on to the ferry. The ferry consisted of a rowing boat operated by two brothers, Will and George Barnes. The Barnes brothers knew everybody in Saltcreek by sight and most of the people who came over from Easterhead Bay. George said at once that Mr. Strange from Gull's Point had gone across at 10.30 on the preceding night. No, he had not brought Mr. Strange back again. Last ferry had gone at 1.30 from the Easterhead side and Mr. Strange wasn't on it.
       
      Battle asked him if he knew Mr. Latimer.
       
      "Latimer? Latimer? Tall, handsome young gentleman? Comes over from the hotel up to Gull's Point? Yes, I know him. Didn't see him at all last night, though. He's been over this morning. Went back last trip."
       
      They crossed on the ferry and went up to the Easterhead Bay Hotel.
       
      Here they found Mr. Latimer newly returned from the other side. He had crossed on the ferry before theirs.
       
      Mr. Latimer was very anxious to do all he could to help.
       
      "Yes, old Nevile came over last night. Looked very blue over something. Told me he'd had a row with the old lady. I hear he'd fallen out with Kay, too, but he didn't tell me that, of course. Anyway, he was a bit down in the mouth. Seemed quite glad of my company for once in a way."
       
      "He wasn't able to find you at once, I understand?"
       
      Latimer said sharply: "Don't know why. I was sitting in the lounge. Strange said he looked in and didn't see me, but he wasn't in a state to concentrate. Or I may have strolled out into the gardens for five minutes or so. Always get out when I can. Beastly smell in this hotel. Noticed it last night in the bar. Drains, I think! Strange mentioned it, too! We both smelt it. Nasty decayed smell. Might be a dead rat under the billiard-room floor."
       
      "You played billiards, and after your game?"
       
      "Oh, we talked a bit, had another drink or two. Then Nevile said, 'Hullo, I've missed the ferry,’ so I said I'd get out my car and drive him back, which I did. We got there about 2.30."
       
      "And Mr. Strange was with you all the evening?"
       
      "Oh, yes. Ask anybody. They'll tell you."
       
      "Thank you, Mr. Latimer. We have to be so careful."
       
      Leach said as they left the smiling, self-possessed young man: "What's the idea of checking up so carefully on Nevile Strange?"
       
      Battle smiled. Leach got it suddenly.
       
      "Good Lord, it's the other one you're checking up on. So that's your idea."
       
      "It's too soon to have ideas," said Battle. "I've just got to know exactly where Mr. Ted Latimer was last night. We know that from quarter-past eleven, say - to after midnight - he was with Nevile Strange. But where was he before that -when Strange arrived and couldn't find him?"
       
      They pursued their inquiries doggedly - with bar attendants, waiters, lift boys. Latimer had been seen in the lounge between nine and ten. He had been in the bar at a quarter-past ten. But between that time and eleven-twenty he seemed to have been singularly elusive. Then one of the maids was found who declared that Mr. Latimer had been in one of the small writing rooms with Mrs. Beddoes -that's the fat North Country lady."
       
      "That tears it," said Battle gloomily. "He was here, all right. Just didn't want attention drawn to his fat (and no doubt rich) lady friend. That throws us back on those others - the servants, Kay Strange, Audrey Strange, Mary Aldin and Thomas Royde. One of them killed the old lady, but which? If we could find the real weapon -"
       
      He stopped, then slapped his thigh.
       
      "Got it, Jim, my boy! I know now what made me think of Hercule Poirot. We'll have a spot of lunch and go back to Gull's Point and I'll show you something."
       
      X
       
      Mary Aldin was restless. She went in and out of the house, picked off a dead dahlia head here and there, went back into the drawing-room and shifted flower vases in an unmeaning fashion.
       
      From the library came a vague murmur of voices. Mr. Trelawny was in there with Nevile. Kay and Audrey were nowhere to be seen.
       
      Mary went out in the garden again. Down by the wall she spied Thomas Royde placidly smoking. She went and joined him.
       
      "Oh, dear." She sat down beside him with a deep, perplexed sigh.
       
      "Anything the matter?" Thomas asked.
       
      Mary laughed with a slight note of hysteria in the laugh.
       
      "Nobody but you would say a thing like that. A murder in the house and you just say, 'Is anything the matter?'"
       
      Looking a little surprised, Thomas said: "I meant anything fresh?"
       
      "Oh, I know what you meant. It's really a wonderful relief to find anyone so gloriously just-the-same-as-usual as you are!"
       
      "Not much good, is it, getting all het up over things?" 188
       
      "No, no. You're eminently sensible. It's how you manage to do it beats me." "Well, I suppose I'm an outsider."
       
      "That's true, of course. You can't fed the relief all the rest of .us do that Nevile is cleared."
       
      "I'm very pleased he is, of course," said Royde. Mary shuddered.
       
      "It was a very near thing. If Camilla hadn't taken it into her head to ring the bell for Barrett after Nevile had left her -"
       
      "Then old Nevile would have been for it, all right."
       
      He spoke with a certain grim satisfaction, then shook his head with a slight smile, as he met Mary's reproachful gaze.
       
      "I'm not really heartless, but now that Nevile's all right I can't help being pleased he had a bit of a shaking up. He's always so damned complacent."
       
      "He isn't really, Thomas."
       
      "Perhaps not. It's just his manner. Anyway, he was looking scared as Hell this morning!"
       
      "What a cruel streak you have!"
       
      "Anyway, it's all right now. You know, Mary, even here Nevile has had the devil's own luck. Some other poor beggar with all that evidence piled up against him mightn't have had such a break."
       
      Mary shivered again. "Don't say that. I like to think the innocent are -protected."
       
      "Do you, my dear?" His voice was gentle.
       
      Mary burst out suddenly: "Thomas, I'm worried. I'm frightfully worried."
       
      "Yes."
       
      "It's about Mr. Treves."
       
      Thomas dropped his pipe on the stones. His voice changed as he bent to pick it up.
       
      "What about Mr. Treves?"
       
      "That night he was here - that story he told - about a little murderer! I've been wondering, Thomas ... Was it just a story? Or did he tell it with a purpose?"
       
      "You mean," said Royde deliberately, "was it aimed at someone who was in the room?"
       
      Mary whispered, "Yes."
       
      Thomas said quietly: "I've been wondering, too. As a matter of fact, that was what I was thinking about when you came along just now."
       
      Mary half-closed her eyes.
       
      "I've been trying to remember ... He told it, you know, so very deliberately. He almost dragged it into the conversation. And he said he would recognise the person anywhere. He emphasised that. As though he had recognised him."
       
      "M'm," said Thomas. "I've been through all that."
       
      "But why should he do it? What was the point?"
       
      "I suppose," said Royde, "it was a kind of warning. Not to try anything on."
       
      "You mean that Mr. Treves knew that Camilla was going to be murdered?"
       
      "No - o. I think that's too fantastic. It may have been just a general warning."
       
      "What I've been wondering is, do you think we ought to tell the police?" To that Thomas again gave his thoughtful consideration.
       
      "I think not," he said at last. "I don't see that it's relevant in any way. It's not as though Treves were alive and could tell them anything."
       
      "No," said Mary. "He's dead!" She gave a quick shiver. "It's so odd, Thomas, the way he died."
       
      "Heart attack. He had a bad heart."
       
      "I mean that curious business about the lift being out of order. I don't like it."
       
      "I don't like it very much myself," said Thomas Royde.
       
      XI
       
      Superintendent Battle looked round the bedroom. The bed had been made. Otherwise the room was unchanged. It had been neat when they first looked round it. It was neat now.
       
      "That's it," said Superintendent Battle, pointing to the old-fashioned steel fender. "Do you see anything odd about that fender?"
       
      "Must take some cleaning," said Jim Leach. "It's well kept. Nothing odd about it that I can see, except - yes, the left-hand knob is brighter than the right-hand one."
       
      "That's what put Hercule Poirot into my head," said Battle. "You know his fad about things not being quite symmetrical - gets him all worked up. I suppose I thought unconsciously, ‘That would worry old Poirot,' and then I began talking about him. Get your fingerprint kit, Jones, we'll have a look at those two knobs."
       
      Jones reported presently. "There are prints on the right-hand knob, sir, none on the left."
       
      "It's the left one we want, then. Those other prints are the housemaid's when she last cleaned it. The left-hand one has been cleaned since."
       
      "There was a bit of screwed-up emery paper in this waste-paper basket," volunteered Jones. "I didn't think it meant anything."
       
      "Because you didn't know what you were looking for, then. Gently now, I'll bet anything you like that knob unscrews - yes, I thought so."
       
      Presently Jones held the knob up.
       
      "It's a good weight," he said, weighing it in his hands.
       
      Leach, bending over it, said: "There's something dark - on the screw."
       
      "Blood, as likely as not," said Battle. "Cleaned the knob itself and wiped it and that little stain on the screw wasn't noticed. I'll bet anything you like that's the weapon that caved the old lady's skull in. But there's more to find. It's up to you, Jones, to search the house again. This time, you'll know exactly what you're looking for."
       
      He gave a few swift detailed instructions. Going to the window he put his head out.
       
      "There's something yellow tucked into the ivy. That may be another piece of the puzzle. I rather think it is."
       
      XII
       
      Crossing the hall. Superintendent Battle was waylaid by Mary Aldin.
       
      "Can I speak to you a minute. Superintendent?"
       
      "Certainly, Miss Aldin. Shall we come in here?"
       
      He threw open the dining-room door. Lunch had been cleared away by Hurstall.
       
      "I want to ask you something, Superintendent. Surely you don't, you can't still think that this - this awful crime was done by one of us? It must have been someone from outside! Some maniac!"
       
      "You may not be far wrong there. Miss Aldin. Maniac is a word that describes this criminal very well, if I'm not mistaken. But not an outsider."
       
      Her eyes opened very wide.
       
      "Do you mean that someone in this house is - is mad?"
       
      "You're thinking," said the Superintendent, "of someone foaming at the mouth and rolling their eyes. Mania isn't like that. Some of the most dangerous criminal lunatics have looked as sane as you or I. It's a question, usually, of having an obsession. One idea, preying on the mind, gradually distorting it. Pathetic, reasonable people who come up to you and explain how they're being persecuted and how everyone is spying on them - and you sometimes feel it must all be true."
       
      "I'm sure nobody here has any idea of being persecuted."
       
      "I only gave that as an instance. There are other forms of insanity. But I believe whoever committed this crime was under the domination of one fixed idea - an idea on which they had brooded until literally nothing else mattered or had any importance."
       
      Mary shivered. She said: "There's something I think you ought to know."
       
      Concisely and clearly she told him of Mr. Treves' visit to dinner and of the story he had told. Superintendent Battle was deeply interested.
       
      "He said he could recognise this person? Man or woman - by the way?"
       
      "I took it that it was a boy the story was about - but it's true, Mr. Treves didn't actually say so - in fact, I remember now - he distinctly stated he would not give any particulars as to sex or age."
       
      "Did he? Rather significant, perhaps. And he said there was a definite physical peculiarity by which he could be sure of knowing this child anywhere?"
       
      "Yes."
       
      "A scar, perhaps - has anybody here got a scar?"
       
      He noticed the faint hesitation before Mary Aldin replied: "Not that I have noticed."
       
      "Come now. Miss Aldin," he smiled. "You have noticed something. If so, don't you think that I shall be able to notice it, too?"
       
      She shook her head.
       
      "I -I haven't noticed anything of the kind."
       
      But he saw that she was startled and upset. His words had obviously suggested a very unpleasant train of thought to her. He wished he knew just what it was, but his experience made him aware that to press her at this minute would not yield any result.
       
      He brought the conversation back to old Mr. Treves. Mary told him of the tragic sequel to the evening.
       
      Battle questioned her at some length. Then he said quietly: "That's a new one on me. Never come across that before."
       
      "What do you mean?"
       
      "I've never come across a murder committed by the simple expedient of hanging a placard on a lift."
       
      She looked horrified. "You don't really think -"
       
      "That it was murder? Of course it was! Quick, resourceful murder. It might not have come off, of course - but it did come off."
       
      "Just because Mr. Treves knew -"
       
      "Yes. Because he would have been able to direct our attention to one particular person in this house. As it is, we've started in the dark. But we've got a glimmer of light now, and every minute the case is getting clearer. I'll tell you this. Miss Aldin, this murder was very carefully planned beforehand down to the smallest detail. And I want to impress one thing on your mind - don't let anybody know that you've told me what you have. That is important. Don't tell anyone, mind."
       
      Mary nodded. She was still looking dazed.
       
      Superintendent Battle went out of the room and proceeded to do what he had been about to do when Mary Aldin intercepted him. He was a methodical man. He wanted certain information, and a new and promising hare did not distract him from the orderly performance of his duties, however tempting this new hare might be.
       
      He tapped on the library door, and Nevile Strange's voice called "Come in."
       
      Battle was introduced to Mr. Trelawny, a tall, distinguished-looking man with a keen, dark eye.
       
      "Sorry if I am butting in," said Superintendent Battle apologetically. "But there's something I haven't got clear. You, Mr. Strange, inherit half the late Sir Matthew's estate, but who inherits the other half?"
       
      Nevile looked surprised.
       
      "I told you. My wife."
       
      "Yes. But -" Battle coughed in a deprecating manner, "which wife, Mr. Strange?"
       
      "Oh, I see. Yes, I expressed myself badly. The money goes to Audrey, who was my wife at the time the will was made. That's right, Mr. Trelawny?"
       
      The lawyer assented.
       
      "The bequest is quite clearly worded. The estate is to be divided between Sir Matthew's ward, Nevile Henry Strange, and his wife, Audrey Elizabeth Strange, nee Standish. The subsequent divorce makes no difference whatever."
       
      "That's clear, then," said Battle. "I take it Mrs. Audrey Strange is fully aware of these facts?"
       
      "Certainly," said Mr. Trelawny. "And the present Mrs. Strange?"
       
      "Kay?" Nevile looked slightly surprised. "Oh, I suppose so. At least - I've never talked much about it with her -"
       
      "I think you'll find," said Battle, "that she's under a misapprehension. She thinks that the money on Lady Tressilian's death comes to you and your present wife. At least, that's what she gave me to understand this morning. That's why I came along to find out how the position really lay."
       
      "How extraordinary!" said Nevile. "Still, I suppose it might have happened quite easily. She has said once or twice, now that I think about it, ‘We come into that money when Camilla dies,’ but I suppose I assumed that she was just associating herself with me in my share of it."
       
      "It's extraordinary," said Battle, "the amount of misunderstandings there are even between two people who discuss a thing quite often - both of them assuming different things and neither of them discovering the discrepancy."
       
      "I suppose so," said Nevile, not sounding very interested. "It doesn't matter much in this case, anyway. It's not as though we're short of money at all. I'm very glad for Audrey. She has been very hard up and this will make a big difference to her."
       
      Battle said bluntly: "But surely, sir, at the time of the divorce, she was entitled to an allowance from you?"
       
      Nevile flushed. He said in a constrained voice: "There is such a thing as - as pride. Superintendent. Audrey has always persistently refused to touch a penny of the allowance I wished to make her."
       
      "A very generous allowance," put in Mr. Trelawny. "But Mrs. Strange has always returned it and refused to accept it."
       
      "Very interesting," said Battle, and went out before anyone could ask him to elaborate that comment.
       
      He went out and found his nephew.
       
      "On its face value," he said, "there's a nice monetary motive for nearly everybody in this case. Nevile Strange and Audrey Strange get a cool fifty thousand each. Kay Strange thinks she's entitled to fifty thousand. Mary Aldin gets an income that frees her from having to earn her living. Thomas Royde, I'm bound to say, doesn't gain. But we can include Hurstall and even Barrett if we admit that she'd take the risk of finishing herself off to avoid suspicion. Yes, as I say, there are no lack of money motives. And yet, if I'm right, money doesn't enter into this at all. If there's such a thing as a murder for pure hate, this is it. And if no one comes along and throws a spanner into the works, I'm going to get the person who did it!"
       
      XIII
       
      Angus MacWhirter sat on the terrace of the Easterhead Bay Hotel and stared across the river to the frowning height of Stark Head opposite.
       
      He was engaged at the moment in a careful stocktaking of his thoughts and emotions.
       
      He hardly knew what it was that had made him choose to spend his last few days of leisure where he now was. Yet something had drawn him there. Perhaps the wish to test himself - to see if there remained in his heart any of the old despair.
       
      Mona? How little he cared now! She was married to the other man. He had passed her in the street one day without feeling any emotion. He could remember his grief and bitterness when she left him, but they were past now and gone.
       
      He was recalled from these thoughts by an impact of wet dog and the frenzied appeal of a newly-made friend. Miss Diana Brinton, aged thirteen.
       
      "Oh, come away, Don. Come away. Isn't it awful? He's rolled on some fish or something down on the beach. You can smell him yards away. The fish was awfully dead, you know!"
       
      MacWhirter's nose confirmed this assumption.
       
      "In a sort of crevice on the rocks," said Miss Brinton. "I took him into the sea and tried to wash it off, but it doesn't seem to have done much good."
       
      MacWhirter agreed. Don, a wire-haired terrier of amiable and loving disposition, was looking hurt by the tendency of his friends to keep him firmly at arm's length.
       
      "Sea water's no good," said MacWhirter. "Hot water and soap's the only thing." "I know. But that's not so jolly easy in a hotel. We haven't got a private bath."
       
      In the end MacWhirter and Diana surreptitiously entered by the side door with Don on a lead, and smuggling him up to MacWhirter's bathroom, a thorough cleansing took place and both MacWhirter and Diana got very wet. Don was very sad when it was all over. That disgusting smell of soap again - just when he had found a really nice perfume such as any other dog would envy. Oh, well, it was always the same with humans - they had no decent sense of smell.
       
      The little incident had left MacWhirter in a more cheerful mood. He took the bus into Saltington, where he had left a suit to be cleaned.
       
      The girl in charge of the 24-Hour Cleaners looked at him vacantly. "MacWhirter, did you say? I'm afraid it isn't ready yet."
       
      "It should be." He had been promised that suit the day before, and even that would have been 48 and not 24 hours. A woman might have said all this. MacWhirter merely scowled.
       
      "There's not been time yet," said the girl, smiling indifferently. "Nonsense."
       
      The girl stopped smiling. She snapped: "Anyway, it's not done."
       
      Then I'll take it away as it is," said MacWhirter.
       
      "Nothing's been done to it," the girl warned him.
       
      "I'll take it away."
       
      "I dare say we might get it done by to-morrow as a special favour."
       
      "I'm not in the habit of asking for special favours. Just give me the suit, please."
       
      Giving him a bad-tempered look, the girl went into the back room. She returned with a clumsily done-up parcel, which she pushed across the counter.
       
      MacWhirter took it and went out.
       
      He felt, quite ridiculously, as though he had won a victory. Actually it merely meant that he would have to have the suit cleaned elsewhere!
       
      He threw the parcel on his bed when he returned to the hotel and looked at it with annoyance. Perhaps he could get it sponged and pressed in the hotel. It was not really too bad - perhaps it didn't actually need cleaning?
       
      He undid the parcel and gave vent to an expression of annoyance. Really, the 24-Hour Cleaners were too inefficient for words. This wasn't his suit. It wasn't even the same colour! It had been a dark blue suit he had left with them. Impertinent, inefficient muddlers.
       
      He glanced irritably at the label. It had the name MacWhirter, all right. Another MacWhirter? Or some stupid interchange of labels?
       
      Staring down vexedly at the crumpled heap, he suddenly sniffed.
       
      Surely he knew that smell - a particularly unpleasant smell ... connected somehow with a dog. Yes, that was it. Diana and her dog. Absolutely and literally stinking fish!
       
      He bent down and examined the suit. There it was, a discoloured patch on the shoulder of the coat. On the shoulder -
       
      Now that, thought MacWhirter, is really very curious ...
       
      Anyway, next day, he would have a few grim words with the girl at the 24-Hour Cleaners. Gross mismanagement!
       
      XIV
       
      After dinner he strolled out of the hotel and down the road to the ferry. It was a clear night, but cold, with a sharp foretaste of winter. Summer was over.
       
      MacWhirter crossed in the ferry to the Saltcreek side. It was the second time that he was revisiting Stark Head. The place had a fascination for him. He walked slowly up the hill, passing the Balmoral Court Hotel and then a big house set on the point of a cliff. Gull's Point - he read the name on the painted door. Of course, that was where the old lady had been murdered. There had been a lot of talk in the hotel about it; his chambermaid had insisted on telling him all about it, and the newspapers had given it a prominence which had annoyed MacWhirter, who preferred to read world-wide affairs and who was not interested in crime.
       
      He went on downhill again to skirt a small beach and some old-fashioned fishing cottages that had been modernised. Then up again till the road ended and petered out into the track that led on up Stark Head.
       
      It was grim and forbidding on Stark Head. MacWhirter stood on the cliff edge looking down to the sea. So he had stood on that other night. He tried to recapture some of the feeling he had had then - the desperation, anger, weariness - the longing to be out of it all. But there was nothing to recapture. All that had gone. There was, instead, a cold anger. Caught on that tree, rescued by coast-guards, fussed over like a naughty child in hospital, a series of indignities and affronts. Why couldn't he have been let alone? He would rather, a thousand times rather, be out of it all. He still felt that. The only thing he had lost was the necessary impetus.
       
      How it had hurt him then to think of Mona! He could think of her quite calmly now. She had always been rather a fool. Easily taken in by anyone who flattered her or played up to her idea of herself. Very pretty. Yes, very pretty - but no mind; not the kind of woman he had once dreamed about.
       
      But that was beauty, of course - Some vague, fancied picture of a woman flying through the night with white draperies streaming out behind her ... Something like the figure-head of a ship - only not so solid ... not nearly so solid ...
       
      And then, with dramatic suddenness, the incredible happened! Out of the night came a flying figure. One minute she was not there, the next minute she was - a white figure running - running - to the cliff's edge. A figure, beautiful and desperate, driven to destruction by pursuing Furies! Running with a terrible desperation ... He knew that desperation. He knew what it meant ...
       
      He came with a rush out of the shadows and caught her just as she was about to go over the edge!
       
      He said fiercely: "No, you don't ..."
       
      It was just like holding a bird. She struggled - struggled silently, and then, again like a bird, was suddenly still.
       
      He said urgently: "Don't throw yourself over! Nothing's worth it. Nothing. Even if you are desperately unhappy -"
       
      She made a sound. It was, perhaps, a far-off ghost of a laugh.
       
      He said sharply: "You're not unhappy? What is it then?"
       
      She answered him at once with the low, softly-breathed word: "Afraid."
       
      "Afraid?" He was so astonished that he let her go, standing back a pace to see her better.
       
      He realised then the truth of her words. It. was fear that had lent that urgency to her footsteps. It was fear that made her small, white, intelligent face blank and stupid. Fear that dilated those wide-apart eyes.
       
      He said incredulously: "What are you afraid of?"
       
      She replied so low that he hardly heard it: "I'm afraid of being hanged ..."
       
      Yes, she had said just that. He stared and stared. He looked from her to the cliff's edge.
       
      "So that's why?"
       
      "Yes. A quick death instead of -"
       
      She closed her eyes and shivered. She went on shivering.
       
      MacWhirter was piecing things together logically in his mind.
       
      He said at last: "Lady Tressilian? The old lady who was murdered." Then, accusingly: "You'll be Mrs. Strange - the first Mrs. Strange."
       
      Still shivering, she nodded her head.
       
      MacWhirter went on in his slow, careful voice, trying to remember all that he had heard. Rumour had been incorporated with fact.
       
      "They detained your husband - that's right, isn't it? A lot of evidence against him - and then they found that the evidence had been faked by someone ..."
       
      He stopped and looked at her. She wasn't shivering any longer. She was just standing looking at him like a docile child. He found her attitude unendurably affecting.
       
      His voice went on: "I see ... Yes, I see how it was ... He left you for another woman, didn't he? And you loved him ... That's why -" He broke off. He said, "I understand. My wife left me for another man ..."
       
      She flung out her arms. She began stammering wildly, hopelessly: "It's n-n-not -it's n-n-not l-like that. N-not at all -"
       
      He cut her short. His voice was stern and commanding: "Go home. You needn't be afraid any longer. D'you hear? I'll see that you're not hanged!"
       
      XV
       
      Mary Aldin was lying on the drawing-room sofa. Her head ached and her whole body felt worn out.
       
      The inquest had taken place the day before and, after formal evidence of identification, had been adjourned for a week.
       
      Lady Tressilian's funeral was to take place on the morrow. Audrey and Kay had gone into Saltington in the car to get some black clothes. Ted Latimer had gone with them. Nevile and Thomas Royde had gone for a walk, so, except for the servants, Mary was alone in the house.
       
      Superintendent Battle and Inspector Leach had been absent to-day, and that, too, was a relief. It seemed to Mary that with their absence a shadow had been lifted. They had been polite, quite pleasant, in fact, but the ceaseless questions, that quiet, deliberate probing and sifting of every fact, was the sort of thing that wore hardly on the nerves. By now that wooden-faced Superintendent must have learned of every incident, every word, every gesture, even, of the past ten days.
       
      Now, with their going, there was peace. Mary let herself relax. She would forget everything - everything. Just lie back and rest.
       
      "Excuse me, Madam -"
       
      It was Hurstall in the doorway, looking apologetic.
       
      "A gentleman wishes to see you. I have put him in the study."
       
      Mary looked at him in astonishment and some annoyance.
       
      "Who is it?"
       
      "He gave his name as Mr. MacWhirter, Miss."
       
      "I've never heard of him."
       
      "No, Miss."
       
      "He must be a reporter. You shouldn't have let him in, Hurstall."
       
      Hurstall coughed.
       
      "I don't think he is a reporter, Miss. I think he is a friend of Miss Audrey's."
       
      "Oh, that's different."
       
      Smoothing her hair, Mary went wearily across the hall and into the small study. She was, somehow, a little surprised as the tall man standing by the window turned. He did not look in the least like a friend of Audrey's.
       
      However, she said pleasantly: "I'm sorry Mrs. Strange is out. You wanted to see her."
       
      He looked at her in a thoughtful, considering way.
       
      "You'll be Miss Aldin?" be said.
       
      "Yes."
       
      "I dare say you can help me just as well. I want to find some rope."
       
      "Rope?" said Mary in lively amazement.
       
      "Yes, rope. Where would you be likely to keep a piece of rope?"
       
      Afterwards Mary considered that she had been half-hypnotised. If this strange man had volunteered any explanation she might have resisted. But Andrew MacWhirter, unable to think of a plausible explanation, decided, very wisely, to do without one. He just stated quite simply what he wanted. She found herself, semi-dazed, leading MacWhirter in search of rope.
       
      "What kind of rope?" she had asked.
       
      And he had replied: "Any rope will do."
       
      She said doubtfully: "Perhaps in the potting shed -"
       
      "Shall we go there?"
       
      She led the way. There was twine and an odd bit of cord, but MacWhirter shook his head.
       
      He wanted rope - a good-sized coil of rope. "There's the box-room," said Mary hesitatingly. "Ay, that might be the place."
       
      They went indoors and upstairs. Mary threw open the box-room door. MacWhirter stood in the doorway looking in. He gave a curious sigh of contentment.
       
      "There it is," he said.
       
      There was a big coil of rope lying on a chest just inside the door in company with old fishing tackle and some moth-eaten cushions. He laid a hand on her arm and impelled Mary gently forward until they stood looking down on the rope. He touched it and said: "I'd like you to charge your memory with this. Miss Aldin. You'll notice that everything round about is covered with dust. There's no dust on this rope. Just feel it."
       
      She said: "It feels slightly damp," in a surprised tone.
       
      "Just so."
       
      He turned to go out again.
       
      "But the rope? I thought you wanted it?" said Mary in surprise.
       
      MacWhirter smiled.
       
      "I just wanted to know it was there. That's all. Perhaps you wouldn't mind locking this door. Miss Aldin - and taking the key out? Yes. I'd be obliged if you'd hand the key to Superintendent Battle or Inspector Leach. It would be best in their keeping."
       
      As they went downstairs, Mary made an effort to rally herself.
       
      She protested as they reached the main hall: "But really, I don't understand."
       
      MacWhirter said firmly: "There's no need for you to understand." He took her hand and shook it heartily. "I'm very much obliged to you for your co-operation."
       
      Whereupon he went straight out of the front door. Mary wondered if she had been dreaming.
       
      Nevile and Thomas came in presently and the car arrived back shortly afterwards and Mary Aldin found herself envying Kay and Ted for being able to look quite cheerful. They were laughing and joking together. After all, why not? she thought. Camilla Tressilian had been nothing to Kay. All this tragic business was very hard on a bright young creature.
       
      They had just finished lunch when the police came. There was something scared in Hurstall's voice as he announced that Superintendent Battle and Inspector Leach were in the drawing-room.
       
      Superintendent Battle's face was quite genial as he greeted them.
       
      "Hope I haven't disturbed you all," he said apologetically. "But there are one or two things I'd like to know about. This glove, for instance, who does it belong to?"
       
      He held it out, a small yellow chamois leather glove.
       
      He addressed Audrey.
       
      "Is this yours, Mrs. Strange?"
       
      She shook her head.
       
      "No - no, it isn't mine."
       
      "Miss Aldin?"
       
      "I don't think so. I have none of that colour."
       
      "May I see?" Kay held out her hand. "No."
       
      Kay tried, but the glove was too small.
       
      "Miss Aldin?"
       
      Mary tried in her turn.
       
      "It's too small for you also," said Battle. He turned back to Audrey. "I think you'll find it fits you, all right. Your hand is smaller than either of the other ladies'."
       
      Audrey took it from him and slipped it on over her right hand.
       
      Nevile Strange said sharply: "She's already told you, Battle, that it isn't her glove."
       
      "Ah, well," said Battle, "perhaps she made a mistake. Or forgot." Audrey said: "It may be mine - gloves are so alike, aren't they?"
       
      Battle said: "At any rate, it was found outside your window, Mrs. Strange, pushed down into the ivy - with its fellow."
       
      There was a pause. Audrey opened her mouth to speak, then closed it up again. Her eyes fell before the Superintendent's steady gaze.
       
      Nevile sprang forward. "Look here. Superintendent -"
       
      "Perhaps we might have a word with you, Mr. Strange, privately?" Battle said gravely.
       
      "Certainly, Superintendent. Come into the library."
       
      He led the way and the two police officers followed him.
       
      As soon as the door had closed Nevile said sharply: "What's this ridiculous story about gloves outside my wife's window?"
       
      Battle said quietly: "Mr. Strange, we've found some very curious things in this house."
       
      Nevile frowned.
       
      "Curious? What do you mean by curious?"
       
      "I'll show you."
       
      In obedience to a nod. Leach left the room and came back holding a very strange implement.
       
      Battle said: "This consists, as you see, sir, of a steel ball taken from a Victorian fender - a heavy steel ball. Then the head has been sawn off a tennis racquet and the ball has been screwed into the handle of the racquet."
       
      He paused. "I think there can be no doubt that this is what was used to kill Lady Tressilian."
       
      "Horrible!" said Nevile with a shudder. "But where did you find this - this nightmare?"
       
      "The ball had been cleaned and put back on the fender. The murderer had, however, neglected to clean the screw. We found a trace of blood on that. In the same way the handle and the head of the racquet were joined together again by means of adhesive surgical plaster. It was then thrown carelessly back into the cupboard under the stairs, where it would probably have remained quite unnoticed amongst so many others if we hadn't happened to be looking for something of that kind."
       
      "Smart of you, Superintendent." "Just a matter of routine."
       
      "No fingerprints, I suppose?"
       
      "That racquet, which belongs, by its weight, I should say, to Mrs. Kay Strange, has been handled by her and also by you, and both your prints are on it. But it also shows unmistakable signs that someone wearing gloves handled it after you did. There was just one other fingerprint - left this time in inadvertence, I think. That was on the surgical strapping that had been applied to bind the racquet together again. I'm not going for the moment to say whose print that was. I've got some other points to mention first."
       
      Battle paused, then he said: "I want you to prepare yourself for a shock, Mr. Strange. And first I want to ask you something. Are you quite sure that it was your own idea to have this meeting here and that it was not actually suggested to you by Mrs. Audrey Strange?"
       
      "Audrey did nothing of the sort. Audrey -"
       
      The door opened and Thomas Royde came in.
       
      "Sorry to butt in," he said, "but I thought I'd like to be in on this."
       
      Nevile turned a harassed face towards him.
       
      "Do you mind, old fellow? This is all rather private."
       
      "I'm afraid I don't care about that. You see, I heard a name outside." He paused. "Audrey's name."
       
      "And what the hell has Audrey's name got to do with you?" demanded Nevile, his temper rising.
       
      "Well, what has it to do with you, if it comes to that? I haven't said anything definite to Audrey, but I came here meaning to ask her to marry me, and I think she knows it. What's more, I mean to marry her."
       
      Superintendent Battle coughed. Nevile turned to him with a start. "Sorry, Superintendent. This interruption -"
       
      Battle said: "It doesn't matter to me, Mr. Strange. I've got one more question to ask you. That dark blue coat you wore at dinner the night of the murder, it's got fair hairs inside the collar and on the shoulders. Do you know how they got there?"
       
      "I suppose they're my hairs."
       
      "Oh, no, they're not yours, sir. They're a lady's hairs, and there's a red hair on the sleeve."
       
      "I suppose that's my wife's - Kay's. The others, you are suggesting, are Audrey's? Very likely they are. I caught my cuff button in her hair one night outside on the terrace. I remember."
       
      "In that case," murmured Leach, "the fair hair would be on the cuff." "What the devil are you suggesting?" cried Nevile.
       
      "There's a trace of powder, too, inside the coat collar," said Battle. "Primavera Naturelle No. 1 - a very pleasant-scented powder and expensive - but it's no good telling me that you use it, Mr. Strange, because I shan't believe you. And Mrs. Kay Strange uses Orchid Sun Kiss. Mrs. Audrey Strange does use Primavera Naturelle No. 1."
       
      "What are you suggesting?" repeated Nevile. Battle leaned forward.
       
      "I'm suggesting that - on some occasion, Mrs. Audrey Strange wore that coat. It's the only reasonable way the hair and the powder could get where it did. Then you've seen that glove I produced just now? It's her glove, all right. That was the right hand, here's the left." He drew it out of his pocket and put it down on the table. It was crumpled and stained with rusty brown patches.
       
      Nevile said with a note of fear in his voice: "What's that on it?"
       
      "Blood, Mr. Strange," said Battle firmly. "And you'll note this, it's the left hand. Now, Mrs. Audrey Strange is left-handed. I noted that first thing when I saw her sitting with her coffee cup in her right hand and her cigarette in her left at the breakfast table. And the pen tray on her writing-table had been shifted to the left-hand side. It all fits in. The knob from her grate, the gloves outside her window, the hair and powder on the coat. Lady Tressilian was struck on the right temple - but the position of the bed made it impossible for anyone to have stood on the other side of it. It follows that to strike Lady Tressilian a blow with the right hand would be a very awkward thing to do - but it's the natural way to strike for a left-handed person ..."
       
      "Are you suggesting that Audrey - Audrey would make all these elaborate preparations and strike down an old lady whom she had known for years in order to get her hands on that old lady's money?"
       
      Battle shook his head.
       
      "I'm suggesting nothing of the sort. I'm sorry, Mr. Strange, you've got to understand just how things are. This crime, first, last and all the time, was directed against you. Ever since you left her, Audrey Strange has been brooding over the possibilities of revenge. In the end she has become mentally unbalanced. Perhaps she was never mentally very strong. She thought, perhaps, of killing you, but that wasn't enough. She thought at last of getting you hanged for murder. She chose an evening when she knew you had quarrelled with Lady Tressilian. She took the coat from your bedroom and wore it when she struck the old lady down, so that it should be bloodstained. She put your niblick on the floor, knowing we would find your fingerprints on it, and smeared blood and hair on the head of the club. It was she who instilled into your mind the idea of coming here when she was here. And the thing that saved you was the one thing she couldn't count on - the fact that Lady Tressilian rang her bell for Barrett and that Barrett saw you leave the house."
       
      Nevile had buried his face in his hands. He said now: "It's not true. It's not true! Audrey's never borne a grudge against me. You've got the whole thing wrong. She's the straightest, truest creature - without one thought of evil in her heart."
       
      "It's not my business to argue with you, Mr. Strange. I only wanted to prepare you. I shall caution Mrs. Strange and ask her to accompany me. I've got the warrant. You'd better see about getting a solicitor for her."
       
      "It's preposterous. Absolutely preposterous."
       
      "Love turns to hate more easily than you think, Mr. Strange."
       
      "I tell you it's all wrong - preposterous."
       
      Thomas Royde broke in. His voice was quiet and pleasant.
       
      "Do stop repeating that it's preposterous, Nevile. Pull yourself together. Don't you see that the only thing that can help Audrey now is for you to give up all your ideas of chivalry and come out with the truth?"
       
      "The truth? You mean -"
       
      "I mean the truth about Audrey and Adrian." Royde turned to the police officers. "You see, Superintendent, you've got the facts wrong. Nevile didn't leave Audrey. She left him. She ran away with my brother, Adrian. Then Adrian was killed in a car accident. Nevile behaved with the utmost chivalry to Audrey. He arranged that she should divorce him and that he would take the blame."
       
      "Didn't want her name dragged through the mud," muttered Nevile sulkily. "Didn't know anyone knew."
       
      "Adrian wrote out to me just before," explained Thomas briefly. He went on: "Don't you see, Superintendent, that knocks your motive out! Audrey has no cause to hate Nevile. On the contrary, she has every reason to be grateful to him. He's tried to get her to accept an allowance, which she wouldn't do. Naturally, when he wanted her to come and meet Kay she didn't feel she could refuse."
       
      "You see," Nevile put in eagerly, - "that cuts out her motive. Thomas is right." Battle's wooden face was immovable.
       
      "Motive's only one thing," he said. "I may have been wrong about that. But facts are another. All the facts show that she's guilty."
       
      Nevile said meaningly: "All the facts showed that I was guilty two days ago!" Battle seemed a little taken aback.
       
      "That's true enough. But look here, Mr. Strange, at what you're asking me to believe. You're asking me to believe that there's someone who hates both of you - someone who, if the plot against you failed, had laid a second trail to lead to Audrey Strange. Now, can you think of anyone, Mr. Strange, who hates both you and your former wife?"
       
      Nevile's head had dropped into his hands again.
       
      "When you say it like that you make it all sound fantastic!"
       
      "Because it is fantastic. I've got to go by the facts. If Mrs. Strange has any explanation to offer -"
       
      "Did I have any explanation?" asked Nevile.
       
      "It's no good, Mr. Strange. I've got to do my duty."
       
      Battle got up abruptly. He and Leach left the room first. Nevile and Royde came close behind them.
       
      They went on across the hall into the drawing-room. There they stopped.
       
      Audrey Strange got up. She walked forward to meet them. She looked straight at Battle, her lips parted in what was very nearly a smile.
       
      She said very softly: "You want me, don't you?" Battle became very official.
       
      "Mrs. Strange, I have a warrant here for your arrest on the charge of murdering Camilla Tressilian on Monday last, September 12th. I must caution you that anything you say will be written down and may be used in evidence at your trial."
       
      Audrey gave a sigh. Her small clear-cut face was peaceful and pure as a cameo. "It's almost a relief. I'm glad it's - over!"
       
      Nevile sprang forward.
       
      "Audrey - don't say anything - don't speak at all."
       
      She smiled at him.
       
      "But why not, Nevile? It's all true - and I'm so tired."
       
      Leach drew a deep breath. Well, that was that. Mad as a hatter, of course, but it would save a lot of worry! He wondered what had happened to his uncle. The old boy was looking as though he had seen a ghost. Staring at the poor demented creature as though he couldn't believe his eyes. Oh, well, it had been an interesting case. Leach thought comfortably.
       
      And then, an almost grotesque anticlimax, Hurstall opened the drawing-room door and announced: "Mr. MacWhirter."
       
      MacWhirter strode in purposefully. He went straight up to Battle. "Are you the police officer in charge of the Tressilian case?" he asked.
       
      "I am."
       
      "Then I have an important statement to make. I am sorry not to have come forward before, but the importance of something I happened to see on the night of Monday last has only just dawned on me."
       
      He gave a quick glance round the room. "If I can speak to you somewhere?"
       
      Battle turned to Leach.
       
      "Will you stay here with Mrs. Strange?"
       
      Leach said officially: "Yes, sir."
       
      Then he leant forward and whispered something into the other's ear.
       
      Battle turned to MacWhirter. "Come this way."
       
      He led the way into the library.
       
      "Now then, what's all this? My colleague tells me that he's seen you before - last winter?"
       
      "Quite right," said MacWhirter. "Attempted suicide. That's part of my story." "Go on, Mr. MacWhirter."
       
      "Last January I attempted to kill myself by throwing myself off Stark Head. This year the fancy took me to revisit the spot. I walked up there on Monday night. I stood there for some time. I looked down at the sea and across to Easterhead Bay and I then looked to my left. That is to say, I looked across towards this house. I could see it quite plainly in the moonlight."
       
      "Yes."
       
      "Until to-day I had not realised that that was the night when a murder was committed."
       
      He leant forward. "I'll tell you what I saw." XVI
       
      It was really only about five minutes before Battle returned to the drawing-room, but to those there it seemed much longer.
       
      Kay had suddenly lost control of herself. She had cried out to Audrey: "I knew it was you. I always knew it was you. I knew you were up to something -"
       
      Mary Aldin said quickly: "Please, Kay." Nevile said sharply: "Shut up, Kay, for God's sake." Ted Latimer came over to Kay, who had begun to cry. "Get a grip on yourself," he said kindly.
       
      He said to Nevile angrily: "You don't seem to realise that Kay has been under a lot of strain! Why don't you look after her a bit. Strange?"
       
      "I'm all right," said Kay.
       
      "For two pins," said Ted, "I'd take you away from the lot of them!"
       
      Inspector Leach cleared his throat. A lot of injudicious things were said at times like these, as he well knew. The unfortunate part was that they were usually remembered most inconveniently afterwards.
       
      Battle came back into the room. His face was expressionless.
       
      He said: "Will you put one or two things together, Mrs. Strange? I'm afraid Inspector Leach must come upstairs with you."
       
      Mary Aldin said: "I'll come, too."
       
      When the two women had left the room with the Inspector, Nevile said anxiously: "Well, what did that chap want?"
       
      Battle said slowly: "Mr. MacWhirter tells a very odd story." "Does it help Audrey? Are you still determined to arrest her?" "I've told you, Mr. Strange. I've got to do my duty." Nevile turned away, the eagerness dying out of his face. He said: "I'd better telephone Trelawny, I suppose."
       
      "There's no immediate hurry for that, Mr. Strange. There's a certain experiment I want to make first as a result of Mr. MacWhirter's statement. I'll just see that Mrs. Strange gets off first."
       
      Audrey was coming down the stairs, Inspector Leach beside her. Her face still had that remote, detached composure.
       
      Nevile came towards her, his hands outstretched. "Audrey -"
       
      Her colourless glance swept over him. She said: "It's all right, Nevile. I don't mind. I don't mind anything."
       
      Thomas Royde stood by the front door, almost as though he would bar the way out.
       
      A very faint smile came to her lips. "‘True Thomas,'" she murmured. He mumbled: "If there's anything I can do -" "No one can do anything," said Audrey.
       
      She went out with her head high. A police car was waiting outside with Sergeant Jones in it. Audrey and Leach got in.
       
      Ted Latimer murmured appreciatively: "Lovely exit!"
       
      Nevile turned on him furiously. Superintendent Battle dexterously interposed his bulk and raised a soothing voice: "As I said, I've got an experiment to make. Mr. MacWhirter is waiting down at the ferry. We're to join him there in ten minutes' time. We shall be going out in a motor-launch, so the ladies had better wrap up warmly. In ten minutes, please."
       
      He might have been a stage manager ordering a company on to the stage. He took no notice at all of their puzzled faces.
       
      Zero Hour
       
      I
       
      It was chilly on the water and Kay hugged the little fur jacket she was wearing closer round her.
       
      The launch chugged down the river below Gull's Point, and then swung round into the little bay that divided Gull's Point from the frowning mass of Stark Head.
       
      Once or twice a question began to be asked, but each time Superintendent Battle held up a large hand rather like a cardboard ham, intimating that the time had not come yet. So the silence was unbroken save for the rushing of the water past them. Kay and Ted stood together looking down into the water. Nevile was slumped down, his legs stuck out. Mary Aldin and Thomas Royde sat up in the bows. And one and all glanced from time to time curiously at the tall, aloof figure of MacWhirter by the stern. He looked at none of them, but stood with his back turned and his shoulders hunched up.
       
      Not until they were under the frowning shadow of Stark Head did Battle throttle down the engine and begin to speak his piece. He spoke without self-consciousness and in a tone that was more reflective than anything else.
       
      "This has been a very odd case - one of the oddest I've ever known, and I'd like to say something on the subject of murder generally. What I'm going to say is not original - actually I overheard young Mr. Daniels, the K.C., say something of the kind, and I wouldn't be surprised if he'd got it from someone else - he'd a trick of doing that!
       
      "It's this! When you read the account of a murder - or, say, a fiction story based on murder - you usually begin with the murder itself. That's all wrong. The murder begins a long time beforehand. A murder is the culmination of a lot of different circumstances, all converging at a given moment at a given point. People are brought into it from different parts of the globe and for unforeseen reasons. Mr. Royde is here from Malaya. Mr. MacWhirter is here because he wanted to revisit a spot where he once tried to commit suicide. The murder itself is the end of the story. It's Zero Hour!"
       
      He paused. "It's Zero Hour now."
       
      Five faces were turned to him - only five, for MacWhirter did not turn his head. Five puzzled faces.
       
      Mary Aldin said: "You mean that Lady Tressilian's death was the culmination of a long train of circumstances?"
       
      "No, Miss Aldin, not Lady Tressilian's death. Lady Tressilian's death was only incidental to the main object of the murderer. The murder I am talking of is the murder of Audrey Strange."
       
      He listened to the sharp indrawing of breath. He wondered if, suddenly, someone was afraid ...
       
      "This crime was planned quite a long time ago - probably as early as last winter. It was planned down to the smallest detail. It had one object, and one object only: that Audrey Strange should be hanged by the neck till she was dead ..."
       
      "It was very cunningly planned by someone who thought themselves very clever. Murderers are usually vain. There was first the superficial unsatisfactory evidence against Nevile Strange which we were meant to see through. But, having been presented with one lot of faked evidence, it was not considered likely that we should consider a second edition of the same thing. And yet, if you come to look at it, all the evidence against Audrey Strange could be faked. The weapon taken from her fireplace, her gloves - the left-hand glove dipped in blood - hidden in the ivy outside her window. The powder she uses dusted on the inside of a coat collar, and a few hairs placed there, too. Her own fingerprint, occurring quite naturally on a roll of adhesive plaster taken from her room. Even the left-handed nature of the blow."
       
      "And there was the final damning evidence of Mrs. Strange herself -I don't believe there's one of you (except the one who knows) who can credit her innocence after the way she behaved when we took her into custody. Practically admitted her guilt, didn't she? I mightn't have believed in her being innocent myself if it hadn't been for a private experience of my own ... Struck me right between the eyes, it did, when I saw and heard her - because, you see, I'd known another girl who did that very same thing, who admitted guilt when she wasn't guilty - and Audrey Strange was looking at me with that other girl's eyes ..."
       
      "I'd got to do my duty. I knew that. We police officers have to act on evidence -not on what we feel and think. But I can tell you that at that minute I prayed for a miracle - because I didn't see that anything but a miracle was going to help that poor lady."
       
      "Well, I got my miracle. Got it right away!"
       
      "'Mr. MacWhirter, here, turned up with his story."
       
      He paused.
       
      "Mr. MacWhirter, will you repeat what you told me up at the house?"
       
      MacWhirter turned. He spoke in short, sharp sentences that carried conviction just because of their conciseness.
       
      He told of his rescue from the cliff the preceding January and of his wish to revisit the scene. He went on: "I went up there on Monday night. I stood there lost in my own thoughts. It must have been, I suppose, in the neighbourhood of eleven o'clock. I looked across at that house on the point - Gull's Point, as I know it now to be."
       
      He paused and then went on: "There was a rope hanging from a window of that house into the sea. I saw a man climbing up that rope ..."
       
      Just a moment elapsed before they took it in. Mary Aldin cried out: "Then it was an outsider after all? It was nothing to do with any of us. It was an ordinary burglar!"
       
      "Not quite so fast," said Battle. "It was someone who came from the other side of the river, yes, since he swam across. But someone in the house had to have the rope ready for him, therefore someone inside must have been concerned."
       
      He went on slowly: "And we know of someone who was on the other side of the river that night - someone who wasn't seen between ten-thirty and a quarter-past eleven, and who might have been swimming over and back. Someone who might have had a friend on this side of the water."
       
      He added: "Eh, Mr. Latimer?"
       
      Ted took a step backward. He cried out shrilly: "But I can't swim! Everybody knows I can't swim. Kay, tell them I can't swim."
       
      "Of course Ted can't swim!" Kay cried. "Is that so?" asked Battle pleasantly.
       
      He moved along the boat as Ted moved in the other direction. There was some clumsy movement and a splash.
       
      "Dear me," said Superintendent Battle in deep concern. "Mr. Latimer's gone overboard."
       
      His hand closed like a vice on Nevile's arm as the latter was preparing to jump in after him.
       
      "No, no, Mr. Strange. No need for you to get yourself wet. There are two of my men handy - fishing in the dinghy there." He peered over the side of the boat. "It's quite true," he said with interest. "He can't swim. It's all right. They've got him. I'll apologise presently, but, really, there's only one way to make quite sure that a person can't swim and that's to throw them in and watch. You see, Mr. Strange, I like to be thorough. I had to eliminate Mr. Latimer first. Mr. Royde, here, has got a groggy arm; he couldn't do any rope-climbing."
       
      Battle's voice took on a purring quality.
       
      "So that brings us to you, doesn't it, Mr. Strange? A good athlete, a mountain climber, a swimmer, and all that. You went over on the 10.30 ferry all right, but no one can swear to seeing you at the Easterhead Hotel until a quarter-past eleven in spite of your story of having been looking for Mr. Latimer then."
       
      Nevile jerked his arm away. He threw back his head and laughed. "You suggest that I swam across the river and climbed op a rope -" "Which you had left ready hanging from your window," said Battle.
       
      "Killed Lady Tressilian and swam back again? Why should I do such a fantastic thing? And who laid all those clues against me? I suppose I laid them against myself?"
       
      "Exactly," said Battle. "And not half a bad idea, either." "And why should I want to kill Camilla Tressilian?"
       
      "You didn't," said Battle. "But you did want to hang the woman who left you for another man. You're a bit unhinged mentally, you know. Have been ever since you were a child - I've looked up that old bow and arrow case, by the way. Anyone who does you an injury has to be punished - and death doesn't seem to you an excessive penalty for them to pay. Death by itself wasn't enough for Audrey - your Audrey whom you loved - oh, yes, you loved her all right, before your love turned to hate. You had to think of some special kind of death, some long-drawn-out specialised death. And when you'd thought of it, the fact that it entailed the killing of a woman who had been something like a mother to you didn't worry you in the least ..."
       
      Nevile said, and his voice was quite gentle: "All lies! All lies! And I'm not mad. I'm not mad."
       
      Battle said contemptuously: "Flicked you on the raw, didn't she, when she went off and left you for another man? Hurt your vanity? To think she should walk out on you. You salved your pride by pretending to the world at large that you'd left her and you married another girl who was in love with you just to bolster up that belief. But underneath you planned what you'd do to Audrey. You couldn't think of anything worse than this - to get her hanged. A fine idea - pity you hadn't the brains to carry it out better!"
       
      Nevile's tweed-coated shoulders moved, a queer, wriggling movement.
       
      Battle went on: "Childish - all that niblick stuff! Those crude trails pointing to you! Audrey must have known what you were after! She must have laughed up her sleeve! Thinking I didn't suspect you! You murderers are funny little fellows! So puffed up. Always thinking you've been clever and resourceful and really being quite pitifully childish ..."
       
      It was a strange, queer scream that came from Nevile.
       
      "It was a clever idea - it was. You'd never have guessed. Never! Not if it hadn't been for this interfering jackanapes, this pompous Scotch fool. I'd thought out every detail - every detail! I can't help what went wrong. How was I to know Royde knew the truth about Audrey and Adrian? Audrey and Adrian ... Curse Audrey - she shall hang - you've got to hang her -I want her to die afraid - to die - to die ... I hate her. I tell you I want her to die ..."
       
      The high, whinnying voice died away. Nevile slumped down and began to cry quietly.
       
      "Oh, God," said Mary Aldin. She was white to the lips.
       
      Battle said gently, in a low voice: "I'm sorry, but I had to push him over the edge ... There was precious little evidence, you know."
       
      Nevile was still whimpering. His voice was like a child's.
       
      "I want her to be hanged. I do want her to be hanged ..."
       
      Mary Aldin shuddered and turned to Thomas Royde.
       
      He took her hands in his.
       
      II
       
      "I was always frightened," said Audrey.
       
      They were sitting on the terrace. Audrey sat close to Superintendent Battle. Battle had resumed his holiday and was at Gull's Point as a friend.
       
      "Always frightened - all the time," said Audrey.
       
      Battle said, nodding his head: "I knew you were dead scared first moment I saw you. And you'd got that colourless, reserved way people have who are holding some very strong emotion in check. It might have been love or hate, but actually it was fear, wasn't it?"
       
      She nodded.
       
      "I began to be afraid of Nevile soon after we were married. But the awful thing is, you see, that I didn't know why. I began to think that I was mad."
       
      "It wasn't you," said Battle.
       
      "Nevile seemed to me when I married him so particularly sane and normal -always delightfully good-tempered and pleasant."
       
      "Interesting," said Battle. "He played the part of the good sportsman, you know. That's why he could keep his temper so well at tennis. His role as a good sportsman was more important to him than winning matches. But it put a strain upon him, of course; playing a part always does. He got worse underneath."
       
      "Underneath," whispered Audrey with a shudder. "Always underneath. Nothing you could get hold of. Just sometimes a word or a look and then I'd fancy I'd imagined it ... Something queer. And then, as I say, I thought I must be queer. And I went on getting more and more afraid - the kind of unreasoning fear, you know, that makes you sick!"
       
      "I told myself I was going mad. That I couldn't help it I felt I'd do anything in the world to get away! And then Adrian came and told me he loved me, and I thought it would be wonderful to go away with him, and he said ..."
       
      She stopped.
       
      "You know what happened? I went off to meet Adrian - he never came ... he was killed ... I felt as though Nevile had managed it, somehow."
       
      "Perhaps he did," said Battle. Audrey turned a startled face to him. "Oh, do you think so?"
       
      "We'll never know now. Motor accidents can be arranged. Don't brood on it, though, Mrs. Strange. As likely as not, it just happened naturally."
       
      "I -I was all broken up. I went back to the Rectory - Adrian's home. We were to have written to his mother, but as she didn't know about us, I thought I wouldn't tell her and give her pain. And Nevile came almost at once. He was very nice -and kind - and all the time I talked to him I was quite sick with fear! He said no one need know about Adrian, that I could divorce him on evidence he would send me and that he was going to remarry afterwards. I felt so thankful. I knew he had thought Kay attractive and I hoped that everything would turn out right and that I should get over this queer obsession of mine. I still thought it must be me."
       
      "But I couldn't get rid of it - quite. I never felt I'd really escaped. And then I met Nevile in the Park one day and he explained that he did so want me and Kay to be friends and suggested that we should all come here in September. I couldn't refuse - how could I? After all the kind things he'd done."
       
      "'Will you walk into my parlour? Said the spider to the fly,'" remarked Superintendent Battle.
       
      Audrey shivered. "Yes, just that ..."
       
      "Very clever he was about that," said Battle. "Protested so loudly to everyone that it was his idea, that everyone at once got the impression that it wasn't."
       
      Audrey said: "And then I got here - and it was like a kind of nightmare. I knew something awful was going to happen -I knew Nevile meant it to happen - and that it was to happen to me. But I didn't know what it was. I think, you know, that I nearly did go off my head! I was just paralysed with fright - like you are in a dream when something's going to happen and you can't move ..."
       
      "I've always thought," said Superintendent Battle, "that I'd like to have seen a snake fascinate a bird so that it can't fly away - but now I'm not so sure."
       
      Audrey went on.
       
      "Even when Lady Tressilian was killed I didn't realise what it meant. I was puzzled. I didn't even suspect Nevile. I knew he didn't care about money - it was absurd to think he'd kill her in order to inherit fifty thousand pounds."
       
      "I thought over and over again about Mr. Treves and the story he had told that evening. Even then I didn't connect it with Nevile. Treves had mentioned some physical peculiarity by which he could recognise the child of long ago. I've got a scar on my ear, but I don't think anyone else has any sign that you'd notice."
       
      Battle said: "Miss Aldin has a lock of white hair. Thomas Royde has a stiff right arm, which might not have been only the result of an earthquake. Mr. Ted Latimer has rather an odd-shaped skull. And Nevile Strange -"
       
      He paused.
       
      "Surely there was no physical peculiarity about Nevile?"
       
      "Oh, yes, there was. His left-hand little finger is shorter than his right. That's very unusual, Mrs. Strange - very unusual indeed."
       
      "So that was it?"
       
      "That was it."
       
      "And Nevile hung that sign on the lift?"
       
      "Yes. Nipped down there and back whilst Royde and Latimer were giving the old boy drinks. Clever and simple - doubt if we could ever prove that was murder."
       
      Audrey shivered again.
       
      "Now, now," said Battle. "It's all over now, my dear. Go on talking."
       
      "You're very clever ... I haven't talked so much for years!"
       
      "No, that's what's been wrong. When did it first dawn on you what Master Nevile's game was?"
       
      "I don't know exactly. It came to me all at once. He himself had been cleared and that left all of us. And then, suddenly, I saw him looking at me - a sort of gloating look. And I knew! That was when -" She stopped abruptly.
       
      "That was when what - ?"
       
      Audrey said slowly: "When I thought a quick way out would be - best."
       
      Superintendent Battle shook his head.
       
      "Never give in. That's my motto."
       
      "Oh, you're quite right. But you don't know what it does to you being so afraid for so long. It paralyses you - you can't think - you can't plan - you just wait for something awful to happen. And then, when it does happen" - she gave a sudden, quick smile - "you'd be surprised at the relief! No more waiting and fearing - it's come. You'll think I'm quite demented, I suppose, if I tell you that when you came to arrest me for murder I didn't mind at all. Nevile had done his worst and it was over. I felt so safe going off with Inspector Leach."
       
      "That's partly why we did it," said Battle. "I wanted you out of that madman's reach. And besides, if I wanted to break him down I wanted to be able to count on the shock of the reaction. He'd seen his plan come off, as he thought - so the jolt would be all the greater."
       
      "If he hadn't broken down would there have been any evidence?"
       
      "Not too much. There was MacWhirter's story of seeing a man climb up a rope in the moonlight. And there was the rope itself confirming his story, coiled up in the attic and still faintly damp. It was raining that night, you know."
       
      He paused and stared hard at Audrey as though he were expecting her to say something.
       
      As she merely looked interested he went on: "And there was the pinstripe suit. He stripped, of course, in the dark on that rocky point on the Easterhead Bay side, and thrust his suit into a niche in the rock. As it happened, he put it down on a decayed bit of fish washed up by the flood tide. It made a stained patch on the shoulder - and it smelt. There was some talk, I found out, about the drains being wrong in the hotel. Nevile himself put that story about. He'd got his raincoat on over his suit, but the smell was a pervasive one. Then he got the wind up about that suit afterwards and at the first opportunity he took it off to the cleaners and, like a fool, didn't give his own name. Took a name at random, actually one he'd seen in the hotel register. That's how your friend got hold of it and, having a good head on him, he linked it up with the man climbing up the rope. You step on decayed fish, but you don't put your shoulder down on it unless you have taken your clothes off to bathe at night, and no one would bathe for pleasure on a wet night in September. He fitted the whole thing together. Very ingenious man, Mr. MacWhirter."
       
      "More than ingenious," said Audrey.
       
      "M'm, well, perhaps. Like to know about him? I can tell you something of his history."
       
      Audrey listened attentively. Battle found her a good listener. She said: "I owe a lot to him - and to you."
       
      "Don't owe very much to me," said Superintendent Battle. "If I hadn't been a fool I'd have seen the point of that bell."
       
      "Bell? What bell?"
       
      "The bell in Lady Tressilian's room. Always did feel there was something wrong about that bell. I nearly got it, too, when I came down the stairs from the top floor and saw one of those poles you open windows with."
       
      "That was the whole point of the bell, see - to give Nevile Strange an alibi. Lady T. didn't remember what she had rung for - of course she didn't, because she hadn't rung at all! Nevile rang the bell from outside in the passage with that long pole; the wires ran along the ceiling. So down comes Barrett and sees Mr. Nevile Strange go downstairs and out, and she finds Lady Tressilian alive and well. The whole business of the maid was fishy. What's the good of doping her for a murder that's going to be committed before midnight! Ten to one she won't have gone off properly by then. But it fixes the murder as an inside job, and it allows a little time for Nevile to play his role of first suspect - then Barrett speaks and Nevile is so triumphantly cleared that no one is going to inquire very closely as to exactly what time he got to the hotel. We know he didn't cross back by ferry, and no boats had been taken. There remained the possibility of swimming. He was a powerful swimmer, but even then the time must have been short. Up the rope he's left hanging into his bedroom and a good deal of water on the floor, as we noticed (but without seeing the point, I'm sorry to say). Then into his blue coat and trousers, along to Lady Tressilian's room - we won't go into that -wouldn't have taken more than a couple of minutes; he'd fixed up that steel ball beforehand - then back, out of his clothes, down the rope and back to Easterhead."
       
      "Suppose Kay had come in?"
       
      "She'd been mildly doped, I'll bet. She was yawning from dinner on, so they tell me. Besides, he'd taken care to have a quarrel with her, so that she'd lock her door and keep out of his way."
       
      "I'm trying to think if I noticed the ball was gone from the fender. I don't think I did. When did he put it back?"
       
      "Next morning when all the hullabaloo arose. Once he got back in Ted Latimer's car, he had all night to clear up his traces and fix things, mend the tennis racquet, etc. By the way, he hit the old lady backhanded, you know. That's why the crime appeared to be left-handed. Strange's backhand was always his strong point, remember!"
       
      "Don't - don't" - Audrey put up her hands. "I can't bear any more." He smiled at her.
       
      "All the same, it's done you good to talk it all out. Mrs. Strange, may I be impertinent and give you some advice?"
       
      "Yes, please."
       
      "You lived for eight years with a criminal lunatic - that's enough to sap any woman's nerves. But you've got to snap out of it now, Mrs. Strange. You don't need to be afraid any more - and you've got to make yourself realise that."
       
      Audrey smiled at him. The frozen look had gone from her face; it was a sweet, rather timid, but confiding face, with the wide-apart eyes full of gratitude.
       
      She said, hesitating a little: "You told the others there was a girl - a girl who acted as I did?"
       
      Battle slowly nodded his head.
       
      "My own daughter," he said. "So you see, my dear, that miracle had to happen. These things are sent to teach us!"
       
      III
       
      Andrew MacWhirter was packing.
       
      He laid three shirts carefully in his suitcase, and then that dark blue suit which he had remembered to fetch from the cleaners. Two suits left by two different MacWhirters had been too much for the girl in charge.
       
      There was a tap on the door and he called "Come in."
       
      Audrey Strange walked in. She said: "I've come to thank you - are you packing?"
       
      "Yes. I'm leaving here to-night. And sailing the day after to-morrow."
       
      "For South America?"
       
      "For Chile."
       
      She said: "I'll pack for you."
       
      He protested, but she overbore him. He watched her as worked deftly and methodically.
       
      "There," she said, when she had finished. "You did that well," said MacWhirter.
       
      There was a silence. Then Audrey said: "You saved my life. If you hadn't happened to see what you did see -"
       
      She broke off.
       
      Then she said: "Did you realise at once that night on the cliff when you - you stopped me going over - when you said 'Go home, I'll see that you're not hanged' - did you realise then that you'd got some important evidence?"
       
      "Not precisely," said MacWhirter. "I had to think it out." "Then how could you say - what you did say?"
       
      MacWhirter always felt annoyed when he had to explain the intense simplicity of his thought processes.
       
      "I meant just precisely that - that I intended to prevent you from being hanged."
       
      The colour came up in Audrey's cheeks.
       
      "Supposing I had done it?"
       
      "That would have made no difference."
       
      "Did you think I had done it, then?"
       
      "I didn't speculate on the matter overmuch. I was inclined to believe you were innocent, but it would have made no difference to my course of action."
       
      "And then you remembered the man on the rope?"
       
      MacWhirter was silent for a few moments. Then he cleared his throat.
       
      "You may as well know, I suppose, I did not actually see a man climbing up a rope - indeed, I could not have done so, for I was up on Stark Head on Sunday night, not on Monday. I deduced what must have happened from the evidence of the suit and my suppositions were confirmed by the finding of a wet rope in the attic."
       
      From red Audrey had gone white. She said incredulously: "Your story was all a lie?"
       
      "Deductions would not have carried weight with the police. I had to say I saw what happened."
       
      "But - you might have had to swear to it at my trial."
       
      "Yes."
       
      "You would have done that?"
       
      "I would."
       
      Audrey cried incredulously: "And you - you are the man who lost his job and came down to throwing himself off a cliff because he wouldn't tamper with the truth!"
       
      "I have a great regard for the truth. But I've discovered there are things that matter more."
       
      "Such as?"
       
      "You," said MacWhirter.
       
      Audrey's eyes dropped. MacWhirter cleared his throat in an embarrassed manner.
       
      "There's no need for you to feel under a great obligation or anything of that kind. You'll never hear of me again after to-day. The police have got Strange's confession and they'll not need my evidence. In any case, I hear he's so bad he'll maybe not live to come to trial."
       
      "I'm glad of that," said Audrey. "You were fond of him once?" "Of the man I thought he was."
       
      MacWhirter nodded. "We've all felt that way, maybe." He went on: "Everything's turned out well. Superintendent Battle was able to act upon my story and break down the man -"
       
      Audrey interrupted. She said: "He worked upon your story, yes. But I don't believe you fooled him. He deliberately shut his eyes."
       
      "Why do you say that?"
       
      "When he was talking to me he mentioned it was lucky you saw what you did in the moonlight, and then added something - a sentence or two later - about it being a rainy night."
       
      MacWhirter was taken aback. "That's true. On Monday night I doubt if I'd have seen anything at all."
       
      "It doesn't matter," said Audrey.
       
      "He knew that what you pretended to have seen was what had really happened. But it explains why he worked on Nevile to break him down. He suspected Nevile as soon as Thomas told him about me and Adrian. He knew then that if he was right about the kind of crime - he had fixed on the wrong person - what he wanted was some kind of evidence to use on Nevile. He wanted, as he said, a miracle - you were Superintendent Battle's prayer."
       
      "That's a curious thing for him to say," said MacWhirter dryly. "So you see," said Audrey, "you are a miracle. My special miracle."
       
      MacWhirter said earnestly: "I'd not like you to feel you're under an obligation to me. I'm going right out of your life -"
       
      "Must you?" said Audrey.
       
      He stared at her. The colour came up, flooding her ears and temples.
       
      She said: "Won't you take me with you?"
       
      "You don't know what you're saying!"
       
      "Yes, I do. I'm doing something very difficult - but that matters to me more than life or death. I know the time is very short. By the way, I'm conventional; I should like to be married before we go!"
       
      "Naturally," said MacWhirter, deeply shocked. "You don't imagine I'd suggest anything else?"
       
      "I'm sure you wouldn't," said Audrey.
       
      MacWhirter said: "I'm not your kind. I thought you'd marry that quiet fellow who's cared for you so long."
       
      "Thomas? Dear, true Thomas. He's too true. He's faithful to the image of a girl he loved years ago. But the person he really cares for is Mary Aldin, though he doesn't know it yet himself."
       
      MacWhirter took a step towards her. He spoke sternly. "Do you mean what you're saying?"
       
      "Yes ... I want to be with you always, never to leave you. If you go I shall never find anybody like you, and I shall go lonely all my days."
       
      MacWhirter sighed. He took out his wallet and carefully examined its contents.
       
      He murmured: "A special licence comes expensive. I'll need to go to the bank first thing to-morrow."
       
      "I could lend you some money," murmured Audrey.
       
      "You'll do nothing of the kind. If I marry a woman, I pay for the licence. You understand?"
       
      "You needn't," said Audrey softly, "look so stern."
       
      He said gently as he came towards her: "Last time I had my hands on you, you felt like a bird - struggling to escape. You'll never escape now ..."
       
      She said: "I shall never want to escape."

      #3
        bachhop2403 28.05.2009 19:09:29 (permalink)
        Second story: Why didn't they ask Evans?

        CHAPTER 1 The Accident
         
        Bobby Jones teed up his ball, gave a short preliminary waggle, took the club back slowly, then brought it down and through with the rapidity of lightning.
         
        Did the ball fly down the fairway straight and true, rising as it went and soaring over the bunker to land within an easy mashie shot of the fourteenth green?
         
        No, it did not. Badly topped, it scudded along the ground and embedded itself firmly in the bunker!
         
        There were no eager crowds to groan with dismay. The solitary witness of the shot manifested no surprise. And that is easily explained - for it was not the American-bom master of the game who had played the shot, but merely the fourth son of the Vicar ofMarchboh - a small seaside town on the coast of Wales.
         
        Bobby uttered a decidedly profane ejaculation.
         
        He was an amiable-looking young man of about eight and twenty. His best friend could not have said that he was handsome, but his face was an eminently likeable one, and his eyes had the honest brown friendliness of a dog's.
         
        'I get worse every day,' he muttered dejectedly.
         
        'You press,' said his companion.
         
        Dr Thomas was a middle-aged man with grey hair and a red cheerful face. He himself never took a full swing. He played short straight shots down the middle, and usually beat more brilliant but more erratic players.
         
        Bobby attacked his ball fiercely with a niblick. The third time was successful. The ball lay a short distance from the green which Dr Thomas had reached with two creditable iron shots.
         
        'Your hole,' said Bobby.
         
        They proceeded to the next tee.
         
        The doctor drove first - a nice straight shot, but with no great distance about it.
         
        Bobby sighed, teed his ball, reteed it, waggled his club a long time, took back stiffly, shut his eyes, raised his head, depressed his right shoulder, did everything he ought not to have done and hit a screamer down the middle of the course.
         
        He drew a deep breath of satisfaction. The well-known golfer's gloom passed from his eloquent face to be succeeded by the equally well-known golfer's exultation.
         
        'I know now what I've been doing,' said Bobby - quite untruthfully.
         
        A perfect iron shot, a little chip with a mashie and Bobby lay dead. He achieved a birdie four and Dr Thomas was reduced to one up.
         
        Full of confidence, Bobby stepped on to the sixteenth tee.
         
        He again did everything he should not have done, and this time no miracle occurred. A terrific, a magnificent, an almost superhuman slice happened! The ball went round at right angles.
         
        'If that had been straight - whew!' said Dr Thomas.
         
        'Hell,' said Bobby bitterly. 'Hullo, I thought I heard a shout!
         
        Hope the ball didn't hit anyone.' He peered out to the right. It was a difficult light. The sun was on the point of setting, and, looking straight into it, it was hard to see anything distinctly. Also there was a slight mist rising from the sea. The edge of the cliff was a few hundred yards away.
         
        'The footpath runs along there,' said Bobby. 'But the ball can't possibly have travelled as far as that. All the same, I did think I heard a cry. Did you?' But the doctor had heard nothing.
         
        Bobby went after his ball. He had some difficulty in finding it, but ran it to earth at last. It was practically unplayable embedded in a furze bush. He had a couple of hacks at it, then picked it up and called out to his companion that he gave up the hole.
         
        The doctor came over towards him since the next tee was right on the edge of the cliff.
         
        The seventeenth was Bobby's particular bugbear. At it you had to drive over a chasm. The distance was not actually so great, but the attraction of the depths below was overpowering.
         
        They had crossed the footpath which now ran inland to their left, skirting the very edge of the cliff.
         
        The doctor took an iron and just landed on the other side.
         
        Bobby took a deep breath and drove. The ball scudded forward and disappeared over the lip of the abyss.
         
        'Every single dashed time,' said Bobby bitterly. 'I do the same dashed idiotic thing.' He skirted the chasm, peering over. Far below the sea sparkled, but not every ball was lost in its depths. The drop was sheer at the top, but below it shelved gradually.
         
        Bobby walked slowly along. There was, he knew, one place where one could scramble down fairly easily. Caddies did so, hurling themselves over the edge and reappearing triumphant and panting with the missing ball.
         
        Suddenly Bobby stiffened and called to his companion.
         
        'I say, doctor, come here. What do you make of that?' Some forty feet below was a dark heap of something that looked like old clothes.
         
        The doctor caught his breath.
         
        'By Jove,' he said. 'Somebody's fallen over the cliff. We must get down to him.' Side by side the two men scrambled down the rock, the more athletic Bobby helping the other. At last they reached the ominous dark bundle. It was a man of about forty, and he was still breathing, though unconscious.
         
        The doctor examined him, touching his limbs, feeling his pulse, drawing down the lids of his eyes. He knelt down beside him and completed his examination. Then he looked up at Bobby, who was standing there feeling rather sick, and slowly shook his head.
         
        'Nothing to be done,' he said. 'His number's up, poor fellow.
         
        His back's broken. Well, well. I suppose he wasn't familiar with the path, and when the mist came up he walked over the edge. I've told the council more than once there ought to be a railing just here.' He stood up again.
         
        'I'll go off and get help,' he said. 'Make arrangements to have the body got up. It'll be dark before we know where we are.
         
        Will you stay here?' Bobby nodded.
         
        "There's nothing to be done for him, I suppose?' he asked.
         
        The doctor shook his head.
         
        'Nothing. It won't be long - the pulse is weakening fast.
         
        He'll last another twenty minutes at most. Just possible he may recover consciousness before the end; but very likely he won't.
         
        Still-' 'Rather,' said Bobby quickly. 'I'll stay. You get along. If he does come to, there's no drug or anything -'he hesitated.
         
        The doctor shook his head.
         
        "They'll be no pain,' he said. 'No pain at all.' Turning away, he began rapidly to climb up the cliff again.
         
        Bobby watched him till he disappeared over the top with a wave of his hand.
         
        Bobby moved a step or two along the narrow ledge, sat down on a projection in the rock and lit a cigarette. The business had shaken him. Up to now he had never come in contact with illness or death.
         
        What rotten luck there was in the world! A swirl of mist on a fine evening, a false step - and life came to an end. Fine healthy-looking fellow too - probably never known a day's illness in his life. The pallor of approaching death couldn't disguise the deep tan of the skin. A man who had lived an outof-door life - abroad, perhaps. Bobby studied him more closely - the crisp curling chestnut hair just touched with grey at the temples, the big nose, the strong jaw, the white teeth just showing through the parted lips. Then the broad shoulders and the fine sinewy hands. The legs were twisted at a curious angle.
         
        Bobby shuddered and brought his eyes up again to the face. An attractive face, humorous, determined, resourceful. The eyes, he thought, were probably blue And just as he reached that point in his thoughts, the eyes suddenly opened.
         
        They were blue - a clear deep blue. They looked straight at Bobby. There was nothing uncertain or hazy about them. They seemed completely conscious. They were watchful and at the same time they seemed to be asking a question.
         
        Bobby got up quickly and came towards the man. Before he got there, the other spoke. His voice was not weak - it came out clear and resonant.
         
        'Why didn't they ask EvansV he said.
         
        And then a queer little shudder passed over him, the eyelids dropped, the jaw fell.
         
        The man was dead.
         
        CHAPTER 2 Concerning Fathers
         
        Bobby knelt down beside him, but there was no doubt. The man was dead. A last moment of consciousness, that sudden question, and then - the end.
         
        Rather apologetically, Bobby put his hand into the dead man's pocket and, drawing out a silk handkerchief, he spread it reverently over the dead face. There was nothing more he could do.
         
        Then he noticed that in his action he had jerked something else out of the pocket. It was a photograph and in the act of replacing it he glanced at the pictured face.
         
        It was a woman's face, strangely haunting in quality. A fair woman with wide-apart eyes. She seemed little more than a girl, certainly under thirty, but it was the arresting quality of her beauty rather than the beauty itself that seized upon the boy's imagination. It was the kind of face, he thought, not easy to forget.
         
        Gently and reverently, he replaced the photograph in the pocket from which it had come, then he sat down again to wait for the doctor's return.
         
        The time passed very slowly - or at least so it seemed to the waiting boy. Also, he had just remembered something. He had promised his father to play the organ at the evening service at six o'clock and it was now ten minutes to six. Naturally, his father would understand the circumstances, but all the same he wished that he had remembered to send a message by the doctor. The Rev. Thomas Jones was a man of extremely nervous temperament. He was, par excellence, a fusser, and when he fussed, his digestive apparatus collapsed and he suffered agonizing pain. Bobby, though he considered his father a pitiful old ass, was nevertheless extremely fond of him.
         
        The Rev. Thomas, on the other hand, considered his fourth son a pitiful young ass, and with less tolerance than Bobby sought to effect improvement in the young man.
         
        'The poor old gov'nor,' thought Bobby. 'He'll be ramping up and down. He won't know whether to start the service or not. He'll work himself up till he gets that pain in the tummy, and then he won't be able to eat his supper. He won't have the sense to realize that I wouldn't let him down unless it were quite unavoidable - and, anyway, what does it matter? But he'll never see it that way. Nobody over fifty has got any sense - they worry themselves to death about tuppeny-ha'peny things that don't matter. They've been brought up all wrong, I suppose, and now they can't help themselves. Poor old Dad, he's got less sense than a chicken!' He sat there thinking of his father with mingled affection and exasperation. His life at home seemed to him to be one long sacrifice to his father's peculiar ideas. To Mr Jones, the same time seemed to be one long sacrifice on his part, ill understood or appreciated by the younger generation. So may ideas on the same subject differ.
         
        What an age the doctor was! Surely he might have been back by this time?
         
        Bobby got up and stamped his feet moodily. At that moment he heard something above him and looked up, thankful that help was at hand and his own services no longer needed.
         
        But it was not the doctor. It was a man in plus fours whom Bobby did not know.
         
        'I say,' said the newcomer. 'Is anything the matter? Has there been an accident? Can I help in any way?' He was a tall man with a pleasant tenor voice. Bobby could not see him very clearly for it was now fast growing dusk.
         
        He explained what had happened whilst the stranger made shocked comments.
         
        'There's nothing I can do?' he asked. 'Get help or anything?' Bobby explained that help was on the way and asked if the other could see any signs of its arriving.
         
        'There's nothing at present.' 'You see,' went on Bobby, 'I've got an appointment at six.' 'And you don't like to leave ' 'No, I don't quite,' said Bobby. 'I mean, the poor chap's dead and all that, and of course one can't do anything, but all the same ' He paused, finding it, as usual, difficult to put confused emotions into words.
         
        The other, however, seemed to understand.
         
        'I know,' he said. 'Look here, I'll come down - that is, if I can see my way - and I'll stay till these fellows arrive.' 'Oh, would you?' said Bobby gratefully. 'You see, it's my father. He's not a bad sort really, and things upset him. Can you see your way? A bit more to the left - now to the right - that's it. It's not really difficult.' He encouraged the other with directions until the two men were face to face on the narrow plateau. The newcomer was a man of about thirty-five. He had a rather indecisive face which seemed to be calling for a monocle and a little moustache.
         
        'I'm a stranger down here,' he explained. 'My name's Bassington-ffrench, by the way. Come down to see about a house. I say, what a beastly thing to happen! Did he walk over the edge?' Bobby nodded.
         
        'Bit of mist got up,' he explained. 'It's a dangerous bit of path. Well, so long. Thanks very much. I've got to hurry. It's awfully good of you.' 'Not at all,' the other protested. 'Anybody would do the same. Can't leave the poor chap lying - well, I mean, it wouldn't be decent somehow.' Bobby was scrambling up the precipitous path. At the top he waved his hand to the other then set off at a brisk run across country. To save time, he vaulted the churchyard wall instead of going round to the gate on the road - a proceeding observed by the Vicar from the vestry window and deeply disapproved of by him.
         
        It was five minutes past six, but the bell was still tolling.
         
        Explanations and recriminations were postponed until after the service. Breathless, Bobby sank into his seat and manipulated the stops of the ancient organ. Association of ideas led his fingers into Chopin's funeral march.
         
        Afterwards, more in sorrow than in anger (as he expressly pointed out), the Vicar took his son to task.
         
        'If you cannot do a thing properly, my dear Bobby,' he said, 'it is better not to do it at all. I know that you and all your young friends seem to have no idea of time, but there is One whom we should not keep waiting. You offered to play the organ of your own accord. I did not coerce you. Instead, faint-hearted, you preferred playing a game ' Bobby thought he had better interrupt before his father got too well away.
         
        'Sorry, Dad,' he said, speaking cheerfully and breezily as was his habit no matter what the subject. 'Not my fault this time. I was keeping guard over a corpse.' 'You were what?' 'Keeping guard over a blighter who stepped over the cliff.
         
        You know - the place where the chasm is - by the seventeenth tee. There was a bit of mist just then, and he must have gone straight on and over.' 'Good heavens,' cried the Vicar. 'What a tragedy! Was the man killed outright?' 'No. He was unconscious. He died just after Dr Thomas had gone off. But of course I felt I had to squat there - couldn't just push off and leave him. And then another fellow came along so I passed the job of chief mourner on to him and legged it here as fast as I could.' The Vicar sighed.
         
        'Oh, my dear Bobby,' he said. 'Will nothing shake your deplorable callousness? It grieves me more than I can say. Here you have been brought face to face with death - with sudden death. And you can joke about it! It leaves you unmoved.
         
        Everything - everything, however solemn, however sacred, is merely a joke to your generation.' Bobby shuffled his feet.
         
        If his father couldn't see that, of course, you joked about a thing because you had felt badly about it - well, he couldn't see it! It wasn't the sort of thing you could explain. With death and tragedy about you had to keep a stiff upper lip.
         
        But what could you expect? Nobody over fifty understood anything at all. They had the most extraordinary ideas.
         
        'I expect it was the War,' thought Bobby loyally. 'It upset them and they never got straight again.' He felt ashamed of his father and sorry for him.
         
        'Sorry, Dad,' he said with a clear-eyed realization that explanation was impossible.
         
        The Vicar felt sorry for his son - he looked abashed - but he also felt ashamed of him. The boy had no conception of the seriousness of life. Even his apology was cheery and impenitent.
         
        They moved towards the Vicarage, each making enormous efforts to find excuses for the other.
         
        The Vicar thought: 'I wonder when Bobby will find something to do... ?' Bobby thought: 'Wonder how much longer I can stick it down here... ?' Yet they were both extremely fond of each other.
         
        CHAPTER 3 A Railway Journey
         
        Bobby did not see the immediate sequel of his adventure. On the following morning he went up to town, there to meet a friend who was thinking of starting a garage and who fancied Bobby's co-operation might be valuable.
         
        After settling things to everybody's satisfaction, Bobby caught the 11.30 train home two days later. He caught it, true, but only by a very narrow margin. He arrived at Paddington when the clock announced the time to be 11.28, dashed down the subway, emerged on No. 3 Platform just as the train was moving and hurled himself at the first carriage he saw, heedless of indignant ticket collectors and porters in his immediate rear.
         
        Wrenching open the door, he fell in on his hands and knees, picked himself up. The door was shut with a slam by an agile porter and Bobby found himself looking at the sole occupant of the compartment.
         
        It was a first-class carriage and in the corner facing the engine sat a dark girl smoking a cigarette. She had on a red skirt, a short green jacket and a brilliant blue beret, and despite a certain resemblance to an organ grinder's monkey (she had long sorrowful dark eyes and a puckered-up face) she was distinctly attractive.
         
        In the midst of an apology, Bobby broke off.
         
        'Why, it's you, Frankie!' he said. 'I haven't seen you for ages.' 'Well, I haven't seen you. Sit down and talk.' Bobby grinned.
         
        'My ticket's the wrong colour.' 'That doesn't matter,' said Frankie kindly. 'I'll pay the difference for you.' 'My manly indignation rises at the thought,' said Bobby.
         
        'How could I let a lady pay for me?' 'It's about all we seem to be good for these days,' said Frankie.
         
        'I will pay the difference myself,' said Bobby heroically as a burly figure in blue appeared at the door from the corridor.
         
        'Leave it to me,' said Frankie.
         
        She smiled graciously at the ticket collector, who touched his hat as he took the piece of white cardboard from her and punched it.
         
        'Mr Jones has just come in to talk to me for a bit,' she said.
         
        'That won't matter, will it?' 'That's all right, your ladyship. The gentleman won't be staying long, I expect.' He coughed tactfully. 'I shan't be round again till after Bristol,' he added significantly.
         
        'What can be done with a smile,' said Bob;by as the official withdrew.
         
        Lady Frances Derwent shook her head thoughtfully.
         
        'I'm not so sure it's the smile,' she said. 'I rather think it's father's habit of tipping everybody five shillings whenever he travels that does it.' 'I thought you'd given up Wales for good, Frankie.' Frances sighed.
         
        'My dear, you know what it is. You know how mouldy parents can be. What with that and the bathrooms in the state they are, and nothing to do and nobody to see - and people simply won't come to the country to stay nowadays! They say they're economizing and they can't go so far. Well, I mean, what's a girl to do?' Bobby shook his head, sadly recognizing the problem.
         
        'However,' went on Frankie, 'after the party I went to last night, I thought even home couldn't be worse.' 'What was wrong with the party?' 'Nothing at all. It was just like any other party, only more so.
         
        It was to start at the Savoy at half-past eight. Some of us rolled up about a quarter-past nine and, of course, we got entangled with other people, but we got sorted out about ten. And we had dinner and then after a bit we went on to the Marionette - there was a rumour it was going to be raided, but nothing happened - it was just moribund, and we drank a bit and then we went on to the Bullring and that was even deader, and then we went to a coffee stall, and then we went to a fried-fish place, and then we thought we'd go and breakfast with Angela's uncle and see if he'd be shocked, but he wasn't - only bored, and then we sort of fizzled home. Honestly, Bobby, it isn't good enough.' 'I suppose not,' said Bobby, stilling a pang of envy.
         
        Never in his wildest moments did he dream of being able to be a member of the Marionette or the Bullring.
         
        His relationship with Frankie was a peculiar one.
         
        As children, he and his brothers had played with the children at the Castle. Now that they were all grown up, they seldom came across each other. When they did, they still used Christian names. On the rare occasions when Frankie was at home, Bobby and his brothers would go up and play tennis.
         
        But Frankie and her two brothers were not asked to the Vicarage. It seemed to be tacitly recognized that it would not be amusing for them. On the other hand, extra men were always wanted for tennis. There may have been a trace of constraint in spite of the Christian names. The Derwents were, perhaps, a shade more friendly than they need have been as though to show that 'there was no difference'. The Jones, on their side, were a shade formal, as though determined not to claim more friendship than was offered them. The two families had now nothing in common save certain childish memories.
         
        Yet Bobbie was very fond of Frankie and was always pleased on the rare occasions when Fate threw them together.
         
        'I'm so tired of everything,' said Frankie in a weary voice.
         
        'Aren't you?' Bobby considered.
         
        •No, I don't think I am.' 'My dear, how wonderful,' said Frankie.
         
        'I don't mean I'm hearty,' said Bobby, anxious not to create a painful impression. 'I just can't stand people who are hearty.' Frankie shuddered at the mere mention of the word.
         
        'I know,' she murmured. 'They're dreadful.' They looked at each other sympathetically.
         
        'By the way,' said Frankie suddenly. 'What's all this about a man falling over the cliffs?' 'Dr Thomas and I found him,' said Bobby. 'How did you know about it, Frankie?' 'Saw it in the paper. Look.' She indicated with her finger a small paragraph headed: 'Fatal Accident in Sea Mist.' The victim of the tragedy at Marchbolt was identified late last night by means of a photograph which he was carrying. The photograph proved to be that of Mrs Leo Cayman. Mrs Cayman was communicated with and journeyed at once to Marchbolt, where she identified the deceased as her brother, Alex Pritchard.
         
        Mr Pritchard had recently returned from Siam. He had been out of England for ten years and was just starting upon a walking tour.
         
        The inquest will be held at Marchbolt tomorrow.
         
        Bobby's thoughts flew back to the strangely haunting face of the photograph.
         
        'I believe I shall have to give evidence at the inquest,' he said.
         
        'How thrilling. I shall come and hear you.' 'I don't suppose there will be anything thrilling about it,' said Bobby. 'We just found him, you know.' 'Was he dead?' 'No, not then. He died about a quarter of an hour later. I was alone with him.' He paused.
         
        'Rather grim,' said Frankie with that immediate understanding that Bobby's father had lacked.
         
        'Of course he didn't feel anything ' 'No?' 'But all the same - well - you see, he looked awfully alive that sort of person - rather a rotten way to finish - just stepping off a cliff in a silly little bit of mist.' 'I get you, Steve,' said Frankie, and again the queer phrase represented sympathy and understanding.
         
        'Did you see the sister?' she asked presently.
         
        'No. I've been up in town two days. Had to see a friend of mine about a garage business we're going in for. You remember him. Badger Beadon.' 'Do I?' 'Of course you do. You must remember good old Badger.
         
        He squints.' Frankie wrinkled her brows.
         
        'He's got an awfully silly kind of laugh - haw haw haw - like that,' continued Bobby helpfully.
         
        Still Frankie wrinkled her brows.
         
        'Fell off his pony when we were kids,' continued Bobby.
         
        'Stuck in the mud head down, and we had to pull him out by the legs.' 'Oh!' said Frankie in a flood of recollection. 'I know now. He stammered.' 'He still does,' said Bobby proudly.
         
        'Didn't he run a chicken farm and it went bust?' inquired Frankie.
         
        'That's right.' 'And then he went into a stockbroker's office and they fired him after a month?' 'That's it.' 'And then they sent him to Australia and he came back?' 'Yes.' 'Bobby,' said Frankie. 'You're not putting any money into this business venture, I hope?' 'I haven't got any money to put,' said Bobby.
         
        'That's just as well,' said Frankie.
         
        'Naturally,' went on Bobby. 'Badger has tried to get hold of someone with a little capital to invest. But it isn't so easy as you'd think.' 'When you look round you,' said Frankie, 'you wouldn't believe people had any sense at all - but they have.' The point of these remarks seemed at last to strike Bobby.
         
        'Look here, Frankie,' he said. 'Badger's one of the best - one of the very best.' 'They always are,' said Frankie.
         
        'Who are?' 'The ones who go to Australia and come back again. How did he get hold of the money to start this business?' 'An aunt or something died and left him a garage for six cars with three rooms over and his people stumped up a hundred pounds to buy second-hand cars with. You'd be surprised what bargains there are to be had in second-hand cars.' 'I bought one once,' said Frankie. 'It's a painful subject.
         
        Don't let's talk of it. What did you want to leave the Navy for?
         
        They didn't axe you, did they? Not at your age.' Bobby Hushed.
         
        'Eyes,' he said gruffly.
         
        'You always had trouble with your eyes, I remember.' 'I know. But I just managed to scrape through. Then foreign service - the strong light, you know - that rather did for them.
         
        So - well - I had to get out.' 'Grim,' murmured Frankie, looking out of the window.
         
        There was an eloquent pause.
         
        'All the same, it's a shame,' burst out Bobby. 'My eyes aren't really bad - they won't get any worse, they say. I could have carried on perfectly.' 'They look all right,' said Frankie.
         
        She looked straight into their honest brown depths.
         
        'So you see,' said Bobby, 'I'm going in with Badger.' Frankie nodded.
         
        An attendant opened the door and said, 'First luncheon.' 'Shall we?' said Frankie.
         
        They passed along to the dining car.
         
        Bobby made a short strategic retreat during the time when the ticket collector might be expected.
         
        'We don't want him to strain his conscience too much,' he said.
         
        But Frankie said she didn't expect ticket collectors had any consciences.
         
        It was just after five o'clock when they reached Sileham, which was the station for Marchbolt.
         
        'The car's meeting me,' said Frankie. 'I'll give you a lift.' 'Thanks. That will save me carrying this beastly thing for two miles.' He kicked his suitcase disparagingly.
         
        'Three miles, not two,' said Frankie.
         
        'Two miles if you go by the footpath over the links.' 'The one where ' 'Yes - where that fellow went over.' 'I suppose nobody pushed him over, did they?' asked Frankie as she handed her dressing-case to her maid.
         
        'Pushed him over? Good Lord, no. Why?' 'Well, it would make it much more exciting, wouldn't it?' said Frankie idly.
         
        CHAPTER 4 The Inquest
         
        The inquest on the body of Alex Pritchard was held on the following day. Dr Thomas gave evidence as to the finding of the body.
         
        'Life was not then extinct?' asked the coroner.
         
        'No, deceased was still breathing. There was, however, no hope of recovery. The ' Here the doctor became highly technical. The coroner came to the rescue of the jury: 'In ordinary everyday language, the man's back was broken?' 'If you like to put it that way,' said Dr Thomas sadly.
         
        He described how he had gone off to get help, leaving the dying man in Bobby's charge.
         
        'Now as to the cause of this disaster, what is your opinion, Dr Thomas?' 'I should say that in all probability (failing any evidence as to his state of mind, that is to say) the deceased stepped inadvertently over the edge of the cliff. There was a mist rising from the sea, and at that particular point the path turns abruptly inland. Owing to the mist the deceased may not have noticed the danger and walked straight on-in which case two steps would take him over the edge.' 'There were no signs of violence? Such as might have been administered by a third party?' 'I can only say that all the injuries present are fully explained by the body striking the rocks fifty or sixty feet below.' 'There remains the question of suicide?' 'That is, of course, perfectly possible. Whether the deceased walked over the edge or threw himself over is a matter on which I can say nothing.' Robert Jones was called next.
         
        Bobby explained that he had been playing golf with the doctor and had sliced his ball towards the sea. A mist was rising at the time and it was difficult to see. He thought he heard a cry, and for a moment wondered if his ball could have hit anybody coining along the footpath. He had dedded,,however, that it could not possibly have travelled so far.
         
        'Did you find the ball?' 'Yes, it was about a hundred yards short of the footpath.' He then described how they had driven from the next tee and how he himself had driven into the chasm.
         
        Here the coroner stopped him since his evidence would have been a repetition of the doctor's. He questioned him closely, however, as to the cry he had heard or thought he heard.
         
        'It was just a cry.' 'A cry for help?' 'Oh, no. Just a sort of shout, you know. In fact I wasn't quite sure I heard it.' 'A startled kind of cry?' 'That's more like it,' said Bobby gratefully. 'Sort of noise a fellow might let out if a ball hit him unexpectedly.' 'Or if he took a step into nothingness when he thought he was on a path?' 'Yes.' Then, having explained that the man actually died about five minutes after the doctor left to get help, Bobby's ordeal came to an end.
         
        The coroner was by now anxious to get on with a perfectly straightforward business.
         
        Mrs Leo Cayman was called.
         
        Bobby gave a gasp of acute disappointment. Where was the face of the photo that had tumbled from the dead man's pocket? Photographers, thought Bobby disgustedly, were the worst kind of liars. The photo obviously must have been taken some years ago, but even then it was hard to believe that that charming wide-eyed beauty could have become this brazenlooking woman with plucked eyebrows and obviously dyed hair. Time, thought Bobby suddenly, was a very frightening thing. What would Frankie, for instance, look like in twenty years' time? He gave a little shiver.
         
        Meanwhile, Amelia Cayman, of 17 St Leonard's Gardens, Paddington, was giving evidence.
         
        Deceased was her only brother, Alexander Pritchard. She had last seen her brother the day before the tragedy when he had announced his intention of going for a walking tour in Wales. Her brother had recently returned from the East.
         
        'Did he seem in a happy and normal state of mind?' 'Oh, quite. Alex was always cheerful.' 'So far as you know, he had nothing on his mind?' 'Oh! I'm sure he hadn't. He was looking forward to his trip.' 'There have been no money troubles - or other troubles of any kind in his life recently?' 'Well, really I couldn't say as to that,' said Mrs Cayman.
         
        'You see, he'd only just come back, and before that I hadn't seen him for ten years and he was never one much for writing.
         
        But he took me out to theatres and lunches in London and gave me one or two presents, so I don't think he could have been short of money, and he was in such good spirits that I don't think there could have been anything else.' 'What was your brother's profession, Mrs Cayman?' The lady seemed slightly embarrassed.
         
        'Well, I can't say I rightly know. Prospecting - that's what he called it. He was very seldom in England.' 'You know of no reason which should cause him to take his own life?' 'Oh, no; and I can't believe that he did such a thing. It must have been an accident.' 'How do you explain the fact that your brother had no luggage with him - not even a knapsack?' 'He didn't like carrying a knapsack. He meant to post parcels alternate days. He posted one the day before he left with his night things and a pair of socks, only he addressed it to Derbyshire instead of Denbighshire, so it only got here today.' 'Ah! That clears up a somewhat curious point.' Mrs Cayman went on to explain how she had been communicated with through the photographers whose name was on the photo her brother had carried. She had come down with her husband to Marchbolt and had at once recognized the body as that of her brother.
         
        As she said the last words she sniffed audibly and began to cry.
         
        The coroner said a few soothing words and dismissed her.
         
        Then he address the jury. Their task was to state how this man came by his death. Fortunately, the matter appeared to be quite simple. There was no suggestion that Mr Pritchard had been worried or depressed or in a state of mind where he would be likely to take his own life. On the contrary, he had been in good health and spirits and had been looking forward to his holiday. It was unfortunately the case that when a sea mist was rising the path along the cliff was a dangerous one and possibly they might agree with him that it was time something was done about it.
         
        The jury's verdict was prompt.
         
        'We find that the deceased came to his death by misadventure and we wish to add a rider that in our opinion the Town Council should immediately take steps to put a fence or rail on the sea side of the path where it skirts the chasm.' The coroner nodded approval.
         
        The inquest was over.
         
        CHAPTER 5 Mr and Mrs Cayman
         
        On arriving back at the Vicarage about half an hour later, Bobby found that his connection with the death of Alex Pritchard was not yet quite over. He was informed that Mr and Mrs Cayman had called to see him and were in the study with his father. Bobby made his way there and found his father bravely making suitable conversation without, apparently, much enjoying his task.
         
        'Ah!' he said with some slight relief. 'Here is Bobby.' Mr Cayman rose and advanced towards the young man with outstretched hand. Mr Cayman was a big florid man with a would-be hearty manner and a cold and somewhat shifty eye that rather belied the manner. As for Mrs Cayman, though she might be considered attractive in a bold, coarse fashion, she had little now in common with that early photograph of herself, and no trace of that wistful expression remained. In fact, Bobby reflected, if she had not recognized her own photograph, it seemed doubtful if anyone else would have done so.
         
        'I came down with the wife,' said Mr Cayman, enclosing Bobby's hand in a firm and painful grip. 'Had to stand by, you know; Amelia's naturally upset.' Mrs Cayman sniffed.
         
        'We came round to see you,' continued Mr Cayman. 'You see, my poor wife's brother died, practically speaking, in your arms. Naturally, she wanted to know all you could tell her of his last moments.' 'Absolutely,' said Bobby unhappily. 'Oh, absolutely.' He grinned nervously and was immediately aware of his father's sigh - a sigh of Christian resignation.
         
        'Poor Alex,' said Mrs Cayman, dabbing her eyes. 'Poor, poor Alex.' 'I know,' said Bobby. 'Absolutely grim.' He wriggled uncomfortably.
         
        'You see,' said Mrs Cayman, looking hopefully at Bobby, 'if he left any last words or messages, naturally I want to know.' 'Oh, rather,' said Bobby. 'But as a matter of fact he didn't.' 'Nothing at all?' Mrs Cayman looked disappointed and incredulous. Bobby felt apologetic.
         
        'No - well - as a matter of fact, nothing at all.' 'It was best so,' said Mr Cayman solemnly. 'To pass away unconscious - without pain - why, you must think of it as a mercy, Amelia.' 'I suppose I must,' said Mrs Cayman. 'You don't think he felt any pain?' 'I'm sure he didn't,' said Bobby.
         
        Mrs Cayman sighed deeply.
         
        'Well, that's something to be thankful for. Perhaps I did hope he'd left a last message, but I can see that it's best as it is.
         
        Poor Alex. Such a fine out-of-door man.' 'Yes, wasn't he?' said Bobby. He recalled the bronze face, the deep blue eyes. An attractive personality, that of Alex Pritchard, attractive even so near death. Strange that he should be the brother of Mrs Cayman and the brother-in-law of Mr Cayman. He had been worthy, Bobby felt, of better things.
         
        'Well, we're very much indebted to you, I'm sure,' said Mrs Cayman.
         
        'Oh, that's all right,' said Bobby. 'I mean - well, couldn't do anything else - I mean ' He floundered hopelessly.
         
        'We shan't forget it,' said Mr Cayman. Bobby suffered once more that painful grip. He received a flabby hand from Mrs Cayman. His father made further adieus. Bobby accompanied the Caymans to the front door.
         
        'And what do you do with yourself, young man?' inquired Cayman. 'Home on leave - something of that kind?' 'I spend most of my time looking for a job,' said Bobby. He paused. 'I was in the Navy.' 'Hard times - hard times nowadays,' said Mr Cayman, shaking his head. 'Well, I wish you luck, I'm sure.' 'Thank you very much,' said Bobby politely.
         
        He watched them down the weed-grown drive.
         
        Standing there, he fell into a brown study. Various ideas flashed chaotically through his mind - confused reflections the photograph - that girl's face with the wide-apart eyes and the misty hair - and ten or fifteen years later Mrs Cayman with her heavy make-up, her plucked eyebrows, those wide-apart eyes sunk in between folds of flesh till they looked like pig's eyes, and her violent henna-tinted hair. All traces of youth and innocence had vanished. The pity of things! It all came, perhaps, of marrying a hearty bounder like Mr Cayman. If she had married someone else she might possibly have grown older gracefully. A touch of grey in her hair, eyes still wide apart looking out from a smooth pale face. But perhaps anyway ~ Bobby sighed and shook his head.
         
        'That's the worst of marriage,' he said gloomily.
         
        'What did you say?' Bobby awoke from meditation to become aware of Frankie, whose approach he had not heard.
         
        'Hullo,' he said.
         
        'Hullo. Why marriage? And whose?' 'I was making a reflection of a general nature,' said Bobby.
         
        'Namely - ?' 'On the devasting effects of marriage.' 'Who is devastated?' Bobby explained. He found Frankie unsympathetic.
         
        'Nonsense. The woman's exactly like her photograph.' 'When did you see her? Were you at the inquest?' 'Of course I was at the inquest. What do you think? There's little enough to do down here. An inquest is a perfect godsend.
         
        I've never been to one before. I was thrilled to the teeth. Of course, it would have been better if it had been a mysterious poisoning case, with the analyst's reports and all that sort of thing; but one mustn't be too exacting when these simple pleasures come one's way. I hoped up to the end for a suspicion of foul play, but it all seemed most regrettably straightforward.'
         
        'What blood-thirsty instincts you have, Frankie.' 'I know. It's probably atavism (however do you pronounce it? - I've never been sure). Don't you think so? I'm sure I'm atavistic. My nickname at school was Monkey Face.' 'Do monkeys like murder?' queried Bobby.
         
        'You sound like a correspondence in a Sunday paper,' said Frankie. 'Our correspondents' views on this subject are solicited.' 'You know,' said Bobby, reverting to the original topic, 'I don't agree with you about the female Cayman. Her photograph was lovely.' 'Touched up - that's all,' interrupted Frankie.
         
        'Well, then, it was so much touched up that you wouldn't have known them for the same person.' 'You're blind,' said Frankie. 'The photographer had done all that the art of photography could do, but it was still a nasty bit of work.' 'I absolutely disagree with you,' said Bobby coldly. 'Anyway, where did you see it?' 'In the local Evening Echo.' 'It probably reproduced badly.' 'It seems to me you're absolutely batty,' said Frankie crossly, 'over a painted-up raddled bitch - yes, I said bitch - like the Cayman.' 'Frankie,' said Bobby, 'I'm surprised at you. In the Vicarage drive, too. Semi-holy ground, so to speak.' 'Well, you shouldn't have been so ridiculous.' There was a pause, then Frankie's sudden fit of temper abated.
         
        'What is ridiculous,' she said, 'is to quarrel about the damned woman. I came to suggest a round of golf. What about it?' 'OK, chief,' said Bobby happily.
         
        They set off amicably together and their conversation was of such things as slicing and pulling and how to perfect a chip shot on to the green.
         
        The recent tragedy passed quite out of mind until Bobby, holing a long putt at the eleventh to halve the hole, suddenly gave an exclamation.
         
        'What is it?' 'Nothing. I've just remembered something.' 'What?' 'Well, these people, the Caymans - they came round and asked if the fellow had said anything before he died - and I told them he hadn't.' 'Well?' 'And now I've just remembered that he did.' 'Not one of your brightest mornings, in fact.' 'Well, you see, it wasn't the sort of thing they meant. That's why, I suppose, I didn't think of it.' 'What did he say?' asked Frankie curiously.
         
        'He said: "Why didn't they ask Evans?"' 'What a funny thing to say. Nothing else?' 'No. He just opened his eyes and said that - quite suddenly - and then died, poor chap.' 'Oh, well,' said Frankie, turning it over in her mind. 'I don't see that you need worry. It wasn't important.' 'No, of course not. Still, I wish I'd just mentioned it. You see, I said he'd said nothing at all.' 'Well, it amounts to the same thing,' said Franlde. 'I mean, it isn't like - "Tell Gladys I always loved her", or "The will is in the walnut bureau", or any of the proper romantic Last Words there are in books.' 'You don't think it's worth writing about it to them?' 'I shouldn't bother. It couldn't be important.' 'I expect you're right,' said Bobby and turned his attention with renewed vigour to the game.
         
        But the matter did not really dismiss itself from his mind. It was a small point but it fretted him. He felt very faintly uncomfortable about it. Frankie's point of view was, he felt sure, the right and sensible one. The thing was of no importance - let it go. But his conscience continued to reproach him faintly. He had said that the dead man had said nothing.
         
        That wasn't true. It was all very trivial and silly but he couldn't feel quite comfortable about it.
         
        Finally, that evening, on an impulse, he sat down and wrote to Mr Cayman.
         
        Dear Mr Cayman, I have just remembered that your brotherin-law did actually say something before he died. I think the exact words were, 'Why didn't they ask Evans?' I apologize/or not mentioning this this morning, but I attached no importance to the words at the time and so, I suppose, they slipped my memory.
         
        Yours truly, Robert Jones.
         
        On the next day but one he received a reply: Dear Mr Jones (wrote Mr CaymanJ, Your letter of 6th instant to hand. Many thanks for repeating my poor brother-in-law's last words so punctiliously in spite of their trivial character. What my wife hoped was that her brother might have left her some last message. Still, thank you for being so conscientious.
         
        Yours faithfully, Leo Cayman.
         
        Bobby felt snubbed.
         
        CHAPTER 6 End of a Picnic
         
        On the following day Bobby received a letter of quite a different nature: It's all fixed, old boy, (wrote Badger in an illiterate scrawl which reflected no credit on the expensive public school which had educated him). Actually got five cars yesterday for fifteen pounds the lot - an Austin, two Morrises and a couple of Rovers. At the moment they won't actually go, but we can tinker them up sufficiently, I think. Dash it all, a car's a car, after all. So long as it takes the purchaser home without breaking down, that's all they can expect. I thought of opening up Monday week and am relying onyou, so don't let me down, willyou, old boy? I must say old Aunt Carrie was a sport. I once broke the window of an old boy next door to her who 'd been rude to her about her cats and she never got over it. Sent me a river every Christmas - and now this.
         
        We 're bound to succeed. The thing's a dead cert. I mean, a car's a car after all. You can pick 'em up for nothing. Put a lick of paint on and that's all the ordinary fool notices. The thing will go with a Bang. Now don't forget. Monday week. I'm relying on you.
         
        Yours ever, Badger.
         
        Bobby informed his father that he would be going up to town on Monday week to take up a job. The description of the job did not rouse the Vicar to anything like enthusiasm. He had, it may be pointed out, come across Badger Beadon in the past. He merely treated Bobby to a long lecture on the advisability of not making himself liable for anything. Not an authority on financial or business matters, his advice was technically vague, but its meaning unmistakable.
         
        On the Wednesday of that week Bobby received another letter. It was addressed in a foreign slanting handwriting. Its contents were somewhat surprising to the young man.
         
        It was from the firm ofHenriquez and Dallo in Buenos Aires and, to put it concisely, it offered Bobby a job in the firm with a salary of a thousand a year.
         
        For the first minute or two the young man thought he must be dreaming. A thousand a year. He reread the letter more carefully. There was mention of an ex-Naval man being preferred. A suggestion that Bobby's name had been put forward by someone (someone not named). That acceptance must be immediate, and that Bobby must be prepared to start for Buenos Aires within a week.
         
        'Well, I'm damned!' said Bobby, giving vent to his feelings in a somewhat unfortunate manner. ,Bobby!' 'Sorry, Dad. Forgot you were there.' Mr Jones cleared his throat.
         
        'I should like to point out to you ' Bobby felt that this process - usually a leng one - must at all costs be avoided. He achieved this course by a simple statement: 'Someone's offered me a thousand a year.' The Vicar remained open-mouthed, unable for the moment to make any comment.
         
        'That's put him off his drive all right,' thought Bobby with satisfaction.
         
        'My dear Bobby, did I understand you to say that someone had offered you a thousand a year? A thousand?' 'Holed it in one. Dad,' said Bobby.
         
        'It's impossible,' said the Vicar.
         
        Bobby was not hurt by this frank incredulity. His estimate of his own monetary value differed little from that of his father.
         
        'They must be complete mutts,' he agreed heartily.
         
        'Who - er - are these people?' Bobby handed him the letter. The Vicar, fumbling for his pince-nez, peered at it suspiciously. Finally he perused it twice.
         
        'Most remarkable,' he said at last. 'Most remarkable.' 'Lunatics,' said Bobby.
         
        'Ah! my boy,' said the Vicar. 'It is after all, a great thing to be an Englishman. Honesty. That's what we stand for. The Navy has carried that ideal all over the world. An Englishman's word! This South American firm realizes the value of a young man whose integrity will be unshaken and of whose fidelity his employers will be assured. You can always depend on an Englishman to play the game ' 'And keep a straight bat,' said Bobby.
         
        The Vicar looked at his son doubtfully. The phrase, an excellent one, had actually been on the tip of his tongue, but there was something in Bobby's tone that struck him as not quite sincere.
         
        The young man, however, appeared to be perfectly serious.
         
        'All the same. Dad,' he said, 'why me?' 'What do you mean - why you?' 'There are a lot of Englishmen in England,' said Bobby.
         
        'Hearty fellows, full of cricketing qualities. Why pick on me?' 'Probably your late commanding officer may have recommended you.' 'Yes, I suppose that's true,' said Bobby doubtfully. 'It doesn't matter, anyway, since I can't take the job.' 'Can't take it? My dear boy, what do you mean?' 'Well, I'm fixed up, you see. With Badger.' 'Badger? Badger Beadon. Nonsense, my dear Bobby. This is serious.' 'It's a bit hard, I own,' said Bobby with a sigh.
         
        'Any childish arrangement you have made with young Beadon cannot count for a moment.' 'It counts with me.' 'Young Beadon is completely irresponsible. He has already, I understand, been a source of considerable trouble and expense to his parents.' 'He's not had much luck. Badger's so infernally trusting.' 'Luck - luck! I should say that young man had never done a hand's turn in his life.' 'Nonsense, Dad. Why, he used to get up at five in the morning to feed those beastly chickens. It wasn't his fault they all got the roop or the croup, or whatever it was.' 'I have never approved of this garage project. Mere folly.
         
        You must give it up.' 'Can't sir. I've promised. I can't let old Badger down. He's counting on me.' The discussion proceeded. The Vicar, biased by his views on the subject of Badger, was quite unable to regard any promise made to that young man as binding. He looked on Bobby as obstinate and determined at all costs to lead an idle life in company with one of the worse possible companions. Bobby, on the other hand, stolidly repeated without originality that he 'couldn't let old Badger down'.
         
        The Vicar finally left the room in anger and Bobby then and there sat down to write to the firm of Henriquez and Dallo, refusing their offer.
         
        He sighed as he did so. He was letting a chance go here which was never likely to occur again. But he saw no alternative.
         
        Later, on the links, he put the problem to Frankie. She listened attentively.
         
        'You'd have had to go to South America?' 'Yes.' 'Would you have liked that?' 'Yes, why not?' Frankie sighed.
         
        'Anyway,' she said with decision. 'I think you did quite right.' 'About Badger, you mean?' 'Yes.' 'I couldn't let the old bird down, could I?' 'No, but be careful the old bird, as you call him, doesn't let you in.' 'Oh! I shall be careful. Anyway, I shall be all right. I haven't got any assets.' 'That must be rather fun,' said Frankie.
         
        •Why?' 'I don't know why. It just sounded rather nice and free and irresponsible. I suppose, though, when I come to think of it, that I haven't got any assets much, either. I mean. Father gives me an allowance and I've got lots of houses to live in and clothes and maids and some hideous family jewels and a good deal of credits at shops; but that's all the family really. It's not me.' 'No, but all the same -' Bobby paused.
         
        'Oh, it's quite different, I know.' 'Yes,' said Bobby. 'It's quite different.' He felt suddenly very depressed.
         
        They walked in silence to the next tee.
         
        'I'm going to town tomorrow,' said Frankie, as Bobby teed up his ball.
         
        'Tomorrow? Oh - and I was going to suggest you should come for a picnic.' 'I'd have liked to. However, it's arranged. You see. Father's got the gout again.' 'You ought to stay and minister to him,' said Bobby.
         
        'He doesn't like being ministered to. It annoys him frightfully.
         
        He likes the second footman best. He's sympathetic and doesn't mind having things thrown at him and being called a damned fool.' Bobby topped his drive and it trickled into the bunker.
         
        'Hard lines,' said Frankie and drove a nice straight ball that sailed over it.
         
        'By the way,' she remarked. 'We might do something together in London. You'll be up soon?' 'On Monday. But - well - it's no good, is it?' 'What do you mean - no good?' 'Well, I mean I shall be working as a mechanic most of the time. I mean ' 'Even then,' said Frankie, 'I suppose you're just as capable of coming to a cocktail party and getting tight as any other of my friends.' Bobby merely shook his head.
         
        'I'll give a beer and sausage party if you prefer it,' said Frankie encouragingly.
         
        'Oh, look here, Frankie, what's the good? I mean, you can't mix your crowds. Your crowd's a different crowd from mine.' 'I assure you,' said Frankie, 'that my crowd is a very mixed one.' 'You're pretending not to understand.' 'You can bring Badger if you like. There's friendship for you.' 'You've got some sort of prejudice against Badger.' 'I daresay it's his stammer. People who stammer always make me stammer, too.' 'Look here, Frankie, it's no good and you know it isn't. It's all right down here. There's not much to do and I suppose I'm better than nothing. I mean you're always awfully decent to me and all that, and I'm grateful. But I mean I know I'm just nobody - I mean ' 'When you've quite finished expressing your inferiority complex,' said Frankie coldly, 'perhaps you'll try getting out of the bunker with a niblick instead of a putter.' 'Have I - oh! damn!' He replaced the putter in his bag and took out the niblick. Frankie watched with malicious satisfaction as he hacked at the ball five times in succession. Clouds of sand rose round them.
         
        'Your hole,' said Bobby, picking up the ball.
         
        'I think it is,' said Frankie. 'And that gives me the match.' 'Shall we play the bye?' 'No, I don't think so. I've got a lot to do.' 'Of course. I suppose you have.' They walked together in silence to the clubhouse.
         
        'Well,' said Frankie, holding out her hand. 'Goodbye, my dear. It's been too marvellous to have you to make use of while I've been down here. See something of you again, perhaps, when I've nothing better to do.' 'Look here, Frankie ' 'Perhaps you'll condescend to come to my coster party. I believe you can get pearl buttons quite cheaply at Woolworth's.' 'Frankie ' His words were drowned in the noise of the Bentley's engine which Frankie had just started. She drove away with an airy wave of her hand.
         
        'Damn!' said Bobby in a heartfelt tone.
         
        Frankie, he considered, had behpved outrageously. Perhaps he hadn't put things very tactfully, but, dash it all, what he had said was true enough.
         
        Perhaps, though, he shouldn't have put it into words.
         
        The next three days seemed interminably long.
         
        The Vicar had a sore throat which necessitated his speaking in a whisper when he spoke at all. He spoke very little and was obviously bearing his fourth son's presence as a Christian should. Once or twice he quoted Shakespeare to the effect that a serpent's tooth, etc.
         
        On Saturday Bobby felt that he could bear the strain of home life no longer. He got Mrs Roberts, who, with her husband, 'ran' the Vicarage, to give him a packet of sandwiches, and, supplementing this with a bottle of beer which he bought in Marchbolt, he set off for a solitary picnic.
         
        He had missed Frankie abominably these last few days.
         
        These older people were the limit... They harped on things so.
         
        Bobby stretched himself out on a brackeny bank and debated with himself whether he should eat his lunch first and go to sleep afterwards, or sleep first and eat afterwards.
         
        While he was cogitating, the matter was settled for him by his falling asleep without noticing it.
         
        When he awoke it was half-past three! Bobby grinned as he thought how his father would disapprove of this way of spending a day. A good walk across country ~ twelve miles or so - that was the kind of thing that a healthy young man should do. It led inevitably to that famous remark: 'And now, I think, I've earned my lunch.' 'Idiotic,' thought Bobby. 'Why earn lunch by doing a lot of walking you don't particularly want to do? What's the merit in it? If you enjoy it, then it's pure self-indulgence, and if you don't enjoy it you're a fool to do it.' Whereupon he fell upon his unearned lunch and ate it with gusto. With a sigh of satisfaction he unscrewed the bottle of beer. Unusually bitter beer, but decidedly refreshing.
         
        He lay back again, having tossed the empty beer bottle into a clump of heather.
         
        He felt rather god-like lounging there. The world was at his feet. A phrase, but a good phrase. He could do anything anything if he tried! Plans of great splendour and daring initiative flashed through his mind.
         
        Then he grew sleepy again. Lethargy stole over him.
         
        He slept.
         
        Heavy, numbing sleep.
         
        CHAPTER 7 An Escape from Death
         
        Driving her large green Bentley, Frankie drew up to the kerb outside a large old-fashioned house over the doorway of which was inscribed 'St Asaph's'.
         
        Frankie jumped out and, turning, extracted a large bunch of lilies. Then she rang the bell. A woman in nurse's dress answered the door.
         
        'Can I see Mr Jones?' inquired Frankie.
         
        The nurse's eyes took in the Bentley, the lilies and Frankie with intense interest.
         
        'What name shall I say?' 'Lady Frances Derwent.' The nurse was thrilled and her patient went up in her estimation.
         
        She guided Frankie upstairs into a room on the first floor.
         
        'You've a visitor to see you, Mr Jones. Now, who do you think it is? Such a nice surprise for you.' All this is the 'bright' manner usual to nursing homes.
         
        'Gosh!' said Bobby, very much surprised. 'If it isn't Frankie!' 'Hullo, Bobby, I've brought the usual flowers. Rather a graveyard suggestion about them, but the choice was limited.' 'Oh, Lady Frances,' said the nurse, 'they're lovely. I'll put them into water.' She left the room.
         
        Frankie sat down in an obvious visitor's chair.
         
        •Well, Bobby,' she said. 'What's all this?' 'You may well ask,' said Bobby. 'I'm the complete sensation of this place. Eight grains of morphia, no less. They're going to write about me in the Lancet and the BMJ.' 'What's the BMf>' interrupted Frankie.
         
        'The British Medical Journal.' 'All right. Go ahead. Rattle off some more initials.' 'Do you know, my girl, that half a grain is a fatal dose? I ought to be dead about sixteen times over. It's true that recovery has been known after sixteen grains - still, eight is pretty good, don't you think? I'm the hero of this place.
         
        They've never had a case like me before.' 'How nice for them.' 'Isn't it? Gives them something to talk about to all the other patients.' The nurse re-entered, bearing lilies in vases.
         
        'It's true, isn't it, nurse?' demanded Bobby. 'You've never had a case like mine?' 'Oh! you oughtn't to be here at all,' said the nurse. 'In the churchyard you ought to be. But it's only the good die young, they say.' She giggled at her own wit and went out.
         
        'There you are,' said Bobby. 'You'll see, I shall be famous all over England.' He continued to talk. Any signs of inferiority complex that he had displayed at his last meeting with Frankie had now quite disappeared. He took a firm and egotistical pleasure in recounting every detail of his case.
         
        'That's enough,' said Frankie, quelling him. 'I don't really care terribly for stomach pumps. To listen to you one would think nobody had ever been poisoned before.' 'Jolly few have been poisoned with eight grains of morphia and got over it,' Bobby pointed out. 'Dash it all, you're not sufficiently impressed.' 'Pretty sickening for the people who poisoned you,' said Frankie.
         
        'I know. Waste of perfectly good morphia.' 'It was in the beer, wasn't it?' 'Yes. You see, someone found me sleeping like the dead, tried to wake me and couldn't. Then they got alarmed, carried me to a farmhouse and sent for a doctor ' 'I know all the next part,' said Frankie hastily.
         
        'At first they had the idea that I'd taken the stuff deliberately.
         
        Then when they heard my story, they went off and looked for the beer bottle and found it where I'd thrown it and had it analysed - the dregs of it were quite enough for that, apparently.' 'No clue as to how the morphia got in the bottle?' 'None whatever. They've interviewed the pub where I bought it and opened other bottles and everything's been quite all right.' 'Someone must have put the stuff in the beer while you were asleep?' 'That's it. I remember that the paper across the top wasn't still sticking properly.' Frankie nodded thoughtfully.
         
        'Well,' she said. 'It shows that what I said in the train that day was quite right.' 'What did you say?' 'That that man - Pritchard - had been pushed over the cliff 'That wasn't in the train. You said that at the station,' said Bobby feebly.
         
        'Same thing.' 'But why-' 'Darling - it's obvious. Why should anyone want to putyou out of the way? You're not the heir to a fortune or anything.' 'I may be. Some great aunt I've never heard of in New Zealand or somewhere may have left me all her money.' 'Nonsense. Not without knowing you. And if she didn't know you, why leave money to a fourth son? Why, in these hard times even a clergyman mightn't have a fourth son! No, it's all quite clear. No one benefits by your death, so that's ruled out. Then there's revenge. You haven't seduced a chemist's daughter, by any chance?' 'Not that I can remember,' said Bobby with dignity.
         
        'I know. One seduces so much that one can't keep count. But I should say offhand that you've never seduced anyone at all.' 'You're making me blush, Frankie. And why must it be a chemist's daughter, anyway?' 'Free access to morphia. It's not so easy to get hold of morphia.' 'Well, I haven't seduced a chemist's daughter.' 'And you haven't got any enemies that you know of?' Bobby shook his head.
         
        'Well, there you are,' said Frankie triumphantly. 'It must be the man who was pushed over the cliff. What do the police think?' 'They think it must have been a lunatic.' 'Nonsense. Lunatics don't wander about with unlimited supplies of morphia looking for odd bottles of beer to put it into. No, somebody pushed Pritchard over the cliff. A minute or two later you come along and he thinks you saw him do it and so determines to put you out of the way.' 'I don't think that will hold water, Frankie.' 'Why not?' 'Well, to begin with, I didn't see anything.' 'Yes, but he didn't know that.' 'And if I had seen anything, I should have said so at the inquest.' 'I suppose that's so,' said Frankie unwillingly.
         
        She thought for a minute or two.
         
        'Perhaps he thought you'd seen something that you didn't think was anything but which really was something. That sounds pure gibberish, but you get the idea?' Bobby nodded.
         
        'Yes, I see what you mean, but it doesn't seem very probable, somehow.' 'I'm sure that cliff business had something to do with this.
         
        You were on the spot - the first person to be there -' 'Thomas was there, too,' Bobby reminded her. 'And nobody's tried to poison him.' 'Perhaps they're going to,' said Frankie cheerfully. 'Or perhaps they've tried and failed.' 'It all seems very farfetched.' 'I think it's logical. If you get two out of the way things happening in a stagnant pond like Marchbolt - wait - there's a third thing.' 'What?' 'That job you were offered. That, of course, is quite a small thing, but it was odd, you must admit. I've never heard of a foreign firm that specialized in seeking out undistinguished exNaval officers.' 'Did you say undistinguished?' 'You hadn't got into the BMJ, then. But you see my point.
         
        You've seen something you weren't meant to see - or so they (whoever they are) think. Very well. They first try to get rid of you by offering you a job abroad. Then, when that fails, they try to put you out of the way altogether.' 'Isn't that rather drastic? And anyway a great risk to take?' 'Oh! but murderers are always frightfully rash. The more murders they do, the more murders they want to do.' 'Like The Third Bloodstain,' said Bobby, remembering one of his favourite works of fiction.
         
        'Yes, and in real life, too - Smith and his wives and Armstrong and people.' 'Well, but, Frankie, what on earth is it I'm supposed to have seen?' 'That, of course, is the difficulty,' admitted Frankie. 'I agree that it can't have been the actual pushing, because you would have told about that. It must be something about the man himself. Perhaps he had a birthmark or double-jointed fingers or some strange physical peculiarity.' 'Your mind is running on Dr Thomdyke, I see. It couldn't be anything like that because whatever I saw the police would see as well.' 'So they would. That was an idiotic suggestion. It's very difficult, isn't it?' 'It's a pleasing theory,' said Bobby. 'And it makes me feel important, but all the same, I don't believe it's much more than a theory.' 'I'm sure I'm right.' Frankie rose. 'I must be off now. Shall I come and see you again tomorrow?' 'Oh! Do. The arch chatter of the nurses gets very monotonous.
         
        By the way, you're back from London very soon?' 'My dear, as soon as I heard about you, I tore back. It's most exciting to have a romantically poisoned friend.' 'I don't know whether morphia is so very romantic,' said Bobby reminiscently.
         
        'Well, I'll come tomorrow. Do I kiss you or don't I?' 'It's not catching,' said Bobby encouragingly.
         
        'Then I'll do my duty to the sick thoroughly.' She kissed him lightly.
         
        'See you tomorrow.' The nurse came in with Bobby's tea as she went out.
         
        'I've seen her pictures in the papers often. She's not so very like them, though. And, of course, I've seen her driving about in her car, but I've never seen her before close to, so to speak.
         
        Not a bit haughty, is she?' 'Oh, no!' said Bobby. 'I should never call Frankie haughty.' 'I said to Sister, I said, she's as natural as anything. Not a bit stuck up. I said to Sister, she's just like you or me, I said.' Silently dissenting violently from this view, Bobby returned no reply. The nurse, disappointed by his lack of response, left the room.
         
        Bobby was left to his own thoughts.
         
        He finished his tea. Then he went over in his mind the possibilities of Frankie's amazing theory, and ended by deciding reluctantly against it. He then cast about for other distractions.
         
        His eye was caught by the vases of lilies. Frightfully sweet of Frankie to bring him all these flowers, and of course they were lovely, but he wished it had occurred to her to bring him a few detective stories instead. He cast his eye over the table beside him. There was a novel of Ouida's and a copy of John Halifax, Gentleman and last week's Marchbolt Weekly Times. He picked up John Halifax, Gentleman.
         
        After five minutes he put it down. To a mind nourished on The Third Bloodstain, The Case of the Murdered Archduke and The Strange Adventure of the Florentine Dagger, John Halifax, Gentleman, lacked pep.
         
        With a sigh he picked up last week's Marchbolt Weekly Times. ;.
         
        A moment or two later he was pressing the bell beneath his pillow with a vigour which brought a nurse into the room at a run.
         
        'Whatever's the matter, Mr Jones? Are you taken bad?' 'Ring up the Castle,' cried Bobby. Tell Lady Frances she must come back here at once.' 'Oh, Mr Jones. You can't send a message like that.' 'Can't I?' said Bobby. 'If I were allowed to get up from this blasted bed you'd soon see whether I could or couldn't. As it is, you've got to do it for me.' 'But she'll hardly be back.' 'You don't know that Bentley.' 'She won't have had her tea.' 'Now look here, my dear girl,' said Bobby, 'don't stand there arguing with me. Ring up as I tell you. Tell her she's got to come here at once because I've got something very important to say to her.' Overborne, but unwilling, the nurse went. She took some liberties with Bobby's message.
         
        If it was no inconvenience to Lady Frances, Mr Jones wondered if she would mind coming as he had something he would like to say to her, but, of course. Lady Frances was not to put herself out in any way.
         
        Lady Frances replied curtly that she would come at once.
         
        'Depend upon it,' said the nurse to her colleagues, 'she's sweet on him! That's what it is.' Frankie arrived all agog.
         
        'What's this desperate summons?' she demanded.
         
        Bobby was sitting up in bed, a bright red spot in each cheek.
         
        In his hand he waved the copy of the Marchbolt Weekly Times.
         
        'Look at this, Frankie.' Frankie looked.
         
        'Well,' she demanded.
         
        'This is the picture you meant when you said it was touched up but quite like the Cayman woman.' Bobby's finger pointed to a somewhat blurred reproduction of a photograph. Underneath it were the words: 'portrait FOUND ON THE DEAD MAN AND BY WHICH HE WAS IDENTIFIED. mrs amelia cayman, THE DEAD MAN'S SISTER.' 'That's what I said, and it's true, too. I can't see anything to rave over in it.' 'No more than I.' 'But you said ' 'I know I said. But you see, Frankie' - Bobby's voice became very impressive - 'this isn't the photograph that I put back in the dead man's pocket...' They looked at each other.
         
        'Then in that case,' began Frankie slowly.
         
        'Either there must have been two photographs ' '- Which isn't likely ' 'Or else ' They paused.
         
        'That man - what's his name?' said Frankie.
         
        'Bassington-ffrench!' said Bobby.
         
        'I'm quite sure!'
         
        CHAPTER 8 Riddle of a Photograph
         
        They stared at each other as they tried to adjust themselves to the altered situation.
         
        'It couldn't be anyone else,' said Bobby. 'He was the only person who had the chance.' 'Unless, as we said, there were two photographs.' 'We agreed that that wasn't likely. If there had been two photographs they'd have tried to identify him by means of both of them - not only one.' 'Anyway, that's easily found out,' said Frankie. 'We can ask the police. We'll assume for the moment that there was just the one photograph, the one you saw that you put back again in his pocket. It was there when you left him, and it wasn't there when the police came, therefore the only person who could have taken it away and put the other one in its place was this man Bassington-ffrench. What was he like, Bobby?' Bobby frowned in the effort of remembrance.
         
        'A sort of nondescript fellow. Pleasant voice. A gentleman and all that. I really didn't notice him particularly. He said that he was a stranger down here - and something about looking for a house.' 'We can verify that, anyway,' said Frankie. 'Wheeler & Owen are the only house agents.' Suddenly she gave a shiver.
         
        'Bobby, have you thought? If Pritchard was pushed over - Bassington-ffrench must be the man who did it...' 'That's pretty grim,' said Bobby. 'He seemed such a nice pleasant sort of fellow. But you know, Frankie, we can't be sure he really was pushed over.' 'You have been all along.' 'No, I just wanted it to be that way because it made things more exciting. But now it's more or less proved. If it was murder everything fits in. Your unexpected appearance which upsets the murderer's plans. Your discovery of the photograph and, in consequence, the need to put you out of the way.' 'There's a flaw there,' said Bobby.
         
        'Why?' You were the only person who saw that photograph.
         
        As soon as Bassington-ffrench was left alone with the body he changed the photograph which only you had seen.' But Bobby continued to shake his head.
         
        'No, that won't do. Let's grant for the moment that that photograph was so important that I had to be "got out of the way", as you put it. Sounds absurd but I suppose it's just possible. Well, then, whatever was going to be done would have to be done at once. The fact that I went to London and never saw the Marchbolt Weekly Times or the other papers with the photograph in it was just pure chance - a thing nobody could count on. The probability was that I should say at once, "That isn't the photograph I saw." Why wait till after the inquest when everything was nicely settled?' 'There's something in that,' admitted Frankie.
         
        'And there's another point. I can't be absolutely sure, of course, but I could almost swear that when I put the photograph back in the dead man's pocket Bassingtonffrench wasn't there. He didn't arrive till about five or ten minutes later.' 'He might have been watching you all the time,' argued Frankie.
         
        'I don't see very well how he could,' said Bobby slowly.
         
        'There's really only one place where you can see down to exactly the spot we were. Farther round, the cliff bulges and then recedes underneath, so that you can't see over. There's just the one place and when Bassington-ffrench did arrive there I heard him at once. Footsteps echo down below. He may have been near at hand, but he wasn't looking over till then - I'll swear.' 'Then you think that he didn't know about your seeing the photograph?' 'I don't see how he could have known.' 'And he can't have been afraid you'd seen him doing it - the murder, I mean - because, as you say, that's absurd. You'd never have held your tongue about it. It looks as though it must have been something else altogether.' 'Only I don't see what it could have been.' 'Something they didn't know about till after the inquest. I don't know why I say "they".' 'Why not? After all, the Caymans must have been in it, too.
         
        It's probably a gang. I like gangs.' 'That's a low taste,' said Frankie absently. 'A single-handed murder is much higher class. Bobby!' 'Yes?' 'What was it Pritchard said - just before he died? You know, you told me about it that day on the links. That funny question?' "'Why didn't they ask Evans?'" 'Yes. Suppose that was it?' 'But that's ridiculous.' 'It sounds so, but it might be important, really. Bobby, I'm sure it's that. Oh, no, I'm being an idiot - you never told the Caymans about it?' 'I did, as a matter of fact,' said Bobby slowly.
         
        'You didr 'Yes. I wrote to them that evening. Saying, of course, that it was probably quite unimportant.' 'And what happened?' 'Cayman wrote back, politely agreeing, of course, that there was nothing in it, but thanking me for taking the trouble. I felt rather snubbed.' 'And two days later you got this letter from a strange firm bribing you to go to South America?' 'Yes.' 'Well,' said Frankie, 'I don't know what more you want.
         
        They try that first; you turn it down, and the next thing is that they follow you round and seize a good moment to empty a lot of morphia into your bottle of beer.' 'Then the Caymans are in it?' 'Of course the Caymans are in it!' 'Yes,' said Bobby thoughtfully. 'If your reconstruction is correct, they must be in it. According to our present theory, it goes like this. Dead man X is deliberately pushed over cliff presumably by OF (pardon these initials). It is important that X should not be correctly identified, so portrait of Mrs C is put in his pocket and portrait of fair unknown removed. (Who was she, I wonder?)' 'Keep to the point,' said Frankie sternly.
         
        'Mrs C waits for photographs to appear and turns up as grief-stricken sister and identifies X as her brother from foreign parts.' 'You don't believe he could really have been her brother?' 'Not for a moment! You know, it puzzled me all along. The Caymans were a different class altogether. The dead man was - well, it sounds a most awful thing to say and just like some deadly old retired Anglo-Indian, but the dead man was a pukka sahib.' 'And the Caymans most emphatically weren't?' 'Most emphatically.' 'And then, just when everything has gone off well from the Caymans' point of view - body successfully identified, verdict of accidental death, everything in the garden lovely -you come along and mess things up,' mused Frankie.
         
        '" Why didn 't they ask Evans? "' Bobby repeated the phrase thoughtfully. 'You know, I can't see what on earth there can be in that to put the wind up anybody.' 'Ah! that's because you don't know. It's like making crossword puzzles. You write down a clue and you think it's too idiotically simple and that everyone will guess it straight off, and you're frightfully surprised when they simply can't get it in the least. " Why didn't they ask Evans? " must have been a most frightfully significant phrase to them, and they couldn't realize that it meant nothing at all to you.' 'More fools they.' 'Oh, quite so. But it's just possible they thought that if Pritchard said that, he might have said something more which would also recur to you in due time. Anyway, they weren't going to take chances. You were safer out of the way.' 'They took a lot of risk. Why didn't they engineer another "accident"?' 'No, no. That would have been stupid. Two accidents within a week of each other? It might have suggested a connection between the two, and then people would have begun inquiring into the first one. No, I think there's a kind of bald simplicity about their method which is really rather clever.' 'And yet you said just now that morphia wasn't easy to get hold of.' 'No more it isn't. You have to sign poison books and things.
         
        Oh! of course, that's a clue. Whoever did it had easy access to supplies of morphia.' 'A doctor, a hospital nurse, or a chemist,' suggested Bobby.
         
        'Well, I was thinking more of illicitly imported drugs.' 'You can't mix up too many different sorts of crime,' said Bobby.
         
        'You see, the strong point would be the absence of motive.
         
        Your death doesn't benefit anyone. So what will the police think?' 'A lunatic,' said Bobby. 'And that's what they do think.' 'You see? It's awfully simple, really.' Bobby began to laugh suddenly.
         
        'What's amusing you?' 'Just the thought of how sick-making it must be for them!
         
        All that morphia - enough to kill five or six people - and here I am still alive and kicking.' 'One of Life's little ironies that one can't foresee,' agreed Frankie.
         
        'The question is - what do we do next?' said Bobby practically.
         
        'Oh! lots of things,' said Frankie promptly.
         
        'Such as... ?' 'Well - finding out about the photograph - that there was only one, not two. And about Bassington-ffrench's house hunting.' 'That will probably be quite all right and above board.' 'Why do you say that?' 'Look here, Frankie, think a minute. Bassingtonffrench must be above suspicion. He must be all clear and above board.
         
        Not only must there be nothing to connect him in any way with the dead man, but he must have a proper reason for being down here. He may have invented house hunting on the spur of the moment, but I bet he carried out something of the kind. There must be no suggestion of a "mysterious stranger seen in the neighbourhood of the accident". I fancy that Bassingtonffrench is his own name and that he's the sort of person who would be quite above suspicion.' 'Yes,' said Frankie thoughtfully. 'That's a very good deduction. There will be nothing whatever to connect Bassington-ffrench with Alex Pritchard. Now, if we knew who the dead man really was ' 'Ah, then it might be different.' 'So it was very important that the body should not be recognized - hence all the Cayman camouflage. And yet it was taking a big risk.' 'You forget that Mrs Cayman identified him as soon as was humanly possible. After that, even if there had been pictures of him in the papers (you know how blurry these things are) people would only say: "Curious, this man Pritchard, who fell over a cliff, is really extraordinarily like Mr X."' 'There must be more to it than that,' said Frankie shrewdly.
         
        'X must have been a man who wouldn't easily be missed. I mean, he couldn't have been the sort of family man whose wife or relations would go to the police at once and report him missing.' 'Good for you, Frankie. No, he must have been just going abroad or perhaps just come back (he was marvellously tanned - like a big-game hunter - he looked that sort of person) and he can't have had any very near relations who knew all about his movements.' 'We're deducing beautifully,' said Frankie. 'I hope we're not deducing all wrong.' 'Very likely,' said Bobby. 'But I think what we've said so far is fairly sound sense - granted, that is, the wild improbability of the whole thing.' Frankie waved away the wild improbability with an airy gesture.
         
        'The thing is - what to do next,' she said. 'It seems to me we've got three angles of attack.' 'Go on, Sherlock.' 'The first is you. They've made one attempt on your life.
         
        They'll probably try again. This time we might get what they call "a line" on them. Using you as a decoy, I mean.' 'No thank you, Frankie,' said Bobby with feeling. 'I've been very lucky this time, but I mightn't be so lucky again if they changed the attack to a blunt instrument. I was thinking of taking a great deal of care of myself in the future. The decoy idea can be washed out.' 'I was afraid you'd say that,' said Frankie with a sigh. 'Young men are sadly degenerate nowadays. Father says so. They don't enjoy being uncomfortable and doing dangerous and unpleasant things any longer. It's a pity.' 'A great pity,' said Bobby, but he spoke with firmness.
         
        'What's the second plan of campaign?' 'Working from the "Why didn't they ask Evans?" clue,' said Frankie. 'Presumably the dead man came down here to see Evans, whoever he was. Now, if we could find Evans ' 'How many Evanses,' Bobby interrupted, 'do you think there are in Marchbolt?' 'Seven hundred, I should think,' admitted Frankie.
         
        'At least! We might do something that way, but I'm rather doubtful.' 'We could list all the Evanses and visit the likely ones.' 'And ask them - what?' 'That's the difficulty,' said Frankie.
         
        'We need to know a little more,' said Bobby. 'Then that idea of yours might come in useful. What's No. 3?' 'This man Bassington-ffrench. There we have got something tangible to go upon. It's an uncommon name. I'll ask Father. He knows all these county family names and their various branches.' 'Yes;' said Bobby. 'We might do something that way.' 'At any rate, we are going to do something?' 'Of course we are. Do you think I'm going to be given eight grains of morphia and do nothing about it?' 'That's the spirit,' said Frankie.
         
        'And besides that,' said Bobby, 'there's the indignity of the stomach pump to be washed out.' 'That's enough,' said Frankie. 'You'll be getting morbid and indecent again if I don't stop you.' 'You have no true womanly sympathy,' said Bobby.
         
        CHAPTER 9 Concerning Mr Bassingtonffrench
         
        Frankie lost no time in setting to work. She attacked her father that same evening.
         
        'Father,' she said, 'do you know any Bassingtonffrenches?' Lord Marchington, who was reading a political article, did not quite take in the question.
         
        'It's not the French so much as the Americans,' he said severely. 'All this tomfoolery and conferences - wasting the nation's time and money -' Frankie abstracted her mind until Lord Marchington, running like a railway train along an accustomed line, came, as it were, to a halt at a station.
         
        'The Bassington-ffrenches,' repeated Frankie.
         
        'What about 'em?' said Lord Marchington.
         
        Frankie didn't know what about them. She made a statement, knowing well enough that her father enjoyed contradiction.
         
        'They're a Yorkshire family, aren't they?' 'Nonsense - Hampshire. There's the Shropshire branch, of course, and then there's the Irish lot. Which are your friends?' 'I'm not sure,' said Frankie, accepting the implication of friendship with several unknown people.
         
        'Not sure? What do you mean? You must be sure.' 'People drift about so nowadays,' said Frankie.
         
        'Drift - drift - that's about all they do. In my days we asked people. Then one knew where one was - fellow said he was the Hampshire branch - very well, your grandmother married my second cousin. It made a link.' 'It must have been too sweet,' said Frankie, 'But there really isn't time for genealogical and geographical research nowadays.' 'No - you've no time nowadays for anything but drinking these poisonous cocktails.' Lord Marchington gave a sudden yelp of pain as he moved his gouty leg, which some free imbibing of the family port had not improved.
         
        'Are they well off?' asked Frankie.
         
        'The Bassington-ffrenches? Couldn't say. The Shropshire lot have been hard hit, I believe - death duties, and one thing or another. One of the Hampshire ones married an heiress. An American woman.' 'One of them was down here the other day,' said Frankie.
         
        'Looking for a house, I believe.' 'Funny idea. What should anyone want with a house down here?' That, thought Frankie, was the question.
         
        On the following day she walked into the office of Messrs.
         
        Wheeler & Owen, House and Estate Agents.
         
        Mr Owen himself sprang up to receive her. Frankie gave him a gracious smile and dropped into a chair.
         
        'And what can we have the pleasure of doing for you. Lady Frances? You don't want to sell the Castle, I suppose. Ha! Ha!' Mr Owen laughed at his own wit.
         
        'I wish we could,' said Frankie. 'No, as a matter of fact, I believe a friend of mine was down here the other day - a Mr Bassington-ffrench. He was looking for a house.' 'Ah! yes, indeed. I remember the name perfectly. Two small if 's.' 'That's right,' said Frankie.
         
        'He was making inquiries about various small properties with a view to purchase. He was obliged to return to town the next day, so could not view many of the houses, but I understand he is in no great hurry. Since he left, one or two suitable properties have come into the market and I have sent him on particulars, but have had no reply.' 'Did you write to London - or to the - er - country address?' inquired Frankie.
         
        'Let me see now.' He called to a junior clerk. 'Frank, Mr Bassington-ffrench's address.' 'Roger Bassington-ffrench, Esq., Merroway Court, Staverley, Hants,' said the junior clerk glibly.
         
        'Ah!' said Frankie. 'Then it wasn't my Mr Bassingtonffrench.
         
        This must be his cousin. I thought it was odd his being here and not looking me up.' 'Quite so - quite so,' said Mr Owen intelligently.
         
        'Let me see, it must have been the Wednesday he came to see you.' 'That's right. Just before six-thirty. We close at six-thirty. I remember particularly because it was the day when that sad accident happened. Man fell over the cliff. Mr Bassingtonffrench had actually stayed by the body till the police came. He looked quite upset when he came in here. Very sad tragedy, that, and high time something was done about that bit of path.
         
        The Town Council have been criticized very freely, I can tell you. Lady Frances. Most dangerous. Why we haven't had more accidents than we have I can't imagine.' 'Extraordinary,' said Frankie.
         
        She left the office in a thoughtful mood. As Bobby had prophesied, all Mr Bassington-ffrench's actions seemed clear and above aboard. He was one of the Hampshire Bassingtonffrenches, he had given his proper address, he had actually mentioned his part in the tragedy to the house agent. Was it possible that, after all, Mr Bassington-ffrench was the completely innocent person he seemed?
         
        Frankie had a qualm of doubt. Then she refused it.
         
        'No,' she said to herself. 'A man who wants to buy a little place would either get here earlier in the day, or else stay over the next day. You wouldn't go into a house agent's at six-thirty in the evening and go up to London the following day. Why make the journey at all? Why not write?' No, she decided, Bassington-fFrench was the guilty party.
         
        Her next call was the police station.
         
        Inspector Williams was an old acquaintance, having succeeded in tracking down a maid with a false reference who had absconded with some of Frankie's jewellery.
         
        'Good afternoon. Inspector.' 'Good afternoon, your Ladyship. Nothing wrong, I hope.' 'Not as yet, but I'm thinking of holding up a bank soon, because I'm getting so short of money.' The inspector gave a rumbling laugh in acknowledgement of this witticism.

         
        'As a matter of fact, I've come to ask questions out of sheer curiosity,' said Frankie.
         
        'Is that so. Lady Frances?' 'Now do tell me this. Inspector - the man who fell over the cliff - Pritchard, or whatever his name was -' 'Pritchard, that's right.' 'He had only one photograph on him, didn't he? Somebody told me he had three?
         
        'One's right,' said the inspector. 'Photograph of his sister it was. She came down and identified him.' 'How absurd to say there were three!' 'Oh! That's easy, your Ladyship. These newspaper reporters don't mind how much they exaggerate and as often as not they get the whole thing wrong.' 'I know,' said Frankie. 'I've heard the wildest stories.' She paused a moment then drew freely on her imagination. 'I've heard that his pockets were stuffed with papers proving him to be a Bolshevik agent, and there's another story that his pockets were full of dope, and another again about his having pockets full of counterfeit bank notes.' The inspector laughed heartily.
         
        'That's a good one.' 'I suppose really he had just the usual things in his pockets?' 'And very few at that. A handkerchief, not marked. Some loose change, a packet of cigarettes and a couple of treasury notes - loose, not in a case. No letters. We'd have had a job to identify him if it hadn't been for the photo. Providential, you might call it.' 'I wonder,' said Frankie.
         
        In view other private knowledge, she considered providential a singularly inappropriate word. She changed the conversation.
         
        'I went to see Mr Jones, the Vicar's son, yesterday. The one who's been poisoned. What an extraordinary thing that was.' 'Ah!' said the inspector. 'Now that is extraordinary, if you like. Never heard of anything like it happening before. A nice young gentleman without an enemy in the world, or so you'd say. You know. Lady Frances, there are some queer customers going about. All the same, I never heard of a homicidal maniac who acted just this way.' 'Is there any clue at all to who did it?' Frankie was all wide-eyed inquiry.
         
        'It's so interesting to hear all this,' she added.
         
        The inspector swelled with gratification. He enjoyed this friendly conversation with an Earl's daughter. Nothing stuck up or snobbish about Lady Frances.
         
        'There was a car seen in the vicinity,' said the inspector.
         
        'Dark-blue Talbot saloon. A man on Lock's Corner reported dark-blue Talbot, No. GG 8282, passed going direction St Botolph's.' 'And you think?' 'GG 8282 is the number of the Bishop of Botolph's car.' Frankie toyed for a minute or two with the idea of a homicidal bishop who offered sacrifices of clergymen's sons, but rejected it with a sigh.
         
        'You don't suspect the Bishop, I suppose?' she said.
         
        'We've found out that the Bishop's car never left the Palace garage that afternoon.' 'So it was a false number.' 'Yes. We've got that to go on all right.' With expressions of admiration, Frankie took her leave. She made no damping remark, but she thought to herself: 'There must be a large number of dark-blue Talbots in England.' On her return home she took a directory of Marchbolt from its place on the writing-table in the library and removed it to her own room. She worked over it for some hours.
         
        The result was not satisfactory.
         
        There were four hundred and eighty-two Evanses in Marchbolt.
         
        'Damn!' said Frankie.
         
        She began to make plans for the future.
         
        CHAPTER 10 Preparations for an Accident
         
        A week later Bobby had joined Badger in London. He had received several enigmatical communications from Frankie, most in such an illegible scrawl that he was quite unable to do more than guess at their meaning. However, their general purport seemed to be that Frankie had a plan and that he (Bobby) was to do nothing until he heard from her. This was as well, for Bobby would certainly have had no leisure to do anything, since the unlucky Badger had already succeeded in embroiling himself and his business in every way ingenuity could suggest, and Bobby was kept busy disentangling the extraordinary mess his friend seemed to have got into.
         
        Meanwhile, the young man remained very strictly on his guard. The effect of eight grains of morphia was to render their taker extremely suspicious of food and drink and had also induced him to bring to London a Service revolver, the possession of which was extremely irksome to him.
         
        He was just beginning to feel that the whole thing had been an extravagant nightmare when Frankie's Bentley roared down the Mews and drew up outside the garage. Bobby, in greasestained overalls, came out to receive it. Frankie was at the wheel and beside her sat a rather gloomy-looking young man.
         
        'Hullo, Bobby,' said Frankie. 'This is George Arbuthnot.
         
        He's a doctor, and we shall need him.' Bobby winced slightly as he and George Arbuthnot made faint recognitions of each other's presence.
         
        'Are you sure we're going to need a doctor?' he asked.
         
        'Aren't you being a bit pessimistic?' 'I didn't mean we should need him in that way,' said Frankie. 'I need him for a scheme that I've got on. Look here, is there anywhere we can go and talk?' Bobby looked round him.
         
        'Well, there's my bedroom,' he said doubtfully.
         
        'Excellent,' said Frankie.
         
        She got out of the car and she and George Arbuthnot followed Bobby up some outside steps and into a microscopic bedroom.
         
        'I don't know,' said Bobby, looking round dubiously, 'if there's anywhere to sit.' There was not. The only chair was loaded with, apparently, the whole of Bobby's wardrobe.
         
        'The bed will do,' said Frankie.
         
        She plumped down on it. George Arbuthnot did the same and the bed groaned protestingly.
         
        'I've got everything planned out,' said Frankie. 'To begin with, we want a car. One of yours will do.' 'Do you mean you want to buy one of our cars?' Yes.' 'That's really very nice of you, Frankie,' said Bobby, with warm appreciation. 'But you needn't. I really do draw the line at sticking my friends.' 'You've got it all wrong,' said Frankie. 'It isn't like that at all.
         
        I know what you mean - it's like buying perfectly appalling clothes and hats from one's friends who are just starting in business. A nuisance, but it's got to be done. But this isn't like that at all. I really need a car.' 'What about the Bentley?' 'The Bentley's no good.' 'You're mad,' said Bobby.
         
        'No, I'm not. The Bentley's no good for what I want it for.' 'What's that?' 'Smashing it up.' Bobby groaned and put a hand to his head.
         
        'I don't seem very well this morning.' George Arbuthnot spoke for the first time. His voice was deep and melancholy.
         
        'She means,' he said, 'that's she going to have an accident.' 'How does she know?' said Bobby wildly.
         
        Frankie gave an exasperated sigh.
         
        'Somehow or other,' she said, 'we seem to have started wrong. Now just listen quietly, Bobby, and try and take in what I'm going to say. I know your brains are practically negligible, but you ought to be able to understand if you really concentrate.' She paused, then resumed.
         
        'I am on the trail of Bassingtonffrench.' 'Hear, hear.' 'Bassington-ffrench - our particular Bassington-ffrench lives at Merroway Court at the village of Staverley in Hampshire. Merroway Court belongs to BassingtonfTrench's brother, and our Bassington-ffrench lives there with his brother and his wife.' 'Who's wife?' 'The brother's wife, of course. That isn't the point. The point is how are you or I or both of us is going to worm ourselves into the household. I've been down and reconnoitred the ground. Staverley's a mere village. Strangers arriving there to stay would stick out a mile. It would be the sort of thing that simply isn't done. So I've evolved a plan. This is what is going to happen: Lady Frances Derwent, driving her car more recklessly than well, crashes into the wall near the gates of Merroway Court. Complete wreckage of the car, less complete wreckage of Lady Frances, who is carried to the house, suffering from concussion and shock and must emphatically not be moved.' 'Who says so?' 'George. Now you see where George comes in. We can't risk a strange doctor saying there is nothing the matter with me. Or perhaps some officious person might pick up my prostrate form and take it to some local hospital. No, what happens is this: George is passing, also in a car (you'd better sell us a second one), sees the accident, leaps out and takes charge. "I am a doctor. Stand back, everybody" (That is, if there is anybody to stand back). "We must take her into that house what is it, Merroway Court? That will do. I must be able to make a thorough examination." I am carried to the best spare room, the Bassington-ffrenches either sympathetic or bitterly resisting, but in any case, George will overbear them. George makes his examination and emerges with his verdict. Happily, it is not as serious as he thought. No bones broken, but danger of concussion. I must on no account be moved for two or three days. After that, I shall be able to return to London.
         
        'And then George departs and it's up to me to ingratiate myself with the household.' 'And where do I come in?' 'You don't.' 'But look here ' 'My dear child, do remember that Bassingtonffrench knows you. He doesn't know me from Adam. And I'm in a frightfully strong position, because I've got a title. You see how useful that is. I'm not just a stray young woman gaining admission to the house for mysterious purposes. I am an earl's daughter and therefore highly respectable. And George is a real doctor and everything is quite above suspicion.' 'Oh! I suppose it's all right,' said Bobby unhappily.
         
        'It's a remarkably well-planned scheme, I think,' said Frankie with pride.
         
        'And I don't do anything at all?' asked Bobby.
         
        He still felt injured - much like a dog who has been unexpectedly deprived of a bone. This, he felt, was his own particular crime, and now he was being ousted.
         
        'Of course you do, darling. You grow a moustache.' 'Oh! I grow a moustache, do I?' 'Yes. How long will it take?' 'Two or three weeks, I expect.' 'Heavens! I'd no idea it was such a slow process. Can't you speed it up?' 'No. Why can't I wear a false one?' 'They always look so false and they twist or come off or smell of spirit gum. Wait a minute, though, I believe there is a kind you can get stuck on hair by hair, so to speak, that absolutely defies detection. I expect a theatrical wigmaker would do it for you.' 'He'd probably think I was trying to escape from justice.' 'It doesn't matter what he thinks.' 'Once I've got the moustache, what do I do?' 'Put on a chauffeur's uniform and drive the Bentley down to Staverley.' 'Oh, I see.' Bobby brightened.
         
        'You see my idea is this,' said Frankie: 'Nobody looks at a chauffeur in the way they look at a person. In any case, Bassington-ffrench only saw you for a minute or two and he must have been too rattled wondering if he could change the photograph in time to look at you much. You were just a young golfing ass to him. It isn't like the Caymans who sat opposite you and talked to you and who were deliberately trying to sum you up. I'd bet anything that seeing you in chauffeur's uniform, Bassington-ffrench wouldn't recognize you even without the moustache. He might just possibly think that your face reminded him of somebody - no more than that. And with the moustache it ought to be perfectly safe. Now tell me, what do you think of the plan?' Bobby turned it over in his mind.
         
        'To tell you the truth, Frankie,' he said generously, 'I think it's pretty good.' 'In that case,' said Frankie briskly. 'Let's go and buy some cars. I say, I think George has broken your bed.' 'It doesn't matter,' said Bobby hospitably. 'It was never a particularly good bed.' They descended to the garage, where a nervous-looking young man with a curious lack of chin and an agreeable smile greeted them with a vague 'Haw, haw, haw!' His general appearance was slightly marred by the fact that his eyes had a distinct disinclination to look in the same direction.
         
        'Hullo, Badger,' said Bobby. 'You remember Frankie, don't you^' Badger clearly didn't, but he said, 'Haw, haw, haw!' again in an amiable manner.
         
        'Last time I saw you,' said Frankie, 'you were head downward in the mud and we had to pull you out by the legs.' 'No, not really?' said Badger. 'Why, that m-m-must have been Ww-w-wales.' 'Quite right,' said Frankie. 'It was.' 'I always was a p-p-putrid r-r-r-rider,' said Badger. 'I s-s-sstill am,' he added mournfully.
         
        'Frankie wants to buy a car,' said Bobby.
         
        'Two cars,' said Frankie. 'George has got to have one, too.
         
        He's crashed his at the moment.' 'We can hire him one,' said Bobby.
         
        'Well, come and look at what we've got in s-s-stock,' said Badger.
         
        'They look very smart,' said Frankie, dazzled by lurid hues of scarlet and apple-green.
         
        'They look all right,' said Bobby darkly.
         
        'That's r-r-r-remarkably good value in a ss-second-hand Chrysler,' said Badger.
         
        'No, not that one,' said Bobby. 'Whatever she buys has got to go at least forty miles.' Badger cast his partner a look of reproach.
         
        'The Standard is pretty much on its last legs,' mused Bobby.
         
        'But I think it would just get you there. The Essex is a bit too good for the job. She'll go at least two hundred before breaking down.' 'All right,' said Frankie. 'I'll have the Standard.' Badger drew his colleague a little aside.
         
        'W-w-what do you think about p-p-price?' he murmured.
         
        'Don't want to s-s-stick a friend of yours too much. Tt-t-ten pounds?' 'Ten pounds is all right,' said Frankie, entering the discussion.
         
        'I'll pay for it now.' 'Who is she really?' asked Badger in a loud whisper.
         
        Bobby whispered back.
         
        'F-f-f-first time I ever knew anyone with a t-t-t-title who c-c-could pay cash,' said Badger with respect.
         
        Bobby followed the other two out to the Bentley.
         
        'When is this business going to take place?' he demanded.
         
        'The sooner the better,' said Frankie. 'We thought tomorrow afternoon.' 'Look here, can't I be there? I'll put on a beard if you like.' 'Certainly not,' said Frankie. 'A beard would probably ruin everything by falling off at the wrong moment. But I don't see why you shouldn't be a motor-cyclist - with a lot of cap and goggles. What do you think, George?' George Arbuthnot spoke for the second time: 'All right,' he said, 'the more the merrier.' His voice was even more melancholy than before.
         
        CHAPTER 11 The Accident Happens
         
        The rendezvous for the great accident party was fixed at a spot about a mile from Staverley village where the road to Staverley branched off from the main road to Andover.
         
        All three arrived there safely, though Frankie's Standard had shown unmistakable signs of decrepitude at every hill.
         
        The time fixed had been one o'clock.
         
        'We don't want to be interrupted when we're staging the thing,' Frankie had said. 'Hardly anything ever goes down this road, I should imagine, but at lunch time we ought to be perfectly safe.' They proceeded for half a mile on the side road and then Frankie pointed out the place she had selected for the accident to take place.
         
        'It couldn't be better in my opinion,' she said. 'Straight down this hill and then, as you see, the road gives a sudden very sharp turn round that bulging bit of wall. The wall is actually the wall of Merroway Court. If we start the car and let it run down the hill it will crash straight into the wall and something pretty drastic ought to happen to it.' 'I should say so,' Bobby agreed. 'But someone ought to be on the lookout at the corner to be sure someone isn't coming round it in the opposite direction.' 'Quite right,' said Frankie. 'We don't want to involve anybody else in a mess and perhaps maim them for life. George can take his car down there and turn it as though he were coming from the other direction. Then when he waves a handkerchief it will show that all is clear.' 'You're looking very pale, Frankie,' said Bobby anxiously.
         
        'Are you sure you're all right?' 'I'm made up pale,' explained Frankie. 'Ready for the concussion. You don't want me to be carried into the house blooming with health.' 'How wonderful women are,' said Bobby appreciatively.
         
        'You look exactly like a sick monkey.' 'I think you're very rude,' said Frankie. 'Now, then, I shall go and prospect at the gate into Merroway Court. It's just this side of the bulge. There's no lodge, fortunately. When George waves his handkerchief and I wave mine, you start her off.' 'Right,' said Bobby. 'I'll stay on the running board to guide her until the pace gets too hot and then I'll jump off.' 'Don't hurt yourself,' said Frankie.
         
        'I shall be extremely careful not to. It would complicate matters to have a real accident on the spot of the faked one.' 'Well, start off, George,' said Frankie.
         
        George nodded, jumped into the second car and ran slowly down the hill. Bobby and Frankie stood looking after him.
         
        'You'll - look after yourself, won't you, Frankie?' said Bobby with a sudden gruffness. 'I mean - don't go doing anything foolish.' 'I shall be all right. Most circumspect. By the way, I don't think I'd better write to you direct. I'll write to George or my maid or someone or other to pass on to you.' 'I wonder if George is going to be a success in his profession.' 'Why shouldn't he?' 'Well, he doesn't seem to have acquired a chatty bedside manner yet.' 'I expect that will come,' said Frankie. 'I'd better be going now. I'll let you know when I want you to come down with the Bentley.' 'I'll get busy with the moustache. So long, Frankie.' 'They looked at each other for a moment, and then Frankie nodded and began to walk down the hill.
         
        George had turned the car and then backed it round the bulge.
         
        Frankie disappeared for a moment then reappeared in the road, waving a handkerchief. A second handkerchief waved from the bottom of the road at the turn.
         
        Bobby put the car into third gear, then, standing on the footboard, he released the brake. The car moved grudgingly forward, impeded by being in gear. The slope, however, was sufficiently steep. The engine started. The car gathered way.
         
        Bobby steadied the steering wheel. At the last possible moment he jumped off.
         
        The car went on down the hill and crashed into the wall with considerable force. All was well - the accident had taken place successfully.
         
        Bobby saw Frankie run quickly to the scene of the crime and plop down amid the wreckage. George in his car came round the corner and pulled up.
         
        With a sigh Bobby mounted his motor cycle and rode away in the direction of London.
         
        At the scene of the accident things were busy.
         
        'Shall I roll about in the road a bit,' asked Frankie, 'to get myself dusty?' 'You might as well,' said George. 'Here, give me your hat.' He took it and inflicted a terrific dent on it. Frankie gave a faint anguished cry.
         
        'That's the concussion,' explained George. 'Now, then, lie doggo just where you are. I think I heard a bicycle bell.' Sure enough, at that moment, a boy of about seventeen came whistling round the corner. He stopped at once, delighted with the pleasurable spectacle that met his eyes.
         
        'Ooer!' he ejaculated,' 'as there been an accident?' 'No,' said George sarcastically. 'The young lady ran her car into the wall on purpose.' Accepting, as he was meant to do, this remark as irony rather than the simple truth which it was, the boy said with relish: 'Looks bad, don't she? Is she dead?' 'Not yet,' said George. 'She must be taken somewhere at once. I'm a doctor. What's this place in here?' 'Merroway Court. Belongs to Mr Bassington-ffrench. He's a JP, he is.' 'She must be carried there at once,' said George authoritatively.
         
        'Here, leave your bicycle and lend me a hand.' Only too willing, the boy propped his bicycle against the wall and came to assist. Between them George and the boy carried Frankie up the drive to a pleasant old-fashioned-looking manor house.
         
        Their approach had been observed, for an elderly butler came out to meet them.
         
        'There's been an accident,' said George curtly. 'Is there a room I can carry this lady into? She must be attended to at once.' The butler went back into the hall in a flustered way. George and the boy followed him up closely, still carrying the limp body of Frankie. The butler had gone into a room on the left and from there a woman emerged. She was tall, with red hair, and about thirty years of age. Her eyes were a light clear blue.
         
        She dealt with the situation quickly.
         
        'There is a spare bedroom on the ground floor,' she said.
         
        'Will you bring her in there? Ought I to telephone for a doctor?' 'I am a doctor,' explained George. 'I was passing in my car and saw the accident occur.' 'Oh! how very fortunate. Come this way, will you?' She showed them the way into a pleasant bedroom with windows giving on the garden.
         
        'Is she badly hurt?' she inquired.
         
        'I can't tell yet.' Mrs Bassington-ffrench took the hint and retired. The boy accompanied her and launched out into a description of the accident as though he had been an actual witness of it.
         
        'Run smack into the wall she did. Car's all smashed up.
         
        There she was lying on the ground with her hat all dinted in.
         
        The gentleman, he was passing in his car ' He proceeded ad lib till got rid of with a half-crown.
         
        Meanwhile Frankie and George were conversing in careful whispers.
         
        'George, darling, this won't blight your career, will it? They won't strike you off the register, or whatever it is, will they?' 'Probably,' said George gloomily. 'That is, if it ever comes out.' 'It won't,' said Frankie. 'Don't worry, George. I shan't let you down.' She added thoughtfully: 'You did it very well. I've never heard you talk so much before.' George sighed. He looked at his watch.
         
        'I shall give my examination another three minutes,' he said.
         
        'What about the car?' 'I'll arrange with a garage to have that cleared up.' 'Good.' George continued to study his watch. Finally he said with an air of relief: 'Time.' 'George,' said Frankie, 'you've been an angel. I don't know why you did it.' 'No more do I,' said George. 'Damn fool thing to do.' He nodded to her.
         
        'Bye bye. Enjoy yourself.' 'I wonder if I shall,' said Frankie.
         
        She was thinking of that cool impersonal voice with the slight American accent.
         
        George went in search of the owner of it, whom he found waiting for him in the drawing-room.
         
        'Well,' he said abruptly. 'I'm glad to say it's not so bad as I feared. Concussion very slight and already passing off. She ought to stay quietly where she is for a day or so, though.' He paused. 'She seems to be a Lady Frances Derwent.' 'Oh, fancy!' said Mrs Bassington-ffrench. 'Then I know some cousins of hers - the Draycotts - quite well.' 'I don't know if it's inconvenient for you to have her here,' said George. 'But if she could stay where she is for a day or two...' Here George paused.
         
        'Oh, of course. That will be all right, Dr -?' 'Arbuthnot. By the way, I'll see to the car business. I shall be passing a garage.' 'Thank you very much, Dr Arbuthnot. How very lucky you happened to be passing. I suppose a doctor ought to see her tomorrow just to see she's getting on all right.' 'Don't think it's necessary,' said George. 'All she needs is quiet.' 'But I should feel happier. And her people ought to know.' 'I'll attend to that,' said George. 'And as to the doctoring business - well, it seems she's a Christian Scientist and won't have doctors at any price. She wasn't too pleased at finding me in attendance.' 'Oh, dear!' said Mrs Bassingtonffrench.
         
        'But she'll be quite all right,' said George reassuringly. 'You can take my word for it.' 'If you really think so, Dr Arbuthnot,' said Mrs Bassingtonffrench rather doubtfully.
         
        'I do,' said George. 'Goodbye. Dear me. I left one of my instruments in the bedroom.' He came rapidly into the room and up to the bedside.
         
        Trankie,' he said in a quick whisper. 'You're a Christian Scientist. Don't forget.' 'But why?' 'I had to do it. Only way.' 'All right,' said Frankie. 'I won't forget."
         
        CHAPTER 12 In the Enemy's Camp
         
        'Well, here I am,' thought Frankie. 'Safely in the enemy's camp. Now, it's up to me.' There was a tap on the door and Mrs BassingtonfFrench entered.
         
        Frankie raised herself a little on her pillows.
         
        'I'm so frightfully sorry,' she said in a faint voice. 'Causing you all this bother.' 'Nonsense,' said Mrs Bassington-ffrench. Frankie heard anew that cool attractive drawling voice with a slight American accent, and remembered that Lord Marchington had said that one of the Hampshire Bassington-ffrenches had married an American heiress. 'Dr Arbuthnot says you will be quite all right in a day or two if you just keep quiet.' Frankie felt that she ought at this point to say something about 'error' or 'mortal mind', but was frightened of saying the wrong thing.
         
        'He seems nice,' she said. 'He was very kind.' 'He seemed a most capable young man,' said Mrs Bassington-ffrench. 'It was very fortunate that he just happened to be passing.' 'Yes, wasn't it? Not, of course, that I really needed him.' 'But you mustn't talk,' continued her hostess. 'I'll send my maid along with some things for you and then she can get you properly into bed.' 'It's frightfully kind of you.' 'Not at all.' Frankie felt a momentary qualm as the other woman withdrew.
         
        'A nice kind creature,' she said to herself. 'And beautifully unsuspecting.' For the first time she felt that she was playing a mean trick on her hostess. Her mind had been so taken up with the vision of a murderous Bassington-ffrench pushing an unsuspecting victim over a precipice that lesser characters in the drama had not entered her imagination.
         
        'Oh, well,' thought Frankie, 'I've got to go through with it now. But I wish she hadn't been so nice about it.' She spent a dull afternoon and evening lying in her darkened room. Mrs Bassington-ffrench looked in once or twice to see how she was but did not stay.
         
        The next day, however, Frankie admitted the daylight and expressed a desire for company and her hostess came and sat `with her for some time. They discovered many mutual acquaintances and friends and by the end of the day, Frankie felt, with a guilty qualm, that they had become friends.
         
        Mrs Bassington-ffrench referred several times to her husband and to her small boy. Tommy. She seemed a simple woman, deeply attached to her home, and yet, for some reason or other, Frankie fancied that she was not quite happy. There was an `anxious expression in her eyes sometimes that did not agree with a mind at peace with itself.
         
        On the third day Frankie got up and was introduced to the master of the house.
         
        He was a big man, heavy jowled, with a kindly but rather abstracted air. He seemed to spend a good deal of his time shut up in his study. Yet Frankie judged him to be very fond of his wife, though interesting himself very little in her concerns.
         
        Tommy, the small boy, was seven, and a healthy, mischievous child. Sylvia Bassington-ffrench obviously adored him.
         
        'It's so nice down here,' said Frankie with a sigh.
         
        She was lying out on a long chair in the garden.
         
        'I don't know whether it's the bang on the head, or what it is, but I just don't feel I want to move. I'd like to lie here for days and days.' 'Well, do,' said Sylvia Bassington-ffrench in her calm, incurious tones. 'No, really, I mean it. Don't hurry back to town. You see,' she went on, 'it's a great pleasure to me to have you here. You're so bright and amusing. It quite cheers me up.' 'So she needs cheering up,' flashed across Frankie's mind.
         
        At the same time she felt ashamed of herself.
         
        'I feel we really have become friends,' continued the other woman.
         
        Frankie felt still more ashamed.
         
        It was a mean thing she was doing - mean - mean - mean.
         
        She would give it up! Go back to town Her hostess went on: 'It won't be too dull here. Tomorrow my brother-in-law is coming back. You'll like him, I'm sure. Everyone likes Roger.' 'He lives with you?' 'Off and on. He's a restless creature. He calls himself the ne'er-do-weel of the family, and perhaps it's true in a way. He never sticks to a job for long - in fact I don't believe he's ever done any real work in his life. But some people just are like that - especially in old families. And they're usually people with a great charm of manner. Roger is wonderfully sympathetic. I don't know what I should have done without him this spring when Tommy was ill.' 'What was the matter with Tommy?' 'He had a bad fall from the swing. It must have been tied on to a rotten branch and the branch gave way. Roger was very upset because he was swinging the child at the time - you know, giving him high ones, such as children love. We thought at first Tommy's spine was hurt, but it turned out to be a very slight injury and he's quite all right now.' 'He certainly looks it,' said Frankie, smiling, as she heard faint yells and whoops in the distance.
         
        'I know. He seems in perfect condition. It's such a relief.
         
        He's had bad luck in accidents. He was nearly drowned last winter.' 'Was he really?' said Frankie thoughtfully.
         
        She no longer meditated returning to town. The feeling of guilt had abated.
         
        Accidents!
         
        Did Roger Bassington-ffrench specialize in accidents, she wondered.
         
        She said: 'If you're sure you mean it, I'd love to stay a little longer. But won't your husband mind my butting in like this?' 'Henry?' Mrs Bassington-ffrench's lips curled in a strange expression. 'No, Henry won't mind. Henry never minds anything - nowadays.' Frankie looked at her curiously.
         
        'If she knew me better she'd tell me something,' she thought to herself. 'I believe there are lots of odd things going on in this household.' Henry Bassington-ffrench joined them for tea and Frankie studied him closely. There was certainly something odd about the man. His type was an obvious one - a jovial, sport-loving, simple country gentleman. But such a man ought not to sit twitching nervously, his nerves obviously on edge, now sunk in an abstraction from which it was impossible to rouse him, now giving out bitter and sarcastic replies to anything said to him.
         
        Not that he was always like that. Later that evening, at dinner, he showed out in quite a new light. He joked, laughed, told stories, and was, for a man of his abilities, quite brilliant. Too brilliant, Frankie felt. The brilliance was just as unnatural and out of character.
         
        'He has such queer eyes,' she thought. 'They frighten me a little.' And yet surely she did not suspect Henry Bassingtonffrench of anything? It was his brother, not he, who had been in Marchbolt on that fatal day.
         
        As to the brother, Frankie looked forward to seeing him with eager interest. According to her and to Bobby, the man was a murderer. She was going to meet a murderer face to face.
         
        She felt momentarily nervous.
         
        Yet, after all, how could he guess?
         
        How could he, in any way, connect her with a successfully accomplished crime?
         
        'You're making a bogey for yourself out of nothing,' she said to herself.
         
        Roger Bassington-ffrench arrived just before tea on the following afternoon.
         
        Frankie did not meet him till tea time. She was still supposed to 'rest' in the afternoon.
         
        When she came out on to the lawn where tea was laid, Sylvia said smiling: 'Here is our invalid. This is my brother-in-law. Lady Frances Derwent.' Frankie saw a tall, slender young man of something over thirty with very pleasant eyes. Although she could see what Bobby meant by saying he ought to have a monocle and a toothbrush moustache, she herself was more inclined to notice the intense blue of his eyes. They shook hands.
         
        He said: 'I've been hearing all about the way you tried to break down the park wall.' 'I'll admit,' said Frankie, 'that I'm the world's worst driver.
         
        But I was driving an awful old rattle-trap. My own car was laid up and I bought a cheap one secondhand.' 'She was rescued from the ruins by a very good-looking young doctor,' said Sylvia.
         
        'He was rather sweet,' agreed Frankie.
         
        Tommy arrived at this moment and flung himself upon his uncle with squeaks of joy.
         
        'Have you brought me a Homby train? You said you would.
         
        You said you would.' 'Oh, Tommy! You mustn't ask for things,' said Sylvia.
         
        'That's all right, Sylvia. It was a promise. I've got your train all right, old man.' He looked casually at his sister-in-law. 'Isn't Henry coming to tea?' 'I don't think so.' The constrained note was in her voice. 'He isn't feeling awfully well today, I imagine.' Then she said impulsively: 'Oh, Roger, I'm glad you're back.' He put his hand on her arm for a minute.
         
        'That's all right, Sylvia, old girl.' After tea, Roger played trains with his nephew.
         
        Frankie watched them, her mind in a turmoil.
         
        Surely this wasn't the sort of man to push people over cliffs!
         
        This charming young man couldn't be a cold-blooded murderer!
         
        But, then - she and Bobby must have been wrong all along.
         
        Wrong, that is, about this part of it.
         
        She felt sure now that it wasn't Bassington-ffrench who had pushed Pritchard over the cliff.
         
        Then who was it?
         
        She was still convinced he had been pushed over. Who had done it? And who had put the morphia in Bobby's beer?
         
        With the thought of morphia suddenly the explanation of Henry Bassington-ffrench's peculiar eyes came to her, with their pin-point pupils.
         
        Was Henry Bassington-ffrench a drug fiend?
         
        CHAPTER 13 Alan Carstairs
         
        Strangely enough, she received confirmation of this theory no later than the following day, and it came from Roger.
         
        They had been playing a single at tennis against each other and were sitting afterwards sipping iced drinks.
         
        They had been talking about various indifferent subjects and Frankie had become more and more sensible of the charm of someone who had, like Roger Bassington-ffrench, travelled about all over the world. The family ne'er-do-weel, she could not help thinking, contrasted very favourably with his heavy, serious-minded brother.
         
        A pause had fallen while these thoughts were passing through Frankie's mind. It was broken by Roger - speaking this time in an entirely different tone of voice.
         
        'Lady Frances, I'm going to do a rather peculiar thing. I've known you less than twenty-four hours, but I feel instinctively that you're the one person I can ask advice from.' 'Advice?' said Frankie, surprised.
         
        'Yes. I can't make up my mind between two different courses of action.' He paused. He was leaning forward, swinging a racquet between his knees, a light frown on his forehead. He looked worried and upset.
         
        'It's about my brother. Lady Frances.' 'Yes?' 'He is taking drugs. I am sure of it.' 'What makes you think so?' asked Frankie.
         
        'Everything. His appearance. His extraordinary changes of mood. And have you noticed his eyes? The pupils are like pinpoints.'
         
        'I had noticed that,' admitted Frankie. 'What do you think it is?' 'Morphia or some form of opium.' 'Has it been going on for long?' 'I date the beginning of it from about six months ago. I remember that he complained of sleeplessness a good deal.
         
        How he first came to take the stuff, I don't know, but I think it must have begun soon after then.' 'How does he get hold of it?' inquired Frankie practically.
         
        'I think it comes to him by post. Have you noticed that he is particularly nervous and irritable some days at tea time?' 'Yes, I have.' 'I suspect that that is when he has finished up his supply and is waiting for more. Then, after the six o'clock post has come, he goes into his study and emerges for dinner in quite a different mood.' Frankie nodded. She remembered that unnatural brilliance of conversation sometimes at dinner.
         
        'But where does the supply come from?' she asked.
         
        'Ah, that I don't know. No reputable doctor would give it to him. There are, I suppose, various sources where one could get it in London by paying a big price.' Frankie nodded thoughtfully.
         
        She was remembering having said to Bobby something about a gang of drug smugglers and his replying that one could not mix up too many crimes. It was queer that so soon in their investigations they should have come upon the traces of such a thing.
         
        It was queerer that it should be the chief suspect who should draw her attention to the fact. It made her more inclined than ever to acquit Roger Bassington-ffrench of the charge of murder.
         
        And yet there was the inexplicable matter of the changed photograph. The evidence against him, she reminded herself, was still exactly what it had been. On the other side was only the personality of the man himself. And everyone always said that murderers were charming people!
         
        She shook off these reflections and turned to her companion.
         
        'Why exactly are you telling me this?' she asked frankly.
         
        'Because I don't know what to do about Sylvia,' he said simply.
         
        'You think she doesn't know?' 'Of course she doesn't know. Ought I to tell her?' 'It's very difficult ' 'It is difficult. That's why I thought you might be able to help me. Sylvia has taken a great fancy to you. She doesn't care much for any of the people round about, but she liked you at once, she tells me. What ought I to do. Lady Frances? By telling her I shall add a great burden to her life.' 'If she knew she might have some influence,' suggested Frankie.
         
        'I doubt it. When it's a case of drug-taking, nobody, even the nearest and dearest, has any influence.' 'That's rather a hopeless point of view, isn't it?' 'It's a fact. There are ways, of course. If Henry would only consent to go in for a cure - there's a place actually near here.
         
        Run by a Dr Nicholson.' 'But he'd never consent, would he?' 'He might. You can catch a morphia taker in a mood of extravagant remorse sometimes when they'd do anything to cure themselves. I'm inclined to think that Henry might be got to that frame of mind more easily if he thought Sylvia didn't know - if her knowing was held over him as a kind of threat. If the cure was successful (they'd call it "nerves", of course) she never need know.' 'Would he have to go away for the cure?' 'The place I mean is about three miles from here, the other side of the village. It's run by a Canadian - Dr Nicholson. A very clever man, I believe. And, fortunately. Henry likes him.
         
        Hush - here comes Sylvia.' Mrs Bassington-ffrench joined them, observing: 'Have you been very energetic?' 'Three sets,' said Frankie. 'And I was beaten every time.' 'You play a very good game,' said Roger.
         
        'I'm terribly lazy about tennis,' said Sylvia. 'We must ask the Nicholsons over one day. She's very fond of a game. Why what is it?' She had caught the glance the other two had exchanged.
         
        'Nothing - only I happened to be talking about the Nicholsons to Lady Frances.' 'You'd better call her Frankie like I do,' said Sylvia. 'Isn't it odd how whenever one talks of any person or thing, somebody else does the same immediately afterwards?' 'They are Canadians, aren't they?' inquired Frankie.
         
        'He is, certainly. I rather fancy she is English, but I'm not sure. She's a very pretty little thing - quite charming with the most lovely big wistful eyes. Somehow or other, I fancy she isn't terribly happy. It must be a depressing life.' 'He runs a kind of sanatorium, doesn't he?' 'Yes - nerve cases and people who take drugs. He's very successful, I believe. He's rather an impressive man.' 'You like him?' 'No,' said Sylvia abruptly, 'I don't.' And rather vehemently, after a moment or two, she added: 'Not at all.' Later on, she pointed out to Frankie a photograph of a charming large-eyed woman which stood on the piano.
         
        'That's Moira Nicholson. An appealing face, isn't it? A man who came down here with some friends of ours some time ago was quite struck with it. He wanted an introduction to her, I think.' She laughed.
         
        'I'll ask them to dinner tomorrow night. I'd like to know what you think of him.' 'Him?' 'Yes. As I told you, I dislike him, and yet he's quite an attractive-looking man.' Something in her tone made Frankie look at her quickly, but Sylvia Bassington-ffrench had turned away and was taking some dead flowers out of a vase.
         
        'I must collect my ideas,' thought Frankie, as she drew a comb through her thick dark hair when dressing for dinner that night. 'And,' she added resolutely, 'it's time I made a few experiments.' Was, or was not, Roger Bassington-ffrench the villain she and Bobby assumed him to be?
         
        She and Bobby had agreed that whoever had tried to put the latter out of the way must have easy access to morphia. Now in a way this held good for Roger Bassington-ffrench. If his brother received supplies of morphia by post, it would be easy enough for Roger to abstract a packet and use it for his own purposes.
         
        'Mem.,' wrote Frankie on a sheet of paper:
         
        '(1) Find out where Roger was on the 16th - day when Bobby was poisoned.' She thought she saw her way to doing that fairly clearly.
         
        '(2),' she wrote. 'Produce picture of dead man and observe reactions if any. Also noteifR.B.F. admits being in Marchbolt then.' She felt slightly nervous over the second resolution. It meant coming out into the open. On the other hand, the tragedy had happened in her own part of the world, and to mention it casually would be the most natural thing in the world.
         
        She crumpled up the sheet of paper and burnt it.
         
        She managed to introduce the first point fairly naturally at dinner.
         
        'You know,' she said frankly to Roger. 'I can't help feeling that we've met before. And it wasn't very long ago, either. It wasn't, by any chance, at that party of Lady Shane's at Claridges. On the 16th it was.' 'It couldn't have been on the 16th,' said Sylvia quickly.
         
        'Roger was here then. I remember, because we had a children's party that day and what I should have done without Roger I simply don't know.' She gave a grateful glance at her brother-in-law and he smiled back at her.
         
        'I don't feel I've ever met you before,' he said thoughtfully to Frankie, and added: 'I'm sure if I had I'd remember it.' He said it rather nicely.
         
        'One point settled,' thought Frankie. 'Roger Bassingtonffrench was not in Wales on the day that Bobby was poisoned.' The second point came up fairly easily later. Frankie led the talk to country places, the dullness thereof, and the interest aroused by any local excitement.
         
        'We had a man fall over the cliff last month,' she remarked.
         
        'We were all thrilled to the core. I went to the inquest full of excitement, but it was all rather dull, really.' 'Was that a place called Marchbolt?' asked Sylvia suddenly.
         
        Frankie nodded.
         
        'Derwent Castle is only about seven miles from Marchbolt,' she explained.
         
        'Roger, that must have been your man,' cried Sylvia.
         
        Frankie looked inquiringly at him.
         
        'I was actually in at the death,' said Roger. 'I stayed with the body till the police came.' 'I thought one of the Vicar's sons did that,' said Frankie.
         
        'He had to go off to play the organ or something - so I took over.' 'How perfectly extraordinary,' said Frankie. 'I did hear somebody else had been there, too, but I never heard the name.
         
        So it was you?' There was a general atmosphere of 'How curious. Isn't the world small?' Frankie felt she was doing this rather well.
         
        'Perhaps that's where you saw me before - in Marchbolt?' suggested Roger.
         
        'I wasn't there actually at the time of the accident,' said Frankie. 'I came back from London a couple of days afterwards.
         
        Were you at the inquest?' 'No. I went back to London the morning after the tragedy.' 'He had some absurd idea of buying a house down there,' said Sylvia.
         
        'Utter nonsense,' said Henry Bassingtonf&ench.
         
        'Not at all,' said Roger good-humouredly.
         
        'You know perfectly well, Roger, that as soon as you'd bought it, you'd get a fit of wanderlust and go off abroad again.' 'Oh, I shall settle down some day, Sylvia.' 'When you do you'd better settle down near us,' said Sylvia.
         
        'Not go off to Wales.' Roger laughed. Then he turned to Frankie.
         
        'Any points of interest about the accident? It didn't turn out to be suicide or anything?' 'Oh, no, it was all painfully above board and some appalling relations came and identified the man. He was on a walking tour, it seems. Very sad, really, because he was awfully goodlooking.
         
        Did you see his picture in the papers?' 'I think I did,' said Sylvia vaguely. 'But I don't remember.' 'I've got a cutting upstairs from our local paper.' Frankie was all eagerness. She ran upstairs and came down with the cutting in her hand. She gave it to Sylvia. Roger came and looked over Sylvia's shoulder.
         
        'Don't you think he's good-looking?' she demanded in a rather school-girl manner.
         
        'He is, rather,' said Sylvia. 'He looks very like that man, Alan Carstairs, don't you think so, Roger? I believe I remembered saying so at the time.' 'He's got quite a look of him here,' agreed Roger. 'But there wasn't much real resemblance, you know.' 'You can't tell from newspaper pictures, can you?' said Sylvia, as she handed the cutting back.
         
        Frankie agreed that you couldn't.
         
        The conversation passed to other matters.
         
        Frankie went to bed undecided. Everyone seemed to have reacted with perfect naturalness. Roger's house-hunting stunt had been no secret.
         
        The only thing she had succeeded in getting was a name.
         
        The name of Alan Carstairs.
         
        CHAPTER 14 Dr Nicholson
         
        Frankie attacked Sylvia the following morning.
         
        She started by saying carelessly: 'What was that man's name you mentioned last night? Alan Carstairs, was it? I feel sure I've heard that name before.'
        'Oh, he was. Distinctly attractive.' 'Funny - his being so like the man who fell over the cliff at Marchbolt,' said Frankie.
         
        'I wonder if everyone has a double.' They compared instances, citing Adolf Beck and referring lightly to the Lyons Mail. Frankie was careful to make no further references to Alan Carstairs. To show too much interest in him would be fatal.
         
        In her own mind, however, she felt she was getting on now.
         
        She was quite convinced that Alan Carstairs had been the victim of the cliff tragedy at Marchbolt. He fulfilled all the conditions. He had no intimate friends or relations in this country and his disappearance was unlikely to be noticed for some time. A man who frequently ran off to East Africa and South America was not likely to be missed at once. Moreover, Frankie noted, although Sylvia Bassington-ffrench had commented on the resemblance in the newspaper reproduction, it had not occurred to her for a moment that it actually was the man.
         
        That, Frankie thought, was rather an interesting bit of psychology.
         
        We seldom suspect people who are 'news' of being people we have usually seen or met.
         
        Very good, then. Alan Carstairs was the dead man. The next step was to learn more about Alan Carstairs. His connection with the Bassington-ffrenches seemed to have been of the slightest. He had been brought down there quite by chance by friends. What was the name? Rivington. Frankie stored it in her memory for future use.
         
        That certainly was a possible avenue of inquiry. But it would be well to go slowly. Inquiries about Alan Carstairs must be very discreetly made.
         
        'I don't want to be poisoned or knocked on the head,' thought Frankie with a grimace. 'They were ready enough to bump off Bobby for practically nothing at all ' Her thoughts flew off at a tangent to that tantalizing phrase that had started the whole business.
         
        Evans! Who was Evans? Where did Evans fit in?
         
        'A dope gang,' decided Frankie. Perhaps some relation of Carstairs was victimized, and he was determined to bust it up.
         
        Perhaps he came to England for that purpose. Evans may have been one of the gang who had retired and gone to Wales to live.
         
        Carstairs had bribed Evans to give the others away and Evans had consented and Carstairs went there to see him, and someone followed him and killed him.
         
        Was that somebody Roger Bassington-ffrench? It seemed very unlikely. The Caymans, now, were far more what Frankie imagined a gang of dope smugglers would be likely to be.
         
        And yet - that photograph. If only there was some explanation of that photograph.
         
        That evening, Dr Nicholson and his wife were expected to dinner. Frankie was finishing dressing when she heard their car drive up to the front door. Her window faced that way and she looked out.
         
        A tall man was just alighting from the driver's seat of a darkblue Talbot.
         
        Frankie withdrew her head thoughtfully.
         
        Carstairs had been a Canadian. Dr Nicholson was a Canadian. And Dr Nicholson had a dark-blue Talbot.
         
        Absurd to build anything upon that, of course, but wasn't it just faintly suggestive?
         
        Dr Nicholson was a big man with a manner that suggested great reserves of power. His speech was slow, on the whole he said very little, but contrived somehow to make every word sound significant. He wore strong glasses and behind them his very pale-blue eyes glittered reflectively.
         
        His wife was a slender creature of perhaps twenty-seven, pretty, indeed beautiful. She seemed, Frankie, thought, slightly nervous and chattered rather feverishly as though to conceal the fact.
         
        'You had an accident, I hear. Lady Frances,' said Dr Nicholson as he took his seat beside her at the dinner table.
         
        Frankie explained the catastrophe. She wondered why she should feel so nervous doing so. The doctor's manner was simple and interested. Why should she feel as though she were rehearsing a defence to a charge that had never been made. Was there any earthly reason why the doctor should disbelieve in her accident?
         
        'That was too bad,' he said, as she finished, having, perhaps, made a more detailed story of it than seemed strictly necessary.
         
        'But you seem to have made a very good recovery.' 'We won't admit she's cured yet. We're keeping her with us,' said Sylvia.
         
        The doctor's gaze went to Sylvia. Something like a very faint smile came to his lips but passed almost immediately.
         
        'I should keep her with you as long as possible,' he said gravely.
         
        Frankie was sitting between her host and Dr Nicholson.
         
        Henry Bassington-ffrench was decidedly moody tonight. His hands twitched, he ate next to nothing and he took no part in the conversation.
         
        Mrs Nicholson, opposite, had a difficult time with him, and turned to Roger with obvious relief. She talked to him in a desultory fashion, but Frankie noticed that her eyes were never long absent from her husband's face.
         
        Dr Nicholson was talking about life in the country.
         
        'Do you know what a culture is. Lady Frances?' 'Do you mean book learning?' asked Frankie, rather puzzled.
         
        'No, no. I was referring to germs. They develop, you know, in specially prepared serum. The country. Lady Frances, is a little like that. There is time and space and infinite leisure suitable conditions, you see, for development.' 'Do you mean bad things?' asked Frankie puzzled.
         
        'That depends. Lady Frances, on the kind of germ cultivated.' Idiotic conversation, thought Frankie, and why should it make me feel creepy, but it does!
         
        She said flippantly: 'I expect I'm developing all sorts of dark qualities.' He looked at her and said calmly: 'Oh, no, I don't think so. Lady Frances. I think you would always be on the side of law and order.' Was there a faint emphasis on the word law?
         
        Suddenly, across the table, Mrs Nicholson said: 'My husband prides himself on summing up character.' Dr Nicholson nodded his head gently.
         
        'Quite right, Moira. Little things interest me.' He turned to Frankie again. 'I had heard of your accident, you know. One thing about it intrigued me very much.' 'Yes?' said Frankie, her heart beating suddenly.
         
        'The doctor who was passing - the one who brought you in here.' Yes?' 'He must have had a curious character - to turn his car before going to the rescue.' 'I don't understand.' 'Of course not. You were unconscious. But young Reeves, the message boy, came from Staverley on his bicycle and no car passed him, yet he comes round the corner, finds the smash, and the doctor's car pointing the same way he was going towards London. You see the point? The doctor did not come from the direction of Staveley so he must have come the other way, down the hill. But in that case his car should have been pointing towards Staverley. But it wasn't. Therefore he must have turned it.' 'Unless he had come from Staverley some time before,' said Frankie.
         
        'Then his car would have been standing there as you came down the hill. Was it?' The pale-blue eyes were looking at her very intently through the thick glasses.
         
        'I don't remember,' said Frankie. 'I don't think so.' 'You sound like a detective, Jasper,' said Mrs Nicholson.
         
        'And all about nothing at all.' 'Little things interest me,' said Nicholson.
         
        He turned to his hostess, and Frankie drew a breath of relief.
         
        Why had he catechized her like that? How had he found out all about the accident? 'Little things interest me,' he had said.
         
        Was that all there was to it?
         
        Frankie remembered the dark-blue Talbot saloon, and the fact that Carstairs had been a Canadian. It seemed to her that Dr Nicholson was a sinister man.
         
        She kept out of his way after dinner, attaching herself to the gentle, fragile Mrs Nicholson. She noticed that all the time Mrs Nicholson's eyes still watched her husband. Was it love, Frankie wondered, or fear?
         
        Nicholson devoted himself to Sylvia and at half-past ten he caught his wife's eye and they rose to go.
         
        'Well,' said Roger after they had gone, 'what do you think of our Dr Nicholson? A very forceful personality, hasn't he?' I'm like Sylvia,' said Frankie. 'I don't think I like him very much. I like her better.' 'Good-looking, but rather a little idiot,' said Roger. 'She either worships him or is scared to death of him -I don't know which.' 'That's just what I wondered,' agreed Frankie.
         
        'I don't like him,' said Sylvia, 'but I must admit that he's got a lot of - of. force. I believe he's cured drug takers in the most marvellous way. People whose relations despaired utterly.
         
        They've gone there as a last hope and come out absolutely cured.' 'Yes,' cried Henry Bassington-ffrench suddenly. 'And do you know what goes on there? Do you know the awful suffering and mental torment? A man's used to a drug and they cut him off it - cut him off it - till he goes raving mad for the lack of it and beats his head against the wall. That's what he does - your "forceful" doctor tortures people - tortures them - sends them to Hell - drives them mad...' He was shaking violently. Suddenly he turned and left the room.
         
        Sylvia Bassington-ffrench looked startled.
         
        'What is the matter with Henry?' she said wonderingly. 'He seems very upset.' Frankie and Roger dared not look at each other.
         
        'He's not looked well all evening,' ventured Frankie.
         
        'No. I noticed that. He's very moody lately. I wish he hadn't given up riding. Oh, by the way, Dr Nicholson invited Tommy over tomorrow, but I don't like him going there very much not with all those queer nerve cases and dope-takers.' 'I don't suppose the doctor would allow him to come into contact with them,' said Roger. 'He seems very fond of children.' 'Yes, I think it's a disappointment he hasn't got any of his own. Probably to her, too. She looks very sad - and terribly delicate.' 'She's like a sad Madonna,' said Frankie.
         
        'Yes, that describes her very well.' 'If Dr Nicholson is so fond of children I suppose he came to your children's party?' said Frankie carelessly.
         
        'Unfortunately he was away for a day or two just then. I think he had to go to London for some conference.' 'I see.' They went up to bed. Before she went to sleep, Frankie wrote to Bobby.
         
        CHAPTER 15 A Discovery
         
        Bobby had had an irksome time. His forced inaction was exceedingly trying. He hated staying quietly in London and doing nothing.
         
        He had been rung up on the telephone by George Arbuthnot who, in a few laconic words, told him that all had gone well. A couple of days later, he had a letter from Frankie, delivered to him by her maid, the letter having gone under cover to her at Lord Marchington's town house.
         
        Since then he had heard nothing.
         
        'Letter for you,' called out Badger.
         
        Bobby came forward excitedly but the letter was one addressed in his father's handwriting, and postmarked Marchbolt.
         
        At that moment, however, he caught sight of the neat blackgowned figure of Frankie's maid approaching down the Mews.
         
        Five minutes later he was tearing open Frankie's second letter.
         
        Dear Bobby (wrote Frankie,), / think it's about time you came down. I've given them instructions at home that you're to have the Bentley whenever you ask for it. Get a chauffeur's livery - darkgreen ours always are. Put it down to father at Harrods. It's best to be correct in details. Concentrate on making a good job of the moustache. It makes a frightful difference to anyone's face.
         
        Come down here and ask for me. You might bring me an ostensible note from Father. Report that the car is now in working order again. The garage here only holds two cars and as it's got the family Daimler and Roger Bassington-ffrench 's two-seater in it, it is fortunately full up, so you will go to Staverley and put up there.
         
        Get what local information you can when there - particularly about a Dr Nicholson who runs a place for dope patients. Several suspicious circumstances about him - he has a dark-blue Talbot saloon, he was away from home on the 16th when your beer was doctored, and he takes altogether too detailed an interest in the circumstances of my accident.
         
        I think I've identified the corpse!
         
        Au revoir, my fellow sleuth.
         
        Love from your successfully concussed, Frankie.
         
        P.S. I shall post this myself.
         
        Bobby's spirits rose with a bound.
         
        Discarding his overalls and breaking the news of his immediate departure to Badger, he was about to hurry off when he remembered that he had not yet opened his father's letter. He did so with a rather qualified enthusiasm since the Vicar's letters were actuated by a spirit of duty rather than pleasure and breathed an atmosphere of Christian forbearance which was highly depressing.
         
        The Vicar gave conscientious news of doings in Marchbolt, describing his own troubles with the organist and commenting on the unchristian spirit of one of his churchwardens. The rebinding of the hymn books was also touched upon. And the Vicar hoped that Bobby was sticking manfully to his job and trying to make good, and remained his ever affectionate father.
         
        There was a postscript: By the way, someone called who asked for your address in London.
         
        I was out at the time and he did not leave his name. Mrs Roberts describes him as a tall, stooping gentleman with pince-nez. He seemed very sorry to miss you and very anxious to see you again.
         
        A tall, stooping man with pince-nez. Bobby ran over in his mind anyone of his acquaintance likely to fit that description but could think of nobody.
         
        Suddenly a quick suspicion darted into his mind. Was this the forerunner of a new attempt upon his life? Were these mysterious enemies, or enemy, trying to track him down?
         
        He sat still and did some serious thinking. They, whoever they were, had only just discovered that he had left the neighbourhood. All unsuspecting, Mrs Roberts had given his new address.
         
        So that already they, whoever they were, might be keeping a watch upon the place. If he went out he would be followed and just as things were at the moment that would never do.
         
        'Badger,' said Bobby.
         
        'Yes, old lad.' 'Come here.' The next five minutes were spent in genuine hard work. At the end often minutes Badger could repeat his instructions by heart.
         
        When he was word perfect, Bobby got into a two-seater Flat dating from 1902 and drove dashingly down the Mews. He parked the Flat in St James's Square and walked straight from there to his club. There he did some telephoning and a couple of hours later certain parcels were delivered to him. Finally, about half-past three, a chauffeur in dark green livery walked to St James's Square and went rapidly up to a large Bentley which had been parked there about half an hour previously.
         
        The parking attendant nodded to him - the gentleman who had left the car had remarked, stammering slightly as he did so, that his chauffeur would be fetching it shortly.
         
        Bobby let in the clutch and drew neatly out. The abandoned Flat still stood demurely awaiting its owner. Bobby, despite the intense discomfort of his upper lip, began to enjoy himself. He headed north, not south, and, before long, the powerful engine was forging ahead on the Great North Road.
         
        It was only an extra precaution that he was taking. He was pretty sure that he was not being followed. Presently he turned off to the left and made his way by circuitous roads to Hampshire.
         
        It was just after tea that the Bentley purred up the drive of Merroway Court, a stiff and correct chauffeur at the wheel.
         
        'Hullo,' said Frankie lightly. There's the car.' She went out to the front door. Sylvia and Roger came with her.
         
        'Is everything all right, Hawkins?' The chauffeur touched his cap.
         
        'Yes, m'lady. She's been thoroughly overhauled.' 'That's all right, then.' The chauffeur produced a note.
         
        'From his lordship, m'lady.' Frankie took it.
         
        'You'll put up at the - what is it - Anglers' Arms in Staverley, Hawkins. I'll telephone in the morning if I want the car.' 'Very good, your ladyship.' Bobby backed, turned and sped down the drive.
         
        'I'm so sorry we haven't room here,' said Sylvia. 'It's a lovely car.' 'You get some pace out of that,' said Roger.
         
        'I do,' admitted Frankie.
         
        She was satisfied that no faintest quiver of recognition had shown on Roger's face. She would have been surprised if it had. She would not have recognized Bobby herself had she met him casually. The small moustache had a perfectly natural appearance, and that, with the stiff demeanour so uncharacteristic of the natural Bobby, completed the disguise enhanced by the chauffeur's livery.
         
        The voice, too, had been excellent, and quite unlike Bobby's own. Frankie began to think that Bobby was far more talented than she had given him credit for being.
         
        Meanwhile Bobby had successfully taken up his quarters at the Anglers' Arms.
         
        It was up to him to create the part of Edward Hawkins, chauffeur to Lady Frances Derwent.
         
        As to the behaviour of chauffeurs in private life, Bobby was singularly ill-informed, but he imagined that a certain haughtiness would not come amiss. He tried to feel himself a superior being and to act accordingly. The admiring attitude of various young women employed in the Anglers' Arms had a distinctly encouraging effect and he soon found that Frankie and her accident had provided the principal topic of conversation in Staverley ever since it had happened. Bobby unbent towards the landlord, a stout, genial person of the name of Thomas Askew, and permitted information to leak from him.
         
        'Young Reeves, he was there and saw it happen,' declared Mr Askew.
         
        Bobby blessed the natural mendacity of the young. The famous accident was now vouched for by an eye witness.
         
        'Thought his last moment had come, he did,' went on Mr Askew. 'Straight for him down the hill it come - and then took the wall instead. A wonder the young lady wasn't killed.' 'Her ladyship takes some killing,' said Bobby.
         
        'Had many accidents, has she?' 'She's been lucky,' said Bobby. 'But I assure you, Mr Askew, that when her ladyship's taken over the wheel from me as she sometimes does - well, I've made sure my last hour has come.' Several persons present shook their heads wisely and said they didn't wonder and it's just what they would have thought.
         
        'Very nice little place you have here, Mr Askew,' said Bobby kindly and condescendingly. 'Very nice and snug.' Mr Askew expressed gratification.
         
        'Merroway Court the only big place in the neighbourhood?' 'Well, there's the Grange, Mr Hawkins. Not that you'd call that a place exactly. There's no family living there. No, it had been empty for years until this American doctor took it.' 'An American doctor?' 'That's it - Nicholson his name is. And if you ask me, Mr Hawkins, there are some very queer goings on there.' The barmaid at this point remarked that Dr Nicholson gave her the shivers, he did.
         
        'Goings on, Mr Askew?' said Bobby. 'Now, what do you mean by goings on?' Mr Askew shook his head darkly.
         
        'There's those there that don't want to be there. Put away by their relations. I assure you, Mr Hawkins, the meanings and the shrieks and the groans that go on there you wouldn't believe.' 'Why don't the police interfere?' 'Oh, well, you see, it's supposed to be all right. Nerve cases, and such like. Loonies that aren't so very bad. The gentleman's a doctor and it's all right, so to speak -' Here the landlord buried his face in a pint pot and emerged again to shake his head in a very doubtful fashion.
         
        'Ah!' said Bobby in a dark and meaning way. 'If we knew everything that went on in these places...' And he, too, applied himself to a pewter pot.
         
        The barmaid chimed in eagerly.
         
        'That's what I say, Mr Hawkins. What goes on there? Why, one night a poor young creature escaped - in her nightgown she was - and the doctor and a couple of nurses out looking for her.
         
        "Oh! don't let them take me back!" That's what she was crying out. Pitiful it was. And about her being rich really and her relations having her put away. But they took her back, they did, and the doctor he explained that she'd got a persecution mania - that's what he called it. Kind of thinking everyone was against her. But I've often wondered - yes, I have. I've often wondered...' 'Ah!' said Mr Askew. 'It's easy enough to say ' Somebody present said that there was no knowing what went on in places. And somebody else said that.was right.
         
        Finally the meeting broke up and Bobby announced his intention of going for a stroll before turning in.
         
        The Grange was, he knew, on the other side of the village from Merroway Court, so he turned his footsteps in that direction. What he had heard that evening seemed to him worthy of attention. A lot of it could, of course, be discounted.
         
        Villages are usually prejudiced against newcomers, and still more so if the newcomer is of a different nationality. If Nicholson ran a place for curing drug takers, in all probability there would be strange sounds issuing from it - groans and even shrieks might be heard without any sinister reason for them, but all the same, the story of the escaping girl struck Bobby unpleasantly.
         
        Supposing the Grange were really a place where people were kept against their will? A certain amount of genuine cases might be taken as camouflage.
         
        At this point in his meditations Bobby arrived at a high wall with an entrance of wrought-iron gates. He stepped up to the gates and tried one gently. It was locked. Well, after all, why not?
         
        And yet somehow, the touch of that locked gate gave him a faintly sinister feeling. The place was like a prison.
         
        He moved a little farther along the road measuring the wall with his eye. Would it be possible to climb over? The wall was smooth and high and presented no accommodating crannies.
         
        He shook his head. Suddenly he came upon a little door.
         
        Without much real hope he tried it. To his surprise it yielded.
         
        It was not locked.
         
        'Bit of an oversight here,' thought Bobby with a grin.
         
        He slipped through, closing the door softly behind him.
         
        He found himself on a path leading through a shrubbery. He followed the path which twisted a good deal - in fact, it reminded Bobby of the one in Alice Through the Looking Glass.
         
        Suddenly, without any warning, the path gave a sharp turn and emerged into an open space close to the house. It was a moonlit night and the space was clearly lit. Bobby had stepped full into the moonlight before he could stop himself.
         
        At the same moment a woman's figure came round the corner of the house. She was treading very softly, glancing from side to side with - or so it seemed to the watching Bobby - the nervous alertness of a hunted animal. Suddenly she stopped dead and stood, swaying as though she would fall.
         
        Bobby rushed forward and caught her. Her lips were white and it seemed to him that never had he seen such an awful fear on any human countenance.
         
        'It's all right,' he said reassuringly in a very low voice. 'It's quite all right.' The girl, for she was little more, moaned faintly, her eyelids half closed.
         
        'I'm so frightened,' she murmured. 'I'm so terribly frightened.' 'What's the matter?' said Bobby.
         
        The girl only shook her head and repeated faintly: 'I'm so frightened. I'm so horribly frightened.' Suddenly some sound seemed to come to her ears. She sprang upright, away from Bobby. Then she turned to him.
         
        'Go away,' she said. 'Go away at once.' 'I want to help you,' said Bobby.
         
        'Do you?' She looked at him for a minute or two, a strange searching and moving glance. It was as though she explored his soul.
         
        Then she shook her head.
         
        'No one can help me.' 'I can,' said Bobby. 'I'd do anything. Tell me what it is that frightens you so.' She shook her head.
         
        'Not now. Oh! quick - they're coming! You can't help me unless you go now. At once - at once.' Bobby yielded to her urgency.
         
        With a whispered: 'I'm at the Anglers' Arms,' he plunged back along the path. The last he saw of her was an urgent gesture bidding him hurry.
         
        Suddenly he heard footsteps on the path in front of him.
         
        Someone was coming along the path from the little door.
         
        Bobby plunged abruptly into the bushes at the side of the path.
         
        He had not been mistaken. A man was coming along the path. He passed close to Bobby but it was too dark for the young man to see his face.
         
        When he had passed, Bobby resumed his retreat. He felt that he could do nothing more that night.
         
        Anyway, his head was in a whirl.
         
        For he had recognized the girl - recognized her beyond any possible doubt.
         
        She was the original of the photograph which had so mysteriously disappeared.
         
        CHAPTER 16 Bobby Becomes a Solicitor
         
        'Mr Hawkins?' 'Yes,' said Bobby, his voice slightly muffled owing to a large mouthful of bacon and eggs.
         
        'You're wanted on the telephone.' Bobby took a hasty gulp of coffee, wiped his mouth and rose.
         
        The telephone was in a small dark passage. He took up the receiver..
         
        'Hullo,' said Frankie's voice.
         
        'Hullo, Frankie,' said Bobby incautiously.
         
        'This is Lady Frances Derwent speaking,' said the voice coldly. 'Is that Hawkins?' 'Yes, m'lady.' 'I shall want the car at ten o'clock to take me up to London.' 'Very good, your ladyship.' Bobby replaced the receiver.
         
        'When does one say, "my lady", and when does one say, "your ladyship"?' he cogitated. 'I ought to know, but I don't.
         
        It's the sort of thing that will lead a real chauffeur or butler to catch me out.' At the other end, Frankie hung up the receiver and turned to Roger Bassingtonffrench.
         
        'It's a nuisance,' she observed lightly, 'to have to go up to London today. All owing to Father's fuss.' 'Still,' said Roger, 'you'll be back this evening?' 'Oh, yes!' 'I'd half thought of asking you if you'd give me a lift to town,' said Roger carelessly.
         
        Frankie paused for an infinitesimal second before her answer - given with an apparent readiness.
         
        'Why, of course,' she said.
         
        'But on second thoughts I don't think I will go up today,' went on Roger. 'Henry's looking even odder than usual.
         
        Somehow I don't very much like leaving Sylvia alone with him.' 'I know,' said Frankie.
         
        'Are you driving yourself?' asked Roger casually as they moved away from the telephone.
         
        'Yes, but I shall take Hawkins. I've got some shopping to do as well and it's a nuisance if you're driving yourself - you can't leave the car anywhere.' 'Yes, of course.' He said no more, but when the car came around, Bobby at the wheel very stiff and correct of demeanour, he came out on the doorstep to see her off.
         
        'Goodbye,' said Frankie.
         
        Under the circumstances she did not think of holding out a hand, but Roger took hers and held it a minute.
         
        'You are coming back?' he said with curious insistence.
         
        Frankie laughed.
         
        'Of course. I only meant goodbye till this evening.' 'Don't have any more accidents.' 'I'll let Hawkins drive if you like.' She sprang in beside Bobby, who touched his cap. The car moved off down the drive, Roger still standing on the step looking after it.
         
        'Bobby,' said Frankie, 'do you think it possible that Roger might fall for me?' 'Has he?' inquired Bobby.
         
        'Well, I just wondered.' 'I expect you know the symptoms pretty well,' said Bobby.
         
        But he spoke absently. Frankie shot him a quick glance.
         
        'Has anything - happened?' she asked.
         
        'Yes, it has. Frankie, I've found the original of the photograph!' 'You mean - the one - the one you talked so much about the one that was in the dead man's pocket?' 'Yes.' 'Bobby! I've got a few things to tell you, but nothing to this.
         
        Where did you find her?' Bobby jerked his head back over his shoulder.
         
        'In Dr Nicholson's nursing home.' 'Tell me.' Carefully and meticulously Bobby described the events of the previous night. Frankie listened breathlessly.
         
        "Then we are on the right track,' she said. 'And Dr Nicholson is mixed up in all this! I'm afraid of that man.' 'What is he like?' 'Oh! big and forceful - and he watches you. Very intently behind glasses. And you feel he knows all about you.' 'When did you meet him?' 'He came to dinner.' She described the dinner party and Dr Nicholson's insistent dwelling on the details of her 'accident'.
         
        'I felt he was suspicious,' she ended up.
         
        'It's certainly queer his going into details like that,' said Bobby. 'What do you think is at the bottom of all this business, Frankie?' 'Well, I'm beginning to think that your suggestion of a dope gang, which I was so haughty about at the time, isn't such a bad guess after all.' 'With Dr Nicholson at the head of the gang?' 'Yes. This nursing home business would be a very good cloak for that sort of thing. He'd have a certain supply of drugs on the premises quite legitimately. While pretending to cure drug cases, he might really be supplying them with the stuff.' 'That seems plausible enough,' agreed Bobby.
         
        'I haven't told you yet about Henry Bassingtonffrench.' Bobby listened attentively to her description of her host's idiosyncracies.
         
        'His wife doesn't suspect?' 'I'm sure she doesn't.' 'What is she like? Intelligent?' 'I never thought exactly. No, I suppose she isn't very. And yet in some ways she seems quite shrewd. A frank, pleasant woman.' 'And our Bassingtonffrench?' 'There I'm puzzled,' said Frankie slowly. 'Do you think, Bobby, that just possibly we might be all wrong about him?' 'Nonsense,' said Bobby. 'We worked it all out and decided that he must be the villain of the piece.' 'Because of the photograph?' 'Because of the photograph. No one else could have changed that photograph for the other.' 'I know,' said Frankie. 'But that one incident is all that we have against him.' 'It's quite enough.' 'I suppose so. And yet ' 'Well?' 'I don't know, but I have a queer sort of feeling that he's innocent - that he's not concerned in the matter at all.' Bobby looked at her coldly.
         
        'Did you say that he had fallen for you or that you had fallen for him?' he inquired politely.
         
        Frankie flushed.
         
        'Don't be so absurd, Bobby. I just wondered if there couldn't be some innocent explanation, that's all.' 'I don't see that there can be. Especially now that we've actually found the girl in the neighbourhood. That seems to clinch matters. If we only had some inkling as to who the dead man was ' 'Oh, but I have. I told you so in my letter. I'm nearly sure that the murdered man was somebody called Alan Carstairs.' Once more she plunged into narrative.
         
        'You know,' said Bobby, 'we really are getting on. Now we must try, more or less, to reconstruct the crime. Let's spread out our facts and see what sort of a job we can make of it.' He paused for a moment and the car slackened speed as though in sympathy. Then he pressed his foot down once more on the accelerator and at the same time spoke.
         
        'First, we'll assume that you are right about Alan Carstairs.
         
        He certainly fulfils the conditions. He's the right sort of man, he led a wandering life, he had very few friends and acquaintances in England, and if he disappeared he wasn't likely to be missed or sought after.
         
        'So far, good. Alan Carstairs comes down to Staverley with these people - what did you say their name was - ?' 'Rivington. There's a possible channel of inquiry there. In fact, I think we ought to follow it up.' 'We will. Very well, Carstairs comes down to Staverley with the Rivingtons. Now, is there anything in that?' 'You mean did he get them to bring him down here deliberately?' 'That's what I mean. Or was it just a casual chance? Was he brought down here by them and did he then come across the girl by accident just as I did? I presume he knew her before or he wouldn't have had her photograph on him.' 'The alternative being,' said Frankie thoughtfully, 'that he was already on the track of Nicholson and his gang.' 'And used the Rivingtons as a means of getting to this part of the world naturally?' 'That's quite a possible theory,' said Frankie. 'He may have been on the track of this gang.' 'Or simply on the track of the girl.' 'The girl?' 'Yes. She may have been abducted. He may have come over to England to find her.' 'Well, but if he had tracked her down to Staverley, why should he go off to Wales?' 'Obviously, there's a lot we don't know yet,' said Bobby.
         
        'Evans,' said Frankie thoughtfully. 'We don't get any clues as to Evans. The Evans part of it must have to do with Wales.' They were both silent for a moment or two. Then Frankie woke up to her surroundings.
         
        'My dear, we're actually at Putney Hill. It seems like five minutes. Where are we going and what are we doing?' 'That's for you to say. I don't even know why we've come up to town.' 'The journey to town was only an excuse for getting a talk with you. I couldn't very well risk being seen walking the lanes at Staverley deep in conversation with my chauffeur. I used the pseudo-letter from Father as an excuse for driving up to town and talking to you on the way and even that was nearly wrecked by Bassington-ffrench coming too.' 'That would have torn it severely.' 'Not really. We'd have dropped him wherever he liked and then we'd have gone on to Brook Street and talked there. I think we'd better do that, anyway. Your garage place may be watched.' Bobby agreed and related the episode of the inquiries made about him at Marchbolt.
         
        'We'll go to the Derwents' town residence,' said Frankie.
         
        'There's no one there but my maid and a couple of caretakers.' They drove to Brook Street. Frankie rang the bell and was admitted, Bobby remaining outside. Presently Frankie opened the door again and beckoned him in. They went upstairs to the big drawing-room and pulled up some of the blinds and removed the swathing from one of the sofas.
         
        'There's one other thing I forgot to tell you,' said Frankie.
         
        'On the 16th, the day you were poisoned, Bassingtonffrench was at Staverley, but Nicholson was away - supposedly at a conference in London. And his car is a dark-blue Talbot.' 'And he has access to morphia,' said Bobby.
         
        They exchanged significant glances.
         
        'It's not exactly evidence, I suppose,' said Bobby, 'but it fits in nicely.' Frankie went to a side table and returned with a telephone directory.
         
        'What are you going to do?' 'I'm looking up the name Rivington.' She turned pages rapidly.
         
        'A. Rivington & Sons, Builders. B. A. C. Rivington, Dental Surgeon. D. Rivington, Shooters Hill, I think not. Miss Florence Rivington. Col. H. Rivington, D.S.O. - that's more like it - Tite Street, Chelsea.' She continued her search.
         
        'There's M. R. Rivington, Onslow Square. He's possible.
         
        And there's a William Rivington at Hampstead. I think Onslow Square and Tite Street are the most likely ones. The Rivingtons, Bobby, have got to be seen without delay.' 'I think you're right. But what are we going to say? Think up a few good lies, Frankie. I'm not much good at that sort of thing.' Frankie reflected for a minute or two.
         
        'I think,' she said, 'that'll you have to go. Do you feel you could be the junior partner of a solicitors' firm?' That seems a most gentlemanly role,' said Bobby. t! was afraid you might think of something much worse than that. All the same, it's not quite in character, is it?' 'How do you mean?' 'Well, solicitors never do make personal visits, do they?
         
        Surely they always write letters at six and eightpence a time, or else write and ask someone to keep an appointment at their office.' 'This particular firm of solicitors is unconventional,' said Frankie. 'Wait a minute.' She left the room and returned with a card.
         
        'Mr Frederick Spragge,' she said, handing it to Bobby. 'You are a young member of the firm of Spragge, Spragge, Jenkinson and Spragge, of Bloomsbury Square.' 'Did you invent that firm, Frankie?' 'Certainly not. They're Father's solicitors.' 'And suppose they have me up for impersonation?' 'That's all right. There isn't any young Spragge. The only Spragge is about a hundred, and anyway he eats out of my hand. I'll fix him if things go wrong. He's a great snob - he loves lords and dukes, however little money he makes out of them.' 'What about clothes? Shall I ring up Badger to bring some along?' Frankie looked doubtful.
         
        'I don't want to insult your clothes, Bobby,' she said. 'Or throw your poverty in your teeth, or anything like that. But will they carry conviction? I think, myself, that we'd better raid Father's wardrobe. His clothes won't fit you too badly.' A quarter of an hour later, Bobby, attired in a morning coat and striped trousers of exquisitely correct cut and passable fit, stood surveying himself in Lord Marchington's pier glass.
         
        'Your father does himself well in clothes,' he remarked graciously. 'With the might of Savile Row behind me, I feel a great increase of confidence.' 'I suppose you'll have to stick to your moustache,' said Frankie.
         
        'It's sticking to me,' said Bobby. 'It's a work of art that couldn't be repeated in a hurry.' 'You'd better keep it, then. Though it's more legal-looking to be clean-shaven.' 'It's better than a beard,' said Bobby. 'Now, then, Frankie, do you think your father could lend me a hat?'
         
        CHAPTER 17 Mrs Rivington Talks
         
        'Supposing,' said Bobby, pausing on the doorstep, 'that Mr M.
         
        R. Rivington of Onslow Square is himself a solicitor? That would be a blow.' 'You'd better try the Tite Street colonel first,' said Frankie.
         
        'He won't know anything about solicitors.' Accordingly, Bobby took a taxi to Tite Street. Colonel Rivington was out. Mrs Rivington, however, was at home.
         
        Bobby delivered over to the smart parlourmaid his card on which he had written: 'From Messrs Spragge, Spragge, Jenkinson Spragge. Very Urgent.
         
        The card and Lord Marchington's clothes produced their effect upon the parlourmaid. She did not for an instant suspect that Bobby had come to sell miniatures or tout for insurances.
         
        He was shown into a beautifully and expensively furnished drawing-room and presently Mrs Rivington, beautifully and expensively dressed and made up, came into the room.
         
        'I must apologize for troubling you, Mrs Rivington,' said Bobby. 'But the matter was rather urgent and we wished to avoid the delay of letters.' That any solicitor could ever wish to avoid delay seemed so transparently impossible that Bobby for a moment wondered anxiously whether Mrs Rivington would see through the pretence.
         
        Mrs Rivington, however, was clearly a woman of more looks than brains who accepted things as they were presented to her.
         
        'Oh, do sit down!' she said. 'I got the telephone message just now from your office saying that you were on your way here.' Bobby mentally applauded Frankie for this last-minute flash of brilliance.
         
        He sat down and endeavoured to look legal.
         
        'It is about our client, Mr Alan Carstairs,' he said.
         
        Oh, yes?' 'He may have mentioned that we were acting for him.' 'Did he now? I believe he did,' said Mrs Rivington, opening very large blue eyes. She was clearly of a suggestible type. 'But of course, I know about you. You acted for Dolly Maltravers, didn't you, when she shot that dreadful dressmaker man? I suppose you know all the details?' She looked at him with frank curiosity. It seemed to Bobby that Mrs Rivington was going to be easy meat.
         
        'We know a lot that never comes into court,' he said, smiling.
         
        'Oh, I suppose you must.' Mrs Rivington looked at him enviously. 'Tell me, did she really - I mean, was she dressed as that woman said?' 'The story was contradicted in court,' said Bobby solemnly.
         
        He slightly dropped the corner of his eyelid.
         
        'Oh, I see,' breathed Mrs Rivington, enraptured.
         
        'About Mr Carstairs,' said Bobby, feeling that he had now established friendly relations and could get on with his job. 'He left England very suddenly, as perhaps you know?' Mrs Rivington shook her head.
         
        'Has he left England? I didn't know. We haven't seen him for some time.' 'Did he tell you how long he expected to be over here?' 'He said he might be here for a week or two or it might be six months or a year.' 'Where was he staying?' 'At the Savoy.' 'And you saw him last - when?' 'Oh, about three weeks or a month ago. I can't remember.' 'You took him down to Staverley one day?' 'Of course! I believe that's the last time we saw him. He rang up to know when he could see us. He'd just arrived in London and Hubert was very put out because we were going up to Scotland the next day, and we were going down to Staverley to lunch and dining out with some dreadful people that we couldn't get rid of, and he wanted to see Carstairs because he liked him so much, and so I said: "My dear, let's take him down to the Bassington-ffrenches with us. They won't mind.' And we did. And, of course, they didn't.' She came breathlessly to a pause.
         
        'Did he tell you his reasons for being in England?' asked Bobby.
         
        'No. Did he have any? Oh yes, I know. We thought it was something to do with that millionaire man, that friend of his, who had such a tragic death. Some doctor told him he had cancer and he killed himself. A very wicked thing for a doctor to do, don't you think so? And they're often quite wrong. Our doctor said the other day that my little girl had measles and it turned out to be a sort of heat rash. I told Hubert I should change him.' Ignoring Mrs Rivington's treatment of doctors as though they were library books, Bobby returned to the point.
         
        'Did Mr Carstairs know the Bassingtonffrenches?' 'Oh, no! But I think he liked them. Though he was very queer and moody on the way back. I suppose something that had been said must have upset him. He's a Canadian, you know, and I often think Canadians are so touchy.' 'You don't know what it was that upset him?' 'I haven't the least idea. The silliest things do it sometimes, don't they?' 'Did he take any walks in the neighbourhood?' asked Bobby.
         
        'Oh, no! What a very odd idea!' She stared at him.
         
        Bobby tried again.
         
        'Was there a party? Did he meet any of the neighbours?' 'No, it was just ourselves and them. But it's odd your saying that ' 'Yes,' said Bobby eagerly, as she paused.
         
        'Because he asked a most frightful lot of questions about some people who lived near there.' 'Do you remember the name?' 'No, I don't. It wasn't anyone very interesting - some doctor or other.' 'Dr Nicholson?' 'I believe that was the name. He wanted to know all about him and his wife and when they came there - all sorts of things.
         
        It seemed so odd when he didn't know them, and he wasn't a bit a curious man as a rule. But, of course, perhaps he was only making conversation, and couldn't think of anything to say.
         
        One does do things like that sometimes.' Bobby agreed that one did and asked how the subject of the Nicholsons had come up, but that Mrs Rivington was unable to tell him. She had been out with Henry Bassington-ffrench in the garden and had come in to find the others discussing the Nicholsons.
         
        So far, the conversation had proceeded easily, Bobby pumping the lady without any camouflage, but she now displayed a sudden curiosity.
         
        'But what is it you want to know about Mr Carstairs?' she asked.
         
        'I really wanted his address,' explained Bobby. 'As you know, we act for him and we've just had a rather important cable from New York - you know, there's rather a serious fluctuation in the dollar just now -' Mrs Rivington nodded with desperate intelligence.
         
        'And so,' continued Bobby rapidly, 'we wanted to get into touch with him - to get his instructions - and he hasn't left an address - and, having heard him mention he was a friend of yours, I thought you might possibly have news of him.' 'Oh, I see,' said Mrs Rivington, completely satisfied. 'What a pity. But he's always rather a vague man, I should think.' 'Oh, distinctly so,' said Bobby. 'Well,' he rose, 'I apologize for taking up so much of your time.' 'Oh, not at all,' said Mrs Rivington. 'And it's so interesting to know that Dolly Maltravers really did - as you say she did.' 'I said nothing at all,' said Bobby.
         
        'Yes, but then lawyers are so discreet, aren't they?' said Mrs Rivington with a little gurgle of laughter.
         
        'So that's all right,' thought Bobby, as he walked away down Tite Street. 'I seem to have taken Dolly Whatsemame's character away for good, but I daresay she deserves it, and that charming idiot of a woman will never wonder why, if I wanted Carstairs' address, I didn't simply ring up and ask for it!' Back in Brook Street he and Frankie discussed the matter from every angle.
         
        'It looks as though it were really pure chance that took him to the Bassington-ffrenches,' said Frankie thoughtfully.
         
        'I know. But evidently when he was down there some chance remark directed his attention to the Nicholsons.' 'So that, really, it is Nicholson who is at the heart of the mystery, not the Bassingtonffrenches?' Bobby looked at her.
         
        'Still intent on whitewashing your hero,' he inquired coldly.
         
        'My dear, I'm only pointing out what it looks like. It's the mention of Nicholson and his nursing home that excited Carstairs. Being taken down to the Bassington-ffrenches was a pure matter of chance. You must admit that.' 'It seems like it.' 'Why only "seems"?' 'Well, there is just one other possibility. In some way, Carstairs may have found out that the Rivingtons were going down to lunch with the Bassington-ffrenches. He may have overheard some chance remark in a restaurant - at the Savoy, perhaps. So he rings them up, very urgent to see them, and what he hopes may happen does happen. They're very booked up and they suggest his coming down with them - their friends won't mind and they do so want to see him. That is possible, Frankie.' 'It is possible, I suppose. But it seems a very roundabout method of doing things.' 'No more roundabout than your accident,' said Bobby.
         
        'My accident was vigorous direct action,' said Frankie coldly.
         
        Bobby removed Lord Marchington's clothes and replaced them where he had found them. Then he donned his chauffeur's uniform once more and they were soon speeding back to Staverley.
         
        'If Roger has fallen for me,' said Frankie demurely, 'he'll be pleased I've come back so soon. He'll think I can't bear to be away from him for long.' 'I'm not sure that you can bear it, either,' said Bobby. 'I've always heard that really dangerous criminals were singularly attractive.' 'Somehow I can't believe he is a criminal.' 'So you remarked before.' 'Well, I feel like that.' 'You can't get over the photograph.' 'Damn the photograph!' said Frankie.
         
        Bobby drove up the drive in silence. Frankie sprang out and went into the house without a backward glance. Bobby drove away.
         
        The house seemed very silent. Frankie glanced at the clock.
         
        It was half-past two.
         
        'They don't expect me back for hours yet,' she thought. 'I wonder where they are?' She opened the door of the library and went in, stopping suddenly on the threshold.
         
        Dr Nicholson was sitting on the sofa, holding both Sylvia Bassington-ffrench's hands in his.
         
        Sylvia jumped to her feet and came across the room towards Frankie.
         
        'He's been telling me,' she said.
         
        Her voice was stifled. She put both hands to her face as though to hide it from view.
         
        'It's too terrible,' she sobbed, and, brushing past Frankie, she ran out of the room.
         
        Dr Nicholson had risen. Frankie advanced a step or two towards him. His eyes, watchful as ever, met hers.
         
        'Poor lady,' he said suavely. 'It has been a great shock to her.' The muscles at the corner of his mouth twitched. For a moment or two Frankie fancied that he was amused. And then, quite suddenly, she realized that it was quite a different emotion.
         
        The man was angry. He was holding himself in, hiding his anger behind a suave bland mask, but the emotion was there. It was all he could do to hold that emotion in.
         
        There was a moment's pause.
         
        'It was best that Mrs Bassington-ffrench should know the truth,' said the doctor. 'I want her to induce her husband to place himself in my hands.' 'I'm afraid,' said Frankie gently, 'that I interrupted you.' She paused. 'I came back sooner than I meant.'
         
        CHAPTER 18 The Girl of the Photograph
         
        On Bobby's return to the inn he was greeted with the information that someone was waiting to see him.
         
        'It's a lady. You'll find her in Mr Askew's little sittingroom.' Bobby made his way there slightly puzzled. Unless she had flown there on wings he could not see how Frankie could possibly have got to the Anglers' Arms ahead of him, and that his visitor could be anyone else but Frankie never occurred to him.
         
        He opened the door of the small room which Mr Askew kept as his private sitting-room. Sitting bolt upright in a chair was a slender figure dressed in black - the girl of the photograph.
         
        Bobby was so astonished that for a moment or two he could not speak. Then he noticed that the girl was terribly nervous.
         
        Her small hands were trembling and closed and unclosed themselves on the arm of the chair. She seemed too nervous even to speak, but her large eyes held a kind of terrified appeal.
         
        'So it's you?' said Bobby at last. He shut the door behind him and came forward to the table.
         
        Still the girl did not speak - still those large, terrified eyes looked into his. At last words came - a mere hoarse whisper.
         
        'You said - you said - you'd help me. Perhaps I shouldn't have come ' Here Bobby broke in, finding words and assurance at the same time.
         
        'Shouldn't have come? Nonsense. You did quite right to come. Of course, you should have come. And I'll do anything - anything in the world - to help you. Don't be frightened.
         
        You're quite safe now.' The colour rose a little in the girl's face. She said abruptly: 'Who are you? You're - you're - not a chauffeur. I mean, you may be a chauffeur, but you're not one really.' Bobby understood her meaning in spite of the confused form of words in which she had cloaked them.
         
        'One does all sorts of jobs nowadays,' he said. 'I used to be in the Navy. As a matter of fact, I'm not exactly a chauffeur but that doesn't matter now. But, anyway, I assure you you can trust me and - and tell me all about it.' Her flush had deepened.
         
        'You must think me mad,' she murmured. 'You must think me quite mad.' 'No, no.' 'Yes - coming here like this. But I was so frightened - so terribly frightened -' Her voice died away. Her eyes widened as though they saw some vision of terror.
         
        Bobby seized her hand firmly.
         
        'Look here,' he said, 'it's quite all right. Everything's going to be all right. You're safe now - with - with a friend. Nothing shall happen to you.' He felt the answering pressure of her fingers.
         
        'When you stepped out into the moonlight the other night,' she said in a low, hurried voice, 'it was - it was like a dream a dream of deliverance. I didn't know who you were or where you came from, but it gave me hope and I determined to come and find you - and - tell you.' 'That's right,' said Bobby encouragingly. 'Tell me. Tell me everything.' She drew her hand away suddenly.
         
        'If I do, you'll think I'm mad - that I've gone wrong in my head from being in that place with those others.' 'No, I shan't. I shan't, really.' 'You will. It sounds mad.' 'I shall know it isn't. Tell me. Please tell me.' She drew a little farther away from him, sitting very upright, her eyes staring Straight in front of her.
         
        'It's just this,' she said. 'I'm afraid I'm going to be murdered.' Her voice was dry and hoarse. She was speaking with obvious self-restraint but her hands were trembling.
         
        'Murdered?' 'Yes, that sounds mad, doesn't it? Like - what do they call it?
         
        - persecution mania.' 'No,' said Bobby. 'You don't sound mad at all - just frightened. Tell me, who wants to murder you and why?' She was silent a minute or two, twisting and untwisting her hands. Then she said in a low voice: 'My husband.' 'Your husband?' Thoughts whirled round in Bobby's head: 'Who are you -' he said abruptly.
         
        It was her turn to look surprised.
         
        'Don't you know?' 'I haven't the least idea.' She said: 'I'm Moira Nicholson. My husband is Dr Nicholson.' • 'Then you're not a patient there?' 'A patient? Oh, no!' Her face darkened suddenly. 'I suppose you think I speak like one.' 'No, no, I didn't mean that at all.' He was at pains to reassure her. 'Honestly, I didn't mean it that way. I was only surprised at finding you married - and - all that. Now, go on with what you're telling me - about your husband wanting to murder you.' 'It sounds mad, I know. But it isn't - it isn't! I see it in his eyes when he looks at me. And queer things have happened accidents.'
         
        'Accidents?' said Bobby sharply.
         
        'Yes. Oh! I know it sounds hysterical and as though I was making it all up ' 'Not a bit,' said Bobby. 'It sounds perfectly reasonable. Go on. About these accidents.' 'They were just accidents. He backed the car not seeing I was there - I just jumped aside in time - and some stuff that was in the wrong bottle - oh, stupid things - and things that people would think quite all right, but they weren't - they were meant. I know it. And it's wearing me out - watching for them - being on my guard - trying to save my life.' She swallowed convulsively.
         
        'Why does your husband want to do away with you?' asked Bobby.
         
        Perhaps he hardly expected a definite answer - but the answer came promptly: 'Because he wants to marry Sylvia Bassingtonffrench.' 'What? But she's married already.' 'I know. But he's arranging for that.' 'How do you mean?' 'I don't know exactly. But I know that he's trying to get Mr Bassington-ffrench brought to the Grange as a patient.' And then?' 'I don't know, but I think something would happen.' She shuddered.
         
        'He's got some hold over Mr Bassington-ffrench. I don't know what it is.' 'Bassington-ffrench takes morphia,' said Bobby.
         
        'Is that it? Jasper gives it to him, I suppose.' 'It comes by post.' 'Perhaps Jasper doesn't do it directly - he's very cunning, Mr Bassington-ffrench mayn't know it comes from Jasper but I'm sure it does. And then Jasper would have him at the Grange and pretend to cure him - and once he was there ' She paused and shivered.
         
        'All sorts of things happen at the Grange,' she said. 'Queer things. People come there to get better - and they don't get better - they get worse.' As she spoke, Bobby was aware of a glimpse into a strange, evil atmosphere. He felt something of the terror that had enveloped Moira Nicholson's life so long.
         
        He said abruptly: 'You say your husband wants to marry Mrs Bassingtonffrench?'
         
        Moira nodded.
         
        'He's crazy about her.' 'And she?' «»'I don't know,' said Moira slowly. 'I can't make up my mind.
         
        On the surface she seems fond of her husband and little boy and content and peaceful. She seems a very simple woman. But sometimes I fancy that she isn't so simple as she seems. I've even wondered sometimes whether she is an entirely different woman from what we all think she is... whether, perhaps, she isn't playing a part and playing it very well... But, really, I think, that's nonsense - foolish imagination on my part.
         
        When you've lived at a place like the Grange your mind gets distorted and you do begin imagining things.' 'What about the brother Roger?' asked Bobby.
         
        'I don't know much about him. He's nice, I think, but he's the sort of person who would be very easily deceived. He's quite taken in by Jasper, I know. Jasper is working on him to persuade Mr Bassington-ffrench to come to the Grange. I believe he thinks it's all his own idea.' She leaned forward suddenly and caught Bobby's sleeve. 'Don't let him come to the Grange,' she implored. 'If he does, something awful will happen. I know it will.' Bobby was silent a minute or two, turning over the amazing story in his mind.
         
        'How long have you been married to Nicholson?' he said at last.
         
        'Just over a year -' She shivered.
         
        'Haven't you ever thought of leaving him?' 'How could I? I've nowhere to go. I've no money. If anyone took me in, what sort of story could I tell? A fantastic tale that my husband wanted to murder me? Who would believe me?' 'Well, I believe you,' said Bobby.
         
        He paused a moment, as though making up his mind to a certain course of action. Then he went on: 'Look here,' he said bluntly. 'I'm going to ask you a question straight out. Did you know a man called Alan Carstairs?' He saw the colour come up in her cheeks.
         
        'Why do you ask me that?' 'Because it's rather important that I should know. My idea is that you ^d know Alan Carstairs, that perhaps at some time or other you gave him your photograph.' She was silent a moment, her eyes downcast. Then she lifted her head and looked him in the face.
         
        'That's quite true,' she said.
         
        'You knew him before you were married?' 'Yes.' 'Has he been down here to see you since you were married?' She hesitated, then said: 'Yes, once.' 'About a month ago would that be?' 'Yes. I suppose it would be about a month.' 'He knew you were living down here?' 'I don't know how he knew - I hadn't told him. I had never even written to him since my marriage.' 'But he found out and came here to see you. Did your husband know that?' 'No.' 'You think not. But he might have known all the same?' 'I suppose he might, but he never said anything.' 'Did you discuss your husband at all with Carstairs? Did you tell him of your fears as to your safety?' She shook her head.
         
        'I hadn't begun to suspect then.' 'But you were unhappy?' Yes.' 'And you told him so?' 'No. I tried not to show in any way that my marriage hadn't been a success.' 'But he might have guessed it all the same,' said Bobby gently.
         
        'I suppose he might,' she admitted in a low voice.
         
        'Do you think - I don't know how to put it - but do you think that he knew anything about your husband - that he suspected, for instance, that this nursing home place mightn't be quite what it seemed to be?' Her brows furrowed as she tried to think.
         
        'It's possible,' she said at last. 'He asked one or two rather peculiar questions - but - no. I don't think he can really have known anything about it.' Bobby was silent again for a few minutes. Then he said: 'Would you call your husband a jealous man?' Rather to his surprise, she answered: 'Yes. Very jealous.' 'Jealous, for instance, of you.' 'You mean even though he doesn't care? But, yes, he would be jealous, just the same. I'm his property, you see. He's a queer man - a very queer man.' She shivered.
         
        Then she asked suddenly: 'You're not connected with the police in any way, are you?' 'I? Oh, no!' 'I wondered, I mean ' Bobby looked down at his chauffeur's livery.
         
        'It's rather a long story,' he said.
         
        'You are Lady Frances Derwent's chauffeur, aren't you? So the landlord here said. I met her at dinner the other night.' 'I know.' He paused. 'We've got to get hold of her,' he said.
         
        'And it's a bit difficult for me to do. Do you think you could ring up and ask to speak to her and then get her to come and meet you somewhere outdoors?' 'I suppose I could -' said Moira slowly.
         
        'I know it must seem frightfully odd to you. But it won't when I've explained. We must get hold of Frankie as soon as possible. It's essential.' Moira rose.
         
        'Very well,' she said.
         
        With her hand on the door-handle she hesitated.
         
        'Alan,' she said, 'Alan Carstairs. Did you say you'd seen him?' 'I have seen him,' said Bobby slowly. 'But not lately.' And he thought, with a shock: 'Of course - she doesn't know he's dead...' He said: 'Ring up Lady Frances. Then I'll tell you everything.'
         
        CHAPTER 19 A Council of Three
         
        Moira returned a few minutes later.
         
        'I got her,' she said. 'I've asked her to come and meet me at a little summer-house down near the river. She must have thought it very odd, but she said she'd come.' 'Good,' said Bobby. 'Now, just where is this place exactly?' Moira described it carefully, and the way to get to it.
         
        'That's all right,' said Bobby. 'You go first. I'll follow on.' They adhered to this programme, Bobby lingering to have a word with Mr Askew.
         
        'Odd thing,' he said casually, 'that lady, Mrs Nicholson, I used to work for an uncle of hers. Canadian gentleman.' Moira's visit to him might, he felt, give rise to gossip, and the last thing he wanted was for gossip of that kind to get about and possibly find its way to Dr Nicholson's ears.
         
        'So that's it, is it?' said Mr Askew. 'I rather wondered.' 'Yes,' said Bobby. 'She recognized me, and came along to hear what I was doing now. A nice, pleasant-spoken lady.' 'Very pleasant, indeed. She can't have much of a life living at the Grange.' 'It wouldn't be my fancy,' agreed Bobby.
         
        Feeling that he had achieved his object, he strolled out into the village and with an aimless air betook himself in the direction indicated by Moira.
         
        He reached the rendezvous successfully and found her there waiting for him. Frankie had not yet put in an appearance.
         
        Moira's glance was frankly inquiring, and Bobby felt he must attempt the somewhat difficult task of explanation.
         
        'There's an awful lot I've got to tell you,' he said, and stopped awkwardly.
         
        'Yes?' 'To begin with,' said Bobby plunging, 'I'm not really a chauffeur, although I do work in a garage in London. And my name isn't Hawkins - it's Jones - Bobby Jones. I come from Marchbolt in Wales.' Moira was listening attentively, but clearly the mention of Marchbolt meant nothing to her. Bobby set his teeth and went bravely to the heart of the matter.
         
        'Look here, I'm afraid I'm going to give you rather a shock.
         
        This friend of yours - Alan Carstairs - he's, well - you've got to know - he's dead.' He felt the start she gave and tactfully he averted his eyes from her face. Did she mind very much? Had she been - dash it all - keen on the fellow?
         
        She was silent a moment or two, then she said in a low, thoughtful voice: 'So that's why he never came back? I wondered.' Bobby ventured to steal a look at her. His spirits rose. She looked sad and thoughtful - but that was all.
         
        'Tell me about it,' she said.
         
        Bobby complied.
         
        'He fell over the cliff at Marchbolt - the place where I live.
         
        I and the doctor there happened to be the ones to find him.' He paused and then added: 'He had your photograph in his pocket.' 'Did he?' She gave a sweet, rather sad smile. 'Dear Alan, he was - very faithful.' There was silence for a moment or two and then she asked: 'When did this happen?' 'About a month ago. October 3rd to be exact.' 'That must have been just after he came down here.' 'Yes. Did he mention that he was going to Wales?' She shook her head.
         
        'You don't know anyone called Evans, do you?' said Bobby.
         
        'Evans?' Moira frowned, trying to think. 'No, I don't think so. It's a very common name, of course, but I can't remember anybody. What is he?' 'That's just what we don't know. Oh! hullo, here's Frankie.' Frankie came hurrying along the path. Her face, at the sight of Bobby and Mrs Nicholson sitting chatting together, was a study in conflicting expressions.
         
        'Hullo, Frankie,' said Bobby. 'I'm glad you've come. We've got to have a great pow-wow. To begin with it's Mrs Nicholson who is the original of the photograph.' 'Oh!' said Frankie blankly.
         
        She looked at Moira and suddenly laughed.
         
        'My dear,' she said to Bobby, 'now I see why the sight of Mrs Cayman at the inquest was such a shock to you!' 'Exactly,' said Bobby.
         
        What a fool he had been. However could he have imagined for one moment that any space of time could have turned a Moira Nicholson into an Amelia Cayman.
         
        'Lord, what a fool I've been!' he exclaimed.
         
        Moira was looking bewildered.
         
        'There's such an awful lot to tell,' said Bobby, 'and I don't quite know how to put it all.' He described the Caymans and their identification of the body.
         
        'But I don't understand,' said Moira, bewildered. 'Whose body was it really, her brother's or Alan Carstairs?' 'That's where the dirty work comes in,' explained Bobby.
         
        'And then,' continued Frankie, 'Bobby was poisoned.' 'Eight grains of morphia,' said Bobby reminiscently.
         
        'Don't start on that,' said Frankie. 'You're capable of going on for hours on the subject and it's really very boring to other people. Let me explain.' She took a long breath.
         
        'You see,' she said, 'those Cayman people came to see Bobby after the inquest to ask him if the brother (supposed) had said anything before he died, and Bobby said, "No." But afterwards he remembered that he had said something about a man called Evans, so he wrote and told them so, and a few days afterwards he got a letter offering him a job in Peru or somewhere and when he wouldn't take it, the next thing was that someone put a lot of morphia ' 'Eight grains,' said Bobby.
         
        '- in his beer. Only, having a most extraordinary inside or something, it didn't kill him. And so then we saw at once that Pritchard - or Carstairs, you know - must have been pushed over the cliff.' 'But why?' asked Moira.
         
        'Don't you see? Why, it seems perfectly clear to us. I expect I haven't told it very well. Anyway, we decided that he had been and that Roger Bassington-ffrench had probably done it.' 'Roger Bassington-ffrench?' Moira spoke in tones of the liveliest amusement.
         
        'We worked it out that way. You see, he was there at the time, and your photograph disappeared, and he seemed to be the only man who could have taken it.' 'I see,' said Moira thoughtfully.
         
        'And then,' continued Frankie, 'I happened to have an accident just here. An amazing coincidence, wasn't it?' She looked hard at Bobby with an admonishing eye. 'So I telephoned to Bobby and suggested that he should come down here pretending to be my chauffeur and we'd look into the matter.' 'So now you see how it was,' said Bobby, accepting Frankie's one discreet departure from the truth. 'And the final climax was when last night I strolled into the grounds of the Grange and ran right into you - the original of the mysterious photograph.' 'You recognized me very quickly,' said Moira, with a faint smile.
         
        'Yes,' said Bobby. 'I would have recognized the original of that photograph anywhere.' For no particular reason, Moir;a blushed.
         
        Then an idea seemed to strike her and she looked sharply from one to the other.
         
        'Are you telling me the truth?' she asked. 'Is it really true that you came down here - by accident? Or did you come because - because' - her voice quavered in spite of herself 'you suspected my husband?' Bobby and Frankie looked at each other. Then Bobby said: 'I give you my word of honour that we'd never even heard of your husband till we came down here.' 'Oh, I see.' She turned to Frankie. 'I'm sorry. Lady Frances, but, you see, I remembered that evening when we came to dinner. Jasper went on and on at you - asking you things about your accident. I couldn't think why. But I think now that perhaps he suspected it wasn't genuine.' 'Well, if you really want to know, it wasn't,' said Frankie.
         
        'Whoof - now I feel better! It was all camouflaged very carefully. But it was nothing to do with your husband. The whole thing was staged because we wanted to - to - what does one call it? - get a line on Roger Bassingtonffrench.' 'Roger?' Moira frowned and smiled perplexedly.
         
        'It seems absurd,' she said frankly.
         
        'All the same facts are facts,' said Bobby.
         
        'Roger - oh, no.' She shook her head. 'He might be weak or wild. He might get into debt, or get mixed up in a scandal but pushing someone over a cliff - no, I simply can't imagine it.' 'Do you know,' said Frankie, 'I can't very well imagine it either.' 'But he must have taken that photograph,' said Bobby stubbornly. 'Listen, Mrs Nicholson, while I go over the facts.' He did so slowly and carefully. When he had finished, she nodded her head comprehendingly.
         
        'I see what you mean. It seems very queer.' She paused a minute and then said unexpectedly: 'Why don't you ask him?'
         
        CHAPTER 20 Council of Two
         
        For a moment, the bold simplicity of the question quite took their breath away. Both Frankie and Bobby started to speak at once: 'That's impossible -' began Bobby, just as Frankie said: 'That would never do.' Then they both stopped dead as the possibilities of the idea sank in.
         
        'You see,' said Moira eagerly, 'I do see what you mean. It does seem as though Roger must have taken that photograph, but I don't believe for one moment that he pushed Alan over.
         
        Why should he? He didn't even know him. They'd only met once - at lunch down here. They'd never come across each other in any way. There's no motive.' 'Then who did push him over?' asked Frankie bluntly.
         
        A shadow crossed Moira's face.
         
        'I don't know,' she said constrainedly.
         
        'Look here,' said Bobby. 'Do you mind if I tell Frankie what you told me. About what you're afraid of.' Moira turned her head away.
         
        'If you like. But it sounds so melodramatic and hysterical. I can't believe it myself this minute.' And indeed the bald statement, made unemotionally in the open air of the quiet English countryside, did seem curiously lacking in reality.
         
        Moira got up abruptly.
         
        'I really feel I've been terribly silly,' she said, her lip trembling. 'Please don't pay any attention to what I said, Mr Jones. It was just - nerves. Anyway, I must be going now.
         
        Goodbye.' She moved rapidly away. Bobby sprang up to follow her, but Frankie pushed him firmly back.
         
        'Stay there, idiot, leave this to me.' She went rapidly off after Moira. She returned a few minutes later.
         
        'Well?' queried Bobby anxiously.
         
        "That's all right. I calmed her down. It was a bit hard on her having her private fears blurted out in front of her to a third person. I made her promise we'd have a meeting - all three of us - again soon. Now that you're not hampered by her being there, tell us all about it.' Bobby did so. Frankie listened attentively. Then she said: 'It fits in with two things. First of all, I came back just now to find Nicholson holding both Sylvia Bassingtonffrench's hands - and didn't he look daggers at me! If looks could kill I feel sure he'd have made me a corpse then and there.' 'What's the second thing?' asked Bobby.
         
        'Oh, just an incident. Sylvia described how Moira's photograph had made a great impression on some stranger who had come to the house. Depend upon it, that was Carstairs. He recognized the photograph, Mrs Bassington-ffrench tells him that it is a portrait of a Mrs Nicholson, and that explains how he came to find out where she was. But you know, Bobby, I don't see yet where Nicholson comes in. Why should he want to do away with Alan Carstairs?' 'You think it was him and not Bassington-ffrench? Rather a coincidence if he and Bassington-ffrench should both be in Marchbolt on the same day.' 'Well, coincidences do happen. But if it was Nicholson, I don't yet see the motive. Was Carstairs on the track of Nicholson as the head of a dope gang? Or is your new lady friend the motive for the murder?' 'It might be both,' suggested Bobby. 'He may know that Carstairs and his wife had an interview, and he may have believed that his wife gave him away somehow.' 'Now, that is a possibility,' said Frankie. 'But the first thing is to make sure about Roger Bassington-ffrench. The only thing we've got against him is the photograph business. If he can clear that up satisfactorily -' 'You're going to tackle him on the subject? Frankie, is that wise? If he is the villain of the piece, as we decided he must be, it means that we're going to show him our hand.' 'Not quite - not the way I shall do it. After all, in every other way he's been perfectly straightforward and above board.
         
        We've taken that to be super-cunning - but suppose it just happens to be innocence? //he can explain the photograph and I shall be watching him when he does explain - and if there's the least sign of hesitation of guilt I shall see it - as I say, if he can explain the photograph - then he may be a very valuable ally.' 'How do you mean, Frankie?' 'My dear, your little friend may be an emotional scaremonger who likes to exaggerate, but supposing she isn't - that all she says is gospel truth - that her husband wants to get rid of her and marry Sylvia. Don't you realize that, in that case, Henry Bassington-ffrench is in mortal danger too. At all costs we've got to prevent him being sent to the Grange. And at present Roger Bassington-ffrench is on Nicholson's side.' 'Good for you, Frankie,' said Bobby quietly. 'Go ahead with your plan.' Frankie got up to go, but before departing she paused for a moment.
         
        'Isn't it odd?' she said. 'We seem, somehow, to have got in between the covers of a book. We're in the middle of someone else's story. It's a frightfully queer feeling.' 'I know what you mean,' said Bobby. 'There is something rather uncanny about it. I should call it a play rather than a book. It's as though we'd walked on to the stage in the middle of the second act and we haven't really got parts in the play at all, but we have to pretend, and what makes it so frightfully hard is that we haven't the faintest idea what the first act was about.' Frankie nodded eagerly.
         
        'I'm not even so sure it's the second act - I think it's more like the third. Bobby, I'm sure we've got to go back a long way... And we've got to be quick because I fancy the play is frightfully near the final curtain.' 'With corpses strewn everywhere,' said Bobby. 'And what brought us into the show was a regular cue - five words - quite meaningless as far as we are concerned.' "'Why didn't they ask Evans?" Isn't it odd, Bobby, that though we've found out a good deal and more and more characters come into the thing, we never get any nearer to the mysterious Evans?' 'I've got an idea about Evans. I've a feeling that Evans doesn't really matter at all - that although he's been the starting point as it were, yet in himself he's probably quite inessential.
         
        It will be like that story of Wells where a prince built a marvellous palace or temple round the tomb of his beloved.
         
        And when it was finished there was just one little thing that jarred. So he said: "Take it away." And the thing was actually the tomb itself.' 'Sometimes,' said Frankie, 'I don't believe there is an Evans.' Saying which, she nodded to Bobby and retraced her steps towards the house.
         
        Frankie stared at him. Suddenly she remembered that in Bobby's first account of the tragedy he had mentioned putting a handkerchief over the face of the dead man.
         
        'You never thought of looking?' went on Frankie.
         
        'No. Why should I?' 'Of course,' thought Frankie, 'if/y found a photograph of somebody I knew in a dead person's pocket, I should simply have had to look at the person's face. How beautifully incurious men are!' 'Poor little thing,' she said. 'I'm so terribly sorry for her.' 'Who do you mean - Moira Nicholson? Why are you so sorry for her?' 'Because she's frightened,' said Frankie slowly.
         
        'She always looks half scared to death. What is she frightened of?' 'Her husband.' 'I don't know that I'd care to be up against Jasper Nicholson myself,' admitted Roger.
         
        'She's sure he's trying to murder her,' said Frankie abruptly.
         
        'Oh, my dear!' He looked at her incredulously.
         
        'Sit down,' said Frankie. 'I'm going to tell you a lot of things.
         
        I've got to prove to you that Dr Nicholson is a dangerous criminal.' 'A criminal?' Roger's tone was frankly incredulous.
         
        'Wait till you've heard the whole story.' She gave him a clear and careful narrative of all that had occurred since the day Bobby and Dr Thomas had found the body. She only kept back the fact that her accident had not been genuine, but she let it appear that she had lingered at Merroway Court through her intense desire to get to the bottom of the mystery.
         
        She could complain of no lack of interest on the part of her listener. Roger seemed quite fascinated by the story.
         
        'Is this really true?' he demanded. 'All this about the fellow Jones being poisoned and all that?' 'Absolute gospel truth, my dear.' 'Sorry for my incredulity - but the facts do take a bit of swallowing, don't they?' He was silent a minute, frowning.
         
        'Look here,' he said at last. 'Fantastic as the whole thing sounds, I think you must be right in your first deduction. This man, Alex Pritchard, or Alan Carstairs, must have been murdered. If he wasn't there seems no point in the attack upon Jones. Whether the key word to the situation is the phrase "Why didn't they ask Evans?" or not doesn't seem to me to matter much since you've no clue to who Evans is or as to what he was to have been asked. Let's put it that the murderer or murderers assumed that Jones was in possession of some knowledge, whether he knew it himself or not, which was dangerous to them. So, accordingly, they tried to eliminate him, and probably would try again if they got on his track. So far that seems sense - but I don't see by what process of reasoning you fix on Nicholson as the criminal.' 'He's such a sinister man, and he's got a dark-blue Talbot and he was away from here on the day that Bobby was poisoned.' 'That's all pretty thin as evidence.' 'There are all the things Mrs Nicholson told Bobby.' She recited them, and once again they sounded melodramatic and unsubstantial repeated aloud against the background of the peaceful English landscape.
         
        Roger shrugged his shoulders.
         
        'She thinks he supplies Henry with the drug - but that's pure conjecture, she's not a particle of evidence that he does so.
         
        She thinks he wants to get Henry to the Grange as a patient well, that's a very natural wish for a doctor to have. A doctor wants as many patients as he can get. She thinks he's in love with Sylvia. Well, as to that, of course, I can't say.' 'If she thinks so, she's probably right,' interrupted Frankie.
         
        'A woman would know all right about her own husband.' 'Well, granting that that's the case, it doesn't necessarily mean that the man's a dangerous criminal. Lots of respectable citizens fall in love with other people's wives.' 'There's her belief that he wants to murder her,' urged Frankie.
         
        Roger looked at her quizzically.
         
        'You take that seriously?' 'She believes it, anyhow.' Roger nodded and lit a cigarette.
         
        'The question is, how much attention to pay that belief of hers,' he said. 'It's a creepy sort of place, the Grange, full of queer customers. Living there would be inclined to upset a woman's balance, especially if she were of the timid nervous type.' 'Then you don't think it's true?' 'I don't say that. She probably believes quite honestly that he is trying to kill her - but is there any foundation in fact for that belief? There doesn't seem to be.' Frankie remembered with curious clearness Moira saying, 'It's just nerves.' And somehow the mere fact that she had said that seemed to Frankie to point to the fact that it was not nerves, but she found it difficult to know how to explain her point of view to Roger.
         
        Meanwhile the young man was going on: 'Mind you, if you could show that Nicholson had been in Marchbolt on the day of the cliff tragedy that would be very different, or if we could find any definite motive linking him with Carstairs, but it seems to me you're ignoring the real suspects.' 'What real suspects?' 'The - what did you call them - Haymans?' 'Caymans.' 'That's it. Now, they are undoubtedly in it up to the hilt.
         
        First, there's the false identification of the body. Then there's their insistence on the point of whether the poor fellow said anything before he died. And I think it's logical to assume, as you did, that the Buenos Aires offer came from, or was arranged for, by them.' 'It's a bit annoying,' said Frankie, 'to have the most strenuous efforts made to get you out of the way because you know something - and not to know yourself what the something you know is. Bother - what a mess one gets into with words.' 'Yes,' said Roger grimly, 'that was a mistake on their part. A mistake that it's going to take them all their rime to remedy.' 'Oh!' cried Frankie. 'I've just thought of something. Up to now, you see, I've been assuming that the photograph of Mrs Cayman was substituted for the one of Moira Nicholson.' 'I can assure you,' said Roger gravely, 'that I have never treasured the likeness of a Mrs Cayman against my heart. She sounds a most repulsive creature.' 'Well, she was handsome in a way,' admitted Frankie. 'A sort of bold, coarse, vampish way. But the point is this: Carstairs must have had her photograph on him as well as Mrs Nicholson's.' Roger nodded.
         
        'And you think -' he suggested.
         
        'I think one was love and the other was business! Carstairs was carrying about the Cayman's photograph for a reason. He wanted it identified by somebody, perhaps. Now, listen - what happens? Someone, the male Cayman perhaps, is following him and, seeing a good opportunity, steals up behind him in the mist and gives him a shove. Carstairs goes over the cliff with a startled cry. Male Cayman makes off as fast as he can; he doesn't know who may be about. We'll say that he doesn't know that Alan Carstairs is carrying about that photograph.
         
        What happens next? The photograph is published ' 'Consternation in the Cayman menage,' said Roger helpfully.
         
        'Exactly. What is to be done? The bold thing - grasp the nettle. Who knows Carstairs as Carstairs? Hardly anyone in this country. Down goes Mrs Cayman, weeping crocodile tears and recognizing body as that of a convenient brother. They also do a little hocus pocus of posting parcels to bolster up the walking-tour theory.' 'You know, Frankie. I think that's positively brilliant,' said Roger with admiration.
         
        'I think it's pretty good myself,' said Frankie. 'And you're quite right. We ought to get busy on the track of the Caymans.
         
        I can't think why we haven't done so before.' This was not quite true, since Frankie knew quite well the reason - namely that they had been on the track of Roger himself. However, she felt it would be tactless, just at this stage, to reveal the fact.
         
        'What are we going to do about Mrs Nicholson?' she asked abruptly.
         
        'What do you mean - do about her?' 'Well, the poor thing is terrified to death. I do think you're callous about her, Roger.' 'I'm not, really, but people who can't help themselves always irritate me.' 'Oh! but do be fair. What can she do? She's no money and nowhere to go.' Roger said unexpectedly: 'If you were in her place, Frankie, you'd find something to do.' 'Oh!' Frankie was rather taken aback.
         
        'Yes, you would. If you really thought somebody was trying to murder you, you wouldn't just stay there tamely waiting to be murdered. You'd run away and make a living somehow, or you'd murder the other person first! You'd do something.' Frankie tried to think what she would do.
         
        'I'd certainly do something,' she said thoughtfully.
         
        "The truth of the matter is that you've got guts and she hasn't,' said Roger with decision.
         
        Frankie felt complimented. Moira Nicholson was not really the type of woman she admired and she had also felt just slightly ruffled by Bobby's absorption in her. 'Bobby,' she thought to herself, 'likes them helpless.' And she remembered the curious fascination that the photograph had had for him from the start of the affair.
         
        'Oh, well,' thought Frankie, 'at any rate, Roger's different.' Roger, it was clear, did not like them helpless. Moira, on the other hand, clearly did not think very much of Roger. She had called him weak and had scouted the possibility of his having the guts to murder anyone. He was weak, perhaps - but undeniably he had charm. She had felt it from the first moment of arriving at Merroway Court.
         
        Roger said quietly: 'If you liked, Frankie, you could make anything you chose of a man...' Frankie felt a sudden little thrill - and at the same time an acute embarrassment. She changed the subject hastily.
         
        'About your brother,' she said. 'Do you still think he should go to the Grange?'
         
        CHAPTER 22 Another Victim
         
        'No,' said Roger. 'I don't. After all, there are heaps of other places where he can be treated. The really important thing is to get Henry to agree.' 'Do you think that will be difficult?' asked Frankie.
         
        'I'm afraid it may be. You heard him the other night. On the other hand, if we just catch him in the repentant mood, that's very different. Hullo - here comes Sylvia.' Mrs Bassington-ffrench emerged from the house and looked about her, then seeing Roger and Frankie, she walked across the grass towards them.
         
        They could see that she was looking terribly worried and strained.
         
        'Roger,' she began, 'I've been looking for you everywhere.' Then, as Frankie made a movement to leave them - 'No, my dear, don't go. Of what use are concealments? In any case, I think you know all there is to know. You've suspected this business for some time, haven't you?' Frankie nodded.
         
        'While I've been blind - blind -' said Sylvia bitterly. 'Both of you saw what I never even suspected. I only wondered why Henry had changed so to all of us. It made me very unhappy, but I never suspected the reason.' She paused, then went on again with a slight change of tone.
         
        'As soon as Dr Nicholson had told me the truth, I went straight to Henry. I've only just left him now.' She paused, swallowing a sob.
         
        'Roger - it's going to be all right. He's agreed. He will go to the Grange and put himself in Dr Nicholson's hands tomorrow.' 'Oh! no -' The exclamation came from Roger and Frankie simultaneously. Sylvia looked at them - astonished.
         
        Roger spoke awkwardly.
         
        'Do you know, Sylvia, I've been thinking it over, and I don't believe the Grange would be a good plan, after all.' 'You think he can fight it by himself?' asked Sylvia doubtfully.
         
        'No, I don't. But there are other places - places not sowell, not so near at hand. I'm convinced that staying in this district would be a mistake.' 'I'm sure of it,' said Frankie, coming to his rescue.
         
        'Oh! I don't agree,' said Sylvia. 'I couldn't bear him to go away somewhere. And Dr Nicholson has been so kind and understanding. I shall feel happy about Henry being under his charge.' 'I thought you didn't like-Nicholson, Sylvia,' said Roger.
         
        'I've changed my mind.' She spoke simply. 'Nobody could have been nicer or kinder than he was this afternoon. My silly prejudice against him has quite vanished.' There was a moment's silence. The position was awkward.
         
        Neither Roger nor Sylvia knew quite what to say next.
         
        'Poor Henry,' said Sylvia. 'He broke down. He was terribly upset at my knowing. He agreed that he must fight this awful craving for my sake and Tommy's, but he said I hadn't a conception of what it meant. I suppose I haven't, though Dr Nicholson explained very fully. It becomes a kind of obsession - people aren't responsible for their actions - so he said. Oh, Roger, it seems so awful. But Dr Nicholson was really kind. I trust him.' 'All the same, I think it would be better -' began Roger.
         
        Sylvia turned on him.
         
        'I don't understand you, Roger. Why have you changed your mind? Half an hour ago you were all for Henry's going to the Grange.' 'Well - I've - I've had time to think the matter over since ' Again Sylvia interrupted.
         
        'Anyway, I've made up my mind. Henry shall go to the Grange and nowhere else.' They confronted her in silence, then Roger said: 'Do you know, I think I will ring up Nicholson. He will be home now. I'd like - just to have a talk with him about matters.' Without waiting for her reply he turned away and went rapidly into the house. The two women stood looking after him.
         
        'I cannot understand Roger,' said Sylvia impatiently. 'About a quarter of an hour ago he was positively urging me to arrange for Henry to go to the Grange.' Her tone held a distinct note of anger.
         
        'All the same,' said Frankie, 'I agree with him. I'm sure I've read somewhere that people ought always to go for a cure somewhere far away from their homes.' 'I think that's just nonsense,' said Sylvia.
         
        Frankie felt in a dilemma. Sylvia's unexpected obstinacy was making things difficult, and also she seemed suddenly to have become as violently pro-Nicholson as she formerly had been against him. It was very hard to know what arguments to use.
         
        Frankie considered telling the whole story to Sylvia - but would Sylvia believe it? Even Roger had not been very impressed by the theory of Dr Nicholson's guilt. Sylvia, with her new-found partisanship where the doctor was concerned, would probably be even less so. She might even go and repeat the whole thing to him. It was certainly difficult.
         
        An aeroplane passed low overhead in the gathering dusk, filling the air with its loud beat of engines. Both Sylvia and Frankie stared up at it, glad of the respite it afforded, since neither of them quite knew what to say next. It gave Frankie time to collect her thoughts, and Sylvia time to recover from her fit of sudden anger.
         
        As the aeroplane disappeared over the trees and its roar receded into the distance, Sylvia turned abruptly to Frankie.
         
        'It's been so awful -' she said brokenly. 'And you all seem to want to send Henry far away from me.' 'No, no,' said Frankie. 'It wasn't that at all.' She cast about for a minute.
         
        'It was only that I thought he ought to have the best treatment. And I do think that Dr Nicholson is rather - well, rather a quack.' 'I don't believe it,' said Sylvia. 'I think he's a very clever man and just the kind of man Henry needs.' She looked defiantly at Frankie. Frankie marvelled at the hold Dr Nicholson had acquired over her in such a short time.
         
        All her former distrust of the man seemed to have vanished completely.
         
        At a loss what to say or do next, Frankie relapsed into silence.
         
        Presently Roger came out again from the house. He seemed slightly breathless.
         
        'Nicholson isn't in yet,' he said. 'I left a message.' 'I don't see why you want to see Dr Nicholson so urgently,' said Sylvia. 'You suggested this plan, and it's all arranged and Henry has consented.' 'I think I've got some say in the matter, Sylvia,' said Roger gently. 'After all, I'm Henry's brother.' 'You suggested the plan yourself,' said Sylvia obstinately.
         
        'Yes, but I've heard a few things about Nicholson since.' 'What things? Oh! I don't believe you.' She bit her lip, turned away and plunged into the house.
         
        Roger looked at Frankie.
         
        'This is a bit awkward,' he said.
         
        'Very awkward, indeed.' 'Once Sylvia has made her mind up she can be obstinate as the devil.' 'What are we going to do?' They sat down again on the garden seat and went into the matter carefully. Roger agreed with Frankie that to tell the whole story to Sylvia would be a mistake. The best plan, in his opinion, would be to tackle the doctor.
         
        'But what are you going to say exactly?' 'I don't know that I shall say much - but I shall hint a good deal. At any rate, I agree with you about one thing - Henry mustn't go to the Grange. Even if we come right out into the open, we've got to stop that.' 'We give the whole show away if we do,' Frankie reminded him.
         
        'I know. That's why we've got to try everything else first.
         
        Curse Sylvia, why must she turn obstinate just at this minute?' 'It shows the power of the man,' Frankie said.
         
        'Yes. You know, it inclines me to believe that, evidence or no evidence, you may be right about him after all - what's that?' They both sprang up.
         
        'It sounded like a shot,' said Frankie. 'From the house.' They looked at each other, then raced towards the building.
         
        They went in by the trench window of the drawing-room and passed through into the hall. Sylvia Bassington-ffrench was standing there, her face white as paper.
         
        'Did you hear?' she said. 'It was a shot - from Henry's study.' She swayed and Roger put an arm round her to steady her.
         
        Frankie went to the study door and turned the handle.
         
        'It's locked,' she said.
         
        'The window,' said Roger.
         
        He deposited Sylvia, who was in a half-fainting condition, on a convenient settee and raced out again through the drawingroom, Frankie on his heels. They went round the house till they came to the study window. It was closed, but they put their went into his study, locked the door, wrote a few words on a sheet of paper - and - shot himself. Bobby, it's too ghastly. It's - it's grim.' 'I know,' said Bobby quietly.
         
        They were both silent for a little.
         
        'I shall have to leave today, of course,' said Frankie presently.
         
        'Yes, I suppose you will. How is she - Mrs Bassingtonffrench, I mean?' 'She's collapsed, poor soul. I haven't seen her since we - we found the body. The shock to her must have been awful.' Bobby nodded.
         
        'You'd better bring the car round about eleven,' continued Frankie.
         
        Bobby did not answer. Frankie looked at him impatiently.
         
        'What's the matter with you, Bobby? You look as though you were miles away.' 'Sorry. As a matter of fact ' 'Yes?' 'Well, I was just wondering. I suppose - well, I suppose it's all right?' 'What do you mean - all right?' 'I mean it's quite certain that he did commit suicide?' 'Oh!' said Frankie. 'I see.' She thought a minute. 'Yes,' she said, 'it was suicide all right.' 'You're quite sure? You see, Frankie, we have Moira's word for it that Nicholson wanted two people out of the way. Well, here's one of them gone.' Frankie thought again, but once more she shook her head.
         
        'It must be suicide,' she said. 'I was in the garden with Roger when we heard the shot. We both ran straight in through the drawing-room to the hall. The study door was locked on the inside. We went round to the window. That was fastened also and Roger had to smash it. It wasn't till then that Nicholson appeared upon the scene.' Bobby reflected upon this information.
         
        'It looks all right,' he agreed. 'But Nicholson seems to have appeared on the scene very suddenly.' 'He'd left a stick behind earlier in the afternoon and had come back for it.' Bobby was frowning with the process of thought.
         
        'Listen, Frankie. Suppose that actually Nicholson shot Bassington-ffrench ' 'Having induced him first to write a suicide's letter of farewell?' 'I should think that would be the easiest thing in the world to fake. Any alteration in handwriting would be put down to agitation.' 'Yes, that's true. Go on with your theory.' 'Nicholson shoots Bassington-ffrench, leaves the farewell letter, and nips out locking the door - to appear again a few minutes later as though he had just arrived.' Frankie shook her head regretfully.
         
        'It's a good idea - but it won't work. To begin with, the key was in Henry Bassington-ffrench's pocket ' 'Who found it there?' 'Well, as a matter of fact, Nicholson did.' 'There you are. What's easier for him than to pretend to find it there.' 'I was watching him - remember. I'm sure the key was in the pocket.' 'That's what one says when one watches a conjurer. You see the rabbit being put into the hat! If Nicholson is a high-class criminal, a simple little bit of sleight of hand like that would be child's play to him.' 'Well, you may be right about that, but honestly, Bobby, the whole thing's impossible. Sylvia Bassington-ffrench was actually in the house when the shot was fired. The moment she heard it she ran out into the hall. If Nicholson had fired the shot and come out through the study door she would have been bound to see him. Besides, she told us that he actually came up the drive to the front door. She saw him coming as we ran round the house and went to meet him and brought him round to the study window. No, Bobby, I hate to say it, but the man has an alibi.' 'On principle, I distrust people who have alibis,' said Bobby.
         
        'So do I. But I don't see how you can get round this one.' 'No. Sylvia Bassington-ffrench's word ought to be good enough.' 'Yes, indeed.' 'Well,' said Bobby with a sigh. 'I suppose we'll have to leave it at suicide. Poor devil. What's the next angle of attack, Frankie?' 'The Caymans,' said Frankie. 'I can't think how we've been so remiss as not to have looked them up before. You've kept the address Cayman wrote from, haven't you?' 'Yes. It's the same they gave at the inquest. 17 St Leonard's Gardens, Paddington.' 'Don't you agree that we've rather neglected that channel of inquiry?' 'Absolutely. All the same, you know, Frankie, I've got a very shrewd idea that you'll find the birds flown. I should imagine that the Caymans weren't exactly born yesterday.' 'Even if they have gone off, I may find out something about them.' 'Why - /?' 'Because, once again, I don't think you'd better appear in the matter. It's like coming down here when we thought Roger was the bad man of the show. You are known to them and I am not.' 'And how do your propose to make their acquaintance?' asked Bobby.
         
        'I shall be something political,' said Frankie. 'Canvassing for the Conservative Party. I shall arrive with leaflets.' 'Good enough,' said Bobby. 'But, as I said before, I think you'll find the birds flown. Now there's another thing that requires to be thought of - Moira.' 'Goodness,' said Frankie, 'I'd forgotten all about her.' 'So I noticed,' said Bobby with a trace of coldness in his manner.
         
        'You're right,' said Frankie thoughtfully. 'Something must be done about her.' Bobby nodded. The strange haunting face came up before his eyes. There was something tragic about it. He had always felt that from the first moment when he had taken the photograph from Alan Carstairs' pocket.
         
        'If you'd seen her that night when I first went to the Grange!' he said. 'She was crazy with fear - and I tell you, Frankie, she's right. It's not nerves or imagination, or anything like that. If Nicholson wants to marry Sylvia Bassingtonffrench, two obstacles have got to go. One's gone. I've a feeling that Moira's life is hanging by a hair and that any delay may be fatal.' Frankie was sobered by the eamestness of his words.
         
        'My dear, you're right,' she said. 'We must act quickly.
         
        What shall we do?' 'We must persuade her to leave the Grange - at once.' Frankie nodded.
         
        'I tell you what,' she said. 'She'd better go down to Wales to the Castle. Heaven knows, she ought to be safe enough there.' 'If you can fix that, Frankie, nothing could be better.' 'Well, it's simple enough. Father never notices who goes or comes. He'll like Moira - nearly any man would - she's so feminine. It's extraordinary how men like helpless women.' 'I don't think Moira is particularly helpless,' said Bobby.
         
        'Nonsense. She's like a little bird that sits and waits to be eaten by a snake without doing anything about it.' 'What could she do?' 'Heaps of things,' said Frankie vigorously.
         
        'Well, I don't see it. She's got no money, no friends ' 'My dear, don't drone on as though you were recommending a case to the Girls' Friendly Society.' 'Sorry,' said Bobby.
         
        There was an offended pause.
         
        'Well,' said Frankie, recovering her temper. 'As you were. I think we'd better get on to this business as soon as possible.' 'So do I,' said Bobby. 'Really, Frankie, it's awfully decent of you to -' 'That's all right,' said Frankie interrupting him. 'I don't mind befriending the girl so long as you don't drivel on about her as though she had no hands or feet or tongue or brains.' 'I simply don't know what you mean,' said Bobby.
         
        'Well, we needn't talk about it,' said Frankie. 'Now, my idea is that whatever we're going to do we'd better do it quickly. Is that a quotation?' 'It's a paraphrase of one. Go on. Lady Macbeth.' 'You know, I've always thought,' said Frankie, suddenly digressing wildly from the matter in hand, 'that Lady Macbeth incited Macbeth to do all those murders simply and solely because she was so frightfully bored with life - and incidentally with Macbeth. I'm sure he was one of those meek, inoffensive men who drive their wives distracted with boredom. But, having once committed a murder for the first time in his life, he felt the hell of a fine fellow and began to develop ego mania as a compensation for his former inferiority complex.' 'You ought to write a book on the subject, Frankie.' 'I can't spell. Now, where were we? Oh, yes, rescue of Moira. You'd better bring the car round at half-past ten. I'll drive over to the Grange, ask for Moira and, if Nicholson's there when I see her, I'll remind her of her promise to come and stay with me and carry her off then and there.' 'Excellent, Frankie. I'm glad we're not going to waste any time. I've a horror of another accident happening.' 'Half-past ten, then,' said Frankie.
         
        By the time she got back to Merroway Court, it was half-past nine. Breakfast had just been brought in and Roger was pouring himself out some coffee. He looked ill and worn.
         
        'Good morning,' said Frankie. 'I slept awfully badly. In the end I got up about seven and went for a walk.' 'I'm frightfully sorry you should have been let in for all this worry,' said Roger.
         
        'How's Sylvia?' 'They gave her an opiate last night. She's still asleep, I believe. Poor girl, I'm most terribly sorry for her. She was simply devoted to Henry.' 'I know.' Frankie paused and then explained her plans for departure.
         
        'I suppose you'll have to go,' said Roger resentfully. 'The inquest's on Friday. I'll let you know if you're wanted for it. It all depends on the coroner.' He swallowed a cup of coffee and a piece of toast and then went off to attend to the many things requiring his attention.
         
        Frankie felt very sorry for him. The amount of gossip and curiosity created by a suicide in a family she could imagine only too well. Tommy appeared and she devoted herself to amusing the child.
         
        Bobby brought the car round at half-past ten, Frankie's luggage was brought down. She said goodbye to Tommy and left a note for Sylvia. The Bentley drove away.
         
        They covered the distance to the Grange in a very short time. Frankie had never been there before and the big iron gates and the overgrown shrubbery depressed her spirits.
         
        'It's a creepy place,' she observed. 'I don't wonder Moira gets the horrors here.' They drove up to the front door and Bobby got down and rang the bell. It was not answered for some minutes. Finally a woman in nurse's kit opened it.
         
        'Mrs Nicholson?' said Bobby.
         
        The woman hesitated, then withdrew into the hall and opened the door wider. Frankie jumped out of the car and passed into the house. The door closed behind her. It had a nasty echoing clang as it shut. Frankie noticed that it had heavy bolts and bars across it. Quite irrationally she felt afraid - as though she was here, in this sinister house, a prisoner.
         
        'Nonsense,' she told herself. 'Bobby's outside in the car. I've come here openly. Nothing can happen to me.' And, shaking off the ridiculous feeling, she followed the nurse upstairs and along a passage. The nurse threw open a door and Frankie passed into a small sitting-room daintily furnished with cheerful chintzes and flowers in the vases. Her spirits rose.
         
        Murmuring something, the nurse withdrew.
         
        About five minutes passed and the door opened and Dr Nicholson came in.
         
        Frankie was quite unable to control a slight nervous start, but she masked it by a welcoming smile and shook hands.
         
        'Good morning,' she said.
         
        'Good morning. Lady Frances. You have not come to bring me bad news of Mrs Bassington-ffrench, I hope?' 'She was still asleep when I left,' said Frankie.
         
        'Poor lady. Her own doctor is, of course, looking after her.' 'Oh! yes.' She paused, then said: 'I'm sure you're busy. I mustn't take up your time, Dr Nicholson. I really called to see your wife.' 'To see Moira? That was very kind of you.' Was it only fancy, or did the pale-blue eyes behind the strong glasses harden ever so slightly.
         
        'Yes,' he repeated. 'That was very kind.' 'If she isn't up yet,' said Frankie, smiling pleasantly, 'I'll sit down and wait.' 'Oh! she's up,' said Dr Nicholson.
         
        'Good,' said Frankie. 'I want to persuade her to come to me for a visit. She's practically promised to.' She smiled again.
         
        'Why, now, that's really very kind of you. Lady Frances very kind, indeed. I'm sure Moira would have enjoyed that very much.' 'Would have?' asked Frankie sharply.
         
        Dr Nicholson smiled, showing his fine set of even white teeth.
         
        'Unfortunately, my wife went away this morning.' 'Went away?' said Frankie blankly. 'Where?' 'Oh! just for a little change. You know what women are, Lady Frances. This is rather a gloomy place for a young woman. Occasionally Moira feels she must have a little excitement and then off she goes.' 'You don't know where she has gone?' said Frankie.
         
        'London, I imagine. Shops and theatres. You know the sort of thing.' Frankie felt that his smile was the most disagreeable thing she had ever come across.
         
        'I am going up to London today,' she said lightly. 'Will you give me her address?' 'She usually stays at the Savoy,' said Dr Nicholson. 'But in any case I shall probably hear from her in a day or so. She's not a very good correspondent, I'm afraid, and I believe in perfect liberty between husband and wife. But I think the Savoy is the most likely place for you to find her.' He held the door open and Frankie found herself shaking hands with him and being ushered to the front door. The nurse was standing there to let her out. The last thing Frankie heard was Dr Nicholson's voice, suave and, perhaps, just a trifle ironical.
         
        'So very kind of you to think of asking my wife to stay. Lady Frances.'
         
        CHAPTER 24 On the Track of the Caymans
         
        Bobby had some ado to preserve his impassive chauffeur's demeanour as Frankie came out alone.
         
        She said: 'Back to Staverley, Hawkins,' for the benefit of the nurse.
         
        The car swept down the drive and out through the gates.
         
        Then, when they came to an empty bit of road, Bobby pulled up and looked inquiringly at his companion.
         
        'What about it?' he asked.
         
        Rather pale, Frankie replied: 'Bobby, I don't like it. Apparently, she's gone away.' 'Gone away? This morning?' 'Or last night.' 'Without a word to us?' 'Bobby, I just don't believe it. The man was lying - I'm sure of it.' Bobby had gone very pale. He murmured: 'Too late! Idiots that we've been! We should never have let her go back there yesterday.' 'You don't think she's - dead, do you?' whispered Frankie in a shaky voice.
         
        'No,' said Bobby in a violent voice, as though to reassure himself.
         
        They were both silent for a minute or two, then Bobby stated his deductions in a calmer tone.
         
        'She must be still alive, because of the disposing of the body and all that. Her death would have to seem natural and accidental. No, she's either been spirited away somewhere against her will, or else - and this is what I believe - she's still there.' 'At the Grange?' 'At the Grange.' 'Well,' said Frankie, 'what are we going to do?' Bobby thought for a minute.
         
        'I don't think you can do anything,' he said at last. 'You'd better go back to London. You suggested trying to trace the Caymans. Go on with that.' 'Oh, Bobby!' 'My dear, you can't be of any use down here. You're known - very well known by now. You've announced that you're going - what can you do? You can't stay on at Merroway. You can't come and stay at the Anglers' Arms. You'd set every tongue in the neighbourhood wagging. No, you must go.
         
        Nicholson may suspect, but he can't be sure that you know anything. You go back to town and I'll stay.' 'At the Anglers' Arms?' up my headquarters at Ambledever - that's ten miles away and if Moira's still in that beastly house I shall find her.' Frankie demurred a little.
         
        'Bobby, you will be careful?' 'I shall be cunning as the serpent.' With a rather heavy heart Frankie gave in. What Bobby said was certainly sensible enough. She herself could do no further good down here. Bobby drove her up to town and Frankie, letting herself into the Brook Street house, felt suddenly forlorn.
         
        She was not one, however, to let the grass grow under her feet. At three o'clock that afternoon, a fashionably but soberly dressed young woman with pince-nez and an earnest frown might have been seen approaching St Leonard's Gardens, a sheaf of pamphlets and papers in her hand.
         
        St Leonard's Gardens, Paddington, was a distinctly gloomy collection of houses, most of them in a somewhat dilapidated condition. The place had a general air of having seen 'better days' a long time ago.
         
        Frankie walked along, looking up at the numbers. Suddenly she came to a halt with a grimace of vexation.
         
        No. 17 had a board up announcing that it was to be sold or let unfurnished.
         
        Frankie immediately removed the pince-nez and the earnest air.
         
        It seemed that the political canvasser would not be required.
         
        The names of several house agents were given. Frankie selected two and wrote them down. Then, having determined on her plan of campaign, she proceeded to put it into action.
         
        The first agents were Messrs. Gordon & Porter of Praed Street.
         
        'Good morning,' said Frankie. 'I wonder if you can give me the address of a Mr Cayman? He was until recently at 17 St Leonard's Gardens.' 'That's right,' said the young man to whom Frankie had addressed herself. 'Only there a short time, though, wasn't he?
         
        We act for the owners, you see. Mr Cayman took it on a quarterly tenancy as he might have to take up a post abroad any moment. I believe he's actually done so.' 'Then you haven't got his address?' 'I'm afraid not. He settled up with us and that was all.' 'But he must have had some address originally when he took the house.' 'A hotel - I think it was the G.W.R., Paddington Station, you know.' 'References,' suggested Frankie.
         
        'He paid the quarter's rent in advance and a deposit to cover the electric light and gas.' 'Oh!' said Frankie, feeling despairing.
         
        She saw the young man looking rather curiously at her.
         
        House agents are adepts at summing up the 'class' of clients.
         
        He obviously found Frankie's interest in the Caymans rather unexpected.
         
        'He owes me a good deal of money,' said Frankie mendaciously.
         
        The young man's face immediately assumed a shocked expression.
         
        Thoroughly sympathetic with beauty in distress, he hunted up files of correspondence and did all he could, but no trace of Mr Cayman's present or late abode could be found.
         
        Frankie thanked him and departed. She took a taxi to the next firm of house agents. She wasted no time in repeating the process. The first agents were the ones who had let Cayman the house. These people would be merely concerned to let it again on behalf of the owner. Frankie asked for an order to view.
         
        This time, to counteract the expression of surprise that she saw appear on the clerk's face, she explained that she wanted a cheap property to open as a hostel for girls. The surprised expression disappeared, and Frankie emerged with the key of 17 Leonard's Gardens, the keys of two more 'properties' which she had no wish to see, and an order to view yet a fourth.
         
        It was a bit of luck, Frankie thought, that the clerk had not wished to accompany her, but perhaps they only did that when it was a question of a furnished tenancy.
         
        The musty smell of a closed-up house assailed Frankie's nostrils as she unlocked and pushed open the front door of No. 17.
         
        It was an unappetising house, cheaply decorated, and with blistered, dirty paint. Frankie went over it methodically from garret to basement. The house had not been cleaned up on departure. There were bits of string, old newspapers and some odd nails and tools. But of personal matter, Frankie could not find so much as the scrap of a tom-up letter.
         
        The only thing that struck her as having a possible significance was an ABC railway guide which lay open on one of the window seats. There was nothing to indicate that any of the names of the open page were of special significance, but Frankie copied the lot down in a little note-book as a poor substitute for all she had hoped to find.
         
        As far as tracing the Caymans was concerned, she had drawn a blank.
         
        She consoled herself with the reflection that this was only to be expected. If Mr and Mrs Cayman were associated with the wrong side of the law they would take particularly good care that no one should be able to trace them. It was at least a kind of negative confirmatory evidence.
         
        Still Frankie felt definitely disappointed as she handed back the keys to the house agents and uttered mendacious statements as to communicating with them in a few days.
         
        She walked down towards the Park feeling rather depressed and wondered what on earth she was going to do next. These fruitless meditations were interrupted by a sharp and violent squall of rain. No taxi was in sight and Frankie hurriedly preserved a favourite hat by hurrying into the tube which was close at hand. She took a ticket to Piccadilly Circus and bought a couple of papers at the bookstall.
         
        When she had entered the train - almost empty at this time of day - she resolutely banished thoughts of the vexing problem and, opening her paper, strove to concentrate her attention on its contents.
         
        She read desultory snippets here and there.
         
        Number of road deaths. Mysterious disappearance of a schoolgirl. Lady Peterhampton's party at Claridge's. Sir John Milkington's convalescence after his accident yachting - the Astradora - the famous yacht which had belonged to the late Mr John Savage, the millionaire. Was she an unlucky boat?
         
        The man who had designed her had met with a tragic death Mr Savage had committed suicide - Sir John Milkington had just escaped death by a miracle.
         
        Frankie lowered the paper, frowning in an effort of remembrance.
         
        Twice before, the name of Mr John Savage had been mentioned - once by Sylvia Bassington-ffrench when she was speaking of Alan Carstairs, and once by Bobby when he was repeating the conversation he had had with Mrs Rivington.
         
        Alan Carstairs had been a friend of John Savage's. Mrs Rivington had had a vague idea that Carstairs' presence in England had something to do with the death of Savage. Savage had - what was it? - he had committed suicide because he thought he had cancer.
         
        Supposing - supposing Alan Carstairs had not been satisfied with the account of his friend's death. Supposing he had come over to inquire into the whole thing? Supposing that here, in the circumstances surrounding Savage's death - was the first act of the drama that she and Bobby were acting in.
         
        'It's possible,' thought Frankie. 'Yes, it's possible.' She thought deeply, wondering how best to attack this new phase of the matter. She had no idea as to who had been John Savage's friends or intimates.
         
        Then an idea struck her - his will. If there had been something suspicious about the way he met his death, his will would give a possible clue.
         
        Somewhere in London, Frankie knew, was a place where you went and read wills if you paid a shilling. But she couldn't remember where it was.
         
        The train drew up at a station and Frankie saw that it was the British Museum. She had overshot Oxford Circus, where she meant to have changed, by two stations.
         
        She jumped up and left the train. As she emerged into the street an idea came to her. Five minutes' walk brought her to the office of Messrs. Spragge, Spragge, Jenkinson & Spragge.
         
        Frankie was received with deference and was at once ushered into the private fastness of Mr Spragge, the senior member of the firm.
         
        Mr Spragge was exceedingly genial. He had a rich mellow persuasive voice which his aristocratic clients had found extremely soothing when they had come to him to be extricated from some mess. It was rumoured that Mr Spragge knew more discreditable secrets about noble families than any other man in London.
         
        'This is a pleasure indeed. Lady Frances,' said Mr Spragge.
         
        'Do sit down. Now are you sure that chair is quite comfortable?
         
        Yes, yes. The weather is very delightful just now, is it not? A St Martin's summer. And how is Lord Marchington? Well, I trust?' Frankie answered these and other inquiries in a suitable manner.
         
        Then Mr Spragge removed his pince-nez from his nose and became more definitely the legal guide and adviser.
         
        'And now. Lady Frances,' he said. 'What is it gives me the pleasure of seeing you in my - hm - dingy office this afternoon?' 'Blackmail?' said his eyebrows. 'Indiscreet letters? An entanglement with an undesirable young man? Sued by your dressmaker?' But the eyebrows asked these questions in a very discreet manner as befitted a solicitor of Mr Spragge's experience and income.
         
        'I want to look at a will,' said Frankie. 'And I don't know where you go and what you do. But there is somewhere you can pay a shilling, isn't there?' 'Somerset House,' said Mr Spragge. 'But what will is it? I think I can possibly tell you anything you want to know about - er - wills in your family. I may say that I believe our firm has had the honour of drawing them up for many years past.' 'It isn't a family will,' said Frankie.
         
        'No?' said Mr Spragge.
         
        And so strong was his almost hypnotic power of drawing confidences out of his clients that Frankie, who had not meant to do so, succumbed to the manner and told him.
         
        'I wanted to see the will of Mr Savage - John Savage.' 'In-deed?' A very real astonishment showed in Mr Spragge's voice. He had not expected this. 'Now that is very extraordinary - very extraordinary indeed.' There was something so unusual in his voice that Frankie looked at him in surprise.
         
        'Really,' said Mr Spragge. 'Really, I do not know what to do.
         
        Perhaps, Lady Frances, you can give me your reasons for wanting to see that will?' 'No,' said Frankie slowly. 'I'm afraid I can't.' It struck her that Mr Spragge was, for some reason, behaving quite unlike his usual benign omniscient self. He looked actually worried.
         
        'I really believe,' said Mr Spragge, 'that I ought to warn you.' 'Warn me?' said Frankie.
         
        'Yes. The indications are vague, very vague - but clearly there is something afoot. I would not, for the world, have you involved in any questionable business.' As far as that went, Frankie could have told him that she was already involved up to the neck in a business of which he would have decidedly disapproved. But she merely stared at him inquiringly.
         
        'The whole thing is rather an extraordinary coincidence,' Mr Spragge was going on. 'Something is clearly afoot - clearly. But what it is I am not at present at liberty to say.' Frankie continued to look inquiring.
         
        'A piece of information has just come to my knowledge,' continued Mr Spragge. His chest swelled with indignation. 'I have been impersonated. Lady Frances. Deliberately impersonated.
         
        What do you say to that?' But for just one panic-stricken minute Frankie could say nothing at all.
         
        CHAPTER 25 Mr Spragge Talks
         
        At last she stammered: 'How did you find out?' It was not at all what she meant to say. She could, in fact, have bitten out her tongue for stupidity a moment later, but the words had been said, and Mr Spragge would have been no lawyer had he failed to perceive that they contained an admission.
         
        'So you know something of this business. Lady Frances?' 'Yes,' said Frankie.
         
        She paused, drew a deep breath and said: 'The whole thing is really my doing, Mr Spragge.' 'I am amazed,' said Mr Spragge.
         
        There was a struggle in his voice, the outraged lawyer was at war with the fatherly family solicitor.
         
        'How did this come about?' he asked.
         
        'It was just a joke,' said Frankie weakly. 'We - we wanted something to do.' 'And who,' demanded Mr Spragge, 'had the idea of passing himself off as Me?' Frankie looked at him, her wits working once more, made a rapid decision.
         
        'It was the young Duke of No -' She broke off. 'I really mustn't mention names. It isn't fair.' 'Somerset House,' said Mr Spragge. 'But what will is it? I think I can possibly tell you anything you want to know about - er - wills in your family. I may say that I believe our firm has had the honour of drawing them up for many years past.' 'It isn't a family will,' said Frankie.
         
        'No?' said Mr Spragge.
         
        And so strong was his almost hypnotic power of drawing confidences out of his clients that Frankie, who had not meant to do so, succumbed to the manner and told him.
         
        'I wanted to see the will of Mr Savage - John Savage.' 'In-deed?' A very real astonishment showed in Mr Spragge's voice. He had not expected this. 'Now that is very extraordinary - very extraordinary indeed.' There was something so unusual in his voice that Frankie looked at him in surprise.
         
        'Really,' said Mr Spragge. 'Really, I do not know what to do.
         
        Perhaps, Lady Frances, you can give me your reasons for wanting to see that will?' 'No,' said Frankie slowly. 'I'm afraid I can't.' It struck her that Mr Spragge was, for some reason, behaving quite unlike his usual benign omniscient self. He looked actually worried.
         
        'I really believe,' said Mr Spragge, 'that I ought to warn you.' 'Warn me?' said Frankie.
         
        'Yes. The indications are vague, very vague - but clearly there is something afoot. I would not, for the world, have you involved in any questionable business.' As far as that went, Frankie could have told him that she was already involved up to the neck in a business of which he would have decidedly disapproved. But she merely stared at him inquiringly.
         
        'The whole thing is rather an extraordinary coincidence,' Mr Spragge was going on. 'Something is clearly afoot - clearly. But what it is I am not at present at liberty to say.' Frankie continued to look inquiring.
         
        'A piece of information has just come to my knowledge,' continued Mr Spragge. His chest swelled with indignation. 'I have been impersonated. Lady Frances. Deliberately impersonated.
         
        What do you say to that?' But for just one panic-stricken minute Frankie could say nothing at all.
         
        CHAPTER 25 Mr Spragge Talks
         
        At last she stammered: 'How did you find out?' It was not at all what she meant to say. She could, in fact, have bitten out her tongue for stupidity a moment later, but the words had been said, and Mr Spragge would have been no lawyer had he failed to perceive that they contained an admission.
         
        'So you know something of this business. Lady Frances?' 'Yes,' said Frankie.
         
        She paused, drew a deep breath and said: 'The whole thing is really my doing, Mr Spragge.' 'I am amazed,' said Mr Spragge.
         
        There was a struggle in his voice, the outraged lawyer was at war with the fatherly family solicitor.
         
        'How did this come about?' he asked.
         
        'It was just a joke,' said Frankie weakly. 'We - we wanted something to do.' 'And who,' demanded Mr Spragge, 'had the idea of passing himself off as Me?' Frankie looked at him, her wits working once more, made a rapid decision.
         
        'It was the young Duke of No -' She broke off. 'I really mustn't mention names. It isn't fair.' But she knew that the tide had turned in her favour. It was doubtful if Mr Spragge could have forgiven a mere vicar's son such audacity, but his weakness for noble names led him to look softly on the impertinences of a duke. His benign manner returned.
         
        'Oh! you Bright Young People - You Bright Young People,' he murmured, wagging a forefinger. 'What trouble you land yourselves in. You would be surprised. Lady Frances, at the amount of legal complication that may ensue from an apparently harmless practical joke determined upon on the spur of the moment. Just high spirits - but sometimes extremely difficult to settle out of court.' 'I think you're too marvellous, Mr Spragge,' said Frankie earnestly. 'I do, really. Not one person in a thousand would have taken it as you have done. I feel really terribly ashamed.' 'No, no. Lady Frances,' said Mr Spragge paternally.
         
        'Oh, but I do. I suppose it was the Rivington woman - what exactly did she tell you?' 'I think I have the letter here. I opened it only half an hour ago.' Frankie held out a hand and Mr Spragge put the letter into it with the air of one saying: 'There, see for yourself what your foolishness has led you into.' Dear Mr Spragge (Mrs Rivington had written). It's really too stupid of me, but I've just remembered something that might have helped you the day you called on me. Alan Car stairs mentioned that he was going to a place called Chipping Somerton. I don't know whether this will be any help to you.
         
        I was so interested in what you told me about the Maltravers case. With kind regards, Yours sincerely, Edith Rivington.
         
        'You can see that the matter might have been very grave,' said Mr Spragge severely, but with a severity tempered by benevolence. 'I took it that some extremely questionable business was afoot. Whether connected with the Maltravers case or with my client, Mr Carstairs -' Frankie interrupted him.
         
        'Was Alan Carstairs a client of yours?' she inquired excitedly.
         
        'He was. He consulted me when he was last in England a month ago. You know Mr Carstairs, Lady Frances?' 'I think I may say I do,' said Frankie.
         
        'A most attractive personality,' said Mr Spragge. 'He brought quite a breath of the - er - wide open spaces into my office.' 'He came to consult you about Mr Savage's will, didn't he?' said Frankie.
         
        'Ah!' said Mr Spragge. 'So it was you who advised him to come to me? He couldn't remember just who it was. I'm sorry I couldn't do more for him.' 'Just what did you advise him to do?' asked Frankie. 'Or would it be unprofessional to tell me?' 'Not in this case,' said Mr Spragge smiling. 'My opinion was that there was nothing to be done - nothing, that is, unless Mr Savage's relatives were prepared to spend a lot of money on fighting the case - which I gather they were not prepared, or indeed in a position, to do. I never advise bringing a case into court unless there is every hope of success. The law. Lady Frances, is an uncertain animal. It has twists and turns that surprise the non-legal mind. Settle out of court has always been my motto.' 'The whole thing was very curious,' said Frankie thoughtfully.
         
        She had a little of the sensation of walking barefoot over a floor covered with tin tacks. At any minute she might step on one - and the game would be up.
         
        'Such cases are less uncommon than you might think,' said Mr Spragge.
         
        'Cases of suicide?' inquired Frankie.
         
        'No, no, I meant cases of undue influence. Mr Savage was a hard-headed business man, and yet he was clearly as wax in this woman's hands. I've no doubt she knew her business thoroughly.' 'I wish you'd tell me the whole story properly,' said Frankie boldly. 'Mr Carstairs was - well, was so heated, that I never seemed to get the thing clearly.' 'The case was extremely simple,' said Mr Spragge. 'I can run over the facts to you - they are accessible to everyone - so there is no objection to my doing so.' 'Then tell me all about it,' said Frankie.
         
        'Mr Savage happened to be travelling back from the United States to England in November of last year. He was, as you know, an extremely wealthy man with no near relations. On this voyage he made the acquaintance of a certain lady - a - er - Mrs Templeton. Nothing much is known about Mrs Templeton except that she was a very good-looking woman and had a husband somewhere conveniently in the background.' 'The Caymans,' thought Frankie.
         
        'These ocean trips are dangerous,' went on Mr Spragge, smiling and shaking his head. 'Mr Savage was clearly very much attracted. He accepted the lady's invitation to come down and stay at her little cottage at Chipping Somerton.
         
        Exactly how often he went there I have not been able to ascertain, but there is no doubt that he came more and more under this Mrs Templeton's influence.
         
        'Then came the tragedy. Mr Savage had for some time been uneasy about his state of health. He feared that he might be suffering from a certain disease ' 'Cancer?' said Frankie.
         
        'Well, yes, as a matter of fact, cancer. The subject became quite an obsession with him. He was staying with the Templetons at the time. They persuaded him to go up to London and consult a specialist. He did so. Now here. Lady Frances, I preserve an open mind. That specialist - a very distinguished man who has been at the top of his profession for many years - swore at the inquest that Mr Savage was not suffering from cancer and that he had told him so, but that Mr Savage was so obsessed by his own belief that he could not accept the truth when he was told it. Now, strictly without prejudice. Lady Frances, and knowing the medical profession, I think things may have gone a little differently.
         
        'If Mr Savage's symptoms puzzled the doctor he may have spoken seriously, pulled a long face, spoken of certain expensive treatments and while reassuring him as to cancer yet have conveyed the impression that something was seriously wrong.
         
        Mr Savage, having heard that doctors usually conceal from a patient the fact that he is suffering from that disease, would interpret this according to his own lights. The doctor's reassuring words were not true - he had got the disease he thought he had.
         
        'Anyway, Mr Savage came back to Chipping Somerton in a state of great mental distress. He saw ahead of him a painful and lingering death. I understand some members of his family had died of cancer and he determined not to go through what he had seen them suffer. He sent for a solicitor - a very reputable member of an eminently respectable firm - and the latter drew up a will there and then which Mr Savage signed and which he then delivered over to the solicitor for safe keeping. On that same evening Mr Savage took a large overdose of chloral, leaving a letter behind in which he explained that he preferred a quick and painless death to a long and painful one.
         
        'By his will Mr Savage left the sum of seven hundred thousand pounds free of legacy duty to Mrs Templeton and the remainder to certain specified charities.' Mr Spragge leaned back in his chair. He was now enjoying himself.
         
        'The jury brought in the usual sympathetic verdict of Suicide while of Unsound Mind, but I do not think that we can argue from that that he was necessarily of unsound mind when he made the will. I do not think that any jury would take it so.
         
        The will was made in the presence of a solicitor in whose opinion the deceased was undoubtedly sane and in possession of his senses. Nor do I think we can prove undue influence. Mr Savage did not disinherit anyone near and dear to him - his only relatives were distant cousins whom he seldom saw. They actually lived in Australia, I believe.' Mr Spragge paused.
         
        'Mr Carstairs' contention was that such a will was completely uncharacteristic of Mr Savage. Mr Savage had no liking for organized charities and had always held very strong opinions as to money passing by blood relationship. However, Mr Carstairs had no documentary proof of these assertions and, as I pointed out to him, men change their opinions. In contesting such a will, there would be the charitable organizations to deal with as well as Mrs Templeton. Also, the will had been admitted to probate.' 'There was no fuss made at the time?' asked Frankie.
         
        'As I say, Mr Savage's relatives were not living in this country and they knew very little about the matter. It was Mr Carstairs who took the matter up. He returned from a trip into the interior of Africa, gradually leamt the details of this business and came over to this country to see if something could be done about it. I was forced to tell him that in my view there was nothing to be done. Possession is nine points of the law, and Mrs Templeton was in possession. Moreover, she had left the country and gone, I believe, to the South of France to live. She refused to enter into any communication on the matter. I suggested getting counsel's opinion but Mr Carstairs decided that it was not necessary and took my view that there was nothing to be done - or, alternatively, that whatever might have been done at the time, and in my opinion that was exceedingly doubtful, it was now too late to do it.' 'I see,' said Frankie. 'And nobody knows anything about this Mrs Templeton?' Mr Spragge shook his head and pursed his lips.
         
        'A man like Mr Savage, with his knowledge of life, ought to have been less easily taken in - but -' Mr Spragge shook his head sadly as a vision of innumerable clients who ought to have known better and who had come to him to have their cases settled out of court passed across his mind.
         
        Frankie rose.
         
        Then are extraordinary creatures,' she said.
         
        She held out a hand.
         
        'Goodbye, Mr Spragge,' she said. 'You've been wonderful simply wonderful. I feel too ashamed.' 'You Bright Young People must be more careful,' said Mr Spragge, shaking his head at her.
         
        'You've been an angel,' said Frankie.
         
        She squeezed his hand fervently and departed.
         
        Mr Spragge sat down again before his table.
         
        He was thinking.
         
        'The young Duke of ' There were only two dukes who could be so described.
         
        Which was it?
         
        He picked up a Peerage.
         
        CHAPTER 26 Nocturnal Adventure
         
        The inexplicable absence of Moira worried Bobby more than he cared to admit. He told himself repeatedly that it was absurd to jump to conclusions - that it was fantastic to imagine that Moira had been done away with in a house full of possible witnesses - that there was probably some perfectly simple explanation and that at the worst she could only be a prisoner in the Grange.
         
        That she had left Staverley of her own free will Bobby did not for one minute believe. He was convinced that she would never have gone off like that without sending him a word of explanation. Besides, she had stated emphatically that she had nowhere to go.
         
        No, the sinister Dr Nicholson was at the bottom of this.
         
        Somehow or other he must have become aware of Moira's -activities and this was his counter move. Somewhere within the sinister walls of the Grange Moira was a prisoner, unable to communicate with the outside world.
         
        But she might not remain a prisoner long. Bobby believed implicitly every word Moira had uttered. Her fears were neither the result of a vivid imagination not yet of nerves. They were simple stark truth.
         
        Nicholson meant to get rid of his wife. Several times his plans had miscarried. Now, by communicating her fears to others, she had forced his hand. He must act quickly or not at all. Would he have the nerve to act?
         
        Bobby believed he would. He must know that, even if these strangers had listened to his wife's fears, they had no evidence.
         
        Also, he would believe that he had only Frankie to deal with. It was possible that he had suspected her from the first - his pertinent questioning as to her 'accident' seemed to point to that - but as Lady Frances' chauffeur, Bobby did not believe that he himself was suspected of being anything other than he appeared to be.
         
        Yes, Nicholson would act. Moira's body would probably be found in some district far from Staverley. It might, perhaps, be washed up by the sea. Or it might be found at the foot of a cliff.
         
        The thing would appear to be, Bobby was almost sure, an 'accident'. Nicholson specialized in accidents.
         
        Nevertheless, Bobby believed that the planning and carrying out of such an accident would need time - not much time, but a certain amount. Nicholson's hand was being forced - he had to act quicker than he had anticipated. It seemed reasonable to suppose that twenty-four hours at least must elapse before he could put any plan into operation.
         
        Before that interval had elapsed, Bobby meant to have found Moira if she were in the Grange.
         
        After he had left Frankie in Brook Street, he started to put his plans into operation. He judged it wise to give the Mews a wide berth. For all he knew, a watch might be being kept on it.
         
        As Hawkins, he believed himself to be still unsuspected. Now Hawkins in turn was about to disappear.
         
        That evening, a young man with a moustache, dressed in a cheap dark-blue suit, arrived at the bustling little town of Ambledever. The young man put up at an hotel near the station, registering as George Parker. Having deposited his suitcase there he strolled out and entered into negotiations for hiring a motorcycle.
         
        At ten o'clock that evening a motor-cyclist in cap and goggles passed through the village of Staverley, and came to a halt at a deserted part of the road not far from the Grange.
         
        Hastily shoving the bicycle behind some convenient bushes, Bobby looked up and down the road. It was quite deserted.
         
        Then he sauntered along the wall till he came to the little door. As before, it was unlocked. With another look up and down the road to make sure he was not observed, Bobby slipped quietly inside. He put his hand into the pocket of his coat where a bulge showed the presence of his service revolver.
         
        The feel of it was reassuring.
         
        Inside the grounds of the Grange everything seemed quiet.
         
        Bobby grinned to himself as he recalled bloodcurdling stories where the villain of the piece kept a cheetah or some excited beast of prey about the place to deal with intruders.
         
        Dr Nicholson seemed content with mere bolts and bars and even there he seemed to be somewhat remiss. Bobby felt certain that that little door should not have been left open. As the villain of the piece, Dr Nicholson seemed regrettably careless.
         
        'No tame pythons,' thought Bobby. 'No cheetahs, no electrically-charged wires - the man is shamefully behind the times.' He made these reflections more to cheer himself up than for any other reason. Every time he thought of Moira a queer constriction seemed to tighten around his heart.
         
        Her face rose in the air before him - the trembling lips - the wide, terrified eyes. It was just about here he had first seen her in the flesh. A little thrill ran through him as he remembered how he had put his arm round her to steady her.
         
        Moira - where was she now? What had that sinister doctor done with her? If only she were still alive.
         
        'She must be,' said Bobby grimly between set lips. 'I'm not going to think anything else.' He made a careful reconnaissance round the house. Some of the upstairs windows had lights in them and there was one lighted window on the ground floor.
         
        Towards this window Bobby crept. The curtains were drawn across it, but there was a slight chink between them.
         
        Bobby put a knee on the window-sill and hoisted himself noiselessly up. He peered through the slits.
         
        He could see a man's arm and shoulder moving along as though writing. Presently the man shifted his position and his profile came into view. It was Dr Nicholson.
         
        It was a curious position. Quite unconscious that he was being watched, the doctor wrote steadily on. A queer sort of fascination stole over Bobby. The man was so near him that, but for the intervening glass, he could have stretched out his arm and touched him.
         
        For the first time, Bobby felt, he was really seeing the man.
         
        It was a forceful profile, the big, bold nose, the jutting chin, the crisp, well-shaven line of the jaw. The ears, Bobby noted, were small and laid flat to the head and the lobe of the ear was actually joined to the cheek. He had an idea that ears like these were said to have some special significance.
         
        The doctor wrote on - calm and unhurried. Now pausing for a moment or two as though to think of the right word - then setting to once more. His pen moved over the paper, precisely and evenly. Once he took off his prince-nez, polished them and put them on again.
         
        At last with a sigh Bobby let himself slide noiselessly to the ground. From the look of it, Nicholson would be writing for some time to come. Now was the moment to gain admission to the house.
         
        If Bobby could force an entrance by an upstairs window while the doctor was writing in his study he could explore the building at his leisure later in the night.
         
        He made a circuit of the house again and singled out a window on the first floor. The sash was open at the top but there was no light in the room, so that it was probably unoccupied at the moment. Moreover, a very convenient tree seemed to promise an easy means of access.
         
        In another minute, Bobby was swarming up the tree. All went well and he was just stretching out his hand to take a grip of the window ledge when an ominous crack came from the branch he was on and the next minute the bough, a rotten one, had snapped and Bobby was pitchforked head first into a clump of hydrangea bushes below, which fortunately broke his fall.
         
        The window of Nicholson's study was farther along on the same side of the house. Bobby heard an exclamation in the doctor's voice and the window was flung up. Bobby, recovering from the first shock of his fall, sprang up, disentangled himself from the hydrangeas and bolted across the dark patch of shadow into the pathway leading to the little door. He went a short way along it, then dived into the bushes.
         
        He heard the sound of voices and saw lights moving near the trampled and broken hydrangeas. Bobby kept still and held his breath. They might come along the path. If so, finding the door open, they would probably conclude that anyone had escaped that way and would not prosecute the search further.
         
        However, the minutes passed and nobody came. Presently Bobby heard Nicholson's voice raised in a question. He did not hear the words but he heard an answer given in a hoarse, rather uneducated voice.
         
        'All present and correct, sir. I've made the rounds.' The sounds gradually died down, the lights disappeared.
         
        Everyone seemed to have returned to the house.
         
        Very cautiously, Bobby came out of his hiding place. He emerged on to the path, listening. All was still. He took a step or two towards the house.
         
        And then out of the darkness something struck him on the back of the neck. He fell forward... into darkness.
         
        CHAPTER 27 'My Brother was Murdered'
         
        On Friday morning the green Bentley drew up outside the Station Hotel at Ambledever.
         
        Frankie had wired Bobby under the name they had agreed upon - George Parker - that she would be required to give evidence at the inquest on Henry Bassington-ffrench and would call in at Ambledever on the way down from London.
         
        She had expected a wire in reply appointing some rendezvous, but nothing had come, so she had come to the hotel.
         
        'Mr Parker, miss?' said the boots. 'I don't think there's any gentleman of that name stopping here, but I'll see.' He returned a few minutes later.
         
        'Came here Wednesday evening, miss. Left his bag and said he mightn't be in till late. His bag's still here but he hasn't been back to fetch it.' Frankie felt suddenly rather sick. She clutched at a table for support. The man was looking at her sympathetically.
         
        'Feeling bad, miss?' he inquired.
         
        Frankie shook her head.
         
        'It's all right,' she managed to say. 'He didn't leave any message?' The man went away again and returned, shaking his head.
         
        'There's a telegram come for him,' he said. 'That's all.' He looked at her curiously.
         
        'Anything I can do, miss?' he asked.
         
        Frankie shook her head.
         
        At the moment she only wanted to get away. She must have time to think what to do next.
         
        'It's all right,' she said and, getting into the Bentley, she drove away.
         
        The man nodded his head wisely as he looked after her.
         
        'He's done a bunk, he has,' he said to himself. 'Disappointed her. Given her the slip. A fine rakish piece of goods she is.
         
        Wonder what he was like?' He asked the young lady in the reception office, but the young lady couldn't remember.
         
        'A couple of nobs,' said the boots wisely. 'Going to get married on the quiet - and he's hooked it.' Meanwhile, Frankie was driving in the direction of Staverley, her mind a maze of conflicting emotions.
         
        Why had Bobby not returned to the Station Hotel? There could only be two reasons: either he was on the trail - and that trail had taken him away somewhere, or else - or else something had gone wrong. The Bentley swerved dangerously.
         
        Frankie recovered control just in time.
         
        She was being an idiot - imagining things. Of course, Bobby was all right. He was on the trail - that was all-on the trail.
         
        But why, asked another voice, hadn't he sent her a word of reassurance?
         
        That was more difficult to explain, but there were explanations.
         
        Difficult circumstances - no time or opportunity Bobby would know that she, Frankie, wouldn't get the wind up about him. Everything was all right - bound to be.
         
        The inquest passed like a dream. Roger was there and Sylvia - looking quite beautiful in her widow's weeds. She made an impressive figure and a moving one. Frankie found herself admiring her as though she were admiring a performance at a theatre.
         
        The proceedings were very tactfully conducted. The Bassington-ffrenches were popular locally and everything was done to spare the feelings of the widow and the brother of the dead man.
         
        Frankie and Roger gave their evidence - Dr Nicholson gave his - the dead man's farewell letter was produced. The thing seemed over in no time and the verdict given - 'Suicide while of Unsound Mind'.
         
        The 'sympathetic' verdict, as Mr Spragge had called it.
         
        The two events connected themselves in Frankie's mind.
         
        Two suicides while of Unsound Mind. Was there - could there be a connection between them?
         
        That this suicide was genuine enough she knew, for she had been on the scene. Bobby's theory of murder had had to be dismissed as untenable. Dr Nicholson's alibi was cast iron vouched for by the widow herself.
         
        Frankie and Dr Nicholson remained behind after the other people departed, the coroner having shaken hands with Sylvia and uttered a few words of sympathy.
         
        'I think there are some letters for you, Frankie, dear,' said Sylvia. 'You won't mind if I leave you now and go and lie down.
         
        It's all been so awful.' She shivered and left the room. Nicholson went with her, murmuring something about a sedative.
         
        Frankie turned to Roger.
         
        'Roger, Bobby's disappeared.' 'Disappeared?' 'Yes!' 'Where and how?' Frankie explained in a few rapid words.
         
        'And he's not been seen since?' said Roger.
         
        'No. What do you think?' 'I don't like the sound of it,' said Roger slowly.
         
        Frankie's heart sank.
         
        'You don't think - ?' 'Oh! it may be all right, but - sh, here comes Nicholson.' The doctor entered the room with his noiseless tread. He was rubbing his hands together and smiling.
         
        'That went off very well,' he said. 'Very well, indeed. Dr Davidson was most tactful and considerate. We may consider ourselves very lucky to have had him as our local coroner.' 'I suppose so,' said Frankie mechanically.
         
        'It makes a lot of difference. Lady Frances. The conduct of an inquest is entirely in the hands of the coroner. He has wide powers. He can make things easy or difficult as he pleases. In this case everything went off perfectly.' 'A good stage performance, in fact,' said Frankie in a hard voice.
         
        Nicholson looked at her in surprise.
         
        'I know what Lady Frances is feeling,' said Roger. 'I feel the same. My brother was murdered, Dr Nicholson.' He was standing behind the other and did not see, as Frankie did, the startled expression that sprang into the doctor's eyes.
         
        'I mean what I say,' said Roger, interrupting Nicholson as he was about to reply. 'The law may not regard it as such, but murder it was. The criminal brutes who induced my brother to become a slave to that drug murdered him just as truly as if they had struck him down.' He had moved a little and his angry eyes now looked straight into the doctor's.
         
        'I mean to get even with them,' he said; and the words sounded like a threat.
         
        Dr Nicholson's pale-blue eyes fell before his. He shook his head sadly.
         
        'I cannot say I disagree with you,' he said. 'I know more about drug-taking than you do, Mr Bassington-ffrench. To induce a man to take drugs is indeed a most terrible crime.' Ideas were whirling through Frankie's head - one idea in particular.
         
        'It can't be,' she was saying to herself. 'That would be too monstrous. And yet^ his whole alibi depends on her word. But in that case -' j She roused herself to find Nicholson speaking to her.
         
        'You came down by car. Lady Frances? No accident this time?' Frankie felt she simply hated that smile.
         
        'No,' she said. 'I think it's a pity to go in too much for accidents - don't you?' She wondered if she had imagined it, or whether his eyelids really flickered for a moment.
         
        'Perhaps your chauffeur drove you this time?' 'My chauffeur,' said Frankie, 'has disappeared.' She looked straight at Nicholson.
         
        Indeed?' 'He was last seen heading for the Grange,' went on Frankie.
         
        Nicholson raised his eyebrows.
         
        'Really? Have I - some attraction in the kitchen?' His voice sounded amused. 'I can hardly believe it.' 'At any rate that is where he was last seen,' said Frankie.
         
        'You sound quite dramatic,' said Nicholson. 'Possibly you are paying too much attention to local gossip. Local gossip is very unreliable. I have heard the wildest stories.' He paused.
         
        His voice altered slightly in tone. 'I have even had a story brought to my ears that my wife and your chauffeur had been seen talking together down by the river.' Another pause. 'He was, I believe, a very superior young man. Lady Frances.' 'Is that it?' thought Frankie. 'Is he going to pretend that his wife has run off with my chauffeur? Is that his little game?' Aloud she said: 'Hawkins is quite above the average chauffeur.' 'So it seems,' said Nicholson.
         
        He turned to Roger.
         
        'I must be going. Believe me, all my sympathies are with you and Mrs Bassingtonffrench.' Roger went out into the hall with him. Frankie followed. On the hall table were a couple of letters addressed to her. One was a bill. The other Her heart gave a leap.

         
        The other was in Bobby's handwriting.
         
        Nicholson and Roger were on the doorstep.
         
        She tore it open.
         
        Dear Frankie (wrote Bobby), I'm on the trail at last. Follow me as soon as possible to Chipping Somerton. You'd better come by train and not by car. The Bentley is too noticeable. The trains aren't too good but you can get there all right. You're to come to a house called Tudor Cottage. I'll explain to you just exactly how to find it. Don't ask the way. (Here followed some minute directions.) Have you got that clear? Don't tell anyone. (This was heavily underlined.) No one at all. Yours ever, Bobby.
         
        Frankie crushed the letter excitedly in the palm of her hand.
         
        So it was all right.
         
        Nothing dreadful had overtaken Bobby.
         
        He was on the trail - and by a coincidence on the same trail as herself. She had been to Somerset House to look up the will of John Savage. Rose Emily Templeton was given as the wife of Edgar Templeton of Tudor Cottage, Chipping Somerton.
         
        And that again had fitted in with the open ABC in the St Leonard's Gardens house. Chipping Somerton had been one of the stations on the open page. The Caymans had gone to Chipping Somerton.
         
        Everything was falling into place. They were nearing the end of the chase.
         
        Roger Bassington-ffrench turned and came towards her.
         
        'Anything interesting in your letter?' he inquired casually.
         
        For a moment Frankie hesitated. Surely Bobby had not meant Roger when he adjured her to tell nobody?
         
        Then she remembered the heavy underlining - remembered, too, her own recent monstrous idea. If that were true, Roger might betray them both in all innocence. She dared not hint to him her own suspicions.
         
        So she made up her mind and spoke.
         
        'No,' she said. 'Nothing at all.' She was to repent her decision bitterly before twenty-four hours had passed.
         
        More than once in the course of the next few hours did she bitterly regret Bobby's dictum that the car was not to be used.
         
        Chipping Somerton was no very great distance as the crow flies but it involved changing three times, with a long dreary wait at a country station each time, and to one of Frankie's impatient temperament, this slow method of procedure was extremely hard to endure with fortitude.
         
        Still, she felt bound to admit that there was something in what Bobby had said. The Bentley was a noticeable car.
         
        Her excuses for leaving it at Merroway had been of the flimsiest order, but she had been unable to think of anything brilliant on the spur of the moment.
         
        It was getting dark when Frankie's train, an extremely deliberate and thoughtful train, drew into the little station of Chipping Somerton. To Frankie it seemed more like midnight.
         
        The train seemed to her to have been ambling on for hours and hours.
         
        It was just beginning to rain, too, which was additionally trying.
         
        Frankie buttoned up her coat to her neck, took a last look at Bobby's letter by the light of the station lamp, got the directions clearly in her head and set off.
         
        The instructions were quite easy to follow. Frankie saw the lights of the village ahead and turned off to the left up a lane which led steeply uphill. At the top of the lane she took the right-hand fork and presently saw the little cluster of houses that formed the village lying below her and a belt of pine trees ahead. Finally, she came to a neat wooden gate and, striking a match, saw Tudor Cottage written on it.
         
        There was no one about. Frankie slipped up the latch and passed inside. She could make out the outlines of the house behind a belt of pine trees. She took up her post within the trees where she could get a clear view of the house. Then, heart beating a little faster, she gave the best imitation she could of the hoot of an owl. A few minutes passed and nothing happened. She repeated the call.
         
        The door of the cottage opened and she saw a figure in chauffeur's dress peer cautiously out. Bobby! He made a beckoning gesture then withdrew inside, leaving the door ajar.
         
        Frankie came out from the trees and up to the door. There was no light in any window. Everything was perfectly dark and silent.
         
        Frankie stepped gingerly over the threshold into a dark hall.
         
        She stopped, peering about her.
         
        'Bobby?' she whispered.
         
        It was her nose that gave her warning. Where had she known that smell before - that heavy, sweet odour?
         
        Just as her brain gave the answer 'Chloroform', strong arms seized her from behind. She opened her mouth to scream and a wet pad was clapped over it. The sweet, cloying smell filled her nostrils.
         
        She fought desperately, twisting and turning, kicking. But it was of no avail. Despite the fight she put up, she felt herself succumbing. There was a drumming in her ears, she felt herself choking. And then she knew no more...
         
        CHAPTER 28 At the Eleventh Hour
         
        When Frankie came to herself, the immediate reactions were depressing. There is nothing romantic about the after effects of chloroform. She was lying on an extremely hard wooden floor and her hands and feet were tied. She managed to roll herself over and her head nearly collided violently with a battered coalbox.
         
        Various distressing events then occurred.
         
        A few minutes later, Frankie was able, if not to sit up, at least to take notice.
         
        Close at hand she heard a faint groan. She peered about her.
         
        As far as she could make out, she seemed to be in a kind of attic.
         
        The only light came from a skylight in the roof, and at this moment there was very little of that. In a few minutes it would be quite dark. There were a few broken pictures lying against the wall, a dilapidated iron bed and some broken chairs, and the coal-scuttle before mentioned.
         
        The groan seemed to have come from the corner.
         
        Frankie's bonds were not very tight. They permitted motion of a somewhat crablike type. She wormed her way across the dusty floor.
         
        'Bobby!' she ejaculated.
         
        Bobby it was, also tied hand and foot. In addition, he had a piece of cloth bound round his mouth.
         
        This he had almost succeeded in working loose. Frankie came to his assistance. In spite of being bound together, her hands were still of some use and a final vigorous pull with her teeth finally did the job.
         
        Rather stiffly, Bobby managed to ejaculate: 'Frankie!' 'I'm glad we're together,' said Frankie. 'But it does look as though we'd been had for mugs.' 'I suppose,' said Bobby gloomily, 'it's what they call a "fair cop".' 'How did they get you?' demanded Frankie. 'Was it after you wrote that letter to me?' 'What letter? I never wrote any letter.' 'Oh! I see,' said Frankie, her eyes opening. 'What an idiot I have been! And all that stuff in it about not telling a soul.' 'Look here, Frankie, I'll tell you what happened to me and then you carry on the good work and tell me what happened to you.' He described his adventures at the Grange and their sinister sequel.
         
        'I came to in this beastly hole,' he said. 'There was some food and drink on a tray. I was frightfully hungry and I had some.
         
        I think it must have been doped for I fell asleep almost immediately. What day is it?' 'Friday.' 'And I was knocked out on Wednesday evening. Dash it all, I've been pretty well unconscious all the time. Now tell me what happened to you?' Frankie recounted her adventures, beginning with the story she had heard from Mr Spragge and carrying on until she thought she recognized Bobby's figure in the doorway.
         
        'And then they chloroformed me,' she finished. 'And oh, Bobby, I've just been sick in a coal-bucket!' 'I call that very resourceful of you, Frankie,' said Bobby approvingly. 'With your hands tied and everything? The thing is: what are we going to do now? We've had it our own way for a long time, but now the tables are turned.' 'If only I'd told Roger about your letter,' lamented Frankie.
         
        'I did think of it and wavered - and then I decided to do exactly what you said and tell nobody at all.' 'With the result that no one knows where we are,' said Bobby gravely. 'Frankie, my dear, I'm afraid I've landed you in a mess.' 'We got a bit too sure of ourselves,' said Frankie sombrely.
         
        'The only thing I can't make out is why they didn't knock us both on the head straight away,' mused Bobby. 'I don't think Nicholson would stick at a little trifle like that.' 'He's got a plan,' said Frankie with a slight shiver.
         
        'Well, we'd better have one, too. We've got to get out of this, Frankie. How are we going to do it?' 'We can shout,' said Frankie.
         
        'Ye-es,' said Bobby. 'Somebody might be passing and hear.
         
        But from the fact that Nicholson didn't gag you I should say that the chances in that direction are pretty poor. Your hands are more loosely tied than mine. Let's see if I can get them undone with my teeth.' The next five minutes were spent in a struggle that did credit to Bobby's dentist.
         
        'Extraordinary how easy these things sound in books,' he panted. 'I don't believe I'm making the slightest impression.' 'You are,' said Frankie. 'It's loosening. Look out! There's somebody coming.' She rolled away from him. A step could be heard mounting a stair, a heavy, ponderous tread. A gleam of light appeared under the door. Then there was the sound of a key being turned in the lock. The door swung slowly open.
         
        'And how are my two little birds?' said the voice of Dr Nicholson.
         
        He carried a candle in one hand and, though he was wearing a hat pulled down over his eyes and a heavy overcoat with the collar turned up, his voice would have betrayed him anywhere.
         
        His eyes glittered palely behind the strong glasses.
         
        He shook his head at them playfully.
         
        'Unworthy of you, my dear young lady,' he said, 'to fall into the trap so easily.' Neither Bobby nor Frankie made any reply. The honours of the situation so obviously lay with Nicholson that it was difficult to know what to say.
         
        Nicholson put the candle down on a chair.
         
        'At any rate,' he said, 'let me see if you are comfortable.' He examined Bobby's fastenings, nodded his head approvingly and passed on to Frankie. There he shook his head.
         
        'As they truly used to say to me in my youth,' he remarked, 'fingers were made before forks - and teeth were used before fingers. Your young friend's teeth, I see, have been active.' A heavy, broken-backed oak chair was standing in a corner.
         
        Nicholson picked up Frankie, deposited her on the chair and tied her securely to it.
         
        'Not too uncomfortable, I trust?' he said. 'Well, it isn't for long.' Frankie found her tongue.
         
        'What are you going to do with us?' she demanded.
         
        Nicholson walked to the door and picked up his candle.
         
        'You taunted me. Lady Frances, with being too fond of accidents. Perhaps I am. At any rate, I am going to risk one more accident.' 'What do you mean?' said Bobby.
         
        'Shall I tell you? Yes, I think I will. Lady Frances Derwent, driving her car, her chauffeur beside her, mistakes a turning and takes a disused road leading to a quarry. The car crashes over the edge. Lady Frances and her chauffeur are killed.' There was a slight pause, then Bobby said: 'But we mightn't be. Plans go awry sometimes. One of yours did down in Wales.' 'Your tolerance of morphia was certainly very remarkable and from our point of view - regrettable,' said Nicholson. 'But you need have no anxiety on my behalf this time. You and Lady Frances will be quite dead when your bodies are discovered.' Bobby shivered in spite of himself. There had been a queer note in Nicholson's voice - it was the tone of an artist contemplating a masterpiece.
         
        'He enjoys this,' thought Bobby. 'Really enjoys it.' He was not going to give Nicholson further cause for enjoyment than he could help. He said in a casual tone of voice: 'You're making a mistake - especially where Lady Frances is concerned.' 'Yes,' said Frankie. 'In that very clever letter you forged you told me to tell nobody. Well, I made just one exception. I told Roger Bassington-ffrench. He knows all about you. If anything happens to us, he will know who is responsible for it. You'd better let us go and clear out of the country as fast as you can.' Nicholson was silent for a moment. Then he said: 'A good bluff - but I call it.' He turned to the door.
         
        'What about your wife, you swine?' cried Bobby. 'Have you murdered her, too?' 'Moira i§ still alive,' said Nicholson. 'How much longer she will remain so, I do not really know. It depends on circumstances.' He made them a mocking little bow.
         
        'Au revoir,' he said. 'It will take me a couple of hours to complete my arrangements. You may enjoy talking the matter over. I shall not gag you unless it becomes necessary. You understand? Any calls for help and I return and deal with the matter.' He went out and closed and locked the door behind him.
         
        'It isn't true,' said Bobby. 'It can't be true. These things don't happen.' But he could not help feeling that they were going to happen - and to him and Frankie.
         
        'In books there's always an eleventh-hour rescue,' said Frankie, trying to speak hopefully.
         
        But she was not feeling very hopeful. In fact, her morale was decidedly low.
         
        'The whole thing's so impossible,' said Bobby as though pleading with someone. 'So fantastic. Nicholson himself was absolutely unreal. I wish an eleventh-hour rescue was possible, but I can't see who's going to rescue us.' 'If only I'd told Roger,' wailed Frankie.
         
        'Perhaps in spite of everything, Nicholson believes you have,' suggested Bobby.
         
        'No,' said Frankie. 'The suggestion didn't go down at all.
         
        The man's too damned clever.' 'He's been too clever for us,' said Bobby gloomily. 'Frankie, do you know what annoys me most about this business?' 'No. What?' 'That even now, when we're going to be hurled into the next world, we still don't know who Evans is.' 'Let's ask him,' said Frankie. 'You know - a last-minute boon. He can't refuse to tell us. I agree with you that I simply can't die without having my curiosity satisfied.' There was a silence, then Bobby said: 'Do you think we ought to yell for help - a sort of last chance? It's about the only chance we've got.' 'Not yet,' said Frankie. 'In the first place, I don't believe anyone would hear - he'd never risk it otherwise - and in the second place, I feel I just can't bear waiting here to be killed without being able to speak or be spoken to. Let's leave shouting till the last possible moment. It's - it's so comforting having you to talk to.' Her voice wavered a little over the last words.
         
        'I've got you into an awful mess, Frankie.' 'Oh! that's all right. You couldn't have kept me out. I wanted to come in. Bobby, do you think he'll really pull it off?
         
        Us, I mean.' 'I'm terribly afraid he will. He's so damnably efficient.' 'Bobby, do you believe now that it was he who killed Henry Bassingtonffrench?' 'If it were possible ' 'It is possible - granted one thing: that Sylvia Bassingtonffrench is in it, too.' 'Frankie!' 'I know. I was just as horrified when the idea occurred to me.
         
        But it fits. Why was Sylvia so dense about the morphia - why did she resist so obstinately when we wanted her to send her husband somewhere else instead of the Grange? And then she was in the house when the shot was fired ' 'She might have done it herself.' 'Oh! no, surely.' 'Yes, she might. And then have given the key of the study to Nicholson to put in Henry's pocket.' 'It's all crazy,' said Frankie in a hopeless voice. 'Like looking- through a distorting mirror. All the people who seemed most all right are really all wrong - all the nice, everyday people.
         
        There ought to be some way of telling criminals - eyebrows or ears or something.' 'My God!' cried Bobby.
         
        'What is it?' 'Frankie, that wasn't Nicholson who came here just now.' 'Have you gone quite mad? Who was it then?' 'I don't know - but it wasn't Nicholson. All along I felt there was something wrong, but couldn't spot it, and your saying ears has given me the clue. When I was watching Nicholson the other evening through the window I especially noticed his ears - the lobes are joined to the face. But this man tonight - his ears weren't like that.' 'But what does it mean?' Frankie asked hopelessly.
         
        'This is a very clever actor impersonating Nicholson.' 'But why - and who could it be?' 'Bassington-ffrench,' breathed Bobby. 'Roger Bassingtonffrench! We spotted the right man at the beginning and then, like idiots, we went astray after red herrings.' 'Bassington-ffrench,' whispered Frankie. 'Bobby, you're right. It must be him. He was the only person there when I taunted Nicholson about accidents.' 'Then it really is all up,' said Bobby. 'I've still had a kind of sneaking hope that possibly Roger Bassington-ffrench might nose out our trail by some miracle but now the last hope's gone.
         
        Moira's a prisoner, you and I are tied hand and foot. Nobody else has the least idea where we are. The game's up, Frankie.' As he finished speaking there was a sound overhead. The next minute, with a terrific crash, a heavy body fell through the skylight.

         
        It was too dark to see anything.
         
        'What the devil -' began Bobby.
         
        From amidst a pile of broken glass, a voice spoke.
         
        'B-b-b-bobby,' it said.
         
        'Well, I'm damned!' said Bobby. 'It's Badger!'
         
        CHAPTER 29 Badger's Story
         
        There was not a minute to be lost. Already sounds could be heard on the floor below.
         
        'Quick, Badger, you fool!' said Bobby. 'Pull one of my boots off! Don't argue or ask questions! Haul it off somehow. Chuck it down in the middle there and crawl under that bed! Quick, I tell you!' Steps were ascending the stairs. The key turned.
         
        Nicholson - the pseudo Nicholson - stood in the doorway, candle in hand.
         
        He saw Bobby and Frankie as he had left them, but in the middle of the floor was a pile of broken glass and in the middle of the broken glass was a boot!
         
        Nicholson stared in amazement from the boot to Bobby.
         
        Bobby's left foot was bootless.
         
        'Very clever, my young friend,' he said dryly. 'Extremely acrobatic.' He came over to Bobby, examined the ropes that bound him and tied a couple of extra knots. He looked at him curiously.
         
        'I wish I knew how you managed to throw that boot through the skylight It seems almost incredible. A touch of the Houdini about you, my friend.' He looked at them both, up at the broken skylight, then shrugging his shoulders, he left the room.
         
        'Quick, Badger.' Badger crawled out from under the bed. He had a pocket knife and with its aid he soon cut the other two free.
         
        'That's better,' said Bobby, stretching himself. 'Whew! I'm stiff! Well, Frankie, what about our friend Nicholson?' 'You're right,' said Frankie. 'It's Roger Bassingtonffrench.
         
        Now that I know he's Roger playing the part of Nicholson I can see it. But it's a pretty good performance all the same.' 'Entirely voice and pince-nez,' said Bobby.
         
        'I was at Oxford with a B-b-b-bassington-ffrench,' said Badger. 'M-m-m-marvellous actor. B-b-b-bad hat, though. Bb-b-bad business about forging his p-p-pater's n-n-n-name to a cheque. Old m-m-man hushed it up.' In the minds of both Bobby and Frankie was the same thought. Badger, whom they had judged it wiser not to take into their confidence, could all along have given them valuable information!
         
        'Forgery,' said Frankie thoughtfully. 'That letter from you, Bobby, was remarkably well done. I wonder how he knew your handwriting?' 'If he's in with the Caymans he probably saw my letter about the Evans business.' The voice of Badger rose plaintively.
         
        'W-w-w-what are we going to do next?' he inquired.
         
        'We're going to take up a comfortable position behind this door,' said Bobby. 'And when our friend returns, which I imagine won't be for a little while yet, you and I are going to spring on him from behind and give him the surprise of his life.
         
        How about it. Badger? Are you game?' 'Oh! absolutely.' 'As for you, Frankie, when you hear his step you'd better get back on to your chair. He'll see you as soon as he opens the door and will come in without any suspicion.' 'All right,' said Frankie. 'And once you and Badger have got him down I'll join in and bite his ankles or something.' 'That's the true womanly spirit,' said Bobby approvingly.
         
        'Now, let's all sit close together on the floor here and hear all about things. I want to know what miracle brought Badger through that skylight.' 'Well, you s-s-see,' said Badger, 'after you w-w-went off, I got into a bit of a mm-mess.' He paused. Gradually the story was extracted: a tale of liabilities, creditors and bailiffs - a typical Badger catastrophe.
         
        Bobby had gone off leaving no address, only saying that he was driving the Bentley down to Staveriey. So to Staverley came Badger.
         
        'I thought p-p-perhaps you m-m-might be able to let have a f-f-fiver,' he explained.
         
        Bobby's heart smote him. To aid Badger in his enterprise he had come to London and had promptly deserted his post to go off sleuthing with Frankie. And even now the faithful Badger uttered no word of reproach.
         
        Badger had no wish to endanger Bobby's mysterious enterprises, but he was of the opinion that a car like the green Bentley would not be difficult to find in a place the size of Staverley.
         
        As a matter of fact, he came across the car before he got to Staverley, for it was standing outside a pub - empty.
         
        'S-s-so I thought,' went on Badger, 'that I'd give you a little s-s-s-surprise, don't you know? There were some r-r-rugs and things in the b-b-back and nobody about. I g-g-got in and pp-p-pulled them over me. I thought I'd give you the sssurprise of your life.' What actually happened was that a chauffeur in green livery had emerged from the pub and that Badger, peering from his place of concealment, was thunderstruck to perceive that this chauffeur was not Bobby. He had an idea that the face was in some way familiar to him but couldn't place the man. The stranger got into the car and drove off.
         
        Badger was in a predicament. He did not know what to do next. Explanations and apologies were difficult, and in any case it is not easy to explain to someone who is driving a car at sixty miles an hour. Badger decided to lie low and sneak out of the car when it stopped.
         
        The car finally reached its destination - Tudor Cottage. The chauffeur drove it into the garage and left it there, but, on going out, he shut the garage doors. Badger was a prisoner. There was a small window at one side of the garage and through this about half an hour later Badger had observed Frankie's approach, her whistle and her admission into the house.
         
        The whole business puzzled Badger greatly. He began to suspect that something was wrong. At any rate, he determined to have a look round for himself and see what it was all about.
         
        With the help of some tools lying about in the garage he succeeded in picking the lock of the garage door and set out on a tour of inspection. The windows on the ground floor were all shuttered, but he thought that by getting on to the roof he might manage to have a look into some of the upper windows.
         
        The roof presented no difficulties. There was a convenient pipe running up the garage and from the garage roof to the roof of the cottage was an easy climb. In the course of his prowling, Badger had come upon the skylight. Nature and Badger's weight had done the rest.
         
        Bobby drew a long breath as the narrative came to an end.
         
        'All the same,' he said reverently, 'you are a miracle - a singularly beautiful miracle! But for you. Badger, my lad, Frankie and I would have been little corpses in about an hour's time.' He gave Badger a condensed account of the activities of himself and Frankie. Towards the end he broke off.
         
        'Someone's coming. Get to your post, Frankie. Now, then, this is where our play-acting Bassington-ffrench gets the surprise of his life.' Frankie arranged herself in a depressed attitude on the broken chair. Badger and Bobby stood ready behind the door.
         
        The steps came up the stairs, a line of candle-light showed underneath the door. The key was put in the lock and turned, the door swung open. The light of the candle disclosed Frankie drooping dejectedly on her chair. Their gaoler stepped through the doorway.
         
        Then, joyously. Badger and Bobby sprang.
         
        The proceedings were short and decisive. Taken utterly by surprise, the man was knocked down, the candle flew wide and was retrieved by Frankie, and a few seconds later the three friends stood looking down with malicious pleasure at a figure securely bound with the same ropes as had previously secured two of them.
         
        'Good evening, Mr Bassington-ffrench,' said Bobby - and if the exultation in his voice was a little crude, who shall blame him? 'It's a nice night for the funeral.'
         
        CHAPTER 30 Escape
         
        The man on the floor stared up at them. His pince-nez had flown off and so had his hat. There could be no further attempt at disguise. Slight traces of make-up were visible about the eyebrows, but otherwise the face was the pleasant, slightly vacuous face of Roger Bassingtonffrench.
         
        He spoke in his own agreeable tenor voice, its note that of pleasant soliloquy.
         
        'Very interesting,' he said. 'I really knew quite well that no man tied up as you were could have thrown a boot through that skylight. But because the boot was there among the broken glass I took it for cause and effect and assumed that, though it was impossible, the impossible had been achieved. An interesting light on the limitations of the brain.' As nobody spoke, he went on still in the same reflective voice: 'So, after all, you've won the round. Most unexpected and extremely regrettable. I thought I'd got you all fooled nicely.' 'So you had,' said Frankie. 'You forged that letter from Bobby, I suppose?' 'I have a talent that way,' said Roger modestly.
         
        'And Bobby?' Lying on his back, smiling agreeably, Roger seemed to take a positive pleasure in enlightening them.
         
        'I knew he'd go to the Grange. I only had to wait about in the bushes near the path. I was just behind him there when he retreated after rather clumsily falling off a tree. I let the hubbub die down and then got him neatly on the back of the neck with a sandbag. All I had to do was to carry him out to where my car was waiting, shove him in the dickey and drive him here. I was at home again before morning.' 'And Moira?' demanded Bobby. 'Did you entice her away somehow?' Roger chuckled. The question seemed to amuse him.
         
        'Forgery is a very useful art, my dear Jones,' he said.
         
        'You swine,' said Bobby.
         
        Frankie intervened. She was still full of curiosity, and their prisoner seemed in an obliging mood.
         
        'Why did you pretend to be Dr Nicholson?' she asked.
         
        'Why did I, now?' Roger seemed to be asking the question of himself. 'Partly, I think, the fun of seeing whether I could spoof you both. You were so very sure that poor old Nicholson was in it up to the neck.' He laughed and Frankie blushed. 'Just because he cross-questioned you a bit about the details of your accident - in his pompous way. It was an irritating fad of his accuracy in details.' 'And really,' said Frankie slowly, 'he was quite innocent?' 'As a child unborn,' said Roger. 'But he did me a good turn.
         
        He drew my attention to that accident of yours. That and another incident made me realize that you mightn't be quite the innocent young thing you seemed to be. And then I was standing by you when you telephoned one morning and heard your chauffeur's voice say "Frankie". I've got pretty good hearing. I suggested coming up to town with you and you agreed - but you were very relieved when I changed my mind.
         
        After that -' He stopped and, as far as he was able, shrugged his bound shoulders. 'It was rather fun seeing you all get worked up about Nicholson. He's a harmless old ass, but he does look exactly like a scientific super-criminal on the films. I thought I might as well keep the deception up. After all, you never know.
         
        The best-laid plans go wrong, as my present predicament shows.' 'There's one thing you must tell me,' said Frankie. 'I've been driven nearly mad with curiosity. Who is Evans?' 'Oh!' said Bassington-ffrench. 'So you don't know that?' He laughed - and laughed again.
         
        'That's rather amusing,' he said. 'It shows what a fool one can be.' 'Meaning us?' asked Frankie.
         
        'No,' said Roger. 'In this case, meaning me. Do you know, if you don't know who Evans is, I don't think I shall tell you.
         
        I'll keep that to myself as my own little secret.' The position was a curious one. They had turned the tables on Bassington-ffrench and yet, in some peculiar way, he had robbed them of their triumph. Lying on the floor, bound and a prisoner, it was he who dominated the situation.
         
        'And what are your plans now, may I ask?' he inquired.
         
        Nobody had as yet evolved any plans. Bobby rather doubtfully murmured something about police.
         
        'Much the best thing to do,' said Roger cheerfully. 'Ring them up and hand me over to them. The charge will be abduction, I suppose. I can't very well deny that.' He looked at Frankie. 'I shall plead a guilty passion.' Frankie reddened.
         
        'What about murder?' she asked.
         
        'My dear, you haven't any evidence. Positively none. Think it over and you'll see you haven't.
         
        'Badger,' said Bobby, 'you'd better stay here and keep an eye on him. I'll go down and ring the police.' 'You'd better be careful,' said Frankie. 'We don't know how many of them there may be in the house.' 'No one but me,' said Roger. 'I was carrying this through single-handed.' 'I'm not prepared to take your word for that,' said Bobby gruffly.
         
        He bent over and tested the knots.
         
        'He's all right,' he said. 'Safe as houses. We'd better all go down together. We can lock the door.' 'Terribly distrustful, aren't you, my dear chap,' said Roger.
         
        'There's a pistol in my pocket if you'd like it. It may make you feel happier and it's certainly no good to me in my present position.' Ignoring the other's mocking tone, Bobby bent down and extracted the weapon.
         
        'Kind of you to mention it,' he said. 'If you want to know it does me me feel happier.' 'Good,' said Roger. 'It's loaded.' Bobby took the candle and they filed out of the attic, leaving Roger lying on the floor. Bobby locked the door and put the key in his pocket. He held the pistol in his hand.
         
        'I'll go first,' he said. 'We've got to be quite sure and not make a mess of things now.'' 'He's a qu-qu-queer chap, isn't he?' said Badger with a jerk of his head backwards in the direction of the room they had left.
         
        'He's a damned good loser,' said Frankie.
         
        Even now she was not quite free from the charm of that very remarkable young man, Roger Bassingtonffrench.
         
        A rather rickety flight of steps led down to the main landing.
         
        Everything was quiet. Bobby looked over the banisters. The telephone was in the hall below.
         
        'We'd better look into these rooms first,' he said. 'We don't want to be taken in the rear.' Badger flung open each door in turn. Of the four bedrooms, three were empty. In the fourth a slender figure was lying on the bed.
         
        'It's Moira,' cried Frankie.
         
        The others crowded in. Moira was lying like one dead, except that her breast moved up and down ever so slightly.
         
        'Is she asleep?' asked Bobby.
         
        'She's drugged I think,' said Frankie.
         
        She looked round. A hypodermic syringe lay on a little enamel tray on a table near the window. There was also a little spirit lamp and a type of morphia hypodermic needle.
         
        'She'll be all right, I think,' she said. 'But we ought to get a doctor.' 'Let's go down and telephone,' said Bobby.
         
        They adjourned to the hall below. Frankie had a half fear that the telephone wires might be cut, but her fears proved quite unfounded. They got through to the police station quite easily, but found a good deal of difficulty in explaining matters.
         
        The local police station was highly disposed to regard the summons as a practical joke.
         
        However, they were convinced at last, and Bobby replaced the receiver with a sigh. He had explained that they also wanted a doctor and the police constable promised to bring one along.
         
        Ten minutes later a car arrived with an inspector and a constable and an elderly man who had his profession stamped all over him.
         
        Bobby and Frankie received them and, after explaining matters once more in a somewhat perfunctory fashion, led the way to the attic. Bobby unlocked the door - then stood dumbfounded in the doorway. In the middle of the floor was a heap of severed ropes. Underneath the broken skylight a chair had been placed on the bed, which had been dragged out till it was under the skylight.
         
        Of Roger Bassington-ffrench there was no sign.
         
        Bobby, Badger and Frankie were dumbfounded.
         
        'Talk of Houdini,' said Bobby. 'He must have outHoudinied Houdini. How the devil did he cut these cords?' 'He must have had a knife in his pocket,' said Frankie.
         
        'Even then, how could he get at it? Both hands were bound together behind his back.' The inspector coughed. All his former doubts had returned.
         
        He was more strongly disposed than ever to regard the whole thing as a hoax.
         
        Frankie and Bobby found themselves telling a long story which sounded more impossible every minute.
         
        The doctor was their salvation.
         
        On being taken to the room where Moira was lying, he declared at once that she had been drugged with morphia or some preparation of opium. He did not consider her condition serious and thought she would awake naturally in four or five hours' time.
         
        He suggested taking her off then and there to a good nursing home in the neighbourhood.
         
        To this Bobby and Frankie agreed, not seeing what else could be done. Having given their own names and addresses to the inspector, who appeared to disbelieve utterly in Frankie's, they themselves were allowed to leave Tudor Cottage and with the assistance of the inspector succeeded in gaining admission to the Seven Stars in the village.
         
        Here, still feeling that they were regarded as criminals, they were only too thankful to go to their rooms - a double one for Bobby and Badger, and a very minute single one for Frankie.
         
        A few minutes after they had all retired, a knock came on Bobby's door.
         
        It was Frankie.
         
        'I've thought of something,' she said. 'If that fool of a police inspector persists in thinking that we made all this up, at any rate I've got evidence that I was chloroformed.' 'Have you? Where?' 'In the coal-bucket,' said Frankie with decision.
         
        CHAPTER 31 Frankie Asks a Question
         
        Exhausted by all her adventures, Frankie slept late the next morning. It was half-past ten when she came down to the small coffee room to find Bobby waiting for her.
         
        'Hullo, Frankie, here you are at last.' 'Don't be so horribly vigorous, my dear,' Frankie subsided into a chair.
         
        'What will you have? They've got haddock and eggs and bacon and cold ham.' 'I shall have some toast and weak tea,' said Frankie, quelling him. 'What is the matter with you?' 'It must be the sandbagging,' said Bobby. 'It's probably broken up adhesions in the brain. I feel absolutely full of pep and vim and bright ideas and a longing to dash out and do things.' 'Well, why not dash?' said Frankie languidly.
         
        'I have dashed, I've been with Inspector Hammond for the last half-hour. We'll have to let it go as a practical joke, Frankie, for the moment.' 'Oh, but, Bobby ' 'I said/or the moment. We've got to get to the bottom of this, Frankie. We're on the right spot and all we've got to do is to get down to it. We don't want Roger Bassington-ffrench for abduction. We want him for murder.' 'And we'll get him,' said Frankie, with a rivival of spirit.
         
        'That's more like it,' said Bobby approvingly. 'Drink some more tea.' 'How's Moira?' 'Pretty bad. She came round in the most awful state of nerves. Scared stiff apparently. She's gone up to London - to a nursing home place in Queen's Gate. She says she'll feel safe there. She was terrified here.' 'She never did have much nerve,' said Frankie.
         
        'Well, anyone might be scared stiff with a queer, coldblooded murderer like Roger Bassington-ffrench loose in the neighbourhood.' 'He doesn't want to murder her. We're the ones he's after.' 'He's probably too busy taking care of himself to worry about us for the moment,' said Bobby. 'Now, Frankie, we've got to get down to it. The start of the whole thing must be John Savage's death and will. There's something wrong about it.
         
        Either that will was forged or Savage was murdered or something.' 'It's quite likely the will was forged if Bassingtonffrench was concerned,' said Frankie thoughtfully. 'Forgery seems to be his speciality.' 'It may have been forgery and murder. We've got to find out.' Frankie nodded.
         
        'I've got the notes I made after looking at the will. The witnesses were Rose Chudleigh, cook, and Albeit Mere, gardener. They ought to be quite easy to find. Then there are the lawyers who drew it up - Elford and Leigh - a very respectable firm as Mr Spragge said.' 'Right, we'll start from there. I think you'd better take the lawyers. You'll get more out of them than I would. I'll hunt up Rose Chudleigh and Albeit Mere.' 'What about Badger?' 'Badger never gets up till lunch time - you needn't worry about him.' 'We must get his affairs straightened out for him sometime,' said Frankie. 'After all, he did save my life.' 'They'll soon get tangled again,' said Bobby. 'Oh! by the way, what do you think of this?' He held out a dirty piece of cardboard for her inspection. It was a photograph.
         
        'Mr Cayman,' said Frankie immediately. 'Where did you get it?' 'Last night. It had slipped down behind the telephone.' 'Then it seems pretty clear who Mr and Mrs Templeton were. Wait a minute.' A waitress had just approached, bearing toast. Frankie displayed the photograph.
         
        'Do you know who that is?' she asked.
         
        The waitress regarded the photograph, her head a little on one side.
         
        'Now, I've seen the gentleman - but I can't quite call to mind. Oh! yes, it's the gentleman who had Tudor Cottage - Mr Templeton. They've gone away now - somewhere abroad, I believe.' 'What sort of man was he?' asked Frankie.
         
        'I really couldn't say. They didn't come down here very often - just weekends now and then. Nobody saw much of him.
         
        Mrs Templeton was a very nice lady. But they hadn't had Tudor Cottage very long - Only about six months - when a very rich gentleman died and left Mrs Templeton all his money and they went to live abroad. They never sold Tudor Cottage, though. I think they sometimes lend it to people for weekends.
         
        But I don't suppose with all that money they'll ever come back here and live in it themselves.' 'They had a cook called Rose Chudleigh, didn't they?' asked Frankie.
         
        But the girl seemed uninterested in cooks. Being left a fortune by a rich gentleman was what really stirred her imagination. In answer to Frankie's question she replied that she couldn't say, she was sure, and withdrew carrying an empty toast-rack.
         
        'That's all plain sailing,' said Frankie. 'The Caymans have given up coming here, but they keep the place on for the convenience of the gang.' They agreed to divide the labour as Bobby had suggested.
         
        Frankie went off in the Bentley, having smartened herself up by a few local purchases, and Bobby went off in quest of Albeit Mere, the gardener.
         
        They met at lunch time.
         
        'Well?' demanded Bobby.
         
        Frankie shook her head.
         
        'Forgery's out of the question.' She spoke in a dispirited voice. 'I spent a long time with Mr Elford - he's rather an old dear. He'd got wind of our doings last night and was wild to hear a few details. I don't suppose they get much excitement down here. Anyway, I soon got him eating out of my hand.
         
        Then I discussed the Savage case - pretended I'd met some of the Savage relations and that they'd hinted at forgery. At that my old dear bristled up - absolutely out of the question! It wasn't a question of letters or anything like that. He saw Mr Savage himself and Mr Savage insisted on the will being drawn up then and there. Mr Elford wanted to go away and do it properly - you know how they do - sheets and sheets all about nothing ' 'I don't know,' said Bobby. 'I've never made any wills.' 'I have - two. The second was this morning. I had to have some excuse for seeing a lawyer.' 'Who did you leave your money to?' 'You.' 'That was a bit thoughtless, wasn't it? If Roger Bassingtonffrench succeeded in bumping you off I should probably be hanged for it!' 'I never thought of that,' said Frankie. 'Well, as I was saying, Mr Savage was so nervous and wrought up that Mr Elford wrote out the will then and there and the servant and the gardener came and witnessed it, and Mr Elford took it away with him for safe keeping.' 'That does seem to knock out forgery,' agreed Bobby.
         
        'I know. You can't have forgery when you've actually seen the man sign his name. As to the other business - murder, it's going to be hard to find out anything about that now. The doctor who was called in has died since. The man we saw last night is a new man - he's only been here about two months.' 'We seem to have rather an unfortunate number of deaths,' said Bobby.
         
        'Why, who else is dead?' 'Albert Mere.' 'Do you think they've all been put out of the way?' 'That seems rather wholesale. We might give Albert Mere the benefit of the doubt - he was seventy-two, poor old man.' 'All right,' said Frankie. 'I'll allow you Natural Causes in his case. Any luck with Rose Chudleigh?' 'Yes. After she left the Templetons she went to the north of England to a place, but she's come back and married a man down here whom it seems she's been walking out with for the last seventeen years. Unfortunately she's a bit of a nitwit. She doesn't seem to remember anything about anyone. Perhaps you could do something with her.' 'I'll have a go,' said Frankie. 'I'm rather good with nitwits.
         
        Where's Badger, by the way?' 'Good Lord! I've forgotten all about him,' said Bobby. He got up and left the room, returning a few minutes later.
         
        'He was still asleep,' he explained. 'He's getting up now. A chambermaid seems to have called him four times but it didn't make any impression.' 'Well, we'd better go and see the nitwit,' said Frankie, rising.
         
        'And then I must buy a toothbrush and a nightgown and a sponge and a few other necessities of civilized existence. I was so close to Nature last night that I didn't think about any of them. I just stripped off my outer covering and fell upon the bed.' 'I know,' said Bobby. 'So did I.' 'Let's go and talk to Rose Chudleigh,' said Frankie.
         
        Rose Chudleigh, now Mrs Pratt, lived in a small cottage that seemed to be overflowing with china dogs and furniture. Mrs Pratt herself was a bovine-looking woman of ample proportions, with fish-like eyes and every indication of adenoids.
         
        'You see, I've come back,' said Bobby breezily.
         
        Mrs Pratt breathed hard and looked at them both incuriously.
         
        'We were so interested to hear that you had lived with Mrs Templeton,' explained Frankie.
         
        'Yes, ma'am,' said Mrs Pratt.
         
        'She's living abroad now, I believe,' continued Frankie, trying to give an impression of being an intimate of the family.
         
        'I've heard so,' agreed Mrs Pratt.
         
        'You were with her some time, weren't you?' asked Frankie.
         
        'Were I which, ma'am?' 'With Mrs Templeton some time,' said Frankie, speaking slowly and clearly.
         
        'I wouldn't say that, ma'am. Only two months.' 'Oh! I thought you'd been with her longer than that.' 'That was Gladys, ma'am. The house-parlourmaid. She was there six months.' 'There were two of you?' 'That's right. House-parlourmaid she was and I was cook.' 'You were there when Mr Savage died, weren't you?' 'I beg your pardon, ma'am.' 'You were there when Mr Savage died?' 'Mr Templeton didn't die - at least I haven't heard so. He went abroad.' 'Not Mr Templeton - Mr Savage,' said Bobby.
         
        Mrs Pratt looked at him vacantly.
         
        'The gentleman who left her all the money,' said Frankie.
         
        A gleam of something like intelligence passed across Mrs Pratt's face.
         
        'Oh! yes, ma'am, the gentleman there was the inquest on.' 'That's right,' said Frankie, delighted with her success. 'He used to come and stay quite often, didn't he?' 'I couldn't say as to that, ma'am. I'd only just come, you see.
         
        Gladys would know.' 'But you had to witness his will, didn't you?' Mrs Pratt looked blank.
         
        'You went and saw him sign a paper and you had to sign it, too.' Again the gleam of intelligence.
         
        'Yes, ma'am. Me and Albert. I'd never done such a thing before and I didn't like it. I said to Gladys I don't like signing a paper and that's a fact, and Gladys, she said it must be all right because Mr Elford was there and he was a very nice gentleman as well as being a lawyer.' 'What happened exactly?' asked Bobby.
         
        'I beg your pardon, sir?' 'Who called you to sign your name?' asked Frankie.
         
        'The mistress, sir. She came into the kitchen and said would I go outside and call Albert and would we both come up to the best bedroom (which she'd moved out of for Mr - the gentleman - the night before) and there was the gentleman sitting up in bed - he'd come back from London and gone straight to bed - and a very ill-looking gentleman he was. I hadn't seen him before. But he looked something ghastly, and Mr Elford was there, too, and he spoke very nice and said there was nothing to be afraid of and I was to sign my name where the gentleman had signed his, and I did and put "cook" after it and the address and Albeit did the same and I went down to Gladys all of a tremble and said I'd never seen a gentleman look so like death, and Gladys said he'd looked all right the night before, and that it must have been something in London that had upset him. He'd gone up to London very early before anyone was up.
         
        And then I said about not liking to write my name to anything, and Gladys said it was all right because Mr Elford was there.' 'And Mr Savage - the gentleman died - when?' 'Next morning as ever was, ma'am. He shut himself up in his room that night and wouldn't let anyone go near him, and when Gladys called him in the morning he was all stiff and dead and a letter propped up by his bedside. "To the Coroner," it said. Oh! it gave Gladys a regular turn. And then there was an inquest and everything. About two months later Mrs Templeton told me she was going abroad to live. But she got me a very good place up north with big wages and she gave me a nice present and everything. A very nice lady, Mrs Templeton.' Mrs Pratt was by now thoroughly enjoying her own loquacity.
         
        Frankie rose.
         
        'Well,' she said. 'It's been very nice to hear all this.' She slipped a note out of her purse. 'You must let me leave you a er - little present. I've taken up so much of your time.' 'Well, thank you kindly, I'm sure, ma'am. Good day to you and your good gentleman.' Frankie blushed and retreated rather rapidly. Bobby followed her after a few minutes. He looked preoccupied.
         
        'Well,' he said. 'We seem to have got at all she knows.' 'Yes,' said Frankie. 'And it hangs together. There seems no doubt that Savage did make that will, and I suppose his fear of cancer was genuine enough. They couldn't very well bribe a Harley Street doctor. I suppose they just took advantage of his having made that will to do away with him quickly before he changed his mind. But how we or anyone else can prove they did make away with him I can't see.' 'I know. We may suspect that Mrs T gave him "something to make him sleep", but we can't prove it. Bassingtonffrench may have forged the letter to the coroner, but that again we can't prove by now. I expect the letter is destroyed long ago after being put in as evidence at the inquest.' 'So we come back to the old problem - what on earth are Bassington-ffrench and Co. so afraid of our discovering?' 'Nothing strikes you as odd particularly?' 'No, I don't think so - at least only one thing. Why did Mrs Templeton send out for the gardener to come and witness the will when the house-parlourmaid was in the house. Why didn't they ask the parlourmaid?' 'It's odd your saying that, Frankie,' said Bobby.
         
        His voice sounded so queer that Frankie looked at him in surprise.
         
        'Why?' 'Because I stayed behind to ask Mrs Pratt for Gladys's name and address.' 'Well?' 'The parlourmaid's name was Evans!'
         
        CHAPTER 32 Evans
         
        Frankie gasped.
         
        Bobby's voice rose excitedly.
         
        'You see, you've asked the same question that Carstairs asked. Why didn't they ask the parlourmaid? Why didn't they ask Evans?' 'Ohi Bobby, we're getting there at last'' 'The same thing must have struck Carstairs. He was nosing round, just as we were, looking for something fishy - and this point struck him just as it struck us. And, moreover, I believe he came to Wales for that reason. Gladys Evans is a Welsh name - Evans was probably a Welsh girl. He was following her to Marchbolt. And someone was following him - and so, he never got to her.' 'Why didn't they ask Evans?' said Frankie. 'There must be a reason. It's such a silly little point - and yet it's important. With a couple of maids in the house, why send out for a gardener?' 'Perhaps because both Chudleigh and Albert Mere were chumps, whereas Evans was rather a sharp girl.' 'It can't be only that. Mr Elford was there and he's quite shrewd. Oh! Bobby, the whole situation is there - I know it is.
         
        If we could just get at the reason. Evans. Why Chudleigh and Mere and not Evans?' Suddenly she stopped and put both hands over her eyes.
         
        'It's coming,' she said. 'Just a sort of flicker. It'll come in a minute.' She stayed dead still for a minute or two, then removed her hands and looked at her companion with an odd flicker in her eyes.
         
        'Bobby,' she said, 'if you're staying in a house with two servants which do you tip?' 'The house-parlourmaid, of course,' said Bobby, surprised.
         
        'One never tips a cook. One never sees her, for one thing.' 'No, and she never sees you. At least she might catch a glimpse of you if you were there some rime. But a houseparlourmaid waits on you at dinner and calls you and hands you coffee.' 'What are you getting at, Frankie?' 'They couldn't have Evans witnessing that will - because Evans would have known that it wasn't Mr Savage who was making it' 'Good Lord, Frankie, what do you mean? Who was it then?' 'Bassington-ffrench, of course! Don't you see, he impersonated Savage? I bet it was Bassington-ffrench who went to that doctor and made all that fuss about having cancer. Then the lawyer is sent for - a stranger who doesn't know Mr Savage but who will be able to swear that he saw Mr Savage sign that will and it's witnessed by two people, one of whom hadn't seen him before and the other an old man who was probably pretty blind and who probably had never seen Savage either. Now do you see?' 'But where was the real Savage all that time?' 'Oh! he arrived all right and then I suspect they drugged him and put him in the attic, perhaps, and kept him there for twelve hours while Bassington-ffrench did his impersonation stunt.
         
        Then he was put back in his bed and given chloral and Evans finds him dead in the morning.' 'My God, I believe you've hit it, Frankie. But can we prove it?' 'Yes - no - I don't know. Supposing Rose Chudleigh - Pratt, I mean - was shown a photograph of the real Savage? Would she be able to say, "that wasn't the man who signed the will"?' 'I doubt it,' said Bobby. 'She is such a nitwit.' 'Chosen for that purpose, I expect. But there's another thing. An expert ought to be able to detect that the signature is a forgery.' 'They didn't before.' 'Because nobody ever raised the question. There didn't seem any possible moment when the will could have been forged. But now it's different.' 'One thing we must do,' said Bobby. 'Find Evans. She may be able to tell us a lot. She was with the Templetons for six months, remember,' Frankie groaned.
         
        'That's going to make it even more difficult.' 'How about the post office?' suggested Bobby.
         
        They were just passing it. In appearance it was more of a general store than a post office.
         
        Frankie darted inside and opened the campaign. There was no one else in the shop except the postmistress - a young woman with an inquisitive nose.
         
        Frankie bought a two-shilling book of stamps, commented on the weather and then said: 'But I expect you always have better weather here than we do in my part of the world. I live in Wales - Marchbolt. You wouldn't believe the rain we have.' The young woman with the nose said that they had a good deal of rain themselves and last Bank Holiday it had rained something cruel.
         
        Frankie said: 'There's someone in Marchbolt who comes from this part of the world. I wonder if you know her. Her name was Evans - Gladys Evans.' The young woman was quite unsuspicious.
         
        'Why, of course,' she said. She was in service here. At Tudor Cottage. But she didn't come from these parts. She came from Wales and she went back there and married - Roberts her name is now.' 'That's right,' said Frankie. 'You can't give me her address, I suppose? I borrowed a raincoat from her and forgot to give it back. If I had her address I'd post it to her.' 'Well now,' the other replied, 'I believe I can. I get a p.c. from her now and again. She and her husband have gone into service together. Wait a minute now.' She went away and rummaged in a corner. Presently she returned with a piece of paper in her hand.
         
        'Here you are,' she said, pushing it across the counter.
         
        Bobby and Frankie read it together. It was the last thing in the world they expected.
         
        'Mrs Roberts, The Vicarage, Marchbolt, Wales.'
         
        CHAPTER 33 Sensation in the Orient Cafe
         
        How Bobby and Frankie got out of the post office without disgracing themselves neither of them ever knew.
         
        Outside, with one accord, they looked at each other and shook with laugher.
         
        'At the Vicarage - all the time!' gasped Bobby.
         
        'And I looked through four hundred and eighty Evans,' lamented Frankie.
         
        'Now I see why Bassington-ffrench was so amused when he realized we didn't know in the least who Evans was!' 'And of course it was dangerous from their point of view.
         
        You and Evans were actually under the same roof.' 'Come on,' said Bobby. 'Marchbolt's the next place.' 'Like where the rainbow ends,' said Frankie. 'Back to the dear old home.' 'Dash it all,' said Bobby, 'we must do something about Badger. Have you any money, Frankie?' Frankie opened her bag and took out a handful of notes.
         
        'Give these to him and tell him to make some arrangement with his creditors and that Father will buy the garage and put him in as manager.' 'All right,' said Bobby. 'The great thing is to get off quickly.' 'Why this frightful haste?' 'I don't know - but I've a feeling something might happen.' 'How awful. Let's go ever so quickly.' 'I'll settle Badger. You go and start the car.' 'I shall never buy that toothbrush,' said Frankie.
         
        Five minutes saw them speeding out of Chipping Somerton.
         
        Bobby had no occasion to complain of lack of speed.
         
        Nevertheless, Frankie suddenly said: 'Look here, Bobby, this isn't quick enough.' Bobby glanced at the speedometer needle, which was, at the moment, registering eighty, and remarked dryly: 'I don't see what more we can do.' 'We can take an air taxi,' said Frankie. 'We're only about seven miles from Medeshot Aerodrome.' 'My dear girl!' said Bobby.
         
        'If we do that we'll be home in a couple of hours.' 'Good,' said Bobby. 'Let's take an air taxi.' The whole proceedings were beginning to take on the fantastic character of a dream. Why this wild hurry to get to Marchbolt? Bobby didn't know. He suspected that Frankie didn't know either. It was just a feeling.
         
        At Medeshot Frankie asked for Mr Donald King and an untidy-looking young man was produced who appeared languidly surprised at the sight of her.
         
        'Hullo, Frankie,' he said. 'I haven't seen you for an age.
         
        What do you want?' 'I want an air taxi,' said Frankie. 'You do that sort of thing, don't you?' 'Oh! yes. Where do you want to go?' 'I want to get home quickly,' said Frankie.
         
        Mr Donald King raised his eyebrows.
         
        'Is that all?' he asked.
         
        'Not quite,' said Frankie. 'But it's the main idea.' 'Oh! well, we can soon fix you up.' 'I'll give you a cheque,' said Frankie.
         
        Five minutes later they were off.
         
        'Frankie,' said Bobby. 'Why are we doing this?' 'I haven't the faintest idea,' said Frankie. 'But I feel we must.
         
        Don't you?' 'Curiously enough, I do. But I don't know why. After all our Mrs Roberts won't fly away on a broomstick.' 'She might. Remember, we don't know what Bassingtonffrench is up to.' 'That's true,' said Bobby thoughtfully.
         
        It was growing late when they reached their destination. The plane landed them in the Park and five minutes later Bobby and Frankie were driving into Marchbolt in Lord Marchington's Chrysler.
         
        They pulled up outside the Vicarage gate, the Vicarage drive not lending itself to the turning of expensive cars.
         
        Then jumping out they ran up the drive.
         
        'I shall wake up soon,' thought Bobby. 'What are we doing and why?' A slender figure was standing on the doorstep. Frankie and Bobby recognized her at the same minute.
         
        'Moira!' cried Frankie.
         
        Moira turned. She was swaying slightly.
         
        'Oh! I'm so glad to see you. I don't know what to do.' 'But what on earth brings you here?' 'The same thing that has brought you, I expect.' 'You have found out who Evans is?' asked Bobby.
         
        Moira nodded.
         
        'Yes, it's a long story ' 'Come inside,' said Bobby.
         
        But Moira shrank back.
         
        'No, no,' she said hurriedly. 'Let's go somewhere and talk.
         
        There's something I must tell you - before we go into the house. Isn't there a cafe or some place like that in the town?
         
        Somewhere where we could go?' 'All right,' said Bobby, moving unwillingly away from the door. 'But why ' Moira stamped her foot.
         
        'You'll see when I tell you. Oh! do come. There's not a minute to lose.' They yielded to her urgency. About half-way down the main street was the Orient Cafe - a somewhat grand name not borne out by the interior decoration. The three of them filed in. It was a slack moment - half-past six.
         
        They sat down at a small table in the corner and Bobby ordered three coffees.
         
        'Now then?' he said.
         
        'Wait till she's brought the coffee,' said Moira.
         
        The waitress returned and listlessly deposited three cups of tepid coffee in front of them.
         
        'Now then,' said Bobby.
         
        'I hardly know where to begin,' said Moira. 'It was in the train going to London. Really, the most amazing coincidence.
         
        I went along the corridor and ' She broke off. Her seat faced the door and she leant forward, staring.
         
        'He must have followed me,' she said.
         
        'Who?' cried Frankie and Bobby together.
         
        'Bassington-ffrench,' whispered Moira.
         
        'You've seen him?' 'He's outside. I saw him with a woman with red hair.' 'Mrs Cayman,' cried Frankie.
         
        She and Bobby jumped and ran to the door. A protest came from Moira but neither of them heeded it. They looked up and down the street but Bassington-ffrench was nowhere in sight.
         
        Moira joined them.
         
        'Has he gone?' she asked, her voice trembling. 'Oh! do be careful. He's dangerous - horribly dangerous.' 'He can't do anything so long as we're all together,' said Bobby.
         
        'Brace up, Moira,' said Frankie. 'Don't be such a rabbit.' 'Well, we can't do anything for the moment,' said Bobby, leading the way back to the table. 'Go on with what you were telling us, Moira.' He picked up his cup of coffee. Frankie lost her balance and fell against him and the coffee poured over the table.
         
        'Sorry,' said Frankie.
         
        She stretched over the adjoining table which was laid for possible diners. There was a cruet on it with two glass stoppered bottles containing oil and vinegar.
         
        The oddity of Frankie's proceedings riveted Bobby's attention.
         
        She took the vinegar bottle, emptied out the vinegar into the slop bowl and began to pour coffee into it from her cup.
         
        'Have you gone batty, Frankie?' asked Bobby. 'What the devil are you doing?' 'Taking a sample of this coffee for George Arbuthnot to analyse,' said Frankie.
         
        She turned to Moira.
         
        'The game's up, Moira! The whole thing came to me in a flash as we stood at the door just now! When I jogged Bobby's elbow and made him spill his coffee I saw your face. You put something in our cups when you sent us running to the door to look for Bassington-ffrench. The game's up, Mrs Nicholson or Templeton or whatever you like to call yourself'.' 'Templeton?' cried Bobby.
         
        'Look at her face,' cried Frankie. 'If she denies it ask her to come to the Vicarage and see if Mrs Roberts doesn't identify her.' Bobby did look at her. He saw that face, that haunting, wistful face transformed by a demoniac rage. That beautiful mouth opened and a stream of foul and hideous curses poured out.
         
        She fumbled in her handbag.
         
        Bobby was still dazed but he acted in the nick of time.
         
        It was his hand that struck the pistol up.
         
        The bullet passed over Frankie's head and buried itself in the wall of the Orient Cafe.
         
        For the first time in its history one of the waitresses hurried.
         
        With a wild scream she shot out into the street calling: 'Help!
         
        Murder! Police!'
         
        CHAPTER 34 Letter from South America
         
        It was some weeks later.
         
        Frankie had just received a letter. It bore the stamp of one of the less well-known South American republics.
         
        After reading it through, she passed it to Bobby.
         
        It ran as follows: Dear Frankie, Really, I congratulate you! You and your young naval friend have shattered the plans of a life-time. I had everything so nicely arranged.
         
        Would you really like to hear all about it? My lady friend has given me away so thoroughly (spite, I'm afraid - women are invariable spiteful!) that my most damaging admissions won't do me any further harm. Besides, I am starting life again. Roger Bassington-ffrench is dead.
         
        I fancy I've always been what they call a 'wrong 'un'. Even at Oxford I had a little lapse. Stupid, because it was bound to be found out. The Pater didn't let me down. But he sent me to the Colonies.
         
        I fell in with Moira and her lot fairly soon. She was the real thing.. She was an accomplished criminal by the time she was fifteen. When I met her things were getting a bit too hot for her.
         
        The American police were on her trail.
         
        She and I liked each other. We decided to make a match of it but we'd a few plans to carry through first.
         
        To begin with, she married Nicholson. By doing so she removed herself to another world and the police lost sight of her. Nicholson was just coming over to England to start a place for nerve patients.
         
        He was looking for a suitable house to buy cheap. Moira got him on to the Grange.
         
        She was still working in with her gang in the dope business.
         
        Without knowing it, Nicholson was very useful to her.
         
        I had always had two ambitions. I wanted to be the owner of Merroway and I wanted to command an immense amount of money. A Bassington-ffrench played a great part in the reign of Charles II. Since then the family has dwindled down to mediocrity.
         
        I felt capable of playing a great part again. But I had to have money.
         
        Moira made several trips across to Canada to 'see her people'.
         
        Nicholson adored her and believed anything she told him. Most men did. Owing to the complications of the drug business she travelled under various names. She was travelling as Mrs Templeton when she met Savage. She knew all about Savage and his enormous wealth and she went all out for him. He was attracted, but he wasn 't attracted enough to lose his common sense.
         
        However, we concocted a plan. You know pretty well the story of that. The man you know as Cayman acted the part of the unfeeling husband. Savage was induced to come down and stay at Tudor Cottage more than once. The third time he came our plans were laid. I needn't go into all that -you know it. The whole thing went with a bang. Moira cleared the money and went of if ostensibly abroad - in reality back to Staverley and the Grange.
         
        In the meantime, I was perfecting my own plans. Henry and young Tommy had to be got out of the way. I had bad luck over Tommy. A couple of perfectly good accidents went wrong. I wasn't going to fool about with accidents in Henry's case. He had a good deal of rheumatic pain after an accident in the hunting field. I introduced him to morphia. He took it in all good faith. Henry was a simple soul. He soon became an addict. Our plan was that he should go to the Grange for treatment and should there either 'commit suicide' or get hold of an overdose of morphia. Moira would do the business. I shouldn 't be connected with it in any way.
         
        And then that fool Car stairs began to be active. It seems that Savage had written him a line on board ship mentioning Mrs Templeton and even enclosing a snapshot of her. Carstairs went on a shooting trip soon afterwards. When he came back from the wilds and heard the news of Savage's death and will, he was frankly incredulous. The story didn 't ring true to him. He was certain that Savage wasn't worried about his death and he didn't believe he had any special fear of cancer. Also the wording of the will sounded to him highly uncharacteristic. Savage was a hard-headed business man and while he might be quite ready to have an affair with a pretty woman, Carstairs didn't believe he would leave a vast sum of money to her and the rest to charity. The charity touch was my idea. It sounded so respectable and unfishy.
         
        Carstairs came over here, determined to look into the business.
         
        He began to poke about.
         
        And straightaway we had a piece of bad luck. Some friends brought him down to lunch and he saw a picture of Moira on the piano, and recognized it as the woman of the snapshot that Savage had sent him. He went down to Chipping Somerton and started to poke about there.
         
        Moira and I began to get the wind up - I sometimes think unnecessarily. But Carstairs was a shrewd chap.
         
        I went down to Chipping Somerton after him. He failed to trace the cook - Rose Chudleigh. She'd gone to the north, but he tracked down Evans, found out her married name and started of if for Marchbolt.
         
        Things were getting serious. If Evans identified Mrs Templeton and Mrs Nicholson as one and the same person matters were going to become difficult. Also, she 'd been in the house some time and we weren 't sure quite how much she might know.
         
        I decided that Carstairs had got to be suppressed. He was making a serious nuisance of himself. Chance came to my aid. I was close behind him when the mist came up. I crept up nearer and a sudden push did the job.
         
        But I was still in a dilemma. I didn't know what incriminating matter he might have on him. However, your young naval friend played into my hands very nicely. I was left alone with the body for a short time - quite enough for my purpose. He had a photograph of Moira - he'd got it from the photographers - presumably for identification. I removed that and any letters or identifying matter. Then I planted the photograph of one of the gang.
         
        All went well. The pseudo sister and brother-in-law came down and identified him. All seemed to have gone off satisfactorily. And then your friend Bobby upset things. It seemed that Carstairs had recovered consciousness before he died and that he had been saying things. He 'd mentioned Evans - and Evans was actually in service at the Vicarage.
         
        I admit we were getting rattled by now. We lost our heads a bit.
         
        Moira insisted that he must be put out of the way. We tried one plan which failed. Then Moira said she 'd see to it. She went down to Marchbolt in the car. She seized a chance very neatly - slipped some morphia into his beer when he was asleep. But the young devil didn't succumb. That was pure bad luck.
         
        As I told you, it was Nicholson 's cross-questioning that made me wonder if you were just what you seemed. But imagine the shock that Moira had when she was creeping out to meet me one evening and came face to face with Bobby! She recognized him at once she 'd had a good look when he was asleep that day. No wonder she was so scared she nearly passed out. Then she realized that it wasn't her he suspected and she rallied and played up.
         
        She came to the inn and told him a few tall stories. He swallowed them like a lamb. She pretended that Alan Carstairs was an old lover and she piled it on thick about her fear of Nicholson. Also she did her best to disabuse you of your suspicions concerning me. I did the same to you and disparaged her as a weak, helpless creature - Moira, who had the nerve to put any number of people out of the way without turning a hair!
         
        The position was serious. We'd got the money. We were getting on well with the Henry plan. I was in no hurry for Tommy. I could afford to wait a bit. Nicholson could easily be got out of the way when the time came. But you and Bobby were a menace. You'd got your suspicions fixed on the Grange.
         
        It may interest you to know that Henry didn't commit suicide.
         
        I killed him! When I was talking to you in the garden I saw there was no time to waste - and I went straight in and saw to things.
         
        The aeroplane that came over gave me my chance. I went into the study, sat down by Henry who was writing and said: 'Look here, old man -' and shot him! The noise of the plane drowned the sound. Then I wrote a nice affecting letter, wiped off my fingerprints from the revolver, pressed Henry's hand round it and let it drop to the floor. I put the key of the study in Henry's pocket and went out, locking the door from the outside with the diningroom key which fits the lock.
         
        I won't go into details of the neat little squib arrangement in the chimney which was timed to go off four minutes later.
         
        Everything went beautifully. You and I were in the garden together and heard the 'shot'. A perfect suicide! The only person who laid himself open to suspicion was poor old Nicholson. The ass came back for a stick or something!
         
        Of course Bobby's knight errantry was a bit difficult for Moira.
         
        So she just went off to the cottage. We fancied that Nicholson's explanation of his wife's absence would be sure to make you suspicious.
         
        Where Moira really showed her mettle was at the cottage. She realized from the noise upstairs that I'd been knocked out, and she quickly injected a large dose of morphia into herself and lay down on the bed. After you all went down to telephone she nipped up to the attic and cut me free. Then the morphia took effect and by the time the doctor arrived she was genuinely off in a hypnotic sleep.
         
        But all the same her nerve was going. She was afraid you'd get on to Evans and get the hang of how Savage's will and suicide was worked. Also she was afraid that Carstairs had written to Evans before he came to Marchbolt. She pretended to go up to a London nursing home. Instead, she hurried down to Marchbolt - and met you on the doorstep! Then her one idea was to get you both out of the way. Her methods were crude to the last degree, but I believe she 'd have got away with it. I doubt if the waitress would have been able to remember much about what the woman who came in with you was like. Moira would have got away back to London and lain low in a nursing home. With you and Bobby out of the way the whole thing would have died down.
         
        But you spotted her - and she lost her head. And then at the trial she dragged me into it!
         
        Perhaps I was getting a little tired of her.
         
        But I had no idea that she knew it.
         
        You see, she had got the money - my money! Once I had married her I might have got tired of her. I like variety.
         
        So here I am starting life again.
         
        And all owing to you and that extremely objectionable young man Bobby Jones.
         
        But I've no doubt I shall make good!
         
        Or ought it to be bad, not good?
         
        I haven't reformed yet.
         
        But if at first you don't succeed, try, try, try again.
         
        Goodbye, my dear - or, perhaps au revoir. One never knows, does one?
         
        Your affectionate enemy, the bold, bad villain of the piece, Roger Bassingtonffrench.
         
        CHAPTER 35 News from the Vicarage
         
        Bobby handed back the letter and with a sigh Frankie took it.
         
        'He's really a very remarkable person,' she said.
         
        'You always had a fancy for him,' said Bobby coldly.
         
        'He had charm,' said Frankie. 'So had Moira,' she added.
         
        Bobby blushed.
         
        'It was very queer that all the time the clue to the whole thing should have been in the Vicarage,' he said. 'You do know, don't you, Frankie, that Carstairs had actually written to Evans - to Mrs Roberts, that is?' Frankie nodded.
         
        'Telling her that he was coming to see her and that he wanted information about Mrs Templeton whom he had reason to believe was a dangerous international crook wanted by the police.
         
        'And then when he's pushed over the cliff she doesn't put two and two together,' said Bobby bitterly.
         
        'That's because the man who went over the cliff was Pritchard,' said Frankie. 'That identification was a very clever bit of work. If a man called Pritchard is pushed over, how could it be a man called Carstairs? That's how the ordinary mind works.' 'The funny thing is that she recognized Cayman,' went on Bobby. 'At least she caught a glimpse of him when Roberts was letting him in and asked him who it was. And he said it was Mr Cayman and she said, "Funny, he's the dead spit of a gentleman I used to be in service with." ' 'Can you beat it?' said Frankie.
         
        'Even Bassington-ffrench gave himself away once or twice,' she continued. 'But like an idiot I never spotted it.' 'Did he?' 'Yes, when Sylvia said that the picture in the paper was very like Carstairs he said there wasn't much likeness really showing he'd seen the dead man. And then later he said to me that he never saw the dead man's face.' 'How on earth did you spot Moira, Frankie?' 'I think it was the description of Mrs Templeton,' said Frankie dreamily. 'Everyone said she was "such a nice lady".
         
        Now that didn't seem to fit with the Cayman woman. No servant would describe her a "nice lady". And then we got to the Vicarage and Moira was there and it suddenly came to me - Suppose Moira was Mrs Templeton?' 'Very bright of you.' 'I'm very sorry for Sylvia,' said Frankie. 'With Moira dragging Roger into it, it's been a terrible lot of publicity for her. But Dr Nicholson has stuck by her and I shouldn't be at all surprised if they ended by making a match of it.' 'Everything seems to have ended very fortunately,' said Bobby. 'Badger's doing well at the garage - thanks to your father, and also thanks to your father, I've got this perfectly marvellous job.' 'Is it a marvellous job?' 'Managing a coffee estate out in Kenya on a whacking big screw? I should think so. It's just the sort of thing I used to dream about.' He paused.
         
        'People come out to Kenya a good deal on trips,' he said with intention.
         
        'Quite a lot of people live out there,' said Frankie demurely.
         
        'Oh! Frankie, you wouldn't?' He blushed, stammered, recovered himself. 'W-w-would you?' 'I would,' said Frankie. 'I mean, I will.' 'I've been keen about you always,' said Bobby in a stifled voice. 'I used to be miserable - knowing, I mean, that it was no good.' 'I suppose that's what made you so rude that day on the golf links?' 'Yes, I was feeling pretty grim.' 'H'm,' said Frankie. 'What about Moira?' Bobby looked uncomfortable.
         
        'Her face did sort of get me,' he admitted.
         
        'It's a better face than mine,' said Frankie generously.
         
        'It isn't - but it sort of "haunted" me. And then, when we were up in the attic and you were so plucky about things - well, Moira just faded out. I was hardly interested in what happened to her. It was you - only you. You were simply splendid! So frightfully plucky.' 'I wasn't feeling plucky inside,' said Frankie. 'I was all shaking. But I wanted you to admire me.' 'I did, darling. I do. I always have. I always shall. Are you sure you won't hate it out in Kenya?' 'I shall adore it. I was fed up with England.' 'Frankie.' 'Bobby.' 'If you will come in here,' said the Vicar, opening the door and ushering in the advance guard of the Dorcas Society.
         
        He shut the door precipitately and apologized.
         
        'My - er - one of my sons. He is - er - engaged.' A member of the Dorcas Society said archly that it looked like it.
         
        'A good boy,' said the Vicar. 'Inclined at one time not to take life seriously. But he has improved very much of late. He is going out to manage a coffee estate in Kenya.' Said one member of the Dorcas Society to another in a whisper: 'Did you see? It was Lady Frances Derwent he was kissing?' In an hour's time the news was all over Marchbolt.

        #4
          bachhop2403 28.05.2009 21:12:54 (permalink)
          Third story:Third Girl

          Chapter 1
           
          Hercule Poirot was sitting at the breakfast table. At his right hand was a steaming cup of chocolate. He had always had a sweet tooth. To accompany the chocolate was a brioche. It went agreeably with chocolate. He nodded his approval. This was from the fourth shop he had tried. It was a Danish patisserie but infinitely superior to the so-called French one near by. That had been nothing less than a fraud.
           
          He was satisfied gastronomically. His stomach was at peace. His mind also was at peace, perhaps somewhat too much so. He had finished his Magnum Opus, an analysis of great writers of detective fiction. He had dared to speak scathingly of Edgar Alien Poe, he had complained of the lack of method or order in the romantic outpourings of Wilkie Collins, had lauded to the skies two American authors who were practically unknown, and had in various other ways given honour where honour was due and sternly withheld it where he considered it was not. He had seen the volume through the press, had looked upon the results and, apart from a really incredible number of printer's errors, pronounced that it was good. He had enjoyed this literary achievement and enjoyed the vast amount of reading he had had to do, had enjoyed snorting with disgust as he flung a book across the floor (though always remembering to rise, pick it up and dispose of it tidily in the waste-paper basket) and had enjoyed appreciatively nodding his head on the rare occasions when such approval was justified.
           
          And now? He had had a pleasant interlude of relaxation, very necessary after his intellectual labour. But one could not relax for ever, one had to go on to the next thing. Unfortunately he had no idea what the next thing might be. Some further literary accomplishment? He thought not. Do a thing well then leave it alone. That was his maxim. The truth of the matter was, he was bored. All this strenuous mental activity in which he had been indulging - there had been too much of it. It had got him into bad habits, it had made him restless...
           
          Vexatious! He shook his head and took another sip of chocolate.
           
          The door opened and his well-trained servant, George, entered. His manner was deferential and slightly apologetic. He coughed and murmured, "A -" he paused, "- a - young lady has called."
           
          Poirot looked at him with surprise and mild distaste.
           
          "I do not see people at this hour," he said reprovingly.
           
          "No, sir," agreed George.
           
          Master and servant looked at each other. Communication was sometimes fraught with difficulties for them. By inflexion or innuendo or a certain choice of words George would signify that there was something that might be elicited if the right question was asked. Poirot considered what the right question in this case might be.
           
          "She is good-looking, this young lady?" he enquired carefully.
           
          "In my view - no, sir, but there is no accounting for tastes."
           
          Poirot considered this reply. He remembered the slight pause that George had made before the phrase - young lady.
           
          George was a delicate social recorder. He had been uncertain of the visitor's status but had given her the benefit of the doubt.
           
          "You are of the opinion that she is a young lady rather than, let us say, a young person?"
           
          "I think so, sir, though it is not always easy to tell nowadays." George spoke with genuine regret.
           
          "Did she give a reason for wishing to see me?"
           
          "She said -" George pronounced the words with some reluctance, apologising for them in advance as it were, "that she wanted to consult you about a murder she might have committed."
           
          Hercule Poirot stared. His eyebrows rose. "Might have committed? Does she not know?"
           
          "That is what she said, sir."
           
          "Unsatisfactory, but possibly interesting," said Poirot.
           
          "It might - have been a joke, sir," said George, dubiously.
           
          "Anything is possible, I suppose," conceded Poirot, "But one would hardly think -" He lifted his cup. "Show her in after five minutes."
           
          "Yes, sir." George withdrew.
           
          Poirot finished the last sip of chocolate. He pushed aside his cup and rose to his feet. He walked to the fireplace and adjusted his moustaches carefully in the mirror over the chimney piece. Satisfied, he returned to his chair and awaited the arrival of his visitor. He did not know exactly what to expect...
           
          He had hoped perhaps for something nearer to his own estimate of female attraction. The outworn phrase "beauty in distress" had occurred to him. He was disappointed when George returned ushering in the visitor; inwardly he shook his head and sighed. Here was no beauty - and no noticeable distress either. Mild perplexity would seem nearer the mark.
           
          "Pah!" thought Poirot disgustedly. "These girls! Do they not even try to make something of themselves? Well made up, attractively dressed, hair that has been arranged by a good hairdresser, then perhaps she might pass. But now!"
           
          His visitor was a girl of perhaps twenty-odd. Long straggly hair of indeterminate colour strayed over her shoulders. Her eyes, which were large, bore a vacant expression and were of a greenish blue. She wore what were presumably the chosen clothes of her generation. Black high leather boots, white openwork woollen stockings of doubtful cleanliness, a skimpy skirt, and a long and sloppy pullover of heavy wool. Anyone of Poirot's age and generation would have had only one desire. To drop the girl into a bath as soon as possible. He had often felt this same reaction walking along the streets.
           
          There were hundreds of girls looking exactly the same. They all looked dirty.
           
          And yet - a contradiction in terms - this one had the look of having been recently drowned and pulled out of a river. Such girls, he reflected, were not perhaps really dirty. They merely took enormous care and pains to look so.
           
          He rose with his usual politeness, shook hands, drew out a chair.
           
          "You demanded to see me, mademoiselle? Sit down, I pray of you."
           
          "Oh," said the girl, in a slightly breathless voice. She stared at him.
           
          "Eh bien?" said Poirot.
           
          She hesitated. "I think I'd rather stand." The large eyes continued to stare doubtfully.
           
          "As you please." Poirot resumed his seat and looked at her. He waited. The girl shuffled her feet. She looked down on them then up again at Poirot.
           
          "You - you are Hercule Poirot?"
           
          "Assuredly. In what way can I be of use to you?"
           
          "Oh, well, it's rather difficult. I mean -"
           
          Poirot felt that she might need perhaps a little assistance. He said helpfully, "My manservant told me that you wanted to consult me because you thought you 'might have committed a murder'. Is that correct?"
           
          The girl nodded. "That's right."
           
          "Surely that is not a matter that admits of any doubt. You must know yourself whether you have committed a murder or not."
           
          "Well, I don't know quite how to put it. I mean -"
           
          "Come now," said Poirot kindly. "Sit down. Relax the muscles. Tell me all about it."
           
          "I don't think - oh dear, I don't know how to - You see, it's all so difficult. I've - I've changed my mind. I don't want to be rude but - well, I think I'd better go."
           
          "Come now. Courage."
           
          "No, I can't. I thought I could come and - and ask you, ask you what I ought to do - but I can't, you see. It's all so different from -"
           
          "From what?"
           
          "I'm awfully sorry and I really don't want to be rude, but -"
           
          She breathed an enormous sigh, looked at Poirot, looked away, and suddenly blurted out, "You're too old. Nobody told me you were so old. I really don't want to be rude but - there it is. You're too old. I'm really very sorry."
           
          She turned abruptly and blundered out of the room, rather like a desperate moth in lamplight.
           
          Poirot, his mouth open, heard the bang of the front door.
           
          He ejaculated: "Non d'un nom d'un nom..."
           
          Chapter 2
           
          The telephone rang.
           
          Hercule Poirot did not even seem aware of the fact.
           
          It rang with shrill and insistent persistence.
           
          George entered the room and stepped towards it, turning a questioning glance towards Poirot.
           
          Poirot gestured with his hand.
           
          "Leave it," he said.
           
          George obeyed, leaving the room again.
           
          The telephone continued to ring. The shrill irritating noise continued. Suddenly it stopped. After a minute or two, however, it commenced to ring again.
           
          "Ah Sapristi! That must be a woman - undoubtedly a woman."
           
          He sighed, rose to his feet and came to the instrument.
           
          He picked up the receiver. "'Allo," he said.
           
          "Are you - is that M. Poirot?"
           
          "I, myself."
           
          "It's Mrs Oliver - your voice sounds different. I didn't recognise it at first."
           
          "Bonjour, Madame - you are well, I hope?"
           
          "Oh, I'm all right." Ariadne Oliver's voice came through in its usual cheerful accents. The well-known detective story writer and Hercule Poirot were on friendly terms.
           
          "It's rather early to ring you up, but I want to ask you a favour."
           
          "Yes?"
           
          "It is the annual dinner of our Detective Authors' Club; I wondered if you would come and be our Guest Speaker this year. It would be very very sweet of you if you would."
           
          "When is this?"
           
          "Next month - the twenty-third."
           
          A deep sigh came over the telephone.
           
          "Alas! I am too old."
           
          "Too old? What on earth do you mean? You're not old at all."
           
          "You think not?"
           
          "Of course not. You'll be wonderful. You can tell us lots of lovely stories about real crimes."
           
          "And who will want to listen?"
           
          "Everyone. They - M. Poirot, is there anything the matter? Has something happened? You sound upset."
           
          "Yes, I am upset. My feelings - ah well, no matter."
           
          "But tell me about it."
           
          "Why should I make a fuss?"
           
          "Why shouldn't you? You'd better come and tell me all about it. When will you come? This afternoon. Come and have tea with me."
           
          "Afternoon tea, I do not drink it."
           
          "Then you can have coffee."
           
          "It is not the time of day I usually drink coffee."
           
          "Chocolate? With whipped cream on top? Or a tisane. You love sipping tisanes. Or lemonade. Or orangeade. Or would you like decaffeinated coffee if I can get it -"
           
          "Ah, зa non, par example? It is an abomination."
           
          "One of those sirups you like so much. I know, I've got half a bottle of Ribena in the cupboard."
           
          "What is Ribena?"
           
          "Black-currant flavour."
           
          "Indeed, one has to hand it to you! You really do try, Madame. I am touched by your solicitude. I will accept with pleasure to drink a cup of chocolate this afternoon."
           
          "Good. And then you'll tell me all about what's upset you."
           
          She rang off.
           
          II
           
          Poirot considered for a moment. Then he dialled a number. Presently he said:
           
          "Mr Goby? Hercule Poirot here. Are you very fully occupied at this moment?"
           
          "Middling," said the voice of Mr Goby. "Middling to fair. But to oblige you. Monsieur Poirot, if you're in a hurry, as you usually are - well, I wouldn't say that my young men couldn't manage mostly what's on hand at present. Of course good boys aren't as easy to get as they used to be. Think too much of themselves nowadays. Think they know it all before they've started to learn. But there! Can't expect old heads on young shoulders. I'll be pleased to put myself at your disposal, M. Poirot. Maybe I can put one or two of the better lads on the job. I suppose it's the usual - collecting information?"
           
          He nodded his head and listened whilst Poirot went into details of exactly what he wanted done. When he had finished with Mr Goby, Poirot rang up Scotland Yard where in due course he got through to a friend of his. When he in turn had listened to Poirot's requirements, he replied,
           
          "Don't want much, do you? Any murder, anywhere. Time, place and victim unknown. Sounds a bit of a wild goose chase, if you ask me, old boy." He added disapprovingly, "You don't seem to know anything!"
           
          III
           
          At 4:15 that afternoon Poirot sat in Mrs Oliver's drawing-room sipping appreciatively at a large cup of chocolate topped with foaming whipped cream which his hostess had just placed on a small table beside him. She added a small plate full of langue de chats biscuits.
           
          "Chиre Madame, what kindness." He looked over his cup with faint surprise at Mrs Oliver's coiffure and also at her new wallpaper. Both were new to him.
           
          The last time he had seen Mrs Oliver, her hair style had been plain and severe. It now displayed a richness of coils and twists arranged in intricate patterns all over her head. Its prolific luxury was, he suspected, largely artificial. He debated in his mind how many switches of hair might unexpectedly fall off if Mrs Oliver was to get suddenly excited, as was her wont. As for the wallpaper...
           
          "These cherries - they are new?" he waved a teaspoon. It was, he felt, rather like being in a cherry orchard.
           
          "Are there too many of them, do you think?" said Mrs Oliver. "So hard to tell beforehand with wallpaper. Do you think my old was better?"
           
          Poirot cast his mind back dimly to what he seemed to remember as large quantities of bright coloured tropical birds in a forest. He felt inclined to remark 'Plus зa change, plus c'est la mкme chose,' but restrained himself.
           
          "And now," said Mrs Oliver, as her guest finally replaced his cup on its saucer and sat back with a sigh of satisfaction, wiping remnants of foaming cream from his moustache, "what is all this about?"
           
          "That I can tell you very simply. This morning a girl came to see me. I suggested she might make an appointment. One has one's routine, you comprehend. She sent back word that she wanted to see me at once because she thought she might have committed a murder."
           
          "What an odd thing to say. Didn't she know?"
           
          "Precisely! C'est inoui! so I instructed George to show her in. She stood there! She refused to sit down. She just stood there staring at me. She seemed quite half witted. I tried to encourage her. Then suddenly she said that she'd changed her mind. She said she didn't want to be rude but that - (what do you think?) - but that I was too old..."
           
          Mrs Oliver hastened to utter soothing words. "Oh well, girls are like that. Anyone over thirty-five they think is half dead. They've no sense, girls, you must realise that."
           
          "It wounded me," said Hercule Poirot.
           
          "Well, I shouldn't worry about it, if I were you. Of course it was a very rude thing to say."
           
          "That does not matter. And it is not only my feelings. I am worried. Yes, I am worried."
           
          "Well, I should forget all about it if I were you," advised Mrs Oliver comfortably.
           
          "You do not understand. I am worried about this girl. She came to me for help. Then she decided that I was too old. Too old to be of any use to her. She was wrong of course, that goes without saying and then she just ran away. But I tell you that girl needs help."
           
          "I don't suppose she does really," said Mrs Oliver soothingly. "Girls make a fuss about things."
           
          "No. You are wrong. She needs help."
           
          "You don't think she really has committed a murder?"
           
          "Why not? She said she had."
           
          "Yes, but -" Mrs Oliver stopped.
           
          "She said she might have," she said slowly. "But what can she possibly mean by that?"
           
          "Exactly. It does not make sense."
           
          "Who did she murder or did she think she murdered?"
           
          Poirot shrugged his shoulders.
           
          "And why did she murder someone?"
           
          Again Poirot shrugged his shoulders.
           
          "Of course it could be all sorts of things." Mrs Oliver began to brighten as she set her ever prolific imagination to work. "She could have run over someone in her car and not stopped. She could have been assaulted by a man on a cliff and struggled with him and managed to push him over. She could have given someone the wrong medicine by mistake. She could have gone to one of those purple pill parties and had a fight with someone. She could have come to and found she had stabbed someone. She -"
           
          "Assez, madame, assez!"
           
          But Mrs Oliver was well away. "She might have been a nurse in the operating theatre and administered the wrong anaesthetic or -" she broke off, suddenly anxious for clearer details. "What did she look like?"
           
          Poirot considered for a moment.
           
          "An Ophelia devoid of physical attraction."
           
          "Oh dear," said Mrs Oliver. "I can almost see her when you say that. How queer."
           
          "She is not competent," said Poirot. "That is how I see her. She is not one who can cope with difficulties. She is not one of those who can see beforehand the danger that must come. She is one of whom others will look round and say 'We want a victim. That one will do.'"
           
          But Mrs Oliver was no longer listening. She was clutching her rich coils of hair with both hands in a gesture with which Poirot was familiar.
           
          "Wait," she cried in a kind of agony. "Wait!"
           
          Poirot waited, his eyebrows raised.
           
          "You didn't tell me her name," said Mrs Oliver.
           
          "She did not give it. Unfortunate, I agree with you."
           
          "Wait!" implored Mrs Oliver, again with the same agony. She relaxed her grip on her head and uttered a deep sigh. Hair detached itself from its bonds and tumbled over her shoulders, a super imperial coil of hair detached itself completely and fell on the floor. Poirot picked it up and put it discreetly on the table.
           
          "Now then," said Mrs Oliver, suddenly restored to calm. She pushed in a hairpin or two, and nodded her head while she thought.
           
          "Who told this girl about you, M. Poirot?"
           
          "No one so far as I know. Naturally, she had heard about me no doubt."
           
          Mrs Oliver thought that "naturally" was not the word at all. What was natural was that Poirot himself was sure that everyone had always heard of him. Actually large numbers of people would only look at you blankly if the name of Hercule Poirot was mentioned, especially the younger generation. "But how am I going to put that to him?" thought Mrs Oliver, "in such a way that it won't hurt his feelings?"
           
          "I think you're wrong," she said. "Girls - well, girls and young men - they don't know very much about detectives and things like that. They don't hear about them."
           
          "Everyone must have heard about Hercule Poirot," said Poirot, superbly. It was an article of belief for Hercule Poirot.
           
          "But they are all so badly educated nowadays," said Mrs Oliver. "Really, the only people whose names they know are pop singers, or groups, or disc jockeys - that sort of thing. If you need someone special, I mean a doctor or a detective or a dentist - well, then, I mean you would ask someone - ask who's the right person to go to? And then the other person says - 'My dear, you must go to that absolutely wonderful man in Queen Anne's Street, twists your legs three times round your head and you're cured', or 'All my diamonds were stolen, and Henry would have been furious, so I couldn't go to the police, but there's a simply uncanny detective, most discreet, and he got them back for me and Henry never knew a thing.' - That's the way it happens all the time. Someone sent that girl to you."
           
          "I doubt it very much."
           
          "You wouldn't know until you were told. And you're going to be told now. It's only just come to me. I sent that girl to you."
           
          Poirot stared. "You? But why did you not say so at once?"
           
          "Because it's only just come to me - when you spoke about Ophelia - long wet-looking hair, and rather plain. It seemed a description of someone I'd actually seen. Quite lately. And then it came to me who it was."
           
          "Who is she?"
           
          "I don't actually know her name, but I can easily find out. We were talking - about private detectives and private eyes - and I spoke about you and some of the amazing things you had done."
           
          "And you gave her my address?"
           
          "No, of course I didn't. I'd no idea she wanted a detective or anything like that. I thought we were just talking. But I'd mentioned the name several times, and of course it would be easy to look you up in the telephone book and just come along."
           
          "Were you talking about murder?"
           
          "Not that I can remember. I don't even know how we came to be talking about detectives - unless, yes, perhaps it was she who started the subject..."
           
          "Tell me then, tell me all you can - even if you do not know her name, tell me all you know about her."
           
          "Well, it was last weekend. I was staying with the Lorrimers. They don't come into it except that they took me over to some friends of theirs for drinks. There were several people there - and I didn't enjoy myself much because, as you know, I don't really like drink, and so people have to find a soft drink for me which is rather a bore for them. And then people say things to me - you know - how much they like my books, and how they've been longing to meet me - and it all makes me feel hot and bothered and rather silly. But I managed to cope more or less. And they say how much they love my awful detective Sven Hjerson. If they knew how I hated him! But my publisher always says I'm not to say so. Anyway, I suppose the talk about detectives in real life grew out of all that, and I talked a bit about you, and this girl was standing around listening. When you said an unattractive Ophelia it clicked somehow. I thought, 'now who does that remind me of?' And then it came to me: 'Of course. The girl at the party that day.' I rather think she belonged there unless I'm confusing her with some other girl."
           
          Poirot sighed. With Mrs Oliver one always needed a lot of patience.
           
          "Who were these people with whom you went to have drinks?"
           
          "Trefusis, I think, unless it was Treherne. That sort of name - he's a tycoon. Rich. Something in the City, but he's spent most of his life in South Africa -"
           
          "He has a wife?"
           
          "Yes. Very good-looking woman. Much younger than he is. Lots of golden hair. Second wife. The daughter was the first wife's daughter. Then there was an uncle of incredible antiquity. Rather deaf. He's frightfully distinguished - strings of letters after his name. An admiral or an airmarshal or something. He's an astronomer too, I think. Anyway, he's got a kind of big telescope sticking out of the roof. Though I suppose that might be just a hobby. There was a foreign girl there, too, who sort of trots about after the old boy. Goes up to London with him, I believe, and sees he doesn't get run over. Rather pretty, she was."
           
          Poirot sorted out the information Mrs Oliver had supplied him with, feeling rather like a human computer.
           
          "There lives then in the house Mr and Mrs Trefusis -"
           
          "It's not Trefusis - I remember now - It's - Restarick."
           
          "That is not at all the same type of name."
           
          "Yes it is. It's a Cornish name, isn't it?"
           
          "There lives there then, Mr and Mrs Restarick, the distinguished elderly uncle. Is his name Restarick too?"
           
          "It's Sir Roderick something."
           
          "And there is the au pair girl, or whatever she is, and a daughter - any more children?"
           
          "I don't think so - but I don't really know. The daughter doesn't live at home, by the way. She was only down for the weekend. Doesn't get on with the stepmother, I expect. She's got a job in London, and she's picked up with a boyfriend they don't much like, so I understand."
           
          "You seem to know quite a lot about the family."
           
          "Oh well, one picks things up. The Lorrimers are great talkers. Always chattering about someone or other. One hears a lot of gossip about the people all around. Sometimes, though, one gets them mixed up. I probably have. I wish I could remember that girl's Christian name. Something connected with a song... Thora? Speak to me, Thora. Thora, Thora. Something like that, or Myra? Myra, oh Myra my love is all for thee. Something like that. I dreamt I dwelt in marble halls. Norma? Or do I mean Maritana? Norma - Norma Restarick. That's right, I'm sure." She added inconsequently, "She's a third girl."
           
          "I thought you said you thought she was an only child."
           
          "So she is - or I think so."
           
          "Then what do you mean by saying she is the third girl?"
           
          "Good gracious, don't you know what a third girl is? Don't you read The Times."
           
          "I read the births, deaths, and marriages. And such articles as I find of interest."
           
          "No, I mean the front advertisement page. Only it isn't in the front now. So I'm thinking of taking some other paper. But I'll show you."
           
          She went to a side table and snatched up The Times, turned the pages over and brought it to him. "Here you are - look. 'Third girl for comfortable second floor flat, own room, central heating, Earl's Court.' 'Third girl wanted to share flat. 5 guineas a week own room.' 'Third girl wanted. Regents Park. Own room.' It's the way girls like living now. Better than P.G.s or a hostel. The main girl takes a furnished flat, and then shares out the rent. Second girl is usually a friend. Then they find a third girl by advertising if they don't know one. And, as you see, very often they manage to squeeze in a fourth girl. First girl takes the best room, second girl pays rather less, third girl less still and is stuck in a cat-hole. They fix it among themselves which one has the flat to herself which night a week - or something like that. It works reasonably well."
           
          "And where does this girl whose name might just possibly be Norma live in London?"
           
          "As I've told you I don't really know anything about her."
           
          "But you could find out?"
           
          "Oh yes, I expect that would be quite easy."
           
          "You are sure there was no talk, no mention of an unexpected death?"
           
          "Do you mean a death in London - or at the Restaricks' home?"
           
          "Either."
           
          "I don't think so. Shall I see what I can rake up?"
           
          Mrs Oliver's eyes sparked with excitement.
           
          She was by now entering into the spirit of the thing.
           
          "That would be very kind."
           
          "I'll ring up the Lorrimers. Actually now would be quite a good time." She went towards the telephone. "I shall have to think of reasons and things - perhaps invent things?"
           
          She looked towards Poirot rather doubtfully.
           
          "But naturally. That is understood. You are a woman of imagination - you will have no difficulty. But - not too fantastic, you understand. Moderation."
           
          Mrs Oliver flashed him an understanding glance.
           
          She dialled and asked for the number she wanted. Turning her head, she hissed:
           
          "Have you got a pencil and paper - something to write down names and addresses or places?"
           
          Poirot had already his notebook arranged by his elbow and nodded his head reassuringly.
           
          Mrs Oliver turned back to the receiver she held and launched herself into speech.
           
          Poirot listened attentively to one side of a telephone conversation.
           
          "Hallo. Can I speak to - Oh, it's you, Naomi. Ariadne Oliver here. Oh, yes - well, it was rather a crowd... Oh, you mean the old boy?... No, you know I don't... Practically blind?... I thought he was going up to London with the little foreign girl... Yes, it must be rather worrying for them sometimes - but she seems to manage him quite well... One of the things I rang up for was to ask you what the girl's address was - No, the Restarick girl, I mean - somewhere in South Ken, isn't it? Or was it Knightsbridge? Well, I promised her a book and I wrote down the address, but of course I've lost it as usual. I can't even remember her name. Is it Thora or Norma?... Yes, I thought it was Norma... Wait a minute, I'll get a pencil... Yes, I'm ready... 67 Borodene Mansions... I know - that great block that looks rather like Wormwood Scrubs prison... Yes, I believe the flats are very comfortable with central heating and everything... Who are the other two girls she lives with?... Friends of hers?... or advertisements?... Claudia Reece-Holland... her father's the M.P., is he? Who's the other one?... No, I suppose you wouldn't know - she's quite nice, too, I suppose... What do they all do? They always seem to be secretaries, don't they?... Oh, the other girl's an interior decorator - you think - or to do with an art gallery - No, Naomi, of course I don't really want to know - one just wonders - what do all the girls do nowadays? - well, it's useful for me to know because of my books - one wants to keep up to date... What was it you told me about some boyfriend... Yes, but one's so helpless, isn't one? I mean girls do just exactly as they like... does he look very awful? Is he the unshaven dirty kind? - Oh, that kind - Brocade waistcoats, and long curling chestnut hair - lying on his shoulders - yes, so hard to tell whether they're girls or boys, isn't it? - Yes, they do look like Vandykes sometimes if they're good-looking... What did you say? That Andrew Restarick simply hates him?... Yes, men usually do... Mary Restarick?... Well, I suppose you do usually have rows with a stepmother. I expect she was quite thankful when the girl got a job in London. What do you mean about people saying things... Why, couldn't they find out what was the matter with her?... Who said?... Yes, but what did they hush up?... Oh - a nurse? - talked to the Jenners' governess? Do you mean her husband? Oh, I see - The doctors couldn't find out... No, but people are so ill natured. I do agree with you. These things are usually quite untrue... Oh, gastric, was it?... But how ridiculous. Do you mean people said what's his name - Andrew - You mean it would be easy with all those weed killers about - Yes, but why?... I mean, it's not a case of some wife he's hated for years - she's the second wife - and much younger than he is and good-looking... Yes, I suppose that could be - but why should the foreign girl want to either?... You mean she might have resented things that Mrs Restarick said to her... She's quite an attractive little thing - I suppose Andrew might have taken a fancy to her - nothing serious of course - but it might have annoyed Mary, and then she might have pitched into the girl and -"
           
          Out of the corner of her eye, Mrs Oliver perceived Poirot signalling wildly to her.
           
          "Just a moment, darling," said Mrs Oliver into the telephone. "It's the baker."
           
          Poirot looked affronted. "Hang on."
           
          She laid down the receiver, hurried across the room, and backed Poirot into a breakfast nook.
           
          "Yes," she demanded breathlessly.
           
          "A baker," said Poirot with scorn. "Me!"
           
          "Well, it was necessary to think of something quickly. What were you signalling about? Did you understand what she -"
           
          Poirot cut her short.
           
          "You shall tell me presently. I know enough. What I want you to do is, with your rapid powers of improvisation, to arrange some plausible pretext for me to visit the Restaricks - an old friend of yours, shortly to be in the neighbourhood. Perhaps you could say -"
           
          "Leave it to me. I'll think of something. Shall you give a false name?"
           
          "Certainly not. Let us at least try to keep it simple."
           
          Mrs Oliver nodded, and hurried back to the abandoned telephone.
           
          "Naomi? I can't remember what we were saying. Why does something always come to interrupt just when one has settled down to a nice gossip. I can't even remember now what I rang you up for to begin with - Oh yes - that child Thora's address - Norma, I mean - and you gave it to me. But there was something else I wanted to - oh, I remember. An old friend of mine. A most fascinating little man. Actually I was talking about him the other day down there. Hercule Poirot his name is. He's going to be staying quite close to the Restaricks and he is most tremendously anxious to meet old Sir Roderick. He knows a lot about him and has a terrific admiration for him, and for some wonderful discovery of his in the war - or some scientific thing he did - anyway, he is very anxious to 'call upon him and present his respects' that's how he put it. Will that be all right, do you think? Will you warn them? Yes, he'll probably just turn up out of the blue. Tell them to make him tell them some wonderful espionage stories... He - what? Oh! your mowers? Yes, of course you must go. Goodbye."
           
          She put back the receiver and sank down in an armchair. "Goodness, how exhausting. Was that all right?"
           
          "Not bad," said Poirot.
           
          "I thought I'd better pin it all to the old boy. Then you'll get to see the lot which I suppose is what you want. And one can always be vague about scientific subjects if one is a woman, and you can think up something more definite that sounds probable by the time you arrive. Now, do you want to hear what she was telling me?"
           
          "There has been gossip, I gather. About the health of Mrs Restarick?"
           
          "That's it. It seems she had some kind of mysterious illness - gastric in nature - and the doctors were puzzled. They sent her into hospital and she got quite all right, but there didn't seem any real cause to account for it. And she went home, and it all began to start again - and again the doctors were puzzled. And then people began to talk. A rather irresponsible nurse started it and her sister told a neighbour, and the neighbour went out on daily work and told someone else, and how queer it all was. And then people began saying that her husband must be trying to poison her. The sort of thing people always say - but in this case it really didn't seem to make sense. And then Naomi and I wondered about the au pair girl - at least she isn't exactly an au pair girl, she's a kind of secretary companion to the old boy - so really there isn't any kind of reason why she should administer weed killer to Mrs Restarick."
           
          "I heard you suggesting a few."
           
          "Well, there is usually something possible..."
           
          "Murder desired..." said Poirot thoughtfully... "But not yet committed."
           
          Chapter 3
           
          Mrs Oliver drove into the inner court of Borodene Mansions.
           
          There were six cars filling the parking space. As Mrs Oliver hesitated, one of the cars reversed out and drove away. Mrs Oliver hurried neatly into the vacant space.
           
          She descended, banged the door and stood looking up to the sky. It was a recent block, occupying a space left by the havoc of a land mine in the last war. It might, Mrs Oliver thought, have been lifted en bloc from the Great West Road and, first deprived of some such legend as 'Skylark's feather razor blades', have been deposited as a block of flats in situ. It looked extremely functional and whoever had built it had obviously scorned any ornamental additions.
           
          It was a busy time. Cars and people were going in and out of the courtyard as the day's work came to a close.
           
          Mrs Oliver glanced down at her wrist. Ten minutes to seven. About the right time, as far as she could judge. The kind of time when girls in jobs might be presumed to have returned, either to renew their makeup, change their clothes to tight exotic pants or whatever their particular addiction was, and go out again, or else to settle down to home life and wash their smalls and their stockings. Anyway, quite a sensible time to try. The block was exactly the same on the east and the west, with big swing doors set in the centre.
           
          Mrs Oliver chose the left hand side but immediately found that she was wrong.
           
          All this side were numbers from 100 to 200. She crossed over to the other side.
           
          No. 67 was on the sixth floor. Mrs Oliver pressed the button of the lift. The doors opened like a yawning mouth with a menacing clash. Mrs Oliver hurried into the yawning cavern. She was always afraid of modern lifts.
           
          Crash. The doors came to again. The lift went up. It stopped almost immediately (that was frightening too!). Mrs Oliver scuttled out like a frightened rabbit.
           
          She looked up at the wall and went along the right hand passage. She came to a door marked 67 in metal numbers affixed to the centre of the door. The numeral 7 detached itself and fell on her feet as she arrived.
           
          "This place doesn't like me," said Mrs Oliver to herself as she winced with pain and picked the number up gingerly and affixed it by its spike to the door again.
           
          She pressed the bell. Perhaps everyone was out.
           
          However, the door opened almost at once. A tall handsome girl stood in the doorway. She was wearing a dark, well-cut suit with a very short skirt, a white silk shirt, and was very well shod. She had swept-up dark hair, good but discreet make-up, and for some reason was slightly alarming to Mrs Oliver.
           
          "Oh," said Mrs Oliver, galvanising herself to say the right thing. "Is Miss Restarick in, by any chance?"
           
          "No, I'm sorry, she's out. Can I give her a message?"
           
          Mrs Oliver said, "Oh" again-before proceeding. She made a play of action by producing a parcel rather untidily done up in brown paper. "I promised her a book," she explained. "One of mine that she hadn't read. I hope I've remembered actually which it was. She won't be in soon, I suppose?"
           
          "I really couldn't say. I don't know what she is doing tonight."
           
          "Oh. Are you Miss Reece-Holland?"
           
          The girl looked slightly surprised.
           
          "Yes, I am."
           
          "I've met your father," said Mrs Oliver. She went on, "I'm Mrs Oliver. I write books," she added in the usual guilty style in which she invariably made such announcement.
           
          "Won't you come in?"
           
          Mrs Oliver accepted the invitation, and Claudia Reece-Holland led her into a sitting-room. All the rooms of the flats were papered the same with an artificial raw wood pattern. Tenants could then display their modern pictures or apply any forms of decoration they fancied. There was a foundation of modern built-in furniture, cupboard, bookshelves and so on, a large settee and a pull-out type of table. Personal bits and pieces could be added by the tenants. There were also signs of individuality displayed here by a gigantic Harlequin pasted on one wall, and a stencil of a monkey swinging from branches of palm fronds on another wall.
           
          "I'm sure Norma will be thrilled to get your book, Mrs Oliver. Won't you have a drink? Sherry? Gin?"
           
          This girl had the brisk manner of a really good secretary.
           
          Mrs Oliver refused.
           
          "You've got a splendid view up here," she said, looking out of the window and blinking a little as she got the setting sun straight in her eyes.
           
          "Yes. Not so funny when the lift goes out of order."
           
          "I shouldn't have thought that lift would dare to go out of order. It's so - so - robot-like."
           
          "Recently installed, but none the better for that," said Claudia. "It needs frequent adjusting and all that."
           
          Another girl came in, talking as she entered.
           
          "Claudia, have you any idea where I put -"
           
          She stopped, looking at Mrs Oliver.
           
          Claudia made a quick introduction.
           
          "Frances Cary - Mrs Oliver. Mrs Ariadne Oliver."
           
          "Oh, how exciting," said Frances.
           
          She was a tall, willowy girl, with long black hair, a heavily made-up, dead white face, and eyebrows and eyelashes slightly slanted upwards - the effect heightened by mascara. She wore tight velvet pants and a heavy sweater. She was a complete contrast to the brisk and efficient Claudia.
           
          "I brought a book I'd promised Norma Restarick," said Mrs Oliver.
           
          "Oh! - what a pity she's still in the country."
           
          "Hasn't she come back?"
           
          There was quite definitely a pause. Mrs Oliver thought the two girls exchanged a glance.
           
          "I thought she had a job in London," said Mrs Oliver, endeavouring to convey innocent surprise.
           
          "Oh yes," said Claudia. "She's in an interior decorating place. She's sent down with patterns occasionally to places in the country," She smiled. "We live rather separate lives here. Come and go as we like - and don't usually leave messages. But I won't forget to give her your book when she does arrive."
           
          Nothing could have been easier than the casual explanation.
           
          Mrs Oliver rose. "Well, thank you very much."
           
          Claudia accompanied her to the door. "I shall tell my father I've met you," she said. "He's a great reader of detective stories."
           
          Closing the door she went back into the sitting-room.
           
          The girl Frances was leaning against the window.
           
          "Sorry," she said. "Did I boob?"
           
          "I'd just said that Norma was out."
           
          Frances shrugged her shoulders.
           
          "I couldn't tell. Claudia, where is that girl? Why didn't she come back on Monday? Where has she gone?"
           
          "I can't imagine."
           
          "She didn't stay on down with her people? That's where she went for the weekend."
           
          "No. I rang up, actually, to find out."
           
          "I suppose it doesn't really matter... All the same, she is - well, there's something queer about her."
           
          "She's not really queerer than anyone else." But the opinion sounded uncertain.
           
          "Oh yes, she is," said Frances. "Sometimes she gives me the shivers. She's not normal, you know."
           
          She laughed suddenly.
           
          "Norma isn't normal! You know she isn't, Claudia, although you won't admit it. Loyalty to your employer, I suppose."
           
          Chapter 4
           
          Hercule Poirot walked along the main street of Long Basing.
           
          That is, if you can describe as a main street a street that is to all intents and purposes the only street, which was the case in Long Basing. It was one of those villages that exhibit a tendency to length without breadth. It had an impressive church with a tall tower and a yew tree of elderly dignity in its churchyard. It had its full quota of village shops disclosing much variety. It had two antique shops, one mostly consisting of stripped pine chimney pieces, the other disclosing a full house of piled up ancient maps, a good deal of porcelain, most of it chipped, some worm-eaten old oak chests, shelves of glass, some Victorian silver, all somewhat hampered in display by lack of space. There were two cafйs, both rather nasty, there was a basket shop, quite delightful, with a large variety of home-made wares, there was a post office-cum-greengrocer, there was a draper's which dealt largely in millinery and also a shoe department for children and a large miscellaneous selection of haberdashery of all kinds. There was a stationery and newspaper shop which also dealt in tobacco and sweets. There was a wool shop which was clearly the aristocrat of the place. Two white-haired severe women were in charge of shelves and shelves of knitting materials of every description. Also large quantities of dressmaking patterns and knitting patterns and which branched off into a counter for art needle-work. What had lately been the local grocers' had now blossomed into calling itself "a supermarket" complete with stacks of wire baskets and packaged materials of every cereal and cleaning material, all in dazzling paper boxes. And there was a small establishment with one small window with Lillah written across it in fancy letters, a fashion display of one French blouse, labelled "Latest chic", and a navy skirt and a purple striped jumper labelled "separates". These were displayed by being flung down as by a careless hand in the window.
           
          All of this Poirot observed with detached interest. Also contained within the limits of the village and facing on the street were several small houses, old-fashioned in style, sometimes retaining Georgian purity, more often showing some signs of Victorian improvement, as a veranda, bow window, or a small conservatory. One or two houses had had a complete face lift and showed signs of claiming to be new and proud of it.
           
          There were also some delightful and decrepit old-world cottages, some pretending to be a hundred or so years older than they were, others completely genuine, any added comforts of plumbing or such, being carefully hidden from any casual glance.
           
          Poirot walked gently along digesting all that he saw. If his impatient friend, Mrs Oliver had been with him, she would have immediately demanded why he was wasting time, as the house to which he was bound was a quarter of a mile beyond the village limits. Poirot would have told her that he was absorbing the local atmosphere; that these things were sometimes important.
           
          At the end of the village there came an abrupt transition. On one side, set back from the road, was a row of newly built council houses, a strip of green in front of them and a gay note set by each house having been given a different coloured front door. Beyond the council houses the sway of fields and hedges resumed its course interspersed now and then by the occasional "desirable residences" of a house agent's list, with their own trees and gardens and a general air of reserve and of keeping themselves to themselves.
           
          Ahead of him farther down the road Poirot discovered a house, the top story of which displayed an unusual note of bulbous construction. Something had evidently been tacked on up there not so many years ago. This no doubt was the Mecca towards which his feet were bent.
           
          He arrived at a gate to which the nameplate Crosshedges was attached. He surveyed the house. It was a conventional house dating perhaps to the beginning of the century. It was neither beautiful nor ugly. Commonplace was perhaps the word to describe it. The garden was more attractive than the house and had obviously been the subject of a great deal of care and attention in its time, though it had been allowed to fall into disarray. It still had smooth green lawns, plenty of flower beds, carefully planted areas of shrubs to display a certain landscape effect. It was all in good order. A gardener was certainly employed in this garden, Poirot reflected.
           
          A personal interest was perhaps also taken, since he noted in a corner near the house a woman bending over one of the flower beds, tying up dahlias, he thought. Her head showed as a bright circle of pure gold colour. She was tall, slim but square-shouldered.
           
          He unlatched the gate, passed through and walked up towards the house.
           
          The woman turned her head and then straightened herself, turning towards him enquiringly.
           
          She remained standing, waiting for him to speak, some garden twine hanging from her left hand. She looked, he noted, puzzled.
           
          "Yes?" she said.
           
          Poirot, very foreign, took off his hat with a flourish and bowed. Her eyes rested on his moustaches with a kind of fascination.
           
          "Mrs Restarick?"
           
          "Yes. I -"
           
          "I hope that I do not derange you, Madame."
           
          A faint smile touched her lips. "Not at all. Are you -"
           
          "I have permitted myself to pay a visit on you. A friend of mine, Mrs Ariadne Oliver -"
           
          "Oh, of course. I know who you must be. Monsieur Poiret."
           
          "Monsieur Poirot," he corrected her with an emphasis on the last syllable. "Hercule Poirot, at your service. I was passing through this neighbourhood and I ventured to call upon you here in the hope that I might be allowed to pay my respects to Sir Roderick Horsefield."
           
          "Yes. Naomi Lorrimer told us you might turn up."
           
          "I hope it is not inconvenient?"
           
          "Oh, it is not inconvenient at all. Ariadne Oliver was here last weekend. She came over with the Lorrimers. Her books are most amusing, aren't they? But perhaps you don't find detective stories amusing. You are a detective yourself, aren't you - a real one?"
           
          "I am all that there is of the most real," said Hercule Poirot.
           
          He noticed that she repressed a smile.
           
          He studied her more closely. She was handsome in a rather artificial fashion. Her golden hair was stiffly arranged. He wondered whether she might not at heart be secretly unsure of herself, whether she were not carefully playing the part of the English lady absorbed in her garden. He wondered a little what her social background might have been.
           
          "You have a very fine garden here," he said.
           
          "You like gardens?"
           
          "Not as the English like gardens. You have for a garden a special talent in England. It means something to you that it does not to us."
           
          "To French people, you mean?"
           
          "I am not French. I am Belgian."
           
          "Oh yes. I believe that Mrs Oliver mentioned that you were once with the Belgian Police Force?"
           
          "That is so. Me, I am an old Belgian police dog." He gave a polite little laugh and said, waving his hands, "But your gardens, you English, I admire. I sit at your feet! The Latin races, they like the formal garden, the gardens of the chatкau of Versailles in miniature, and also of course they invented the potager. Very important, the potager. Here in England you have the potager, but you got it from France and you do not love your potager as much as you love your flowers. Hein? That is so?"
           
          "Yes, I think you are right," said Mary Restarick. "Do come into the house. You came to see my uncle."
           
          "I came, as you say, to pay homage to Sir Roderick, but I pay homage to you also, Madame. Always I pay homage to beauty when I meet it." He bowed.
           
          She laughed with slight embarrassment. "You mustn't pay me so many compliments."
           
          She led the way through an open french window and he followed her.
           
          "I knew your uncle slightly in 1944."
           
          "Poor dear, he's getting quite an old man now. He's very deaf, I'm afraid."
           
          "It was long ago that I encountered him. He will probably have forgotten. It was a matter of espionage and of scientific developments of a certain invention. We owed that invention to the ingenuity of Sir Roderick. He will be willing, I hope, to receive me."
           
          "Oh, I'm sure he'll love it," said Mrs Restarick. "He has rather a dull life in some ways nowadays. I have to be so much in London - we are looking for a suitable house there." She sighed and said, "Elderly people can be very difficult sometimes."
           
          "I know," said Poirot. "Frequently I, too, am difficult."
           
          She laughed. "Ah no, M. Poirot, come now, you mustn't pretend you're old."
           
          "Sometimes I am told so," said Poirot.
           
          He sighed. "By young girls," he added mournfully.
           
          "That's very unkind of them. It's probably the sort of thing that our daughter would do," she added.
           
          "Ah, you have a daughter?"
           
          "Yes. At least, she is my stepdaughter."
           
          "I shall have much pleasure in meeting her," said Poirot politely.
           
          "Oh well, I'm afraid she is not here. She's in London. She works there."
           
          "The young girls, they all do jobs nowadays."
           
          "Everybody's supposed to do a job," said Mrs Restarick vaguely. "Even when they get married they're always being persuaded back into industry or back into teaching."
           
          "Have they persuaded you, Madame, to come back into anything?"
           
          "No. I was brought up in South Africa. I only came here with my husband a short time ago - It's all - rather strange to me still."
           
          She looked round her with what Poirot judged to be an absence of enthusiasm.
           
          It was a handsomely furnished room of a conventional type - without personality. Two large portraits hung on the walls - the only personal touch. The first was that of a thin-lipped woman in a grey velvet evening dress. Facing her on the opposite wall was a man of about thirty-odd with an air of repressed energy about him.
           
          "Your daughter, I suppose, finds it dull in the country?"
           
          "Yes, it is much better for her to be in London. She doesn't like it here." She paused abruptly, and then as though the last words were almost dragged out of her, she said, "and she doesn't like me."
           
          "Impossible," said Hercule Poirot, with Gallic politeness.
           
          "Not at all impossible! Oh well, I suppose it often happens. I suppose it's hard for girls to accept a stepmother."
           
          "Was your daughter very fond of her own mother?"
           
          "I suppose she must have been. She's a difficult girl. I suppose most girls are."
           
          Poirot sighed and said, "Mothers and fathers have much less control over daughters nowadays. It is not as it used to be in the old good-fashioned days."
           
          "No indeed."
           
          "One dare not say so, Madame, but I must confess I regret that they show so very little discrimination in choosing their - how do you say it? - their boyfriends?"
           
          "Norma has been a great worry to her father in that way. However, I suppose it is no good complaining. People must make their own experiments. But I must take you up to Uncle Roddy - he has his own rooms upstairs."
           
          She led the way out of the room. Poirot looked back over his shoulder. A dull room, a room without character - except perhaps for the two portraits. By the style of the woman's dress, Poirot judged that they dated from some years back. If that was the first Mrs Restarick, Poirot did not think that he would have liked her.
           
          He said, "Those are fine portraits, Madame."
           
          "Yes. Lansberger did them."
           
          It was the name of a famous and exceedingly expensive fashionable portrait painter of twenty years ago. His meticulous naturalism had now gone out of fashion, and since his death, he was little spoken of. His sitters were sometimes sneeringly spoken of as "clothes props", but Poirot thought they were a good deal more than that. He suspected that there was a carefully concealed mockery behind the smooth exteriors that Lansberger executed so effortlessly.
           
          Mary Restarick said as she went up the stairs ahead of him,
           
          "They have just come out of storage - and been cleaned up and -"
           
          She stopped abruptly - coming to a dead halt, one hand on the stair-rail.
           
          Above her, a figure had just turned the corner of the staircase on its way down. It was a figure that seemed strangely incongruous. It might have been someone in fancy dress, someone who certainly did not match with this house.
           
          He was a figure familiar enough to Poirot in different conditions, a figure often met in the streets of London or even at parties. A representative of the youth of today. He wore a black coat, an elaborate velvet waistcoat, skin tight pants, and rich curls of chestnut hair hung down on his neck. He looked exotic and rather beautiful, and it needed a few moments to be certain of his sex.
           
          "David!" Mary Restarick spoke sharply. "What on earth are you doing here?"
           
          The young man was by no means taken aback.
           
          "Startled you?" he asked. "So sorry."
           
          "What are you doing here - in this house? You - have you come down here with Norma?"
           
          "Norma? No. I hoped to find her here."
           
          "Find her here - what do you mean? She's in London."
           
          "Oh, but my dear, she isn't. At any rate, she's not at 67 Borodene Mansions."
           
          "What do you mean, she isn't there?"
           
          "Well, since she didn't come back this weekend, I thought she was probably here with you. I came down to see what she was up to."
           
          "She left here Sunday night as usual."
           
          She added in an angry voice, "Why didn't you ring the bell and let us know you were here? What are you doing roaming about the house?"
           
          "Really, darling, you seem to be thinking I'm going to pinch the spoons or something. Surely it's natural to walk into a house in broad daylight. Why ever not?"
           
          "Well, we're old-fashioned and we don't like it."
           
          "Oh dear, dear." David sighed. "The fuss everyone makes. Well, my dear, if I'm not going to have a welcome and you don't seem to know where your stepdaughter is, I suppose I'd better be moving along. Shall I turn out my pockets before I go?"
           
          "Don't be absurd, David."
           
          "Ta-ta, then." The young man passed them, waved an airy hand and went on down and out through the open front door.
           
          "Horrible creature," said Mary Restarick, with a sharpness of rancour that startled Poirot. "I can't bear him. I simply can't stand him. Why is England absolutely full of these people nowadays?"
           
          "Ah, Madame, do not disquiet yourself. It is all a question of fashion. There have always been fashions. You see less in the country, but in London you meet plenty of them."
           
          "Dreadful," said Mary. "Absolutely dreadful. Effeminate, exotic."
           
          "And yet not unlike a Vandyke portrait, do you not think so, Madame? In a gold frame, wearing a lace collar, you would not then say he was effeminate or exotic."
           
          "Daring to come down here like that. Andrew would have been furious. It worries him dreadfully. Daughters can be very worrying. It's not even as though Andrew knew Norma well. He's been abroad since she was a child. He left her entirely to her mother to bring up, and now he finds her a complete puzzle. So do I for that matter. I can't help feeling that she is a very odd type of girl. One has no kind of authority over them these days. They seem to like the worst type of young men. She's absolutely infatuated with this David Baker. One can't do anything. Andrew forbade him the house, and look, he turns up here, walks in as cool as a cucumber. I think - I almost think I'd better not tell Andrew. I don't want him to be unduly worried. I believe she goes about with this creature in London, and not only with him. There are some much worse ones even. The kind that don't wash, completely unshaven faces and funny sprouting beards and greasy clothes."
           
          Poirot said cheerfully. "Alas, Madame, you must not distress yourself. The indiscretions of youth pass."
           
          "I hope so, I'm sure. Norma is a very difficult girl. Sometimes I think she's not right in the head. She's so peculiar. She really looks sometimes as though she isn't all there. These extraordinary dislikes she takes -"
           
          "Dislikes?"
           
          "She hates me. Really hates me. I don't see why it's necessary. I suppose she was very devoted to her mother, but after all it's only reasonable that her father should marry again, isn't it?"
           
          "Do you think she really hates you?"
           
          "Oh, I know she does. I've had ample proof of it. I can't say how relieved I was when she went off to London. I didn't want to make trouble -" She stopped suddenly. It was as though for the first time she realised that she was talking to a stranger.
           
          Poirot had the capacity to attract confidences.
           
          It was as though when people were talking to him they hardly realised who it was they were talking to. She gave a short laugh now.
           
          "Dear me," she said, "I don't really know why I'm saying all this to you. I expect every family has these problems. Poor stepmothers, we have a hard time of it. Ah, here we are."
           
          She tapped on a door.
           
          "Come in, come in."
           
          It was a stentorian roar.
           
          "Here is a visitor to see you. Uncle," said Mary Restarick, as she walked into the room, Poirot behind her. A broad-shouldered, square-faced, redcheeked irascible looking elderly man had been pacing the floor. He stumped forward towards them. At the table behind him a girl was sitting sorting letters and papers. Her head was bent over them, a sleek, dark head.
           
          "This is Monsieur Hercule Poirot, Uncle Roddy," said Mary Restarick.
           
          Poirot stepped forward gracefully into action and speech. "Ah, Sir Roderick, it is many years - many years since I have had the pleasure of meeting you. We have to go back, so far as the last war. It was, I think, in Normandy the last time. How well I remember, there was there also Colonel Race and there was General Abercromby and there was Air Marshal Sir Edmund Collingsby. What decisions we had to take! And what difficulties we had with security. Ah, nowadays, there is no longer the need for secrecy. I recall the unmasking of that secret agent who succeeded for so long - you remember Captain Henderson."
           
          "Ah. Captain Henderson indeed. Lord, that damned swine! Unmasked!"
           
          "You may not remember me, Hercule Poirot."
           
          "Yes, yes, of course I remember you. Ah, it was a close shave that, a close shave. You were the French representative, weren't you? There were one or two of them, one I couldn't get on with - can't remember his name. Ah well, sit down, sit down. Nothing like having a chat over old days."
           
          "I feared so much that you might not remember me or my colleague, Monsieur Giraud."
           
          "Yes, yes, of course I remember both of you. Ah, those were the days, those were the days indeed."
           
          The girl at the table got up. She moved a chair politely towards Poirot.
           
          "That's right, Sonia, that's right," said Sir Roderick. "Let me introduce you," he said, "to my charming little secretary here. Makes a great difference to me. Helps me, you know, files all my work. Don't know how I ever got on without her."
           
          Poirot bowed politely. "Enchantй, mademoiselle," he murmured.
           
          The girl murmured something in rejoinder. She was a small creature with black bobbed hair. She looked shy. Her dark blue eyes were usually modestly cast down, but she smiled up sweetly and shyly at her employer. He patted her on the shoulder.
           
          "Don't know what I should do without her," he said. I don't really."
           
          "Oh, no," the girl protested. "I am not much good really. I cannot type very fast."
           
          "You type quite fast enough, my dear. You're my memory, too. My eyes and my ears and a great many other things."
           
          She smiled again at him.
           
          "One remembers," murmured Poirot, "some of the excellent stories that used to go the round. I don't know if they were exaggerated or not. Now, for instance, the day that someone stole your car and -" he proceeded to follow up the tale.
           
          Sir Roderick was delighted. "Ha, ha, of course now. Yes, indeed, well, bit of exaggeration, I expect. But on the whole, that's how it was. Yes, yes, well, fancy your remembering that, after all this long time. But I could tell you a better one than that now." He launched forth into another tale.
           
          Poirot listened, applauded. Finally he glanced at his watch and rose to his feet.
           
          "But I must detain you no longer," he said. "You are engaged, I can see, in important work. It was just that being in this neighbourhood I could not help paying my respects. Years pass, but you, I see, have lost none of your vigour, of your enjoyment of life."
           
          "Well, well, perhaps you may say so. Anyway, you mustn't pay me too many compliments - but surely you'll stay and have tea. I'm sure Mary will give you some tea." He looked round. "Oh, she's gone away. Nice girl."
           
          "Yes, indeed, and very handsome. I expect she has been a great comfort to you for many years."
           
          "Oh! they've only married recently. She's my nephew's second wife. I'll be frank with you. I've never cared very much for this nephew of mine, Andrew - not a steady chap. Always restless. His elder brother Simon was my favourite. Not that I knew him well, either. As for Andrew, he behaved very badly to his first wife. Went off, you know. Left her high and dry. Went off with a thoroughly bad lot. Everybody knew about her. But he was infatuated with her. The whole thing broke up in a year or two: silly fellow. This girl he's married seems all right. Nothing wrong with her as far as I know. Now Simon was a steady chap - damned dull, though. I can't say I liked it when my sister married into that family. Marrying into trade, you know. Rich, of course, but money isn't everything - we've usually married into the Services. I never saw much of the Restarick lot."
           
          "They have, I believe, a daughter. A friend of mine met her last week."
           
          "Oh, Norma. Silly girl. Goes about in dreadful clothes and has picked up with a dreadful young man. Ah well, they're all alike nowadays. Long-haired young fellows, beatniks, Beatles, all sorts of names they've got. I can't keep up with them. Practically talk a foreign language. Still, nobody cares to hear an old man's criticisms, so there we are. Even Mary - I always thought she was a good, sensible sort, but as far as I can see she can be thoroughly hysterical in some ways - mainly about her health. Some fuss about going to hospital for observation or something. What about a drink? Whisky? No? Sure you won't stop and have a drop of tea?"
           
          "Thank you, but I am staying with friends."
           
          "Well, I must say I have enjoyed this chat with you very much. Nice to remember some of the things that happened in the old days. Sonia, dear, perhaps you'll take Monsieur - sorry, what's your name, it's gone again - ah, yes, Poirot. Take him down to Mary, will you?"
           
          "No, no," Hercule Poirot hastily waved aside the offer. "I could not dream of troubling Madame any more. I am quite all right. Quite all right. I can find my way perfectly. It has been a great pleasure to meet you again."
           
          He left the room.
           
          "Haven't the faintest idea who that chap was," said Sir Roderick, after Poirot had gone.
           
          "You do not know who he was?" Sonia asked, looking at him in a startled manner.
           
          "Personally I don't remember who half the people are who come up and talk to me nowadays. Of course, I have to make a good shot at it. One learns to get away with that, you know. Same thing at parties. Up comes a chap and says, 'Perhaps you don't remember me. I last saw you in 1939.' I have to say 'Of course I remember,' but I don't. It's a handicap being nearly blind and deaf. We got pally with a lot of frogs like that towards the end of the war. Don't remember half of them. Oh, he'd been there all right. He knew me and I knew a good many of the chaps he talked about. That story about me and the stolen car, that was true enough. Exaggerated a bit, of course, they made a pretty good story of it at the time. Ah well, I don't think he knew I didn't remember him. Clever chap, I should say, but a thorough frog, isn't he? You know, mincing and dancing and bowing and scraping. Now then, where were we?"
           
          Sonia picked up a letter and handed it to him. She tentatively proffered a pair of spectacles which he immediately rejected.
           
          "Don't want those damned things - I can see all right."
           
          He screwed up his eyes and peered down at the letter he was holding. Then he capitulated and thrust it back into her hands.
           
          "Well, perhaps you'd better read it to me."
           
          She started reading it in her clear soft voice.
           
          Chapter 5
           
          Hercule Poirot stood upon the landing for a moment. His head was a little on one side with a listening air. He could hear nothing from downstairs.
           
          He crossed to the landing window and looked out. Mary Restarick was below on the terrace, resuming her gardening work. Poirot nodded his head in satisfaction.
           
          He walked gently along the corridor. One by one in turn he opened the doors. A bathroom, a linen cupboard, a double bedded spare room, an occupied single bedroom, a woman's room, with a double bed (Mary Restarick's?). The next door was that of an adjoining room and was, he guessed, the room belonging to Andrew Restarick. He turned to the other side of the landing. The door he opened first was a single bedroom. It was not, he judged, occupied at the time, but it was a room which possibly was occupied at weekends.
           
          There were toilet brushes on the dressingtable.
           
          He listened carefully, then tiptoed in. He opened the wardrobe. Yes, there were some clothes hanging up there. Country clothes.
           
          There was a writing table but there was nothing on it. He opened the desk drawers very softly. There were a few odds and ends, a letter or two, but the letters were trivial and dated some time ago. He shut the desk drawers. He walked downstairs, and going out of the house, bade farewell to his hostess. He refused her offer of tea.
           
          He had promised to get back, he said as he had to catch a train to town very shortly afterwards.
           
          "Don't you want a taxi? We could order you one, or I could drive you in the car."
           
          "No, no, Madame, you are too kind."
           
          Poirot walked back to the village and turned down the lane by the church. He crossed a little bridge over a stream.
           
          Presently he came to where a large car with a chauffeur was waiting discreetly under a beech tree. The chauffeur opened the door of the car, Poirot got inside, sat down and removed his patent leather shoes, uttering a gasp of relief.
           
          "Now we return to London," he said.
           
          The chauffeur closed the door, returned to his seat and the car purred quietly away.
           
          The sight of a young man standing by the roadside furiously thumbing a ride was not an unusual one. Poirot's eyes rested almost indifferently on this member of the fraternity, a brightly dressed young man with long and exotic hair. There were many such but in the moment of passing him Poirot suddenly sat upright and addressed the driver.
           
          "If you please, stop. Yes, and if you can reverse a little... There is someone requesting a lift."
           
          The chauffeur turned an incredulous eye over his shoulder. It was the last remark he would have expected. However, Poirot was gently nodding his head, so he obeyed.
           
          The young man called David advanced to the door. "Thought you weren't going to stop for me," he said cheerfully. "Much obliged, I'm sure."
           
          He got in, removed a small pack from his shoulders and let it slide to the floor, smoothed down his copper brown locks.
           
          "So you recognised me," he said.
           
          "You are perhaps somewhat conspicuously dressed."
           
          "Oh, do you think so? Not really. I'm just one of a band of brothers."
           
          "The school of Vandyke. Very dressy."
           
          "Oh. I've never thought of it like that. Yes, there may be something in what you say."
           
          "You should wear a cavalier's hat," said Poirot, "and a lace collar, if I might advise."
           
          "Oh, I don't think we go quite as far as that." The young man laughed. "How Mrs Restarick dislikes the mere sight of me. Actually I reciprocate her dislike. I don't care much for Restarick, either. There is something singularly unattractive about successful tycoons, don't you think?"
           
          "It depends on the point of view. You have been paying attentions to the daughter, I understand."
           
          "That is such a nice phrase," said David. "Paying attentions to the daughter. I suppose it might be called that. But there's plenty of fifty-fifty about it, you know. She's paying attention to me, too."
           
          "Where is Mademoiselle now?"
           
          Davis turned his head rather sharply.
           
          "And why do you ask that?"
           
          "I should like to meet her." He shrugged his shoulders.
           
          "I don't believe she'd be your type, you know, any more than I am. Norma's in London."
           
          "But you said to her stepmother -"
           
          "Oh! we don't tell stepmothers everything."
           
          "And where is she in London?"
           
          "She works in an interior decorator's down the King's Road somewhere in Chelsea. Can't remember the name of it for the moment. Susan Phelps, I think."
           
          "But that is not where she lives, I presume. You have her address?"
           
          "Oh yes, a great block of flats. I don't really understand your interest."
           
          "One is interested in so many things."
           
          "What do you mean?"
           
          "What brought you to that house - (what is its name? - Crosshedges) today. Brought you secretly into the house and up the stairs."
           
          "I came in the back door, I admit."
           
          "What were you looking for upstairs?"
           
          "That's my business. I don't want to be rude - but aren't you being rather nosy?"
           
          "Yes, I am displaying curiosity. I would like to know exactly where this young lady is."
           
          "I see. Dear Andrew and dear Mary - lord rot 'em - are employing you, is that it? They are trying to find her?"
           
          "As yet," said Poirot, "I do not think they know that she is missing."
           
          "Someone must be employing you."
           
          "You are exceedingly perceptive," said Poirot. He leant back.
           
          "I wondered what you were up to," said David. "That's why I hailed you. I hoped you'd stop and give me a bit of dope. She's my girl. You know that, I suppose?"
           
          "I understand that that is supposed to be the idea," said Poirot cautiously. "If so, you should know where she is. Is that not so, Mr - I am sorry, I do not think I know your name beyond, that is, that your Christian name is David."
           
          "Baker."
           
          "Perhaps, Mr Baker, you have had a quarrel."
           
          "No, we haven't had a quarrel. Why should you think we had?"
           
          "Miss Norma Restarick left Crosshedges on Sunday evening or was it Monday morning?"
           
          "It depends. There is an early bus you can take. Gets you to London a little after ten. It would make her a bit late at work, but not too much. Usually she goes back on Sunday night."
           
          "She left there Sunday night but she has not arrived at Borodene Mansions."
           
          "Apparently not. So Claudia says."
           
          "This Miss Reece-Holland - that is her name, is it not? - was she surprised or worried?"
           
          "Good lord no, why should she be. They don't keep tabs on each other all the time, these girls."
           
          "But you thought she was going back there?"
           
          "She didn't go back to work either. They're fed up at the shop, I can tell you."
           
          "Are you worried, Mr Baker?"
           
          "No. Naturally - I mean, well, I'm damned if I know. I don't see any reason I should be worried, only time's getting on. What is it today - Thursday?"
           
          "She has not quarrelled with you?"
           
          "No. We don't quarrel."
           
          "But you are worried about her, Mr Baker?"
           
          "What business is it of yours?"
           
          "It is no business of mine but there has, I understand, been trouble at home. She does not like her stepmother."
           
          "Quite right too. She's a bitch, that woman. Hard as nails. She doesn't like Norma either."
           
          "She has been ill, has she not? She had to go to hospital."
           
          "Who are you talking about - Norma?"
           
          "No, I am not talking about Miss Restarick. I am talking about Mrs Restarick."
           
          "I believe she did go into a nursing home. No reason she should. Strong as a horse, I'd say."
           
          "And Miss Restarick hates her stepmother."
           
          "She's a bit unbalanced sometimes, Norma. You know, goes off the deep end. I tell you, girls always hate their stepmothers."
           
          "Does that always make stepmothers ill? Ill enough to go to hospital?"
           
          "What the hell are you getting at?"
           
          "Gardening perhaps - or the use of weedkiller."
           
          "What do you mean by talking about weed killer? Are you suggesting that Norma - that she'd dream of - that -"
           
          "People talk," said Poirot. "Talk goes round the neighbourhood."
           
          "Do you mean that somebody has said that Norma has tried to poison her stepmother? That's ridiculous. It's absolutely absurd."
           
          "It is very unlikely, I agree," said Poirot. "Actually, people have not been saying that."
           
          "Oh. Sorry. I misunderstood. But - what did you mean?"
           
          "My dear young man," said Poirot, "you must realise that there are rumours going about, and rumours are almost always about the same person - a husband."
           
          "What, poor old Andrew? Most unlikely I should say."
           
          "Yes. Yes, it does not seem to me very likely."
           
          "Well, what were you there for then? You are a detective, aren't you?"
           
          "Yes."
           
          "Well, then?"
           
          "We are talking at cross purposes," said Poirot. "I did not go down there to enquire into any doubtful or possible case of poisoning. You must forgive me if I cannot answer your question. It is all very hush-hush, you understand."
           
          "What on earth do you mean by that."
           
          "I went there," said Poirot, "to see Sir Roderick Horsefield."
           
          "What, that old boy? He's practically ga-ga, isn't he?"
           
          "He is a man," said Poirot, "who is in possession of a great many secrets. I do not mean that he takes an active part in such things nowadays, but he knows a good deal. He was connected with a great many things in the past war. He knew several people."
           
          "That's all over years ago, though."
           
          "Yes, yes, his part in things is all over years ago. But do you not realise that there are certain things that it might be useful to know?"
           
          "What sort of things?"
           
          "Faces," said Poirot. "A well known face perhaps, which Sir Roderick might recognise. A face or a mannerism, a way of talking, a way of walking, a gesture. People do remember, you know. Old people. They remember, not things that have happened last week or last month or last year, but they remember something that happened, say, nearly twenty years ago. And they may remember someone who does not want to be remembered. And they can tell you certain things about a certain man or a certain woman or something they were mixed up in - I am speaking very vaguely, you understand. I went to him for information."
           
          "You went to him for information, did you? That old boy? Ga-ga. And he gave it to you?"
           
          "Let us say that I am quite satisfied."
           
          David continued to stare at him. "I wonder now," he said, "Did you go to see the old boy or did you go to see the little girl, eh? Did you want to know what she was doing in the house? I've wondered once or twice myself. Do you think she took that post there to get a bit of past information out of the old boy?"
           
          "I do not think," said Poirot, "that it will serve any useful purpose to discuss these matters. She seems a very devoted and attentive - what shall I call her - secretary?"
           
          "A mixture of a hospital nurse, a secretary, a companion, an au pair girl, an uncle's help? Yes, one could find a good many names for her, couldn't one? He's besotted about her. You noticed that?"
           
          "It is not unnatural under the circumstances," said Poirot primly.
           
          "I can tell you someone who doesn't like her, and that's our Mary."
           
          "And she perhaps does not like Mary Restarick either."
           
          "So that's what you think, is it?" said David. "That Sonia doesn't like Mary Restarick. Perhaps you go as far as thinking that she may have made a few enquiries as to where the weed killer was kept? Bah," he added, "the whole thing's ridiculous. All right. Thanks for the lift. I think I'll get out here."
           
          "Aha. This is where you want to be? We are still a good seven miles out of London."
           
          "I'll get out here. Good-bye, M. Poirot."
           
          "Goodbye."
           
          Poirot leant back in his seat as David slammed the door.
           
          II
           
          Mrs Oliver prowled round her sitting-room.
           
          She was very restless. An hour ago she had parcelled up a typescript that she had just finished correcting. She was about to send it off to her publisher who was anxiously awaiting it and constantly prodding her about it every three or four days.
           
          "There you are," said Mrs Oliver, addressing the empty air and conjuring up an imaginary publisher. "There you are, and I hope you like it! I don't. I think it's lousy! I don't believe you know whether anything I write is good or bad. Anyway, I warned you. I told you it was frightful. You said 'Oh! no, no, I don't believe that for a moment.'
           
          "You just wait and see," said Mrs Oliver vengefully. "You just wait and see."
           
          She opened the door, called to Edith, her maid, gave her the parcel and directed that it should be taken to the post at once.
           
          "And now," said Mrs Oliver, "what am I going to do with myself?"
           
          She began strolling about again. "Yes," thought Mrs Oliver, "I wish I had those tropical birds and things back on the wall instead of these idiotic cherries. I used to feel like something in a tropical wood. A lion or a tiger or a leopard or a cheetah! What could I possibly feel like in a cherry orchard except a bird scarer?"
           
          She looked round again. "Cheeping like a bird, that's what I ought to be doing," she said gloomily. "Eating cherries... I wish it was the right time of year for cherries. I'd like some cherries. I wonder now -" She went to the telephone.
           
          "I will ascertain, Madam," said the voice of George in answer to her enquiry. Presently another voice spoke.
           
          "Hercule Poirot, at your service, Madame," he said.
           
          "Where've you been?" said Mrs Oliver. "You've been away all day. I suppose you went down to look up the Restaricks. Is that it? Did you see Sir Roderick? What did you find out?"
           
          "Nothing," said Hercule Poirot.
           
          "How dreadfully dull," said Mrs Oliver.
           
          "No, I do not think it is really so dull. It is rather astonishing that I have not found out anything."
           
          "Why is it so astonishing? I don't understand."
           
          "Because," said Poirot, "it means either there was nothing to find out, and that, let me tell you, does not accord with the facts, or else something was being very cleverly concealed. That, you see, would be interesting. Mrs Restarick, by the way, did not know the girl was missing."
           
          "You mean - she has nothing to do with the girl having disappeared?"
           
          "So it seems. I met there the young man."
           
          "You mean the unsatisfactory young man that nobody likes?"
           
          "That is right. The unsatisfactory young man."
           
          "Did you think he was unsatisfactory?"
           
          "From whose point of view?"
           
          "Not from the girl's point of view, I suppose."
           
          "The girl who came to see me I am sure would have been highly delighted with him."
           
          "Did he look very awful?"
           
          "He looked very beautiful," said Hercule Poirot.
           
          "Beautiful?" said Mrs Oliver. "I don't know that I like beautiful young men."
           
          "Girls do," said Poirot.
           
          "Yes, you're quite right. They like beautiful young men. I don't mean good-looking young men or smart-looking young men or well dressed or well washed looking young men. I mean they either like young men looking as though they were just going on in a Restoration comedy, or else very dirty young men looking as though they were just going to take some awful tramp's job."
           
          "It seemed that he also did not know where the girl is now -"
           
          "Or else he wasn't admitting it."
           
          "Perhaps. He had gone down there. Why? He was actually in the house. He had taken the trouble to walk in without anyone seeing him. Again why? For what reason? Was he looking for the girl? Or was he looking for something else?"
           
          "You think he was looking for something?"
           
          "He was looking for something in the girl's room," said Poirot.
           
          "How do you know? Did you see him there?"
           
          "No, I only saw him coming down the stairs, but I found a very nice little piece of damp mud in Norma's room that could have come from his shoe. It is possible that she herself may have asked him to bring her something from that room - there are a lot of possibilities. There is another girl in that house - and a pretty one - He may have come down there to meet her. Yes - many possibilities."
           
          "What are you going to do next?" demanded Mrs Oliver.
           
          "Nothing," said Poirot.
           
          "That's very dull," said Mrs Oliver disapprovingly.
           
          "I am going to receive, perhaps, a little information from those I have employed to find it, though it is quite possible that I shall receive nothing at all."
           
          "But aren't you going to do something?"
           
          "Not till the right moment," said Poirot.
           
          "Well, I shall," said Mrs Oliver.
           
          "Pray, pray be very careful," he implored her.
           
          "What nonsense! What could happen to me?"
           
          "Where there is murder, anything can happen. I tell that to you. I, Poirot."
           
          Chapter 6
           
          Mr Goby sat in a chair. He was a small shrunken little man, so nondescript as to be practically nonexistent.
           
          He looked attentively at the claw foot of an antique table and addressed his remarks to it. He never addressed anybody direct. "Glad you got the names for me, Mr Poirot," he said. "Otherwise, you know, it might have taken a lot of time. As it is, I've got the main facts - and a bit of gossip on the side... Always useful, that. I'll begin at Borodene Mansions, shall I?"
           
          Poirot inclined his head graciously.
           
          "Plenty of porters," Mr Goby informed the clock on the chimney piece. "I started there, used one or two different young men. Expensive, but worth it. Didn't want it thought that there was anyone making any particular enquiries! Shall I use initials, or names?"
           
          "Within these walls you can use the names," said Poirot.
           
          "Miss Claudia Reece-Holland spoken of as a very nice young lady. Father an M.P. Ambitious man. Gets himself in the news a lot. She's his only daughter. She does secretarial work. Serious girl. No wild parties, no drink, no beatniks. Shares flat with two others. Number two works for the Wedderburn Gallery in Bond Street. Arty type. Whoops it up a bit with the Chelsea set. Goes around to places arranging exhibitions and art shows.
           
          "The third one is your one. Not been there long. General opinion is that she's a bit 'wanting'. Not all there in the top story. But it's all a bit vague. One of the porters is a gossipy type. Buy him a drink or two and you'll be surprised at the things he'll tell you! Who drinks, and who drugs, and who's having trouble with his income tax, and who keeps his cash behind the cistern. Of course you can't believe it all. Anyway, there was some story about a revolver being fired one night."
           
          "A revolver fired? Was anyone injured?"
           
          "There seems a bit of doubt as to that. His story is he heard a shot fired one night, and he comes out and there was this girl, your girl, standing there with a revolver in her hand. She looked sort of dazed. And then one of the other young ladies - or both of them, in fact - they come running along. And Miss Cary (that's the arty one) says 'Norma, what on earth have you done?' and Miss Reece-Holland, she says sharplike, 'Shut up, can't you, Frances. Don't be a fool' and she took the revolver away from your girl and says 'Give me that.' She slams it into her handbag and then she notices this chap Micky, and goes over to him and says, laughing like, 'that must have startled you, didn't it?' and Micky he says it gave him quite a turn, and she says 'You needn't worry. Matter of fact, we'd no idea this thing was loaded. We were just fooling about.' And then she says: 'Anyway, if anybody asks you questions, tell them it is quite all right.' And then she says: 'Come on, Norma' and took her arm and led her along to the elevator, and they all went up again.
           
          "But Micky said he was a bit doubtful still. He went and had a good look round the courtyard."
           
          Mr Goby lowered his eyes and quoted from his notebook:
           
          "I'll tell you, I found something, I did! I found some wet patches. Sure as anything I did. Drops of blood they were. I touched them with my finger. I tell you what I think. Somebody had been shot - some man as he was running away... I went upstairs and I asked if I could speak to Miss Holland. I says to her: 'I think there may have been someone shot, Miss' I says. 'There are some drops of blood in the courtyard.' 'Good gracious,' she says, 'How ridiculous. I expect, you know,' she says, 'it must have been one of the pigeons.' And then she says: 'I'm sorry if it gave you a turn. Forget about it,' and she slipped me a five pound note. Five pound note, no less! Well, naturally, I didn't open my mouth after that.'
           
          "And then, after another whisky, he comes out with some more. 'If you ask me, she took a pot shot at that low class young chap that comes to see her. I think she and he had a row and she did her best to shoot him. That's what I think. But least said soonest mended, so I'm not repeating it. If anyone asks me anything I'll say I don't know what they're talking about'." Mr Goby paused.
           
          "Interesting," said Poirot.
           
          "Yes, but it's as likely as not that it's a pack of lies. Nobody else seems to know anything about it. There's a story about a gang of young thugs who came barging into the courtyard one night, and had a bit of a fight - flick-knives out and all that."
           
          "I see," said Poirot. "Another possible source of blood in the courtyard."
           
          "Maybe the girl did have a row with her young man, threatened to shoot him, perhaps. And Micky overheard it and mixed the whole thing up - especially if there was a car back-firing just then."
           
          "Yes," said Hercule Poirot, and sighed, "that would account for things quite well."
           
          Mr Goby turned over another leaf of his notebook and selected his confidant. He chose an electric radiator.
           
          "Joshua Restarick Ltd. Family firm. Been going over a hundred years. Well thought of in the City. Always very sound. Nothing spectacular. Founded by Joshua Restarick in 1850. Launched out after the first war, with greatly increased investments abroad, mostly South Africa, West Africa and Australia. Simon and Andrew Restarick - the last of the Restaricks. Simon, the elder brother, died about a year ago, no children. His wife had died some years previously. Andrew Restarick seems to have been a restless chap. His heart was never really in the business though everyone says he had plenty of ability. Finally ran off with some woman, leaving his wife and a daughter of five years old. Went to South Africa, Kenya, and various other places. No divorce. His wife died two years ago. Had been an invalid for some time. He travelled about a lot, and wherever he went he seems to have made money. Concessions for minerals mostly. Everything he touched prospered.
           
          "After his brother's death, he seems to have decided it was time to settle down. He'd married again and he thought the right thing to do was to come back and make a home for his daughter. They're living at the moment with his uncle Sir Roderick Horsefield - uncle by marriage that is. That's only temporary. His wife's looking at houses all over London. Expense no object. They're rolling in money."
           
          Poirot sighed.
           
          "I know," he said. "What you outline to me is a success story! Everyone makes money! Everybody is of good family and highly respected. Their relations are distinguished. They are well thought of in business circles.
           
          "There is only one cloud in the sky. A girl who is said to be 'a bit wanting', a girl who is mixed up with a dubious boyfriend who has been on probation more than once. A girl who may quite possibly have tried to poison her stepmother, and who either suffers from hallucinations, or else has committed a crime! I tell you, none of that accords well with the success story you have brought me."
           
          Mr Goby shook his head sadly and said rather obscurely: "There's one in every family."
           
          "This Mrs Restarick is quite a young woman. I presume she is not the woman he originally ran away with?"
           
          "Oh no, that bust up quite soon. She was a pretty bad lot by all accounts, and a tartar as well. He was a fool ever to be taken in by her." Mr Goby shut his notebook and looked enquiringly at Poirot. "Anything more you want me to do?"
           
          "Yes. I want to know a little more about the late Mrs Andrew Restarick. She was an invalid, frequently in nursing homes. What kind of nursing homes? Mental homes?"
           
          "I take your point, Mr Poirot."
           
          "And any history of insanity in the family - on either side?"
           
          "I'll see to it, Mr Poirot."
           
          Mr Goby rose to his feet. "Then I'll take leave of you, sir. Goodnight."
           
          Poirot remained thoughtful after Mr Goby had left. He raised and lowered his eyebrows. He wondered, he wondered very much.
           
          Then he rang Mrs Oliver:
           
          "I told you before," he said, "to be careful. I repeat that - Be very careful."
           
          "Careful of what?" said Mrs Oliver.
           
          "Of yourself. I think there might be danger. Danger to anyone who goes poking about where they are not wanted. There is murder in the air - I do not want it to be yours."
           
          "Have you had the information you said you might have?"
           
          "Yes," said Poirot, "I have had a little information. Mostly rumour and gossip, but it seems something happened at Borodene Mansions."
           
          "What sort of thing?"
           
          "Blood in the courtyard," said Poirot.
           
          "Really!" said Mrs Oliver. "That's just like the title of an old-fashioned detective story. The Stain on the Staircase. I mean nowadays you say something more like 'She asked for Death'."
           
          "Perhaps there may not have been blood in the courtyard. Perhaps it is only what an imaginative Irish porter imagined."
           
          "Probably an upset milk bottle," said Mrs Oliver. "He couldn't see it at night. What happened?"
           
          Poirot did not answer directly.
           
          "The girl thought she 'might have committed a murder'. Was that the murder she meant?"
           
          "You mean she did shoot someone?"
           
          "One might presume that she did shoot at someone, but for all intents and purposes missed them. A few drops of blood... That was all. No body."
           
          "Oh dear," said Mrs Oliver, "it's all very confused. Surely if anyone could still run out of a courtyard, you wouldn't think you'd killed him, would you?"
           
          "C'est difficile," said Poirot, and rang off.
           
          II
           
          "I'm worried," said Claudia Reece-Holland.
           
          She refilled her cup from the coffee percolator. Frances Cary gave an enormous yawn. Both girls were breakfasting in the small kitchen of the flat. Claudia was dressed and ready to start for her day's work. Frances was still in dressing-gown and pyjamas. Her black hair fell over one eye.
           
          "I'm worried about Norma," continued Claudia.
           
          Frances yawned.
           
          "I shouldn't worry if I were you. She'll ring up or turn up sooner or later, I suppose."
           
          "Will she? You know, Fran, I can't help wondering -"
           
          "I don't see why," said Frances, pouring herself out more coffee. She sipped it doubtfully. "I mean - Norma's not really our business, is she? I mean, we're not looking after her or spoon-feeding her or anything. She just shares the flat. Why all this motherly solicitude? I certainly wouldn't worry."
           
          "I daresay you wouldn't. You never worry over anything. But it's not the same for you as it is for me."
           
          "Why isn't it the same? You mean because you're the tenant of the flat or something?"
           
          "Well, I'm in rather a special position, as you might say."
           
          Frances gave another enormous yawn.
           
          "I was up too late last night," she said. "At Basil's party. I feel dreadful. Oh well, I suppose black coffee will be helpful. Have some more before I've drunk it all? Basil would make us try some new pills - Emerald Dreams. I don't think it's really worth trying all these silly things."
           
          "You'll be late at your gallery," said Claudia.
           
          "Oh well, I don't suppose it matters much. Nobody notices or cares.
           
          "I saw David last night," she added. "He was all dressed up and really looked rather wonderful."
           
          "Now don't say you're falling for him, too, Fran. He really is too awful."
           
          "Oh, I know you think so. You're such a conventional type, Claudia."
           
          "Not at all. But I cannot say I care for all your arty set. Trying out all these drugs and passing out or getting fighting mad."
           
          Frances looked amused.
           
          "I'm not a drug fiend, dear - I just like to see what these things are like. And some of the gang are all right. David can paint, you know, if he wants to."
           
          "David doesn't very often want to, though, does he?"
           
          "You've always got your knife into him, Claudia... You hate him coming here to see Norma. And talking of knives..."
           
          "Well? Talking of knives?"
           
          "I've been worrying," said Frances slowly, "whether to tell you something or not."
           
          Claudia glanced at her wristwatch.
           
          "I haven't got time now," she said. "You can tell me this evening if you want to tell me something. Anyway, I'm not in the mood. Oh dear," she sighed, "I wish I knew what to do."
           
          "About Norma?"
           
          "Yes. I'm wondering if her parents ought to know that we don't know where she is..."
           
          "That would be very unsporting. Poor Norma, why shouldn't she slope off on her own if she wants to?"
           
          "Well, Norma isn't exactly -" Claudia stopped.
           
          "No, she isn't, is she? Non compos mentis. That's what you meant. Have you rung up that terrible place where she works. 'Homebirds', or whatever it's called? Oh yes, of course you did. I remember."
           
          "So where is she?" demanded Claudia. "Did David say anything last night?"
           
          "David didn't seem to know. Really, Claudia, I can't see that it matters."
           
          "It matters for me," said Claudia, "because my boss happens to be her father. Sooner or later, if anything peculiar has happened to her, they'll ask me why I didn't mention the fact that she hadn't come home."
           
          "Yes, I suppose they might pitch on you. But there's no real reason, is there, why Norma should have to report to us every time she's going to be away from here for a day or two. Or even a few nights. I mean, she's not a paying guest or anything. You're not in charge of the girl."
           
          "No, but Mr Restarick did mention he felt glad to know that she had got a room here with us."
           
          "So that entitles you to go and tittle-tattle about her every time she's absent without leave? She's probably got a crush on some new man."
           
          "She's got a crush on David," said Claudia. "Are you sure she isn't holed up at his place?"
           
          "Oh, I shouldn't think so. He doesn't really care for her, you know."
           
          "You'd like to think he doesn't," said Claudia. "You are rather sweet on David yourself."
           
          "Certainly not," said Frances sharply. "Nothing of the kind."
           
          "David's really keen on her," said Claudia. "If not, why did he come round looking for her here the other day?"
           
          "You soon marched him out again," said Frances. "I think," she added, getting up and looking at her face in a rather unflattering small kitchen mirror, "I think it might have been me he really came to see."
           
          "You're too idiotic! He came here looking for Norma."
           
          "That girl's mental," said Frances.
           
          "Sometimes I really think she is!"
           
          "Well, I know she is. Look here, Claudia, I'm going to tell you that something now. You ought to know. I broke the string of my bra the other day and I was in a hurry. I know you don't like anyone fiddling with your things -"
           
          "I certainly don't," said Claudia.
           
          "- but Norma never minds, or doesn't notice. Anyway, I went into her room and I rootled in her drawer and I - well, I found something. A knife."
           
          "A knife!" said Claudia surprised. "What sort of a knife?"
           
          "You know we had that sort of shindy thing in the courtyard? A group of beats, teenagers who'd come in here and were having a fight with flick-knives and all that. And Norma came in just after."
           
          "Yes, yes, I remember."
           
          "One of the boys got stabbed, so a reporter told me, and he ran away. Well, the knife in Norma's drawer was a flickknife. It had got a stain on it - looked like dried blood."
           
          "Frances! You're being absurdly dramatic."
           
          "Perhaps. But I'm sure that's what it was. And what on earth was that doing hidden away in Norma's drawer, I should like to know?"
           
          "I suppose - she might have picked it up."
           
          "What - a souvenir? And hidden it away and never told us?"
           
          "What did you do with it?"
           
          "I put it back," said Frances slowly. "I - I didn't know what else to do... I couldn't decide whether to tell you or not. Then yesterday I looked again and it was gone, Claudia. Not a trace of it."
           
          "You think she sent David here to get it?"
           
          "Well, she might have done... I tell you, Claudia, in future I'm going to keep my door locked at night."
           
          Chapter 7
           
          Mrs Oliver woke up dissatisfied. She saw stretching before her a day with nothing to do. Having packed off her completed manuscript with a highly virtuous feeling, work was over. She had now only, as many times before, to relax, to enjoy herself; to lie fallow until the creative urge became active once more. She walked about her flat in a rather aimless fashion, touching things, picking them up, putting them down, looking in the drawers of her desk, realising that there were plenty of letters there to be dealt with but feeling also that in her present state of virtuous accomplishment, she was certainly not going to deal with anything so tiresome as that now. She wanted something interesting to do. She wanted - what did she want?
           
          She thought about the conversation she had had with Hercule Poirot, the warning he had given her. Ridiculous! After all, why shouldn't she participate in this problem which she was sharing with Poirot?
           
          Poirot might choose to sit in a chair, put the tips of his fingers together, and set his grey cells whirring to work while his body reclined comfortably within four walls.
           
          That was not the procedure that appealed to Ariadne Oliver. She had said, very forcibly, that she at least was going to do something. She was going to find out more about this mysterious girl. Where was Norma Restarick? What was she doing? What more could she, Ariadne Oliver, find out about her?
           
          Mrs Oliver prowled about, more and more disconsolate. What could one do? It wasn't very easy to decide. Go somewhere and ask questions? Should she go down to Long Basing? But Poirot had already been there-and found out presumably what there was to be found out. What excuse could she offer for barging into Sir Roderick Horsefield's house?
           
          She considered another visit to Borodene Mansions. Something still to be found out there, perhaps? She would have to think of another excuse for going there. She wasn't quite sure what excuse she would use but anyway, that seemed the only possible place where more information could be obtained. What was the time?
           
          Ten a.m. There were certain possibilities...
           
          On the way there she concocted an excuse. Not a very original excuse. In fact, Mrs Oliver would have liked to have found something more intriguing, but perhaps, she reflected prudently, it was just as well to keep to something completely everyday and plausible. She arrived at the stately if grim elevation of Borodene Mansions and walked slowly round the courtyard considering it.
           
          A porter was conversing with a furniture van - A milkman, pushing his milk-float, joined Mrs Oliver near the service lift.
           
          He rattled bottles, cheerfully whistling, whilst Mrs Oliver continued to stare abstractedly at the furniture van.
           
          "Number 76 moving out," explained the milkman to Mrs Oliver, mistaking her interest. He transferred a clutch of bottles from his float to the lift.
           
          "Not that she hasn't moved already in a manner of speaking," he added, emerging again. He seemed a cheery kind of milkman.
           
          He pointed a thumb upwards.
           
          "Pitched herself out of a window - seventh floor - only a week ago, it was. Five o'clock in the morning. Funny time to choose."
           
          Mrs Oliver didn't think it so funny. "Why?"
           
          "Why did she do it? Nobody knows. Balance of mind disturbed, they said."
           
          "Was she - young?"
           
          "Nah! Just an old trout. Fifty if she was a day."
           
          Two men struggled in the van with a chest of drawers. It resisted them and two mahogany drawers crashed to the ground - a loose piece of paper floated toward Mrs Oliver who caught it.
           
          "Don't smash everything, Charlie," said the cheerful milkman reprovingly, and went up in the lift with his cargo of bottles.
           
          An altercation broke out between the furniture movers. Mrs Oliver offered them the piece of paper, but they waved it away.
           
          Making up her mind, Mrs Oliver entered the building and went up to No. 67. A clank came from inside and presently the door was opened by a middle-aged woman with a mop who was clearly engaged in household labours.
           
          "Oh," said Mrs Oliver, using her favourite monosyllable. "Good-morning. Is - I wonder - is anyone in?"
           
          "No, I'm afraid not. Madam. They're all out. They've gone to work."
           
          "Yes, of course... As a matter of fact when I was here last I left a little diary behind. So annoying. It must be in the sitting-room somewhere."
           
          "Well, I haven't picked up anything of the kind. Madam, as far as I know. Of course I mightn't have known it was yours. Would you like to come in?" She opened the door hospitably, set aside the mop with which she had been treating the kitchen floor, and accompanied Mrs Oliver into the sitting-room.
           
          "Yes," said Mrs Oliver, determined to establish friendly relations, "yes, I see here - that's the book I left for Miss Restarick, Miss Norma. Is she back from the country yet?"
           
          "I don't think she's living here at the moment. Her bed wasn't slept in. Perhaps she's still down with her people in the country. I know she was going there last weekend."
           
          "Yes, I expect that's it," said Mrs Oliver. "This was a book I brought her. One of my books."
           
          One of Mrs Oliver's books did not seem to strike any chord of interest in the cleaning woman.
           
          "I was sitting here," went on Mrs Oliver, patting an armchair, "at least I think so. And then I moved to the window and perhaps to the sofa."
           
          She dug down vehemently behind the cushions of the chair. The cleaning woman obliged by doing the same thing to the sofa cushions.
           
          "You've no idea how maddening it is when one loses something like that," went on Mrs Oliver, chattily. "One has all one's engagements written down there. I'm quite sure I'm lunching with someone very important today, and I can't remember who it was or where the luncheon was to be. Only, of course, it may be tomorrow. If so, I'm lunching with someone else quite different. Oh dear."
           
          "Very trying for you, ma'am, I'm sure," said the cleaning woman with sympathy.
           
          "They're such nice flats, these," said Mrs Oliver, looking round.
           
          "A long way up."
           
          "Well, that gives you a very good view, doesn't it?"
           
          "Yes, but if they face east you get a lot of cold wind in winter. Comes right through these metal window frames. Some people have had double windows put in. Oh yes, I wouldn't care for a flat facing this way in winter. No, give me a nice ground floor flat every time. Much more convenient too if you've got children. For prams and all that, you know. Oh yes, I'm all for the ground floor, I am. Think if there was to be a fire."
           
          "Yes, of course, that would be terrible," said Mrs Oliver. "I suppose there are fire escapes?"
           
          "You can't always get to a fire door. Terrified of fire, I am. Always have been. And they're ever so expensive, these flats. You wouldn't believe the rents they ask! That's why Miss Holland gets two other girls to go in with her."
           
          "Oh yes, I think I met them both. Miss Cary's an artist, isn't she?"
           
          "Works for an art gallery, she does. Don't work at it very hard, though. She paints a bit - cows and trees that you'd never recognise as being what they're meant to be. An untidy young lady. The state her room is in - you wouldn't believe it! Now Miss Holland, everything is always as neat as a new pin. She was a secretary in the Coal Board at one time but she's a private secretary in the City now. She likes it better, she says. She's secretary to a very rich gentleman just come back from South America or somewhere like that. He's Miss Norma's father, and it was he who asked Miss Holland to take her as a boarder when the last young lady went off to get married - and she mentioned as she was looking for another girl. Well, she couldn't very well refuse, could she? Not since he was her employer."
           
          "Did she want to refuse?"
           
          The woman sniffed. "I think she would have - if she'd known."
           
          "Known what?" The question was too direct.
           
          "It's not for me to say anything, I'm sure. It's not my business -"
           
          Mrs Oliver continued to look mildly enquiring. Mrs Mop fell.
           
          "It's not that she isn't a nice young lady. Scatty - but then they're nearly all scatty. But I think as a doctor ought to see her. There are times when she doesn't seem to know rightly what she's doing, or where she is. It gives you quite a turn, sometimes - Looks just how my husband's nephew does after he's had a fit. (Terrible fits he has - you wouldn't believe!) Only I've never known her have fits. Maybe she takes things - a lot do."
           
          "I believe there is a young man her family doesn't approve of."
           
          "Yes, so I've heard. He's come here to call for her once or twice - though I've never seen him. One of these Mods by all accounts. Miss Holland doesn't like it - but what can you do nowadays? Girls go their own way."
           
          "Sometimes one feels very upset about girls nowadays!" said Mrs Oliver, and tried to look serious and responsible. "Not brought up right, that's what one says."
           
          "I'm afraid not. No, I'm afraid not. One feels really a girl like Norma Restarick would be better at home than coming all alone to London and earning her living as an interior decorator."
           
          "She don't like it at home."
           
          "Really?"
           
          "Got a stepmother. Girls don't like stepmothers. From what I've heard the stepmother's done her best, tried to pull her up, tried to keep flashy young men out of the house, that sort of thing. She knows girls pick up with the wrong young man and a lot of harm may come of it. Sometimes -" the cleaning woman spoke impressively, "I'm thankful I've never had any daughters."
           
          "Have you got sons?"
           
          "Two boys, we've got. One's doing very well at school, and the other one, he's in a printers, doing well there too. Yes, very nice boys they are. Mind you, boys can cause you trouble, too. But girls is more worrying, I think. You feel you ought to be able to do something about them."
           
          "Yes," said Mrs Oliver, thoughtfully, "one does feel that."
           
          She saw signs of the cleaning woman wishing to return to her cleaning.
           
          "It's too bad about my diary," she said. "Well, thank you very much and I hope I haven't wasted your time."
           
          "Well, I hope you'll find it, I'm sure," said the other woman obligingly.
           
          Mrs Oliver went out of the flat and considered what she should do next. She couldn't think of anything she could do further that day, but a plan for tomorrow began to form in her mind.
           
          When she got home, Mrs Oliver, in an important way, got out a notebook and jotted down in it various things under the heading "Facts I have learned". On the whole the facts did not amount to very much but Mrs Oliver, true to her calling, managed to make the most of them that could be made. Possibly the fact that Claudia Reece-Holland was employed by Norma's father was the most salient fact of any. She had not known that before, she rather doubted if Hercule Poirot had known it either. She thought of ringing him up on the telephone and acquainting him with it but decided to keep it to herself for the moment because of her plan for the morrow.
           
          In fact, Mrs Oliver felt at this moment less like a detective novelist than like an ardent bloodhound. She was on the trail, nose down on the scent, and tomorrow morning - well, tomorrow morning she would see.
           
          True to her plan, Mrs Oliver rose early, partook of two cups of tea and a boiled egg and started out on her quest. Once more she arrived in the vicinity of Borodene Mansions. She wondered whether she might be getting a bit well known there, so this time she did not enter the courtyard, but skulked around either one entrance to it or the other, scanning the various people who were turning out into the morning drizzle to trot off on their way to work.
           
          They were mostly girls, and looked deceptively alike. How extraordinary human beings were when you considered them like this, emerging purposefully from these large tall buildings - just like anthills, thought Mrs Oliver. One had never considered an anthill properly, she decided.
           
          It always looked so aimless, as one disturbed it with the toe of a shoe. All those little things rushing about with bits of grass in their mouths, streaming along industriously, worried, anxious, looking as though they were running to and fro and going nowhere, but presumably they were just as well organised as these human beings here. That man, for instance, who had just passed her. Scurrying along, muttering to himself.
           
          "I wonder what's upsetting you," thought Mrs Oliver. She walked up and down a little more, then she drew back suddenly.
           
          Claudia Reece-Holland came out of the entrance way walking at a brisk businesslike pace. As before, she looked very well turned out. Mrs Oliver turned away so that she should not be recognised. Once she had allowed Claudia to get a sufficient distance ahead of her, she wheeled round again and followed in her tracks. Claudia Reece-Holland came to the end of the street and turned right into a main thoroughfare.
           
          She came to a bus stop and joined the queue. Mrs Oliver, still following her, felt a momentary uneasiness. Supposing Claudia should turn round, look at her, recognise her? All Mrs Oliver could think of was to do several protracted but noiseless blows of the nose. But Claudia Reece-Holland seemed totally absorbed in her own thoughts. She looked at none of her fellow waiters for buses. Mrs Oliver was about third in the queue behind her. Finally the right bus came and there was a surge forward. Claudia got on the bus and went straight up to the top. Mrs Oliver got inside and was able to get a seat close to the door as the uncomfortable third person.
           
          When the conductor came round for fares Mrs Oliver pressed a reckless one and sixpence into his hand. After all, she had no idea by what route the bus went or indeed how far the distance was to what the cleaning woman had described vaguely as "one of those new buildings by St Paul's". She was on the alert and ready when the venerable dome was at last sighted. Any time now, she thought to herself and fixed a steady eye on those who descended from the platform above. Ah yes, there came Claudia, neat and chic in her smart suit. She got off the bus. Mrs Oliver followed her in due course and kept at a nicely calculated distance.
           
          "Very interesting," thought Mrs Oliver. "Here I am actually trailing someone! Just like in my books. And, what's more, I must be doing it very well because she hasn't the least idea."
           
          Claudia Reece-Holland, indeed, looked very much absorbed in her own thoughts.
           
          "That's a very capable looking girl," thought Mrs Oliver, as indeed she had thought before. "If I was thinking of having a go at guessing a murderer, a good capable murderer, I'd choose someone very like her."
           
          Unfortunately, nobody had been murdered yet, that is to say, unless the girl Norma had been entirely right in her assumption that she herself had committed a murder.
           
          This part of London seemed to have suffered or profited from a large amount of building in the recent years. Enormous skyscrapers, most of which Mrs Oliver thought very hideous, mounted to the sky with a square matchbox-like air.
           
          Claudia turned into a building. "Now I shall find out exactly," thought Mrs Oliver and turned into it after her. Four lifts appeared to be all going up and down with frantic haste. This, Mrs Oliver thought, was going to be more difficult. However, they were of a very large size and by getting into Claudia's one at the last minute Mrs Oliver was able to interpose large masses of tall men between herself and the figure she was following.
           
          Claudia's destination turned out to be the fourth floor. She went along a corridor and Mrs Oliver, lingering behind two of her tall men, noted the door where she went in. Three doors from the end of the corridor.
           
          Mrs Oliver arrived at the same door in due course and was able to read the legend on it. "Joshua Restarick Ltd" was the legend it bore.
           
          Having got as far as that Mrs Oliver felt as though she did not quite know what to do next. She had found Norma's father's place of business and the place where Claudia worked, but now, slightly disabused, she felt that this was not so much of a discovery as it might have been.
           
          Frankly, did it help? Probably it didn't. She waited around a few moments, walking from one end to the other of the corridor looking to see if anybody else interesting went in at the door of Restarick Enterprises. Two or three girls did but they did not look particularly interesting.
           
          Mrs Oliver went down again in the lift and walked rather disconsolately out of the building. She couldn't quite think what to do next. She took a walk round the adjacent streets, she meditated a visit to St Paul's.
           
          "I might go up in the Whispering Gallery and whisper," thought Mrs Oliver. "I wonder now how the Whispering Gallery would do for the scene of a murder?"
           
          "No," she decided, "too profane, I'm afraid. No, I don't think that would be quite nice." She walked thoughtfully towards the Mermaid Theatre. That, she thought, had far more possibilities. She walked back in the direction of the various new buildings. Then, feeling the lack of a more substantial breakfast than she had had, she turned into a local cafй.
           
          It was moderately well filled with people having extra late breakfast or else early "elevenses". Mrs Oliver, looking round vaguely for a suitable table, gave a gasp.
           
          At a table near the wall the girl Norma was sitting, and opposite her was sitting a young man with lavish chestnut hair curled on his shoulders, wearing a red velvet waistcoat and a very fancy jacket.
           
          "David," said Mrs Oliver under her breath. "It must be David." He and the girl Norma were talking excitedly together.
           
          Mrs Oliver considered a plan of campaign, made up her mind, and nodding her head in satisfaction, crossed the floor of the cafй to a discreet door marked "Ladies".
           
          Mrs Oliver was not quite sure whether Norma was likely to recognise her or not. It was not always the vaguest looking people who proved the vaguest in fact. At the moment Norma did not look as though she was likely to look at anybody but David, but who knows?
           
          "I expect I can do something to myself anyway," thought Mrs Oliver. She looked at herself in a small fly-blown mirror provided by the cafй's management, studying particularly what she considered to be the focal point of a woman's appearance, her hair. No one knew this better than Mrs Oliver, owing to the innumerable times that she had changed her mode of hairdressing, and had failed to be recognised by her friends in consequence. Giving her head an appraising eye she started work.
           
          Out came the pins, she took off several coils of hair, wrapped them up in her handkerchief and stuffed them into her handbag, parted her hair in the middle, combed it sternly back from her face and rolled it up into a modest bun at the back of her neck. She also took out a pair of spectacles and put them on her nose. There was a really earnest look about her now!
           
          "Almost intellectual," Mrs Oliver thought approvingly. She altered the shape of her mouth by an application of lipstick, and emerged once more into the cafй, moving carefully since the spectacles were only for reading and in consequence that landscape was blurred. She crossed the cafй, and made her way to an empty table next to that occupied by Norma and David. She sat down so that she was facing David.
           
          Norma, on the near side, sat with her back to her. Norma, therefore, would not see her unless she turned her head right round. The waitress drifted up. Mrs Oliver ordered coffee and a Bath bun and settled down to be inconspicuous. Norma and David did not even notice her. They were deeply in the middle of a passionate discussion. It took Mrs Oliver just a minute or two to tune in to them.
           
          "... But you only fancy these things," David was saying. "You imagine them. They're all utter, utter nonsense, my dear girl."
           
          "I don't know. I can't tell." Norma's voice had a queer lack of resonance in it.
           
          Mrs Oliver could not hear her as well as she heard David, since Norma's back was turned to her, but the dullness of the girl's tone struck her disagreeably. There was something wrong here, she thought.
           
          Very wrong. She remembered the story as Poirot had first told it to her. "She thinks she may have committed a murder." What was the matter with the girl. Hallucinations? Was her mind really slightly affected, or was it no more and no less than truth, and in consequence the girl had suffered a bad shock?
           
          "If you ask me, it's all fuss on Mary's part! She's a thoroughly stupid woman anyway, and she imagines she has illnesses and all that sort of thing."
           
          "She was ill."
           
          "All right then, she was ill. Any sensible woman would get the doctor to give her some antibiotic or other, and not get het up."
           
          "She thought I did it to her. My father thinks so too."
           
          "I tell you, Norma, you imagine all these things."
           
          "You just say that to me, David. You say it to me to cheer me up. Supposing I did give her the stuff?"
           
          "What do you mean, suppose? You must know whether you did or you didn't. You can't be so idiotic, Norma."
           
          "I don't know."
           
          "You keep saying that. You keep coming back to that, and saying it again and again. 'I don't know. I don't know.'"
           
          "You don't understand. You don't understand in the least what hate is. I hated her from the first moment I saw her."
           
          "I know. You told me that."
           
          "That's the queer part of it. I told you that, and yet I don't even remember telling you that. D'you see? Every now and then I - I tell people things. I tell people things that I want to do, or that I have done, or that I'm going to do. But I don't even remember telling them the things. It's as though I was thinking all these things in my mind, and sometimes they come out in the open and I say them to people. I did say them to you, didn't I?"
           
          "Well - I mean - look here, don't let's harp back to that."
           
          "But I did say it to you? Didn't I?"
           
          "All right, all right! One says things like that. 'I hate her and I'd like to kill her. I think I'll poison her!' But that's only kid stuff, if you know what I mean, as though you weren't quite grown up. It's a very natural thing. Children say it a lot. 'I hate so and so. I'll cut off his head!' Kids say it at school. About some master they particularly dislike."
           
          "You think it was just that? But - that sounds as though I wasn't grown up."
           
          "Well, you're not in some ways. If you'd just pull yourself together, realise how silly it all is. What can it matter if you do hate her? You've got away from home and don't have to live with her."
           
          "Why shouldn't I live in my own home - with my own father?" said Norma. "It's not fair. It's not fair. First he went away and left my mother, and now, just when he's coming back to me, he goes and marries Mary. Of course I hate her and she hates me too. I used to think about killing her, used to think of ways of doing it. I used to enjoy thinking like that. But then - when she really got ill..."
           
          David said uneasily: "You don't think you're a witch or anything, do you? You don't make figures in wax and stick pins into them or do that sort of thing?"
           
          "Oh no. That would be silly. What I did was real. Quite real."
           
          "Look here, Norma, what do you mean when you say it was real?"
           
          "The bottle was there, in my drawer. Yes, I opened the drawer and found it."
           
          "What bottle?"
           
          "The Dragon Exterminator. Selective weed killer. That's what it was labelled. Stuff in a dark green bottle and you were supposed to spray it on things. And it had labels with Caution and Poison, too."
           
          "Did you buy it? Or did you just find it?"
           
          "I don't know where I got it, but it was there, in my drawer, and it was half empty."
           
          "And then you - you - remembered -"
           
          "Yes," said Norma. "Yes..." Her voice was vague, almost dreamy. "Yes... I think it was then it all came back to me. You think so too, don't you, David?"
           
          "I don't know what to make of you, Norma. I really don't. I think in a way, you're making it all up, you're telling it to yourself."
           
          "But she went to hospital, for observation, they said, they were puzzled. Then they said they couldn't find anything wrong so she came home - and then she got ill again, and I began to be frightened. My father began looking at me in a queer sort of way, and then the doctor came and they talked together, shut up in father's study. I went round outside, and crept up to the window and I tried to listen. I wanted to hear what they were saying. They were planning together - to send me away to a place where I'd be shut up! A place where I'd have a 'course of treatment' - or something. They thought, you see, that I was crazy, and I was frightened... Because - because I wasn't sure what I'd done or what I hadn't done."
           
          "Is that when you ran away?"
           
          "No - that was later -"
           
          "Tell me."
           
          "I don't want to talk about it any more."
           
          "You'll have to let them know sooner or later where you are -"
           
          "I won't! I hate them. I hate my father as much as I hate Mary. I wish they were dead. I wish they were both dead. Then - then I think I'd be happy again."
           
          "Don't get all het up! Look here, Norma -" He paused in an embarrassed manner - "I'm not very set on marriage and all that rubbish... I mean I didn't think I'd ever do anything of that kind - oh well, not for years. One doesn't want to tie oneself up - but I think it's the best thing we could do, you know. Get married. At a registry office or something. You'll have to say you're over twenty-one. Roll up your hair, put on some spectacles or something. Make you look a bit older. Once we're married, your father can't do a thing! He can't send you away to what you call a 'place'. He'll be powerless."
           
          "I hate him."
           
          "You seem to hate everybody."
           
          "Only my father and Mary."
           
          "Well, after all, it's quite natural for a man to marry again."
           
          "Look what he did to my mother."
           
          "All that must have been a long time ago?"
           
          "Yes. I was only a child, but I remember. He went away and left us. He sent me presents at Christmas - but he never came himself. I wouldn't even have known him if I'd met him in the street by the time he did come back. He didn't mean anything to me by then. I think he got my mother shut up, too. She used to go away when she was ill. I don't know where. I don't know what was the matter with her. Sometimes I wonder... I wonder, David. I think, you know, there's something wrong in my head, and some day it will make me do something really bad. Like the knife."
           
          "What knife?"
           
          "It doesn't matter. Just a knife."
           
          "Well, can't you tell me what you're talking about?"
           
          "I think it had bloodstains on it - it was hidden there... under my stockings."
           
          "Do you remember hiding a knife there?"
           
          "I think so. But I can't remember what I'd done with it before that. I can't remember where I'd been... There is a whole hour gone out of that evening. A whole hour I didn't know where I'd been. I'd been somewhere and done something."
           
          "Hush!" He hissed it quickly as the waitress approached their table. "You'll be all right. I'll look after you. Let's have something more," he said to the waitress in a loud voice, picking up the menu - "Two baked beans on toast."
           
          Chapter 8
           
          Hercule Poirot was dictating to his secretary, Miss Lemon.
           
          "And while I much appreciate the honour you have done me, I must regretfully inform you that..."
           
          The telephone rang. Miss Lemon stretched out a hand for it. "Yes? Who did you say?" She put her hand over the receiver and said to Poirot "Mrs Oliver."
           
          "Ah... Mrs Oliver," said Poirot. He did not particularly want to be interrupted at this moment, but he took the receiver from Miss Lemon.
           
          "'Allo," he said, "Hercule Poirot speaks."
           
          "Oh, M. Poirot, I'm so glad I got you! I've found her for you!"
           
          "I beg your pardon?"
           
          "I found her for you. Your girl! You know, the one who's committed a murder or thinks she has. She's talking about it too, a good deal. I think she is off her head. But never mind that now. Do you want to come and get her?"
           
          "Where are you, chйre Madame?"
           
          "Somewhere between St Paul's and the Mermaid Theatre and all that. Calthorpe Street," said Mrs Oliver, suddenly looking out of the telephone box in which she was standing. "Do you think you can get here quickly? They're in a restaurant."
           
          "They?"
           
          "Oh, she and what I suppose is the unsuitable boyfriend. He is rather nice really, and he seems very fond of her. I can't think why. People are odd. Well, I don't want to talk because I want to get back again. I followed them, you see. I came into the restaurant and saw them there."
           
          "Aha? You have been very clever, Madame."
           
          "No, I haven't really. It was a pure accident. I mean, I walked into a small cafй place and there the girl was, just sitting there."
           
          "Ah. You had the good fortune then. That is just as important."
           
          "And I've been sitting at the next table to them, only she's got her back to me. And anyway I don't suppose she'd recognise me. I've done things to my hair. Anyway, they've been talking as though they were alone in the world, and when they ordered another course - baked beans - (I can't bear baked beans, it always seems to me so funny that people should) -"
           
          "Never mind the baked beans. Go on. You left them and came out to telephone. Is that right?"
           
          "Yes. Because the baked beans gave me time. And I shall go back now. Or I might hang about outside. Anyway, try and get here quickly."
           
          "What is the name of this cafй?"
           
          "The Merry Shamrock - but it doesn't look very merry. In fact, it looks rather sordid, but the coffee is quite good."
           
          "Say no more. Go back. In due course, I will arrive."
           
          "Splendid," said Mrs Oliver, and rang off.
           
          II
           
          Miss Lemon, always efficient, had preceded him to the street, and was waiting by a taxi. She asked no questions and displayed no curiosity. She did not tell Poirot how she would occupy her time whilst he was away. She did not need to tell him. She always knew what she was going to do and she was always right in what she did.
           
          Poirot duly arrived at the corner of Calthorpe Street. He descended, paid the taxi, and looked around him. He saw The Merry Shamrock but he saw no one in its vicinity who looked at all like Mrs Oliver, however well disguised. He walked to the end of the street and back. No Mrs Oliver. So either the couple in which they were interested had left the cafй and Mrs Oliver had gone on a shadowing expedition, or else - To answer "or else" he went to the cafй door. One could not see the inside very well from the outside, on account of steam, so he pushed the door gently open and entered. His eyes swept round it.
           
          He saw at once the girl who had come to visit him at the breakfast table. She was sitting by herself at a table against the wall. She was smoking a cigarette and staring in front of her. She seemed to be lost in thought. No, Poirot thought, hardly that. There did not seem to be any thought there. She was lost in a kind of oblivion. She was somewhere else.
           
          He crossed the room quietly and sat down in the chair opposite her. She looked up then, and he was at least gratified to see that he was recognised.
           
          "So we meet again. Mademoiselle," he said pleasantly. "I see you recognise me."
           
          "Yes. Yes, I do."
           
          "It is always gratifying to be recognised by a young lady one has only met once and for a very short time."
           
          She continued to look at him without speaking.
           
          "And how did you know me, may I ask? What made you recognise me?"
           
          "Your moustache," said Norma immediately. "It couldn't be anyone else."
           
          He was gratified by that observation and stroked it with the pride and vanity that he was apt to display on these occasions.
           
          "Ah yes, very true. Yes, there are not many moustaches such as mine. It is a fine one, hein?"
           
          "Yes - well, yes - I suppose it is."
           
          "Ah, you are perhaps not a connoisseur of moustaches, but I can tell you, Miss Restarick - Miss Norma Restarick, is it not? - that it is a very fine moustache."
           
          He had dwelt deliberately upon her name. She had at first looked so oblivious to everything around her, so far away, that he wondered if she would notice. She did. It startled her.
           
          "How did you know my name?" she said.
           
          "True, you did not give your name to my servant when you came to see me that morning."
           
          "How did you know it? How did you get to know it? Who told you?"
           
          He saw the alarm, the fear.
           
          "A friend told me," he said. "One's friends can be very useful."
           
          "Who was it?"
           
          "Mademoiselle, you like keeping your little secrets from me. I, too, have a preference for keeping my little secrets from you."
           
          "I don't see how you could know who I was."
           
          "I am Hercule Poirot," said Poirot, with his usual magnificence. Then he left the initiative to her, merely sitting there smiling gently at her.
           
          "I -" she began, then stopped. "- would -" Again she stopped.
           
          "We did not get very far that morning, I know," said Hercule Poirot. "Only so far as your telling me that you had committed a murder."
           
          "Oh, that!"
           
          "Yes, Mademoiselle, that."
           
          "But - I didn't mean it of course. I didn't mean anything like that. I mean, it was just a joke."
           
          "Vraiment? You came to see me rather early in the morning, at breakfast time. You said it was urgent. The urgency was because you might have committed a murder. That is your idea of a joke, eh?"
           
          A waitress who had been hovering, looking at Poirot with a fixed attention, suddenly came up to him and proffered him what appeared to be a paper boat such as it made for children to sail in a bath.
           
          "This for you?" she said. "Mr Porritt? A lady left it."
           
          "Ah yes," said Poirot. "And how did you know who I was?"
           
          "The lady said I'd know by your moustache. Said I wouldn't have seen a moustache like that before. And it's true enough," she added, gazing at it.
           
          "Well, thank you very much." Poirot took the boat from her, untwisted it and smoothed it out; he read some hastily pencilled words: "He's just going. She's staying behind, so I'm going to leave her for you, and follow him." It was signed Ariadne.
           
          "Ah yes," said Hercule Poirot, folding it and slipping it into his pocket. "What were we talking about? Your sense of humour, I think, Miss Restarick."
           
          "Do you know just my name or - or do you know everything about me?"
           
          "I know a few things about you. You are Miss Norma Restarick, your address in London is 67 Borodene Mansions. Your home address is Crosshedges, Long Basing. You live there with a father, a stepmother, a great-uncle and - ah yes, an au pair girl. You see, I am quite well informed."
           
          "You've been having me followed."
           
          "No, no," said Poirot. "Not at all. As to that, I give you my word of honour."
           
          "But you are not police, are you? You didn't say you were."
           
          "I am not police, no."
           
          Her suspicion and defiance broke down.
           
          "I don't know what to do," she said.
           
          "I am not urging you to employ me," said Poirot. "For that you have said already that I am too old. Possibly you are right. But since I know who you are and something about you, there is no reason we should not discuss together in a friendly fashion the troubles that afflict you. The old, you must remember, though considered incapable of action, have nevertheless a good fund of experience on which to draw."
           
          Norma continued to look at him doubtfully, that wide-eyed stare that had disquieted Poirot before. But she was in a sense trapped, and she had at this particular moment, or so Poirot judged, a wish to talk about things. For some reason, Poirot had always been a person it was easy to talk to.
           
          "They think I'm crazy," she said bluntly. "And - and I rather think I'm crazy, too. Mad."
           
          "That is most interesting," said Hercule Poirot, cheerfully. "There are many different names for these things. Very grand names. Names rolled out happily by psychiatrists, psychologists and others. But when you say crazy, that describes very well what the general appearance may be to ordinary, everyday people. Eh bien, then, you are crazy, or you appear crazy or you think you are crazy, and possibly you may be crazy. But all the same that is not to say the condition is serious. It is a thing that people suffer from a good deal, and it is usually easily cured with the proper treatment. It comes about because people have had too much mental strain, too much worry, have studied too much for examinations, have dwelled too much perhaps on their emotions, have too much religion or have a lamentable lack of religion, or have good reasons for hating their fathers or their mothers! Or, of course, it can be as simple as having an unfortunate love affair."
           
          "I've got a stepmother. I hate her and I rather think I hate my father too. That seems rather a lot, doesn't it?"
           
          "It is more usual to hate one or the other," said Poirot. "You were, I suppose, very fond of your own mother. Is she divorced or dead?"
           
          "Dead. She died two or three years ago."
           
          "And you cared for her very much?"
           
          "Yes. I suppose I did. I mean of course I did. She was an invalid, you know and she had to go to nursing homes a good deal."
           
          "And your father?"
           
          "Father had gone abroad a long time before that. He went to South America when I was about five or six. I think he wanted Mother to divorce him but she wouldn't. He went to South America and was mixed up with mines or something like that. Anyway, he used to write to me at Christmas, and send me a Christmas present or arrange for one to come to me. That was about all. So he didn't really seem very real to me. He came home about a year ago because he had to wind up my uncle's affairs and all that sort of financial thing. And when he came home he - he brought this new wife with him."
           
          "And you resented the fact?"
           
          "Yes, I did."
           
          "But your mother was dead by then. It is not unusual, you know, for a man to marry again. Especially when he and his wife have been estranged for many years. This wife he brought, was she the same lady he had wished to marry previously, when he asked your mother for a divorce?"
           
          "Oh, no, this one is quite young. And she's very good-looking and she acts as though she just owns my father!"
           
          She went on after a pause - in a different rather childish voice. "I thought perhaps when he came home this time he would be fond of me and take notice of me and - but she won't let him. She's against me. She's crowded me out."
           
          "But that does not matter at all at the age you are. It is a good thing. You do not need anyone to look after you now. You can stand on your own feet, you can enjoy life, you can choose your own friends -"
           
          "You wouldn't think so, the way they go on at home! Well, I mean to choose my own friends."
           
          "Most girls nowadays have to endure criticism about their friends," said Poirot.
           
          "It was all so different," said Norma. "My father isn't at all like I remember him when I was five years old. He used to play with me, all the time, and be so gay. He's not gay now. He's worried and rather fierce and - oh quite different."
           
          "That must be nearly fifteen years ago, I presume. People change."
           
          "But ought people to change so much?"
           
          "Has he changed in appearance?"
           
          "Oh no, no, not that. Oh no! If you look at his picture just over his chair, although it's of him when he was much younger, it's exactly like him now. But it isn't at all the way I remembered him."
           
          "But you know, my dear," said Poirot gently, "people are never like what you remember them. You make them as the years go by, more and more the way you wish them to be, and as you think you remember them. If you want to remember them as agreeable and gay and handsome, you make them far more so than they actually were."
           
          "Do you think so? Do you really think so?" She paused and then said abruptly, "But why do you think I want to kill people?" The question came out quite naturally. It was there between them. They had, Poirot felt, got at last to a crucial moment.
           
          "That may be quite an interesting question," said Poirot, "and there may be quite an interesting reason. The person who can probably tell you the answer to that will be a doctor. The kind of doctor who knows."
           
          She reacted quickly.
           
          "I won't go to a doctor. I won't go near a doctor! They wanted to send me to a doctor, and then I'll be shut up in one of those loony places and they won't let me out again. I'm not going to do anything like that." She was struggling now to rise to her feet.
           
          "It is not I who can send you to one! You need not be alarmed. You could go to a doctor entirely on your own behalf if you liked. You can go and say to him the things you have been saying to me, and you may ask him why, and he will perhaps tell you the cause."
           
          "That's what David says. That's what David says I should do but I don't think - I don't think he understands. I'd have to tell a doctor that I - I might have tried to do things..."
           
          "What makes you think you have?"
           
          "Because I don't always remember what I've done - or where I've been. I lose an hour of time - two hours - and I can't remember. I was in a corridor once - a corridor outside a door, her door. I'd something in my hand - I don't know how I got it. She came walking along towards me - But when she got near me, her face changed. It wasn't her at all. She'd changed into somebody else."
           
          "You are remembering, perhaps, a nightmare. There people do change into somebody else."
           
          "It wasn't a nightmare. I picked up the revolver - It was lying there at my feet -"
           
          "In a corridor?"
           
          "No, in the courtyard. She came and took it away from me."
           
          "Who did?"
           
          "Claudia. She took me upstairs and gave me some bitter stuff to drink."
           
          "Where was your stepmother then?"
           
          "She was there, too - No, she wasn't. She was at Crosshedges. Or in hospital. That's where they found out she was being poisoned - and that it was me."
           
          "It need not have been you - It could have been someone else."
           
          "Who else could it have been?"
           
          "Perhaps - her husband."
           
          "Father? Why on earth should Father want to poison Mary. He's devoted to her. He's silly about her!"
           
          "There are others in the house, are there not?"
           
          "Old Uncle Roderick? Nonsense!"
           
          "One does not know," said Poirot, "he might be mentally afflicted. He might think it was his duty to poison a woman who might be a beautiful spy. Something like that."
           
          "That would be very interesting," said Norma, momentarily diverted, and speaking in a perfectly natural manner. "Uncle Roderick was mixed up a good deal with spies and things in the last war. Who else is there? Sonia? I suppose she might be a beautiful spy, but she's not quite my idea of one."
           
          "No, and there does not seem very much reason why she should wish to poison your stepmother. I suppose there might be servants, gardeners?"
           
          "No, they just come in for the day. I don't think - well, they wouldn't be the kind of people to have any reason."
           
          "She might have done it herself."
           
          "Committed suicide, do you mean? Like the other one?"
           
          "It is a possibility."
           
          "I can't imagine Mary committing suicide. She's far too sensible. And why should she want to?"
           
          "Yes, you feel that if she did, she would put her head in the gas oven, or she would lie on a bed nicely arranged and take an overdose of sleeping draught. Is that right?"
           
          "Well, it would have been more natural. So you see," said Norma earnestly, "it must have been me."
           
          "Aha," said Poirot, "that interests me. You would almost, it would seem, prefer that it should be you. You are attracted to the idea that it was your hand who slipped the fatal dose of this, that or the other. Yes, you like the idea."
           
          "How dare you say such a thing! How can you?"
           
          "Because I think it is true," said Poirot. "Why does the thought that you may have committed murder excite you, please you?"
           
          "It's not true."
           
          "I wonder," said Poirot.
           
          She scooped up her bag and began feeling in it with shaking fingers.
           
          "I'm not going to stop here and have you say these things to me." She signalled to the waitress who came, scribbled on a pad of paper, detached it and laid it down by Norma's plate.
           
          "Permit me," said Hercule Poirot.
           
          He removed the slip of paper deftly, and prepared to draw his notecase from his pocket. The girl snatched it back again.
           
          "No, I won't let you pay for me."
           
          "As you please," said Poirot.
           
          He had seen what he wanted to see.
           
          The bill was for two. It would seem therefore that David of the fine feathers had no objection to having his bills paid by an infatuated girl.
           
          "So it is you who entertain a friend to elevenses, I see."
           
          "How did you know that I was with anyone?"
           
          "I tell you, I know a good deal."
           
          She placed coins on the table and rose.
           
          "I'm going now," she said, "and I forbid you to follow me."
           
          "I doubt if I could," said Poirot. "You must remember my advanced age. If you were to run down the street I should certainly not be able to follow you."
           
          She got up and went towards the door.
           
          "Do you hear? You are not to follow me."
           
          "You permit me at least to open the door for you." He did so with something of a flourish. "Au revoir, Mademoiselle."
           
          She threw a suspicious glance at him and walked away down the street with a rapid step, turning her head back over her shoulder from time to time. Poirot remained by the door watching her, but made no attempt to gain the pavement or to catch her up. When she was out of sight, he turned back into the cafй.
           
          "And what the devil does all that mean?" said Poirot to himself.
           
          The waitress was advancing upon him, displeasure on her face. Poirot regained his seat at the table and placated her by ordering a cup of coffee. "There is something here very curious," he murmured to himself. "Yes, something very curious indeed."
           
          A cup of pale beige fluid was placed in front of him. He took a sip of it and made a grimace.
           
          He wondered where Mrs Oliver was at this moment.
           
          Chapter 9
           
          Mrs Oliver was seated in a bus. She was slightly out of breath though full of the zest of the chase. What she called in her own mind the Peacock, had led a somewhat brisk pace. Mrs Oliver was not a rapid walker.
           
          Going along the Embankment she followed him at a distance of some twenty yards or so. At Charing Cross he got into the underground. Mrs Oliver also got into the underground. At Sloane Square he got out, so did Mrs Oliver. She waited in a bus queue some three or four people behind him. He got on a bus and so did she.
           
          He got out at World's End, so did Mrs Oliver. He plunged into a bewildering maze of streets between King's Road and the river. He turned into what seemed a builder's yard. Mrs Oliver stood in the shadow of a doorway and watched. He turned into an alleyway, Mrs Oliver gave him a moment or two and then followed - he was nowhere to be seen. Mrs Oliver reconnoitred her general surroundings.
           
          The whole place appeared somewhat decrepit. She wandered farther down the alleyway. Other alleyways led off from it - some of them culs-de-sac. She had completely lost her sense of direction when she once more came to the builder's yard and a voice spoke behind her, startling her considerably.
           
          It said, politely, "I hope I didn't walk too fast for you."
           
          She turned sharply. Suddenly what had recently been almost fun, a chase undertaken light-heartedly and in the best of spirits, now was that no longer. What she felt now was a sudden unexpected throb of fear. Yes, she was afraid. The atmosphere had suddenly become tinged with menace.
           
          Yet the voice was pleasant, polite, but behind it she knew there was anger. The sudden kind of anger that recalled to her in a confused fashion all the things one read in newspapers. Elderly women attacked by gangs of young men. Young men who were ruthless, cruel, who were driven by hate and the desire to do harm.
           
          This was the young man whom she had been following. He had known she was there, had given her the slip and had then followed her into this alleyway, and he stood there now barring her way out.
           
          As is the precarious fashion of London, one moment you are amongst people all round you and the next moment there is nobody in sight. There must be people in the next street, someone in the houses near, but nearer than that is a masterful figure, a figure with strong cruel hands.
           
          She felt sure that in this moment he was thinking of using those hands... The Peacock. A proud peacock. In his velvets, his tight, elegant black trousers, speaking in that quiet ironical amused voice that held behind it anger... Mrs Oliver took three big gasps. Then, in a lightning moment of decision she put up a quickly imagined defence. Firmly and immediately she sat on a dustbin which was against the wall quite close to her.
           
          "Goodness, how you startled me," she said. "I'd no idea you were there. I hope you're not annoyed."
           
          "So you were following me?"
           
          "Yes, I'm afraid I was. I expect it must have been rather annoying to you. You see I thought it would be such an excellent opportunity. I'm sure you're frightfully angry but you needn't be, you know. Not really. You see -" Mrs Oliver settled herself more firmly on the dustbin, "you see I write books. I write detective stories and I've really been very worried this morning. In fact I went into a cafй to have a cup of coffee just to try and think things out. I'd just got to the point in my book where I was following somebody. I mean my hero was following someone and I thought to myself, 'really I know very little about following people.' I mean, I'm always using the phrase in a book and I've read a lot of books where people do follow other people, and I wondered if it was as easy as it seems to be in some people's books or if it was as almost entirely impossible as it seemed in other people's books. So I thought 'Well, really, the only thing was to try it out myself - because until you try things out yourself you can't really tell what it's like. I mean you don't know what you feel like, or whether you get worried at losing a person. As it happened, I just looked up and you were sitting at the next table to me in the cafй and I thought you'd be - I hope you won't be annoyed again - but I thought you'd be an especially good person to follow."
           
          He was still staring at her with those strange, cold blue eyes, yet she felt somehow that the tension had left them.
           
          "Why was I an especially good person to follow?"
           
          "Well, you were so decorative," explained Mrs Oliver. "They are really very attractive clothes - almost Regency, you know, and I thought, well, I might take advantage of your being fairly easy to distinguish from other people. So you see, when you went out of the cafй I went out too. And it's not really easy at all." She looked up at him. "Do you mind telling me if you knew I was there all the time?"
           
          "Not at once, no."
           
          "I see," said Mrs Oliver thoughtfully. "But of course I'm not as distinctive as you are. I mean you wouldn't be able to tell me very easily from a lot of other elderly women. I don't stand out very much, do I?"
           
          "Do you write books that are published? Have I ever come across them?"
           
          "Well, I don't know. You may have. I've written forty-three by now. My name's Oliver."
           
          "Ariadne Oliver?"
           
          "So you do know my name," said Mrs Oliver. "Well, that's rather gratifying, of course, though I daresay you wouldn't like my books very much. You probably would find them rather old-fashioned - not violent enough."
           
          "You didn't know me personally beforehand?"
           
          Mrs Oliver shook her head. "No, I'm sure I don't - didn't, I mean."
           
          "What about the girl I was with?"
           
          "You mean the one you were having - baked beans was it - with in the cafй? No, I don't think so. Of course I only saw the back of her head. She looked to me - well, I mean girls do look rather alike, don't they?"
           
          "She knew you," said the boy suddenly.
           
          His tone in a moment had a sudden acid sharpness. "She mentioned once that she'd met you not long ago. About a week ago, I believe."
           
          "Where? Was it at a party? I suppose I might have met her. What's her name? Perhaps I'd know that."
           
          She thought he was in two moods whether to mention the name or not, but he decided to and he watched her face very keenly as he did so.
           
          "Her name's Norma Restarick."
           
          "Norma Restarick. Oh, of course, yes, it was at a party in the country. A place called - wait a minute - Long Norton was it? - I don't remember the name of the house. I went there with some friends. I don't think I would have recognised her anyway, though I believe she did say something about my books. I even promised I'd give her one. It's very odd, isn't it, that I should make up my mind and actually choose to follow a person who was sitting with somebody I more or less knew. Very odd. I don't think I could put anything like that in my book. It would look rather too much of a coincidence, don't you think?"
           
          Mrs Oliver rose from her seat. "Good gracious, what have I been sitting on? A dustbin! Really! Not a very nice dustbin either." She sniffed. "What is this place I've got to?"
           
          David was looking at her. She felt suddenly that she was completely mistaken in everything she had previously thought.
           
          "Absurd of me," thought Mrs Oliver, "absurd of me. Thinking that he was dangerous, that he might do something to me." He was smiling at her with an extraordinary charm. He moved his head slightly and his chestnut ringlets moved on his shoulders. What fantastic creatures there were in the way of young men nowadays!
           
          "The least I can do," he said, "is to show you, I think, where you've been brought to, just by following me. Come on, up these stairs." He indicated a ramshackle outside staircase running up to what seemed to be a loft.
           
          "Up those stairs?" Mrs Oliver was not so certain about this. Perhaps he was trying to lure her up there with his charm, and he would then knock her on the head.
           
          "It's no good, Ariadne," said Mrs Oliver to herself, "you've got yourself into this spot, and now you've got to go on with it and find out what you can find out."
           
          "Do you think they'll stand my weight?" she said, "they look frightfully rickety."
           
          "They're quite all right. I'll go up first," he said, "and show you the way."
           
          Mrs Oliver mounted the ladder-like stairs behind him. It was no good. She was, deep down, still frightened. Frightened, not so much of the Peacock, as frightened of where the Peacock might be taking her. Well, she'd know very soon.
           
          He pushed open the door at the top and went into a room. It was a large, bare room and it was an artist's studio, an improvised kind of one. A few matresses lay here and there on the floor, there were canvases stacked against the wall, a couple of easels. There was a pervading smell of paint. There were two people in the room, a bearded young man was standing at an easel, painting. He turned his head as they entered.
           
          "Hallo, David," he said, "bringing us company?"
           
          He was, Mrs Oliver thought, quite the dirtiest-looking young man she'd ever seen.
           
          Oily black hair hung in a kind of circular bob down the back of his neck and over his eyes in front. His face apart from the beard was unshaven, and his clothes seemed mainly composed of greasy black leather and high boots. Mrs Oliver's glance went beyond him to a girl who was acting as a model. She was on a wooden chair on a dais, half flung across it, her head back and her dark hair drooping down from it. Mrs Oliver recognised her at once. It was the second one of the three girls in Borodene Mansions. Mrs Oliver couldn't remember her last name but she remembered her first one. It was the highly decorative and languid-looking girl called Frances.
           
          "Meet Peter," said David, indicating the somewhat revolting looking artist. "One of our budding geniuses. And Frances who is posing as a desperate girl demanding abortion."
           
          "Shut up, you ape," said Peter.
           
          "I believe I know you, don't I?" said Mrs Oliver, cheerfully, without any air of conscious certainty. "I'm sure I've met you somewhere! Somewhere quite lately, too."
           
          "You're Mrs Oliver, aren't you?" said Frances.
           
          "That's what she said she was," said David. "True, too, is it?"
           
          "Now, where did I meet you," continued Mrs Oliver. "Some party, was it? No. Let me think. I know. It was Borodene Mansions."
           
          Frances was sitting up now in her chair and speaking in weary but elegant tones. Peter uttered a loud and miserable groan.
           
          "Now you've ruined the pose! Do you have to have all this wriggling about? Can't you keep still?"
           
          "No, I couldn't any longer. It was an awful pose. I've got the most frightful crick in my shoulder."
           
          "I've been making experiments in following people," said Mrs Oliver. "It's much more difficult than I thought. Is this an artist's studio?" she added, looking round her brightly.
           
          "That's what they're like nowadays, a kind of loft - and lucky if you don't fall through the floor," said Peter.
           
          "It's got all you need," said David. "It's got a north light and plenty of room and a pad to sleep on, and a fourth share in the loo downstairs - and what they call cooking facilities. And it's got a bottle or two," he added. Turning to Mrs Oliver, but in an entirely different tone, one of utter politeness, he said, "And can we offer you a drink?"
           
          "I don't drink" said Mrs Oliver. "The lady doesn't drink," said David. "Who would have thought it!"
           
          "That's rather rude but you're quite right," said Mrs Oliver. "Most people come up to me and say 'I always thought you drank like a fish'."
           
          She opened her handbag - and immediately three coils of grey hair fell on the floor. David picked them up and handed them to her.
           
          "Oh! thank you." Mrs Oliver took them. "I hadn't time this morning. I wonder if I've got any more hairpins."
           
          She delved in her bag and started attaching the coils to her head.
           
          Peter roared with laughter -"Bully for you," he said.
           
          "How extraordinary," Mrs Oliver thought to herself, "that I should ever have had this silly idea that I was in danger. Danger - from these people? No matter what they look like, they're really very nice and friendly. It's quite true what people always say to me. I've far too much imagination."
           
          Presently she said she must be going, and David, with Regency gallantry, helped her down the rickety steps, and gave her definite directions as to how to rejoin the King's Road in the quickest way.
           
          "And then," he said, "you can get a bus - or a taxi if you want it."
           
          "A taxi," said Mrs Oliver. "My feet are absolutely dead. The sooner I fall into a taxi the better. Thank you," she added, "for being so very nice about my following you in what must have seemed a very peculiar way. Though after all I don't suppose private detectives, or private eyes or whatever they call them, would look anything at all like me."
           
          "Perhaps not," said David gravely.
           
          "Left here - and then right, and then left again until you see the river and go towards it, and then sharp right and straight on."
           
          Curiously enough, as she walked across the shabby yard the same feeling of unease and suspense came over her. "I mustn't let my imagination go again." She looked back at the steps and the window of the studio. The figure of David still stood looking after her. "Three perfectly nice young people," said Mrs, Oliver to herself.
           
          "Perfectly nice and very kind. Left here, and then right. Just because they look rather peculiar, one goes and has silly ideas about their being dangerous. Was it right again? or left? Left, I think - Oh goodness, my feet. It's going to rain, too."
           
          The walk seemed endless and the King's Road incredibly far away. She could hardly hear the traffic now - and where on earth was the river? She began to suspect that she had followed the directions wrong.
           
          "Oh! well," thought Mrs Oliver, "I'm bound to get somewhere soon - the river, or Putney or Wandsworth or somewhere." She asked her way to the King's Road from a passing man who said he was a foreigner and didn't speak English.
           
          Mrs Oliver turned another corner wearily and there ahead of her was the gleam of the water. She hurried towards it down a narrow passageway, heard a footstep behind her, half turned, when she was struck from behind and the world went up in sparks.
           
          Chapter 10
           
          He said: "Drink this."
           
          Norma was shivering. Her eyes had a dazed look. She shrank back a little in the chair. The command was repeated. "Drink this." This time she drank obediently, then choked a little.
           
          "It's - it's very strong," she gasped.
           
          "It'll put you right. You'll feel better in a minute. Just sit still and wait."
           
          The sickness and the giddiness which had been confusing her passed off. A little colour came into her cheeks, and the shivering diminished. For the first time she looked round her, noting her surroundings.
           
          She had been obsessed by a feeling of fear and horror but now things seemed to be returning to normal. It was a medium-sized room and it was furnished in a way that seemed faintly familiar. A desk, a couch, an armchair and an ordinary chair, a stethoscope on a side table and some machine that she thought had to do with eyes. Then her attention went from the general to the particular. The man who had told her to drink.
           
          She saw a man of perhaps thirty-odd with red hair and a rather attractively ugly face, the kind of face that is craggy but interesting. He nodded at her in a reassuring fashion.
           
          "Beginning to get your bearings?"
           
          "I - I think so. I - did you - what happened?"
           
          "Don't you remember?"
           
          "The traffic. I - it came at me - it -" She looked at him."I was run over."
           
          "Oh no, you weren't run over." He shook his head. "I saw to that."
           
          "You?"
           
          "Well, there you were in the middle of the road, a car bearing down on you and I just managed to snatch you out of its way. What were you thinking of to go running into the traffic like that?"
           
          "I can't remember. I - yes, I suppose I must have been thinking of something else."
           
          "A Jaguar was coming pretty fast, and there was a bus bearing down on the other side of the road. The car wasn't trying to run you down or anything like that, was it?"
           
          "I - no, no, I'm sure it wasn't. I mean I -"
           
          "Well, I wondered - it just might have been something else, mightn't it?"
           
          "What do you mean?"
           
          "Well, it could have been deliberate, you know."
           
          "What do you mean by deliberate?"
           
          "Actually I just wondered whether you were trying to get yourself killed?" He added casually, "Were you?"
           
          "I - no - well - no, of course not."
           
          "Damn' silly way to do it, if so." His tone changed slightly. "Come now, you must remember something about it."
           
          She began shivering again. "I thought - I thought it would be all over. I thought -"
           
          "So you were trying to kill yourself, weren't you? What's the matter? You can tell me. Boy friend? That can make one feel pretty bad. Besides, there's always the hopeful thought that if you kill yourself you make him sorry - but one should never trust to that. People don't like feeling sorry or feeling anything is their fault. All the boyfriend will probably say 'I always thought she was unbalanced. It's really all for the best'. Just remember that next time you have an urge to charge Jaguars. Even Jaguars have feelings to be considered. Was that the trouble? Boy friend walk out on you?"
           
          "No," said Norma. "Oh no. It was quite the opposite." She added suddenly, "He wanted to marry me."
           
          "That's no reason for throwing yourself down in front of a Jaguar."
           
          "Yes it is. I did it because -" She stopped.
           
          "You'd better tell me about it, hadn't you?"
           
          "How did I get here?" asked Norma.
           
          "I brought you here in a taxi. You didn't seem injured - a few bruises, I expect. You merely looked shaken to death, and in a state of shock, I asked you your address, but you looked at me as though you didn't know what I was talking about. A crowd was about to collect. So I hailed a taxi and brought you here."
           
          "Is this a - a doctor's surgery?"
           
          "This is a doctor's consulting room and I'm the doctor. Stillingfleet my name is."
           
          "I don't want to see a doctor! I don't want to talk to a doctor! I don't -"
           
          "Calm down, calm down. You've been talking to a doctor for the last ten minutes. What's the matter with doctors, anyway?"
           
          "I'm afraid. I'm afraid a doctor would say -"
           
          "Come now, my dear girl, you're not consulting me professionally. Regard me as a mere outsider who's been enough of a busybody to save you from being killed or what is far more likely, having a broken arm or a fractured leg or a head injury or something extremely unpleasant which might incapacitate you for life. There are other disadvantages. Formerly, if you deliberately tried to commit suicide you could be had up in Court. You still can if it's a suicide pact. There now, you can't say I haven't been frank. You could oblige now by being frank with me, and telling me why on earth you're afraid of doctors. What's a doctor ever done to you?"
           
          "Nothing. Nothing has been done to me. But I'm afraid that they might -"
           
          "Might what?"
           
          "Shut me up."
           
          Dr Stillingfleet raised his sandy eyebrows and looked at her.
           
          "Well, well," he said. "You seem to have some very curious ideas about doctors. Why should I want to shut you up? Would you like a cup of tea?" he added, "or would you prefer a purple heart or a tranquilliser. That's the kind of thing people of your age go in for. Done a bit yourself in that line, haven't you?"
           
          She shook her head. "Not - not really."
           
          "I don't believe you. Anyway, why the alarm and despondency? You're not really mental, are you? I shouldn't have said so. Doctors aren't at all anxious to have people shut up. Mental homes are far too full already. Difficult to squeeze in another body. In fact lately they've been letting a good many people out - in desperation - pushing them out, you might say - who jolly well ought to have been kept in. Everything's so over-crowded in this country."
           
          "Well," he went on, "what are your tastes? Something out of my drug cupboard or a good solid old-fashioned English cup of tea?"
           
          "I - I'd like some tea," said Norma.
           
          "Indian or China? That's the thing to ask, isn't it? Mind you, I'm not sure if I've got any China."
           
          "I like Indian better."
           
          "Good," he went to the door, opened it and shouted, "Annie. Pot of tea for two."
           
          He came back and sat down and said, "Now you get this quite clear, young lady. What's your name, by the way?"
           
          "Norma Res -" she stopped.
           
          "Yes?"
           
          "Norma West."
           
          "Well, Miss West, let's get this clear. I'm not treating you, you're not consulting me. You are the victim of a street accident - that is the way we'll put it and that is the way I suppose you meant it to appear, which would have been pretty hard on the fellow in the Jaguar."
           
          "I thought of throwing myself off a bridge first."
           
          "Did you? You wouldn't have found that so easy. People who build bridges are rather careful nowadays. I mean you'd have had to climb up on to the parapet and it's not so easy. Somebody stops you. Well, to continue with my dissertation, I brought you home as you were in too much of a state of shock to tell me your address. What is it, by the way?"
           
          "I haven't got an address. I - I don't live anywhere."
           
          "Interesting," said Dr Stillingfleet.
           
          "What the police call 'of no fixed abode.' What do you do - sit out on the Embankment all night?"
           
          She looked at him suspiciously.
           
          "I could have reported the accident to the police but there was no obligation upon me to do so. I preferred to take the view that in a state of maiden meditation you were crossing the street before looking left first."
           
          "You're not at all like my idea of a doctor," said Norma.
           
          "Really? Well, I've been getting gradually disillusioned in my profession in this country. In fact, I'm giving up my practice here and I'm going to Australia in about a fortnight. So you're quite safe from me, and you can if you like tell me how you see pink elephants walking out of the wall, how you think the trees are leaning out their branches to wrap round and strangle you, how you think you know just when the devil looks out of people's eyes, or any other cheerful fantasy, and I shan't do a thing about it! You look sane enough, if I may say so."
           
          "I don't think I am."
           
          "Well, you may be right," said Dr Stillingfleet handsomely. "Let's hear what your reasons are."
           
          "I do things and don't remember about them... I tell people things about what I've done but I don't remember telling them..."
           
          "It sounds as though you have a bad memory."
           
          "You don't understand. They're all - wicked things."
           
          "Religious mania? Now that would be very interesting."
           
          "It's not religious. It's just - just hate."
           
          There was a tap at the door and an elderly woman came in with a tea tray. She put it down on the desk and went out again.
           
          "Sugar?" said Dr Stillingfleet.
           
          "Yes, please."
           
          "Sensible girl. Sugar is very good for you when you've had a shock." He poured out two cups of tea, set hers at her side and placed the sugar basin beside it. "Now then," he sat down. "What were we talking about? Oh yes, hate."
           
          "It is possible, isn't it, that you could hate someone so much that you really want to kill them?"
           
          "Oh, yes," said Stillingfleet cheerfully still. "Perfectly possible. In fact, most natural. But even if you really want to do it you can't always screw yourself up to the point, you know. The human being is equipped with a natural braking system and it applies the brakes for you just at the right moment."
           
          "You make it sound so ordinary," said Norma. There was a distinct overtone of annoyance in her voice.
           
          "Oh, well, it is quite natural. Children feel like it almost every day. Lose their tempers, say to their mothers or their fathers: 'You're wicked, I hate you, I wish you were dead'. Mothers, being sometimes sensible people, don't usually pay any attention. When you grow up, you still hate people, but you can't take quite so much trouble wanting to kill them by then. Or if you still do - well, then you go to prison. That is, if you actually brought yourself to do such a messy and difficult job. You aren't putting all this on, are you, by the way?" he asked casually.
           
          "Of course not." Norma sat up straight. Her eyes flashed with anger. "Of course not. Do you think I would say such awful things if they weren't true?"
           
          "Well, again," said Dr Stillingfleet, "people do. They say all sorts of awful things about themselves and enjoy saying them." He took her empty cup from her.
           
          "Now then," he said, "you'd better tell me all about everything. Who you hate, why you hate them, what you'd like to do to them."
           
          "Love can turn to hate."
           
          "Sounds like a melodramatic ballad. But remember hate can turn to love, too. It works both ways. And you say it's not a boyfriend. He was your man and he did you wrong. None of that stuff, eh?"
           
          "No, no. Nothing like that. It's - it's my stepmother."
           
          "The cruel stepmother motif. But that's nonsense. At your age you can get away from a stepmother. What has she done to you beside marrying your father? Do you hate him too, or are you so devoted to him, that you don't want to share him?"
           
          "It's not like that at all. Not at all. I used to love him once. I loved him dearly. He was - he was - I thought he was wonderful."
           
          "Now then," said Dr Stillingfleet, "listen to me. I'm going to suggest something. You see that door?"
           
          Norma turned her head and looked in a puzzled fashion at the door.
           
          "Perfectly ordinary door, isn't it? Not locked. Opens and shuts in the ordinary way. Go on, try it for yourself. You saw my housekeeper come in and go out through it, didn't you? No illusions. Come on. Get up. Do what I tell you."
           
          Norma rose from her chair and rather hesitatingly went to the door and opened it. She stood in the aperture, her head turned towards him enquiringly.
           
          "Right. What do you see? A perfectly ordinary hallway, wants redecorating but it's not worth having it done when I'm just off to Australia. Now go to the front door, open it, also no tricks about it. Go outside and down to the pavement and that will show you that you are perfectly free with no attempts to shut you up in any way. After that when you have satisfied yourself that you could walk out of this place at any minute you like, come back, sit in that comfortable chair over there and tell me all about yourself. After which I will give you my valuable advice. You needn't take it," he added consolingly. "People seldom do take advice, but you might as well have it. See? Agreed?"
           
          Norma got up slowly, she went a little shakily out of the room, out into - as the doctor had described - the perfectly ordinary hallway, opened the front door with a simple catch, down four steps and stood on the pavement in a street of decorous but rather uninteresting houses. She stood there a moment, unaware that she was being watched through a lace blind by Dr Stillingfleet himself. She stood there for about two minutes, then with a slightly more resolute bearing she turned, went up the steps again, shut the front door and came back into the room.
           
          "All right?" said Dr Stillingfleet. "Satisfy you there's nothing up my sleeve? All clear and above board."
           
          The girl nodded.
           
          "Right. Sit down there. Make yourself comfortable. Do you smoke?"
           
          "Well, I -"
           
          "Only reefers - something of that kind? Never mind, you needn't tell me."
           
          "Of course I don't take anything of that kind."
           
          "I shouldn't have said there was any 'of course' about it, but one must believe what the patient tells one. All right. Now tell me all about yourself."
           
          "I - I don't know. There's nothing to tell really. Don't you want me to lie down on a couch?"
           
          "Oh, you mean your memory of dreams and all that stuff? No, not particularly. I just like to get a background. You know. You were born, you lived in the country or the town, you have brothers and sisters or you're an only child and so on. When your own mother died, were you very upset by her death?"
           
          "Of course I was." Norma sounded indignant.
           
          "You're much too fond of saying of course, Miss West. By the way, West isn't really your name, is it? Oh, never mind, I don't want to know any other one. Call yourself West or East or North or anything you like. Anyway, what went on after your mother died?"
           
          "She was an invalid for a long time before she died. In nursing homes a good deal. I stayed with an aunt, rather an old aunt, down in Devonshire. She wasn't really an aunt, she was Mother's first cousin. And then my father came home just about six months ago. It - it was wonderful." Her face lighted up suddenly. She was unaware of the quick, shrewd glance the apparently casual young man shot at her. "I could hardly remember him, you know. He must have gone away when I was about five. I didn't really think I'd ever see him again. Mother didn't very often talk about him. I think at first she hoped that he'd give up this other woman and come back."
           
          "Other woman?"
           
          "Yes. He went away with someone. She was a very bad woman. Mother said. Mother talked about her very bitterly and very bitterly about Father too, but I used to think that perhaps - perhaps Father wasn't as bad as she thought, that it was all this woman's fault."
           
          "Did they marry?"
           
          "No. Mother said she would never divorce Father. She was a - is it an Anglican? - very High Church, you know. Rather like a Roman Catholic. She didn't believe in divorce."
           
          "Did they go on living together? What was the woman's name or is that a secret too?"
           
          "I don't remember her last name."
           
          Norma shook her head. "No, I don't think they lived together long, but I don't know much about it all, you see. They went to South Africa but I think they quarrelled and parted quite soon because that's when Mother said she hoped Father might come back again. But he didn't. He didn't write even. Not even to me. But he sent me things at Christmas. Presents always."
           
          "He was fond of you?"
           
          "I don't know. How could I tell? Nobody ever spoke about him. Only Uncle Simon - his brother, you know. He was in business in the City and he was very angry that Father had chucked up everything. He said he had always been the same, could never settle to anything, but he said he wasn't a bad chap really. He said he was just weak. I didn't often see Uncle Simon. It was always Mother's friends. Most of them were dreadfully dull. My whole life has been very dull...
           
          "Oh, it seemed so wonderful that Father was really coming home. I tried to remember him better. You know, things he had said, games he had played with me. He used to make me laugh a lot. I tried to see if I couldn't find some old snapshots or photographs of him. They seem all to have been thrown away. I think Mother must have torn them all up."
           
          "She had remained vindictive then."
           
          "I think it was really Louise she was vindictive against."
           
          "Louise?"
           
          He saw a slight stiffening on the girl's part.
           
          "I don't remember - I told you - I don't remember any names."
           
          "Never mind. You're talking about the woman your father ran away with. Is that it?"
           
          "Yes. Mother said she drank too much and took drugs and would come to a bad end."
           
          "But you don't know whether she did?"
           
          "I don't know anything."... Her emotion was rising. "I wish you wouldn't ask me questions! I don't know anything about her! I never heard of her again! I'd forgotten her until you spoke about her. I tell you I don't know anything."
           
          "Well, well," said Dr Stillingfleet. "Don't get so agitated. You don't need to bother about past history. Let's think about the future. What are you going to do next?"
           
          Norma gave a deep sigh.
           
          "I don't know. I've nowhere to go. I can't - it's much better - I'm sure it's much better to - to end it all - only -"
           
          "Only you can't make the attempt a second time, is that it? It would be very foolish if you did, I can tell you that, my girl. All right, you've nowhere to go, no one to trust, got any money?"
           
          "Yes, I've got a banking account, and Father pays so much into it every quarter but I'm not sure... I think perhaps, by now, they might be looking for me. I don't want to be found."
           
          "You needn't be. I'll fix that up for you all right. Place called Kenway Court. Not as fine as it sounds. It's a kind of convalescent nursing home where people go for a rest cure. It's got no doctors or couches, and you won't be shut up there, I can promise you. You can walk out any time you like. You can have breakfast in bed, stay in bed all day if you like. Have a good rest and I'll come down one day and talk to you and we'll solve a few problems together. Will that suit you? Are you willing?"
           
          Norma looked at him. She sat, without expression, staring at him, slowly she nodded her head.
           
          II
           
          Later that evening Dr Stillingfleet made a telephone call.
           
          "Quite a good operation kidnap," he said. "She's down at Kenway Court. Came like a lamb. Can't tell you much yet. The girl's full of drugs. I'd say she'd been taking purple hearts, and dream bombs, and probably L.S.D... She's been all hopped up for some time. She says no, but I wouldn't trust much to what she says."
           
          He listened for a moment. "Don't ask me! One will have to go carefully there. She gets the wind up easily... Yes, she's scared of something, or she's pretending to be scared of something...
           
          "I don't know yet, I can't tell. Remember people who take drugs are tricky. You can't believe what they say always. We haven't rushed things and I don't want to startle her...
           
          "A father complex as a child. I'd say didn't care much for her mother who sounds a grim woman by all accounts - the self-righteous martyr type. I'd say Father was a gay one, and couldn't quite stand the grimness of married life - Know of anyone called Louise?... The name seemed to frighten her - She was the girl's first hate, I should say. She took Father away at the time the child was five. Children don't understand very much at that age, but they're very quick to feel resentment of the person they feel was responsible. She didn't see Father again until apparently a few months ago. I'd say she'd had sentimental dreams of being her father's companion and the apple of his eye. She got disillusioned apparently. Father came back with a wife, a new young attractive wife. She's not called Louise, is she?... Oh well, I only asked. I'm giving you roughly the picture, the general picture, that is."
           
          The voice at the other end of the wire said sharply, "What is that you say? Say it again."
           
          "I said I'm giving you roughly the picture."
           
          There was a pause.
           
          "By the way, here's one little fact might interest you. The girl made a rather hamhanded attempt to commit suicide. Does that startle you?...
           
          "Oh, it doesn't... No, she didn't swallow the aspirin bottle, or put her head in the gas oven. She rushed into the traffic in the path of a Jaguar going faster than it should have done... I can tell you I only got to her just in time... Yes, I'd say it was a genuine impulse... She admitted it. Usual classic phrase - she 'wanted to get out of it all'."
           
          He listened to a rapid flow of words, then he said: "I don't know. At this stage, I can't be sure - The picture presented is clear. A nervy girl, neurotic and in an overwrought state from taking drugs of too many kinds. No, I couldn't tell you definitely what kind. There are dozens of these things going about all producing slightly different effects. There can be confusion, loss of memory, aggression, bewilderment, or sheer fuzzleheadedness! The difficulty is to tell what the real reactions are as opposed to the reactions produced by drugs. There are two choices, you see. Either this is a girl who is playing herself up, depicting herself as neurotic and nervy and claiming suicidal tendencies. It could be actually so. Or it could be a whole pack of lies. I wouldn't put it past her to be putting up this story for some obscure reason of her own - wanting to give an entirely false impression of herself. If so, she's doing it very cleverly. Every now and then, there seems something not quite right in the picture she's giving. Is she a very clever little actress acting a part? Or is she a genuine semi-moronic suicidal victim? She could be either... What did you say?... Oh, the Jaguar!... Yes, it was being driven far too fast. You think it mightn't have been an attempt at suicide? That the Jaguar was deliberately meaning to run her down?"
           
          He thought for a minute or two. "I can't say," he said slowly. "It just could be so. Yes, it could be so, but I hadn't thought of it that way. The trouble is, everything's possible, isn't it? Anyway, I'm going to get more out of her shortly. I've got her in a position where she's semi-willing to trust me, so long as I don't go too far too quickly, and make her suspicious. She'll become more trusting soon, and tell me more, and if she's a genuine case, she'll pour out her whole story to me - force it on me in the end. At the moment she's frightened of something...
           
          "If, of course, she's leading me up the garden path we'll have to find out the reason why. She's at Kenway Court and I think she'll stay there. I'd suggest that you keep someone with an eye on it for a day or so and if she does attempt to leave, someone she doesn't know by sight had better follow her."
           
          Chapter 11
           
          Andrew Restarick was writing a cheque - he made a slight grimace as he did so.
           
          His office was large and handsomely furnished in typical conventional tycoon fashion - the furnishing and fittings had been Simon Restarick's and Andrew Restarick had accepted them without interest and had made few changes except for removing a couple of pictures and replacing them by his own portrait which he had brought up from the country, and a water colour of Table Mountain.
           
          Andrew Restarick was a man of middle age, beginning to put on flesh, yet strangely little changed from the man some fifteen years younger in the picture hanging above him. There was the same jutting out chin, the lips firmly pressed together, and the slightly raised quizzical eyebrows. Not a very noticeable man - an ordinary type and at the moment not a very happy man.
           
          His secretary entered the room - she advanced towards his desk, as he looked up.
           
          "A Monsieur Hercule Poirot is here. He insists that he has an appointment with you - but I can find no trace of one."
           
          "A Monsieur Hercule Poirot?" The name seemed vaguely familiar, but he could not remember in what context. He shook his head - "I can't remember anything about him - though I seem to have heard the name. What does he look like?"
           
          "A very small man - foreign - French I should say - with an enormous moustache -"
           
          "Of course! I remember Mary describing him. He came to see old Roddy. But what's all this about an appointment with me."
           
          "He says you wrote him a letter."
           
          "Can't remember it - even if I did. Perhaps Mary - Oh well, never mind - bring him in. I suppose I'd better see what this is all about."
           
          A moment or two later Claudia Reece-Holland returned ushering with her a small man with an egg-shaped head, large moustaches, pointed patent leather shoes and a general air of complacency which accorded very well with the description he had had from his wife.
           
          "Monsieur Hercule Poirot," said Claudia Reece-Holland.
           
          She went out again as Hercule Poirot advanced towards the desk. Restarick rose.
           
          "Monsieur Restarick? I am Hercule Poirot, at your service."
           
          "Oh yes. My wife mentioned that you'd called upon us or rather called upon my uncle. What can I do for you?"
           
          "I have presented myself in answer to your letter."
           
          "What letter? I did not write to you, M. Poirot."
           
          Poirot stared at him. Then he drew from his pocket a letter, unfolded it, glanced at it and handed it across the desk with a bow.
           
          "See for yourself. Monsieur."
           
          Restarick stared at it. It was typewritten on his own office stationery. His signature was written in ink at the bottom.
           
          Dear Monsieur Poirot,
           
          I should be very glad if you could call upon me at the above address at your earliest convenience. I understand from what my wife tells me and also from what I have learned by making various enquiries in London, that you are a man to be trusted when you agree to accept a mission that demands discretion.
           
          Yours truly,
           
          Andrew Restarick
           
          He said sharply:
           
          "When did you receive this?"
           
          "This morning. I had no matters of moment on my hands so I came along here."
           
          "This is an extraordinary thing, M. Poirot. That letter was not written by me."
           
          "Not written by you?"
           
          "No. My signature is quite different - look for yourself." He cast out a hand as though looking for some example of his handwriting and without conscious thought turned the cheque book on which he had just written his signature, so that Poirot could see it. "You see? The signature on the letter is not in the least like mine."
           
          "But that is extraordinary," said Poirot.
           
          "Absolutely extraordinary. Who could have written this letter?"
           
          "That's just what I'm asking myself."
           
          "It could not - excuse me - have been your wife?"
           
          "No, no. Mary would never do a thing like that. And anyway why should she sign it with my name? Oh no, she would have told me if she'd done so, prepared me for your visit."
           
          "Then you have no idea why anyone might have sent this letter?"
           
          "No, indeed."
           
          "Have you no knowledge, Mr Restarick, as to what the matter might be on which in this letter you apparently want to engage me?"
           
          "How could I have an idea?"
           
          "Excuse me," said Poirot, "you have not yet completely read this letter. You will notice at the bottom of the first page after the signature, there is a small p.t.o." Restarick turned the letter over. At the top of the next page the typewriting continued.
           
          The matter on which I wish to consult you concerns my daughter, Norma.
           
          Restarick's manner changed. His face darkened.
           
          "So that's it! But who could know - who could possibly meddle in this matter. Who knows about it?"
           
          "Could it be a way of urging you to consult me? Some well-meaning friend? You have really no idea who the writer may have been?"
           
          "I've no idea whatever."
           
          "And you are not in trouble over a daughter of yours - a daughter named Norma?"
           
          Restarick said slowly:
           
          "I have a daughter named Norma. My only daughter." His voice changed slightly as he said the last words.
           
          "And she is in trouble, difficulty of some kind?"
           
          "Not that I know of." But he hesitated slightly as he spoke the words.
           
          Poirot leaned forward.
           
          "I don't think that is exactly right, Mr Restarick. I think there is some trouble or difficulty concerning your daughter."
           
          "Why should you think that? Has someone spoken to you on the subject?"
           
          "I was going entirely by your intonation, Monsieur. Many people," added Hercule Poirot, "are in trouble over daughters at the present date. They have a genius, young ladies, for getting into various kinds of trouble and difficulty. It is possible that the same obtains here."
           
          Restarick was silent for some few moments, drumming with his fingers on the desk.
           
          "Yes, I am worried about Norma," he said at last. "She is a difficult girl. Neurotic, inclined to be hysterical. I - unfortunately I don't know her very well."
           
          "Trouble, no doubt, over a young man?"
           
          "In a way, yes, but that is not entirely what is worrying me. I think -" he looked appraisingly at Poirot. "Am I to take it that you are a man of discretion?"
           
          "I should be very little good in my profession if I were not."
           
          "It is a case, you see, of wanting my daughter found."
           
          "Ah?"
           
          "She came home last weekend as she usually does to our house in the country. She went back on Sunday night ostensibly to the flat which she occupies in common with two other girls, but I now find that she did not go there. She must have gone - somewhere else."
           
          "In fact, she has disappeared?"
           
          "It sounds too much of a melodramatic statement, but it does amount to that. I expect there's a perfectly natural explanation, but - well, I suppose any father would be worried. She hasn't rung up, you see, or given any explanation to the girls with whom she shares her flat."
           
          "They too are worried?"
           
          "No, I should not say so. I think - well, I think they take such things easily enough. Girls are very independent. More so than when I left England fifteen years ago."
           
          "What about the young man of whom you say you do not approve? Can she have gone away with him?"
           
          "I devoutly hope not. It's possible, but I don't - my wife doesn't think so. You saw him, I believe, the day you came to our house to call on my uncle -"
           
          "Ah yes, I think I know the young man of whom you speak. A very handsome young man but not, if I may say so, a man of whom a father would approve. I noticed that your wife was not pleased, either."
           
          "My wife is quite certain that he came to the house that day hoping to escape observation."
           
          "He knows, perhaps, that he is not welcome there?"
           
          "He knows all right," said Restarick grimly.
           
          "Do you not then think that it is only too likely your daughter may have joined him?"
           
          "I don't know what to think. I didn't - at first."
           
          "You have been to the police."
           
          "No."
           
          "In the case of anyone who is missing, it is usually much better to go to the police. They too are discreet and they have many means at their disposal which persons like myself have not."
           
          "I don't want to go to the police. It's my daughter, man, you understand? My daughter. If she's chosen to - to go away for a short time and not let us know, well, that's up to her. There's no reason to believe that she's in any danger or anything like that. I - I just want to know for my own satisfaction where she is."
           
          "Is it possible, Mr Restarick - I hope I am not unduly presuming, that that is not the only thing that is worrying you about your daughter?"
           
          "Why should you think there was anything else?"
           
          "Because the mere fact that a girl is absent for a few days without telling her parents, or the friends with whom she is living, where she is going, is not particularly unusual nowadays. It is that, taken in conjunction with something else, I think, which has caused you this alarm."
           
          "Well, perhaps you're right. It's -" he looked doubtfully at Poirot. "It is very hard to speak of these things to strangers."
           
          "Not really," said Poirot. "It is infinitely easier to speak to strangers of such things than it would be to speak of them to friends or acquaintances. Surely you must agree to that?"
           
          "Perhaps. Perhaps. I can see what you mean. Well, I will admit I am upset about my girl. You see she - she's not quite like other girls and there's been something already that has definitely worried me - worried us both."
           
          Poirot said: "Your daughter, perhaps, is at that difficult age of young girlhood, an emotional adolescence when, quite frankly, they are capable of performing actions for which they are hardly to be held responsible. Do not take it amiss if I venture to make a surmise. Your daughter perhaps resents having a stepmother?"
           
          "That is unfortunately true. And yet she has no reason to do so, M. Poirot. It is not as though my first wife and I had recently parted. The parting took place many years ago." He paused and then said, "I might as well speak frankly to you. After all, there has been no concealment about the matter. My first wife and I drifted apart. I need not mince matters. I had met someone else, someone with whom I was quite infatuated. I left England and went to South Africa with the other woman. My wife did not approve of divorce and I did not ask her for one. I made suitable financial provision for my wife and for the child - she was only five years old at the time -"
           
          He paused and then went on: "Looking back, I can see that I had been dissatisfied with life for some time. I'd been yearning to travel. At that period of my life I hated being tied down to an office desk. My brother reproached me several times with not taking more interest in the family business, now that I had come in with him. He said that I was not pulling my weight. But I didn't want that sort of life. I was restless. I wanted an adventurous life. I wanted to see the world and wild places..."
           
          He broke off abruptly.
           
          "Anyway - you don't want to hear the story of my life. I went to South Africa and Louise went with me. It wasn't a success. I'll admit that straight away. I was in love with her but we quarrelled incessantly. She hated life in South Africa. She wanted to get back to London and Paris - all the sophisticated places. We parted only about a year after we arrived there."
           
          He sighed.
           
          "Perhaps I ought to have gone back then, back to the tame life that I disliked the idea of so much. But I didn't. I don't know whether my wife would have had me back or not. Probably she would have considered it her duty to do so. She was a great woman for doing her duty."
           
          Poirot noted the slight bitterness that ran through that sentence.
           
          "But I ought to have thought more about Norma, I suppose. Well, there it was. The child was safely with her mother. Financial arrangements had been made. I wrote to her occasionally and sent her presents, but I never once thought of going back to England and seeing her. That was not entirely blameworthy on my part. I had adopted a different way of life and I thought it would be merely unsettling for the child to have a father who came and went, and perhaps disturbed her own peace of mind. Anyway, let's say I thought I was acting for the best."
           
          Restarick's words came fast now. It was as though he was feeling a definite solace in being able to pour out his story to a sympathetic listener. It was a reaction that Poirot had often noticed before and he encouraged it.
           
          "You never wished to come home on your own account?"
           
          Restarick shook his head very definitely. "No. You see, I was living the kind of life I liked, the kind of life I was meant for. I went from South Africa to East Africa. I was doing very well financially, everything I touched seemed to prosper, projects with which I was associated, occasionally with other people, sometimes on my own, all went well. I used to go off into the bush and trek. That was the life I'd always wanted. I am by nature an out-of-door man. Perhaps that's why when I was married to my first wife I felt trapped, held down. No, I enjoyed my freedom and I'd no wish to go back to the conventional type of life that I'd led here."
           
          "But you did come back in the end?"
           
          Restarick sighed. "Yes. I did come back. Ah well, one grows old, I suppose. Also, another man and I had made a very good strike. We'd secured a concession which might have very important consequences. It would need negotiation in London. There I could have depended on my brother to act, but my brother died. I was still a partner in the firm. I could return if I chose and see to things myself. It was the first time I had thought of doing so. Of returning, I mean, to City life."
           
          "Perhaps your wife - your second wife -"
           
          "Yes, you may have something there. I had been married to Mary just a month or two when my brother died. Mary was born in South Africa but she had been to England several times and she liked the life there. She liked particularly the idea of having an English garden!
           
          "And I? Well, for the first time perhaps I felt I would like life in England, too. And I thought of Norma as well. Her mother had died two years earlier. I talked to Mary about it all, and she was quite willing to help me make a home for my daughter. The prospects all seemed good and so -" he smiled, " - and so I came home."
           
          Poirot looked at the portrait that hung behind Restarick's head. It was in a better light here than it had been at the house in the country. It showed very plainly the man who was sitting at the desk, there were the distinctive features, the obstinacy of the chin, the quizzical eyebrows, the poise of the head, but the portrait had one thing that the man sitting in the chair beneath it lacked. Youth!
           
          Another thought occurred to Poirot.
           
          Why had Andrew Restarick moved the portrait from the country to his London office? The two portraits of him and his wife had been companion portraits done at the same time and by that particular fashionable artist of the day whose speciality was portrait painting. It would have been more natural, Poirot thought, to have left them together, as they had been meant to be originally. But Restarick had moved one portrait, his own, to his office. Was it a kind of vanity on his part - a wish to display himself as a City man, as someone important to the City? Yet he was a man who had spent his time in wild places, who professed to prefer wild places. Or did he perhaps do it in order to keep before his mind himself in his City personality. Did he feel the need of reinforcement.
           
          "Or, of course," thought Poirot, "it could be simple vanity!"
           
          "Even I myself," said Poirot to himself, in an unusual fit of modesty, "even I myself am capable of vanity on occasions."
           
          The short silence, of which both men had seemed unaware, was broken. Restarick spoke apologetically.
           
          "You must forgive me, M. Poirot. I seem to have been boring you with the story of my life."
           
          "There is nothing to excuse, Mr Restarick. You have been talking really only of your life as it may have affected that of your daughter. You are much disquieted about your daughter. But I do not think that you have yet told me the real reason. You want her found, you say?"
           
          "Yes, I want her found."
           
          "You want her found, yes, but do you want her found by me? Ah, do not hesitate. La politesse - it is very necessary in life, but it is not necessary here. Listen. I tell you, if you want your daughter found I advise you, I - Hercule Poirot - to go to the police for they have the facilities. And from my own knowledge they can be discreet."
           
          "I won't go to the police unless - well, unless I get very desperate."
           
          "You would rather go to a private agent?"
           
          "Yes. But you see, I don't know anything about private agents. I don't know who - who can be trusted. I don't know who -"
           
          "And what do you know about me?"
           
          "I do know something about you. I know, for instance, that you held a responsible position in Intelligence during the war, since, in fact, my own uncle vouches for you. That is an admitted fact."
           
          The faintly cynical expression on Poirot's face was not perceived by Restarick. The admitted fact was, as Poirot was well aware, a complete illusion - although Restarick must have known how undependable Sir Roderick was in the matter of memory and eyesight - he had swallowed Poirot's own account of himself, hook, line and sinker. Poirot did not disillusion him. It merely confirmed him in his long-held belief that you should never believe anything anyone said without first checking it. Suspect everybody, had been for many years, if not his whole life, one of his first axioms.
           
          "Let me reassure you," said Poirot. "I have been throughout my career exceptionally successful. I have been indeed in many ways unequalled."
           
          Restarick looked less reassured by this than he might have been! Indeed, to an Englishman, a man who praised himself in such terms aroused some misgivings.
           
          He said: "What do you feel yourself, M. Poirot? Have you confidence that you can find my daughter?"
           
          "Probably not as quickly as the police could do, but yes, I shall find her."
           
          "And - and if you do -"
           
          "But if you wish me to find her, Mr Restarick, you must tell me all the circumstances."
           
          "But I have told them to you. The time, the place, where she ought to be. I can give you a list of her friends..."
           
          Poirot was making some violent shakings of his head. "No, no, I suggest you tell me the truth."
           
          "Do you suggest I haven't told you the truth?"
           
          "You have not told me all of it. Of that I am assured. What are you afraid of? What are the unknown facts - the facts that I have to know if I am to have success. Your daughter dislikes her stepmother. That is plain. There is nothing strange about that. It is a very natural reaction. You must remember that she may have secretly idealised you for many many years. That is quite possible in the case of a broken marriage where a child has had a severe blow in her affections. Yes, yes, I know what I am talking about. You say a child forgets. That is true. Your daughter could have forgotten you in the sense that when she saw you again she might not remember your face or your voice. She would make her own image of you. You went away. She wanted you to come back. Her mother, no doubt, discouraged her from talking about you, and therefore she thought about you perhaps all the more. You mattered to her all the more. And because she could not talk about you to her own mother she had what is a very natural reaction with a child - the blaming of the parent who remains for the absence of the parent who has gone. She said to herself something in the nature of 'Father was fond of me. It's Mother he didn't like', and from that was born a kind of idealisation, a kind of secret liaison between you and her. What had happened was not her father's fault. She will not believe it!
           
          "Oh yes, that often happens, I assure you. I know something of the psychology. So when she learns that you are coming home, that you and she will be reunited, many memories that she has pushed aside and not thought of for years return. Her father is coming back! He and she will be happy together! She hardly realises the stepmother, perhaps, until she sees her. And then she is violently jealous. It is most natural, I assure you. She is violently jealous partly because your wife is a good-looking woman, sophisticated, and well poised, which is a thing girls often resent because they frequently lack confidence in themselves. She herself is possibly gauche with perhaps an inferiority complex. So when she sees her competent and good-looking stepmother, quite possibly she hates her; but hates her as an adolescent girl who is still half a child might do."
           
          "Well -" Restarick hesitated. "That is more or less what the doctor said when we consulted him - I mean -"
           
          "Aha," said Poirot, "so you consulted a doctor? You must have had some reason, is it not so, for calling in a doctor?"
           
          "Nothing really."
           
          "Ah no, you cannot say that to Hercule Poirot. It is not nothing. It was something serious and you had better tell me, because if I know just what has been in this girl's mind, I shall make more progress. Things will go quicker."
           
          Restarick was silent for several moments, then he made up his mind.
           
          "This is in absolute confidence, M. Poirot? I can rely on you - I have your assurance as to that?"
           
          "By all means. What was the trouble?"
           
          "I cannot be - be sure."
           
          "Your daughter entered into some action against your wife? Something more than being merely childishly rude or saying unpleasant things. It was something worse than that - something more serious. Did she perhaps attack her physically?"
           
          "No, it was not an attack - not a physical attack but - nothing was proved."
           
          "No, no. We will admit that."
           
          "My wife became far from well -" He hesitated.
           
          "Ah," said Poirot. "Yes, I see... And what was the nature of her illness? Digestive, possibly? A form of enteritis?"
           
          "You're quick, M. Poirot. You're very quick. Yes, it was digestive. This complaint of my wife's was puzzling, because she had always had excellent health. Finally they sent her to hospital for 'observation', as they call it. A check up."
           
          "And the result?"
           
          "I don't think they were completely satisfied... She appeared to regain her health completely and was sent home in due course. But the trouble recurred. We went carefully over the meals she had, the cooking. She seemed to be suffering from a form of intestinal poisoning for which there appeared to be no cause. A further step was taken, tests were made of the dishes she ate. By taking samples of everything, it was definitely proved that a certain substance had been administered in various dishes. In each case it was a dish of which only my wife had partaken."
           
          "In plain language somebody was giving her arsenic. Is that right?"
           
          "Quite right. In small doses which would in the end have a cumulative effect."
           
          "You suspected your daughter?"
           
          "No."
           
          "I think you did. Who else could have done it? You suspected your daughter."
           
          Restarick gave a deep sigh.
           
          "Frankly, yes."
           
          II
           
          When Poirot arrived home, George was awaiting him
           
          "A woman named Edith rang up, sir -"
           
          "Edith?" Poirot frowned.
           
          "She is, I gather, in the service of Mrs Oliver. She asked me to inform you that Mrs Oliver is in St Giles' Hospital."
           
          "What has happened to her?"
           
          "I understand she has been - er - coshed." George did not add the latter part of the message, which had been "-and you tell him it's been all his fault."
           
          Poirot clicked his tongue. "I warned her - I was uneasy last night when I rang her up, and there was no answer. Les Femmes!"
           
          Chapter 12
           
          "Let's buy a peacock," said Mrs Oliver suddenly and unexpectedly. She did not open her eyes as she made this remark, and her voice was weak though full of indignation.
           
          Three people brought startled eyes to bear upon her. She made a further statement.
           
          "Hit on the head."
           
          She opened badly focused eyes and endeavoured to make out where she was.
           
          The first thing she saw was a face entirely strange to her. A young man who was writing in a notebook. He held the pencil poised in his hand.
           
          "Policeman," said Mrs Oliver decisively.
           
          "I beg your pardon. Madam?"
           
          "I said you were a policeman," said Mrs Oliver. "Am I right?"
           
          "Yes, Madam."
           
          "Criminal assault," said Mrs Oliver and closed her eyes in a satisfied manner. When she opened them again, she took in her surroundings more fully. She was in a bed, one of those rather high hygienic looking beds, she decided. The kind that you shoot up and down and round and about. She was not in her own home. She looked round and decided on her environment.
           
          "Hospital, or could be nursing home," she said.
           
          A sister was standing with an air of authority at the door, and a nurse was standing by her bed. She identified a fourth figure. "Nobody," said Mrs Oliver, "could mistake those moustaches. What are you doing here, M. Poirot?"
           
          Hercule Poirot advanced towards the bed. "I told you to be careful, Madame," he said.
           
          "Anyone might lose their way," said Mrs Oliver, somewhat obscurely, and added, "my head aches."
           
          "With good cause. As you surmise, you were hit on the head."
           
          "Yes. By the Peacock."
           
          The policeman stirred uneasily then said, "Excuse me. Madam, you say you were assaulted by a peacock?"
           
          "Of course. I'd had an uneasy feeling for some time - you know, atmosphere." Mrs Oliver tried to wave her hand in an appropriate gesture to describe atmosphere, and winced. "Ouch," she said, "I'd better not try that again."
           
          "My patient must not get overexcited," said the sister with disapproval.
           
          "Can you tell me where this assault occurred?"
           
          "I haven't the faintest idea. I'd lost my way. I was coming from a kind of studio. Very badly kept. Dirty. The other young man hadn't shaved for days. A greasy leather jacket."
           
          "Is this the man who assaulted you?"
           
          "No, it's another one."
           
          "If you could just tell me -"
           
          "I am telling you, aren't I? I'd followed him, you see, all the way from the cafй - only I'm not very good at following people. No practice. It's much more difficult than you'd think."
           
          Her eyes focused on the policeman. "But I suppose you know all about that. You have courses - in following people, I mean? Oh, never mind, it doesn't matter. You see," she said, speaking with sudden rapidity, "it's quite simple. I had got off at The World's End, I think it was, and naturally I thought he had stayed with the others - or gone the other way. But instead, he came up behind me."
           
          "Who was this?"
           
          "The Peacock," said Mrs Oliver, "and he startled me, you see. It does startle you when you find things are the wrong way round. I mean he was following you instead of you following him - only it was earlier - and I had a sort of uneasy feeling. In fact, you know, I was afraid. I don't know why. He spoke quite politely but I was afraid. Anyway there it was and he said 'Come up and see the studio' and so I came up rather a rickety staircase. A kind of ladder staircase and there was this other young man - the dirty young man - and he was painting a picture, and the girl was acting as model. She was quite clean. Rather pretty really. And so there we were and they were quite nice and polite, and then I said I must be getting home, and they told me the right way to get back to the King's Road. But they can't really have told me the right way. Of course I might have made a mistake. You know, when people tell you second left and third right, you sometimes do it the wrong way round. At least I do. Anyway, I got into a rather peculiar slummy part quite close to the river. The afraid feeling had gone away by then. I must have been quite off my guard when the Peacock hit me."
           
          "I think she's delirious," said the nurse in an explanatory voice.
           
          "No, I'm not," said Mrs Oliver. "I know what I'm talking about."
           
          The nurse opened her mouth, caught the sister's admonitory eye and shut it again quickly.
           
          "Velvets and satins and long curly hair," said Mrs Oliver.
           
          "A peacock in satin? A real peacock, Madam. You thought you saw a peacock near the river in Chelsea?"
           
          "A real peacock?" said Mrs Oliver. "Of course not. How silly. What would a real peacock be doing down on Chelsea Embankment."
           
          Nobody appeared to have an answer to this question.
           
          "He struts," said Mrs Oliver, "that's why I nicknamed him a peacock. Shows off, you know. Vain, I should think. Proud of his looks. Perhaps a lot of other things as well." She looked at Poirot. "David something. You know who I mean."
           
          "You say this young man of the name of David assaulted you by striking you on the head?"
           
          "Yes I do."
           
          Hercule Poirot spoke. "You saw him?"
           
          "I didn't see him," said Mrs Oliver, "I didn't know anything about it. I just thought I heard something behind me, and before I could turn my head to look - it all happened! Just as if a ton of bricks or something fell on me. I think I'll go to sleep now," she added.
           
          She moved her head slightly, made a grimace of pain, and relapsed into what appeared to be a perfectly satisfactory unconsciousness.
           
          Chapter 13
           
          Poirot seldom used the key to his flat. Instead, in an old-fashioned manner, he pressed the bell and waited for that admirable factotum, George, to open the door. On this occasion, however, after his visit to the hospital, the door was opened to him by Miss Lemon.
           
          "You've got two visitors," said Miss Lemon, pitching her voice in an admirable tone, not as carrying as a whisper but a good many notes lower than her usual pitch. "One's Mr Goby and the other is an old gentleman called Sir Roderick Horsefield. I don't know which you want to see first."
           
          "Sir Roderick Horsefield," mused Poirot. He considered this with his head on one side, looking rather like a robin while he decided how this latest development was likely to affect the general picture. Mr Goby, however, materialised with his usual suddenness from the small room which was sacred to Miss Lemon's typewriting and where she had evidently kept him in storage.
           
          Poirot removed his overcoat. Miss Lemon hung it up on the hall-stand, and Mr Goby, as was his fashion, addressed the back of Miss Lemon's head.
           
          "I'll have a cup of tea in the kitchen with George," said Mr Goby. "My time is my own. I'll keep."
           
          He disappeared obligingly into the kitchen.
           
          Poirot went into his sitting-room where Sir Roderick was pacing up and down full of vitality.
           
          "Run you down, my boy," he said genially. "Wonderful thing the telephone."
           
          "You remembered my name? I am gratified."
           
          "Well, I didn't exactly remember your name," said Sir Roderick. "Names, you know, have never been my strong point. Never forget a face," he ended proudly. "No. I rang up Scotland Yard."
           
          "Oh!" Poirot looked faintly startled, though reflecting that that was the sort of thing that Sir Roderick would do.
           
          "Asked me who I wanted to speak to. I said, put me on to the top. That's the thing to do in life, my boy. Never accept second in charge. No good. Go to the top, that's what I say. I said who I was, mind you. Said I wanted to speak to the top brass and I got on to it in the end. Very civil fellow. Told him I wanted the address of a chap in Allied Intelligence who was out with me at a certain place in France at a certain date. The chap seemed a bit at sea, so I said: 'You know who I mean.' A Frenchman, I said, or a Belgian. Belgian, weren't you? I said: 'He's got a Christian name something like Achilles. It's not Achilles,' I said, 'but it's like Achilles. Little chap,' I said, 'big moustaches.' And then he seemed to catch on, and he said you'd be in the telephone book, he thought. I said that's all right, but I said: 'He won't be listed under Achilles or Hercules (as he said it was), will he? and I can't remember his second name.' So then he gave it me. Very civil sort of fellow. Very civil, I must say."
           
          "I am delighted to see you," said Poirot, sparing a hurried thought for what might be said to him later by Sir Roderick's telephone acquaintance. Fortunately it was not likely to have been quite the top brass.
           
          It was presumably someone with whom he was already acquainted, and whose job it was to produce civility on tap for distinguished persons of a bygone day.
           
          "Anyway," said Sir Roderick, "I got here."
           
          "I am delighted. Let me offer you some refreshment. Tea, a grenadine, a whisky and soda, some sirop de cassis -"
           
          "Good lord, no," said Sir Roderick, alarmed at the mention of sirop de cassis. "I'll take whisky for choice. Not that I'm allowed it," he added, "but doctors are all fools, as we know. All they care for is stopping you having anything you've a fancy for."
           
          Poirot rang for George and gave him the proper instructions. The whisky and the siphon were placed at Sir Roderick's elbow and George withdrew.
           
          "Now," said Poirot, "what can I do for you?"
           
          "Got a job for you, old boy."
           
          After the lapse of time, he seemed even more convinced of the close liaison between him and Poirot in the past, which was as well, thought Poirot, since it would produce an even greater dependence on his, Poirot's, capabilities by Sir Roderick's nephew.
           
          "Papers," said Sir Roderick, dropping his voice. "Lost some papers and I've got to find 'em, see? So I thought what with my eyes not being as good as they were, and the memory being a trifle off key sometimes, I'd better go to someone in the know. See? You came along in the nick of time the other day, just in time to be useful, because I've got to cough 'em up, you understand."
           
          "It sounds most interesting," said Poirot. "What are these papers, if I may ask?"
           
          "Well, I suppose if you're going to find them, you'll have to ask, won't you? Mind you, they're very secret and confidential. Top secret - or they were once. And it seems as though they are going to be again. An inter-change of letters, it was. Not of any particular importance at the time - or it was thought they were of no importance, but then of course politics change. You know the way it is. They go round and face the other way. You know how it was when the war broke out. None of us knew whether we were on our head or on our heels. One war we're pals with the Italians, next war we're enemies. I don't know which of them all was the worst. First war the Japanese were our dear allies, and the next war there they are blowing up Pearl Harbour! Never knew where you were! Start one way with the Russians, and finish the opposite way. I tell you, Poirot, nothing's more difficult nowadays than the question of allies. They can change overnight."
           
          "And you have lost some papers," said Poirot, recalling the old man to the subject of his visit.
           
          "Yes. I've got a lot of papers, you know, and I've dug 'em out lately. I had 'em put away safely. In a bank, as a matter of fact, but I got 'em all out and I began sorting through them because I thought why not write my memoirs. All the chaps are doing it nowadays. We've had Montgomery and Alanbrooke and Auchinleck all shooting their mouths off in print, mostly saying what they thought of the other generals. We've even had old Moran, a respectable physician, blabbing about his important patient. Don't know what things will come to next! Anyway, there it is, and I thought I'd be quite interested myself in telling a few facts about some people I knew! Why shouldn't I have a go as well as everyone else? I was in it all."
           
          "I am sure it could be a matter of much interest to people," said Poirot.
           
          "Ah-ha, yes! One knew a lot of people in the news. Everyone looked at them with awe. They didn't know they were complete fools, but I knew. My goodness, the mistakes some of those brass-hats made - you'd be surprised. So I got out my papers, and I had the little girl help me sort 'em out. Nice little girl, that, and quite bright. Doesn't know English very well, but apart from that, she's very bright and helpful. I'd salted away a lot of stuff, but everything was in a bit of a muddle. The point of the whole thing is, the papers I wanted weren't there."
           
          "Weren't there?"
           
          "No. We thought we'd given it a miss by mistake to begin with, but we went over it again and I can tell you, Poirot, a lot of stuff seemed to me to have been pinched. Some of it wasn't important. Actually, the stuff I was looking for wasn't particularly important - I mean, nobody had thought it was, otherwise I suppose I shouldn't have been allowed to keep it. But anyway, these particular letters weren't there."
           
          "I wish of course to be discreet," said Poirot, "but can you tell me at all the nature of these letters you refer to?"
           
          "Don't know that I can, old boy. The nearest I can go is of somebody who's shooting off his mouth nowadays about what he did and what he said in the past. But he's not speaking the truth, and these letters just show exactly how much of a liar he is! Mind you, I don't suppose they'd be published now. We'll just send him nice copies of them, and tell him this is exactly what he did say at the time, and that we've got it in writing. I shouldn't be surprised if - well, things went a bit differently after that. See? I hardly need ask that, need I? You're familiar with all that kind of talky-talky."
           
          "You're quite right, Sir Roderick. I know exactly the kind of thing you mean, but you see also that it is not easy to help you recover something if one does not know what that something is, and where it is likely to be now."
           
          "First things first: I want to know who pinched 'em because you see that's the important point. There may be more top secret stuff in my little collection, and I want to know who's tampering with it."
           
          "Have you any ideas yourself?"
           
          "You think I ought to have, hell?"
           
          "Well, it would seem that the principal possibility -"
           
          "I know. You want me to say it's the little girl. Well, I don't think it is the little girl. She says she didn't, and I believe her. Understand?"
           
          "Yes," said Poirot with a slight sigh, "I understand."
           
          "For one thing she's too young. She wouldn't know these things were important. It's before her time."
           
          "Someone else might have instructed her as to that." Poirot pointed out.
           
          "Yes, yes, that's true enough. But it's too obvious as well."
           
          Poirot sighed. He doubted if it was any use insisting in view of Sir Roderick's obvious partiality. "Who else had access?"
           
          "Andrew and Mary, of course, but I doubt if Andrew would even be interested in such things. Anyway, he's always been a very decent boy. Always was. Not that I've ever known him very well. Used to come for the holidays once or twice with his brother and that's about all. Of course, he ditched his wife, and went off with an attractive bit of goods to South Africa, but that might happen to any man, especially with a wife like Grace. Not that I ever saw much of her, either. Kind of woman who looked down her nose and was full of good works. Anyway you can't imagine a chap like Andrew being a spy. As for Mary, she seems all right. Never looks at anything but a rose bush as far as I can make out. There's a gardener but he's eighty-three and has lived in the village all his life, and there are a couple of women always dodging about the house making a noise with Hoovers, but I can't see them in the role of spies either. So you see it's got to be an outsider. Of course Mary wears a wig," went on Sir Roderick rather inconsequently.
           
          "I mean it might make you think she was a spy because she wore a wig, but that's not the case. She lost her hair in a fever when she was eighteen. Pretty bad luck for a young woman. I'd no idea she wore a wig to begin with but a rose bush caught in her hair one day and whisked it sideways. Yes, very bad luck."
           
          "I thought there was something a little odd about the way she had arranged her hair," said Poirot.
           
          "Anyway, the best secret agents never wear wigs," Sir Roderick informed him. "Poor devils have to go to plastic surgeons and get their faces altered. But someone's been mucking about with my private papers."
           
          "You don't think that you may perhaps have placed them in some different container - in a drawer or a different file. When did you see them last?"
           
          "I handled these things about a year ago. I remember I thought then, they'd make rather good copy, and I noted those particular letters. Now they're gone. Somebody's taken them."
           
          "You do not suspect your nephew Andrew, his wife or the domestic staff. What about the daughter?"
           
          "Norma? Well Norma's a bit off her onion, I'd say. I mean she might be one of those kleptomaniacs who take people's things without knowing they're taking them but I don't see her fumbling about among my papers."
           
          "Then what do you think?"
           
          "Well, you've been in the house. You saw what the house is like. Anyone can walk in and out any time they like. We don't lock our doors. We never have."
           
          "Do you lock the door of your own room - if you go up to London, for instance?"
           
          "I never thought of it as necessary. I do now of course, but what's the use of that? Too late. Anyway, I've only an ordinary key, fits any of the doors. Someone must have come in from outside. Why nowadays that's how all the burglaries take place. People walk in in the middle of the day, stump up the stairs, go into any room they like, rifle the jewel box, go out again, and nobody sees them or cares who they are. They probably look like mods or rockers or beatniks or whatever they call these chaps nowadays with the long hair and the dirty nails. I've seen more than one of them prowling about. One doesn't like to say 'Who the devil are you?' You never know which sex they are, which is embarrassing. The place crawls with them. I suppose they're Norma's friends. Wouldn't have been allowed in in the old days. But you turn them out of the house, and then you find out it's Viscount Endersleigh or Lady Charlotte Marjoribanks. Don't know where you are nowadays," He paused. "If anyone can get to the bottom of it, you can, Poirot." He swallowed the last mouthful of whisky and got up.
           
          "Well, that's that. It's up to you. You'll take it on, won't you?"
           
          "I will do my best," said Poirot.
           
          The front-door bell rang.
           
          "That's the little girl," said Sir Roderick. "Punctual to the minute. Wonderful, isn't it? Couldn't go about London without her, you know. Blind as a bat. Can't see to cross the road."
           
          "Can you not have glasses?"
           
          "I've got some somewhere, but they're always falling off my nose or else I lose them. Besides, I don't like glasses. I've never had glasses. When I was sixty-five I could see to read without glasses and that's pretty good."
           
          "Nothing," said Hercule Poirot, "lasts for ever."
           
          George ushered in Sonia. She was looking extremely pretty. Her slightly shy manner became her very well, Poirot thought. He moved forward with Gallic empressement.
           
          "Enchantй, Mademoiselle," he said, bowing over her hand.
           
          "I'm not late, am I, Sir Roderick," she said, looking past him. "I have not kept you waiting. Please I hope not."
           
          "Exact to the minute, little girl," said Sir Roderick. "All ship-shape and Bristol fashion," he added.
           
          Sonia looked slightly perplexed.
           
          "Made a good tea, I hope," Sir Roderick went on. "I told you, you know, to have a good tea, buy yourself some buns or йclairs or whatever it is young ladies like nowadays, eh? You obeyed orders, I hope."
           
          "No, not exactly. I took the time to buy a pair of shoes. Look, they are pretty, are they not?" She stuck out a foot.
           
          It was certainly a very pretty foot. Sir Roderick beamed at it.
           
          "Well, we must go and catch our train," he said. "I may be old-fashioned but I'm all for trains. Start to time and get there on time, or they should do. But these cars, they get in a queue in the rush hour and you may idle the time away for about an hour and a half more than you need. Cars! Pah!"
           
          "Shall I ask George to get you a taxi," asked Hercule Poirot. "It will be no trouble, I assure you."
           
          "I have a taxi already waiting," said Sonia.
           
          "There you are," said Sir Roderick, "you see, she thinks of everything." He patted her on the shoulder. She looked at him in a way that Hercule Poirot fully appreciated.
           
          Poirot accompanied them to the hall door and took a polite leave of them. Mr Goby had come out of the kitchen and was standing in the hall giving, it could be said, an excellent performance of a man who had come to see about the gas.
           
          George shut the hall door as soon as they had disappeared into the lift, and turned to meet Poirot's gaze.
           
          "And what is your opinion of that young lady, George, may I ask?" said Poirot.
           
          It was sometimes his habit to seek information from George. On certain points he always said George was infallible.
           
          "Well, sir," said George, "if I might put it that way, if you'll allow me, I would say he'd got it badly, sir. All over her as you might say."
           
          "I think you are right," said Hercule Poirot.
           
          "It's not unusual of course with gentlemen of that age. I remember Lord Mountbryan. He'd had a lot of experience in his life and you'd say he was as fly as anyone. But you'd be surprised. A young woman came to give him a massage. You'd be surprised at what he gave her. An evening frock, and a pretty bracelet. Forget-me-nots, it was. Turquoise and diamonds. Not too expensive but costing quite a pretty penny all the same. Then a fur wrap - not mink, Russian ermine, and a petty point evening bag. After that her brother got into trouble, debt or something, though whether she ever had a brother I sometimes wondered. Lord Mountbryan gave her the money to square it - she was so upset about it! All platonic, mind you, too. Gentlemen seem to lose their sense that way when they get to that age. It's the clinging ones they go for, not the bold type."
           
          "I have no doubt that you are quite right, Georges," said Poirot. "It is all the same not a complete answer to my question. I asked what you thought of the young lady."
           
          "Oh, the young lady... Well, sir, I wouldn't like to say definitely, but she's quite a definite type. There's never anything that you could put your finger on. But they know what they're doing, I'd say."
           
          Poirot entered his sitting-room and Mr Goby followed him, obeying Poirot's gesture. Mr Goby sat down on an upright chair in his usual attitude. Knees together, toes turned in. He took a rather dog-eared little notebook from his pocket, opened it carefully and then proceeded to survey the soda water siphon severely.
           
          "Re the backgrounds you asked me to look up.
           
          "Restarick family, perfectly respectable and of good standing. No scandal. The father, James Patrick Restarick, said to be a sharp man over a bargain. Business has been in the family three generations. Grandfather founded it, father enlarged it, Simon Restarick kept it going. Simon Restarick had coronary trouble two years ago, health declined. Died of coronary thrombosis, about a year ago.
           
          "Younger brother Andrew Restarick came into the business soon after he came down from Oxford, married Miss Grace Baldwin. One daughter, Norma. Left his wife and went out to South Africa. A Miss Birell went with him. No divorce proceedings. Mrs Andrew Restarick died two and a half years ago. Had been an invalid for some time. Miss Norma Restarick was a boarder at Meadowfield Girls' School. Nothing against her."
           
          Allowing his eyes to sweep across Hercule Poirot's face, Mr Goby observed, "In fact everything about the family seems quite O.K. and according to Cocker."
           
          "No black sheep, no mental instability?"
           
          "It doesn't appear so."
           
          "Disappointing," said Poirot.
           
          Mr Goby let this pass. He cleared his throat, licked his finger, and turned over a leaf of his little book.
           
          "David Baker. Unsatisfactory record. Been on probation twice. Police are inclined to be interested in him. He's been on the fringe of several rather dubious affairs, thought to have been concerned in an important art robbery but no proof. He's one of the arty lot. No particular means of subsistence but he does quite well. Prefers girls with money. Not above living on some of the girls who are keen on him. Not above being paid off by their fathers either. Thorough bad lot if you ask me but enough brains to keep himself out of trouble."
           
          Mr Goby shot a sudden glance at Poirot.
           
          "You met him?"
           
          "Yes," said Poirot.
           
          "What conclusions did you form, if I may ask?"
           
          "The same as you," said Poirot. "A gaudy creature," he added thoughtfully.
           
          "Appeals to women," said Mr Goby.
           
          "Trouble is nowadays they won't look twice at a nice hard-working lad. They prefer the bad lots - the scroungers. They usually say 'he hasn't had a chance; poor boy'."
           
          "Strutting about like peacocks," said Poirot.
           
          "Well, you might put it like that," said Mr Goby, rather doubtfully.
           
          "Do you think he'd use a cosh on anyone?"
           
          Mr Goby thought, then very slowly shook his head at the electric fire.
           
          "Nobody's accused him of anything like that. I don't say he'd be past it, but I wouldn't say it was his line. He is a smooth spoken type, not one for the rough stuff."
           
          "No," said Poirot, "no, I should not have thought so. He could be bought off? That was your opinion?"
           
          "He'd drop any girl like a hot coal if it was made worth his while."
           
          Poirot nodded. He was remembering something. Andrew Restarick turning a cheque towards him so that he could read the signature on it. It was not only the signature that Poirot had read, it was the person to whom the cheque was made out. It had been made out to David Baker and it was for a large sum. Would David Baker demur at taking such a cheque, Poirot wondered. He thought not on the whole. Mr Goby clearly was of that opinion. Undesirable young men had been bought off in any time or age, so had undesirable young women. Sons had sworn and daughters had wept but money was money.
           
          To Norma, David had been urging marriage. Was he sincere? Could it be that he really cared for Norma? If so, he would not be easily paid off. He had sounded genuine enough. Norma no doubt believed him genuine. Andrew Restarick and Mr Goby and Hercule Poirot thought differently. They were very much more likely to be right.
           
          Mr Goby cleared his throat and went on. "Miss Claudia Reece-Holland? She's all right. Nothing against her. Nothing dubious, that is. Father a Member of Parliament, well off. No scandals. Not like some M.P.s we've heard about. Educated. Lady Margaret Hall, came down and did a secretarial course. First secretary to a doctor in Harley Street, then went to the Coal Board. First-class secretary. Has been secretary to Mr Restarick for the last two months. No special attachments, just what you'd call minor boyfriends. Eligible and useful if she wants a date. Nothing to show there's anything between her and Restarick. I shouldn't say there is, myself. Has had a flat in Borodene Mansions for the last three years. Quite a high rent there. She usually has two other girls sharing it, no special friends. They come and go. Young lady Frances Cary, the second girl, has been there some time. Was at R.A.D.A. for a time, then went to the Slade. Works for the Wedderburn Gallery - well-known place in Bond Street. Specialises in arranging art shows in Manchester, Birmingham, sometimes abroad. Goes to Switzerland and Portugal. Arty type and has a lot of friends amongst artists and actors."
           
          He paused, cleared his throat and gave a brief look at the little notebook.
           
          "Haven't been able to get much from South Africa yet. Don't suppose I shall. Restarick moved about a lot. Kenya, Uganda, Gold Coast, South America for a while. He just moved about. Restless chap. Nobody seems to have known him particularly well. He'd got plenty of money of his own to go where he liked. He made money, too, quite a lot of it. Liked going to out of the way places. Everyone who came across him seems to have liked him. Just seems as though he was a born wanderer. He never kept in touch with anyone. Three times I believe he was reported dead - gone off into the bush and not turned up again - but he always did in the end. Five or six months and he'd pop up in some entirely different place or country.
           
          "Then last year his brother in London died suddenly. They had a bit of trouble in tracing him. His brother's death seemed to give him a shock. Perhaps he'd had enough, and perhaps he'd met the right woman at last. Good bit younger than him, she was, and a teacher, they say. The steady kind. Anyway he seems to have made up his mind then and there to chuck wandering about, and come home to England. Besides being a very rich man himself, he's his brother's heir."
           
          "A success story and an unhappy girl," said Poirot. "I wish I knew more about her. You have ascertained for me all that you could, the facts I needed. The people who surrounded that girl, who might have influenced her, who perhaps did influence her. I wanted to know something about her father, her stepmother, the boy she is in love with, the people she lived with, and worked for in London. You are sure that in connection with this girl there have been no deaths? That is important -"
           
          "Not a smell of one," said Mr Goby. "She worked for a firm called Homebirds - on the verge of bankruptcy, and they didn't pay her much. Stepmother was in hospital for observation recently - in the country, that was. A lot of rumours flying about, but they didn't seem to come to anything."
           
          "She did not die," said Poirot. "What I need," he added in a bloodthirsty manner, "is a death."
           
          Mr Goby said he was sorry about that and rose to his feet. "Will there be anything more you are wanting at present?"
           
          "Not in the nature of information."
           
          "Very good, sir." As he replaced his notebook in his pocket, Mr Goby said: "You'll excuse me, sir, if I'm speaking out of turn, but that young lady you had here just now -"
           
          "Yes, what about her?"
           
          "Well, of course it's - I don't suppose it's anything to do with this, but I thought I might just mention it to you, sir -"
           
          "Please do. You have seen her before, I gather?"
           
          "Yes. Couple of months ago."
           
          "Where did you see her?"
           
          "Kew Gardens."
           
          "Kew Gardens?" Poirot looked slightly surprised.
           
          "I wasn't following her. I was following someone else, the person who met her."
           
          "And who was that?"
           
          "I don't suppose as it matters mentioning it to you, sir. It was one of the junior attachйs of the Hertzogovinian Embassy."
           
          Poirot raised his eyebrows. "That is interesting. Yes, very interesting. Kew Gardens," he mused. "A pleasant place for a rendezvous. Very pleasant."
           
          "I thought so at the time."
           
          "They talked together?"
           
          "No, sir, you wouldn't have said they knew each other. The young lady had a book with her. She sat down on a seat. She read the book for a little then she laid it down beside her. Then my bloke came and sat there on the seat also. They didn't speak - only the young lady got up and wandered away. He just sat there and presently he gets up and walks off. He takes with him the book that the young lady has left behind. That's all, sir."
           
          "Yes," said Poirot. "It is very interesting."
           
          Mr Goby looked at the bookcase and said Good-night to it. He went. Poirot gave an exasperated sigh.
           
          "Enfin!" he said, "it is too much! There is far too much. Now we have espionage and counter espionage. All I am seeking is one perfectly simple murder. I begin to suspect that that murder only occurred in a drug addict's brain!"
           
          Chapter 14
           
          "Here Madame," Poirot bowed and presented Mrs Oliver with a bouquet very stylised, a posy in the Victorian manner.
           
          "M. Poirot! Well, really, that is very nice of you, and it's very like you somehow. All my flowers are always so untidy." She looked towards a vase of rather temperamental looking chrysanthemums, then back to the prim circle of rosebuds. "And how nice of you to come and see me."
           
          "I come, Madame, to offer you my felicitations on your recovery."
           
          "Yes," said Mrs Oliver, "I suppose I am all right again." She shook her head to and fro rather gingerly. "I get headaches, though," she said. "Quite bad headaches."
           
          "You remember, Madame, that I warned you not to do anything dangerous."
           
          "Not to stick my neck out, in fact. That I suppose is just what I did do." She added, "I felt something evil was about. I was frightened, too, and I told myself I was a fool to be frightened, because what was I frightened of? I mean, it was London. Right in the middle of London. People all about. I mean - how could I be frightened. It wasn't like a lonely wood or anything."
           
          Poirot looked at her thoughtfully. He wondered, had Mrs Oliver really felt this nervous fear, had she really suspected the presence of evil, the sinister feeling that something or someone wished her ill, or had she read it into the whole thing afterwards?
           
          He knew only too well how easily that could be done. Countless clients had spoken in much the same words that Mrs Oliver had just used. 'I knew something was wrong. I could feel evil. I knew something was going to happen' and actually they had not felt anything. Was Mrs Oliver of the same?
           
          He looked at her consideringly. Mrs Oliver in her own opinion was famous for her intuition. One intuition succeeded another with remarkable rapidity and Mrs Oliver always claimed the right to justify the particular intuition which turned out to be right!
           
          And yet one shared very often with animals the uneasiness of a dog or a cat before a thunderstorm, the knowledge that there is something wrong, although one does not know what it is that is wrong.
           
          "When did it come upon you, this fear?"
           
          "When I left the main road," said Mrs Oliver. "Up till then it was all ordinary and quite exciting and - yes, I was enjoying myself, though vexed at finding how difficult it was to trail anybody."
           
          She paused, considering. "Just like a game. Then suddenly it didn't seem so much like a game, because they were queer little streets and rather sort of broken-down places, and sheds and open spaces being cleared for building - oh, I don't know, I can't explain it. But it was all different. Like a dream really. You know how dreams are. They start with one thing, a party or something, and then suddenly you find you're in a jungle or somewhere quite different - and it's all sinister."
           
          "A jungle?" said Poirot. "Yes, it is interesting you should put it like that. So it felt to you as though you were in a jungle and you were afraid of a peacock?"
           
          "I don't know that I was especially afraid of him. After all, a peacock isn't a dangerous sort of animal. It's - well I mean I thought of him as a peacock because I thought of him as a decorative creature. A peacock is very decorative, isn't it? And this awful boy is decorative too."
           
          "You didn't have any idea anyone was following you before you were hit?"
           
          "No. No, I'd no idea - but I think he directed me wrong all the same."
           
          Poirot nodded thoughtfully.
           
          "But of course it must have been the Peacock who hit me," said Mrs Oliver. "Who else? The dirty boy in the greasy clothes? He smelt nasty but he wasn't sinister. And it could hardly be that limp Frances something - she was draped over a packing case with long black hair streaming all over the place. She reminded me of some actress or other."
           
          "You say she was acting as a model?"
           
          "Yes. Not for the Peacock. For the dirty boy. I can't remember if you've seen her or not."
           
          "I have not yet had that pleasure - if it is a pleasure."
           
          "Well, she's quite nice looking in an untidy, arty sort of way. Very much made up. Dead white and lots of mascara and the usual kind of limp hair hanging over her face. Works in an art gallery so I suppose it's quite natural that she should be among all the beatniks, acting as a model. How these girls call it - I suppose she might have fallen for the Peacock. But it's probably the dirty one. All the same I don't see her coshing me on the head somehow."
           
          "I had another possibility in mind, Madame. Someone may have noticed you following David - and in turn followed you."
           
          "Someone saw me trailing David, and then they trailed me?"
           
          "Or someone may have been already in the mews or the yard, keeping perhaps an eye on the same people that you were observing."
           
          "That's an idea, of course," said Mrs Oliver. "I wonder who they could be?"
           
          Poirot gave an exasperated sigh. "Ah, it is there. It is difficult - too difficult. Too many people, too many things. I cannot see anything clearly. I see only a girl who said that she may have committed a murder! That is all that I have to go on and you see even there there are difficulties."
           
          "What do you mean by difficulties?"
           
          "Reflect," said Poirot.
           
          Reflection had never been Mrs Oliver's strong point.
           
          "You always mix me up," she complained.
           
          "I am talking about a murder, but what murder?"
           
          "The murder of the stepmother, I suppose."
           
          "But the stepmother is not murdered. She is alive."
           
          "You really are the most maddening man," said Mrs Oliver.
           
          Poirot sat up in his chair. He brought the tips of his fingers together and prepared - or so Mrs Oliver suspected - to enjoy himself.
           
          "You refuse to reflect," he said. "But to get anywhere we must reflect."
           
          "I don't want to reflect. What I want to know is what you've been doing about everything while I've been in hospital. You must have done something. What have you done?"
           
          Poirot ignored this question.
           
          "We must begin at the beginning. One day you rang me up. I was in distress. Yes, I admit it, I was in distress. Something extremely painful had been said to me. You, Madame, were kindness itself. You cheered me, you encouraged me. You gave me a delicious tasse de chocolat. And what is more you not only offered to help me, but you did help me. You helped me to find a girl who had come to me and said that she thought she might have committed a murder! Let us ask ourselves, Madame, what about this murder? Who has been murdered? Where have they been murdered? Why have they been murdered?"
           
          "Oh do stop," said Mrs Oliver. "You're making my head ache again, and that's bad for me."
           
          Poirot paid no attention to this plea.
           
          "Have we got a murder at all? You say - the stepmother - but I reply that the stepmother is not dead - so as yet we have no murder. But there ought to have been a murder. So me, I enquire first of all, who is dead? Somebody comes to me and mentions a murder. A murder that has been committed somewhere and somehow. But I cannot find that murder, and what you are about to say once again, that the attempted murder of Mary Restarick will do very well, does not satisfy Hercule Poirot."
           
          "I really can't think what more you want," said Mrs Oliver.
           
          "I want a murder," said Hercule Poirot.
           
          "It sounds very bloodthirsty when you say it like that!"
           
          "I look for a murder and I cannot find a murder. It is exasperating - so I ask you to reflect with me."
           
          "I've got a splendid idea," said Mrs Oliver. "Suppose Andrew Restarick murdered his first wife before he went off in a hurry to South Africa. Had you thought of that possibility?"
           
          "I certainly did not think of any such thing," said Poirot indignantly.
           
          "Well, I've thought of it," said Mrs Oliver. "It's very interesting. He was in love with this other woman, and he wanted like Crippen to go off with her, and so he murdered the first one and nobody ever suspected."
           
          Poirot drew a long, exasperated sigh. "But his wife did not die until eleven or twelve years after he'd left this country for South Africa, and his child could not have been concerned in the murder of her own mother at the age of five years old."
           
          "She could have given her mother the wrong medicine or perhaps Restarick just said that she died. After all, we don't know that she's dead."
           
          "I do," said Hercule Poirot. "I have made enquiries. The first Mrs Restarick died on the 14th April 1963."
           
          "How can you know these things?"
           
          "Because I have employed someone to check the facts. I beg of you, Madame, do not jump to impossible conclusions in this rash way."
           
          "I thought I was being rather clever," said Mrs Oliver obstinately. "If I was making it happen in a book that's how I would arrange it. And I'd make the child have done it. Not meaning to, but just by her father telling her to give her mother a drink made of pounded up box hedge."
           
          "Nom d'un nom d'un nom!" said Poirot.
           
          "All right," said Mrs Oliver. "You tell it your way."
           
          "Alas, I have nothing to tell. I look for a murder and I do not find one."
           
          "Not after Mary Restarick is ill and goes to hospital and gets better and comes back and is ill again, and if they looked they'd probably find arsenic or something hidden away by Norma somewhere."
           
          "That is exactly what they did find."
           
          "Well, really, M. Poirot, what more do you want?"
           
          "I want you to pay some attention to the meaning of language. That girl said to me the same thing as she had said to my manservant, Georges. She did not say on either occasion 'I have tried to kill someone' or 'I have tried to kill my stepmother'. She spoke each time of a deed that had been done, something that had already happened. Definitely happened. In the past tense."
           
          "I give up," said Mrs Oliver. "You just won't believe that Norma tried to kill her stepmother."
           
          "Yes, I believe it is perfectly possible that Norma may have tried to kill her stepmother. I think it is probably what happened - it is in accord psychologically. With her distraught frame of mind. But it is not proved. Anyone, remember, could have hidden a preparation of arsenic amongst Norma's things. It could even have been put there by the husband."
           
          "You always seem to think that husbands are the ones who kill their wives," said Mrs Oliver.
           
          "A husband is usually the most likely person," said Hercule Poirot, "so one considers him first. It could have been the girl, Norma, or it could have been one of the servants, or it could have been the au pair girl, or it could have been old Sir Roderick. Or it could have been Mrs Restarick herself."
           
          "Nonsense. Why?"
           
          "There could be reasons. Rather far-fetched reasons, but not beyond the bounds of belief."
           
          "Really, Monsieur Poirot, you can't suspect everybody."
           
          "Mais oui, that is just what I can do. I suspect everybody. First I suspect, then I look for reasons."
           
          "And what reason would that poor foreign child have?"
           
          "It might depend on what she is doing in that house, and what her reasons are for coming to England and a good deal more beside."
           
          "You're really crazy."
           
          "Or it could have been the boy David. Your Peacock."
           
          "Much too far-fetched. David wasn't there. He's never been near the house."
           
          "Oh yes he has. He was wandering about its corridors the day I went there."
           
          "But not putting poison in Norma's room."
           
          "How do you know?"
           
          "But she and that awful boy are in love with each other."
           
          "They appear to be so, I admit."
           
          "You always want to make everything difficult," complained Mrs Oliver.
           
          "Not at all. Things have been made difficult for me. I need information and there is only one person who can give me information. And she has disappeared."
           
          "You mean Norma."
           
          "Yes, I mean Norma."
           
          "But she hasn't disappeared. We found her, you and I."
           
          "She walked out of that cafй and once more she has disappeared."
           
          "And you let her go?" Mrs Oliver's voice quivered with reproach.
           
          "Alas!"
           
          "You let her go? You didn't even try to find her again?"
           
          "I did not say I had not tried to find her."
           
          "But so far you have not succeeded. M. Poirot, I really am disappointed with you."
           
          "There is a pattern," said Hercule Poirot almost dreamily. "Yes, there is a pattern. But because there is one factor missing, the pattern does not make sense. You see that, don't you?"
           
          "No," said Mrs Oliver, whose head was aching.
           
          Poirot continued to talk more to himself than his listener. If Mrs Oliver could be said to be listening. She was highly indignant with Poirot and she thought to herself that the Restarick girl had been quite right and that Poirot was too old!
           
          There, she herself had found the girl for him, had telephoned him so that he might arrive in time, had gone off herself to shadow the other half of the couple. She had left the girl to Poirot, and what had Poirot done - lost her! In fact she could not really see that Poirot had done anything at all of any use at any time whatever.
           
          She was disappointed in him. When he stopped talking she would tell him so again.
           
          Poirot was quietly and methodically outlining what he called "the pattern".
           
          "It interlocks. Yes it interlocks and that is why it is difficult. One thing relates to another and then you find that it relates to something else that seems outside the pattern. But it is not outside the pattern. And so it brings more people again into a ring of suspicion. Suspicion of what? There again one does not know. We have first the girl and through all the maze of conflicting patterns I have to search the answer to the most poignant of questions. Is the girl a victim, is she in danger? Or is the girl very astute. Is the girl creating the impression she wants to create for her own purposes? It can be taken either way. I need something still. Some one sure pointer, and it is there somewhere. I am sure it is there somewhere."
           
          Mrs Oliver was rummaging in her handbag.
           
          "I can't think why I can never find my aspirin when I want it," she said in a vexed voice.
           
          "We have one set of relationships that hook up. The father, the daughter, the stepmother. Their lives are interrelated. We have the elderly uncle, somewhat gaga, with whom they live. We have the girl Sonia. She is linked with the uncle. She works for him. She has pretty manners, pretty ways. He is delighted with her. He is, shall we say, a little soft about her. But what is her role in the household?"
           
          "Wants to learn English, I suppose," said Mrs Oliver.
           
          "She meets one of the members of the Hertzogovinian Embassy - in Kew Gardens. She meets him there, but she does not speak to him. She leaves behind her a book and he takes it away -"
           
          "What is all this?" said Mrs Oliver. "Has this anything to do with the other pattern? We do not as yet know. It seems unlikely but it may not be unlikely. Had Mary Restarick unwittingly stumbled upon something which might be dangerous to the girl?"
           
          "Don't tell me all this has something to do with espionage or something."
           
          "I am not telling you. I am wondering."
           
          "You said yourself that old Sir Roderick was gaga."
           
          "It is not a question of whether he is gaga or not. He was a person of some importance during the war. Important papers passed through his hands. Important letters can have been written to him. Letters which he was at perfect liberty to have kept once they had lost their importance."
           
          "You're talking of the war and that was ages ago."
           
          "Quite so. But the past is not always done with, because it is ages ago. New alliances are made. Public speeches are made repudiating this, denying that, telling various lies about something else. And suppose there exist still certain letters or documents that will change the picture of a certain personality. I am not telling you anything, you understand. I am only making assumptions. Assumptions such as I have known to be true in the past. It might be of the utmost importance that some letters or papers should be destroyed, or else passed to some foreign government. Who better to undertake that task than a charming young lady who assists and aids an elderly notability to collect material for his memoirs. Everyone is writing their memoirs nowadays. One cannot stop them from doing so! Suppose that the stepmother gets a little something in her food on the day that the helpful secretary plus au pair girl is doing the cooking? And suppose it is she who arranges that suspicion should fall on Norma?"
           
          "What a mind you have," said Mrs Oliver. "Tortuous, that's what I call it. I mean, all these things can't have happened."
           
          "That is just it. There are too many patterns. Which is the right one? The girl Norma leaves home, goes to London. She is, as you have instructed me, a third girl sharing a flat with two other girls. There again you may have a pattern. The two girls are strangers to her. But then what do I learn? Claudia Reece-Holland is private secretary to Norma Restarick's father. Here again we have a link. Is that mere chance? Or could there be a pattern of some kind behind it. The other girl, you tell me, acts as a model, and is acquainted with the boy you call 'the Peacock' with whom Norma is in love. Again a link. More links. And what is David - the Peacock - doing in all this? Is he in love with Norma? It would seem so. Her parents dislike it as is only probable and natural."
           
          "It's odd about Claudia Reece-Holland being Restarick's secretary," said Mrs Oliver thoughtfully. "I should judge she was unusually efficient at anything she undertook. Perhaps it was she who pushed the woman out of the window on the seventh floor."
           
          Poirot turned slowly towards her. "What are you saying?" he demanded. "What are you saying?"
           
          "Just someone in the flats - I don't even know her name, but she fell out of a window or threw herself out of a window on the seventh floor and killed herself."
           
          Poirot's voice rose high and stern.
           
          "And you never told me?" he said accusingly.
           
          Mrs Oliver stared at him in surprise.
           
          "I don't know what you mean."
           
          "What I mean? I ask you to tell me of a death. That is what I mean. A death. And you say there are no deaths. You can think only of an attempted poisoning. And yet here is a death. A death at - what is the name of those mansions?"
           
          "Borodene Mansions."
           
          "Yes, yes. And when did it happen?"
           
          "This suicide? Or whatever it was? I think - yes - I think it was about a week before I went there."
           
          "Perfect! How did you hear about it?"
           
          "A milkman told me."
           
          "A milkman, bon Dieu!"
           
          "He was just being chatty," said Mrs Oliver. "It sounded rather sad. It was in the day time - very early in the morning, I think."
           
          "What was her name?"
           
          "I've no idea. I don't think he mentioned it."
           
          "Young, middle-aged, old?"
           
          Mrs Oliver considered. "Well, he didn't say her exact age. Fifty-ish, I think, was what he said."
           
          "I wonder now. Anyone the three girls knew?"
           
          "How can I tell? Nobody has said anything about it."
           
          "And you never thought of telling me."
           
          "Well, really, M. Poirot, I cannot see that it has anything to do with all this. Well, I suppose it may have - but nobody seems to have said so, or thought of it."
           
          "But yes, there is the link. There is this girl, Norma, and she lives in those flats, and one day somebody commits suicide (for that, I gather, was the general impression). That is, somebody throws herself or falls out of a seventh-floor high window and is killed. And then? Some days later this girl Norma, after having heard you talk about me at a party, comes to call upon me and she says to me that she is afraid that she may have committed a murder. Do you not see? A death - and not many days later someone who thinks she may have committed a murder. Yes, this must be the murder"
           
          Mrs Oliver wanted to say "nonsense" but she did not quite dare to do so. Nevertheless, she thought it.
           
          "This then must be the one piece of knowledge that had not yet come to me. This ought to tie up the whole thing! Yes, yes, I do not see yet how, but it must be so. I must think. That is what I must do. I must go home and think until slowly the pieces fit together - because this will be the key piece that ties them all together... Yes. At last. At last I shall see my way."
           
          He rose to his feet and said "Adieu, chиre Madame," and hurried from the room. Mrs Oliver at last relieved her feelings.
           
          "Nonsense," she said to the empty room. "Absolute nonsense. I wonder if four would be too many aspirins to take?"
           
          Chapter 15
           
          At Hercule Poirot's elbow was a tisane prepared for him by George. He sipped at it and thought. He thought in a certain way peculiar to himself. It was the technique of a man who selected thoughts as one might select pieces of a jigsaw puzzle. In due course they would be reassembled together so as to make a clear and coherent picture. At the moment the important thing was the selection, the separation. He sipped his tisane, put down the cup, rested his hands on the arms of his chair and let various pieces of his puzzle come one by one into his mind. Once he recognised them all, he would select. Pieces of grey, pieces of green bank, perhaps striped pieces like those of a tiger...
           
          The painfulness of his own feet in patent-leather shoes. He started there. Walking along a road set on this path by his good friend, Mrs Oliver. A stepmother. He saw himself with his hand on a gate. A woman who turned, a woman bending her head cutting out the weak growth of a rose, turning and looking at him? What was there for him there? Nothing. A golden head, a golden head bright as a cornfield, with twists and loops of hair slightly reminiscent of Mrs Oliver's own in shape. He smiled a little. But Mary Restarick's hair was more tidily arranged than Mrs Oliver's ever was. A golden frame for her face that seemed just a little too large for her. He remembered that old Sir Roderick had said that she had to wear a wig, because of an illness. Sad for so young a woman. There was, when he came to think of it, something unusually heavy about her head. Far too static, too perfectly arranged. He considered Mary Restarick's wig - if it was a wig - for he was by no means sure that he could depend on Sir Roderick. He examined the possibilities of the wig in case they should be of significance. He reviewed the conversation they had had. Had they said anything important? He thought not. He remembered the room into which they had gone. A characterless room recently inhabited in someone else's house. Two pictures on the wall, the picture of a woman in a dove-grey dress. Thin mouth, lips set closely together. Hair that was greyish brown. The first Mrs Restarick. She looked as though she might have been older than her husband. His picture was on the opposite wall, facing her. Good portraits, both of them. Lansberger had been a good portrait painter. His mind dwelt on the portrait of the husband. He had not seen it so well that first day, as he had later in Restarick's office...
           
          Andrew Restarick and Claudia Reece-Holland. Was there anything there? Was their association more than a merely secretarial one? It need not be. Here was a man who had come back to this country after years of absence, who had no near friends or relatives, who was perplexed and troubled over his daughter's character and conduct. It was probably natural enough that he should turn to his recently acquired eminently competent secretary and ask her to suggest somewhere for his daughter to live in London. It would be a favour on her part to provide that accommodation since she was looking for a Third Girl. Third girl... The phrase that he had acquired from Mrs Oliver always seemed to be coming to his mind. As though it had a second significance which for some reason he could not see.
           
          His manservant, George, entered the room, closing the door discreetly behind him.
           
          "A young lady is here, sir. The young lady who came the other day."
           
          The words came too aptly with what Poirot was thinking. He sat up in a startled fashion.
           
          "The young lady who came at breakfast time?"
           
          "Oh no, sir. I mean the young lady who came with Sir Roderick Horsefield."
           
          "Ah, indeed."
           
          Poirot raised his eyebrows. "Bring her in. Where is she?"
           
          "I showed her into Miss Lemon's room, sir."
           
          "Ah. Yes, bring her in."
           
          Sonia did not wait for George to announce her. She came into the room ahead of him with a quick and rather aggressive step.
           
          "It has been difficult for me to get away, but I have come to tell you that I did not take those papers. I did not steal anything. You understand?"
           
          "Has anybody said that you had?" Poirot asked. "Sit down, Mademoiselle."
           
          "I do not want to sit down. I have very little time. I just came to tell you that it is absolutely untrue. I am very honest and I do what I am told."
           
          "I take your point. I have already taken it. Your statement is that you have not removed any papers, information, letters, documents of any kind from Sir Roderick Horsefield's house? That is so, is it not?"
           
          "Yes, and I've come to tell you it is so. He believes me. He knows that I would not do such a thing."
           
          "Very well then. That is a statement and I note it."
           
          "Do you think you are going to find those papers?"
           
          "I have other enquiries in hand," said Poirot. "Sir Roderick's papers will have to take their turn."
           
          "He is worried. He is very worried. There is something that I cannot say to him. I will say it to you. He loses things. Things are not put away where he thinks they are. He puts them in - how do you say it - in funny places. Oh I know. You suspect me. Everyone suspects me because I am foreign. Because I come from a foreign country and so they think - they think I steal secret papers like in one of your silly English spy stories. I am not like that. I am an intellectual."
           
          "Aha," said Poirot. "It is always nice to know." He added: "Is there anything else you wish to tell me?"
           
          "Why should I?"
           
          "One never knows."
           
          "What are these other cases you speak of?"
           
          "Ah, I do not want to detain you. It is your day out, perhaps."
           
          "Yes. I have one day a week when I can do what I like. I can come to London. I can go to the British Museum."
           
          "Ah yes and to the Victoria and Albert also, no doubt."
           
          "That is so."
           
          "And to the National Gallery and see the pictures. And on a fine day you can go to Kensington Gardens, or perhaps as far as Kew Gardens."
           
          She stiffened... She shot him an angry questioning glance.
           
          "Why do you say Kew Gardens?"
           
          "Because there are some very fine plants and shrubs and trees there. Ah! you should not miss Kew Gardens. The admission fee is very small. A penny I think, or twopence. And for that you can go and see tropical trees, or you can sit on a seat and read a book." He smiled at her disarmingly and was interested to notice that her uneasiness was increased. "But I must not detain you. Mademoiselle. You have perhaps friends to visit at one of the Embassies, maybe."
           
          "Why do you say that?"
           
          "No particular reason. You are, as you say, a foreigner and it is quite possible you may have friends connected with your own Embassy here."
           
          "Someone has told you things. Someone has made accusations against me! I tell you he is a silly old man who mislays things. That is all! And he knows nothing of importance. He has no secret papers or documents. He never has had."
           
          "Ah, but you are not quite thinking of what you are saying. Time passes, you know. He was once an important man who did know important secrets."
           
          "You are trying to frighten me."
           
          "No, no. I am not being so melodramatic as that."
           
          "Mrs Restarick. It is Mrs Restarick who has been telling you things. She does not like me."
           
          "She has not said so to me."
           
          "Well, I do not like her. She is the kind of woman I mistrust. I think she has secrets."
           
          "Indeed?"
           
          "Yes, I think she has secrets from her husband. I think she goes up to London or to other places to meet other men. To meet at any rate one other man."
           
          "Indeed," said Poirot, "that is very interesting. You think she goes to meet another man?"
           
          "Yes, I do. She goes up to London very often and I do not think she always tells her husband, or she says it is shopping or things she has to buy. All those sort of things. He is busy in the office and he does not think of why his wife comes up. She is more in London than she is in the country. And yet she pretends to like gardening so much."
           
          "You have no idea who this man is whom she meets?"
           
          "How should I know? I do not follow her. Mr Restarick is not a suspicious man. He believes what his wife tells him. He thinks perhaps about business all the time. And, too, I think he is worried about his daughter."
           
          "Yes," said Poirot, "he is certainly worried about his daughter. How much do you know about the daughter? How well do you know her?"
           
          "I do not know her very well. If you ask what I think - well, I tell you! I think she is mad."
           
          "You think she is mad? Why?"
           
          "She says odd things sometimes. She sees things that are not there."
           
          "Sees things that are not there?"
           
          "People that are not there. Sometimes she is very excited and other times she seems as though she is in a dream. You speak to her and she does not hear what you say to her. She does not answer. I think there are people who she would like to have dead."
           
          "You mean Mrs Restarick?"
           
          "And her father. She looks at him as though she hates him."
           
          "Because they are both trying to prevent her marrying a young man of her choice?"
           
          "Yes. They do not want that to happen. They are quite right, of course, but it makes her angry. Some day," added Sonia, nodding her head cheerfully, "I think she will kill herself. I hope she will do nothing so foolish, but that is the thing one does when one is much in love." She shrugged her shoulders. "Well - I go now."
           
          "Just tell me one thing. Does Mrs Restarick wear a wig?"
           
          "A wig? How should I know?" she considered for a moment. "She might, yes," she admitted. "It is useful for travelling. Also it is fashionable. I wear a wig myself sometimes. A green one! Or did." She added again, "I go now," and went.
           
          Chapter 16
           
          "Today I have much to do," Hercule Poirot announced as he rose from the breakfast table next morning and joined Miss Lemon. "Enquiries to make. You have made the necessary researches for me, the appointments, the necessary contacts?"
           
          "Certainly," said Miss Lemon. "It is all here," She handed him a small briefcase.
           
          Poirot took a quick glance at its contents and nodded his head.
           
          "I can always rely on you, Miss Lemon," he said. "C'est fantastique."
           
          "Really, Monsieur Poirot, I cannot see anything fantastic about it. You gave me instructions and I carried them out. Naturally."
           
          "Pah, it is not so natural as that," said Poirot. "Do I not give instructions often to the gas men, the electricians, the man who comes to repair things, and do they always carry out my instructions? Very, very seldom. He went into the hall.
           
          "My slightly heavier overcoat, Georges. I think the autumn chill is setting in."
           
          He popped his head back in his secretary's room. "By the way, what did you think of that young woman who came yesterday?"
           
          Miss Lemon, arrested as she was about to plunge her fingers on the typewriter, said briefly, "Foreign."
           
          "Yes, yes."
           
          "Obviously foreign."
           
          "You do not think anything more about her than that?"
           
          Miss Lemon considered. "I had no means of judging her capability in any way." She added rather doubtfully, "She seemed upset about something."
           
          "Yes. She is suspected, you see, of stealing! Not money, but papers, from her employer."
           
          "Dear, dear," said Miss Lemon. "Important papers?"
           
          "It seems highly probable. It is equally probable though, that he has not lost anything at all."
           
          "Oh well," said Miss Lemon, giving her employer a special look that she always gave and which announced that she wished to get rid of him so that she could get on with proper fervour with her work. "Well, I always say that it's better to know where you are when you are employing someone, and buy British."
           
          Hercule Poirot went out. His first visit was to Borodene Mansions. He took a taxi.
           
          Alighting at the courtyard he cast his eyes around. A uniformed porter was standing in one of the doorways, whistling a somewhat doleful melody. As Poirot advanced upon him, he said:
           
          "Yes, sir?"
           
          "I wondered," said Poirot, "if you can tell me anything about a very sad occurrence that took place here recently."
           
          "Sad occurrence?" said the porter. "Nothing that I know of."
           
          "A lady who threw herself, or shall we say fell from one of the upper stories, and was killed."
           
          "Oh that. I don't know anything about that because I've only been here a week, you see. Hi, Joe."
           
          A porter emerging from the opposite side of the block came over.
           
          "You'd know about the lady as fell from the seventh. About a month ago, was it?"
           
          "Not quite as much as that," said Joe. He was an elderly slow-speaking man.
           
          "Nasty business it was."
           
          "She was killed instantly?"
           
          "Yes."
           
          "What was her name? It may, you understand, have been a relative of mine," Poirot explained. He was not a man who had any scruples about departing from the truth.
           
          "Indeed, sir. Very sorry to hear it. She was a Mrs Charpentier."
           
          "She had been in the flat some time?"
           
          "Well, let me see now. About a year - a year and a half perhaps. No, I think it must have been about two years. No. 76, seventh floor."
           
          "That is the top floor?"
           
          "Yes, sir. A Mrs Charpentier."
           
          Poirot did not press for any other descriptive information since he might be presumed to know such things about his own relative. Instead he asked:
           
          "Did it cause much excitement, much questioning? What time of day was it?"
           
          "Five or six o'clock in the morning, I think. No warning or anything. Just down she came. In spite of being so early we got a crowd almost at once, pushing through the railing over there. You know what people are."
           
          "And the police, of course."
           
          "Oh yes, the police came quite quickly. And a doctor and an ambulance. All the usual," said the porter rather in the weary tone of one who had had people throwing themselves out of a seventh-storey window once or twice every month.
           
          "And I suppose people came down from the flats when they heard what had happened."
           
          "Oh, there wasn't so many coming from the flats because for one thing with the noise of traffic and everything around here most of them didn't know about it. Someone or other said she gave a bit of a scream as she came down, but not so that it caused any real commotion. It was only people in the street, passing by, who saw it happen. And then, of course, they craned their necks over the railings, and other people saw them craning, and joined them. You know what an accident is!"
           
          Poirot assured him he knew what an accident was.
           
          "She lived alone?" he said, making it only half a question.
           
          "That's right."
           
          "But she had friends, I suppose, among the other flat dwellers?"
           
          Joe shrugged and shook his head. "May have done. I couldn't say. Never saw her in the restaurant much with any of our lot. She had outside friends to dinner here sometimes. No, I wouldn't say she was specially pally with anybody here. You'd do best," said Joe, getting slightly restive, "to go and have a chat with Mr McFarlane who's in charge here if you want to know about her."
           
          "Ah, I thank you. Yes, that is what I mean to do."
           
          "His office is in that block over there, sir. On the ground floor. You'll see it marked up on the door."
           
          Poirot went as directed. He detached from his brief-case the top letter with which Miss Lemon had supplied him, and which was marked 'Mr McFarlane'.
           
          Mr McFarlane turned out to be a good-looking, shrewd-looking man of about forty-five. Poirot handed him the letter.
           
          He opened and read it.
           
          "Ah yes," he said, "I see."
           
          He laid it down on the desk and looked at Poirot.
           
          "The owners have instructed me to give you all the help I can about the sad death of Mrs Louise Charpentier. Now what do you want to know exactly. Monsieur -" he glanced at the letter again - "Monsieur Poirot?"
           
          "This is, of course, all quite confidential," said Poirot. "Her relatives have been communicated with by the police and by a solicitor, but they were anxious as I was coming to England, that I should get a few more personal facts, if you understand me. It is distressing when one can get only official reports."
           
          "Yes, quite so. Yes, I quite understand that it must be. Well, I'll tell you anything I can."
           
          "How long had she been here and how did she come to take the flat?"
           
          "She'd been here - I can look it up exactly - about two years. There was a vacant tenancy and I imagine that the lady who was leaving, being an acquaintance of hers, told her in advance that she was giving it up. That was a Mrs Wilder. Worked for the B.B.C. Had been in London for some time, but was going to Canada. Very nice lady - I don't think she knew the deceased well at all. Just happened to mention she was giving up the flat. Mrs Charpentier liked the flat."
           
          "You found her a suitable tenant?"
           
          There was a very faint hesitation before Mr McFarlane answered: "She was a satisfactory tenant, yes."
           
          "You need not mind telling me," said Hercule Poirot. "There were wild parties, eh? A little too - shall we say - gay in her entertaining?"
           
          Mr McFarlane stopped being so discreet.
           
          "There were a few complaints from time to time, but mostly from elderly people."
           
          Hercule Poirot made a significant gesture.
           
          "A bit too fond of the bottle, yes, sir - and in with quite a gay lot. It made for a bit of trouble now and again."
           
          "And she was fond of the gentlemen?"
           
          "Well, I wouldn't like to go as far as that."
           
          "No, no, but one understands."
           
          "Of course she wasn't so young."
           
          "Appearances are very often deceptive. How old would you have said she was?"
           
          "It's difficult to say. Forty - forty-five." He added, "Her health wasn't good, you know."
           
          "So I understand."
           
          "She drank too much - no doubt about it. And then she'd get very depressed. Nervous about herself. Always going to doctors, I believe, and not believing what they told her. Ladies do get it into their heads - especially about that time of life - she thought that she had cancer. Was quite sure of it. The doctor reassured her but she didn't believe him. He said at the inquest that there was nothing really wrong with her. Oh well, one hears of things like that every day. She got all worked up and one final day -" he nodded.
           
          "It is very sad," said Poirot. "Did she have any special friends among the residents of the flats?"
           
          "Not that I know of. This place, you see, isn't what I call the matey kind. They're mostly people in business, in jobs."
           
          "I was thinking possibly of Miss Claudia Reece-Holland. I wondered if they had known each other."
           
          "Miss Reece-Holland? No, I don't think so. Oh I mean they were probably acquaintances, talked when they went up in the lift together, that sort of thing. But I don't think there was much social contact of any kind. You see, they would be in a different generation. I mean -" Mr McFarlane seemed a little flustered. Poirot wondered why.
           
          He said, "One of the other girls who share Miss Holland's flat knew Mrs Charpentier, I believe - Miss Norma Restarick."
           
          "Did she? I wouldn't know - she's only come here quite recently, I hardly know her by sight. Rather a frightened-looking young lady. Not long out of school, I'd say." He added, "Is there anything more I can do for you, sir?"
           
          "No, thank you. You've been most kind. I wonder if possibly I could see the flat. Just in order to be able to say -" Poirot paused, not particularising what he wanted to be able to say.
           
          "Well, now, let me see. A Mr Travers has got it now. He's in the City all day. Yes, come up with me if you like, sir."
           
          They went up to the seventh floor. As Mr McFarlane introduced his key one of the numbers fell from the door and narrowly avoided Poirot's patent-leather shoe. He hopped nimbly and then bent to pick it up. He replaced the spike which fixed it on the door very carefully.
           
          "These numbers are loose," he said.
           
          "I'm very sorry, sir. I'll make a note of it. Yes, they wear loose from time to time. Well, here we are."
           
          Poirot went into the living-room. At the moment it had little personality. The walls were papered with a paper resembling grained wood. It had conventional comfortable furniture, the only personal touch was a television set and a certain number of books.
           
          "All the flats are partly furnished, you see," said Mr McFarlane. "The tenants don't need to bring anything of their own, unless they want to. We cater very largely for people who come and go."
           
          "And the decorations are all the same?"
           
          "Not entirely. People seem to like this raw wood effect. Good background for pictures. The only things that are different are on the one wall facing the door. We have a whole set of frescoes which people can choose from.
           
          "We have a set of ten," said Mr McFarlane with some pride. "There is the Japanese one - very artistic, don't you think? - and there is an English garden one, a very striking one of birds, one of trees, a Harlequin one, a rather interesting abstract effect - lines and cubes, in vividly contrasting colours, that sort of thing. They're all designs by good artists. Our furniture is all the same. Two choices of colours, or of course people can add what they like of their own. But they don't usually bother."
           
          "Most of them are not, as you might say, home-makers," Poirot suggested.
           
          "No, rather the bird of passage type, or busy people who want solid comfort, good plumbing and all that but aren't particularly interested in decoration, though we've had one or two of the do-it-yourself type, which isn't really satisfactory from our point of view. We've had to put a clause in the lease saying they've got to put things back as they found them - or pay for that being done."
           
          They seemed to be getting rather far away from the subject of Mrs Charpentier's death. Poirot approached the window.
           
          "It was from here?" he murmured delicately.
           
          "Yes. That's the window. The left-hand one. It has a balcony."
           
          Poirot looked out down below.
           
          "Seven floors," he said. "A long way."
           
          "Yes, death was instantaneous, I am glad to say. Of course, it might have been an accident."
           
          Poirot shook his head.
           
          "You cannot seriously suggest that, Mr McFarlane. It must have been deliberate."
           
          "Well, one always likes to suggest an easier possibility. She wasn't a happy woman, I'm afraid."
           
          "Thank you," said Poirot, "for your great courtesy. I shall be able to give her relations in France a very clear picture."
           
          His own picture of what had occurred was not as clear as he would have liked.
           
          So far there had been nothing to support his theory that the death of Louise Charpentier had been important. He repeated the Christian name thoughtfully.
           
          Louise... Why had the name Louise some haunting memory about it? He shook his head. He thanked Mr McFarlane and left.
           
          Chapter 17
           
          Chief Inspector Neele was sitting behind his desk looking very official and formal. He greeted Poirot politely and motioned him to a chair. As soon as the young man who had introduced Poirot to the presence had left, Chief Inspector Neele's manner changed.
           
          "And what are you after now, you secretive old devil?" he said.
           
          "As to that," said Poirot, "you already know."
           
          "Oh yes, I've rustled up some stuff but I don't think there's much for you from that particular hole."
           
          "Why call it a hole?"
           
          "Because you're so exactly like a good mouser. A cat sitting over a hole waiting for the mouse to come out. Well, if you ask me, there isn't any mouse in this particular hole. Mind you, I don't say that you couldn't unearth some dubious transactions. You know these financiers. I dare say there's a lot of hoky-poky business, and all that, about minerals and concessions and oil and all those things. But Joshua Restarick Ltd. has got a good reputation. Family business - or used to be - but you can't call it that now. Simon Restarick hadn't any children, and his brother Andrew Restarick only has this daughter. There was an old aunt on the mother's side. Andrew Restarick's daughter lived with her after she left school and her own mother died. The aunt died of a stroke about six months ago. Mildly potty, I believe - belonged to a few peculiar religious societies. No harm in them. Simon Restarick was a perfectly plain type of shrewd business man, and had a social wife. They were married rather late in life."
           
          "And Andrew?"
           
          "Andrew seems to have suffered from wanderlust. Nothing known against him. Never stayed anywhere long, wandered about South Africa, South America, Kenya and a good many other places. His brother pressed him to come back more than once, but he wasn't having any. He didn't like London or business, but he seems to have had the Restarick family flair for making money. He went after mineral deposits, things like that. He wasn't an elephant hunter or an archaeologist or a plant man or any of those things. All his deals were business deals and they always turned out well."
           
          "So he also in his way is conventional?"
           
          "Yes, that about covers it. I don't know what made him come back to England after his brother died. Possibly a new wife - he's married again. Good-looking woman a good deal younger than he is. At the moment they're living with old Sir Roderick Horsefield whose sister had married Andrew Restarick's uncle. But I imagine that's only temporary. Is any of this news to you? Or do you know it all already?"
           
          "I've heard most of it," said Poirot. "Is there any insanity in the family on either side?"
           
          "Shouldn't think so, apart from old Auntie and her fancy religions. And that's not unusual in a woman who lives alone."
           
          "So all you can tell me really is that there is a lot of money," said Poirot.
           
          "Lots of money," said Chief Inspector Neele. "And all quite respectable. Some of it, mark you, Andrew Restarick brought into the firm. South African concessions, mines, mineral deposits. I'd say that by the time these were developed, or placed on the market, there'd be a very large sum of money indeed."
           
          "And who will inherit it?" said Poirot.
           
          "That depends on how Andrew Restarick leaves it. It's up to him, but I'd say that there's no one obvious, except his wife and his daughter."
           
          "So they both stand to inherit a very large amount of money one day?"
           
          "I should say so. I expect there are a good many family trusts and things like that. All the usual City gambits."
           
          "There is, for instance, no other woman in whom he might be interested?"
           
          "Nothing known of such a thing. I shouldn't think it likely. He's got a good-looking new wife."
           
          "A young man," said Poirot thoughtfully, "could easily learn all this?"
           
          "You mean and marry the daughter? There's nothing to stop him, even if she was made a ward of court or something like that. Of course her father could then disinherit her if he wanted to."
           
          Poirot looked down at a neatly written list in his hand.
           
          "What about the Wedderburn Gallery?"
           
          "I wondered how you'd got on to that. Were you consulted by a client about a forgery?"
           
          "Do they deal in forgeries?"
           
          "People don't deal in forgeries," said Chief Inspector Neele reprovingly. "There was a rather unpleasant business. A millionaire from Texas over here buying pictures, and paying incredible sums for them. They sold him a Renoir and a Van Gogh. The Renoir was a small head of a girl and there was some query about it. There seemed no reason to believe that the Wedderburn Gallery had not bought it in the first place in all good faith. There was a case about it. A great many art experts came and gave their verdicts. In fact, as usual, in the end they all seemed to contradict each other. The gallery offered to take it back in any case. However, the millionaire didn't change his mind, since the latest fashionable expert swore that it was perfectly genuine. So he stuck to it. All the same there's been a bit of suspicion hanging round the gallery ever since."
           
          Poirot looked again at his list.
           
          "And what about Mr David Baker? Have you looked him up for me?"
           
          "Oh, he's one of the usual mob. Riff-raff - go about in gangs and break up night clubs. Live on purple hearts - heroin - Coke - Girls go mad about them. He's the kind they moan over saying his life has been so hard and he's such a wonderful genius. His painting is not appreciated. Nothing but good old sex, if you ask me."
           
          Poirot consulted his list again.
           
          "Do you know anything about Mr Reece-Holland, M.P.?"
           
          "Doing quite well, politically. Got the gift of the gab all right. One or two slightly peculiar transactions in the City, but he's wriggled out of them quite neatly. I'd say he was a slippery one. He's made quite a good deal of money off and on by rather doubtful means."
           
          Poirot came to his last point.
           
          "What about Sir Roderick Horsefield?"
           
          "Nice old boy but gaga. What a nose you have, Poirot, get it into everything, don't you? Yes, there's been a lot of trouble in the Special Branch. It's this craze for memoirs. Nobody knows what indiscreet revelations are going to be made next. All the old boys, service and otherwise, are raving hard to bring out their own particular brand of what they remember of the indiscretions of others! Usually it doesn't much matter, but sometimes - well, you know. Cabinets change their policies and you don't want to affront someone's susceptibilities or give the wrong publicity, so we have to try and muffle the old boys. Some of them are not too easy. But you'll have to go to the Special Branch if you want to nose into any of that. I shouldn't think there was much wrong. The trouble is they don't destroy the papers they should. They keep the lot. However, I don't think there is much in that, but we have evidence that a certain power is nosing around."
           
          Poirot gave a deep sigh.
           
          "Haven't I helped?" asked the Chief Inspector.
           
          "I am very glad to get the real lowdown from official quarters. But no, I don't think there is much help in what you have told me." He sighed and then said, "What would be your opinion if someone said to you casually that a woman - a young attractive woman - wore a wig?"
           
          "Nothing in that," said Chief Inspector Neele, and added, with slight asperity, "my wife wears a wig when we're travelling any time. It saves a lot of trouble."
           
          "I beg your pardon," said Hercule Poirot.
           
          As the two men bade each other goodbye, the Chief Inspector asked:
           
          "You got all the dope, I suppose, on that suicide case you were asking about in the flats? I had it sent round to you."
           
          "Yes, thank you. The official facts, at least. A bare record."
           
          "There was something you were talking about just now that brought it back to my mind. I'll think of it in a moment. It was the usual, rather sad story. Gay woman, fond of men, enough money to live upon, no particular worries, drank too much and went down the hill. And then she gets what I call the health bug. You know, they're convinced they have cancer or something in that line. They consult a doctor and he tells them they're all right, and they go home and don't believe him. If you ask me it's usually because they find they're no longer as attractive as they used to be to men. That's what's really depressing them. Yes, it happens all the time. They're lonely, I suppose, poor devils. Mrs Charpentier was just one of them. I don't suppose that any -" he stopped. "Oh yes, of course, I remember. You were asking about one of our M.P.s. Reece-Holland. He's a fairly gay one himself in a discreet way. Anyway, Louise Charpentier was his mistress at one time. That's all."
           
          "Was it a serious liaison?"
           
          "Oh I shouldn't say so particularly. They went to some rather questionable clubs together and things like that. You know, we keep a discreet eye on things of that kind. But there was never anything in the press about them. Nothing of that kind."
           
          "I see."
           
          "But it lasted for a certain time. They were seen together, off and on for about six months, but I don't think she was the only one and I don't think he was the only one either. So you can't make anything of that, can you?"
           
          "I do not think so," said Poirot.
           
          "But all the same," he said to himself as he went down the stairs, "all the same, it is a link. It explains the embarrassment of Mr McFarlane. It is a link, a tiny link, a link between Emlyn Reece-Holland, M.P., and Louise Charpentier." It didn't mean anything probably. Why should it? But yet - "I know too much," said Poirot angrily to himself. "I know too much. I know a little about everything and everyone but I cannot get my pattern. Half these facts are irrelevant. I want a pattern. A pattern. My kingdom for a pattern," he said aloud.
           
          "I beg your pardon, sir," said the lift boy, turning a startled head.
           
          "It is nothing," said Poirot.
           
          Chapter 18
           
          Poirot paused at the doorway of the Wedderburn Gallery to inspect a picture which depicted three aggressive-looking cows with vastly elongated bodies overshadowed by a colossal and complicated design of windmills. The two seemed to have nothing to do with each other or the very curious purple colouring.
           
          "Interesting, isn't it?" said a soft purring voice.
           
          A middle-aged man who at first sight seemed to have shown a smile which exhibited an almost excessive number of beautiful white teeth, was at his elbow.
           
          "Such freshness."
           
          He had large white plump hands which he waved as though he was using them in an arabesque.
           
          "Clever exhibition. Closed last week. Claude Raphael show opened the day before yesterday. It's going to do well. Very well indeed."
           
          "Ah," said Poirot and was led through grey velvet curtains into a long room. Poirot made a few cautious if doubtful remarks. The plump man took him in hand in a practised manner. Here was someone, he obviously felt, who must not be frightened away. He was a very experienced man in the art of salesmanship.
           
          You felt at once that you were welcome to be in his gallery all day if you liked without making a purchase. Sheerly, solely looking at these delightful pictures - though when you entered the gallery you might not have thought that they were delightful. But by the time you went out you were convinced that delightful was exactly the word to describe them. After receiving some useful artistic instruction, and making a few of the amateur's stock remarks such as "I rather like that one," Mr Boscombe responded encouragingly by some such phrase as:
           
          "Now that's very interesting that you should say that. It shows, if I may say so, great perspicacity. Of course you know it isn't the ordinary reaction. Most people prefer something - well, shall I say slightly obvious like that -" he pointed to a blue and green striped effect arranged in one corner of the canvas - "but this, yes, you've spotted the quality of the thing. I'd say myself - of course it's only my personal opinion - that that's one of Raphael's masterpieces."
           
          Poirot and he looked together with both their heads on one side at an orange lop-sided diamond with two human eyes depending from it by what looked like a spidery thread. Pleasant relations established and time obviously being infinite, Poirot remarked:
           
          "I think a Miss Frances Cary works for you, does she not?"
           
          "Ah yes, Frances. Clever girl that. Very artistic and very competent too. Just come back from Portugal where she's been arranging an art show for us. Very successful. Quite a good artist herself, but not I should say really creative, if you understand me. She is better on the business side. I think she recognises that herself."
           
          "I understand that she is a good patron of the arts?"
           
          "Oh yes. She's interested in Les Jeunes. Encourages talent, persuaded me to give a show for a little group of young artists last spring. It was quite successful - the Press noticed it - all in a small way, you understand. Yes, she has her protegйs."
           
          "I am, you understand, somewhat old-fashioned. Some of these young men - vraiment." Poirot's hands went up.
           
          "Ah," said Mr Boscombe indulgently, "you mustn't go by their appearance. It's just a fashion, you know. Beards and jeans or brocades and hair. Just a passing phase."
           
          "David someone," said Poirot. "I forgot his last name. Miss Cary seemed to think highly of him."
           
          "Sure you don't mean Peter Cardiff? He's her present protegй. Mind you, I'm not quite so sure about him as she is. He's really not so much avant garde as he is - well, positively reactionary. Quite - quite - Burne-Jones sometimes! Still, one never knows. You do get these reactions. She acts as his model occasionally."
           
          "David Baker - that was the name I was trying to remember," said Poirot.
           
          "He is not bad," said Mr Boscombe, without enthusiasm. "Not much originality, in my opinion. He was one of the group of artists I mentioned, but he didn't make any particular impression. A good painter, mind, but not striking. Derivative!"
           
          Poirot went home. Miss Lemon presented him with letters to sign, and departed with them duly signed. George served him with an omelette fines herbes garnished, as you might say, with a discreetly sympathetic manner. After lunch as Poirot was settling himself in his square-backed armchair with his coffee at his elbow, the telephone rang.
           
          "Mrs Oliver, sir," said George, lifting the telephone and placing it at his elbow. Poirot picked up the receiver reluctantly.
           
          He did not want to talk to Mrs Oliver. He felt that she would urge upon him something which he did not want to do.
           
          "M. Poirot?"
           
          "C'est moi."
           
          "Well, what are you doing? What have you done?"
           
          "I am sitting in this chair," said Poirot.
           
          "Thinking," he added.
           
          "Is that all?" said Mrs Oliver.
           
          "It is the important thing," said Poirot. "Whether I shall have success in it or not I do not know."
           
          "But you must find that girl. She's probably been kidnapped."
           
          "It would certainly seem so," said Poirot. "And I have a letter here which came by the midday post from her father, urging me to come and see him and tell him what progress I have made."
           
          "Well, what progress have you made?"
           
          "At the moment," said Poirot reluctantly, "none."
           
          "Really, M. Poirot, you really must take a grip on yourself."
           
          "You, too!"
           
          "What do you mean, me too?"
           
          "Urging me on."
           
          "Why don't you go down to that place in Chelsea, where I was hit on the head."
           
          "And get myself hit on the head also?"
           
          "I simply don't understand you," said Mrs Oliver. "I gave you a clue by finding the girl in the cafй. You said so."
           
          "I know, I know."
           
          "And then you go and lose her!"
           
          "I know, I know."
           
          "What about that woman who threw herself out of a window. Haven't you got anything out of that?"
           
          "I have made enquiries, yes."
           
          "Well?"
           
          "Nothing. The woman is one of many. They are attractive when young, they have affairs, they are passionate, they have still more affairs, they get less attractive, they are unhappy and drink too much, they think they have cancer or some fatal disease and so at last in despair and loneliness they throw themselves out of a window!"
           
          "You said her death was important - that it meant something."
           
          "It ought to have done."
           
          "Really!" At a loss for further comment, Mrs Oliver rang off.
           
          Poirot leant back in his armchair, as far as he could lean back since it was of an upright nature, waved to George to remove the coffee pot and also the telephone and proceeded to reflect upon what he did or did not know. To clarify his thoughts he spoke out loud. He recalled three philosophic questions.
           
          "What do I know? What can I hope? What ought I to do?"
           
          He was not sure that he got them in the right order or indeed if they were quite the right questions, but he reflected upon them.
           
          "Perhaps I am too old," said Hercule Poirot, at the bottom depths of despair. "What do I know?"
           
          Upon reflection he thought that he knew too much! He laid that question aside for the moment.
           
          "What can I hope?" Well, one could always hope. He could hope that those excellent brains of his, so much better than anybody else's, would come up sooner or later with an answer to a problem which he felt uneasily that he did not really understand.
           
          "What ought I to do?" Well, that was very definite. What he ought to do was to go and call upon Mr Andrew Restarick who, obviously distraught about his daughter, and who would no doubt blame Poirot for not having by now delivered the daughter in person. Poirot could understand that, and sympathised with his point of view, but disliked having to present himself in such a very unfavourable light. The only other thing he could do was to telephone to a certain number and ask what developments there had been.
           
          But before he did that, he would go back to the question he had laid aside.
           
          "What do I know?"
           
          He knew that the Wedderburn Gallery was under suspicion - so far it had kept on the right side of the law, but it would not hesitate at swindling ignorant millionaires by selling them dubious pictures.
           
          He recalled Mr Boscombe with his plump white hands and his plentiful teeth, and decided that he did not like him. He was the kind of man who was almost certainly up to dirty work, though he would no doubt protect himself remarkably well. That was a fact that might come into use because it might connect up with David Baker. Then there was David Baker himself, the Peacock. What did he know about him? He had met him, he had conversed with him, and he had formed certain opinions about him. He would do a crooked deal of any kind for money, he would marry a rich heiress for her money and not for love, he might perhaps be bought off. Yes, he probably could be bought off. Andrew Restarick certainly believed so and he was probably right. Unless -
           
          He considered Andrew Restarick, thinking more of the picture on the wall hanging above him than of the man himself. He remembered the strong features, the jutting out chin, the air of resolution, of decision.
           
          Then he thought of Mrs Andrew Restarick, deceased. The bitter lines of her mouth... Perhaps he would go down to Crosshedges again and look at that portrait, so as to see it more clearly because there might be a clue to Norma in that.
           
          Norma - no, he must not think of Norma yet. What else was there?
           
          There was Mary Restarick whom the girl Sonia said must have a lover because she went up to London so often. He considered that point but he did not think that Sonia was right. He thought Mrs Restarick was much more likely to go to London in order to look at possible properties to buy, luxury flats, houses in Mayfair, decorators, all the things that money in the metropolis could buy.
           
          Money... It seemed to him that all the points that had been passing through his mind came to this in the end. Money.
           
          The importance of money. There was a great deal of money in this case. Somehow, in some way that was not obvious, money counted. Money played its part. So far there had been nothing to justify his belief that the tragic death of Mrs Charpentier had been the work of Norma.
           
          No sign of evidence, no motive; yet it seemed to him that there was an undeniable link. The girl had said that she "might have committed a murder". A death had taken place only a day or two previously.
           
          A death that had occurred in the building where she lived. Surely it would be too much of a coincidence that that death should not be connected in any way?
           
          He thought again of the mysterious illness which had affected Mary Restarick. An occurrence so simple as to be classic in its outline. A poison case where the poisoner was - must be - one of the household. Had Mary Restarick poisoned herself, had her husband tried to poison her, had the girl Sonia administered poison? Or had Norma been the culprit. Everything pointed, Hercule Poirot had to confess, to Norma as being the logical person. "Tout de mкme," said Poirot, "since I cannot find anything, eh bien then the logic falls out of the window."
           
          He sighed, rose to his feet and told George to fetch him a taxi. He must keep his appointment with Andrew Restarick.
           
          Chapter 19
           
          Claudia Reece-Holland was not in the office today. Instead, a middle-aged woman received Poirot. She said that Mr Restarick was waiting for him and ushered him into Restarick's room.
           
          "Well?" Restarick hardly waited until he had come through the door. "Well, what about my daughter?"
           
          Poirot spread out his hands.
           
          "As yet - nothing."
           
          "But look here, man, there must be something - some clue. A girl can't just disappear into thin air."
           
          "Girls have done it before now and will do it again."
           
          "Did you understand that no expense was to be spared, none whatever? I - I can't go on like this."
           
          He seemed completely on edge by this time. He looked thinner and his reddened eyes spoke of sleepless nights.
           
          "I know what your anxiety must be, but I assure you that I have done everything possible to trace her. These things alas, cannot be hurried."
           
          "She may have lost her memory or - or she may - I mean, she might be sick."
           
          Poirot thought he knew what the broken form of the sentence meant. Restarick had been about to say, "she may perhaps be dead."
           
          He sat down the other side of the desk and said:
           
          "Believe me, I appreciate your anxiety and I have to say to you once again that the results would be a lot quicker if you consulted the police."
           
          "No!" The word broke out explosively.
           
          "They have greater facilities, more lines of enquiry. I assure you it is not only a question of money. Money cannot give you the same result as a highly efficient organisation can do."
           
          "Man, it's no use talking in that soothing way. Norma is my daughter. My only daughter, the only flesh and blood I've got."
           
          "Are you sure that you have told me everything - everything possible - about your daughter?"
           
          "What more can I tell you?"
           
          "That is for you to say, not me. Have there been, for instance, any incidents in the past?"
           
          "Such as? What do you mean, man?"
           
          "Any definite history of mental instability."
           
          "You think that - that -"
           
          "How do I know? How can I know?"
           
          "And how do I know?" said Restarick, suddenly bitter. "What do I know of her? All these years, Grace was a bitter woman. A woman who did not easily forgive or forget. Sometimes I feel - I feel that she was the wrong person to have brought Norma up."
           
          He got up, walked up and down the room and then sat down again.
           
          "Of course I shouldn't have left my wife. I know that. I left her to bring up the child. But then at the time I suppose I made excuses for myself. Grace was a woman of excellent character devoted to Norma. A thoroughly good guardian for her. But was she? Was she really? Some of the letters Grace wrote to me were as though they breathed anger and revenge. Well, I suppose that's natural enough. But I was away all those years. I should have come back, come back more often and found out how the child was getting on. I suppose I had a bad conscience. Oh, it's no good making excuses now."
           
          He turned his head sharply.
           
          "Yes, I did think when I saw her again that Norma's whole attitude was neurotic, indisciplined. I hoped she and Mary would - would get on better after a little while but I have to admit that I don't feel the girl was entirely normal. I felt it would be better for her to have a job in London and come home for weekends, but not to be forced into Mary's company the whole time. Oh, I suppose I've made a mess of everything. But where is she, M. Poirot? Where is she? Do you think she may have lost her memory? One hears of such things."
           
          "Yes," said Poirot, "that is a possibility. In her state she may be wandering about quite unaware of who she is. Or she may have had an accident. That is less likely. I can assure you that I have made all enquiries in hospitals and other places."
           
          "You don't think she is - you don't think she's dead?"
           
          "She would be easier to find dead than alive, I can assure you. Please calm yourself, Mr Restarick. Remember she may have friends of whom you know nothing. Friends in any part of England, friends whom she has known while living with her mother, or with her aunt, or friends who were friends of school friends of hers. All these things take time to sort out. It may be - you must prepare yourself - that she is with a boy-friend of some kind."
           
          "David Baker? If I thought that -"
           
          "She is not with David Baker. That," said Poirot dryly, "I ascertained first of all."
           
          "How do I know what friends she has?"
           
          He sighed. "If I find her, when I find her - I'd rather put it that way - I'm going to take her out of all this."
           
          "Out of all what?"
           
          "Out of this country. I have been miserable, M. Poirot, miserable ever since I returned here. I always hated City life. The boring round of office routine, continual consultations with lawyers and financiers. The life I liked was always the same. Travelling, moving about from place to place, going to wild and inaccessible places. That's the life for me. I should never have left it. I should have sent for Norma to come out to me and, as I say, when I find her that's what I'm going to do. Already I'm being approached with various take-over bids. Well, they can have the whole caboodle on very advantageous terms. I'll take the cash and go back to a country that means something, that's real."
           
          "Aha! And what will your wife say to that?"
           
          "Mary? She's used to that life. That's where she comes from."
           
          "To les femmes with plenty of money," said Poirot, "London can be very attractive."
           
          "She'll see it my way."
           
          The telephone rang on his desk. He picked it up.
           
          "Yes? Oh. From Manchester? Yes. If it's Claudia Reece-Holland, put her through."
           
          He waited a minute.
           
          "Hallo, Claudia. Yes. Speak up - it's a very bad line, I can't hear you. They agreed?... Ah, pity... No, I think you did very well... Right... All right then. Take the evening train back. We'll discuss it further tomorrow morning."
           
          He replaced the telephone on its rest.
           
          "That's a competent girl," he said.
           
          "Miss Reece-Holland?"
           
          "Yes. Unusually competent. Takes a lot of bother off my shoulders. I gave her pretty well carte blanche to put through this deal in Manchester on her own terms. I really felt I couldn't concentrate. And she's done exceedingly well. She's as good as a man in some ways."
           
          He looked at Poirot, suddenly bringing himself back to the present.
           
          "Ah, yes, M. Poirot. Well, I'm afraid I've rather lost my grip. Do you need more money for expenses?"
           
          "No, Monsieur. I assure you that I will do my utmost to restore your daughter sound and well. I have taken all possible precautions for her safety."
           
          He went out through the outer office. When he reached the street he looked up at the sky.
           
          "A definite answer to one question," he said, "that is what I need."
           
          Chapter 20
           
          Hercule Poirot looked up at the faзade of the dignified Georgian house in what had been until recently a quiet street in an old-fashioned market town. Progress was rapidly overtaking it, but the new supermarket, the Gifte Shoppe, Margery's Boutique, Peg's Cafй, and a palatial new bank, had all chosen sites in Croft Road and not encroached on the narrow High Street.
           
          The brass knocker on the door was brightly polished, Poirot noted with approval. He pressed the bell at the side.
           
          It was opened almost at once by a tall distinguished-looking woman with upswept grey hair and an energetic manner.
           
          "M. Poirot? You are very punctual. Come in."
           
          "Miss Battersby?"
           
          "Certainly." She held back the door.
           
          Poirot entered. She deposited his hat on the hall stand and led the way to a pleasant room overlooking a narrow walled garden. She waved towards a chair and sat down herself in an attitude of expectation. It was clear that Miss Battersby was not one to lose time in conventional utterances.
           
          "You are, I think, the former Principal of Meadowfield School?"
           
          "Yes. I retired a year ago. I understand you wished to see me on the subject of Norma Restarick, a former pupil."
           
          "That is right."
           
          "In your letter," said Miss Battersby, "you gave me no further details." She added, "I may say that I know who you are, M. Poirot. I should therefore like a little more information before I proceed further. Are you, for instance, thinking of employing Norma Restarick?"
           
          "That is not my intention, no."
           
          "Knowing what your profession is you understand why I should want further details. Have you, for instance, an introduction to me from any of Norma's relations?"
           
          "Again, no," said Hercule Poirot. "I will explain myself further."
           
          "Thank you."
           
          "In actual fact, I am employed by Miss Restarick's father, Andrew Restarick."
           
          "Ah. He has recently returned to England, I believe, after many years' absence."
           
          "That is so."
           
          "But you do not bring me a letter of introduction from him?"
           
          "I did not ask him for one."
           
          Miss Battersby looked at him enquiringly.
           
          "He might have insisted on coming with me," said Hercule Poirot. "That would have hampered me in asking you the questions that I wish to ask, because it is likely that the answers to them might cause him pain and distress. There is no reason why he should be caused further distress than he is already suffering at this moment."
           
          "Has anything happened to Norma?"
           
          "I hope not... There is, however, a possibility of that. You remember the girl, Miss Battersby?"
           
          "I remember all my pupils. I have an excellent memory. Meadowfield, in any case, is not a very large school. Two hundred girls, no more."
           
          "Why have you resigned from it, Miss Battersby?"
           
          "Really, M. Poirot, I cannot see that that is any of your business."
           
          "No, I am merely expressing my quite natural curiosity."
           
          "I am seventy. Is that not a reason?"
           
          "Not in your case, I should say. You appear to me to be in full vigour and energy, fully capable of continuing your headmistress-ship for a good many years to come."
           
          "Times change, M. Poirot. One does not always like the way they are changing. I will satisfy your curiosity. I found I was having less and less patience with parents. Their aims for their daughters are shortsighted and quite frankly stupid."
           
          Miss Battersby was, as Poirot knew from looking up her qualifications, a very well-known mathematician.
           
          "Do not think that I lead an idle life," said Miss Battersby. "I lead a life where the work is far more congenial to me. I coach senior students. And now, please, may I know the reason for your interest in the girl, Norma Restarick?"
           
          "There is some occasion for anxiety. She has, to put it baldly, disappeared."
           
          Miss Battersby continued to look quite unconcerned.
           
          "Indeed? When you say 'disappeared', I presume you mean that she has left home without telling her parents where she was going. Oh, I believe her mother is dead, so without telling her father where she was going. That is really not at all uncommon nowadays, M. Poirot. Mr Restarick has not consulted the police?"
           
          "He is adamant on that subject. He refuses definitely."
           
          "I can assure you that I have no knowledge as to where the girl is. I have heard nothing from her. Indeed, I have had no news from her since she left Meadowfield. So I fear I cannot help you in any way."
           
          "It is not precisely that kind of information that I want. I want to know what kind of a girl she is - how you would describe her. Not her personal appearance. I do not mean that. I mean as to her personality and characteristics."
           
          "Norma, at school, was a perfectly ordinary girl. Not scholastically brilliant, but her work was adequate."
           
          "Not a neurotic type?"
           
          Miss Battersby considered. Then she said slowly: "No, I would not say so. Not more, that is, than might be expected considering her home circumstances."
           
          "You mean her invalid mother?"
           
          "Yes. She came from a broken home. The father, to whom I think she was very devoted, left home suddenly with another woman - a fact which her mother quite naturally resented. She probably upset the daughter more than she need have done by voicing her resentment without restraint."
           
          "Perhaps it may be more to the point if I ask you your opinion of the late Mrs Restarick?"
           
          "What you are asking for is my private opinion?"
           
          "If you do not object?"
           
          "No, I have no hesitation at all in answering your question. Home conditions are very important in a girl's life and I have always studied them as much as I can through the meagre information that comes to me. Mrs Restarick was a worthy and upright woman, I should say. Self-righteous, censorious and handicapped in life by being an extremely stupid one!"
           
          "Ah," said Poirot appreciatively.
           
          "She was also, I would say, a malade imaginaire. A type that would exaggerate her ailments. The type of woman who is always in and out of nursing homes. An unfortunate home background for a girl - especially a girl who has no very definite personality of her own. Norma had no marked intellectual ambitions, she had no confidence in herself, she was not a girl to whom I would recommend a career. A nice ordinary job followed by marriage and children was what I would have hoped for her."
           
          "You saw - forgive me for asking - no signs at any time of mental instability?"
           
          "Mental instability?" said Miss Battersby. "Rubbish!"
           
          "So that is what you say. Rubbish! And not neurotic?"
           
          "Any girl, or almost any girl, can be neurotic, especially in adolescence, and in her first encounters with the world. She is still immature, and needs guidance in her first encounters with sex. Girls are frequently attracted to completely unsuitable, sometimes even dangerous young men. There are, it seems, no parents nowadays, or hardly any, with the strength of character to save them from this, so they often go through a time of hysterical misery, and perhaps make an unsuitable marriage which ends not long after in divorce."
           
          "But Norma showed no signs of mental instability?" Poirot persisted with the question.
           
          "She is an emotional but normal girl," said Miss Battersby. "Mental instability! As I said before - rubbish! She's probably run away with some young man to get married, and there's nothing more normal than that!"
           
          Chapter 21
           
          Poirot sat in his big square armchair. His hands rested on the arms, his eyes looked at the chimney-piece in front of him without seeing it. By his elbow was a small table and on it, neatly clipped together, were various documents.
           
          Reports from Mr Goby, information obtained from his friend, Chief Inspector Neele, a series of separate pages under the heading of "Hearsay, gossip, rumour" and the sources from which it had been obtained.
           
          At the moment he had no need to consult these documents. He had, in fact, read them through carefully and laid them there in case there was any particular point he wished to refer to once more. He wanted now to assemble together in his mind all that he knew and had learned because he was convinced that these things must form a pattern. There must be a pattern there. He was considering now, from what exact angle to approach it. He was not one to trust in enthusiasm for some particular intuition. He was not an intuitive person - but he did have feelings. The important thing was not the feelings themselves - but what might have caused them. It was the cause that was interesting, the cause was so often not what you thought it was. You had often to work it out by logic, by sense and by knowledge.
           
          What did he feel about this case - what kind of a case was it? Let him start from the general, then proceed to the particular.
           
          What were the salient facts of this case? Money was one of them, he thought, though he did not know how. Somehow or other, money... He also thought, increasingly so, that there was evil somewhere.
           
          He knew evil. He had met it before. He knew the tang of it, the taste of it, the way it went. The trouble was that here he did not yet know exactly where it was. He had taken certain steps to combat evil. He hoped they would be sufficient. Something was happening, something was in progress, that was not yet accomplished. Someone, somewhere, was in danger.
           
          The trouble was that the facts pointed both ways. If the person he thought was in danger was really in danger, there seemed so far as he could see no reason why. Why should that particular person be in danger? There was no motive. If the person he thought was in danger was not in danger, then the whole approach might have to be completely reversed... Everything that pointed one way he must turn round and look at from the completely opposite point of view.
           
          He left that for the moment in the balance, and he came from there to the personalities - to the people. What pattern did they make? What part were they playing?
           
          First - Andrew Restarick. He had accumulated by now a fair amount of information about Andrew Restarick. A general picture of his life before and after going abroad. A restless man, never sticking to one place or purpose long, but generally liked. Nothing of the wastrel about him, nothing shoddy or tricky. Not, perhaps, a strong personality? Weak in many ways?
           
          Poirot frowned, dissatisfied. That picture did not somehow fit the Andrew Restarick that he himself had met. Not weak surely, with that thrust-out chin, the steady eyes, the air of resolution. He had been a successful business man, too, apparently.
           
          Good at his job in the earlier years, and he had put through good deals in South Africa and in South America. He had increased his holdings. It was a success story that he had brought home with him, not one of failure. How then could he be a weak personality? Weak, perhaps, only where women were concerned. He had made a mistake in his marriage - married the wrong woman... Pushed into it perhaps by his family? And then he had met the other woman. Just that one woman? Or had there been several women? It was hard to find a record of that kind after so many years. Certainly he had not been a notoriously unfaithful husband. He had had a normal home, he had been fond, by all accounts, of his small daughter. But then he had come across a woman whom he had cared for enough to leave his home and to leave his country. It had been a real love affair.
           
          But had it, perhaps, matched up with any additional motive? Dislike of office work, the City, the daily routine of London? He thought it might. It matched the pattern. He seemed, too, to have been a solitary type. Everyone had liked him both here and abroad, but there seemed no intimate friends. Indeed, it would have been difficult for him to have intimate friends abroad because he had never stopped in any one spot long enough. He had plunged into some gamble, attempted a coup, had made good, then tired of the thing and gone on somewhere else. Nomadic! A wanderer.
           
          It still did not quite accord with his own picture of the man... A picture? The word stirred in his mind the memory of the picture that hung in Restarick's office, on the wall behind his desk. It had been a portrait of the same man fifteen years ago.
           
          How much difference had those fifteen years made in the man sitting there? Surprisingly little, on the whole! More grey in the hair, a heavier set to the shoulders, but the lines of character on the face were much the same. A determined face. A man who knew what he wanted, who meant to get it. A man who would take risks. A man with a certain ruthlessness.
           
          Why, he wondered, had Restarick brought that picture up to London? They had been companion portraits of a husband and wife. Strictly speaking artistically, they should have remained together. Would a psychologist have said that subconsciously Restarick wanted to dissociate himself from his former wife once more, to separate himself from her? Was he then mentally still retreating from her personality although she was dead? An interesting point...
           
          The pictures had presumably come out of storage with various other family articles of furnishing. Mary Restarick had no doubt selected certain personal objects to supplement the furniture of Crosshedges for which Sir Roderick had made room. He wondered whether Mary Restarick, the new wife, had liked hanging up that particular pair of portraits. More natural, perhaps, if she had put the first wife's portrait in an attic! But then he reflected that she would probably not have had an attic to stow away unwanted objects at Crosshedges. Presumably Sir Roderick had made room for a few family things whilst the returned couple were looking about for a suitable house in London. So it had not mattered much, and it would have been easier to hang both portraits. Besides, Mary Restarick seemed a sensible type of woman - not a jealous or emotional type.
           
          "Tout de mкme" thought Hercule Poirot to himself, "les femmes, they are all capable of jealousy, and sometimes the ones you would consider the least likely!"
           
          His thoughts passed to Mary Restarick, and he considered her in turn. It struck him that what was really odd was that he had so few thoughts about her! He had seen her only the once, and she had, somehow or other, not made much impression on him. A certain efficiency, he thought, and also a certain - how could he put it? - artificiality? ("But there, my friend," said Hercule Poirot, again in parenthesis, "there you are considering her wig!")
           
          It was absurd really that one should know so little about a woman. A woman who was efficient and who wore a wig, and who was good-looking, and who was sensible, and who could feel anger. Yes, she had been angry when she had found the Peacock Boy wandering uninvited in her house. She had displayed it sharply and unmistakably. And the boy - he had seemed what? Amused, no more. But she had been angry, very angry at finding him there. Well, that was natural enough. He would not be any mother's choice for her daughter - Poirot stopped short in his thoughts, shaking his head vexedly. Mary Restarick was not Norma's mother. Not for her the agony, the apprehension about a daughter making an unsuitable unhappy marriage, or announcing an illegitimate baby with an unsuitable father! What did Mary feel about Norma? Presumably, to begin with, that she was a thoroughly tiresome girl - who had picked up with a young man who was going to be obviously a source of worry and annoyance to Andrew Restarick. But after that? What had she thought and felt about a step-daughter who was apparently deliberately trying to poison her?
           
          Her attitude seemed to have been the sensible one. She had wanted to get Norma out of the house, herself out of danger, and to co-operate with her husband in suppressing any scandal about what had happened.
           
          Norma came down for an occasional weekend to keep up appearances, but her life henceforward was bound to centre in London. Even when the Restaricks moved into the house they were looking for, they would not suggest Norma living with them. Most girls, nowadays, lived away from their families. So that problem had been settled.
           
          Except that, for Poirot, the question of who had administered poison to Mary Restarick was very far from settled. Restarick himself believed it was his daughter - But Poirot wondered...
           
          His mind played with the possibilities of the girl Sonia. What was she doing in that house? Why had she come there? She had Sir Roderick eating out of her hand all right - perhaps she had no wish to go back to her own country? Possibly her designs were purely matrimonial - old men of Sir Roderick's age married pretty young girls every day of the week. In the worldly sense, Sonia could do very well for herself.
           
          A secure social position, and widowhood to look forward to with a settled and sufficient income - or were her aims quite different? Had she gone to Kew Gardens with Sir Roderick's missing papers tucked between the pages of a book?
           
          Had Mary Restarick become suspicious of her - of her activities, of her loyalties, of where she went on her days off, and of whom she met? And had Sonia, then, administered the substances which in cumulative small doses, would arouse no suspicion of anything but ordinary gastroenteritis?
           
          For the time being, he put the household at Crosshedges out of his mind.
           
          He came, as Norma had come, to London, and proceeded to the consideration of three girls who shared a flat.
           
          Claudia Reece-Holland, Frances Cary, Norma Restarick. Claudia Reece-Holland, daughter of a well-known Member of Parliament, well off, capable, well trained, good-looking, a first-class secretary.
           
          Frances Cary, a country solicitor's daughter, artistic, had been to drama school for a short time, then to the Slade, chucked that also, occasionally worked for the Arts Council, now employed by an art gallery. Earned a good salary, was artistic and had bohemian associations. She knew the young man, David Baker, though not apparently more than casually. Perhaps she was in love with him? He was the kind of young man, Poirot thought, disliked generally by parents, members of the Establishment and also the police. Where the attraction lay for well-born girls Poirot failed to see. But one had to acknowledge it as a fact. What did he himself think of David?
           
          A good-looking boy with the impudent and slightly amused air whom he had first seen in the upper stories of Crosshedges, doing an errand for Norma (or reconnoitring on his own, who could say?). He had seen him again when he gave him a lift in his car. A young man of personality, giving indeed an impression of ability in what he chose to do. And yet there was clearly an unsatisfactory side to him. Poirot picked up one of the papers on the table by his side and studied it. A bad record though not positively criminal. Small frauds on garages, hooliganism, smashing up things, on probation twice. All those things were the fashion of the day. They did not come under Poirot's category of evil. He had been a promising painter, but had chucked it. He was the king that did no steady work. He was vain, proud, a peacock in love with his own appearance. Was he anything more than that? Poirot wondered.
           
          He stretched out an arm and picked up a sheet of paper on which was scribbed down the rough heads of the conversation held between Norma and David in the cafй - that is, as well as Mrs Oliver could remember them. And how well was that, Poirot thought? He shook his head doubtfully.
           
          One never knew quite at what point Mrs Oliver's imagination would take over!
           
          Did the boy care for Norma, really want to marry her? There was no doubt about her feelings for him. He had suggested marrying her. Had Norma got money of her own? She was the daughter of a rich man, but that was not the same thing. Poirot made an exclamation of vexation. He had forgotten to enquire the terms of the late Mrs Restarick's will. He flipped through the sheets of notes. No, Mr Goby had not neglected this obvious need. Mrs Restarick apparently had been well provided for by her husband during her lifetime. She had had, apparently, a small income of her own amounting perhaps to a thousand a year.
           
          She had left everything she possessed to her daughter. It would hardly amount, Poirot thought, to a motive for marriage.
           
          Probably, as his only child, she would inherit a lot of money at her father's death but that was not at all the same thing. Her father might leave her very little indeed if he disliked the man she had married.
           
          He would say then, that David did care for her, since he was willing to marry her.
           
          And yet - Poirot shook his head. It was about the fifth time he had shaken it. All these things did not tie up, they did not make a satisfactory pattern. He remembered Restarick's desk, and the cheque he had been writing - apparently to buy off the young man - and the young man, apparently, was quite willing to be bought off! So that again did not tally. The cheque had certainly been made out to David Baker and it was for a very large - really a preposterous - sum. It was a sum that might have tempted any impecunious young man of bad character. And yet he had suggested marriage to her only a day before. That, of course, might have been just a move in the game - a move to raise the price he was asking. Poirot remembered Restarick sitting there, his lips hard. He must care a great deal for his daughter to be willing to pay so high a sum, and he must have been afraid too that the girl herself was quite determined to marry him.
           
          From thoughts of Restarick, he went on to Claudia. Claudia and Andrew Restarick.
           
          Was it chance, sheer chance, that she had come to be his secretary? There might be a link between them. Claudia. He considered her. Three girls in a flat, Claudia Reece-Holland's flat. She had been the one who had taken the flat originally, and shared it first with a friend, a girl she already knew, and then with another girl, the third girl. The third girl, thought Poirot. Yes, it always came back to that.
           
          The third girl. And that is where he had come in the end. Where he had had to come. Where all this thinking out of patterns had led. To Norma Restarick.
           
          A girl who had come to consult him as he sat at breakfast. A girl whom he had joined at a table in a cafй where she had recently been eating baked beans with the young man she loved. (He always seemed to see her at meal times, he noted!) And what did he think about her? First, what did other people think about her? Restarick cared for her and was desperately anxious about her, desperately frightened for her. He not only suspected - he was quite sure, apparently, that she had tried to poison his recently married wife. He had consulted a doctor about her. Poirot felt he would like dearly to talk to that doctor himself, but he doubted if he would get anywhere.
           
          Doctors were very wary of parting with medical information to anyone but a duly accredited person such as the parents. But Poirot could imagine fairly well what the doctor had said. He had been cautious, Poirot thought, as doctors are apt to be.
           
          He'd hemmed and hawed and spoken perhaps of medical treatment. He had not stressed too positively a mental angle, but had certainly suggested it or hinted at it.
           
          In fact, the doctor probably was privately sure that that was what had happened. But he also knew a good deal about hysterical girls, and that they sometimes did things that were not really the result of mental causes, but merely of temper, jealousy, emotion, and hysteria. He would not be a psychiatrist himself nor a neurologist. He would be a G.P. who took no risks of making accusations about which he could not be sure, but suggested certain things out of caution. A job somewhere or other - a job in London, later perhaps treatment from a specialist?
           
          What did anyone else think of Norma Restarick? Claudia Reece-Holland? He didn't know. Certainly not from the little that he knew about her. She was capable of hiding any secret, she would certainly let nothing escape her which she did not mean to let escape. She had shown no signs of wanting to turn the girl out - which she might have done if she had been afraid of her mental condition. There could not have been much discussion between her and Frances on the subject since the other girl had so innocently let escape the fact that Norma had not returned to them after her weekend at home. Claudia had been annoyed about that. It was possible that Claudia was more in the pattern than she appeared. She had brains, Poirot thought, and efficiency... He came back to Norma, came back once again to the third girl. What was her place in the pattern? The place that would pull the whole thing together.
           
          Ophelia, he thought? But there were two opinions to that, just as there were two opinions about Norma. Was Ophelia mad or was she pretending madness? Actresses had been variously divided as to how the part should be played - or perhaps, he should say, producers. They were the ones with ideas. Was Hamlet mad or sane? Take your choice. Was Ophelia mad or sane?
           
          Restarick would not have used the word "mad" even in his thoughts about his daughter. Mentally disturbed was the term that everyone preferred to use. The other word that had been used of Norma had been "batty". "She's a bit batty". "Not quite all there". "A bit wanting, if you know what I mean". Where "daily women" good judges? Poirot thought they might be. There was something odd about Norma, certainly, but she might be odd in a different way to what she seemed. He remembered the picture she had made slouching into his room, a girl of today, the modern type looking just as so many other girls looked. Limp hair hanging on her shoulders, the characterless shift dress, a skimpy look about the knees - all to his old-fashioned eyes looking like an adult girl pretending to be a child.
           
          "I'm sorry, you are too old."
           
          Perhaps it was true. He'd looked at her through the eyes of someone old, without admiration, to him just a girl without apparently will to please, without coquetry.
           
          A girl without any sense of her own femininity - no charm or mystery or enticement, who had nothing to offer, perhaps, but plain biological sex. So it may be that she was right in her condemnation of him.
           
          He could not help her because he did not understand her, because it was not even possible for him to appreciate her. He had done his best for her, but what had that meant up to date? What had he done for her since that one moment of appeal?
           
          And in his thoughts the answer came quickly. He had kept her safe. That at least.
           
          If, indeed, she needed keeping safe. That was where the whole point lay. Did she need keeping safe? That preposterous confession! Really, not so much a confession as an announcement: "I think I may have committed a murder."
           
          Hold on to that, because that was the crux of the whole thing. That was his metier. To deal with murder, to clear up murder, to prevent murder! To be the good dog who hunts down murder. Murder announced. Murder somewhere. He had looked for it and had not found it. The pattern of arsenic in the soup? A pattern of young hooligans stabbing each other with knives? The ridiculous and sinister phrase, bloodstains in the courtyard. A shot fired from a revolver. At whom, and why?
           
          It was not as it ought to be, a form of crime that would fit with the words she had said: "I may have committed a murder".
           
          He had stumbled on in the dark, trying to see a pattern of crime, trying to see where the third girl fitted into that pattern, and coming back always to the same urgent need to know what this girl was really like.
           
          And then with a casual phrase, Ariadne Oliver had, as he thought, shown him the light. The supposed suicide of a woman at Borodene Mansions. That would fit. It was where the third girl had her living quarters.
           
          It must be the murder that she had meant. Another murder committed about the same time would have been too much of a coincidence! Besides there was no sign or trace of any other murder that had been committed about then. No other death that could have sent her hot-foot to consult him, after listening at a party to the lavish admiration of his own achievements which his friend, Mrs Oliver, had given to the world. And so, when Mrs Oliver had informed him in a casual manner of the woman who had thrown herself out of the window, it had seemed to him that at last he had got what he had been looking for.
           
          Here was the clue. The answer to his perplexity. Here he would find what he needed. The why, the when, the where.
           
          "Quelle deception." said Hercule Poirot, out loud.
           
          He stretched out his hand, and sorted out the neatly typed resume of a woman's life. The bald facts of Mrs Charpentier's existence. A woman of forty-three of good social position, reported to have been a wild girl - two marriages - two divorces - a woman who liked men. A woman who of late years had drunk more than was good for her. A woman who liked parties. A woman who was now reported to go about with men a good many years younger than herself. Living in a flat alone in Borodene Mansions, Poirot could understand and feel the sort of woman she was, and had been, and he could see why such a woman might wish to throw herself out of a high window one early morning when she awoke to despair.
           
          Because she had cancer or thought she had cancer? But at the inquest, the medical evidence had said very definitely that that was not so.
           
          What he wanted was some kind of a link with Norma Restarick. He could not find it. He read through the dry facts again.
           
          Identification had been supplied at the inquest by a solicitor. Louise Carpenter, though she had used a Frenchified form of her surname - Charpentier. Because it went better with her Christian name?
           
          Louise? Why was the name Louise familiar? Some casual mention? - a phrase? - his fingers paged neatly through typewritten pages. Ah! there it was! Just that one reference. The girl for whom Andrew Restarick had left his wife had been a girl named Louise Birell. Someone who had proved to be of little significance in Restarick's later life. They had quarrelled and parted after about a year. The same pattern, Poirot thought. The same thing obtaining that had probably obtained all through this particular woman's life. To love a man violently, to break up his home, perhaps, to live with him, and then to quarrel with him and leave him. He felt sure, absolutely sure, that this Louise Charpentier was the same Louise.
           
          Even so, how did it tie up with the girl Norma? Had Restarick and Louise Charpentier come together again when he returned to England? Poirot doubted it.
           
          Their lives had parted years ago. That they had by any chance come together again seemed unlikely to the point of impossibility! It had been a brief and in reality unimportant infatuation. His present wife would hardly be jealous enough of her husband's past to wish to push his former mistress out of a window. Ridiculous! The only person so far as he could see who might have been the type to harbour a grudge over many long years, and wish to execute revenge upon the woman who had broken up her home, might have been the first Mrs Restarick. And that sounded wildly impossible also, and anyway, the first Mrs Restarick was dead!
           
          The telephone rang. Poirot did not move.
           
          At this particular moment he did not want to be disturbed. He had a feeling of being on a trail of some kind... He wanted to pursue it... The telephone stopped.
           
          Good. Miss Lemon would be coping with it.
           
          The door opened and Miss Lemon entered.
           
          "Mrs Oliver wants to speak to you," she said.
           
          Poirot waved a hand. "Not now, not now, I pray you! I cannot speak to her now."
           
          "She says there is something that she has just thought of - something she forget to tell you. About a piece of paper - an unfinished letter, which seems to have fallen out of a blotter in a desk in a furniture van. A rather incoherent story," added Miss Lemon, allowing a note of disapproval to enter her voice.
           
          Poirot waved more frantically.
           
          "Not now," he urged. "I beg of you, not now."
           
          "I will tell her you are busy."
           
          Miss Lemon retreated.
           
          Peace descended once more upon the room. Poirot felt waves of fatigue creeping over him. Too much thinking. One must relax. Yes, one must relax. One must let tension go - in relaxation the pattern would come. He closed his eyes. There were all the components there. He was sure of that now, there was nothing more he could learn from outside. It must come from inside.
           
          And quite suddenly - just as his eyelids were relaxing in sleep - it came...
           
          It was all there - waiting for him! He would have to work it all out. But he knew now. All the bits were there, disconnected bits and pieces, all fitting in. A wig, a picture, 5 a.m., women and their hairdos, the Peacock Boy - all leading to the phrase with which it had begun:
           
          Third Girl...
           
          "I may have committed a murder..." Of course!
           
          A ridiculous nursery rhyme came into his mind. He repeated it aloud.
           
          Rub a dub dub, three men in a tub
           
          And who do you think they be?
           
          A butcher, a baker, a candlestick maker...
           
          Too bad, he couldn't remember the last line.
           
          A baker, yes, and in a far-fetched way, a butcher -
           
          He tried out a feminine parody:
           
          Pat a cake, pat, three girls in a flat
           
          And who do you think they be?
           
          A Personal Aide and a girl from the Slade
           
          And the Third is a -
           
          Miss Lemon came in.
           
          "Ah - I remember now - 'And they all came out of a weenie potato.'"
           
          Miss Lemon looked at him in anxiety.
           
          "Dr Stillingfleet insists on speaking to you at once. He says it is urgent."
           
          "Tell Dr Stillingfleet he can - Dr Stillingfleet, did you say?"
           
          He pushed past her, caught up the receiver. "I am here. Poirot speaking! Something has happened?"
           
          "She's walked out on me."
           
          "What?"
           
          "You heard me. She's walked out. Walked out through the front gate."
           
          "You let her go?"
           
          "What else could I do?"
           
          "You could have stopped her."
           
          "No."
           
          "To let her go was madness."
           
          "No."
           
          "You don't understand."
           
          "That was the arrangement. Free to go at any time."
           
          "You don't understand what may be involved."
           
          "All right then, I don't. But I know what I'm doing. And if I don't let her go, all the work I've done on her would go for nothing. And I have worked on her. Your job and my job aren't the same. We're not out for the same thing. I tell you I was getting somewhere. Getting somewhere, so that I was quite sure she wouldn't walk out on me."
           
          "Ah yes. And then, mon ami, she did."
           
          "Frankly, I can't understand it. I can't see why the setback came."
           
          "Something happened."
           
          "Yes, but what?"
           
          "Somebody she saw, somebody who spoke to her, somebody who found out where she was."
           
          "I don't see how that could have happened... But what you don't seem to see is that she's a free agent. She had to be a free agent."
           
          "Somebody got at her. Somebody found out where she was. Did she get a letter, a telegram, a telephone call?"
           
          "No, nothing of that kind. That I am quite sure of."
           
          "Then how - of course! Newspapers. You have newspapers, I suppose, in that establishment of yours?"
           
          "Certainly. Normal everyday life, that's what I stand for in my place of business."
           
          "Then that is how they got at her. Normal, everyday life. What papers do you take?"
           
          "Five." He named the five.
           
          "When did she go?"
           
          "This morning. Half past ten."
           
          "Exactly. After she read the papers. That is good enough to start on. Which paper did she usually read?"
           
          "I don't think she had any special choice. Sometimes one, sometimes another, sometimes the whole lot of them - sometimes only glanced at them."
           
          "Well, I must not waste time talking."
           
          "You think she saw an advertisement. Something of that kind?"
           
          "What other explanation can there be? Good-bye, I can say no more now. I have to search. Search for the possible advertisement and then get on quickly."
           
          He replaced the receiver.
           
          "Miss Lemon, bring me our two papers. The Morning News and the Daily Comet. Send Georges out for all the others."
           
          As he opened out the papers to the personal advertisements and went carefully down them, he followed his line of thought.
           
          He would be in time. He must be in time. There had been one murder already. There would be another one to come. But he, Hercule Poirot, would prevent that... If he was in time... He was Hercule Poirot - the avenger of the innocent. Did he not say (and people laughed when he said it) "I do not approve of murder". They had thought it an understatement. But it was not an understatement. It was a simple statement of fact without melodrama. He did not approve of murder.
           
          George came in with a sheaf of newspapers.
           
          "There are all this morning's, sir."
           
          Poirot looked at Miss Lemon, who was standing by waiting to be efficient.
           
          "Look through the ones that I have searched in case I have missed anything."
           
          "The Personal column, you mean?"
           
          "Yes. I thought there would be the name David perhaps. A girl's name. Some pet name or nickname. They would not use Norma. An appeal for help, perhaps, or to a meeting."
           
          Miss Lemon took the papers obediently with some distaste. This was not her kind of efficiency, but for the moment he had no other job to give her. He himself spread out the Morning Chronicle. That was the biggest field to search. Three columns of it. He bent over the open sheet.
           
          A lady who wanted to dispose of her fur coat... Passengers wanted for a car trip abroad... Lovely period house for sale... Paying guests... Backward children... Home-made chocolates... "Julia. Shall never forget. Always yours." That was more the kind of thing. He considered it, but passed on. Louis XVth furniture... Middle-aged lady to help run an hotel...
           
          "In desperate trouble. Must see you. Come to flat 4:30 without fail. Our code Goliath."
           
          He heard the doorbell ring just as he called out: "Georges, a taxi," slipped on his overcoat, and went into the hall just as George was opening the front door and colliding with Mrs Oliver. All three of them struggled to disentangle themselves in the narrow hall.
           
          Chapter 22
           
          Frances Cary, carrying her overnight bag, walked down Mandeville Road, chattering with the friend she had just met on the corner, towards the bulk of Borodene Mansions.
           
          "Really, Frances, it's like living in a prison block, that building. Wormwood Scrubs or something."
           
          "Nonsense, Eileen. I tell you, they're frightfully comfortable, these flats. I'm very lucky and Claudia is a splendid person to share with - never bothers you. And she's got a wonderful daily. The flat's really very nicely run."
           
          "Are there just the two of you? I forget. I thought you had a third girl?"
           
          "Oh well, she seems to have walked out on us."
           
          "You mean she doesn't pay her rent?"
           
          "Oh, I think the rent's all right. I think she's probably having some affair with a boyfriend." Eileen lost interest. Boyfriends were too much a matter of course.
           
          "Where are you coming back from now?"
           
          "Manchester. Private view was on. Great success."
           
          "Are you really going to Vienna next month?"
           
          "Yes, I think so. It's pretty well fixed up by now. Rather fun."
           
          "Wouldn't it be awful if some of the pictures got stolen?"
           
          "Oh, they're all insured," said Frances. "All the really valuable ones, anyway."
           
          "How did your friend Peter's show go?"
           
          "Not terribly well, I'm afraid. But there was quite a good review by the critic of The Artist, and that counts a lot."
           
          Frances turned into Borodene Mansions, and her friend went on her way to her own small mews house farther down the road.
           
          Frances said "Good-evening" to the porter, and went up in the lift to the sixth floor. She walked along the passage, humming a little tune to herself.
           
          She inserted her key in the door of the flat. The light in the hall was not on yet.
           
          Claudia was not due back from the office for another hour and a half. But in the sitting-room, the door of which was ajar, the light was on.
           
          Frances said aloud: "Light's on. That's funny."
           
          She slipped out of her coat, dropped her overnight bag, pushed the sitting-room door farther open and went in...
           
          Then she stopped dead. Her mouth opened and then shut. She stiffened all over - her eyes staring at the prone figure on the floor; then they rose slowly to the mirror on the wall that reflected back at her her own horror-stricken face...
           
          Then she drew a deep breath. The momentary paralysis over, she flung back her head and screamed. Stumbling over her bag on the hall floor and kicking it aside, she ran out of the flat and along the passage and beat frenziedly at the door of the next flat.
           
          An elderly woman opened it.
           
          "What on earth -"
           
          "There's someone dead - someone dead. And I think it's someone I know... David Baker. He's lying there on the floor... I think he's stabbed... he must have been stabbed. There's blood - blood everywhere."
           
          She began to sob hysterically. Miss Jacobs shook her, steadied her, lowered her on to a sofa and said authoritatively:
           
          "Be quiet now. I'll get you some brandy." She shoved a glass into her hand.
           
          "Stay there and drink it."
           
          Frances sipped obediently. Miss Jacobs went rapidly out of the door along the passage and through the open door from which the light was pouring out. The living-room door was wide open and Miss Jacobs went straight through it.
           
          She was not the kind of woman who screams. She stood just within the doorway, her lips pursed hard together.
           
          What she was looking at had a nightmarish quality. On the floor lay a handsome young man, his arms flung wide, his chestnut hair falling on his shoulders. He wore a crimson velvet coat, and his white shirt was dappled with blood...
           
          She was aware with a start that there was a second figure with her in the room. A girl was standing pressed back against the wall, the great Harlequin above seeming to be leaping across the painted sky.
           
          The girl had a white woollen shift dress on, and her pale brown hair hung limp on either side of her face. In her hand she was holding a kitchen knife.
           
          Miss Jacobs stared at her and she stared back at Miss Jacobs.
           
          Then she said in a quiet reflective voice, as though she was answering what someone had said to her:
           
          "Yes, I've killed him... The blood got on my hands from the knife... I went into the bathroom to wash it off - but you can't really wash things like that off, can you? And then I came back in here to see if it was really true... But it is... Poor David... But I suppose I had to do it."
           
          Shock forced unlikely words from Miss Jacobs. As she said them, she thought how ridiculous they sounded!
           
          "Indeed? Why did you have to do anything of the kind?"
           
          "I don't know... At least - I suppose I do - really. He was in great trouble. He sent for me - and I came... But I wanted to be free of him. I wanted to get away from him. I didn't really love him."
           
          She laid the knife carefully on the table and sat down on a chair.
           
          "It isn't safe, is it?" she said. "To hate anyone... It isn't safe because you never know what you might do... Like Louise..."
           
          Then she said quietly: "Hadn't you better ring up the police?"
           
          Obediently, Miss Jacobs dialled 999.
           
          II
           
          There were six people now in the room with the Harlequin on the wall. A long time had passed. The police had come and gone.
           
          Andrew Restarick sat like a man stunned. Once or twice he said the same words. "I can't believe it..." Telephoned for, he had come from his office, and Claudia Reece-Holland had come with him. In her quiet way, she had been ceaselessly efficient. She had put through telephone calls to lawyers, had rung Crosshedges and two firms of estate agents to try and get in touch with Mary Restarick. She had given Frances Cary a sedative and sent her to lie down.
           
          Hercule Poirot and Mrs Oliver sat side by side on a sofa. They had arrived together at the same time as the police.
           
          Last of all to arrive, when nearly everyone else had gone, had been a quiet man with grey hair and a gentle manner, Chief Inspector Neele of Scotland Yard who had greeted Poirot with a slight nod, and been introduced to Andrew Restarick. A tall red-haired young man was standing by the window staring down into the courtyard.
           
          What were they all waiting for? Mrs Oliver wondered. The body had been removed, the photographers and other police officers had done their work, they themselves, after being herded into Claudia's bedroom, had been readmitted into the sitting-room, where they had been waiting, she supposed, for the Scotland Yard man to arrive.
           
          "If you want me to go," Mrs Oliver said to him uncertainly -
           
          "Mrs Ariadne Oliver, aren't you? No, if you have no objection, I'd rather you remained. I know it hasn't been pleasant -"
           
          "It didn't seem real."
           
          Mrs Oliver shut her eyes - seeing the whole thing again. The Peacock Boy, so picturesquely dead that he had seemed like a stage figure. And the girl - the girl had been different - not the uncertain Norma from Crosshedges - the unattractive Ophelia, as Poirot had called her - but some quiet figure of tragic dignity - accepting her doom.
           
          Poirot had asked if he might make two telephone calls. One had been to Scotland Yard, and that had been agreed to, after the sergeant had made a preliminary suspicious enquiry on the phone. The sergeant had directed Poirot to the extension in Claudia's bedroom, and he had made his call from there, closing the door behind him.
           
          The sergeant had continued to look doubtful, murmuring to his subordinate.
           
          "They say it's all right. Wonder who he is? Odd-looking little bloke."
           
          "Foreign, isn't he? Might be Special Branch?"
           
          "Don't think so. It was Chief Inspector Neele he wanted."
           
          His assistant raised his eyebrows and suppressed a whistle.
           
          After making his calls, Poirot had reopened the door and beckoned Mrs Oliver from where she was standing uncertainly inside the kitchen, to join him.
           
          They had sat down side by side on Claudia Reece-Holland's bed.
           
          "I wish we could do something," said Mrs Oliver - always one for action.
           
          "Patience, chиre Madame."
           
          "Surely you can do something?"
           
          "I have. I have rung up the people it is necessary to ring up. We can do nothing here until the police have finished their preliminary investigations."
           
          "Who did you ring up after the inspector man? Her father? Couldn't he come and bail her out or something?"
           
          "Bail is not likely to be granted where murder is concerned," said Poirot dryly.
           
          "The police have already notified her father. They got his number from Miss Cary."
           
          "Where is she?"
           
          "Having hysterics in the flat of a Miss Jacobs next door, I understand. She was the one who discovered the body. It seems to have upset her. She rushed out of here screaming."
           
          "She's the arty one, isn't she? Claudia would have kept her head."
           
          "I agree with you. A very - poised young woman."
           
          "Who did you ring up, then?"
           
          "First, as perhaps you heard. Chief Inspector Neele of Scotland Yard."
           
          "Will this lot like his coming and meddling?"
           
          "He is not coming to meddle. He has of late been making certain enquiries for me, which may throw light on this matter."
           
          "Oh - I see... Who else did you ring up?"
           
          "Dr John Stillingfleet."
           
          "Who's he? To say that poor Norma is potty and can't help killing people?"
           
          "His qualifications would entitle him to give evidence to that effect in court if necessary."
           
          "Does he know anything about her?"
           
          "A good deal, I should say. She has been in his care since the day you found her in the Shamrock cafй."
           
          "Who sent her there?"
           
          Poirot smiled. "I did. I made certain arrangements by telephone before I came to join you at the cafй."
           
          "What? All the time I was so disappointed in you and kept urging you to do something - you had done something? And you never told me! Really, M. Poirot! Not a word! How could you be so - so mean."
           
          "Do not enrage yourself, Madame, I beg. What I did, I did for the best."
           
          "People always say that when they have done something particularly maddening. What else did you do?"
           
          "I arranged that my services should be retained by her father, so that I could make the necessary arrangements for her safety."
           
          "Meaning this Doctor Stillingwater?"
           
          "Stillingwater? Yes."
           
          "How on earth did you manage that? I shouldn't have thought for a moment that you would be the kind of person that her father would choose to make all these arrangements. He looks the kind of man who would be very suspicious of foreigners."
           
          "I forced myself upon him - as a conjurer forces a card. I called upon him, purporting to have received a letter from him asking me to do so."
           
          "And did he believe you?"
           
          "Naturally. I showed the letter to him. It was typed on his office stationery and signed with his name - though as he pointed out to me, the handwriting was not his."
           
          "Do you mean you had actually written that letter yourself."
           
          "Yes. I judged correctly that it would awaken his curiosity, and that he would want to see me. Having got so far, I trusted to my own talents."
           
          "You told him what you were going to do about this Dr Stillingfleet?"
           
          "No. I told no one. There was danger, you see."
           
          "Danger to Norma?"
           
          "To Norma, or Norma was dangerous to someone else. From the very beginning there have always been the two possibilities. The facts could be interpreted in either way. The attempted poisoning of Mrs Restarick was not convincing - it was delayed too long, it was not a serious attempt to kill. Then there was an indeterminate story of a revolver shot fired here in Borodene Mansions - and another tale of flick-knives and bloodstains. Every time these things happen, Norma knows nothing about them, cannot remember, etcetera. She finds arsenic in a drawer - but does not remember putting it there. Claims to have had lapses of memory, to have lost long periods of time when she does not remember what she has been doing. So one has to ask oneself- is what she says true, or did she, for some reason of her own, invent it? Is she a potential victim of some monstrous and perhaps crazy plot - or is it she herself who is the moving spirit? Is she painting a picture of herself as a girl suffering from mental instability, or has she murder in mind, with a defence of diminished responsibility."
           
          "She was different today," said Mrs Oliver slowly. "Did you notice? Quite different. Not - not scatty any longer."
           
          Poirot nodded.
           
          "Not Ophelia - Iphigeneia."
           
          A sound of added commotion outside in the flat diverted the attention of both of them.
           
          "Do you think -" Mrs Oliver stopped.
           
          Poirot had gone to the window and was looking down to the courtyard far below.
           
          An ambulance was drawn up there.
           
          "Are they going to take it away?" asked Mrs Oliver in a shaky voice. And then added in a sudden rush of pity:
           
          "Poor Peacock."
           
          "He was hardly a likeable character," said Poirot coldly.
           
          "He was very decorative... And so young," said Mrs Oliver.
           
          "That is sufficient for les femmes." Poirot was opening the bedroom door a careful crack, as he peered out.
           
          "Excuse me," he said, "if I leave you for a moment."
           
          "Where are you going?" demanded Mrs Oliver suspiciously.
           
          "I understood that that was not a question considered delicate in this country," said Poirot reproachfully.
           
          "Oh, I beg your pardon."
           
          "And that's not the way to the loo," she breathed sotto voce after him, as she too applied an eye to the crack of the door. She went back to the window to observe what was going on below.
           
          "Mr Restarick has just driven up in a taxi," she observed when Poirot slipped back quietly into the room a few minutes later, "and Claudia has come with him. Did you manage to get into Norma's room, or wherever you really wanted to go?"
           
          "Norma's room is in the occupation of the police."
           
          "How annoying for you. What are you carrying in that kind of black folder thing you've got in your hand?"
           
          Poirot in his turn asked a question. "What have you got in that canvas bag with Persian horses on it?"
           
          "My shopping bag? Only a couple of Avocado pears, as it happens."
           
          "Then if I may, I will entrust this folder to you. Do not be rough with it, or squeeze it, I beg."
           
          "What is it?"
           
          "Something that I hoped to find - and that I have found - Ah, things begin to pass themselves -" He referred to increased sounds of activities.
           
          Poirot's words struck Mrs Oliver as being much more exactly descriptive than English words would have been. Restarick, his voice loud and angry. Claudia coming in to telephone. A glimpse of a police stenographer on an excursion to the flat next door to take statements from Frances Cary and a mythical person called Miss Jacobs. A coming and going of ordered business, and a final departure of two men with cameras.
           
          Then unexpectedly the sudden incursion into Claudia's bedroom of a tall loosely jointed young man with red hair.
           
          Without taking any notice of Mrs Oliver, he spoke to Poirot.
           
          "What's she done? Murder? Who is it? The boyfriend?"
           
          "Yes."
           
          "She admits it?"
           
          "It would seem so."
           
          "Not good enough. Did she say so in definite words?"
           
          "I have not heard her do so. I have had no chance of asking her anything myself."
           
          A policeman looked in.
           
          "Dr Stillingfleet?" he asked. "The police surgeon would like a word with you."
           
          Dr Stillingfleet nodded and followed him out of the room.
           
          "So that's Dr Stillingfleet," said Mrs Oliver. She considered for a moment or two. "Quite something, isn't he?"
           
          Chapter 23
           
          Chief Inspector Neele drew a sheet of paper towards him, jotted one or two notes on it; and looked round at the other five people in the room. His voice was crisp and formal.
           
          "Miss Jacobs?" he said. He looked towards the policeman who stood by the door. "Sergeant Conolly, I know, has taken her statement. But, I'd like to ask her a few questions myself."
           
          Miss Jacobs was ushered into the room a few minutes later. Neele rose courteously to greet her.
           
          "I am Chief Inspector Neele," he said, shaking hands with her. "I am sorry to trouble you for a second time. But this time it is quite informal. I just want to get a clearer picture of exactly what you saw and heard. I'm afraid it may be painful -"
           
          "Painful, no," said Miss Jacobs, accepting the chair he offered her. "It was a shock, of course. But no emotions were involved." She added: "You seem to have tidied up things."
           
          He presumed she was referring to the removal of the body.
           
          Her eyes, both observant and critical, passed lightly over the assembled people, registering, for Poirot frank astonishment (What on earth is this?) for Mrs Oliver, mild curiosity; appraisement for the back of Dr Stillingfleet's red head, neighbourly recognition for Claudia to whom she vouchsafed a slight nod, and finally dawning sympathy for Andrew Restarick.
           
          "You must be the girl's father," she said to him. "There's not much point to condolences from a total stranger. They're better left unsaid. It's a sad world we live in nowadays - or so it seems to me. Girls study too hard in my opinion."
           
          Then she turned her face composedly towards Neele.
           
          "Yes?"
           
          "I would like you, Miss Jacobs, to tell me in your own words exactly what you saw and heard."
           
          "I expect it will vary from what I said before," said Miss Jacobs unexpectedly. "Things do, you know. One tries to make one's description as accurate as possible, and so one uses more words. I don't think one is any more accurate, I think, unconsciously, one adds things that you think you may have seen or ought to have seen - or heard. But I will do my best.
           
          "It started with screams. I was startled. I thought someone must have been hurt. So I was already coming to the door when someone began beating on it, and still screaming. I opened it and saw it was one of my next-door neighbours - the three girls who live in 67. I'm afraid I don't know her name, though I know her by sight."
           
          "Frances Cary," said Claudia.
           
          "She was quite incoherent, and stammered out something about someone being dead - someone she knew - David Someone - I didn't catch his last name. She was sobbing and shaking all over. I brought her in, gave her some brandy, and went to see for myself."
           
          Everyone felt that throughout life that would be what Miss Jacobs would invariably do.
           
          "You know what I found. Need I describe it?"
           
          "Just briefly, perhaps."
           
          "A young man, one of these modern young men - gaudy clothes and long hair. He was lying on the floor and he was clearly dead. His shirt was stiff with blood."
           
          Stillingfleet stirred. He turned his head and looked keenly at Miss Jacobs.
           
          "Then I became aware that there was a girl in the room. She was holding a kitchen knife. She seemed quite calm and self-possessed - really, most peculiar."
           
          Stillingfleet said: "Did she say anything?"
           
          "She said she had been into the bathroom to wash the blood off her hands - and then she said "But you can't wash things like that off, can you?'"
           
          "Out, damned spot, in fact?"
           
          "I cannot say that she reminded me particularly of Lady Macbeth. She was - how shall I put it - perfectly composed. She laid the knife down on the table and sat down on a chair."
           
          "What else did she say?" asked Chief
           
          Inspector Neele, his eyes dropping to a scrawled note in front of him.
           
          "Something about hate. That it wasn't safe to hate anybody."
           
          "She said something about 'poor David', didn't she? Or so you told Sergeant Conoily. And that she wanted to be free of him."
           
          "I'd forgotten that. Yes. She said something about his making her come here - and something about Louise, too."
           
          "What did she say about Louise?" It was Poirot who asked, leaning forward sharply. Miss Jacobs looked at him doubtfully.
           
          "Nothing, really, just mentioned the name. 'Like Louise', she said, and then stopped. It was after she had said about its not being safe to hate people..."
           
          "And then?"
           
          "Then she told me, quite calmly, I had better ring up the police. Which I did. We just - sat there until they came... I did not think I ought to leave her. We did not say anything. She seemed absorbed in her thoughts, and I - well, frankly, I couldn't think of anything to say."
           
          "You could see, couldn't you, that she was mentally unstable?" said Andrew Restarick. "You could see that she didn't know what she had done or why, poor child?"
           
          He spoke pleadingly - hopefully.
           
          "If it is a sign of mental instability to appear perfectly cool and collected after committing a murder, then I will agree with you."
           
          Miss Jacobs spoke in the voice of one who quite decidedly did not agree.
           
          Stillingfleet said: "Miss Jacobs, did she at any time admit that she had killed him?"
           
          "Oh yes. I should have mentioned that before - It was the very first thing she did say. As though she was answering some question I had asked her. She said 'Yes, I've killed him.' And then went on about having washed her hands."
           
          Restarick groaned and buried his face in his hands. Claudia put her hand on his arm.
           
          Poirot said: "Miss Jacobs, you say the girl put down the knife she was carrying on that table. It was quite near you? You saw it clearly? Did it appear to you that the knife also had been washed?"
           
          Miss Jacobs looked hesitantly at Chief Inspector Neele. It was clear that she felt that Poirot struck an alien and unofficial note in this presumably official enquiry.
           
          "Perhaps you would be kind enough to answer that?" said Neele.
           
          "No - I don't think the knife had been washed or wiped in any way. It was stained and discoloured with some thick sticky substance."
           
          "Ah," Poirot leaned back in his chair. "I should have thought you would have known all about the knife yourself," said Miss Jacobs to Neele accusingly. "Didn't your police examine it? It seems to me very lax if they didn't."
           
          "Oh yes, the police examined it," said Neele. "But we - er - always like to get corroboration."
           
          She darted him a shrewd glance.
           
          "What you really mean, I suppose, is that you like to find out how accurate the observation of your witnesses is. How much they make up, or how much they actually see, or think they have seen."
           
          He smiled slightly as he said: "I don't think we need have doubts about you, Miss Jacobs. You will make an excellent witness."
           
          "I shan't enjoy it. But it's the kind of thing one has to go through with, I suppose."
           
          "I'm afraid so. Thank you, Miss Jacobs."
           
          He looked round. "No one has any additional questions?"
           
          Poirot indicated that he had. Miss Jacobs paused near the doorway, displeased.
           
          "Yes?" she said.
           
          "About this mention of someone called Louise. Did you know who it was the girl meant?"
           
          "How should I know?"
           
          "Isn't it possible that she might have meant Mrs Louise Charpentier. You knew Mrs Charpentier, didn't you?"
           
          "I did not."
           
          "You knew that she recently threw herself out of a window in this block of flats?"
           
          "I knew that, of course. I didn't know her Christian name was Louise, and I was not personally acquainted with her."
           
          "Nor, perhaps, particularly wished to be?"
           
          "I have not said so, since the woman is dead. But I will admit that that is quite true. She was a most undesirable tenant, and I and other residents have frequently complained to the management here."
           
          "Of what exactly?"
           
          "To speak frankly, the woman drank. Her flat was actually on the top floor above mine and there were continual disorderly parties, with broken glass, furniture knocked over, singing and shouting, a lot of- er - coming and going."
           
          "She was, perhaps, a lonely woman," suggested Poirot.
           
          "That was hardly the impression she conveyed," said Miss Jacobs acidly. "It was put forward at the inquest that she was depressed over the state of her health. Entirely her own imagination. She seems to have had nothing the matter with her."
           
          And having disposed of the late Mrs Charpentier without sympathy, Miss Jacobs took her departure.
           
          Poirot turned his attention to Andrew Restarick. He asked delicately:
           
          "Am I correct in thinking, Mr Restarick, that you were at one time well acquainted with Mrs Charpentier?"
           
          Restarick did not answer for a moment or two. Then he sighed deeply and transferred his gaze to Poirot.
           
          "Yes. At one time, many years ago, I knew her very well indeed... Not, I may say, under the name of Charpentier. She was Louise Birell when I knew her."
           
          "You were - er - in love with her!"
           
          "Yes, I was in love with her... Head over ears in love with her! I left my wife on her account. We went to South Africa. After barely a year the whole thing blew up. She returned to England. I never heard from her again. I never even knew what had become of her."
           
          "What about your daughter? Did she, also, know Louise Birell?"
           
          "Not to remember her, surely. A child of five years old!"
           
          "But did she know her?" Poirot persisted.
           
          "Yes," said Restarick slowly. "She knew Louise. That is to say, Louise came to our house. She used to play with the child."
           
          "So it is possible that the girl might remember her, even after a lapse of years?"
           
          "I don't know. I simply don't know. I don't know what she looked like, how much Louise might have changed. I never saw her again, as I told you."
           
          Poirot said gently, "But you heard from her, didn't you, Mr Restarick? I mean, you have heard from her since your return to England?"
           
          Again there came that pause, and the deep unhappy sigh:
           
          "Yes - I heard from her..." said Restarick. And then, with sudden curiosity, he asked: "How did you know that, M. Poirot?"
           
          From his pocket, Poirot drew a neatly folded piece of paper. He unfolded it and handed it to Restarick.
           
          The latter looked at it with a faintly puzzled frown.
           
          Dear Andy,
           
          I see from the papers you're home again. We must meet and compare notes as to what we've both been doing all these years - It broke off here - and started again. Andy - Guess who this is from! Louise. Don't dare to say you've forgotten me. I -
           
          Dear Andy,
           
          As you will see by this letterhead, I'm living in the same block of flats as your secretary. What a small world it is! We must meet. Could you come for a drink Monday or Tuesday next week?
           
          Andy darling, I must see you again... Nobody has ever mattered to me but you - you haven't really forgotten me, either, have you?
           
          "How did you get this?" asked Restarick of Poirot, tapping it curiously.
           
          "From a friend of mine via a furniture van," said Poirot, with a glance at Mrs Oliver.
           
          Restarick looked at her without favour.
           
          "I couldn't help it," said Mrs Oliver, interpreting his look correctly. "I suppose it was her furniture being moved out, and the men let go of a desk, and a drawer fell out and scattered a lot of things, and the wind blew this along the courtyard, so I picked it up and tried to give it back to them, but they were cross and didn't want it, so I just put it in my coat pocket without thinking. And I never even looked at it until this afternoon when I was taking things out of pockets before sending the coat to the cleaners. So it really wasn't my fault."
           
          She paused, slightly out of breath.
           
          "Did she get her letter to you written in the end?" Poirot asked.
           
          "Yes - she did - one of the more formal versions! I didn't answer it. I thought it would be wiser not to do so."
           
          "You didn't want to see her again?"
           
          "She was the last person I wanted to see! She was a particularly difficult woman - always had been. And I'd heard things about her - for one that she had become a heavy drinker. And well - other things."
           
          "Did you keep her letter to you?"
           
          "No, I tore it up!"
           
          Dr Stillingfleet asked an abrupt question.
           
          "Did your daughter ever speak about her to you?"
           
          Restarick seemed unwilling to answer.
           
          Dr Stillingfleet urged him:
           
          "It might be significant if she did, you know."
           
          "You doctors! Yes, she did mention her once."
           
          "What did she say exactly?"
           
          "She said quite suddenly: 'I saw Louise the other day. Father.' I was startled. I said 'Where did you see her?' And she said 'In the restaurant of our flats.' I was a bit embarrassed. I said: 'I never dreamed you'd remember her.' And she said: 'I've never forgotten. Mother wouldn't have let me forget, even if I wanted to.'"
           
          "Yes, that could certainly be significant," said Dr Stillingfleet.
           
          "And you, Mademoiselle," said Poirot, turning suddenly to Claudia. "Did Norma ever speak to you about Louise Carpenter?"
           
          "Yes - it was after the suicide. She said something about her being a wicked woman. She said it in rather a childish way, if you know what I mean."
           
          "You were here in the flats yourself on the night - or more correctly the early morning when Mrs Carpenter's suicide occurred?"
           
          "I was not here that night, no! I was away from home. I remember arriving back here the next day and hearing about it."
           
          She half turned to Restarick... "You remember? It was the 23rd. I had gone to Liverpool."
           
          "Yes, of course. You were to represent me at the Hever Trust meeting."
           
          Poirot said: "But Norma slept here that night?"
           
          "Yes." Claudia seemed uncomfortable.
           
          "Claudia?" Restarick laid his hand on her arm. "What is it you know about Norma? There's something. Something that you're holding back."
           
          "Nothing! What should I know about her?"
           
          "You think she's off her head, don't you?" said Dr Stillingfleet in a conversational voice. "And so does the girl with the black hair. And so do you," he added, turning suddenly on Restarick. "All of us behaving nicely and avoiding the subject and thinking the same thing! Except, that is, the chief inspector. He's not thinking anything. He's collecting facts: mad or a murderess. What about you, Madam?"
           
          "Me?" Mrs Oliver jumped. "I - don't know."
           
          "You reserve judgement? I don't blame you. It's difficult. On the whole, most people agree on what they think. They use different terms for it - that's all. Bats in the Belfry. Scatty. Wanting in the top storey. Off her onion. Mental Delusions. Does anyone think that girl is sane?"
           
          "Miss Battersby," said Poirot.
           
          "Who the devil is Miss Battersby?"
           
          "A schoolmistress."
           
          "If I ever have a daughter I shall send her to that school... Of course I'm in a different category. I know. I know everything about that girl!"
           
          Norma's father stared at him.
           
          "Who is this man?" he demanded of Neele. "What can he possibly mean by saying that he knows everything about my daughter?"
           
          "I know about her," said Stillingfleet, "because she's been under my professional care for the last ten days."
           
          "Dr Stillingfleet," said Chief Inspector Neele, "is a highly qualified and reputable psychiatrist."
           
          "And how did she come into your clutches - without someone getting my consent first?"
           
          "Ask Moustaches," said Dr Stillingfleet, nodding to Poirot.
           
          "You - you..."
           
          Restarick could hardly speak he was so angry.
           
          Poirot spoke placidly.
           
          "I had your instructions. You wanted care and protection for your daughter when she was found. I found her - and I was able to interest Dr Stillingfleet in her case. She was in danger, Mr Restarick, very grave danger."
           
          "She could hardly be in any more danger than she is now! Arrested on a charge of murder!"
           
          "Technically she is not yet charged," murmured Neele.
           
          He went on: "Dr Stillingfleet, do I understand that you are willing to give your professional opinion as to Miss Restarick's mental condition, and as to how well she knows the nature and meaning of her acts?"
           
          "We can save the M'Naughten act for court," said Stillingfleet. "What you want to know now is, quite simply, if the girl is mad or sane? All right, I'll tell you. That girl is sane - as sane as any one or you sitting here in this room!"
           
          Chapter 24
           
          They stared at him.
           
          "Didn't expect that, did you?"
           
          Restarick said angrily: "You're wrong. That girl doesn't even know what she's done. She's innocent - completely innocent. She can't be held responsible for what she doesn't know she's done."
           
          "You let me talk for a while. I know what I'm talking about. You don't. That girl is sane and responsible for her actions. In a moment or two we'll have her in and let her speak for herself. She's the only one who hasn't had the chance of speaking for herself! Oh yes, they've got her here still - locked up with a police matron in her bedroom. But before we ask her a question or two, I've got something to say that you'd better hear first.
           
          "When that girl came to me she was full of drugs."
           
          "And he gave them to her!" shouted Restarick. "That degenerate, miserable boy."
           
          "He started her on them, no doubt."
           
          "Thank God," said Restarick. "Thank God for it."
           
          "What are you thanking God for?"
           
          "I misunderstood you. I thought you were going to throw her to the lions when you kept harping on her being sane. I misjudged you. It was the drugs that did it. Drugs that made her do things she would never have done of her own volition, and left her with no knowledge of having done them."
           
          Stillingfleet raised his voice: "If you let me talk instead of talking so much yourself, and being so sure you know all about everything, we might get on a bit. First of all, she's not an addict. There are no marks of injections. She didn't sniff snow. Someone or other, perhaps the boy, perhaps someone else, was administering drugs to her without her knowledge. Not just a purple heart or two in the modern fashion. A rather interesting medley of drugs - L.S.D. giving vivid dream sequences - nightmares or pleasurable. Hemp distorting the time factor, so that she might believe an experience has lasted an hour instead of a few minutes. And a good many other curious substances that I have no intention of letting any of you know about. Somebody who was clever with drugs played merry hell with that girl. Stimulants, sedatives, they all played their part in controlling her, and showing her to herself as a completely different person."
           
          Restarick interrupted: "That's what I say. Norma wasn't responsible! Someone was hypnotising her to do these things."
           
          "You still haven't got the point! Nobody could make the girl do what she didn't want to do! What they could do, was make her think she had done it. Now we'll have her in and make her see what's been happening to her."
           
          He looked enquiringly at Chief Inspector Neele, who nodded.
           
          Stillingfleet spoke over his shoulder to Claudia, as he went out of the sitting-room.
           
          "Where'd you put that other girl, the one you took away from Jacobs, gave a sedative to? In her room on her bed? Better shake her up a bit, and drag her along, somehow. We'll need all the help we can get."
           
          Claudia also went out of the sitting-room.
           
          Stillingfleet came back, propelling Norma, and uttering rough encouragement.
           
          "There's a good girl... Nobody's going to bite you. Sit there."
           
          She sat obediently. Her docility was still rather frightening.
           
          The policewoman hovered by the door looking scandalised.
           
          "All I'm asking you to do is to speak the truth. It isn't nearly as difficult as you think."
           
          Claudia came in with Frances Cary.
           
          Frances was yawning heavily. Her black hair hung like a curtain hiding half her mouth as she yawned and yawned again.
           
          "You need a pick-me-up," said Stillingfleet to her.
           
          "I wish you'd all let me go to sleep," murmured Frances indistinctly.
           
          "Nobody's going to have a chance of sleep until I've done with them! Now, Norma, you answer my questions - That woman along the passage says you admitted to her that you killed David Baker. Is that right?"
           
          Her docile voice said: "Yes. I killed David."
           
          "Stabbed him?"
           
          "Yes."
           
          "How do you know you did?"
           
          She looked faintly puzzled. "I don't know what you mean. He was there on the floor - dead."
           
          "Where was the knife?"
           
          "I picked it up."
           
          "It had blood on it?"
           
          "Yes. And on his shirt."
           
          "What did it feel like - the blood on the knife? The blood that you got on your hand and had to wash off - Wet? Or more like strawberry jam."
           
          "It was like strawberry jam - sticky."
           
          She shivered. "I had to go and wash it off my hands."
           
          "Very sensible. Well, that ties up everything very nicely. Victim, murder - you - all complete with the weapon. Do you remember actually doing it?"
           
          "No... I don't remember that... But I must have done it, mustn't I?"
           
          "Don't ask me! I wasn't there. It's you are the one who's saying it. But there was another killing before that, wasn't there? An earlier killing."
           
          "You mean - Louise?"
           
          "Yes. I mean Louise... When did you first think of killing her?"
           
          "Years ago. Oh, years ago."
           
          "When you were a child."
           
          "Yes."
           
          "Had to wait a long time, didn't you?"
           
          "I'd forgotten all about it."
           
          "Until you saw her again and recognised her?"
           
          "Yes."
           
          "When you were a child, you hated her. Why?"
           
          "Because she took Father, my father, away."
           
          "And made your mother unhappy?"
           
          "Mother hated Louise. She said Louise was a really wicked woman."
           
          "Talked to you about her a lot, I suppose?"
           
          "Yes. I wish she hadn't... I didn't want to go on hearing about her."
           
          "Monotonous - I know. Hate isn't creative. When you saw her again did you really want to kill her?"
           
          Norma seemed to consider. A faintly interested look came into her face.
           
          "I didn't, really, you know... It seemed all so long ago. I couldn't imagine myself - that's why -"
           
          "Why you weren't sure you had?"
           
          "Yes. I had some quite wild idea that I hadn't killed her at all. That it had been all a dream. That perhaps she really had thrown herself out of the window."
           
          "Well - why not?"
           
          "Because I knew I had done it - I said I had done it."
           
          "You said you had done it? Who did you say that to?"
           
          Norma shook her head. "I mustn't... It was someone who tried to be kind - to help me. She said she was going to pretend to have known nothing about it." She went on, the words coming fast and excitedly:
           
          "I was outside Louise's door, the door of 763 just coming out of it. I thought I'd been walking in my sleep. They - she - said there had been an accident. Down in the courtyard. She kept telling me it had been nothing to do with me. Nobody would ever know - And I couldn't remember what I had done - but there was stuff in my hand -"
           
          "Stuff? What stuff? Do you mean blood?"
           
          "No, not blood - torn curtain stuff. When I'd pushed her out."
           
          "You remember pushing her out, do you?"
           
          "No, no. That's what was so awful. I didn't remember anything. That's why I hoped. That's why I went -" She turned her head towards Poirot - "to him -"
           
          She turned back again to Stillingfleet.
           
          "I never remembered the things I'd done, none of them. But I got more and more frightened. Because there used to be quite long times that were blank - quite blank - hours I couldn't account for, or remember where I'd been and what I'd been doing. But I found things - things I must have hidden away myself. Mary was being poisoned by me, they found out she was being poisoned at the hospital. And I found the weed killer I'd hidden away in the drawer. In the flat here there was a flick-knife. And I had a revolver that I didn't even know I'd bought! I did kill people, but I didn't remember killing them, so I'm not really a murderer - I'm just - mad! I realised that at last. I'm mad, and I can't help it. People can't blame you if you do things when you are mad. If I could come here and even kill David, it shows I am mad, doesn't it?"
           
          "You'd like to be mad, very much?"
           
          "I - yes, I suppose so."
           
          "If so, why did you confess to someone that you had killed a woman by pushing her out of the window? Who was it you told?"
           
          Norma turned her head, hesitated. Then raised her hand and pointed.
           
          "I told Claudia."
           
          "That is absolutely untrue." Claudia looked at her scornfully. "You never said anything of the kind to me!"
           
          "I did. I did."
           
          "When? Where?"
           
          "I - don't know."
           
          "She told me that she had confessed it all to you," said Frances indistinctly.
           
          "Frankly, I thought she was hysterical and making the whole thing up."
           
          Stillingfleet looked across at Poirot.
           
          "She could be making it all up," he said judicially. "There is quite a case for that solution. But if so, we would have to find the motive, a strong motive, for her desiring the death of those two people, Louise Carpenter and David Baker. A childish hate? Forgotten and done with years ago? Nonsense. David - just to be 'free of him?' It is not for that that girls kill! We want better motives than that. A whacking great lot of money - say! - Greed!" He looked round him and his voice changed to a conventional tone.
           
          "We want a little more help. There's still one person missing. Your wife is a long time joining us here, Mr Restarick?"
           
          "I can't think where Mary can be. I've rung up. Claudia has left messages in every place we can think of. By now she ought to have rung up at least from somewhere."
           
          "Perhaps we have the wrong idea," said Hercule Poirot. "Perhaps Madame is at least partly here already - in a manner of speaking."
           
          "What on earth do you mean?" shouted Restarick angrily.
           
          "Might I trouble you, chиre Madame?"
           
          Poirot leaned towards Mrs Oliver. Mrs Oliver stared.
           
          "The parcel I entrusted to you -"
           
          "Oh." Mrs Oliver dived into her shopping bag. She handed the black folder to him.
           
          He heard a sharp indrawn breath near him, but did not turn his head.
           
          He shook off the wrappings delicately and held up - a wig of bouffant golden hair.
           
          "Mrs Restarick is not here," he said, "but her wig is. Interesting."
           
          "Where the devil did you get that, Poirot?" asked Neele.
           
          "From the overnight bag of Miss Frances Cary from which she had as yet no opportunity of removing it. Shall we see how it becomes her?"
           
          With a deft movement, he swept aside the black hair that masked Frances's face so effectively. Crowned with a golden aureole before she could defend herself, she glared at them.
           
          Mrs Oliver exclaimed:
           
          "Good gracious - it is Mary Restarick."
           
          Frances was twisting like an angry snake. Restarick jumped from his seat to come to her - but Neele's strong grip retrained him.
           
          "No. We don't want any violence from you. The game's up, you know, Mr Restarick - or shall I call you Robert Orwell -"
           
          A stream of profanity came from the man's lips. Frances's voice was raised sharply:
           
          "Shut up, you damned fool!" she said.
           
          Poirot had abandoned his trophy, the wig.
           
          He had gone to Norma, and taken her hand gently in his.
           
          "Your ordeal is over, my child. The victim will not be sacrificed. You are neither mad, nor have you killed anyone. There are two cruel and heartless creatures who plotted against you, with cunningly administered drugs, with lies, doing their best to drive you either to suicide or to belief in your own guilt and madness."
           
          Norma was staring with horror at the other plotter.
           
          "My father. My father? He could think of doing that to me. His daughter. My father who loved me -"
           
          "Not your father, mon enfant - a man who came here after your father's death, to impersonate him and lay hands on an enormous fortune. Only one person was likely to recognise him - or rather to recognise that this man was not Andrew Restarick, the woman who had been Andrew Restarick's mistress fifteen years ago."
           
          Chapter 25
           
          Four people sat in Poirot's room. Poirot in his square chair was drinking a glass of sirop de cassis. Norma and Mrs Oliver sat on the sofa. Mrs Oliver was looking particularly festive in unbecoming apple green brocade, surmounted by one of her more painstaking coiffures. Dr Stillingfleet was sprawled out in a chair with his long legs stretched out, so that they seemed to reach half across the room.
           
          "Now then there are lots of things I want to know," said Mrs Oliver. Her voice was accusatory.
           
          Poirot hastened to pour oil on troubled waters.
           
          "But, chиre Madame, consider. What I owe to you I can hardly express. All, but all, my good ideas were suggested to me by you."
           
          Mrs Oliver looked at him doubtfully.
           
          "Was it not you who introduced to me the phrase 'Third Girl'? It is there that I started - and there, too, that I ended - at the third girl of three living in a flat. Norma was always technically, I suppose, the Third Girl - but when I looked at things the right way round it all fell into place. The missing answer, the lost piece of the puzzle, every time it was the same - the third girl.
           
          "It was always, if you comprehend me, the person who was not there. She was a name to me, no more."
           
          "I wonder I never connected her with Mary Restarick," said Mrs Oliver. "I'd seen Mary Restarick at Crosshedges, talked to her. Of course the first time I saw Frances Cary, she had black hair hanging all over her face. That would have put anyone off!"
           
          "Again it was you, Madame, who drew my attention to how easily a woman's appearance is altered by the way she arranges her hair. Frances Cary, remember, had had dramatic training. She knew all about the art of swift make-up. She could alter her voice at need. As Frances, she had long black hair, framing her face and half hiding it, heavy dead white maquillage, dark pencilled eyebrows and mascara, with a drawling husky voice. Mary Restarick, with her wig of formally arranged golden hair with crimped waves, her conventional clothes, her slight Colonial accent, her brisk way of talking, presented a complete contrast. Yet one felt, from the beginning, that she was not quite real. What kind of a woman was she? I did not know.
           
          "I was not clever about her - No - I, Hercule Poirot, was not clever at all."
           
          "Hear, hear," said Dr Stillingfleet. "First time I've ever heard you say that, Poirot! Wonders will never cease!"
           
          "I don't really see why she wanted two personalities," said Mrs Oliver. "It seems unnecessarily confusing."
           
          "No. It was very valuable to her. It gave her, you see, a perpetual alibi whenever she wanted it. To think that it was there, all the time, before my eyes, and I did not see it! There was the wig - I kept being subconsciously worried by it, but not seeing why I was worried. Two women - never, at any time, seen together. Their lives so arranged that no one noticed the large gaps in their time schedules when they were unaccounted for. Mary goes often to London, to shop, to visit house agents, to depart with a sheaf of orders to view, supposedly to spend her time that way. Frances goes to Birmingham, to Manchester, even flies abroad, frequents Chelsea with her special coterie of arty young men whom she employs in various capacities which would not be looked on with approval by the law. Special picture frames were designed for the Wedderburn Gallery. Rising young artists had 'shows' there - their pictures sold quite well, and were shipped abroad or sent on exhibition with the frames stuffed with secret packets of heroin - Art rackets - skilful forgeries of the more obscure Old Masters - She arranged and organised all these things. David Baker was one of the artists she employed. He had the gift of being a marvellous copyist."
           
          Norma murmured: "Poor David. When I first met him I thought he was wonderful."
           
          "That picture," said Poirot dreamily. "Always, always, I came back to that in my mind. Why had Restarick brought it up to his office? What special significance did it have for him? Enfin, I do not admire myself for being so dense."
           
          "I don't understand about the picture?"
           
          "It was a very clever idea. It served as a kind of certificate of identity. A pair of portraits, husband and wife, by a celebrated and fashionable portrait painter of his day. David Baker, when they come out of store, replaces Restarick's portrait with one of Orwell, making him about twenty years younger in appearance. Nobody would have dreamed that the portrait was a fake, the style, the brush strokes, the canvas, it was a splendidly convincing bit of work. Restarick hung it over his desk. Anyone who knew Restarick years ago, might say: 'I'd hardly have known you!' Or "You've changed quite a lot', would look up at the portrait, but would only think that he himself had really forgotten what the other man had looked like!"
           
          "It was a great risk for Restarick - or rather Orwell - to take," said Mrs Oliver thoughtfully.
           
          "Less than you might think. He was never a claimant, you see, in the Tichborne sense. He was only a member of a well-known City firm, returning home after his brother's death to settle up his brother's affairs after having spent some years abroad. He brought with him a young wife recently acquired abroad, and took up residence with an elderly, half blind but extremely distinguished uncle by marriage who had never known him well after his schoolboy days, and who accepted him without question. He had no other near relations, except for the daughter whom he had last seen when she was a child of five. When he originally left for South Africa, the office staff had had two very elderly clerks, since deceased. Junior staff never remains anywhere long nowadays. The family lawyer is also dead. You may be sure that the whole position was studied very carefully on the spot by Frances after they had decided on their coup.
           
          "She had met him, it seems, in Kenya about two years ago. They were both crooks, though with entirely different interests. He went in for various shoddy deals as a prospector - Restarick and Orwell went together to prospect for mineral deposits in somewhat wild country. There was a rumour of Restarick's death (probably true) which was later contradicted."
           
          "A lot of money in the gamble, I suspect?" said Stillingfleet.
           
          "An enormous amount of money was involved. A terrific gamble - for a terrific stake. It came off. Andrew Restarick was a very rich man himself and he was his brother's heir. Nobody questioned his identity. And then - things went wrong. Out of the blue, he got a letter from a woman who, if she ever came face to face with him, would know at once that he wasn't Andrew Restarick. And a second piece of bad fortune occurred - David Baker started to blackmail him."
           
          "That might have been expected, I suppose," said Stillingfleet thoughtfully.
           
          "They didn't expect it," said Poirot. "David had never blackmailed before. It was the enormous wealth of this man that went to his head, I expect. The sum he had been paid for faking the portrait seemed to him grossly inadequate. He wanted more. So Restarick wrote him large cheques, and pretended that it was on account of his daughter - to prevent her from making an undesirable marriage. Whether he really wanted to marry her, I do not know - he may have done. But to blackmail two people like Orwell and Frances Cary was a dangerous thing to do."
           
          "You mean those two just cold-bloodedly planned to kill two people - quite calmly - just like that?" demanded Mrs Oliver. She looked rather sick.
           
          "They might have added you to their list, Madame," said Poirot.
           
          "Me? Do you mean that it was one of them who hit me on the head? Frances, I suppose? Not the poor Peacock?"
           
          "I do not think it was the Peacock. But you had been already to Borodene Mansions. Now you perhaps follow Frances to Chelsea, or so she thinks, with a rather dubious story to account for yourself. So she slips out and gives you a nice little tap on the head to put paid to your curiosity for a while. You would not listen when I warned you there was danger about."
           
          "I can hardly believe it of her! Lying about in attitudes of a Burne-Jones heroine in that dirty studio that day. But why -"
           
          She looked at Norma - then back at Poirot. "They used her - deliberately - worked upon her, drugged her, made her believe that she had murdered two people. Why?"
           
          "They wanted a victim..." said Poirot.
           
          He rose from his chair and went to Norma.
           
          "Mon enfant, you have been through a terrible ordeal. It is a thing that need never happen to you again. Remember that now, you can have confidence in yourself always. To have known, at close quarters, what absolute evil means, is to be armoured against what life can do to you."
           
          "I suppose you are right," said Norma.
           
          "To think you are mad - really to believe it, is a frightening thing..." She shivered. "I don't see, even now, why I escaped - why anyone managed to believe that I hadn't killed David - not when even I believed I had killed him?"
           
          "Blood was wrong," said Dr Stillingfleet in a matter-of-fact tone. "Starting to coagulate. Shirt was 'stiff with it', as Miss Jacobs said, not wet. You were supposed to have killed him not more than about five minutes before Frances's screaming act."
           
          "How did she -" Mrs Oliver began to work things out. "She had been to Manchester -"
           
          "She came home by an earlier train, changed into her Mary wig and made-up on the train. Walked into Borodene Mansions and went up in the lift as an unknown blonde. Went into the flat where David was waiting for her, as she had told him to do. He was quite unsuspecting, and she stabbed him. Then she went out again, and kept watch until she saw Norma coming. She slipped into a public cloakroom, changed her appearance, and joined a friend at the end of the road and walked with her, said good-bye to her at Borodene Mansions and went up herself and did her stuff - quite enjoying doing it, I expect. By the time the police had been called and got there, she didn't think anyone would suspect the time lag. I must say, Norma, you gave us all a hell of a time that day. Insisting on having killed everyone the way you did!"
           
          "I wanted to confess and get it all over... Did you - did you think I might really have done it, then?"
           
          "Me? What do you take me for? I know what my patients will do or won't do. But I thought you were going to make things damned difficult. I didn't know how far Neele was sticking his neck out. Didn't seem proper police procedure to me. Look at the way he gave Poirot here his head."
           
          Poirot smiled.
           
          "Chief Inspector Neele and I have known each other for many years. Besides, he had been making enquiries about certain matters already. You were never really outside Louise's door. Frances changed the numbers. She reversed the 6 and the 7 on your own door. Those numbers were loose, stuck on with spikes. Claudia was away that night. Frances drugged you so that the whole thing was a nightmare dream to you."
           
          "I saw the truth suddenly. The only other person who could have killed Louise was the real 'third girl' Frances Cary."
           
          "You kept half recognising her you know," said Stillingfleet, "when you described to me how one person seemed to turn into another."
           
          Norma looked at him thoughtfully.
           
          "You were very rude to people," she said to Stillingfleet. He looked slightly taken aback.
           
          "Rude?"
           
          "The things you said to everyone. The way you shouted at them."
           
          "Oh well, yes, perhaps I was... I've got in the way of it. People are so damned irritating."
           
          He grinned suddenly at Poirot.
           
          "She's quite a girl, isn't she?"
           
          Mrs Oliver rose to her feet with a sigh.
           
          "I must go home." She looked at the two men and then at Norma. "What are we going to do with her?" she asked.
           
          They both looked startled.
           
          "I know she's staying with me at the moment," she went on. "And she says she's quite happy. But I mean there it is, quite a problem. Lots and lots of money because your father - the real one, I mean - left it all to you. And that will cause complications, and begging letters and all that. She could go and live with old Sir Roderick, but that wouldn't be much fun for a girl - he's pretty deaf already as well as blind - and completely selfish. By the way, what about his missing papers, and the girl, and Kew Gardens?"
           
          "They turned up where he thought he'd already looked - Sonia found them," said Norma, and added, "Uncle Roddy and Sonia are getting married - next week -"
           
          "No fool like an old fool," said Stillingfleet.
           
          "Aha!" said Poirot. "So the young lady prefers life in England to being embroiled in la politique. She is perhaps wise, that little one."
           
          "So that's that," said Mrs Oliver with finality. "But to go on about Norma, one has to be practical. One's got to make plans. The girl can't know what she wants to do all by herself. She's waiting for someone to tell her."
           
          She looked at them severely.
           
          Poirot said nothing. He smiled.
           
          "Oh, her?" said Dr Stillingfleet. "Well, I'll tell you, Norma. I'm flying to Australia Tuesday week. I want to look around first - see if what's been fixed up for me is going to work, and all that. Then I'll cable you and you can join me. Then we get married. You'll have to take my word for it that it's not your money I want. I'm not one of those doctors who want to endow whacking great research establishments and all that. I'm just interested in people. I think, too, that you'd be able to manage me all right. All that about my being rude to people - I hadn't noticed it myself. It's odd, really, when you think of all the mess you've been in - helpless as a fly in treacle - yet it's not going to be me running you, it's going to be you running me."
           
          Norma stood quite still. She looked at John Stillingfleet very carefully, as though she was considering something that she knew from an entirely different point of view.
           
          And then she smiled. It was a very nice smile - like a happy young nannie.
           
          "All right," she said.
           
          She crossed the room to Hercule Poirot.
           
          "I was rude, too," she said. "The day I came here when you were having breakfast. I said to you that you were too old to help me. That was a rude thing to say. And it wasn't true..."
           
          She put her hands on his shoulders and kissed him.
           
          "You'd better get us a taxi," she said to Stillingfleet.
           
          Dr Stillingfleet nodded and left the room. Mrs Oliver collected a handbag and a fur stole and Norma slipped on a coat and followed her to the door.
           
          "Madame, un petit moment -"
           
          Mrs Oliver turned. Poirot had collected from the recesses of the sofa a handsome coil of grey hair.
           
          Mrs Oliver exclaimed vexedly: "It's just like everything that they make nowadays, no good at all! Hairpins, I mean. They just slip out, and everything falls."
           
          She went out frowning.
           
          A moment or two later she poked her head round the door again. She spoke in a conspiratorial whisper:
           
          "Just tell me - it's all right, I've sent her on down - did you send that girl to this particular doctor on purpose?"
           
          "Of course I did. His qualifications are -"
           
          "Never mind his qualifications. You know what I mean. He and she - Did you?"
           
          "If you must know, yes."
           
          "I thought so," said Mrs Oliver. "You do think of things, don't you."

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