“How’d Dr. Riddley find out?”
“That music teacher of Katie’s—what’s his name?”
“Cyril Macenery.”
“He called Riddley. Apparently, this chap had to have somebody to talk to who knew Katie. Very broken up.”
Jury drew out the necklace, still wrapped in the handkerchief, and dropped it on the table. “The people who had to die for that little lot—” He shrugged unhappily. “Go ahead, you can touch it. It’s not needed in evidence anymore.”
Melrose gave a low whistle. “Beautiful, objectively speaking. Are you going to return it to Lady Kennington?” Jury nodded. Melrose turned the gem between his thumb and forefinger, ran his thumb over the carving. “So Peter Gere was Tree’s accomplice?”
“It occurred to me after I thought about that search of the people there, the house, the grounds. How simple can you get? The person spot-on was Peter Gere, wasn’t it? The village bobby gets called straightaway, and he calls Hertfield police. And he’s the one who searches Trevor Tree; he said so himself. He could have either just left the necklace in Tree’s dressing gown pocket, or palmed it himself and put it in his own and given it back to Tree later.”
“Would Tree have trusted Gere with it?”
“Why not? It was only a matter of waiting until everyone had disbursed, finally. Police back to Hertfield, the Kenningtons back to bed. Gere couldn’t have got very far with it, so a double-cross was very unlikely. All Tree wanted was to get the necklace out of the house and safely stashed somewhere else—we’ll never know precisely what he had in mind—so he rises early, walks down the drive so as not to wake anyone, gets a ride to Hertfield, and does the smart thing: melts into the early-morning commuters to London. What went through his mind then, I don’t know. But I’ll guess. On the train he gets a bit worried that someone might not assume he’s sleeping late, that someone might shop him, and there’ll be a greeting on the other end. Police at his digs, at least. So he walks up that corridor and sees the grate. Bend down, tie your shoe, something like that, and slip this through.” Jury held up the necklace. The stone winked in the light.
“Then there was Cora Binns. We talked about her ‘running into someone.’ But that’s a bit coincidental, isn’t it? She didn’t run into her murderer by accident, she did what anyone might do—asked directions of the local bobby. Not only did he give her directions, he followed her into the Horndean wood. Peter Gere recognized the rings she was wearing and wondered what ‘business’ she’d got at Stonington. Carstairs’s men found the rings in Gere’s box room, in the bottom of a carton full of junk marked for the Jumble sale at the fête, Obviously, he never delivered it. Can’t imagine why,” added Jury wryly. “I guess he thought no one would bother looking there.”
“What about Ramona Wey?”
Jury shook his head. “He stopped talking at that point. Ramona Wey must have known Cora Binns. Maybe she knew the death of Cora had some connection with the emerald. I may find out when I talk with Mainwaring.”
Melrose thought for a moment. “I wonder what she said to Peter Gere at the gate when he was taking tickets. I was so interested in all the backs she seemed to be getting up—mainly the Bodenheims’—that I didn’t give a thought to Peter Gere.”
Jury drank some cognac neat. “Who would? He seemed such a pleasant, mild sort of chap. Over the edge, he was, and hid it wonderfully. He tried to direct out attention to everyone else. Those letters were just a blind, something to get people thinking about more intriguing things than Katie O’Brien. He must finally have figured out what that represented, and with all of that money at stake, he wasn’t going to let mere human life stand in his way.”
“But what would make him think of the grate as a hiding place?”
“Peter Gere once worked for London Transport. He mentioned it in relationship to the letter he’d got—written to himself, that is—‘skulduggery’ when he worked for LT, he said. So he might think of it quicker than you or me.” Jury poured himself another drink. “Where’s Emily now?”
“With her mother. Oh, yes, she really does have one. Mrs. Perk came by and got her. Horrified at what had happened, but by that time Emily had had a kip and had washed her face, so she didn’t look quite so fierce. Mrs. Perk said she’d told her to go home and to bed right after she’d finished at the stables. Mrs. Perk says Emily doesn’t like sitters. Makes their life hell, so she finally gave up. Half the time when Emily is out, I believe her mummy think’s she’s in.”
Jury rubbed his eyes. “Speaking of kips, I think I’ll have one myself, as soon as I talk to Mainwaring. I’m going to Stonington tomorrow and then back to London. Finish up the paperwork. Wiggins’ll do most of it, I hope.”
Plant picked up the emerald again, held it up to the light, and adjusted his spectacles. “If I didn’t know it was Peter Gere, I’d certainly have sworn it was Ernestine Craigie who was the guilty party.”
“Oh? Why’s that?”
The emerald necklace swung between them. “Surely, that bird carved there is a Great Speckled Crackle.”
They sat there for another ten minutes, passing the bottle back and forth and talking about everything they could think of except Katie O’Brien.
II
“What did she tell you, Mr. Mainwaring?”
Freddie Mainwaring sat in robe and slippers, looking vulnerable, as men will who are routed out of bed in the middle of the night. “That she knew this Binns woman. I wasn’t aware of it before, but Ramona worked for that agency. Funny, I can’t think of her doing that. She always seemed too . . . worldly to be a typist.”
“And?”
Mainwaring seemed to be speaking more to the silver-framed photograph of his wife than to Jury. Perhaps he was trying to explain his fall from grace. “Ramona told me she remembered this girl talking a lot about some ‘Trev’—her boyfriend in London, though Ramona doubted Cora Binns would appeal much to any man for very long. Anyway, Ramona didn’t make any connection between that and Kennington’s secretary. I think she knew him better than she admitted, to tell the truth.” Blood rushed into his face. He brushed his hair away from his forehead. “Until she saw the picture of the dead woman.”
“Why didn’t she tell us all of this?” Jury thought he knew why.
Mainwaring pulled a crumpled packet of cigarettes from his robe pocket. He seemed to have wilted in the last twenty-four hours, grown grayer, sadder. “Ramona seemed to think the Binns woman had blackmail on her mind.”
“That’s a strange conclusion to draw. After all, it was you who got her to come here.”
”I know. But Ramona . . . To tell the truth, Ramona wasn’t all that nice of a person. It’s terrible to say, but—”
“You’re relieved. That doesn’t mean you’d run to murder to get that relief.”
Mainwaring’s look was grateful. Perhaps this late confidence, too late to do Ramona Wey any good, was intended to set the record straight. “I couldn’t seem to shake that idea loose from her mind.”
“Did she have any idea who it might be who was Tree’s confederate—if that’s what she did think? Obviously, she thought someone in Littlebourne was guilty.”
“I don’t think she knew at all. She laughed and said she’d take a shot in the dark. Or several shots.”
“You mean random accusations? That’s a very dangerous game to play.”
They both looked at each other, knowing just how dangerous the game had been.
TWENTY-SIX
I
IT was shortly after ten the next morning. Jury had left for Stonington and Melrose decided to walk across Littlebourne Green in hopes of clearing his head of last night’s brandy. There was a stile of postcards in the sub-post office and he could purchase one and write some vague nonsense to Agatha.
Inside, he found that Miles Bodenheim had come down off the mountain rather early to whip the devils out of the post office. The postmistress, leaning on the counter and resting her weight on her knuckles, seemed impervious to wha
tever onslaught the gods had seen fit to deliver to her door.
“I should think, Mrs. Pennystevens, that in the circumstances, and especially as you are a public servant, having kept your position pretty much by the sufferance of us humble citizens” (a brittle smile, here) “—you would not be so quick to imply niggardliness. The letter to the Chief Constable weighs exactly the same as the other; it must do, for I wrote just the same letter to both. To insist on another two p for the second letter merely proves your scales are malfunctioning—Ah, my dear chap!—” His eye brightened at sight of Melrose. Fresh quarry. Melrose found himself pulled by the arm and being led between the tiers of MacVities’ cakes, golden syrup, and water biscuits. “Of course you’ve heard! Peter Gere! We none of us could believe it. Sylvia is absolutely prostrate, and who can blame her—”
Melrose said mildly, “I hadn’t realized she was so fond of him—”
“Fond of him?” Sir Miles careened slightly backwards, upsetting a few half-loaves. “Of course she wasn’t fond of him. It’s the idea we have all been placed at risk for all of these years, our very lives hanging in the balance—Sylvia’s words exactly—‘Our very lives hanging in the balance’—well, it’s all in my letter to the Commissioner. I sat down straightaway and wrote to him and the chief constable, and I mean to point out the same things to Superintendent Jury when I see him, that we can’t have psychopaths on our police force!”
“I don’t believe,” said Melrose, picking up a couple of packages of MacVities for Emily, “it’s actually part of the requirement.”
Miles looked at him with some suspicion, didn’t quite get the gist of that, and steamrolled on. “It’s the lack of screening, don’t you see? They simply take anyone, obviously, and don’t do a proper check into their backgrounds. Why, just look at that sickly type who goes round with the superintendent.”
“Sergeant Wiggins is a very good policeman.”
“A strong wind would blow him over. Got all sorts of things the matter—” He picked up the cream crackers, checked the price and replaced them. “—with him. I can’t under—” Melrose was saved from further defense of Wiggins by Sir Miles’s attention being diverted onto fresh paths. “There go the Craigies,” he said, craning his neck to look out the window. “Please do excuse me, dear fellow, but I must have a word with them. I know they must be prostrate. . . . ” And out the door he sailed. Melrose heard him trumpeting Ernestine! Augusta! all across the High.
• • •
Having posted his card (a view of Hertfield from the air) to Agatha, telling her that the village was a singularly unexciting place, he wondered what to do with himself. No one seemed to be about. It had started to rain and the sky was dull and the Green wind-whipped. Littlebourne reminded Melrose at the moment of one of those old movie sets, deserted and desolate.
As he was crossing the Green, heading toward the Magic Muffin, he heard the clip clop of a horse’s hooves.
It was Julia Bodenheim, up on Jupiter, all kitted out for a nearby meet, boots polished, stock crisply white. He was awfully glad she did not stop. All she did was raise her crop to her cap and smile and sit a bit taller, giving him the advantage of her trim profile.
He watched her go. Three deaths in as many days and Julia Bodenheim was going out to chase a fox, demonstrating to Melrose the remarkable English propensity for silliness.
II
Most of Littlebourne seemed to have converged on the Magic Muffin, muffins and tea being considered, presumably, not quite so celebratory as ale and beer. The Bold Blue Boy was closed, at any rate, leaving the eleven o’clock tipplers without much choice.
Polly Praed was, fortunately, one of them. She was seated at a corner table with an elderly woman with gray hair who was just in the process of leaving, but who looked Melrose over carefully before giving up her seat.
“Everyone is simply . . . astounded. Did you guess it was Peter Gere?” She was leaning toward him, her glasses scooped up on top of her head, her eyes shining with a mixture of excitement and sadness.
Melrose decided not to lie. “No. I was wondering, Polly—”
She did not seem the least interested in whatever he was wondering. “And Emily! My God! Going after a poor little girl like that.”
Melrose nodded, though he found it very difficult to think of Emily Louise as a “poor, little girl.” “Yes, absolutely dreadful. I thought perhaps—”
What he thought was no more of the moment than what he was wondering. “I always liked Peter Gere. He seemed so . . . mild. Unassuming. The very picture of the village bobby.”
“Polly—”
This time he was interrupted by Miss Pettigrew, who whisked over with a tray to clear up the used teacup and plate before Melrose. Her hair was flyaway, her cheeks pink. Whatever terrors had befallen the village, Miss Pettigrew was right there to offer succor in the form of tea and muffins.
“Nothing, thank you,” said Melrose. She whisked the tray from the table.
“Well, I suppose you’ll be leaving now it’s all over.”
Although he was delighted she had finally given him an opportunity to extend his invitation, he was less than delighted that her tone, when she said this, was hardly one of sadness, not even one of resignation.
“Yes. Tomorrow, after the funeral. I thought perhaps sometime, when you weren’t in the throes of your latest attempt to kill off the Bodenheims, you might consider visiting me at Ardry End. It’s quite a lovely old place; it’s been in the family—the Earls of Caverness—for several centuries.”
She broke off part of a muffin and buttered it. “I suppose you have heaps of money.”
“Heaps.”
“That’s very nice of you, but I don’t know. I never go anywhere, really. Travel is all in the mind, isn’t it?”
He did not attempt to answer that conundrum. “We used to have a mystery writer in Long Piddleton. He’s gone now,” Melrose added, hinting that the vacancy was open.
But her mind was, apparently, still on the subject of money. “I wonder how much policemen make?” She studied her muffin.
Oh, hell, thought Melrose.
III
To Jury’s eyes, the steps of Stonington were as wide as water and its gray facade even more impenetrable than before. The sky was like slate; the rain had stopped, but the trees rained on; rime edged the empty urns.
Not wanting to take her by surprise with the nature of his mission, Jury had asked Carstairs to ring up Jenny Kennington and tell her what had happened. Cowardice, that—his wanting to pretend he was only the messenger bearing news he had had little hand in bringing about.
• • •
She must have been watching from one of the windows, for she opened the door before he reached it. She was dressed as she had been yesterday, in a skirt and the same silver-gray sweater.
“Lady Kennington. I’ve come to—” Was he intending to hand over the necklace on the doorstep?
“I know why. Inspector Carstairs rang me. Come in. He rang up late last night . . . ” She looked as if she hadn’t slept very well afterward. She gave a vague little shrug, seemed about to say something, changed her mind, shook her head. “It’s awful. I couldn’t believe . . . I didn’t know Peter Gere very well at all. But . . . ” Once again, she led him through the door to the chilly-looking library and once again apologized for the cold. “It seems useless trying to heat these rooms, especially with the moving and everything.”
The leather couch and chairs were under dust covers. “I’m leaving all of this. I’ve never liked it.” There were packing cases by the bookshelves.
They walked through to the other, smaller room. Jury felt a twinge of regret when he saw the flowered, chintz-covered chair was gone. He had not realized until just then how it must have hung in his mind like a picture, that arrangement—the chair, the shawl, the teacup on the floor. “Where are you moving to?”
“I don’t know. Once we lived in Stratford—outside Stratford, rather, in the Avon valley. A frien
d of mine wants to sell a cottage in the old part of town. Very tiny, two up and two down.” She smiled slightly. “That’s what I need.”
“Do you?” Jury asked, not looking at her, but through the French window. Outside in the cloistered courtyard, where no trees were, leaves had gathered mysteriously below the figure in the dry fountain. Color had fled completely from the day, leaving behind only the monochromatic scene of white marble, gray stone, dark leaves.
Thinking his question perhaps rhetorical, she didn’t answer, but led him through to the dining room. It was unchanged, of course, for there had been nothing here to change. “I thought we could go into the kitchen where there’s a fire.” Still, she lingered here, looking out the long windows. It was almost ritualistic, the way she stopped in each room, as if paying obeisance to some house-god to keep him from loosing his potent magic.
Certainly, she seemed in no hurry to collect her necklace, which Jury felt was burning in a small, green fire in his pocket.
In a moment she said, “Katie O’Brien’s dead, too.”
“Yes,” said Jury, bringing out the necklace. “This is yours.”
There was nothing for her to do now but hold out her hands, cupped like someone taking a drink from a stream. He dropped the emerald into it. She held it up, turning it in the light. “Four people died because of this.”
“Don’t be stupid about it,” said Jury, brusquely. She looked at him, surprised. “I mean, it’s yours, it belongs to you. If you don’t want to wear it, then hand it over to Sotheby’s or someone and let them auction it off. With that kind of money, you won’t have to leave and move to Stratford-upon-Avon or anywhere else.”
The Anodyne Necklace Page 24