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by Gladys Mitchell




  No Winding-Sheet

  ( Mrs Bradley - 65 )

  Gladys Mitchell

  No Winding Sheet

  Gladys Mitchell

  Bradley 65

  A 3S digital back-up edition 1.0

  click for scan notes and proofing history

  Contents

  1: Unexplained Absence

  2: In Retrospect

  3: An Addition to the List of Missing Persons

  4: Parade of Tenants

  5: Hounds in Leash

  6: Labour in Vain

  7: A Question of Water-Lilies

  8: Digging Up the Past

  9: Self-Appointed Sleuth

  10: A Finger in the Pie

  11: Concerning Chickens

  12: Lost, Stolen or Strayed

  13: Writers and Painters

  14: Hounds in Cry

  15: The Runaways

  16: The Official Opening

  17: Every Picture Tells a Story

  Also by Gladys Mitchell

  speedy death • spotted hemlock

  mystery of a butcher’s shop • the man who grew tomatoes

  the longer bodies • say it with flowers

  the saltmarsh murders • the nodding canaries

  death at the opera • my bones will keep

  the devil at saxon wall • adders on the heath

  dead man’s morris • death of a delft blue

  come away death • pageant of murder

  st. peter’s finger • the croaking raven

  printer’s error • skeleton island

  brazen tongue • three quick and five dead

  hangman’s curfew • dance to your daddy

  when last i died • gory dew

  laurels are poison • lament for leto

  the worsted viper • a hearse on may day

  sunset over soho • the murder of busy lizzie

  my father sleeps • a javelin for jonah

  the rising of the moon • winking at the brim

  here comes a chopper • convent of styx

  death and the maiden • late, late in the evening

  the dancing druids • noonday and night

  tom brown’s body • fault in the structure

  groaning spinney • wraiths and changelings

  the devil’s elbow • mingled with venom

  the echoing strangers • nest of vipers

  merlin’s furlong • mudflats of the dead

  faintley speaking • uncoffin’d clay

  watson’s choice • the whispering knights

  twelve horses and the hangman’s noose

  the twenty-third man • the death-cap dancers

  here lies gloria mundy • death of a burrowing mole

  the greenstone griffins • cold, lone and still

  After more than fifty years of crime-writing, Gladys Mitchell died in July 1983 at her home in Corfe Mullen, Dorset. No Winding-Sheet, which went to press shortly before her death, is set in the school surroundings that she knew so well from her many years of teaching. It is her 66th crime novel.

  Mr Pythias, the geography master at Sir George Etherege school, fails to reappear for work at the end of the Christmas holidays. Also missing are several thousand pounds collected for a school trip to Greece. Pythias is suspected of having absconded with the money, but police inquiries at the school and the master’s lodging-house draw a blank.

  The mystery deepens when a dead body is discovered buried on the school premises and two boys disappear from the school. Dame Beatrice Lestrange Bradley and her intrepid assistant Laura Gavin are called in to track down the boys and solve the riddle of the vanishing schoolmaster.

  ‘Gladys Mitchell was a much-admired member of the great sisterhood of English detective writers from the late 1920s onwards, headed by Dorothy Sayers and Agatha Christie. They all avoided unnecessary violence and concentrated on the whodunnit puzzle.’

  —Daily Telegraph

  Gladys Mitchell’s first novel, Speedy Death, was published in 1929, and she continued to write until just before her death, building up a devoted following. Her style and originality received consistently glowing praise. She spent over forty years as a schoolmistress, and several of her books are set in a school environment. She died at the age of 82, in July 1983.

  First published in Great Britain by Michael Joseph Ltd

  44 Bedford Square, London WC1,1984

  © 1984 by Gladys Mitchell

  All Rights Reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the Copyright owner

  British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data

  Mitchell, Gladys No winding-sheet

  I. Title

  823'.912[F] PR6O25.I832

  ISBN 0 7181 2399 9

  Composition by Allset, London

  Printed in Great Britain by Hollen Street Press, Slough, and bound by Hunter and Foulis Ltd, Edinburgh

  To my grandnephew

  DOUGLAS JAMES MITCHELL

  with love and best wishes

  1

  Unexplained Absence

  ^ »

  At the end of the Christmas vacation the Sir George Etherege school re-assembled on a Thursday and each form master kept his own class so that textbooks and stationery could be distributed, dinner money collected, timetables dictated and nametapes on shorts and gym shoes inspected. The Sir George Etherege was a well-run school, but, even so, the staff were glad enough of a weekend respite when the first two days of the term were behind them and normal working could be resumed.

  Every Monday morning, however, was still a detested beginning to the week, for, until the mid-morning break, each master again had to keep his own class instead of teaching his specialised subject. There were reasons for this. On Mondays after assembly, the dinner money for the week was collected by the dinner monitors, who then took it to the school secretary’s office. With any luck they could contrive that this coveted chore kept them out of lessons for up to twenty minutes if she was on the telephone or in consultation with the headmaster. Even three-quarters of an hour was not entirely unheard of.

  Then there were the winter swimmers. During the summer term swimming was a compulsory subject and was part of the physical education course, but in the Easter term only those boys were taken to the municipal baths whose parents were prepared to pay the fee.

  There were also the Catholics, a small minority but one which had permission to be out of school for an hour from nine-thirty on Mondays so that they could receive instruction in their faith from the parish priest.

  ‘If only the Church had stuck to Latin,’ said a junior master, ‘the priest might teach them enough of that logically constructed language to improve their written English. As it is, the whole system is wrong and ought to be scrapped.’

  ‘What we need,’ said someone else, ‘is to extend the system, not do away with it.’

  ‘As how?’ asked another young man.

  ‘Well, we get rid of the swimmers and the priest’s lot, so why not the C. of E’s, the Free Church adherents and the Sally Anns? We have one or two Jewish boys also. If we could get shot of the lot of them on Monday mornings, we could all have a free period until break or even not come in at all until about eleven. How about that?’

  ‘Might work if all the parents were worshippers,’ said Pybus, the art master, ‘but with seventy per cent of them never going anywhere near a church of any sort, you might find yourself worse off if you put your idea into practice. You might have to keep your own class until Monday dinner-time. Ten to one you wouldn’t persuade the various denominations to stick
to the nine-thirty to ten-thirty schedule that the priest accepts.’

  At this point, on this particular Monday morning, the deputy head (still known to most of the profession as the head assistant) came into the staffroom, looked around at the assembled company and said, ‘Oh, Pythias not in again? I expect there will be a medical certificate this morning. Oh, well, we’ve all got our own boys until break, so I can leave the sixth to get on with private study and double up for him when I’ve seen my lot settled. At break I’ll let you know who’s got to lose free periods for the rest of the day.’

  ‘Well, count me out,’ said the history master. ‘I did two stints for Pythias last week.’

  ‘Didn’t we all?’ said another voice.

  ‘There’s the bell,’ said the deputy head. ‘I’ll let you know at break, then, who’s drawn the short straw.’ When assembly was over, he went to the headmaster to report.

  ‘Everybody in except Pythias,’ he said.

  ‘What, again?’

  ‘Yes. I suppose he’ll have sent in a medical certificate this morning.’

  The headmaster opened his door and said to the prefect who was doing private study in the vestibule and keeping an eye on the queue of boys waiting to hand over dinner money to the secretary, ‘Ask Mrs Wirrell to spare me a moment, Pitts. Ah, Margaret,’ he went on, when she entered his office, ‘has the post come?’

  ‘Yes, mostly educational publishers’ catalogues. I was going to bring them in when I’d checked the dinner money.’

  ‘Nothing from Mr Pythias?’

  ‘No. Isn’t he in?’

  ‘He is not in and this is his third day. No telephone message, either? He really ought to have found some way of letting us know by now. See to the dinner money and then get his lodgings on the telephone, will you? Ask whether his landlady can account for his absence and tell her a medical certificate is needed. If he is ill, he must have seen a doctor.’

  The secretary (Mr Ronsonby sometimes told his wife that he would sooner lose any member of his staff, even Burke, the deputy head, rather than let Margaret Wirrell go) returned to her office and rang up Mr Pythias’s landlady.

  ‘George Etherege school here. Can you give us any news of Mr Pythias? He hasn’t been in since the holiday and we’ve had no medical certificate… No, he hasn’t shown up this morning, either… You haven’t seen him since the school broke up?… Oh, I see… You think he has been staying with friends over Christmas? Yes, I see. Very well, I’ll tell the headmaster. Thank you.’ She rang off and went back to make her negative report.

  ‘No luck about Mr Pythias. He isn’t at his lodgings. The landlady says he went away for Christmas, and she hasn’t seen him since the Friday we broke up. He seems to have walked out on her without giving notice.’

  ‘Well, we ought to have heard from him by now. It sounds as though there must have been a disagreement.’

  ‘She said nothing about anything like that.’

  ‘Whatever can have happened to the man? Look, Margaret, you’ve got to go out this morning to bank the dinner money. Could you call and have a word with the woman? Before Christmas? And she hasn’t heard from him?’

  ‘So she says.’

  ‘That seems strange and I shall be glad of an explanation. I need not tell you to be tactful with her, but, really, I do think she ought to have let us know that he had not shown up. Here we have been waiting since Thursday and have had no news of him at all.’

  ‘I’ll ring her again and find out when she will be in. Any time before lunch will do for banking the dinner money.’

  ‘Yes,’ said the headmaster, ‘and that reminds me. I wonder whether Pythias has banked the journey money? One cannot be too meticulous where school funds are concerned.’

  ‘I told him you had suggested that I took charge of the cash as it had to be banked in a separate account, but he said he had seen you about it.’

  ‘Yes, he did see me. He was anxious to keep the matter in his own hands and, as he had made all the arrangements and had organised the whole thing, I thought it right to allow him to do it his way. After all, he is the senior geography master and has travelled in Greece, of which he is a native, and has given up much of his own time to working out all the details of this journey to Athens.’

  ‘The staff are usually only too glad to push school money matters on to me, so I was quite glad to let him carry on on his own.’

  ‘Money collected from the parents in such large amounts is always a responsibility, of course. I wish now that we had not waited so long before chasing him up, but Pythias has been on the staff for some time and one dislikes the idea of chivvying and harassing a sick man. When you see the landlady, do not give the impression that we are worried in any way, but point out that the situation has taken on an air of slight mystery which is rather disturbing. Anyway, see what she has to say. She may be able to clarify the situation in a more satisfactory way than she was willing to do over the telephone.’

  ‘It didn’t sound much like it just now,’ said the secretary.

  It sounded even less like it when she encountered the landlady face to face. The house was a large Victorian residence built at a time when the children of middle-class families were numerous, but now the rooms were let as bedsitters. Apart from the landlady and her husband, there were now five tenants, the woman told Margaret.

  ‘I don’t take marrieds,’ she said, when she and Margaret had summed one another up, ‘or any other kind of couples. Never know who you might get, do you? Single gentlemen such as Mr Pythias are what I cater for, and no visitors allowed. Like I told you over the phone, the last day I sees him he come back as usual — well, a bit later, actually, because he had had some paperwork to do in connection with the school journey this next summer, he said, kind of apologising for being a bit late for his tea.’

  ‘Oh, you knew about the journey.’

  ‘My sister’s boy is going.’

  ‘Oh, yes? He’s at the school, then, is he?’

  ‘Wilbey, his name is, Chad Wilbey.’

  ‘Oh, yes, I know Wilbey. He is in 5A, isn’t he?’

  ‘That’s right. You must have a wonderful memory for names.’

  Margaret, who, as the headmaster could have testified, had a wonderful memory for more important things than the names of the boys who had been in the school longest, said: ‘Mr Pythias has arranged the whole journey, as, of course, he has lived in Greece and knows it well. Did he seem quite like his usual self when you saw him last?’

  ‘Yes and no.’

  ‘How do you mean?’

  ‘He was all of a fidget, so I guessed what he’d got in his briefcase. You see, I knew the deadline for paying in the money for that trip to Greece because some of it was mine, me helping my sister out so her boy could go. Well, nobody pays away good money before they’ve got to, do they? I mean the electricity and the gas and the telephone and the rates and the income tax. You don’t part up until the last minute — well, most people don’t, do they?’

  ‘No, I suppose that’s true.’

  ‘So I says — kind of joking, like, not wishing to give offence to a good tenant — as I suppose he’s worth robbing, at which he looks at me very straight and asks what I think I’m talking about, so I looks at him just as straight and says, if his briefcase is crammed with what I think it’s crammed with, I’m not having it under my roof for Friday night, Saturday and Sunday, as it should have been banked Friday dinner-time. “It’s asking for trouble,” I says, “in these wicked, unlawful times,” I says, “when you don’t know who your friends are and all this crime about,” I says. “You should have got that money in earlier,” I says, “and banked it in your dinner-time,” I says, “and not brought it into a respectable house to be a temptation to goodness knows who.”

  ‘Well, he turned very huffy and said as he had no intention to burden me or himself with any responsibility and as soon as he’d had his tea the money would be put in a safe place — “and not in this house,” he said nasty
-like. So I give him his tea — a nice bit of cured haddock off the thick end and a poached egg on top — and then he tells me as he is going off by train that very evening to spend Christmas with his friend.

  ‘ “I thought as you was going on Monday,” I says. “I’ve changed my mind,” he says, “and my friend will be expecting me.” So off he goes with his briefcase, and that’s the last I seen of him.’

  ‘Didn’t he take a suitcase?’

  ‘Not unless he took it in the morning and left it at the station on his way to school. I never seen him actually leave, so I can’t say as to that, but my nephew says he only had his briefcase when he left.’

  ‘I see. But when he didn’t turn up again, didn’t you wonder what had happened to him?’

  ‘Well, I seen as he took umbrage when I told him he ought to have banked the money instead of bringing it into my house and I had took umbrage when he said (more or less) as there might be dishonest people here, so when he never come back I guessed he had changed his lodgings, but I did expect to get his notice which has never come, and that do surprise me, because he always acted very proper and as a gentleman should, taking his hat off to me in the street and everything.’

  ‘But you didn’t do anything about his leaving like that? It must have put you out.’

  ‘Do anything? I telephoned round all the hospitals, that’s what I done, but I couldn’t get any news. Of course, he had never told me where his friend lived, so he may be in hospital somewhere miles away. I reckon I done all I could. What more could anybody expect?’

  ‘Perhaps you could have telephoned the school and let us know that he hadn’t come back.’

  ‘Why should I do that? If a tenant walks out on me, do I want everybody to know?‘

  ‘You didn’t think he was the sort who would walk out on you. You’ve just said so. I wish we knew the address of this friend of his. He may have been taken ill there. We need a medical certificate to cover his absence, you see.’

 

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