‘Oh, well, I don’t know about that! Connie did make a beeline for that flat on the Great West Road. And, actually, Potter didn’t call it a panama hat. Think that one over!’
‘Yes, I know. But she hated Tidson and he scared her. Flies don’t usually make direct for the spider’s web.’
‘Mrs Croc. says that, psychologically, they do. By the way, I wonder how much Connie likes Crete? She’s supposed to hate her as much as she hates old Tidson, but that might not prove to be true.’
‘Crete hates Connie, anyway. That’s quite certain, I thought.’
‘Yes. Well, now: I know we can’t get Crete to give evidence against her husband, but, supposing he is the murderer, do you think we could get at anything through her?’
‘Well, we’ve saved her life, I suppose. She might be disposed to tell us one or two facts about her movements since she first came to Winchester, and that might implicate her husband.’
‘I shouldn’t have thought she made many movements. She seemed to do nothing but all that embroidery. And, even if she could help us, she won’t incriminate herself.’
‘No . . . I still think, though, as I have thought ever since I saw both of them, that there can’t be any love lost between them. Besides, who would half-drown Crete except her husband—’
‘Or Connie Carmody? I agree; although there again—’
‘Well, there’s Miss Priscilla Carmody, of course, and the Preece-Harvards, mother and son.’
‘Oh, but—’
‘You can’t cut out any of them, or put in any of them. There isn’t any evidence either way, any more than there is for the murders. All you can say is that, as the Tidsons have no other English connections—’
‘So far as we know. That’s the catch. We really know most about them from the Canary Islands end.’
‘I don’t think it’s much of a catch. Thirty-five years is a pretty good long time, and Crete, so far as we know, hasn’t been in England before.’
‘Even that we can’t prove, though, can we, unless Miss Carmody knows, and Crete had an English mother.’
‘I shall be glad when Mrs Bradley gets down here. Perhaps she can get something out of Crete.’
‘Perhaps she can. She can see further through a brick wall than most people, can Mrs Croc. But Crete’s a dark horse all right, and as for the drowning—’
‘Not a put-up job from her point of view, you know. She was full of nasty unfiltered river water. There was nothing phony about that. I’ve seen half-drowned people before. It’s a habit we have in the police force, and I think I know most of the signs.’
‘Then either she was attempting suicide or—’
‘Exactly. Or. But we should have spotted the party of the other part. We couldn’t have helped it. My own view is that it was an attempt at suicide. I don’t think murder comes into it, somehow, you know.’
‘Didn’t another point strike you?’ Laura enquired.
‘I can’t say it did. What?’
‘Well, it’s against the suicide theory and very much in favour of murder.’
‘Go on.’ He looked anxiously at her.
‘Where were Crete’s clothes? We didn’t see any.’
‘Well, we didn’t look for any. We were more concerned with bundling her up and getting her into the car.’
‘Would a suicide undress first? And, if she did, and the clothes are still there, well, you left a policeman on duty to keep off sightseers and avoid—’
‘Having people leave extraneous clues,’ said Gavin, grinning. ‘I did. So we go along and look for Crete’s garments. Do you know, so much have I become inoculated in favour of the naiad that I never even thought about clothes. It seemed natural to find Crete naked.’
‘It had better not seem natural when you’re married to me,’ said Laura. ‘Now, look. Somebody has got to stay here at the Domus to meet Mrs Croc. and take her to hear Crete’s depositions or whatever you call any information she’s likely to give. Any objection if I point out that that is your job, and that the search for Crete’s clothes is mine?’
‘Go ahead,’ said Gavin. ‘I’ll give you an O.K. for Sandbank.’
‘Sandbank?’
‘Our P.C. I left him on duty at the spot.’
‘Oh, yes. Thanks. All right, then. I’ll be back in an hour to report.’
But she was not back in an hour. She made her way quickly to the place on the river bank from which they had first seen Crete. She was aware at once of Police-Constable Sandbank, and went over to him with her written authority from Gavin.
‘Very good, miss,’ he said, saluting, ‘but I don’t think you’ll find much. I’ve had a look round myself, but I can’t see nothing. It’s hard to decide how the poor lady could have come here naked, though. She, or somebody else, may have hidden her clothes away, of course. There’s plenty of places to search. But it’s queer, to my way of thinking.’
‘Yes, it is queer. I’m going across.’ She went back to the bridge and crossed it. It was soggy on the opposite bank, but, regardless of mud and water, she searched the ground carefully, exploring the reeds and bushes and squelching hopefully through pasture full of waterlogged hoof-prints.
She came out on to the causeway at last, and explored the banks of the brooks on either side. Nothing could be seen of any clothes, although she went as far as the lasher before she turned back.
‘No good going further afield,’ thought Laura. ‘Nobody could have walked naked all over these fields without being spotted by somebody. What about a raincoat, I wonder? You could easily wear just a raincoat and a pair of shoes. No one would notice that. But what could have been the idea?’
She continued her search, but not even a raincoat could be found. She returned to Police-Constable Sandbank.
‘Nothing doing,’ she said briefly. ‘This means an attempt at murder. Somebody must have brought her and chucked her in. Drugged her first, I should imagine, and the cold water brought her round.’
‘Ah, very like,’ said the constable. ‘Times do change. Times past, we didn’t have nothing like this in the city. ’Tis the war, I reckon. Rouses the original in people, war do, so I say.’
Laura considered this opinion.
‘One thing, this wasn’t a Winchester woman,’ she remarked. ‘Well, I’d better get back to report. No, I won’t! I’ll have one more hunt.’
She was bending down poking into reeds when a young voice hailed her from the opposite bank of the river.
‘Missus, was you lookin’ for the old gentleman’s hat?’
‘Eh?’ said Laura, straightening. Opposite her stood a small boy, another in close attendance. The spokesman held out an object which, in spite of the fact that it had been in the water, she had no difficulty in recognizing as the remains of a white straw panama.
‘Yes! Hold on! I’ll come round by the bridge!’ she shouted. She skirted the stolid policeman and cast at him over her shoulder the tidings that things were moving.
The two boys were standing on the bridge by the time she reached it. She gave them sixpence for the hat and thanked them.
‘He’ll be looking for that,’ she said.
‘Not him,’ said the youngster who had held it. ‘He knowed he dropped it in the water, and he made out to catch it with his stick, but he pretended he couldn’t reach it. Us went paddlin’ after it, but the water was deep, so us come on out again, and it fetched up in the roots of the old willow tree, so us brought it back, but he’d gone. He run when he seed us coming.’
‘Would you know him again?’ asked Laura, who had been examining the inside of the hat for traces of an owner’s name, but had found none.
‘Sure us ’ud know him again,’ declared the boy.
Another thought struck Laura, who was fascinated by the story of the hat.
‘You said he saw you. Did you speak to him?’ she enquired. The youngster shook his head.
‘Don’t reckon he wanted us to, missus, and he wasn’t there when we got back. We seed him runnin
g away.’
‘Which way did he go from here?’
‘Over towards St Cross. Us hollered, but he never took no notice.’
‘Well, you’d better give me your names and addresses,’ said Laura. ‘Then, if he gives the five shillings reward, I’ll see that you boys get it. Don’t speak to him again. Run like bally rabbits if you see him. He kills little kids like you.’
She hastened towards the hotel with her trophy, the hat, but by the time she had reached College Walk she had been visited by what she considered to be an inspiration. Instead of turning up College Street she continued to follow the river. She walked past the walls of Wolvesey Castle and so to the bridge at the eastern end of the High Street. She then crossed the High Street and was soon walking down the narrow road which led to the offshoot of Winchester where lived the Potters and the Griers.
She stopped the first group of children she met, and asked for Mrs Grier’s house. Two of them escorted her to it, and lingered beside her as she knocked on the door.
‘All right. That’s all, thanks,’ said Laura. But her audience had no mind to give up their entertainment, and remained almost within arm’s length during the succeeding interview. The door was opened by a grubby little girl of about ten, who was reinforced by an even dirtier child, a boy, a year or two younger.
‘Mother in?’ Laura enquired. The little girl shook her head.
‘Father?’
Another shake of the head.
‘Ah,’ said Laura, ‘then this hat is no good at present, is it?’ She was turning away when the younger child began to cry. Laura turned round again, and the little girl, flinching, said anxiously:
‘He didn’t mean nothing. He didn’t like the lady what wore it.’
‘What lady?’ Laura enquired. ‘What was she like?’
But the little girl shut the door. Laura turned to the boys who were standing beside her.
‘What does she mean?’ she asked.
‘Why, the little ’un seen a lady – well, that’s what ’e said–what took Bobbie Grier away and drownded ’im.’
‘He couldn’t!’ said Laura sharply. The boy was silent. ‘Did he say that?’ she demanded. The boy began to whistle a tune. He made a sign to his mate, and the two of them suddenly fled. Laura hesitated. Then she went round to the back of the Grier’s house.
The garden was very tiny and was bounded by the river, here very shallow. There was nothing to be seen of the two Grier children. Laura, who had been obliged to walk some distance away from the front door and along the street before she gained the dirty little passage which led to the backs of the houses, had counted the front doors as she passed them, so she knew she had reached the right house.
She stepped over the broken stone wall which separated the garden from a muddy little path beside the river, and walked up to the back door. On this she tapped. She was immediately aware of two small noses pressed against the inside of the kitchen window. She stepped back from the door, smiled at the children and took out a piece of chocolate which she happened to have in her handbag.
Before anything decisive could result from this manœuvre there was the sound of a door being slammed. The children disappeared. Laura disappeared, too, and with considerable celerity, so that by the time the newcomer to the house had encountered the children, the self-invited visitor was out of sight from the back windows.
Doubtful as to the wisdom of her proceedings, but feeling that honour demanded the completion of her programme, Laura returned immediately to the front door and knocked.
This time the door was opened by a woman, the slat-ternly, unchaste, disreputable Mrs Grier.
‘Not to-day, thanks,’ said Mrs Grier, ‘and you leave my Billy alone! I wonder at you, pesterin’ poor children when their mum ain’t at ’ome to look after ’em! You ’op it, or I’ll call a policeman!’
‘I am a policeman,’ said Laura calmly. She held out the hat. ‘And I’m here on official business. What do you know about this?’
It was evident that Mrs Grier was too wary to be caught by so transparent a question. It was equally evident that, where the police were concerned, she had a guilty conscience.
‘What I says I says to a uniformed officer,’ she replied. ‘’Ow do I know who you are?’
‘Very well,’ said Laura. She took out a thin notebook which she used for recording small commissions or memoranda. ‘Obstructing the police in the execution of their duty,’ she said aloud as she scribbled in the book. ‘You’d better come along to the station, then. We thought you’d prefer this, that’s all. I didn’t come in uniform with good reason.’
‘Good reason is you ’aven’t got one!’ said Mrs Grier with great perspicacity before she slammed the door. She then opened the sitting-room window and shouted out of it, ‘Go and tell your — newspaper to —! I’m — sick of — reporters and swine like you!’
Laura departed amid jeers (and a stone or two) from children playing in the street, and walked thoughtfully back to the Domus.
‘The beginnings of proof against Mr Tidson,’ she said, when she met David Gavin and found that Mrs Bradley had arrived and was at Crete’s bedside, ‘although the little kid thought he was a woman. He is a bit effeminate, of course.’
Gavin shook his head, but took the hat.
‘Identification by a child of seven or eight isn’t good enough when it comes to hanging a man,’ he replied. ‘We shall need to do better than that. Still, it’s a pointer, and gives us something to start from, I’m bound to agree.’
‘There is one other point,’ said Mrs Bradley, when the matter had been put to her by Laura. ‘We do not know for certain that the hat belongs to Mr Tidson. Still, I think you have done very well,’ she added, observing that her secretary wore a somewhat crestfallen expression. ‘Particularly as I can get nothing out of Crete. Perhaps the hat will help, although I’m not sanguine.’
‘She was half-drowned, wasn’t she?’ said Laura.
‘There is no doubt of that, child. But she won’t say, at present, how she came to be half-drowned.’
‘Annoying of her. She could help us a lot, if she liked.’
‘She may have some old-fashioned ideas, child.’
‘Oh, heavy loyalty to husband, and that sort of tosh,’ said Laura scornfully.
‘Possibly. I was thinking of self-preservation,’ said Mrs Bradley flatly. ‘It is one of the primary instincts.’
‘In that case, you’d think she’d tell.’
‘Do you really think so?’ Well, well, time will show. It usually does, if you don’t interfere, but are content to sit still and let it pass.’
‘Yes, but with that Preece-Harvard boy coming back here to school—’
‘True. But events are shaping well, and if there is the slightest chance of getting the hat recognized as Mr Tidson’s I am sure your young man will manage it, although, when he does, it won’t help him. And now, child, to quiet our minds you and I will visit the Cathedral and gaze upon the remains of Saxon kings. It would be a fascinating and perhaps not impossible task to reassemble the bones correctly,’ she added. ‘I confess I should like to try.’
‘How do you mean, correctly?’ Laura enquired.
‘Well, the contents of the mortuary chests, which now, as you know, rest on top of the screens of pierced stonework erected by Bishop Fox, were desecrated by Cromwell’s soldiers, who, with Puritan frenzy and sadly misdirected zeal, flung the bones of Edred, Edmund, Canute, William Rufus, Emma, Ethelwulf and certain other persons including the Saxon bishops Wina, Alwyn and others, through the stained-glass windows of the Cathedral. The bones were collected and re-housed, but who knows whether correctly? I would give a good deal to be allowed to examine the contents of those chests. However, I don’t suppose it will make much difference, in the long run, whether the bones are correctly reassembled or not.’
‘I wonder what the odds would be in millions of chances to one that the bones are reassembled correctly?’ suggested Laura. Discussion of this
eminently insoluble exercise in mathematics lasted them until they reached the west front of the Cathedral.
Once inside, Mrs Bradley confined her attention to the mortuary chests, the Early Decorated oak choir stalls and the carved vine of Bishop Langton’s chantry chapel. Laura wandered about by herself, chiefly in the north transept, and beside the Chapel of the Holy Sepulchre with its wall-paintings depicting the Passion.
She encountered Mrs Bradley once in the retro-choir, where she found her employer gazing, apparently in abstraction, at the small entrance to the Sanctum Sanctorum and apparently oblivious of her presence. That this was not the case, however, Laura realized as Mrs Bradley addressed her.
‘Corpore sanctorum sunt hic in pace sepulto,
Ex meritis quorum fulgent miracula multa.’
quoted Mrs Bradley into her secretary’s ear.
‘You’ve been inside!’ said Laura. Mrs Bradley, impeccably reverent, did not cackle. She merely nodded confidentially, and fell to a further study of the entrance to the Holy Hole.
‘The vault, and not the Feretory, lies within,’ she said; and they neither spoke nor met again until they came across one another at Izaak Walton’s black marble slab. They left the Cathedral together.
‘Well, that has cleared our minds,’ said Mrs Bradley. Laura could not agree, but did not say so, and, without more words, they returned to the Domus and Crete.
Laura remained downstairs, but Mrs Bradley went up to the bedroom to which Crete had been taken, and, without invitation, drew a chair to the bedside and sat down.
Crete turned her head and looked at her persecutor distastefully. She had recovered as much colour as she usually had, and her greenish hair, now dry, was partly covered by a very charming boudoir cap which gave her the appearance of an exquisite early sixteenth-century portrait.
Her wide, strange eyes were without expression. Her red mouth neither betrayed nor illumined her thoughts. Mrs Bradley produced the panama hat more as one who produces rabbits from toppers than as one who confronts a suspect with Exhibit A, and proffered it for inspection.
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