Anna, Where Are You?

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Anna, Where Are You? Page 10

by Patricia Wentworth


  “I have no claim to being psychic, Mr. Remington.”

  He threw up his hands in horror.

  “Not that formal name! The legacy of ancestors from whom one strives to free oneself! Besides, too, too suggestive of the typewriter! Could anything be more repugnant! What distasteful visions it calls up-rattle, rattle, rattle-click, click, click! Could anything describe me less! No-call me Augustus! It suggests the spacious peace of summer days-mellow pastures -the lap of water-the murmur of bees and of the homing dove. What is your name?”

  In the interests of her profession Miss Silver was prepared for many sacrifices, but there were limits. She was not prepared to be called Maud by Augustus Remington. She said primly,

  “I prefer to be addressed as Miss Silver.”

  CHAPTER XV

  You should not have come,” said Miss Silver on a note of severity.

  Thomasina’s colour brightened.

  “I just felt I had to.”

  Ahead of them, Jennifer ran up the sloping path with the other two after her. She was fleet of foot and the boys could not catch her. She had time to stop and wave to them, or hurl insulting names such as Slowworm, Tortoise, Dilly-dally. The afternoon was grey, but in the west the clouds had broken to show a stretch of pale faint blue.

  Miss Silver shook her head disapprovingly:

  “It is most unwise to give way to impulse. Have you considered that Miss Ball may have spoken of you to the Craddocks?”

  “Anna never spoke about people.”

  “Or that they may have seen the advertisement you put in the Times-‘Anna, where are you? Do write. Thomasina.’ Anyone who had read that might find the juxtaposition of these two names suggestive.”

  Thomasina could not wait for her to finish.

  “But that is just why I am calling myself Ina. Even if Anna had talked-and she wouldn’t-Ina doesn’t suggest anything, does it? It’s quite a different kind of name. And it’s not like taking a name that doesn’t belong to me. I did think about doing that, but it gave me a rather horrid sort of feeling and I thought I wouldn’t.”

  If Miss Silver felt that she had to be thankful for small mercies, she could at least be relieved that Thomasina had not presented herself under an assumed name. She said,

  “It is all most unwise, but now that you are here we must make the best of it. You will, I hope, limit your stay to a very few days.”

  Thomasina looked doubtful.

  “Well, I don’t know. They are rather pets, you know, Miss Elaine and Miss Gwyneth-and I thought I’d like to learn weaving.”

  “It would be most imprudent.”

  There was protest in Thomasina’s voice.

  “I don’t see why. The longer I stay and the more I learn weaving, the more it will look as if that is what I have come down for. And it’s all quite natural. They did know Aunt Barbara, and they were very fond of her, and I like hearing them talk about her, and I don’t see why I shouldn’t learn weaving if I want to. And please don’t be disapproving, because it spoils everything. Peter was just horrid about my coming here, and if you are going to be angry too-”

  Miss Silver was reflecting that the milk was spilled, and that it was no good crying over it. As Thomasina was here, she might as well stay. In point of fact, there was no way of dislodging her. She therefore smiled and said,

  “I am not angry.”

  Thomasina brightened.

  “Peter was horrid,” she said. “And it isn’t his business what I do or where I go. He isn’t even a real relation-he is just Aunt Barbara’s husband’s nephew.”

  Saying this seemed to put Peter in his place. It produced a glow of satisfaction-very heartening for the moment, but almost immediately succeeded by a horrid feeling that complete independence with no bothering relations and Peter a long way off was rather a chilly business. The glow faded, and she gave the kind of shiver that makes country people say that a goose is walking over your grave. She spoke quickly,

  “Oh, I’ve got a message for you-I was nearly forgetting!”

  “From Mr. Brandon? ’ ”

  “Oh, no-from Detective Inspector Abbott. I went to see Mrs. Moray like you said, and he was there. He seems to know a lot of the sort of people you wouldn’t expect a policeman to know.”

  “He has a great many friends.”

  “He didn’t seem a bit like a policeman when he was at Mrs. Moray’s. He asked me out to dinner, and we went to the Luxe and danced. He dances very well.”

  “I believe so.”

  “That was one of the things that Peter was angry about. And it wasn’t his business. He hadn’t asked me himself, so why should he be angry because Frank Abbott did? I enjoyed myself very much. There was a girl called Daphne there who Frank said was his cousin. I liked her.”

  “He has a great many cousins.”

  “He said he started counting them once, and when he got up to a hundred he thought he had better stop-but of course that was nonsense.”

  Miss Silver was unable to deny that Frank Abbott when off duty was given to talking nonsense. She had reproved him for it too often. She smiled indulgently and said,

  “He gave you a message for me?”

  “Yes, he did. He said it would be safer than writing. He said letters might be opened and I’d better post them myself and be careful what I said. And I said I shouldn’t be writing to anyone, because after the things Peter said-”

  Miss Silver did not permit herself to be impatient. She gathered that Mr. Brandon had not behaved with tact, and that his remarks had considerably stiffened Thomasina’s determination to go down to Deep End and stay with the Miss Tremletts. When she had received a graphic account of the ensuing quarrel she said mildly,

  “And Inspector Abbott’s message? Had you not better let me have it?”

  Thomasina came back from some way off.

  “Didn’t I? Oh, no-I got off on to Peter-I’m sorry. He wants-Frank, I mean, not Peter-he wants to see you. He wants you to meet him in Ledlington. Tomorrow. He says there’s a bus from Deeping that gets there just before three, and will you get off at the station, and he’ll pick you up in his car. He says you can ask for the afternoon off. If you don’t come, he’ll know you couldn’t make it. But he said to come if you can, because he really does want to see you.”

  Miss Silver considered all this. To allow any connection between herself and Scotland Yard to appear would be to make her position at Deepe House untenable. She was not convinced that she was accomplishing any useful purpose by remaining there, but Frank Abbott’s message did at least suggest that he might have something useful to communicate. Up to the present the only really suspicious circumstance that had come to her notice was the fact that her letter to Margaret Moray had been opened. She very much disliked the idea that it might have been one of the children who had opened it, but it was possible, and she was too honest to disregard a possibility. As regards Anna Ball, she had discovered no more than that there had been some talk about a Mr. Sandrow, a shadowy and insubstantial person glimpsed in the dusk by Mrs. Craddock and seen, perhaps, by one of the Miss Tremletts.

  She had reached this point, when Thomasina said,

  “And now you won’t be angry any more, will you? Because I’ve got things to tell you. The Miss Tremletts talk all the time, you know. They just go on, and on, and on. As soon as Elaine stops Gwyneth begins. They sat till half past twelve last night doing it-all about Wyshmere and Aunt Barbara, and weaving and folk-dancing, and how wonderful Peveril was. But I don’t think they think an awful lot about Emily, though they were quite kind. Just pointing out her faults, you know, and saying what a pity it was for Peveril, and how unrestrained the children were, and of course it would be all wrong to repress them, but some people could manage children and other people couldn’t. And they seemed to think you were one of the ones who could. But not Anna or the other girl who only stayed a week.”

  Miss Silver smiled.

  “I have had considerable experience.”

 
“Well, I was just getting to the stage when I was missing quite a lot of what they said, when they got to Anna and that woke me up. Do you know, there really was a man.”

  “Mr. Sandrow?”

  “Oh, you do know about him.” Thomasina’s tone was frankly disappointed. “Who told you?”

  “Mrs. Craddock mentioned him, but I really know very little.”

  “Well, this is what the Tremletts told me. They said Anna used to slip out quite late at night and meet him, and they didn’t think it was at all nice. Elaine went down to post a letter at the gate because it was a fine night and she wanted, a breath of air and she was going to be busy in the morning. And there were two people standing very close together just off the drive, a man and a girl. The lodge is empty, so she thought it was odd. She said, ‘Who is that?’ and the man turned round and walked away out of the gate. Well, she had a torch and she turned it on, and the girl was Anna. So she said, ‘Who was that?’ and Anna said, ‘Mr. Sandrow.’ Elaine had her letter in her hand, but of course Anna and the young man were much more interesting, so she said, ‘I will walk up the drive with you. Who is Mr. Sandrow?’ And Anna said, ‘Oh, just a friend of mine. Hadn’t you better post your letter, if that’s what you came for?’ ”

  “That was not very polite.”

  Thomasina said earnestly,

  “Oh, but Anna wasn’t. That’s what made it so difficult- about her making friends, you know. She used to be rude, and then she would go on about people not liking her. You see, unless she had a crush on anyone she just wouldn’t bother.”

  Miss Silver deplored the expression which Thomasina had used, but she did not feel that this was the time to comment on it. There were points of interest. She said,

  “Miss Ball was liable to sudden violent fancies?”

  “Yes, but they didn’t generally come to anything. People didn’t really like it-she was too intense.”

  “Then she may have taken one of these fancies for this Mr. Sandrow.”

  “Oh, yes.”

  “Did either of the Miss Tremletts see him again?”

  “Yes, they did. Gwyneth was in Ledlington, and whilst she was waiting for her bus she saw a car go by. She said Anna Ball was driving it, and there was a man with her. She said he had a red beard and red hair. She really was rather offended, because she thought they might have picked her up and given her a lift back to Deep End.”

  “Perhaps they did not see her.”

  “She swears Anna did. She has very good sight, and you know, you really can always tell. She says Anna looked straight at her and went by. Of course if I was out with somebody I liked, I don’t suppose I should want to pick Gwyneth up.” Thomasina’s eyes danced for a moment.

  Miss Silver repeated the proverb with which Anna Ball had so rudely rebuffed Mrs. Craddock.

  “Two is company. But, my dear, all this conversation about Miss Ball-it sounds a little as if the Miss Tremletts were aware that you had an interest.”

  “Oh, no-not really… They talk about everyone. Do you know, old Mr. Masters in the cottage with the post-box is as jealous as he can be because the postman’s father-in-law is going to be a hundred next year and he is only ninety-seven or something. And Mrs. Hogbin who lives next door but two has had thirteen children, and they are all alive and doing well. One of them sends her a parcel every week. And Mr. Tupper who works in a nursery garden the other side of Deeping has had two lots of wisdom teeth.”

  “My dear!”

  Thomasina nodded.

  “And Miranda is a very pleasant neighbour, and of course there’s nothing wrong about it, but they do think it isn’t quite wise to see so much of Augustus Remington-living next door, you know, and running in and out all the time. And then there is Mr. Robinson. So strange that he should live like that-just one man with a whole wing of the house to himself-no one to cook or do anything for him, and half the windows boarded up. And he won’t go anywhere except to watch birds-not even to their parties, which does seem so very strange. They had been going on like that for hours before they got to Anna.”

  Maurice came running back to them, red-faced and out of breath.

  “Jennifer says we’ll be in the wood, and if you want us you can coo-ee!”

  “That will do very nicely, Maurice.”

  He ran, off again, kicking his heels and waving his arms.

  Remembering the unheralded flight of all three children on their first walk together, it was impossible for Miss Silver not to feel some gratification.

  When he had gone she said,

  “Miss Ball never mentioned a man friend to you?”

  “No, never. I thought she told me everything, but-I suppose she didn’t.”

  In Miss Silver’s experience no one ever did.

  Thomasina went on speaking.

  “And there’s another thing she never told me. I didn’t know that she could drive. I suppose she learned when she was in Germany -she didn’t tell me.”

  “And she never mentioned the name of Sandrow?”

  “She didn’t mention it, but-I was going to tell you. When I didn’t get any answer to my advertisement, I sent for her box. You know, the one she had forwarded to me when she came down here. It wasn’t any use leaving it up there, and I thought I would go through it again, just in case there was anything that would give a clue. I thought there might be something I had missed.”

  “A most sensible course. And you found something?”

  “I didn’t think I had-not till Gwyneth and Elaine were talking last night. Now I’m not so sure. I’ll tell you. One of the things in the box was an old handbag. The clasp didn’t hold any more, so I expect that was why she didn’t take it with her. Well, I went through it, and it was empty except for a torn-off piece of paper crushed down behind the mirror, and the glass was broken. And there was this bit of paper crumpled up behind it. It was just a piece off one of those thin blocks, with names scribbled on it-Sandro, spelt the Italian way, S A N D R O. And then with a W tacked on-Sandrow. And then spelled a lot of other ways-I can’t remember them all-things like Sindrow-Sendrow. I just didn’t think anything of it at the time, but now-it’s odd, isn’t it?”

  Miss Silver thought it very odd indeed. She said so.

  It was on their way home that she had her first sight of Mr. John Robinson, the tenant of the other wing. The children, who had made friends with Thomasina, were all talking at once. They wanted her to come home to tea with them, and when she said that the Miss Tremletts would be expecting her they took her by the arms and ran with her down the slope and across the unkempt grass.

  By the time Miss Silver, at a more sedate pace, came up with them they were in the dank courtyard looking up at the blind and mutilated face of the house. Benjy was saying,

  “And there’s nothing left inside-only spiders, and dust, and Papa’s study what we mustn’t never go near because of his book that he’s writing, and because of the stones that might fall on us.”

  His high childish voice set up an echo. The word “fall” came back from the enclosing wings. The air still trembled with it as John Robinson came round the corner to the left and stood for a moment on the outskirts of the group.

  Afterwards, when Miss Silver tried to formulate a description of him, she found that it would have fitted so many other people as to be of very little value. He was neither tall nor short. He seemed to be of a slim build, but his clothes were so loose and baggy that even this might be in doubt, since a loose raincoat may hide a sagging waist-line. Beneath the raincoat aged flannel trousers and deplorable boots. Above, a long woollen muffler of uncertain shade. And above that a short beard, shaggy eyebrows, and an unkempt head of brown hair just flecked with grey. He stood, he looked-at Miss Silver in her black cloth coat, her elderly fur tippet, and her second-best hat; at Thomasina, glowing from her run; at the children, laughing and whispering with her. He looked, and spoke with a marked country accent.

  “Youth at the prow-and Prudence-at the helm,” he said, and on this mis
quotation walked rapidly away, leaving Miss Silver quite a little surprised and not at all sure that she cared about being alluded to as Prudence by a total stranger. Better that, it is true, than the “Pleasure” of the original, but why the quotation at all?

  As soon as he was gone the children bubbled over with information about him.

  “That was Mr. Robinson.”

  “Mr. John Robinson.”

  “He watches birds-he knows an awful lot about them. He goes out all night and watches them.”

  “And in the day too.”

  Maurice said, “He’s batty! ” And Jennifer, “ He’s always like that if you meet him-he just says something and goes away. Sometimes it’s poetry, and sometimes it isn’t. In the village they say he’s mad because he goes about talking to himself up in the woods and on the common, but old Mr. Masters says, ‘Why shouldn’t he if he wants to? There’s a lot of people that are not so interesting to talk to as what you are yourself.’ ”

  Thomasina went back to the stables, and was ten minutes late for tea with the Miss Tremletts.

  CHAPTER XVI

  Mr. Craddock was present at supper, where he dominated the conversation. During the soup he discoursed upon Alchemy and the Philosopher’s Stone, but by the time they were all eating boiled fish he had diverged into a long and very involved dissertation upon Planetary Influences, to which nobody except Miss Silver appeared to pay any attention. Mrs. Craddock occupied herself with serving, and every now and then said “Oh, yes,” or “Oh, no,” as the occasion appeared to demand. The children ate their fish. Once at least Jennifer’s eyes went to her step-father’s face in a long, bright stare. There was anger in it and something else, but when he turned to meet it the dark lashes came down. She reached out, helping herself to salt, and some of it spilled between them. Not a comfortable meal! But then Deepe House was not a comfortable house.

  Mr. Craddock’s sentences got longer and longer and their meaning less apparent, until with the arrival of a cold and naked looking blancmange Benjy broke into a roar.

 

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