“The parcel?”
She nodded.
“That’s what they were after. I say, Antony, it must be something very important for them to burgle Mr. Holt, and murder Miss Murdle—because they couldn’t have told that she’s got an extra thick skull, and it’s no thanks to them she isn’t murdered—and break into a bank for it. I mean someone must want it most awfully badly.”
Antony cocked an eyebrow. “I think someone does.”
“What will they do with it now they’ve got it?”
“That depends—”
“On what?”
“On who’s got it.”
Delia sat up very straight.
“Who do you think has got it?”
“It might be Cornelius. I hope it isn’t.”
“Why should Cornelius steal his own parcel? You’d have given it back to him, wouldn’t you?”
Antony nodded.
“After I’d seen what was inside—and perhaps he didn’t want me to see what was inside.”
“Why not?”
“I don’t know. There might be papers which he didn’t want me to know about. I don’t know—I’m just guessing.”
Delia was silent for a moment. Then she said,
“Do you think it was Cornelius?”
“Well, I hope it wasn’t. And I shouldn’t think it was. I should think it was a good deal more likely to be the people he is trying to get away from.”
“What sort of people?” said Delia in a whispering voice.
“German secret service agents.”
Her eyes widened and darkened, and she drew in her breath.
“But they couldn’t be over here! They couldn’t—”
“All German secret service agents weren’t born in Germany, my sweet. Some of them were born in Holland, and some of them were born over here.”
Delia remained looking at him. She had lost all her colour.
“If people like that wanted something very badly … it does look as they wanted that parcel very badly, doesn’t it?”
“Yes, I think we may safely say that!”
Delia continued to gaze at him.
“If they wanted it as badly as all that, it wouldn’t be awfully safe to—well, to thwart them?”
Antony laughed.
“Not awfully. The game Cornelius was playing isn’t an awfully safe game. But then nor is polo, nor flying, nor mountain climbing, nor rugger. Men just will go and play these rough games.”
“I don’t call being murdered a game,” said Delia with all the rest of her colour gone.
Antony had an arm around her. She felt oddly rigid. He said, “What’s the matter?” and felt her draw ever so little away.
“I don’t like it—it frightens me.”
“I don’t like their getting away with it, but there isn’t anything to be frightened about. You see, at the moment we’re not thwarting them—unfortunately.”
Delia allowed herself to rest against his arm, but without relaxing.
“Antony—do you know what was in the parcel? I mean, how much does it matter if they get away with it?”
“I—don’t—know.” He spoke in a slow, thoughtful voice. “It mattered very much to Cornelius as long as he was where the Nazis could put their hands on him. It oughtn’t to matter so much now. That’s as far as the cylinder is concerned. There may have been papers as well. I can’t say about them—they might matter—I just don’t know.”
She had started away from him again.
“What did you say about a cylinder? I don’t understand.”
“That’s what was in the parcel—one of those wax cylinders out of a dictaphone.”
Delia beat her hands together and said, “No!”
He looked very much surprised.
“What do you mean?”
“I mean no—I mean it wasn’t in the parcel—I mean there wasn’t anything like that at all.”
Antony gazed at her. “You opened it?”
She beat her bands together again.
Miss Simcox very slightly raised her head, and then resumed the letter she was writing to her sister Fanny. She discovered afterwards that she had written “very goodlooking” in the middle of a description of Bronwen’s baby. It was not strictly true, but so many things are said about babies which are not strictly true, and she let it pass. The time had not yet come when it would be proper to give Fanny any particulars about Mr. Rossiter, to whom the epithet by rights belonged.
“Of course I opened it!” said Delia. She had flashed into a sudden brilliance. Her eyes sparkled, her cheeks glowed. A bright energy came from her. “Of course I opened it!”
Antony burst out laughing. He couldn’t help it. Delia and her “of course!” He laughed, but he was angry too, because she had simply no manner of business to meddle with the damned thing.
The brightness was if anything enhanced. It dazzled him through his anger.
“Of course I opened it!” said Delia for the third time. “There might have been a bomb inside.”
Antony felt himself slipping. He cast an exorcising glare at Miss Simcox’s back.
“There might have been a bomb,” said Delia in an accusing voice.
Antony collected himself. It was no use trying to exorcise Miss Simcox.
He could neither shake Delia nor kiss her. He fell back upon irony.
“And was there?”
“You know there wasn’t.”
“Only the wax cylinder?”
She shook her head vehemently.
“There wasn’t any cylinder—I keep telling you there wasn’t!”
He had let go of her. They sat back, facing one another on the deep window-seat.
Antony said, “No cylinder?” and Delia repeated the words with a little jerk of exasperation in her voice.
“I keep saying so, and you won’t believe me!”
“You really mean it?”
“Darling, do you want me to scream? Because I shall if you go on not believing a word I say. There wasn’t any cylinder in the box. There were only a lot of papers.”
Antony said quickly, “What sort of papers?”
“They were in German, or Dutch or something. I couldn’t read them.”
“But I expect you tried.”
“Of course I tried! There was one with Luftwaffe on it, and then lists—at least that’s what they looked like, only of course I couldn’t read them. And there were maps with things marked on them in red. And there were lots of other papers. I suppose they might be important.”
“I suppose they might,” said Antony very drily indeed. He took her hands and held them in a grip that hurt. “Delia, tell me—did the box look as if it had been opened—tampered with? Was there a space where the cylinder might have been?”
“Oh, no, there wasn’t.”
He thought she sounded relieved, and wondered why.
“It didn’t look as if the cylinder had been there and someone had taken it out?”
“How big did you say it would be?”
“About four by seven.”
She shook her head. The bright hair tossed.
“Oh, no—there wouldn’t have been room. There were a lot of papers.”
Antony let go of her and brought his hand down hard upon his knee.
“Then Cornelius spoofed him! What a bluff!”
Delia wasn’t taking much notice. She had skated over some very thin ice, and she was passionately anxious to reach the shore.
She made haste in that direction.
“So I tied the parcel up again beautifully—you would never have known it had been opened—and took it right off to the bank, because I thought if they had just burgled Mr. Holt and nearly murdered Miss Murdle for the miserable thing, it wasn’t the kind of parcel I wanted to have lying about. Because it looked to me as if anyone who had those papers might be really murdered.”
Her voice made a question of the last words.
Antony said quite seriously, “I think they might.”
/> Delia relaxed.
“What a good thing the parcel’s been burgled,” she said in a comfortable voice.
Chapter Thirteen
When Antony had interviewed the police and gone back to town, Delia pulled out a stool and sat down at Miss Simcox’s feet.
“Don’t you think he’s nice, Simmy?”
The letter to her sister Fanny having been completed, Miss Simcox was now engaged on one to her sister Maud. Fanny was unmarried, but Maud was the wife of Mr. Henry Tulkinghorn, headmaster of Wrestleford Grammar School. Henry was earnest, zealous, and extremely modern. But Maud was a dear. She had five children of her own, and mothered three hundred boys as well, but she had always leisure and interest to spare. To her Miss Simcox had just confided that she considered Lady Maddox was being severe—“and, though I do not like to say so, worldly. Delia is a dear affectionate child, and Mr. Rossiter a very, very charming young man—”
She looked up from the words with what came very near to being a blush.
“My dear child—”
Delia was gazing at her in a beguiling manner.
“Oh, Simmy, don’t be discreet! It’s so dull! If you’re never going to say what you really think because Cousin Leonora or somebody mightn’t approve, you might just as well be dead and buried.”
“My dear—I hardly think—”
Delia nodded vehemently.
“Just as well,” she said with emphasis—“and have one of those large, square, heavy stones like a table put down on the top of you so as to make sure that you’ll never get up again.”
“Delia—dear!”
Delia tossed her head and laughed.
“Simmy, I shall burst if you won’t let me talk.”
She got an indulgent smile.
“You can talk as much as you like, dear.”
“Well then, don’t you think he’s nice? Oh, Simmy, you must!”
With a guilty consciousness of what she had just written to Maud, Miss Simcox again came near to blushing.
“He is certainly very goodlooking, but—”
“I know, darling—handsome is as handsome does, and all that kind of thing. But he’s got all that too—he really has. Uncle Philip thinks no end of him, and I know he’ll be pleased, and so will Cousin Mervyn if Cousin Leonora will only leave him alone.”
Miss Simcox screwed the cap on to her fountain pen. It did not seem at all likely that she would be able to continue her letter to Maud until after lunch. She said in a soothing voice.
“Lord Maddox is always so kind.”
Delia went on talking about Antony.
Antony Rossiter walked into Colonel Garrett’s office at a little after two o’clock. Frank being a rapid and abstemious luncher, he quite expected to find him there. He came instead upon Miss Ann Marsden, who was looking out of the window. She whisked round in a hurry, and he recognized the typist whom he had accused Garrett of reducing to a nervous wreck. She was looking considerably revived and a great deal too pretty.
At the sight of Antony she produced a very engaging smile and said, “Oh!” and then, “You’re Mr. Rossiter, aren’t you?”
Antony admitted it.
The smile took on an ecstatic character.
“Oh, Mr. Rossiter, I did want to thank you! I do think you were wonderful!”
Agreeable, but alarming. Antony said,
“What have I done?”
Miss Marsden looked at him out of very bright blue eyes.
“You told him he was bullying me,” she breathed—“Colonel Garrett, I mean.”
Antony hung his hat on the knob of a convenient chair.
“Well, he was, wasn’t he? Look here—were you listening at the door?”
“Oh, no—” her tone expressed horror—“I wasn’t! He told me himself.”
“Garrett did?”
She nodded.
“When I came in. You know, he makes me shake all over, and then everything goes out of my head, and then he thinks I’m a perfect fool. But I was picked out for him because I was good—I was really. Only when he roars—”
“I know. What did he say?”
“He began as soon as I came in. He said ‘Miss Marsden’—that’s my name, Ann Marsden—‘Miss Marsden,’ he said, ‘young Rossiter says I bully you.’ And I don’t know how I had the courage, but I said ‘Yes, sir,’ and he said ‘Tchah!’—you know the way he does. And then he said, ‘Reducing you to a nervous wreck?’ and I said ‘Yes, sir’ again, and I thought, ‘Well, I can only die once and then it’ll be over,’ but he just clattered with his chair and said, ‘Don’t take any notice—I shan’t eat you,’ and I took down three letters without making a mistake. And he’s been quite human all the morning.”
Antony burst out laughing.
“In fact I have your life! Now—do you want it to stay saved?”
“Of course I do.”
“Then listen! Do you know what you are?… You don’t? You’re a red rag, same like they flap at bull-fights to make the bull go mad. When Garrett sees you he doesn’t see a human being with nerves, or feelings, or anything of that sort—he sees a bundle of his pet abominations.”
Ann Marsden said “O-oh—” with a pursed scarlet mouth.
Antony’s eye was stern upon it.
“Lipstick—make-up—tut-tut! Eyeshadow—asking for trouble, aren’t you? Nail-polish—the new geranium, isn’t it? And your hair hanging down on your shoulders!”
“Where else can it hang?” said Miss Marsden in a faint, stunned voice.
Antony warmed to his task.
“Nowhere, my child—that is the point. Neatly pinned into a bun at the back.”
A faint moan escaped Miss Marsden’s lips.
“A bun?”
“A neat bun,” corrected Antony—“like this.” He twisted the hair deftly into a knot and holding it at the nape of her neck, stepped back to arm’s length in order to contemplate his handiwork. “It’s good!” he said.
“Is it?” Her tone was a little revived.
“Oh, definitely. Gives you a what-you-may-call-it—a cachet.”
“Does it?” The blue eyes were very appealing.
Antony became aware of danger and dropped the role of hair-dresser. He also dropped the hair, which once more fell negligently about Miss Marsden’s shoulders.
“And no lipstick?” she breathed.
“Well—perhaps just a touch of rose naturelle. But definitely no eyeshadow or mascara—he’d only think you hadn’t washed your face.”
A hand came up for his inspection.
“And no nail-polish?” This was the last word in tyranny.
“There’s one that hardly shows. You could match the lipstick. And they’re much too long, you know.
“Oh, no!”
“Oh, yes. He hasn’t got a civilized eye at all—you’ve got to remember that. Talons dipped in blood—that’s what they remind him of.”
Miss Marsden shuddered.
“How—how savage!”
“Yes, isn’t it?” said Antony gravely.
If there was a sparkle in his eye, she did not notice it. She put her hands behind her and looked up at him in rather a seductive manner.
“How do you know such a lot about lipsticks and things?”
“Because I’m engaged,” said Antony in a hurry.
Miss Marsden’s eyes lashes came down and covered her eyes. She murmured something that sounded like “What a pity!”
Antony walked round to the other side of the table. Even if he hadn’t been engaged to Delia, life would certainly not be worth living if Frank were to find him kissing his typist—and that Miss Marsden was all set to be kissed stuck out at least a mile.
He looked at her across the table, kissed the tips of his fingers, and remarked,
“Business as usual, I think.”
Miss Marsden said, “Oh, yes.” Her voice had a disappointed sound, but she was a reasonable girl. She said,
“I’m engaged too. But he’s in a submarine, an
d it’s a long time between leaves.”
“I expect it is—for him.”
She nodded.
“I expect I oughtn’t to flirt. But you know how it is—it doesn’t mean anything, does it?”
“Not a thing!” said Antony, laughing.
Her face changed. She approached the other side of the table.
“What is it?” he said.
She picked up the telephone cord and fiddled with it.
“There was something I was wondering whether I ought to tell somebody about. I’ve really been wondering about it all along, only we got talking nonsense, and—well, you know—”
He nodded with a laughing look in his eyes.
“And it might be important, or it mightn’t,” pursued Miss Marsden in a worried voice, “so I thought I’d better tell you.”
“What is it?”
She gave him a fleeting look and burst into narrative.
“Well, it was this morning—first thing after I’d got here. Colonel Garrett hadn’t come. He had to go and see someone about something, and he didn’t turn up till eleven. And I’m not supposed to answer the telephone, but Mr. Boswell’s away with influenza and Mr. Hope had to take some papers down to Sir Edward, and as soon as he was gone the wretched thing began to ring. Well, you know how they go on ringing—I simply had to answer it. And there was a man who sounded as if he had been running, and he said, ‘Colonel Garrett—is he there?’ And I said, ‘No, he hasn’t come in yet. Can I take a message? Who is speaking?’ and he said, ‘Cornelius—’”
Antony said, “What?”
Miss Marsden looked startled.
“That’s what he said.”
“Go on, go on!”
“There isn’t any more.”
Antony said “What?” again.
She nodded mournfully.
“That’s just it. There was a sort of crash and the line went dead. And I was going to tell Mr. Hope, but he came back frightfully busy and cross, and I thought perhaps he’d say I oughtn’t to have answered the telephone, so I didn’t. And there didn’t seem to be much to tell anyway—did there?”
“You didn’t tell Colonel Garrett?”
“Oh, no. Ought I to have? There wasn’t any message, and I thought, ‘Well, if he wants him he can always ring up again.’”
It was at this moment that the door opened and Garrett walked in. He wore mustard-coloured tweeds, and a bowler hat on the back of his head, but his expression was, for him, benign. It changed as Antony walked to meet him and said,
Pursuit of a Parcel: An Ernest Lamb Mystery Page 14