Читать книгу Chief Inspector Pointer's Cases - 12 Golden Age Murder Mysteries - Dorothy Fielding - Страница 20
CHAPTER ONE
ОглавлениеTHE conversation, judging by what he heard of it as he sauntered up to the east lounge, did not threaten any great demands on his brains.
"All I know is that cricket's jolly good for the liver," Arthur Bond was saying earnestly.
"It is really," echoed Cockburn.
"Isn't it!" agreed Rose absent-mindedly, as, with an apology, she cut open a letter that had just come for her.
"And it doesn't have to be first-rate cricket, either," Bond ruminated. He was a pretty boy, with a girlish face that amused his friends, and misled his acquaintances.
"Not a bit," chimed in Cockburn, the elder of the friends by ten years. The Honourable John Cockburn could not by any stretch of affection be called handsome, but he had a pleasant, freckled face, lit by a pair of eyes which were very steady and observant, though their colour might be indeterminate.
Sibella gave her throaty laugh.
"Hush—h! If you say such brilliant things, Mr. Thornton'll crib them for his book."
"I wasn't saying anything brilliant," protested Bond ingenuously. Then, after he had shaken hands with Thornton, he turned to their host.
"I really ought to've phoned you before blowing in like this, but the Chief was so sure the professor would still be here—"
"My brother-in-law's a will of the wisp. Quite a respectable variety, of course, but as uncertain."
"He's dancing around Genoa just now," Sibella announced idly, "to keep to your simile, dad."
"Milan, my dear, Milan!" corrected her father shortly.
"In this note father speaks of having been in Genoa." Rose replaced a half-sheet in a long envelope, drew out a sealed enclosure, glanced at the address, doubled it up in her little handbag, and turned again to the table.
Cockburn thought that the colonel looked vexed. An old scar on his forehead blazed a bar of crimson. A sign of anger. Yet he could hardly be annoyed with the girls for knowing where the professor was. But already the colonel had puzzled him on the courts. Generally a fine player—to-day! Cockburn eyed him as he cut a cigar unevenly, and decided that something was up. It was not Colonel Scarlett's habit to chip a Corona like that. Nor to hold it so tightly that it leaked. Nor to smoke it at a pace which would turn it into an overheated cabbage stalk.
"Of course you'll stay the night," Rose said hospitably. She was pouring out tea. "Oh, I insist." Professor Charteris had one wing of Stillwater House, and Rose had a free hand in it. The two young men, however, glanced at the colonel. His eyes were on his cigar.
"Sorry," Cockburn said at once, "next time we'll be delighted."
"Well, you must stay for dinner," she insisted, "and for bridge afterwards."
They thought they might venture thus far, uncle or no uncle.
Again the bar of red showed in the colonel's face. He, who was supposed to be one of the most hospitable of men! He said with seeming, heartiness, however, "Your bridge'll be a perfect godsend. I never can understand how a clever chap like Thornton can call a hand as he does. He'd go three no-trumps on one guarded knave."
"Not I!" Thornton protested "I don't say what I might not do, if, like most people, I weren't restrained by the fear of what comes after. You, Colonel, are the 'what comes after' at cards."
"Do you think fear is a deterrent?" di Monti asked suddenly.
Thornton maintained that in many cases it was the only one.
"Well, perhaps with you here in England. With us in Italy—no! If a man wants to commit a crime, does he care that he endangers his own life? Not a bit. What he wants is revenge. Revenge!" The word rang out. "And he takes it!"
"With our poachers it's only fear of us J.P.'s that keeps them under." The colonel spoke as though trying to turn a distasteful subject.
"Especially as in their case there's no difficulty about the disposal of the—what shall we call it—body or booty?" Thornton put in idly. The colonel got up suddenly.
"Mind if I open the window a little?" he asked, and stepped on through it, stepped so hastily that Rose looked after him wonderingly.
Thornton found no chance of speaking to di Monti till tea was over. He solved the problem by drawing a chair up close to the gate that opened into the drive. Presently the purr of a large car caught his ear. It was the count driving away in his Alfa Romeo. He was due at a meeting of the London Facista.
Thornton stepped out down the drive and opened the gates. Mrs. Bennet could be heard in the lodge trying to hand out impartial, but hasty, justice to a couple of squabbling children.
Di Monti got out for a light, and they stood discussing the car's points. Then the conversation drifted around to the professor.
"His departure so unexpected is annoying," di Monti said crossly; "it delays the announcement of my engagement to Miss Charteris."
"My most hearty congratulations. Has it got so far as that?"
Di Monti stared at him. "Well, I suppose!"
"I'd no idea. With us, girls have so much freedom nowadays," Thornton replied easily.
"It is not a question of freedom," the Italian said haughtily, and Thornton thought how cold his eyes were, in spite of the slumbering fires deep within them. "It is merely a question of announcing the engagement."
"Always supposing the young lady doesn't change her mind meanwhile." Thornton spoke casually. "Such things do happen."
Di Monti made no reply. Thornton glanced at him, and then glanced again. He made no mistake. He was looking into the face of what could be a most dangerous man.
"Such a thing does not happen to a di Monti." Cangrande spoke slowly, very slowly. "I possibly do not understand your meaning aright."
"I have none, beyond a general one that it's so easy for foreigners to think an English girl means more than she does. Or shall we say that her words and actions mean less than he might think. I have seen some awkward incidents."
"And you will certainly see one more, if—but I must not detain you. The evening is too fine to waste in generalities which do not apply to what we are discussing."
Di Monti had his voice under control, but the car leapt at his touch, and Mrs. Bennet, who had come out to do her duties, ever after maintained that the Italian had deliberately tried to murder her.
Thornton took up his book again, feeling that he had done all he could to prepare the man for the blow which was to come. He began to understand a little of Rose's feeling. She, and possibly—yes, quite possibly—her father, might be in for a very unpleasant time. However, Rose could be trusted to choose the easiest going.
He sauntered down to the hard courts later.
"I did my best with your kinsman," he said half ruefully, sitting down beside Rose.
"Don't call him, that!" she begged with some warmth. "He's no kin of mine! Of Sib.'s, yes. She's quite Italian, but I'm not."
"No, you're Greek. You're Circe's daughter." He shook his head at her.
"How old would that make me?" She looked at him under the long lashes, straight and golden, which framed her eyes like the rays of a star. "Do you think two thousand years would be about right?"
"The professor's lovely daughter carries off the prize," he announced with a bow. She laughed with him, then her face clouded.
"Unfortunately, Cangrande won't turn into anything so simple—and so useful—as a mere pig. And he's sure to think that father—or some one else—" With a little nip of her perfect mouth that made her look years older, Rose turned away in answer to a call.
Wilkins, the chauffeur, was surprised that Miss Scarlett decided to drive herself, in her own little two-seater, to the concert. As a rule, she was nervous of night driving. If Mrs. Lane wondered at the car, and the whim, she made no comment.
When they were nearly into Medchester, Sibella turned to her.
"You asked me to put you down at Jephsons' for some book or other, didn't you? Do you mind if I don't wait for you? It's only a step from there to the town hall, and I've a visit to pay before the concert. I may be a bit late. If so, I shan't trouble to join you in front, but I'll find a seat farther back. We can meet in the lobby afterwards, if not before."
Sibella stopped the car. Mrs. Lane, got out and shut the door. She went on into the shop, looking as though the arrangement suited her too excellently. Sibella waited a moment, then turned the car, and pressed the accelerator. Like a bird she darted away through the evening light. The concert was from nine to eleven o'clock. It was over when Mrs. Lane, waiting in the little portico, saw Sibella again. She was coming out with an elder woman, who was laughing at something that the girl was saying.
"Wasn't it splendid?" Sibella turned away to Mrs. Lane. "But I thought they took that Third Movement much too fast. It's a mistake to try and copy Kussevitsky's tempo."
They were out on the steps now. Their car was parked to one side. As they walked to it, a lad ran up.
"Miss Scarlett! Miss Scarlett!"
Sibella turned.
"Oh, it's our newspaper boy. Well, Tommy?"
"Your handkerchief, miss. You dropped it just now when you ran into the hall." He held out a wisp of lawn.
"Thank you. But hardly just now,'" Sibella said in a laughing aside to her companion.
Mrs. Lane gave her one of her thoughtful, considering looks.
It almost seemed to her that the girl was rouged. And that her eyes shone like fire-flies in the dark of the night, but again she made no comment.
Bond looked up from his cards to say heartily, "This is better than a stuffy concert hall, what?"
He, Cockburn, and Colonel Scarlett were playing bridge with Thornton in the latter's cottage.
Suddenly there came an interruption. Cockburn, who was dummy, and like every other dummy, took a turn through the gardens while the hand was being played, stuck his head hurriedly through one of the long, open windows.
"I say! I heard a rifle shot over in the lane. Come on, you fellows! Let's see what's wrong."
The interruption was most welcome to Thornton, who had allowed himself to be goaded into calling four hearts, and had been left to rustle for them with the help of a Yarborough. He happened to glance at the colonel as he jumped up. So did Cockburn. Both men saw a look of fear leap into Scarlett's eyes, and saw him crush it down as he might have a dangerous spark as he, too, made for the door.
"Where did it come from?" asked Bond, hard on his friend's heels.
"Somewhere over the other side of the orchard. I—" Cockburn fell sprawling into a flower bed—"shouldn't wonder if it's a row between some poachers and a keeper."
As he picked himself up, he turned towards the colonel, whose feelings about poachers were well known.
"Or Mrs. Viney's pug burst at last," Bond called back, as the colonel made no reply. "She lives across there."
They found the lane deserted, but Cockburn insisted on searching every foot of road and hedge, till they worked around to the main gates of Stillwater again.
"There's nothing to catch here except a wetting. A downpour is coming." The colonel seemed to have suddenly regained his good humour.
In the face of such matter-of-factness the excitement simmered down, and after a few more unanswered shouts, and the first heavy drops of rain, some one suggested a rush to the garage close by, and a general clean-up.
Wilkins was out, but the pump, a towel, and a little petrol repaired all damages, and chaffing the cause of the disturbance, the men returned to finish the rubber, which lasted so late that Thornton insisted on putting "Bond and Co." up for the night, since the colonel still had no suggestions to make.