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Dave did not even pretend to misunderstand her. "I found him."
"I see!" She lowered her eyes. "Poor old Gerry," she said after a moment, with resigned composure. "He was a b.a.s.t.a.r.d to me, but he didn't deserve that. Maybe he wasn't any more of a b.a.s.t.a.r.d to me than I was to him, when it comes down to it. How do I know? It just went sour, what does it matter now whose fault it was? I tell you, though, if we had it to do again we wouldn't set about it the same way, I'd see to that. Not that there's ever likely to be a second chance. I don't even want any family now. Leave it, we said, we won't get caught like some of the kids do, not even a year having fun and in come the brats and the bills, and most likely the debt-collectors, too. Not for us, thanks! We'll both keep working, we said, get some capital, get things things, enjoy life, plenty of time for settling down when we've had a fling. Trouble is, you get to like having a fling, and it goes on and on, and you don't want to let go of it, and all of a sudden..." She let the hypothetical case slip away from her; her face tightened, staring stonily at her own situation. "All of a sudden you're a widow, and he's on a slab in a mortuary."
"I'm sorry!" said Dave helplessly, both cold hands cupped round his mug of coffee, which if instant was at least hot. He didn't know what else to say.
She darted him a brief, shrewd glance. "I know what you're thinking: Her Her heart's not broken, by a long chalk. And no more it is. What's the use of pretending? We haven't mattered much to each other for a long time. Having a fling got pretty boring together, he found himself other partners. It's all right, the police know it all, it doesn't mean a thing now, but I told them, anyhow. Sure we had rows, rows all the time. He went off for days when he felt like it, and there was always a girl behind it. Only last week we had a row again-how was I to know it was going to be the last one ever? There was this girl be used to know, a few years ago... she did feature articles for one of the magazines he used to do pictures for. They worked together a lot, around five or six years ago. She'd do interviews with people, or pieces about places, and he'd do the art work. And last week, after he was up there in your part of the world, suddenly he started looking for her again. He thought I didn't know, but I did. He went to the magazine offices-I know because he came in with an old number from way back, and sat down with it and started thumbing through it as though he expected to find her telephone number, and then he swore and threw the thing across the room, because whatever it was he was looking for, he hadn't found it. But when I went to pick it up he made good and sure he got there first. I saw the date, though, it was some time in 1964. They did a whole series together that year, I knew then there was something between them. Then he walked out, and didn't come back until the Friday, and not a word to be got out of him, all he did all the weekend was turn out all his old pictures and slides, hunting for something. I might as well not have been here... I might as well have been dead." The word shocked her into silence for a moment. She contemplated it bleakly, and accepted it: "And now he's dead." heart's not broken, by a long chalk. And no more it is. What's the use of pretending? We haven't mattered much to each other for a long time. Having a fling got pretty boring together, he found himself other partners. It's all right, the police know it all, it doesn't mean a thing now, but I told them, anyhow. Sure we had rows, rows all the time. He went off for days when he felt like it, and there was always a girl behind it. Only last week we had a row again-how was I to know it was going to be the last one ever? There was this girl be used to know, a few years ago... she did feature articles for one of the magazines he used to do pictures for. They worked together a lot, around five or six years ago. She'd do interviews with people, or pieces about places, and he'd do the art work. And last week, after he was up there in your part of the world, suddenly he started looking for her again. He thought I didn't know, but I did. He went to the magazine offices-I know because he came in with an old number from way back, and sat down with it and started thumbing through it as though he expected to find her telephone number, and then he swore and threw the thing across the room, because whatever it was he was looking for, he hadn't found it. But when I went to pick it up he made good and sure he got there first. I saw the date, though, it was some time in 1964. They did a whole series together that year, I knew then there was something between them. Then he walked out, and didn't come back until the Friday, and not a word to be got out of him, all he did all the weekend was turn out all his old pictures and slides, hunting for something. I might as well not have been here... I might as well have been dead." The word shocked her into silence for a moment. She contemplated it bleakly, and accepted it: "And now he's dead."
"Did you tell the police all this?" Dave asked.
"I told them everything I could think of, my whole life story, not that I suppose it means anything now. I told them where I was Tuesday night, too, but how do you prove you were in a cinema? Not even a local, but in the city. From a quarter to five, when I left the office, I could have been anywhere. I didn't come home. What for, I knew he wouldn't be here!" Her pallid, unmarked morning face had quickened into painful and positive life. Whatever was left of it now, once she had been in love with her husband, and for all her disillusionment she still had not broken the habit of reckoning with him-or, as now, with the blank where he had been.
"But you did tell them about this business with the magazine?" Dave insisted. "Because he must have had a reason for hunting up an issue six years old."
Surprise came as a relief to her. She looked up at him with fresh animation. "You really think it could mean something? I did tell them, yes, but I didn't make all that much of it. I never thought... Here, wait a minute! You could do something for me, at that."
She got up quickly, and clacked out of the kitchen with more spring to her step than he had yet heard in it; and in a moment she was back with a limp and dog-eared magazine in her hand, Country Life Country Life-size, once glossy.
"I didn't give them this yesterday because I didn't know where it was. I thought he'd taken it away with him, but he hadn't, he'd only hidden it. I was turning out his papers and letters last night, after they'd gone. I found this shoved at the back of his transparency files. You're going back there anyhow-give it to that inspector for me."
She put it into his hands. He had occasionally seen copies of it before, but half of it was social gossip, provincial at that, and lacking for him both general and local interest, and he had never bought a copy himself in his life. The Midland Scene The Midland Scene-glossy monthly published right here in Birmingham, but belonging rather to the outer shires than to the city. July 1964, and consequently full of regattas, tennis, gardens open to the public, stately homes on show, and country race meetings. In the winter it would be hunt b.a.l.l.s, meets, the exploits of midland skiers abroad, winter sports and annual dinners. The paper was good, the layout elaborate, the colour-printing first-cla.s.s. He turned the pages, full of social events and comments that seemed to him as remote as Mars; and he came to a feature article with pictures, the centre-piece of the colour pages: Country Houses of the Midlands.
Number Five: Mottisham Abbey, Midshire.
There was no mistaking that long, lofty roof, that thick block of chimneys. The photographs were good and well printed, and had caught house and garden at their summer best. There were two shots of the exterior, one focused across all that remained of a wall of the refectory, barely breaking the soil, one from the best corner of the garden, over a jungle of roses. The lichen-yellows and sage-greens in the roof tiles made an exotic print; and that tall, erect, distinguished-looking fellow in the authentic country tweeds and leather elbows, with wild grey hair still curly and crisp as heather, was Robert Macsen-Martel, senior, a year or so before his death. Sixty years old, but looking at least ten years younger, with a smile that could fetch the birds out of the bushes-literally, according to Saul Trimble.
Dave turned the page, and found a central-double-page spread with three more pictures: the dove-cote in the garden, the panelled hall, the drawing-room.
Not the wine-cellar door! Was that the point? Was that what Bracewell had been hoping to find? the wine-cellar door! Was that the point? Was that what Bracewell had been hoping to find?
He turned back to the previous page. "Text by Alix Trent. Pictures by Gerry Bracewell."
"It's the house up there, where it happened, isn't it?" said Bobbie Bracewell, watching him narrowly.
"Yes, this is the house. The one the door came from."
"That's what I thought. So the police ought to have this. I don't know whether it means anything-but it meant something to him him, all right. Or something that isn't isn't there meant something to him. Take it back with you." there meant something to him. Take it back with you."
"All right, if that's what you want." He hesitated, aware suddenly of her peculiar desolation, which had not been created, but only revealed, by the loss of a husband. "If it's any consolation, I don't think he was looking for this Alix Trent-or not for her own sake. If he went to the trouble to get this back-number from somewhere, after all this time, it was for these pictures. When he was on a job like that, I suppose he'd take a fair number of pictures, and the author or the editor would choose the ones they wanted to use? There'd be more than just these few?"
"Sometimes he'd take as many as thirty to get three, provided the magazine was paying for everything."
"And after he'd looked at these, and failed to find what he wanted, he started turning out all his own files again?"
She shook her head sadly. "That wouldn't do him any good, either. He never kept any but his few best negatives more than about three years, not where the work was commissioned. What s.p.a.ce would he have for filing thousands of pictures in a place like this? He was always going to have a proper filing system and a proper library some day. When our ship came in-only we spent too much time pushing the boat out!" She laughed, and was again grave. "I'll have to go and put my face on, it's time I went. But I suppose I could could have a look through them, just in case..." have a look through them, just in case..."
"Yes, do that," said Dave, and got up from the kitchen table. "Thanks a lot for the coffee. Now just tell me where I can put the car for you, and I'll be getting back."
He walked away from Number 10 Clement Gardens, towards the nearest bus-stop, and he had never been so glad that he wasn't married. The last thing she had said to him, as he left, was: "Call in again some time, if you're this way. You're welcome any time." And the kindling spark he had seen in her eye might have been merely the stimulus of preparing for the day's work, but might equally well have been the first signal of a reviving interest in men-all those men who were still alive and not on a slab in the mortuary. Whatever its source, it made up his mind for him that he was never going to call in at Number 10 again. He didn't dislike her, he was sincerely sorry for her, she even inspired a sort of respect by her rigorous honesty; but he was never going to see her again if he could help it. He'd take her magazine to Sergeant Moon or to Chief Inspector Felse, and he hoped she'd go through all those negatives and transparencies her husband had kept-at least it would give her an interest for an evening or two, and help her over the worst, even if she found nothing-but from this on, let the police take care of anything she produced.
But the magazine under his arm bothered him. Here was confirmation, if nothing more, that Gerry Bracewell had seen something that puzzled, intrigued and excited him about that church door at St. Eata's, and had wanted desperately to hunt up the pictures he had once made of the house in which the door had then hung. To compare? To confirm some nagging suspicion in his own mind that there was something changed about it? Could he have forgotten, in six years, exactly what pictures he had had taken? Was it only a shot in the dark that there taken? Was it only a shot in the dark that there might might have been a photograph of that door in its old position? Or did he have been a photograph of that door in its old position? Or did he know know he'd photographed it? As many as thirty pictures to get three, his wife had said. He couldn't remember which of his batch the magazine had chosen, he had to get hold of a copy of the article first. When that failed, what next? The negatives, presumably, would belong to he'd photographed it? As many as thirty pictures to get three, his wife had said. He couldn't remember which of his batch the magazine had chosen, he had to get hold of a copy of the article first. When that failed, what next? The negatives, presumably, would belong to The Midland Scene The Midland Scene. So the next step would be-supposing the whole thing was urgent enough, and promising enough-to consult their records. Another disappointment? After he'd thrown the magazine across the room in fury and frustration he'd disappeared until the Friday, and only after that had he settled down grimly to turn out all his dead, past pictures, just in case he'd missed it. So before Friday he'd thought of something and someone else he might try. And drawn another blank.
Who or what filled in that gap? Alix Trent? The author of the series might well possess prints of all the pictures concerned, but apparently she hadn't storage s.p.a.ce, either. And the picture wasn't her work, only an ill.u.s.tration by someone else, she had no copyright in it, why keep it?
All he had to do was get off the bus and make his way to New Street station, and go home. And so he would have done, if the editorial offices of The Midland Scene The Midland Scene had not been so close to the city centre, and he had not had at least half an hour to wait for a train. had not been so close to the city centre, and he had not had at least half an hour to wait for a train.
The office was in a new gla.s.s and concrete block, smart, sterile and cold, with a fountain and the pillars of Baalbek in the hall; but two floors up, where The Midland Scene The Midland Scene lived, the premises had settled down into a practical workaday scale and style. A minute front office housed only a receptionist and a telephonist. Dave asked after Alix Trent, and where he could contact her in connection with one of her articles. The receptionist willingly explained that Miss Trent was not on the magazine's pay-roll, but was a freelance who often did work for them, and the office would naturally forward any communications to her. Dave was duly grateful for the information, but had thought of getting in touch with Miss Trent personally while he was here in town-if, of course, she lived in Birmingham. The receptionist examined him sternly through her iris-tinted b.u.t.terfly gla.s.ses, and pondered whether he looked a proper person to be given Miss Trent's address. She was a nice girl, about eighteen and a half by the look of her, with a head of smooth blue-black hair like a well-groomed rook, and the scimitar points of her raven wings stabbed her pink cheeks and made hollows there. She looked over her gla.s.ses, because she could see better that way. On the whole, she thought he looked a harmless creature; and Miss Trent was known to be capable of dealing with most eventualities. lived, the premises had settled down into a practical workaday scale and style. A minute front office housed only a receptionist and a telephonist. Dave asked after Alix Trent, and where he could contact her in connection with one of her articles. The receptionist willingly explained that Miss Trent was not on the magazine's pay-roll, but was a freelance who often did work for them, and the office would naturally forward any communications to her. Dave was duly grateful for the information, but had thought of getting in touch with Miss Trent personally while he was here in town-if, of course, she lived in Birmingham. The receptionist examined him sternly through her iris-tinted b.u.t.terfly gla.s.ses, and pondered whether he looked a proper person to be given Miss Trent's address. She was a nice girl, about eighteen and a half by the look of her, with a head of smooth blue-black hair like a well-groomed rook, and the scimitar points of her raven wings stabbed her pink cheeks and made hollows there. She looked over her gla.s.ses, because she could see better that way. On the whole, she thought he looked a harmless creature; and Miss Trent was known to be capable of dealing with most eventualities.
"It's in Handsworth, close to the park, I'll write it down for you." Which she did, earnestly.
Dave thanked her, and hesitated. "Look, would you mind telling me-are you on here regularly?"
"Yes, days," she said, and took off her gla.s.ses altogether, the better to consider him.
"Do you know if anyone inquired after Miss Trent here last week? I believe a friend of mine may have called in on the same errand."
He must have sounded casual enough and innocent enough. She pondered, visibly turning back the pages of her memory.
"Well, yes, one person did-but I don't think that could be the one you're thinking of, it was one of the photographers who sometimes works for us. He used to work with Miss Trent quite a lot, so I'm told, a few years back. They told me it was O.K. to tell him." She looked momentarily anxious, but not because death had leaned over her shoulder. She was young, she had something better to do in her spare time than read the crime news.
"No, that wouldn't be my man. Never mind, thanks, anyhow."
"He didn't come just for that, actually," the girl said, "he came to go through our library pictures for something he wanted, but I don't think he found it. We don't keep material that hasn't been used for publication, you see, not for more than a year or so-not unless it's of exceptional interest."
"No, of course not. I suppose s.p.a.ce is always a problem."
"These new places," she told him with conviction, "look huge huge, but you try working in them! There isn't room to swing a cat, let alone a camera."
Dave went out and took a bus towards Handsworth from the nearest bus-stop.
At something after ten o'clock, Alix Trent opened the door of her Edwardian semi wide, as only large-minded people do, and looked at her unexpected visitor with mild inquiry. As she stood on her three-inch doorstep, her eyes were exactly on a level with his.
She was the brownest girl Dave had ever seen. Her hair was a weighty long bob, the colour of good tan shoe-polish, and glossy as conkers, her lashes and brows were the same tint with an added relish of red, her forehead and cheeks were matt brown in an indescribable shade, flushed with rose and fading into ivory. She wore a shirt-dress in a tint very like her own complexion, saddle-st.i.tched with dark brown, and in the collar she had a gossamer scarf in bright apricot. Her shoes were tan, coffee and cream in a series of fragile straps. Her features were wry and friendly, not at all beautiful, apart from the deep-brown, luminous eyes, which so far remained distantly grave though her large, generous mouth smiled at him.
"Miss Trent?" Dave inquired, and his tone was almost incredulous, so far removed did this girl seem from the racy rival Bobbie Bracewell had been imagining, and so extremely unlikely ever to have had any but business connections with Gerry Bracewell.
"Yes, I'm Alix Trent."
Her voice was low-pitched, brisk and pleasant, with a note of good-humoured patience in it. He had interrupted her at work, but he didn't look the type to do so without reason.
"If you could spare me just a few minutes I should be very much obliged. My name's Cressett. I'm not the police or the press or anything official, and I haven't any standing, but it's about Gerry Bracewell's death." He saw by her face that she did read the papers, and that she would never be able to feel completely disinterested about the murder of someone she had known and worked with. "I got involved," he said, "whether I wanted to or not. I found him. And I've just come from his widow."
That struck two notes at once with her, her face was mobile and expressive, she was sorry for Bobbie Bracewell, but also she knew how she herself had been regarded in that quarter, and his coming from the widow could mean several very different things.
"There's a matter of a feature article you and he handled together," Dave said carefully, "which seems to be connected in some way with his death. Or at least the house in it does. I believe he came to see you before he was killed."
"Yes," she said readily and coolly, "he did come to see me."
"Don't misunderstand me-you, his visit to you-this has nothing to do with the case. Only the matter about which he wanted to see you, this is is relevant. At least, relevant. At least, I I think so." think so."
"But you are not the police," she said reasonably, and for the first time almost smiled at him with her eyes as well as her lips.
"This is something the police don't yet know, but will as soon as I get back today. His widow gave me this to take back to them." He held out the magazine for her to see, and her understanding was candid, neutral and detached. "I thought I might, with luck, be able to take more at the same time. Will you help me?"
"Forgive me," she said, aware that her smile was getting a little out of hand, "but you do appear such an improbable amateur detective."
"I'm not one," he said shortly, "I don't want to be one, I never shall be one. I'm just the man who found the body, and I happen to belong-I mean belong belong-to the small, closed community where it happened. I don't like a man being wiped out anywhere, and especially not in our village. And I don't like unpaid debts hanging round the necks of innocent people. I want right done, that's all."
A long time afterwards, when they knew each other very much better, she told him that what had impressed her most of all, and made up her mind for her there and then about more matters than one, was that the word he used was not "justice," but "right." A distinction so narrow and so profound.
"Come in!" said Alix, and set the door wide.
She listened to everything he had to say, and he said much more than he had realised was necessary, because she was a good listener, intent, responsive, with the patience to wait for a slower but possibly more powerful and accurate mind than her own to find the words it needed without prompting. She kept very still while he talked, and she thought deeply and talked openly when it was her turn. Once she had made up her mind there were no half-measures.
"Yes, you're right, of course, he did come to me. After he'd found nothing in the archives, I suppose. He wanted to know if I'd kept any of the unused pictures from that country house series. He didn't say which one he was interested in at first, and if I'd had anything to show him I don't think he'd have committed himself any further, but I don't keep past material, except file copies of my own work. And it hadn't seemed likely that there'd be any future sales in that particular set, they were commissioned, and n.o.body else was going to show interest. As I remember it, all the houses were much the same-after all, the major ones are too well known, it was the small stuff we were concerned with. These tumbledown dumps miles from anywhere, with arthritis in every flagstone-So when it was clear I had nothing to show, then he did begin to probe in another way. That was the first time he actually mentioned Mottisham Abbey. I read the papers, I knew about the door being put back into the church porch, it didn't take much guessing to decide that he'd been covering the ceremony. He started reminding me of what the house was like, and asking how much I remembered. In the end it came down to what he really wanted. How well did I remember the wine-cellar door."
She looked up at Dave, across her plain, practical, uncluttered workroom, and smiled. Smiling made her mouth slightly oblique, one corner flicking engagingly upwards.
It sounded hopeless. One house in a series of at least five, one minor feature in the house, one visit... "It was expecting a lot," Dave owned ruefully.
"As it happens, I had some reason to remember it, though not enough to be much use to him, apparently. I do remember it was a nice piece of carving, though very dark and coated with a rather nasty varnish..."
"They've removed that," said Dave.
"Good for them! It did look well worth cleaning up. But n.o.body said a word, about any legends attaching to it, not to us, at any rate. Of course, it was the old man himself who showed us round, and he wasn't the kind to retail legends, from what we saw of him. He scoffed at the whole thing. I was slightly offended, to tell the truth, after all I was twenty-three then, and took my job very seriously, and I expected patrician elderly gentlemen to take their historic houses seriously, too. He didn't. He told me exactly what he thought of old, cold, insanitary stone houses, and said if my rag thought so highly of the place they could have it, he was only waiting for a reasonable offer. He was a character. And handsome, too. Not to say oncoming! What I chiefly remember about the wine-cellar is that he contrived to close the door-or partially close it-with himself and me inside, while Gerry was making some shots of the outside."
"Then he did did photograph the door?" Dave interrupted quickly. photograph the door?" Dave interrupted quickly.
"Oh, yes, both he and I were quite sure of that, that's why he was hunting for the prints, but none of us had kept them-they weren't used, as you've seen. And when we were alone inside there, not to make a long story of it, old Mr. Martel made a very debonair but very determined pa.s.s at me, and I had to whip the door open pretty smartly and make a discreet getaway. The things I know about that door are not so much visual, consequently. What I remember most is how surprised I was, considering its size, at the sweet way it swung. Whoever hung it knew his business. It balanced beautifully, even though it wasn't all that well cared for, and creaked a little in motion."
It sounded absolutely authentic. Given the late Robert's reputation, it would have been unthinkable for him to be shut in a cellar with an attractive twenty-three-year-old girl and not make a pa.s.s at her. He would have considered it an opportunity wasted, almost a dereliction of duty.
"But nothing else strikes you about the door as you remember it?-the door or the knocker?"
She shook her head. "I'm sorry! If only I knew what sort of something, even!"
"If only I could tell you," he agreed ruefully. "Well, thanks, anyhow. I shall have to pa.s.s on all this to the police. You won't mind?"
The heavy, smooth cap of russet hair swung again. "I don't mind. I'll keep thinking about it. Something might occur to me."
He knew he had interrupted her in the middle of a job, there was paper in the typewriter on the desk at the window, and a sheaf of loose pages beside it to be copied. He knew he ought to go, and was even aware that he would be well advised to go now, if he intended ever to come this way again. The time for knowing her better was not yet; but it would come.
"Yes, do keep it in mind. If you think of anything that even may be significant, would you let the Midshire C.I.D. know about it?" He had the wit not to ask her to regard him as the natural intermediary, and send her afterthoughts to him.
She had risen with him, to accompany him to the door. She had a long, free, self-reliant step, and when she gave him her hand it was significant, the seal on an agreement. At the last moment, before he turned towards the gate and she closed the door, she said with deliberation: "A photograph might help, if your local paper carried one. Look in, when you're in town again, and if you've got a picture, bring it with you."
It was the measure of her impact that there was no echo at all. Bobbie Bracewell might never have existed. All he felt was that simple and exhilarating lift of the heart a.s.suring him that he would see Alix Trent again, that it was she who was making the approach easy for him.
"I will," he said, and walked away from her down the path with The Midland Scene The Midland Scene under his arm, and a sense of sudden achievement flooding his senses, as though the sun had come out. under his arm, and a sense of sudden achievement flooding his senses, as though the sun had come out.
CHAPTER 5.
George Felse stood under the arching trees that shadowed the south porch of St. Eata's, in the first fine drizzle of rain, and stared at the wreath of wilted, greyish-green herbage that sagged on the sanctuary knocker. The head of the mythical beast, inanely grinning, jutted out of the tired greenery like a clown from a wilted muslin ruff, obscenely mocking the gravity of the beholders. Withdrawn, the village moved about stealthily in circles, eyes slanted always towards the profaned place of death, feet always directed a.s.siduously somewhere else. There wasn't a soul for two miles round who didn't know.
The dark-green, crinkled leaves drooped despondently, as if they held out very little hope that they would be effective in warding off the obscure evil from outside human experience-which was hypothetically the purpose for which someone had placed them there. It was even something of an achievement to get hold of that much parsley in October, let alone hang it in position in this most exposed of places without being caught in the act. Though a soul benevolent enough to be scheming for the protection of this troubled place against all evil spirits should also have been indifferent to observation. Unless, of course, by demons, whose attentions it would be reasonable enough to avoid if possible.
"All right," said George philosophically, "you didn't see anyone, you don't know anything. I get it. But you do know what this is for, don't you? Avaunt, ye spirits of chaos, sp.a.w.n of darkness, malicious powers, make yourselves scarce! This is no place for you, this is a place protected. All right, you can unhook it now, it's served its purpose."
"I dursen't, sir," said Ebenezer Jennings without a blush, and stood by George's side in full daylight to be surveyed, his face as hard as the building stone they had once quarried from the western slope of Callow, now long overgrown in bracken and furze. "That's magic, sir. That's good magic. I don't meddle with yon. This church is troubled bad, and that garland, that's blessed. Yes, I do know what virtue's in these leaves. You leave 'un there, I say. That ain't no ill, is it? Leave 'un be, and hope!"
George wondered, in one instant of mental irresponsibility, whether it was the mere fact of the man's office as verger, or something in his remarkable appearance, that enabled him to get away with that kind of language without being ridiculous. He was almost sure that it was not because of any actual belief he had in these things; on the contrary, the whole delivery had something of the impressiveness of a first-cla.s.s theatrical performance, larger than life and double as natural. The office of verger was practically hereditary in Mottisham; and this was the role that went with it, the trappings, the privilege.
Eb Jennings the Fifth was a man of medium height and inordinate dryness, all stout bones and leathery hide without much flesh between. He looked as if the wind might blow him away, but he was as tough as old boots. His head was large, with a lofty, domed skull bristling with long grey hair, his face all forehead, tapering away down a long nose to a narrow, hanging jaw, and his eyes in their gaunt sockets burned with a dark, prophetic fire. He would not have been out of place in the direst books of the Old Testament. Even in ancient flannels blotched with paint and grease, and a washed-out oiled-wool sweater, beginning to unravel at the hem, he was impressive.
"And how can you be sure it was put there to protect?" George asked curiously, watching the verger's lantern of a face. "Oh, yes, we know that's what it means, or what it's supposed to mean, but what if whoever put it there did it to frighten the whole village half to death, on the principle of 'the mair mischief of mair sport'? That wouldn't be much benefit to anybody except the murderer, would it? If he stirred up enough muck he might escape notice in the obscurity. Might even be left free to make his next move, whatever that may be. You live here at the lodge on the corner of the churchyard, don't you? Right in the danger zone!"
A boy of about eighteen or nineteen came b.u.t.ting through the gathering rain, shears in hand, and dived into the porch beside them just in time to hear this. George had seen him clipping back the encroaching ivy from the north wall before the shower began.
"Don't you waste your time trying to scare this old raven," he said, punching Jennings lightly in the ribs, and dropping the shears on to the bench inside the porch. "I'd be sorry for the demon that tried tangling with him, I tell you."
"You mind your own business," Eb Jennings told him smartly, "and don't interrupt your elders and betters."
"And don't let him kid you he takes any stock in this Dracula stuff," went on the boy, undeterred, nodding a s.h.a.ggy, light-brown head at the dangling wreath. "He's got his own recipes." He sat down beside his shears, and leaned to examine the withering leaves more closely. His lively lips curled in tolerant disdain. "You know there's a couple of London cranks from some psychic research gang booked in the 'Arms' last night? And a folklore collector from Birmingham? As well as a few national press folks. Somebody slipped the word out there were devils loose up here."
"Somebody," said George, "certainly did." He was less concerned about that particular somebody. The murderer was hardly likely to want professional observers on the scene, however effectively they might embarra.s.s the police; they were all too likely to turn up something he wanted to remain buried. But the man who hung up a clear alarm signal on the spot could well be the murderer himself, studying to redouble confusion, while he himself withdrew farther into the undergrowth. "Good for the hotel trade, at any rate."
"Maybe Mrs. Lloyd hung up the parsley," suggested the boy cheerfully. "Bait for the ghost-hunters!"
"Only fools mock the presence of evil," said Eb Jennings reprovingly, scowling at the boy, whose long legs spread across the porch almost to the bench on the other side.
"Why not, if propitiation does no good? You might as well die laughing." He patted the purring iron beast. "Caution, guard dogs on patrol!"
"I will not stay," said Jennings magnificently, "to listen to impious talk. You'll excuse me, Mr. Felse, I've got work to do." And as he made his exit through the church, that being the driest way, he looked back at the boy and said, making a lightning return to everyday practicality: "And since you've been druv in by the rain, you can go and get some wood in for your mother."
He was gone, leaving the knocker swaying gently, and rustling as the leaves brushed the door. He also left his own minor shock still almost palpable on the air. George told himself that he ought to have guessed. There was something in their wrangling, teasing, needling exchanges that yet stopped short of all malice, and argued a very considerable area of understanding between them. And yet they were, physically, so strikingly unlike.