The lawyer, Herbert Dench, telephoned again during the afternoon, and expressed great shock at his client’s sudden death. I told him that the inquest was not likely to be for ten days or a fortnight, and suggested that he should leave the funeral arrangements to me, coming down himself on the morning of the cremation. This suited him, greatly to my relief, for he sounded what Vita called a “stuffed shirt,” and with luck would have the tact to return by an afternoon train, which meant that he wouldn’t be on our hands for more than a couple of hours or so.
“I would not trespass upon your time at all, Mr. Young,” he said, “were it not out of respect for the late Professor Lane and the unhappy circumstances of his death, and for the fact that you are a beneficiary under his will.”
“Oh,” I said, rather taken aback, “I had not realized…” and hoped it would be the walking-sticks.
“It is something I would prefer not to discuss over the telephone,” he added.
It was not until I had put down the receiver that I realized I was in a somewhat awkward position, living in Magnus’s house rent-free by verbal agreement. It might be the lawyer’s intention to kick us out in the shortest possible time, immediately after the inquest, perhaps. The thought stunned me. Surely he would not do such a thing? I would offer to pay rent, of course, but he might bring up some objection, and say the place must be shut up, or handed over to agents prior to a sale. I was depressed and shaken enough, without the prospect of a sudden move to make things worse.
I spent the rest of the afternoon on the telephone, arranging about the funeral, after checking with the police that it was in order to go ahead, and finally ringing back the lawyer to tell him what I had arranged. None of it seemed to have anything to do with Magnus. What the undertaker did, what happened in the meantime to his body, the whole paraphernalia of death before committal to the flames, did not concern the man who had been my friend. It was as though he had become part of that separate world I knew, the world of Roger, of Isolda.
Vita came into the library when I had finished telephoning. I was sitting at Magnus’s desk by the window, staring out to sea.
“Darling,” she said, “I’ve been thinking,” and she came and stood behind me, putting her hands on my shoulders. “When the inquest is over, don’t you think it would be best if we went away? It would be rather awkward for us to go on staying here, and sad for you, and in a way the whole point of it has gone, hasn’t it?”
“What point?” I asked.
“Well, the loan of the house, now Magnus is dead. I can’t help feeling an interloper, and that we’ve really no right to be here. Surely it would be much more sensible if we spent the rest of the holidays somewhere else? It’s only the beginning of August. Bill was saying over the telephone how lovely Ireland is; they’ve found a delightful hotel in Connemara, some old castle or other, with its own private fishing.”
“I bet he has,” I said. “Twenty guineas a night, and full of your compatriots.”
“Don’t be unfair! He was just trying to be helpful. He took it for granted you would want to get away from here.”
“Well, I don’t,” I said. “Not unless the lawyer kicks us out, and that’s a different matter.”
I told her that the cremation was fixed for Thursday, and that Dench would be coming down, and perhaps some of Magnus’s staff as well. The prospect of guests for lunch or dinner, or even the night, took her mind off the longer-term suggestion of Ireland, but as it turned out we were spared the worst of it, for Dench and Magnus’s senior assistant, John Willis, elected to travel down together through the Wednesday night, attend the cremation, accept our hospitality for lunch, and return to London by a night-train. The boys were sent off for the whole of Thursday for a fishing expedition in charge of the obliging Tom.
I remember little of the cremation service, beyond thinking how Magnus might have devised a simpler method of disposing of the dead by chemicals instead of by fire. Our companions in mourning, Herbert Dench and John Willis, were quite unlike what I had imagined. The lawyer was big, hearty, unpompous, ate an enormous lunch, and regaled us while we consumed our funeral meats with stories of Hindu widows committing suttee on their husbands’ pyres. He had been born in India, and swore he had witnessed such a sacrifice as a babe in arms.
John Willis was a little mouse-like man, with intent eyes behind horn-rimmed spectacles, who would not have looked out of place behind a bank’s grille; I could not picture him at Magnus’s elbow, ministering to live monkeys or dissecting their brain cells. He barely uttered. Not that this signified, for the lawyer spoke enough for all.
Lunch over, we walked through to the library, and Herbert Dench bent to his dispatch case for a formal reading of the will, in which apparently John Willis figured as well as I. Vita, tactfully, was about to withdraw, but the lawyer told her to stay.
“No necessity for that, Mrs. Young,” he said cheerfully. “It’s very short and to the point.”
He was right. Legal language apart, Magnus had left whatever financial assets he possessed at the time of his death to his own college for the advancement of biophysics. His flat in London and his personal effects there were to be sold, and the money given to the same cause, with the exception of his library, which he bequeathed to John Willis in gratitude for ten years of professional cooperation and personal friendship. Kilmarth, with all its contents, he left to me, for my own use or to dispose of, as I wished, in memory of years of friendship dating back to undergraduate days, and because the former occupants of the house would have wished it so. And that was all.
“I take it,” said the lawyer, smiling, “that by the former occupants he is referring to his parents, Commander and Mrs. Lane, whom I believe you knew?”
“Yes,” I said, bewildered, “yes, I was very fond of them both.”
“Well, there we are. It’s a delightful house. I hope you will be very happy here.”
I looked at Vita. She was lighting a cigarette, her usual defense in a moment of sudden shock. “How… how extraordinarily generous of the Professor,” she said. “I really don’t know what to say. Of course it’s up to Dick whether he intends to keep it or not. Our future plans are in a state of flux at present.”
There was a moment’s awkward silence, as Herbert Dench looked from one to the other of us.
“Naturally,” he said, “you will have a great deal to discuss together. You realize, of course, that the house and contents will have to be valued for probate. I would appreciate it if I could see over it, by the way, if it wouldn’t be too much trouble?”
“Why, of course.”
We all rose to our feet, and Vita said, “The Professor had a laboratory in the basement, a most alarming place—at least, so my small sons thought. I suppose the things there would hardly go with the house but should be returned to his laboratory in London? Perhaps Mr. Willis would know what they are.”
Her face was all innocence, but I had the impression that her mention of the laboratory was deliberate, and she wanted to know what was there.
“A laboratory?” queried the lawyer. “Did the Professor do any work down here?” He addressed himself to Willis.
The little mouse-like man blinked behind his horn-rimmed spectacles. “I very much doubt it,” he said with diffidence, “and, if he did, it would be of little scientific importance, and have no connection with his work in London. He may have made a few experiments, just to amuse himself on a rainy day—certainly nothing more, or he would have mentioned it to me.”
Good man. If he knew anything he was not going to commit himself. I could see that Vita was on the point of saying I had told her the contents of the laboratory were of inestimable value, so I suggested that we should inspect the laboratory before visiting the rest of the house.
“Come along,” I said to Willis, “you’re the expert. The room used to be an old laundry in Commander Lane’s day, and Magnus kept a lot of bottles and jars in it.”
He looked at me, but said nothing. We all trooped down to the basement, and I opened the door.
“There you are,” I said. “Nothing very exciting. Just a lot of old jars, as I told you.”
Vita’s face was a study as she looked around her. Amazement, disbelief, and then a swift glance of inquiry at me. No monkey’s head, no embryo kittens, only the empty rows of bottles. She had the supreme intelligence to remain silent.
“Well, well,” said the lawyer, “the valuer might put a price of sixpence apiece on the jars. What do you say, Willis?”
The biophysicist ventured a smile. “I would think,” he said, “that Professor Lane’s mother may have preserved fruit here in former days.”
“A still-room, didn’t they call them?” laughed the lawyer. “The still-room maid would make preserves for the whole year. Look at the hooks in the ceiling! They probably hung the meat here too. Great sides of ham. Well, Mrs. Young, this will be your province, not your husband’s. I recommend an electric washing-machine in the corner to save your laundry bills. Expensive to install, but it will pay for itself in a couple of years, with a young family.”
He turned, still laughing, back into the passage, and we followed. I locked the door behind me. Willis, who was hovering in the rear, bent to pick up something from the stone floor. It was a label from one of the jars. He gave it to me without a word, and I put it in my pocket. Then we tramped upstairs to inspect the remainder of the house, Herbert Dench making the remarkable suggestion that if we wanted to turn the property into an investment we might split the whole place up into flatlets for summer visitors, keeping for our own use the bedroom suite with the view of the sea. He was still extolling the idea to Vita as we wandered round the garden. I saw Willis glance at his watch.
“You must have had about enough of us,” he said. “I told Dench on the way down that we would call in at Divisional Headquarters at Liskeard and answer any questions the police might want to put to us. If you’d telephone for a taxi we could go there straight away, and have dinner in Liskeard later before catching the night train.”
“I’ll drive you myself,” I said. “Hold on, there’s something I want to show you.” I went upstairs, and after a few minutes came back with the walking-stick. “This was near Magnus’s body. It belongs with the others in the London flat. Do you think they will let me keep it?”
“Surely,” he said, “and the other sticks too. I’m so glad you’ve got this house, by the way, and I hope you won’t part with it.”
“I don’t intend to.”
Vita and Dench were still a short distance off on the terrace.
“I think,” said Willis quietly, “we had better tell more or less the same story at the inquest. Magnus was an enthusiastic walker, and if he wanted some exercise after hours in the train it was typical of him.”
“Yes,” I said.
“Incidentally, a young friend of mine, a student, has been looking up historical stuff for Magnus at the BM and the Public Record Office. Do you want him to continue?”
I hesitated. “It might be useful. Yes… If he turns anything up ask him to send it to me here.”
“I’ll do that.”
I noticed for the first time an expression of loss, of emptiness, behind the horn-rimmed spectacles.
“What are your own plans?” I asked.
“I shall go on just the same, I suppose,” he said. “Try to carry on something of Magnus’s work. But it will be tough going. As boss and colleague he will be irreplaceable. You probably realize that.”
“I do.”
The others came up, and nothing further was said between Willis and myself. After a cup of tea, which none of us wanted but Vita insisted on getting, Willis suggested the move to Liskeard. I knew now why Magnus had chosen him as senior member of his staff. Professional competence apart, loyalty and discretion were the qualities behind that mouse-like appearance.
Once we were in the car, Dench asked if we might cover part of the route Magnus had taken on the Friday night. I drove them along the Stonybridge lane past Treverran farm and up to the gate near the top of the hill, and pointed across the fields down to the tunnel.
“Incredible,” Dench murmured, “quite incredible. And dark, too, at the time. I don’t like it, you know.”
“How do you mean?” I asked.
“Well, if it doesn’t make sense to me it won’t to the Coroner, or to the jury. They’re bound to see something behind it.”
“What sort of thing?”
“Some sort of compulsion to get to that tunnel. And once he found it we know what happened.”
“I don’t agree,” said Willis. “As you say, it was dark at the time, or nearly dark. The tunnel wouldn’t have shown up from here, or the line either. I believe he had the idea to go down into the valley, perhaps take a look at that farmhouse from the other side, and when he got to the bottom of the field the railway viaduct interfered with his view. He scrambled up the bank to find out the lie of the land, and the train hit him.”
“It’s possible. But what an extraordinary thing to do.”
“Extraordinary to the legal mind,” said Willis, “but not to Professor Lane. He was an explorer in every sense of the word.”
After I had landed them safely at the police headquarters I turned back for home. Home… The word had a new significance. It was my home now. The place belonged to me, as it had once belonged to Magnus. The strain that had been upon me through the day began to lift, and the weight of depression, too. Magnus was dead; I should never see him again, never hear his voice, rejoice in his company or be aware of his presence in the background of my life, but the link between us would never be broken because the home that had been his was mine. Therefore I could not lose him. Therefore I should not be alone.
I passed the entrance to Boconnoc, which in that other time had been Bockenod, before descending the hill to Lostwithiel, and thought of poor Sir John Carminowe, already infected with the dreaded smallpox, riding beside Joanna Champernoune’s clumsy chariot on that windy October night in 1331, to die a month later, having enjoyed his position as Keeper of Restormel and Tremerton Castles for barely seven months. On the other side of Lostwithiel I took the road to Treesmill, so that I could have a closer view of the farms situated on the opposite side of the valley from the railway. Strickstenton was on the left-hand side of the narrow road, and, from the brief glimpse I had from the car, of considerable age, and what a tourist brochure would describe as “picturesque.” The pasture land belonging to it sloped downwards to a wood.
Once I was out of sight of the house I got out of the car and looked across to the railway on the other side of the valley. The tunnel showed up plainly, and even as I watched a train emerged like a straggling snake, yellow-headed, evil, and wound its way below Treverran Farm and disappeared down to the lower valley. The freight train that had killed Magnus had appeared from the opposite direction, climbing the rising ground and vanishing into the tunnel, a reptile seeking cover in the underworld, as Magnus, who had neither seen nor heard it, dragged himself, dying, to the hut above. I drove on down the twisting lane, noting on my left the turning which, I judged, led past Colwith Farm to the bottom of the valley and what remained of the original river stream. At some time, before the railway cut into the land, there would have been a track leading from Great Treverran across the valley to its smaller neighbor, Little Treverran. Either farm might be the Tregest of the Carminowes.
I went on down to Treesmill, and up the hill to the callbox in Tywardreath. I dialed the Kilmarth number, and Vita answered.
“Darling,” I said, “it seems rather rude to leave Dench and Willis on their own in Liskeard, so I think I’ll hang around until they have finished with the police, and then have dinner with them.”
“Oh well,” she said, “if you must. But don’t be late. No need to wait for the train.”
“Probably not,” I told her. “It depends how much there is to discuss.”
“All right. I’ll expect you when I see you.”
I rang off, and returned to the car. Then I drove back again to Treesmill and up the twisting lane, and this time took the turning that led to Colwith. The lane went on, past the farm, as I had thought it would, becoming steeper, and finally petered out in a small water-splash at the bottom of the hill. To the left, across a cattle-grid, was a narrow entrance to Little Treverran. The buildings themselves were out of sight, but a board with lettering on it said: “W. P. Kelly. Woodworker.”
I risked the water-splash and parked the car, out of sight of the lane, in the field beyond, close to a line of trees and only a few hundred yards from the railway.
I looked at my watch. It was a little after five. I opened the boot of the car and took out the walking-stick, which I had primed, in the dressing-room, with the last of bottle A, before showing it to John Willis in the library.