I
My memory of that night when John made his arrests is still confused. But I do recall feeling resentful when John slapped my face as I laughed to hear Tony crying for me. Then he dried my eyes with his own handkerchief and went out of the room. The next and last coherent thought I had was when Doctor Trefont was pinching my arm. I asked him why he wanted a blood test from me. I was going to be shot, not poisoned. His gentle laugh accompanied me into a deep sleep.
When I awoke the following morning John had gone. I lay there thinking what it was I wanted urgently to tell him. My head was heavy and my body felt bruised. A knock sounded at the door and Yvonne Holland came in bearing a tray.
“Hullo,” I said, struggling to sit up. “Great hostess I am. Are the children all right?”
Yvonne put the tray on my knee. “Daisy Potts-Power has taken them out for a walk. She was so anxious to do something. You are to stay in bed until the doctor comes.”
She gave me a timid look, scared lest she had given me an opening on a forbidden subject. I shuddered at the fried egg, covering it up hastily, and poured out some black coffee.
Yvonne wandered around the room arranging chrysanthemums Daisy had left.
“Get me a cigarette, like a dear girl,” I requested. She glanced at me doubtfully.
“If you don’t,” I said, flinging off the bedclothes in a threatening fashion, “I’ll get up and find one myself.”
The look of doubt was joined by a weak smile as she searched for my case.
I took a deep inhalation. It made my head sing.
“Sit down,” I ordered. “And don’t look apprehensive, Yvonne! It makes me irritable. All I want you to tell me is what happened last night. No more, no less. I’ll get someone else to fill in the gaps. You won’t get into a row from telling me that much, will you?”
Her hand fiddled with her waistband in her old habit.
“Doctor Trefont said—” she began.
I interrupted her by wiping the doctor out of the conversation in one short sentence.
“Your husband,” Yvonne tried again.
“Quite another matter,” I said. “If only John would stick around for a while, I would soon find out everything. Come on, now. What happened?”
Her hand fell away from her belt and began to trace a pattern on the arm of the chair. I considered it a hopeful sign and waited patiently.
“It was all rather confusing,” said Yvonne. “I didn’t know quite what was happening. I still don’t know why you wanted me to hit that leather chair with the riding crop.”
“An old trick of noises off. The sound came over the extension like a gunshot. When we found that bullet in the sandpit, I wondered if it might have something to do with the shot I heard the night Mr Holland was killed. I was looking around trying to figure out where it was fired from when I saw a tiny casement window. It juts out from the study directly in line with where we were sitting that afternoon. Then I remembered that John’s desk was very near that window, and on John’s desk was the telephone. The combination of the shot and the telephone made me remember more important details. That I had been standing near the switchboard at the Hall and had been the only one to hear the shot clearly. In fact, people seemed to infer I had been hearing things. Also, that the keys of the Dower and the Hall on the board were connected.
“And speaking of Tony, I don’t know if it was sheer coincidence or whether he is the remarkable child every mother imagines her son to be, but the following morning he imitated the sound. He must have awakened when Mrs Ames fired her gun through the study window.
“That same shot, which I heard over the extension, was to be passed off as the one that killed your father-in-law. The killer had an alibi for that time. Actually James Holland was murdered at least an hour earlier. That,” I finished with a sidelong glance, “should clear up any doubts you had about Alan Braithwaite.”
Yvonne flushed and said uncertainly: “I never thought for one moment—”
“Didn’t you? Go on with what happened.”
“Well,” she continued, “after you rang off from the Hall I went back to the children.”
“Was Cornell still there?” I demanded, stubbing out my cigarette and making no pretence about having enjoyed it.
“Oh, yes. He remained on the porch until the call came for him.”
“What call?”
Yvonne wrinkled her brow. “That’s just what I don’t quite understand. Someone rang. He wanted to speak to Mr Cornell. I went out to get him. Then I went and brought the children in. It was getting late and Tony was asking for his tea. When I looked out the kitchen door there was no sign of Cornell—I didn’t know where he had gone.”
“On his wild-goose chase. Mrs Ames said she had arranged for his removal.”
“And yet,” Yvonne suggested, “he was there when Mrs Ames was arrested.”
“Cornell is evidently too old a hand at his game to be put off by a false telephone call,” I said. “Go on with your part. Did Tony wonder where I was?”
“He asked for you once or twice. He really started me getting worried about you. You were away such a long time and it was getting dark. I got Tony undressed and put him into his cot, but he wouldn’t go to sleep until he saw you or his father. Then after feeding Jimmy I put them in the same bed together. By the time they had gone to sleep I was terribly nervous. I didn’t know what to do. It was so late and I was by myself. I nearly screamed when your husband came in quietly by the back door. He apologized for giving me such a fright, but he had not wished to be seen. He didn’t ask where you were, which I thought rather odd. I wanted to tell him but he stopped me. He told me what he wanted me to do.”
“And what was that?”
“I was to move about the house quite normally and to answer the door and any phone rings as if nothing had happened. Your husband kept out of sight somewhere. Tony wasn’t to know he had arrived home. Then you came. I was terrified when you rang the bell and started thumping on the door. Then you looked so queer. I couldn’t understand why you struggled with your husband.”
“Mrs Ames said she would shoot Tony if I was any longer than two minutes in opening the back door. She was standing outside the nursery window with a gun ready in her hand.”
Yvonne was very pale. “They were coming to kill us, weren’t they? Your husband told me later.”
I nodded. “I was in for it too. I knew too much. As long as I could swear to the time of that shot over the phone without realising how I heard it, I was safe. But I became too curious. I was to be removed along with you and Jimmy.”
“Inspector Matheson told me their plan was to use Nurse Stone as the scapegoat. She drank, you know. She was terribly jealous of anyone who interfered with Jimmy.”
“Don’t I know it!” I said ruefully. “I mistook her for my true enemy. She gave me a nasty moment or two in the wood. I thought she was after my blood then. But how was Nurse Stone to be saddled with the deaths of the three of us?”
“I think the idea was that she killed us in a fit of drunken jealousy.”
“Easy enough to plant some incriminating evidence on a tipsy woman,” I remarked thoughtfully. “It might have worked. I wonder if she was to be blamed for your father-in-law’s death after the abortive attempt to give Cruikshank that role?”
Safe and cared for in my own house, I could now view Mrs Ames’ plan in a detached fashion.
So much for the final scene. I did not pump Yvonne for any further information. Just then I did not consider it necessary. I thought I knew who had done the actual killing, the murders of Holland and Cruikshank; who was the brilliant organizer of the whole affair. The partner to whom Mrs Ames had referred without actually mentioning a name. All I wanted to do was to fill in the gaps and make the whole picture complete in every detail.
II
Another piece of the jigsaw puzzle was supplied that very morning when Sister Heather called. She was followed by Doctor Trefont himself. My rude health left him rather at a loss for something to say. As Connie Bellamy had warned me, he had no bedside manner. He did not indulge in any of the usual time-passing tricks of his trade such as pulse-taking or respiration. Some medicos test your heart if you complain of a pain in your big toe. We exchanged pleasantries for a while, but I seized the opportunity when he began to talk of the trouble he was having with his car.
“Backfiring again, doctor?” I asked slyly. He looked blank a moment before he read the reason for my significant tone.
“I fear I owe you an apology,” I went on. “I didn’t trust you. But it was your own fault, or perhaps I should have said your car’s. If you hadn’t admitted being in the vicinity of the Hall the night Mr Holland was killed, I would never have had the slightest doubts about your integrity. On top of that admission, you and Sister Heather seemed to be playing a too discreet game with me.”
Sister Heather gave me her gentle smile. “It wasn’t so much that we were being discreet, Mrs Matheson. Unfortunately, our part of the game, as you term it, was being played in the dark.”
I said to the doctor: “You suspected someone wanting to harm the Holland baby. Wasn’t that person Mrs Ames?”
He nodded: “It was. But suspicion and proof are poles apart.”
“My fault,” said Sister Heather. “I couldn’t give Doctor Trefont more help than an odd notion I had got into my head. I have a very good memory for faces and people’s characteristics. When Mrs Ames called for the first and only time at the Centre, I was struck by a sharp memory of an obstetric case I had once attended. I was only a probationer at the time, but it had always stuck in the back of my mind. It happened years ago at a Bush Nursing Hospital. A woman was brought in late one night in labour. It was the first delivery I had witnessed. I remember the child was a girl. Although as I have said I was only training and therefore on the lowest rung of a nursing career, the doctor and midwife called me over to see the child. The poor little thing had a terrible birthmark on one cheek.”
“Where was this hospital?”
Sister Heather told me the name of the town. I recalled it at once. It was one of the many outlying towns Mr Holland had visited during the last few days before his death.
“Do you remember the mother’s name?” I asked Sister Heather.
“Not specifically. It was Smith or Jones or one of those similar names, so obviously assumed. I learned, however, that the woman was a bit of a mystery character. She had appeared from nowhere only six months before the baby’s birth and taken a house in the town. No-one knew who she was or where she came from. She lived very quietly. Although she was friendly enough, it was impossible to get her to unbend about herself. Of course there was a bit of talk after the baby arrived, but she didn’t seem to care. However, it all came out after her death a few years later that her morals were quite in order and that the baby had no stigma on its name.”
“These small towns!” I said with feeling. “What happened to the child?”
“It was sent away when the mother knew she was dying. I never heard any more about it until—”
“Until the day Harriet Ames walked into the Health Centre,” I supplied.
“That’s right. I was interested when she told me where she came from. But she shut up like a clam when I tried to question her further, and never repeated her visit. I got in touch with a friend of those early days. After a length of time and trouble I learned that the mystery woman’s real name had turned out to be Holland. I became troubled. You see, it was just then that the Holland baby started to get sick. I had heard a rumour about Mr Holland and how it was suspected that his wife had left him. It was impossible not to start wondering and worrying what was going on at the Hall. If the Holland baby was to die, it meant that the child Mrs Ames brought for my inspection that day at the Health Centre would be old Mr Holland’s heir.
“I knew Doctor Trefont of old. He had once attended Yvonne Holland. I went to him and told my story, thinking he might be able to do something.”
The doctor threw out his hands. “As you know, Mrs Matheson,” he said ruefully, “I could do nothing. I was in complete disfavour with both Mr Holland and Yvonne.”
“You took a blood test of young Jimmy and diagnosed lead poisoning,” I said with approval.
“That’s as far as I got, I’m afraid. I still don’t know how Mrs Ames was administering the stuff to the baby, or even how she got hold of it.”
It was my moment. It always makes one feel good to be able to tell someone else their own business.
“The dummy!” I announced in triumph. “Nurse Stone belongs to the old, old school and insisted upon it. The poison was mixed with a malt extract and smeared on the bulb. Mrs Ames did all the catering for the Hall.”
Sister Heather looked disapproving. “I didn’t know Mrs Holland permitted one of those things to be given to her baby.” Doctor Trefont asked: “What made you think of the dummy?”
“It didn’t require very much cleverness on my part,” I admitted. “It was rather thrust at me by a stroke of luck.” I told them how I had thrown the comforter away over the golf course.
“For a while Jimmy seemed to pick up. I bet Mrs Ames was sore at my interference. However, Nurse Stone played into her hands by asking her to get another one, and the fun started all over again. Then by some extraordinary chance Tony picked up the original dummy. He took a fancy to it, and helped himself to the jar of comforter smear I had confiscated from Yvonne. His precocity frightens me still. Mrs Ames learned of its whereabouts through Daisy Potts-Power, who saw Tony with it in his mouth. Daisy was taking a golfing lesson from Ames that day. When Tony was off-colour she became frightened and tried to get the dummy back.
“Actually she gave herself away. For it was only after I was searching for some reason why anyone should break in and turn the nursery topsy-turvy that I chanced on the beastly thing. I took a sample of the malt to the local chemist, who arranged an analysis. It was on the same day that I came to suspect Mrs Ames. I overheard her ordering a prescription in a very professional manner. On looking into her record, it might be found that she had made a study of pharmacology.”
Doctor Trefont was tremendously interested. When I told him that the chemist still had the jar of malt and a copy of the report, he made no apology about cutting his professional visit short and departing to confer with Jenkins. Sister Heather gave me a sedative and ordered me to settle down for another nap. I could get up after lunch.
I was just feeling warm and drowsy and ready to relax into a deep sleep when Ernest Mulqueen put his head in the window. I sat up with a start.
He raised one hand. “Don’t be scared. It’s only me. I had to see you for a minute.”
“Do come in,” I invited.
Ernest Mulqueen shook his head. “Don’t think I will. I wasn’t made for a sick room. I’ll stay here if you don’t mind, and say my piece through the window. Do you remember the last time I saw you?”
I drew my brows together. So much had happened that I was in no position to work out riddles.
“The day after the old man was shot. In the wood. Before I landed in jug,” he explained quite happily. I was glad to see that “jug” had not robbed him of his old bounce. Indeed, the experience appeared to have made him more buoyant.
I remembered at once and realized why his sudden appearance had startled me out of all proportion. At our last meeting Ernest Mulqueen had looked as though he wanted to strike me.
“What about it?” I asked cautiously.
“I could have belted the hide off of you for your cheek,” I was informed quite without rancour. “I want to say I am sorry now. I was worried that day. I’d talked too much. I always do. A bad habit, but I’m a plain man and I talk straight. You knew about the agreement I had with the old man. I thought you’d put your hubby on to it.”
“You mean the document you told me you had signed giving up your farm?”
“That’s right.”
“You’ve no need to worry,” I assured him. “They couldn’t find it.”
He grinned slyly. “Of course they couldn’t. I stole it.”
I looked at him half-fearfully, half in amazement at his candour. His next words were to startle me more.
“You see, I came across the old man dead. I could have told the chuckle-headed police that he wasn’t shot at the time they said. Sorry again. Forgot about your hubby; no offence meant.”
I said in my most disapproving voice, forgetting my own lapses: “It was your duty to report your finding at once to the police.”
“And get myself arrested instead of detained? Not me! Anyway, I wasn’t sorry to see the old man dead. The gun in his hand didn’t deceive me either. James thought the world would stop turning if he wasn’t in it to give it a spin or two. It suited me better to keep quiet. I had other things to attend to.”
“Tell me,” I said curiously. “‘Was it you slinking up the drive that night? We saw someone amongst the trees.”
“I didn’t want to be seen. As a matter of fact that pansy chap Yvonne and Ursula are so mad about chased after me. But I was able to give him the slip. I knew where I could find the agreement. It was up in the old man’s bedroom. Then I remembered about Ursie. She’d been playing for some extra cash, and I didn’t blame her much. She never had much to splurge. The old man believed in keeping us all more or less dependent on him. I tore out a few pages of the account book and took them along with the agreement to be destroyed.”
“Your wife nearly gave the show away,” I told him. “She heard someone in Mr Holland’s room and thought it was he. But of course after he was found dead it couldn’t have been.”
The roundness of his jolly face suddenly hardened into a square shape. The change was fascinating. I could well imagine the same transition taking place when he came across Elizabeth Mulqueen with Nugent Parsons in the wood.
I had been tactless in mentioning her name. The little man left me abruptly. Although there was nothing more to be said—he had spoken his “piece”—I could have done with more of his bracing conversation.
I lay back again, trying to recapture the warm drowsy feeling Ernest Mulqueen had terminated so abruptly. My mind turned idly from speculating on the future relations between Ernest and Elizabeth Mulqueen to a relative subject. That of the signal light from the tower. Mrs Mulqueen was the inaugurator of the idea, and Harriet Ames had adopted it. She had recognized in it an admirable means of communicating with that partner of hers, whose name was ever in the back of my mind but about whose actual identity I was still in error.
That some of my movements had been the subject of the signalling I had no doubt whatsoever. It had been Mrs Ames who had stalked me that night at the Hall when I had gone to answer Yvonne’s call to see Jimmy. It had been she who had listened to me talking to John concerning the time on the telegram and who had watched me as I studied the portrait of Olivia in Elizabeth Mulqueen’s sitting-room. Thinking I might return to study the picture again and recognize a likeness either to herself or Robin, she took it away to destroy. She had observed all my movements from the very beginning and had estimated at every one how much I had learned. My curiosity became dangerous. With the breaking of the time of the murder known to the police, my presence, which had once been necessary for the killer’s alibi, was regarded as a menace. The string across the Hall drive was hastily prepared. I was to be frightened off the scene. When Mrs Ames found I was not so easily deterred she made another attempt, this time more ruthless than the first.
III
I learned my mistake from Connie Bellamy when she called that afternoon. Stunned and grieved by the revelation of the second person John had arrested, I was helpless against Connie’s vicarious excitement. She was completely untouched by the reality of the Middleburn crimes. With an envious eye she regarded me in the same light as one of her long-suffering screen heroines.
“My dear, how frightfully odd that you did not know. I heard that your husband actually arrested him here in this house. He was coming to kill you. How marvellous that you escaped, but I daresay your husband would have caught him just the same. I was speaking to Marion over the phone. Of course, you remember Marion Parkes, our dramatic coach at the Community Centre, don’t you, Maggie? Well, she thinks it a marvellous idea if you could make the whole thing into a play. Marion would produce it and of course you could have the leading part. What do you think?”
“Connie,” I said. “Please go now. Forgive me, but I have a shocking headache.”
“My dear, let me get you something. It may be your eyes, Maggie, you know. Do you eat carrots? Such a potent source of vitamin A. I hope Yvonne is managing properly. I’ll pop in and give her a few tips as I leave.”
I caught my breath and started to laugh silently. “Connie, you’re impossible.”
Connie’s eyes goggled at me in apprehension. “I hope you are not going to be hysterical, Maggie. So unlike you, my dear. Perhaps I had better go now. I’d love to stay and chat, but you know how I must avoid everything unpleasant just now.”
I saw her out and then went back to the lounge-room again. I was sitting in front of the fire when John came in. I jumped up at once, but he stood in the doorway watching me. He looked thoroughly weary, but relaxed and unconcerned.
“Hullo,” I said. “I had something to tell you this morning, but you’d gone.”
“What was it?” he asked, taking off his coat and scarf and throwing them on to the nearest chair.
“I don’t hate you, after all.”
“That’s good.”
“In fact, I like you—very much.”
“That’s better still. Sorry I was brutal last night.” He came over towards the fire.
“You nearly broke my jaw—and my heart.”
John gripped my outstretched hands tightly.
“Tell me about the case,” I said presently. “It was old man Ames, wasn’t it? Connie told me. I was so certain it was his son.”
John began to fill his pipe with his free hand. “The case goes back a long way, Maggie. The foundation of the Middleburn crimes was laid when James Holland’s wife, Olivia, left him. Or perhaps even before that. The killer was someone who belonged to the same generation as the Squire. Charles Ames was the originator and organizer of the whole plan, but he had a worthy accessory in his daughter-in-law, Harriet.”
I lifted my head. “Do you mean to say Harriet’s husband knew nothing whatsoever?”
“It is hard to credit, but if you stop to consider Robert Ames’ character you will know why. There is a superficial quality in him. As we know, he does most things well; perfect, but without imagination. There is no broad vision in his mind. Every move Robert made that seemed incriminating was at the suggestion either of his wife or his father. Had Charles Ames confided in him he probably would have been shocked by any suggestion that the positions of the two families should be reversed. For that was Charles Ames’ ambition right from the beginning. For years he had been jealous of James Holland’s position and wealth and the influence he wielded. He could not see why the Squire and his descendants should have more of this world’s gain and power than his own family. So when Olivia Holland appealed to him for friendship out of sheer desperation and lack of anyone else, there began the first glimmerings of a plan to achieve ascendancy over Holland.
“Although not in love with Olivia, he despised James Holland’s attitude towards his wife. Ruthlessness was completely foreign to his own intelligent approach towards ambition. No matter how insignificant their position, people could always be put to some use by a superior brain.
“Olivia had started a second child. She made up her mind to leave James Holland’s despotism and bring it up by herself. Charles Ames helped her run away and hide herself in the country. Later when she was dying, Olivia communicated with Ames and he came and took the child, Harriet, to be cared for elsewhere. Whether in later years it was persuasion, propinquity or a happy chance that caused a daughter of Holland to bestow her hand on his son, I do not know.
“Although I say that the foundation of the crimes was laid years ago, it was not until recently that the actual temptation came Charles Ames’ way. Fate seemed to be forcing him along when James Holland’s son was killed in a plane smash. He knew what the old man’s will would be. The money and estates were to go to the nearest male descendant. Between the Ames family and the Holland position and wealth was a puny, delicate baby, Holland’s other grandson. Harriet Ames undertook to remove that barrier.”
“Did you know about that all the time?” I asked crossly.
“Not as soon as you did,” John said in a soothing voice. “Thanks for getting the stuff analysed. Cornell picked up the report after you left the chemist’s shop.”
“Never again will I play amateur detective. Go on.”
“Affairs were going well for Charles Ames until he was forced to take in another partner. If I ever turn to crime, which is the silliest thing anyone could do, may I never make the mistake of joining forces with an accessory after the fact. It invariably leads to more strife than one is guaranteed or willing to weather. The partner in this instance was Cruikshank the estate agent.
“Cruikshank had been playing around with some of the Holland interests. When James Holland had him up for an account of his stewardship, he tried to blackmail his way out of it by threatening to expose the old scandal of Olivia’s flight. He even hinted that Olivia had had another child. Cruikshank was one of those village busybodies who always know more than is good for them. His hint was enough to send the squire off to trace this mysterious daughter. Cruikshank, on the other hand, was none too happy about the outcome of his attempted bluff, and when Ames offered him a hideout he welcomed it with open arms. Ames did not want him to spread the rumour about the daughter any more than he wanted Holland to trace his child to his very Lodge.
“Fate again was pushing him along. The telegram announcing Holland’s homecoming was taken over the telephone by Harriet Ames, who withheld the exact time of arrival.
“This is where you and I came into the game. Getting the Dower was an extraordinary piece of luck for us. I am inclined to think it would never have come about if you hadn’t given Holland my official card. It occurred to him how useful it would be to have the police on his doorstep and thereby under his influence. He could do a lot with the police on his side. I forbear comment on these, his probable thoughts.
“James Holland had always been dissatisfied with the verdict of his son’s death. Someone must be made to pay for it.
“The plane smash could not have been a mere accident. An enemy must have organized it in an attempt to sabotage the Holland plan of life.
“Then Cruikshank spilled his story of Olivia’s daughter. It came as a shock to Holland—but no more than that. He was not interested in females; not enough to make him leave all to search for his missing daughter and bring her into the bosom of the family. But he brooded on Cruikshank’s information. Suddenly it occurred to him that she might consider herself heiress to the Holland fortune. This was out of the question by the ruling of his will, but this elusive daughter would not know that. Supposing she had engineered her brother’s accident, and was waiting the time to step in and claim the Holland estate.
“The longer Holland brooded, the more he became convinced that his daughter had deliberately caused Jim Holland’s plane to crash. Here at last was someone to blame! Someone on whom to be revenged.
“His first move was to get in touch with me. Unfortunately I was out when he rang. Cruikshank must have had information as to where Olivia Holland went after her flight, and told this to James Holland to lend support to his story.
“The Squire went off at once to trace his late wife’s movements. I think he must have dashed off a letter first, asking me to look into the matter also. Charles Ames or Harriet saw to it that I never got the note. That is the only way I can account for my name on the blotting-pad.
“That letter was the starting point from which Ames built up his alibi. It had been spread about that Holland would be home at seven. He wired to Holland in my name to call in at the Dower on his way home, hinting that I had something of importance to tell him concerning Jim Holland’s death.”
“I remember that wire when I was checking messages at the Post Office,” I interrupted, with some chagrin. “I thought the postmaster was joking when he said you had sent one to the Squire.”
“I am afraid you could almost be considered an accessory too, my pet. The offer of a game of golf was your undoing. Tony didn’t matter, but you had to be removed out of the Dower when the Squire called.”
“I wonder what they said to each other,” I remarked thoughtfully. “Father facing strange daughter.”
“Harriet Ames refuses to talk about it,” John answered. “But she detained him here for as long as the plan necessitated. Mindful of his dinner party and the fact that he could see me later, Holland then started on his walk through his artificial wood.
“This is where I take my hat off to Ames for his cleverness. He had to supply an alibi for himself and Mrs Ames in case of accidents—the death was to look like suicide. He allowed a minimum of time in which to do the actual murder by setting the stage so as to avoid delay. This was accomplished by using Mulqueen’s fox-trap. A silencer was affixed to the gun stolen earlier from James Holland’s study, then removed, and the gun placed in the dead man’s hand. The other gun of the pair Holland had bought and which Robert Ames kept at the Lodge was used to fire the shot you heard relayed over the extension telephone line between the Hall and Dower House; about which time Charles Ames was playing chess and Harriet Ames had gullible, vague Maud Cruikshank for company.
“So far, so good. In fact, it was just about perfect. The only snag was Cruikshank. Was he to be trusted? Evidently not.
“After a while Cruikshank realized he had bitten off more than he could chew. It was one thing to go pinching another man’s money, but quite another to become involved in the murder of the same man. Ames kept a strict eye on his unwilling partner.”
“I saw him one night at the Lodge,” I interrupted again.
“Cruikshank’s feet became colder and colder. When Ames suspected him of wanting to turn informer after his several attempts to contact me, Cruikshank had to leave the happy partnership. This second murder was clumsier than the first. It too was meant to look like suicide but it would not have deceived a child. Ames did not have the time to conceive a better plan. His alibi for that night had as many holes in it as a colander.
“He had started to consider the police easily duped. The greatest mistake is to consider the police fools, Maggie. Our methods may not be as dramatic as fiction would have them, as we don’t play to an audience.
“Criminal investigation can be systematized just as much as debits and credits in a ledger. A certain amount of investigation is mainly paperwork. Items of information actual and suspect are all amassed. Unfortunately in this case suspicion was one thing and proof quite another. And that is where, though it hurts me to confess it, you did a grand job.
“I told Cornell to let you have a free hand, but always to be on guard. Your inimitable capacity for meddling helped us to set the trap.”
“Just the bait,” I commented without rancour.
We watched the leaping fire for a while in silence. It grew brighter as the daylight faded and the mist came up from the creek to end another perfect autumn day.
“And he quoted Tennyson at me,” I said. “The old hypocrite.”
“No, Maggie, you are wrong about Charles Ames. The old man really thought a new order at the Hall would be better. The Squire had corrupted enough of Middleburn.”
The door of the lounge-room opened. I sat up quickly as Yvonne, flushed and smiling, came in. Behind her was Alan Braithwaite, bearing a tray of glasses in one hand and a gold-topped bottle wrapped in a white cloth in the other.
“This has a wedding atmosphere about it,” I remarked, and saw Yvonne’s flush deepen. She nodded happily, slipping her hand through Braithwaite’s arm.
“Champagne always tastes like vinegar and water to me. Is there any beer?” John asked, as he took the long envelope Alan held out to him.
“This is an important occasion,” I said, frowning at him. “Yvonne and Alan are engaged. What’s this?” John had taken a document out of the envelope and put it on my knee. “That,” said John, “is for being a good girl. The title deeds of the Dower House.”
THE END