Murder Is Bad Manners
Page 14
SUSPECT LIST
Miss Parker. MOTIVE: Jealous rage. ALIBI: None yet between 5:20 and 5:45. NOTES: Was seen arguing with the victim at 4:20 on the day of the murder and at 5:20 seen alone in New Wing classroom (near gym) by Kitty Freebody. Believes the victim is still alive and her whereabouts are known by The One. RULED OUT.
Miss Hopkins. MOTIVE: Getting rid of a love rival. Miss Bell threatened to reveal her secret engagement to The One. ALIBI: Good. Up in pavilion at time of murder. RULED OUT. None between 5:20 and 5:45. NOTES: May be in league with The One.
Miss Lappet. MOTIVE: Wants the deputy headmistress job. ALIBI: None yet. None between 5:20 and 5:50. NOTES: Was seen going into Miss Griffin’s study just after 4:30, in agitated state, by Felicity Carrington, then leaving shortly after. Observed to have been drunk several times since the murder—guilty conscience?
Miss Tennyson. MOTIVE: Wants the deputy headmistress job. ALIBI: None yet between 5:20 and 5:50. NOTES: Was observed near gym just after murder by Daisy Wells and Hazel Wong. The second victim! But may have been used by the murderer in some way.
Mamzelle. MOTIVE: None. ALIBI: None yet. Good. In music wing between 5:20 and 5:45, observed by Sophie Croke-Finchley. NOTES: Was observed near gym just after murder, by Daisy Wells and Hazel Wong. RULED OUT.
Mr. MacLean. MOTIVE: None. ALIBI: None yet. Good. In study with class of religious confirmation students between 5:20 and 5:45. NOTES: Was observed near gym just after murder, by Daisy Wells and Hazel Wong. RULED OUT.
The One. MOTIVE: Anger? Blackmail? None yet. Miss Bell threatened to reveal his secret engagement to Miss Hopkins. ALIBI: None yet. Had Sophie Croke-Finchley for music lesson between 4:20 and 4:50 but none yet between 5:20 and 5:45. NOTES: Was observed near gym just after murder by Daisy Wells and Hazel Wong. May be in league with Miss Hopkins.
King Henry. MOTIVE: Unclear. ALIBI: Unclear. NOTES: Probably not the murderer, but she has something to do with this case. What is it?
At lunchtime, everyone was loudly distraught, even though Miss Tennyson had not been a popular teacher and had not had a clique of favorites, like Miss Hopkins or Miss Griffin. When Miss Tennyson was alive, most people had thought her rather wet and foolish. But I was beginning to see that as soon as someone is dead, everyone else feels horribly guilty for not caring about them and goes wild trying to prove that they did. Everyone was afraid of the murderer too.
“I sent a telegram to Mummy asking her to take me out of school,” I heard one tenth-grader say to her friends as I passed them. “At this rate we shall have no teachers left, and I don’t want to be the next victim!”
There were the usual rumors about how Miss Tennyson had died. It had happened in her boarding house, that much was known, so there was a popular theory involving a horrible shove down the stairs. Daisy listened carefully to all the gossip at the dorm’s lunch table, and then went off to find out the truth from King Henry. She came back fuming.
“Veronal,” she said briefly. “Overdose. According to King Henry, Miss Tennyson’s doctor prescribed it for her ages ago—she had trouble sleeping. Still, because it’s unnatural death, it’ll have to be investigated. Oh, bother!”
“What’s wrong?” I asked, not quite understanding why Daisy was so upset. “Is it King Henry? Did she say anything important?”
“The police are going to be called in, you chump. Imagine! The police! They’ll ruin everything. They won’t even interview any of the girls, only the teachers, because they’ll think we’re not important!”
“Well, we aren’t important,” I said.
Daisy narrowed her eyes and fixed me with an icy blue stare. “I am important,” she said. “I’m the only one who’s been investigating this murder from the start—apart from you, I mean, Hazel. Sorry. Well, they’ll see! This is our school and no one has any right to go about killing people off in it.”
“But what if the police solve the murders before we do?” I asked.
“They won’t,” said Daisy. “They don’t even know that they’re murders, or that there have been two of them! The police just think they’re investigating a suspicious death. But we know that Miss Bell and Miss Tennyson were murdered, and we know who the suspects are. Which means that we’re still the only people who can solve the crime.”
I had to admit that Daisy’s logic made sense. In the circumstances, in fact, the Detective Society had never seemed so important.
I declare this extraordinary meeting of the Detective Society to discuss The Case of the Murder of Miss Bell to order,” said Daisy. “In light of Miss Tennyson’s recent murder, we must consider the new facts in the case.”
It was just after we’d brushed our teeth. We were sitting in the linen closet, and I was taking notes.
“All right,” said Daisy. “What new facts do we know? Hazel, write down the list as I say it.
“One: Miss Tennyson was murdered in her boarding house, with a large dose of Veronal. So the killer must be someone she knows, and who knows she takes Veronal to help her sleep. Miss Lappet fits that perfectly. On the face of it, The One is less likely, because as a man he wouldn’t be allowed past the front door of Miss Tennyson’s boarding house, but it’s possible he sent Miss Hopkins to do it for him. King Henry told me that Miss Griffin keeps medical records for all the teachers in her office, so any one of our three suspects could have crept in and read Miss Tennyson’s.”
So far, this all seemed perfectly right to me.
“Two: Miss Tennyson must have been murdered by her accomplice because she was going to tell the police about the crime. Do all three have a motive to work with Miss Tennyson? Miss Lappet is an easy yes. She could have combined forces with Miss Tennyson to knock out their main rival for the deputy post. Then she’d be doubly eager to get rid of Miss Tennyson afterward. Miss Hopkins and The One—well, you said it, Hazel. They would have known perfectly well that the Hop would have been fired as soon as Miss Griffin heard—and Mr. Reid too, for being the one who’s marrying her—so they might have killed Miss Bell together to stop the news of their engagement getting out, and then roped in Miss Tennyson as a scapegoat.”
I nodded. “And, you know,” I said, “even though you were wrong about Miss Tennyson killing Miss Bell on her own, I think you were right about how the murder happened.” If Daisy could admit that I had been right about some things, it only seemed fair that I do the same for her. “So that means we know how the murderer—or murderers—did it, and when they did it. We only have to work out who it was.”
Daisy beamed. “Absolutely correct!” she cried. “Let the police do their worst! We have the most wonderful head start. Tomorrow, we follow our suspects until we learn the truth. And I absolutely promise not to jump to any conclusions unless you agree with me.”
On that note, the meeting was adjourned.
We had narrowed our list down to three suspects, and this time we knew we had to be careful. If we had not caught the real murderer by the end of the week, I decided, then we were no sort of detectives at all.
Part Eight
The Detective Society Solves the Case
The next day, Tuesday, the police really did arrive. We walked down to school in a biting wind that left my face bright red and raw and turned the end of Daisy’s nose a delicate pink. Lavinia, in a cruel mood, tripped Beanie and spilled her book bag open, and we had to sprint about catching bits of flying paper while Beanie wailed and Kitty comforted her and passing shrimps giggled.
We were brought up short by the sight of a policeman standing in front of the Old Wing entrance. He was in uniform, with a blue buttoned-up jacket and a tall blue hat, and as we crept past on our way inside he seemed impossibly severe and awful. The guilt of what I knew we had done to Miss Tennyson went sizzling through me. For a moment I felt like the murderer.
We saw another policeman on the way to prayers. He was much younger than the tall one at the Old Wing entrance, and he had a thin neck and pimples all across his narrow cheeks.
“Dreamy,�
�� whispered Kitty.
“You’re desperate,” Lavinia told her scornfully.
“Quiet, girls,” said Miss Lappet, on her way past. I flinched when I saw her. She looked worse than ever—red-nosed and with two cardigan buttons gaping open. She squinted at us all and said unsteadily, “Top buttons done up, if you please.”
As she staggered away, I breathed a little easier. I was still terrified that the murderer might secretly be waiting for the moment to catch us and add us to their list of victims.
Prayers was very odd. Miss Griffin seemed determined to carry on as though nothing had happened, even though there were now two empty seats where Miss Bell and Miss Tennyson ought to have been. Everyone kept turning around and craning their necks to look at the gaps, and Miss Griffin gave all the turners and craners paralyzing stares whenever she caught their eye.
Miss Griffin did mention the police, though. It would have been difficult not to. “I would like you girls to extend them every courtesy,” she told us sternly, “while they carry out their investigations, which I’m sure we all hope will be completed as quickly as possible. The sooner this regrettable business is cleared up, the better. And now, the day’s notices . . .”
I saw Daisy looking at the pimply policeman thoughtfully as we passed him again on the way to math. She had her planning expression on, and I suspected that I was about to be asked to do something illegal.
Sure enough, while Miss Parker was writing out sums for us on the blackboard, and looking furious and stiff-haired as she did it, I was slipped a note that read: “At bunbreak go straight for the pimply policeman. I’ll do the talking—D.”
This sounded suspiciously like there would be no time to collect our cookies. I did not much like that. Tuesdays are chocolate, my favorite. They are even better than gingersnaps.
Sure enough, as soon as the bunbreak bell rang, Daisy seized my hand and rushed me out of science, down the stairs, and into the Library corridor. The pimply policeman was standing next to the teachers’ common room door, watching the opposite wall with a slightly cross-eyed stare. I looked at him again, and was still unable to understand what Kitty saw in him.
Daisy, however, seemed absolutely charmed. She tugged at her braid until it came loose over her shoulders, dropped her book bag on my feet, and then rushed up to the policeman with a very Kitty-like squeal of glee.
“Oh!” she exclaimed. “I’ve always wanted to meet a policeman!”
Before the pimply policeman had time to realize what was happening to him, she had pounced on his arm and was clinging to it, gazing up at him raptly. He started and a look of panic spread over his pimply face.
“Good morning, Miss,” he said awkwardly. “What can I do for you?”
Daisy widened her blue eyes at him. “I think policemen are fascinating,” she said breathlessly. “All that work you do—it’s simply marvelous. Are you a detective?”
The pimply policeman coughed. A blotchy flush spread all the way up his thin neck to the tips of his ears.
“Yes, Miss, I am,” he said, and then blushed even more.
“Oh!” gasped Daisy. “It must be the most wonderful thing in the world. You must be awfully clever.”
“Oh no,” said the policeman. “Oh no, no, no, not me.”
“Oh, but you are! It’s all around the school that you were the one who first realized that this might not be an accident.”
The policeman’s skinny chest puffed out. “Is it?” he asked squeakily. “Well, I suppose . . . see . . . yes, all right. At first we thought she’d simply dosed herself wrong. But I noticed something interesting. She was lying so nice on the bed, nightdress done up perfectly, hair brushed, but then there were scratches on her hands and a little cut on her lip—as though she’d struggled. It didn’t add up, and I said so to the chief. Then we went to interview the lady who runs your Miss Tennyson’s boarding house, and she said someone came to visit her on Saturday, the night she died. A woman.”
My heart jumped. Had it been Miss Lappet or Miss Hopkins?
“Oh!” squealed Daisy, on cue. “How frightfully exciting!”
The policeman beamed at her. “Of course,” he said, “you mustn’t tell anyone what I’ve just told you. It’s strictly confidential.”
“Oh yes,” said Daisy. “Strictly. But—strictly confidential again—what did she look like, this woman?”
She asked it a little too quickly, and it suddenly sounded strange. I winced inwardly. Daisy tried to cover her mistake by adding, in her silliest voice, “I mean, was she all murderous?”
But even with her charm on, she had gone too far. The policeman blinked and flushed, and then seemed to come out of the spell Daisy had put him under.
“H-here!” he said, stammering. “What d’you want to know that for? You’re going to go around telling all your friends, aren’t you?”
“No!”
“You’d better not! This is very privileged information. Oh, I oughtn’t to have told you so much about it. Promise me you won’t tell anyone else I did? The chief’ll fire me.”
“Oh, of course I won’t,” said Daisy, being as reassuring as possible. “Don’t be so silly! I think you’re terribly lucky, being in the middle of it like that! Do you know—”
But at that moment a man came out of the teachers’ common room and saw Daisy speaking to the pimply policeman. This man had a long nose, black eyes, and thick dark hair slicked back from his forehead. He looked extremely official. In fact, I realized, this must be the police chief the pimply policeman had mentioned.
“Rogers!” the chief said sharply, his face crumpling up in annoyance. “Don’t talk to the young ladies.” He gave Daisy a very nasty glare, and she stared back at him, unmoved.
“Good-bye, Mr. Detective,” she said to Rogers, looking up at him through her eyelashes. With one more withering glare at the police chief, she said, “Come on, Hazel, we must be going now,” and stalked away down the Library corridor.
Daisy plunged along so fast that I could not keep up with her. I was still puffing along the Library corridor when she reached the end and flicked around the corner into the New Wing. There was a shriek, a thump, then a chorus of horrified gasps, and I heard Daisy’s voice, high with panic, crying, “Oh, I’m so terribly sorry . . . oh, Miss Griffin . . . oh, oh, here, let me—”
I dashed round the corner and came face to face with a catastrophe. The corridor was absolutely littered with things—papers and exercise books, hairpins and peppermints and pencils—all clattering and rolling around. Daisy, in her haste, had careened straight into the neat and tidy form of Miss Griffin. I gaped in horror.
Daisy was on her knees, frantically scooping things up again. Miss Griffin’s carefully set hair was disarranged and her expression was horrible to see. Everyone began to gather around, but Miss Griffin rapped out, “Move along, girls,” and they all fled in terror.
I got down next to Daisy. She was sliding about over the tiles, picking up papers and stammering, “Miss Griffin, I am so terribly sorry, please believe me,” but Miss Griffin did not look as though she believed anything much.
I picked up a letter, bending its corner, and Miss Griffin snapped, “Don’t touch that, Wong. Oh, out of the way, both of you, so you don’t cause any more damage.” I could tell she was terribly angry. I had never heard her snarl at a girl like that before.
Daisy, trembling, presented Miss Griffin with the pile of papers she had already collected and we both shuffled backward to begin scooping up the things from Daisy’s bag. Miss Griffin, meanwhile, knelt down in her impeccable tweed skirt and gathered up papers as though she was one of Deepdean’s maids. It made me burn with shame. I felt as if we had both let the school down terribly. Daisy kept stammering out how sorry she was, but Miss Griffin was in no mood to listen.
“Wells, enough. This does not become you at all. Deepdean girls should accept the blame for their mistakes with the same grace and quiet dignity that they show in the rest of their lives. I do not expect
to see my girls tearing about the school like barbarians. Quite frankly, I am disappointed in you. You may go.”
“Yes, Miss Griffin,” said Daisy weakly, and she curtsied, though slightly lopsidedly, because she had the contents of her book bag loose in her arms. Then we both scuttled away, feeling like the smallest of small shrimps.
“I thought I was in for it,” Daisy whispered to me once we were far enough down the corridor. “Oh Lord, though, look at the time. We shall be fearfully late for art.”
We looked round once more, to make sure that Miss Griffin was not watching us (she wasn’t—she had just bent down to pick up something else), and then we ran for it.
I always enjoy art. This is less to do with the art itself, and more to do with the fact that to The One, Hong Kong is part of a magical, made-up place called the Orient; because I am from there, he thinks I must be a natural artist. He seems to imagine that everyone in Hong Kong lies about on bright purple divans, in rooms papered with that Chinese print you can get in Woolworths, with peacocks wandering about at our feet. Of course this is not true, and I am not a natural artist at all, but The One hasn’t noticed. So I copy Chinese dragons out of books I find in the library, and The One is delighted.
That day I was busily coloring in one of my dragons when I noticed that Daisy had stopped working and was scrabbling about in her book bag with an awful expression on her face.
“Is something wrong?” I whispered.
In answer, Daisy took her bag and tipped the whole thing up over her desk. Pencils, erasers, and bits of string rained down, and Daisy began to hunt through them, picking each thing up and then tossing it aside again a moment later.
“Hazel,” she said, still hunting away frantically, “Hazel, I can’t find the earring.”
I went cold. “Are you sure?”
“Of course I’m sure,” Daisy hissed, gesturing at the contents of her bag. There certainly was no gold earring to be seen.