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A Sight for Sore Eyes

Page 37

by Ruth Rendell


  Junk mail was mostly what came through the letter-box, flyers from restaurants and car-hire companies, carpet cleaners and plumbers. Coals to Newcastle, this last, in the opinion of Agnes Tawton, though no plumber lived there now. She had taken to popping in once a week, picking up the post and looking for unconsidered trifles.

  A check for a hundred pounds from a Marjorie J. Trent and made out to T. Brex was useless to her. She had no bank account. The only other item of interest was a ring in an envelope. Agnes recognized it as her daughter’s engagement ring, though she hadn’t seen it for many years.

  The proper thing to do with a ring is put it on one’s finger and this Agnes did, the little finger of her left hand, all the others being too big for it. Of her son-in-law she had always had a low opinion, so she doubted if the ring could be worth much—he had probably picked it up in Wembley market for a couple of quid.

  But she kept it on. Her friend Gladys said it was “dressy,” so she wore it on the Over-Sixties spring outing to Felixstowe. After tea in a restaurant on the front she went into the ladies’ cloakroom to powder her nose and wash her hands. Agnes had never had an engagement ring of her own and now, so late in her life, it gave her a thrill to take off the ring and lay it on the side of the basin like all the other ladies lined up at all the other basins.

  There were no towels, only those hand dryers that blew out hot air, and blew it slowly. One alone was in working order and Agnes had to queue up. By the time her hands were dry Gladys was calling to her to hurry up, the coach was going, and she trotted off, rather flustered, leaving the ring on the side of the basin.

  In their advertisements the estate agents described Orcadia Cottage as “the bijou home immortalized in the internationally acclaimed artwork of Simon Alpheton,” though the photograph they took looked nothing like the painting. In the depths of winter Orcadia Cottage displayed its true self, its shape and proportions. The cherry-colored brickwork, usually concealed under festoons of green or gold or crimson leaves, was now veiled only by a network of fine ginger-colored tendrils like cobwebs made by a red spider. Anthea, who understandably had always disliked the place, said it looked as if it had taken its clothes off and stood revealed in its dirty underwear.

  But Franklin soon got an offer. The purchasers, an American businessman and his wife, wanted to move in quickly. When Franklin offered them the report his surveyors had made thirty years before they were happy to dispense with a survey.

  After all, the house had been there for two hundred years and wasn’t likely to fall down now.

  FOR DON

  AGAIN

  ALSO BY RUTH RENDELL

  Adam and Eve and Pinch Me

  The Keys to the Street

  Blood Lines

  The Crocodile Bird

  Going Wrong

  Live Flesh

  The Tree of Hands

  Master of the Moor

  The Lake of Darkness

  A Judgement in Stone

  A Demon in My View

  To Fear a Painted Devil

  CHIEF INSPECTOR WEXFORD NOVELS

  The Fallen Curtain

  Road Rage

  Simisola

  Kissing the Gunner’s Daughter

  The Veiled One

  An Unkindness of Ravens

  Speaker of Mandarin

  Death Notes

  A Sleeping Life

  Some Lie and Some Die

  Murder Being Once Done

  No More Dying Then

  A Guilty Thing Surprised

  The Best Man to Die

  Wolf of the Slaughter

  Sins of the Fathers

  A New Lease of Death

  From Doon with Death

  Harm Done

  BY RUTH RENDELL WRITING AS BARBARA VINE

  The Chimney Sweeper’s Boy

  No Night Is Too Long

  Anna’s Book

  A Dark-Adapted Eye

 

 

 


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