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Case Is Closed

Page 18

by Patricia Wentworth


  Henry was on the doorstep. They went up in a lift to No. 16 and both talked all the time, because Henry was trying to explain Miss Maud Silver, and Hilary was telling him what she would have done if it had been a Den of Murderers.

  ‘I didn’t want to go to a woman, but Charles Moray says—’

  ‘I’d absolutely made up my mind—’

  ‘There’s something about her that impresses you. She found out—’

  ‘Suppose it hadn’t been you—’

  ‘That the Mercers weren’t married—’

  ‘But someone imitating your voice—’

  ‘Until the day after James Everton’s death.’ The superior resonance of Henry’s voice got through with this.

  Hilary pinched him hard and said, ‘What?’

  ‘If you’d been listening instead of talking all the time—’

  ‘Henry, I like that! You’ve never stopped—I haven’t been able to get in a word!’

  ‘Then why didn’t you hear what I said?’

  ‘I did.’

  ‘Then why did you say, “What?” ’

  ‘Well, darling, what did you expect me to say? I mean—Mrs Mercer! Say it again!’

  ‘The Mercers weren’t married till the day after James Everton’s death.’

  The lift had been stationary for some time. Hilary opened the door and walked out on to the landing.

  Mrs Mercer—how incredible! Respectable, middle-aged Mrs Mercer! There was something quite horrifying about it. She felt shocked and a little frightened. Her dream, which she had forgotten, came vividly up in her mind. It came up so vividly that it made Henry, the lift-shaft, and the bare, cold landing outside Miss Silver’s flat all seem rather unreal. She heard her own voice say in the dream, ‘What did you sell it for?’ And she heard Mrs Mercer say, ‘Something I’d have given my soul to get.’ They were talking about Mrs Mercer’s evidence—the evidence which she had sold—and what she had sold it for—

  Henry’s hand fell on her shoulder, and she blinked up at him.

  ‘What’s the matter?’

  ‘Nothing. I remembered something.’

  He put his arm round her for a moment. Then he rang the bell and they went in.

  Miss Silver sat at her desk with the file of the Everton Case open before her. An infant’s pale blue coat had been relegated to the edge of the table, and the ball of wool attached to it had fallen unnoticed on to the floor and rolled away. Hilary picked it up as she came in.

  ‘Thank you,’ said Miss Silver. ‘Wool becomes so very easily soiled. If you would just spike it on one of the knitting-needles—thank you very much.’

  She had not appeared to be looking at anything except the file. Now she lifted a slightly frowning gaze, inclined her head towards Hilary, and indicated a chair.

  ‘This is Miss Carew?...Will you please sit down? Captain Cunningham has explained why I wish to see you?’

  ‘No, he hasn’t,’ said Hilary. ‘He just rang me up, and I came.’ She contrived a reproachful look at Henry out of the corner of her eye, but it did not appear to get anywhere.

  Miss Silver continued.

  ‘Captain Cunningham rang me up at a very early hour. He seemed a good deal perturbed—’ she paused, coughed slightly, and added—‘about you, Miss Carew. He desired my advice without delay, and he informed me that he had in his possession the entire file of the Everton Case. I asked him to bring it round to me, and he did so. When he had told me about your experiences yesterday I suggested that he should ask you to join us. In the meanwhile I could run through the file and find out whether it continued any evidence with which I was not familiar. I have not, of course, had time to read all the documents. The accounts of the inquest and the trial are taken from the public press, and I am quite au fait with them. The statement made by the chambermaid at the Caledonian Hotel is new to me, and so is the statement of the Glasgow solicitor with regard to Mr Francis Everton. They are both typed copies, and I imagine that the originals were obtained by the police. Do you know if that is so, Miss Carew?’

  ‘No, I don’t. I was abroad in July—I didn’t come home until the inquest was over.’

  Miss Silver said, ‘I see. Captain Cunningham was abroad too, and he tells me that Mrs Grey is exceedingly disinclined to answer questions.’

  ‘She simply won’t,’ said Hilary.

  Miss Silver primmed her lips.

  ‘Decidedly foolish,’ she said. ‘Relatives almost invariably hamper investigation by an unwillingness to be frank. They are afraid of disclosing some point which will tell against the person in whom they are interested. Yet if Mr Grey is really innocent, the more light that is thrown upon every point the better for his case. If Mrs Grey is concealing something which she fears may tell against her husband—’

  Henry struck in, frowning, ‘We haven’t any reason to suppose she’s doing anything of the sort.’

  But Miss Silver’s small pale eyes were fixed not on him, but on Hilary.

  ‘Miss Silver, why do you say that?’

  ‘It is true, is it not? Why else should she refuse to answer questions—to aid in an investigation? She is afraid of what may be brought to light—something damaging—something she had knowledge of—something—Miss Carew, I think you know what it is.’

  Henry looked with astonishment at Hilary, and saw the red distressed colour run up to the roots of her little brown curls. Her eyes swam with tears. She said in a startled voice, ‘How did you know?’

  Miss Silver looked down at the file again. She gave a depreciating cough.

  ‘There is nothing wonderful about seeing what is in front of one. Will you tell me what Mrs Grey is afraid of?’

  ‘I don’t see how I can.’

  Miss Silver looked at her in a different way. She had the air of a kind aunt—of Aunt Emmeline when she was about to give you five pounds at Christmas. She said in a voice that was nice as well as prim, ‘I am a great admirer of Lord Tennyson. The mot juste—how often one comes across it in his writings. “Oh, trust me all in all, or not at all.” I find I often have to quote that to my clients. The most complete frankness is necessary.’

  Hilary looked at Henry, and Henry nodded. After all he didn’t see that anything Hilary said could do any harm. They wouldn’t hang Grey now whatever came out, and he was prepared to bank on the discretion of this respectable little spinster.

  Hilary put her hand to her cheek and began to tell Miss Silver about going to see Mrs Ashley.

  ‘She was the daily help at Solway Lodge, and nobody thought of calling her, because she went away at six o’clock and she told the police she didn’t know anything.’

  Henry took her by the arm.

  ‘What’s all this?’

  ‘I didn’t tell you, Henry—I couldn’t.’

  ‘Go on,’ said Maud Silver.

  Hilary went on between quick breaths.

  ‘I went to see her—she’s a frightened little thing. She cried, and said she’d promised Marion not to tell.’ Henry began to regret his nod. His hand tightened on Hilary’s arm. ‘I made her tell me. She did leave at six, but she went back. She had dropped a letter, and she thought it might be in the study—and she thought she could get in through the open window—but when she got near she heard voices—quarrelling. And she heard Mr Everton say, “My own nephew!” And then she heard a shot, and she ran away and never stopped running till she got home.’

  ‘I see,’ said Miss Silver. ‘Yes, I see. And what time was this?’

  Hilary caught her breath.

  ‘That’s the worst part of it—for Geoff, I mean. She heard a church clock strike as she came by Oakley Road. It struck eight, and at first when she said that, I thought it was going to be all right, because the outside of what it would take her to get to Solway Lodge from Oakley Road would be ten minutes. Geoff did it in five, and I don’t think anyone could really take more than seven or eight, so I’m saying ten as an absolute limit. Well, if she heard that shot at ten minutes past eight, it clears Geoff, becau
se the very earliest he could have got there was a quarter past, so I thought it was all right.’ Her voice very plainly indicated that it had turned out all wrong.

  Henry said, ‘Why wasn’t it all right?’ and Miss Silver gazed at her expectantly.

  ‘Oh, it wasn’t, because she said, and stuck to it like a leech, that that blighted clock was a good ten minutes out, and that it must have been “getting on for the half hour” when she reached the house.’

  ‘She said the clock was slow?’ said Miss Silver.

  ‘She said everyone in the house knew it was slow.’

  ‘Clocks,’ said Miss Silver, ‘are extremely unreliable as evidence. You are quite, quite sure that she said the clock was slow?’

  ‘I asked her, and asked her, and asked her,’ said Hilary in a wretched voice. ‘She said she was always talking about it to Mrs Mercer. She said it used to give her a turn coming in the morning.’

  ‘Why?’ Miss Silver shot the word out short and sharp.

  ‘It made her think she was late when she wasn’t.’ Hilary’s eyes widened suddenly. ‘Oh!’

  ‘But then it was fast,’ said Henry. He took her by the arm and shook her. ‘I say, Hilary, wake up! Use the head—it’s meant to think with! The clock would have to be fast to make her afraid she was late, not slow.’

  Hilary’s eyes got rounder and rounder. She said, ‘Golly!’ in a hushed whisper.

  Miss Silver said, ‘Exactly.’

  ‘How could you be such an ass?’ said Henry Cunningham.

  ‘Golly!’ said Hilary again. ‘She said it just like I told you, and I just gulped it down! And she must have said it to Marion, and Marion swallowed it too, and made her promise not to tell. And if she had told—Miss Silver, it would have cleared Geoff—oh, it would!’

  Miss Silver coughed.

  ‘Do not build on it too much. The facts must be verified—and fifteen months have elapsed. But if it can be proved that this church clock was ten minutes fast in the July of last year, it would seem that the shot which killed Mr Everton was fired at somewhere very near to eight o’clock.’

  ‘Oh, Miss Silver!’

  Miss Silver nodded.

  ‘Then with regard to the words which Mrs Ashley overheard, they are’—she gave her little dry cough—‘well, they are certainly capable of more than one construction. She appears to have considered, and Mrs Grey appears to have considered, that those words “My own nephew!” indicated that Mr Everton was at that moment addressing his nephew Geoffrey Grey. You appear to have taken the same view. But it really doesn’t follow, you know. He may have been addressing Mr Geoffrey Grey, but the words which you have quoted by no means prove that he was doing so. For instance, he may have been replying to some accusation or slander against Mr Grey, and the words “My own nephew!” might be construed as an indignant denial. Further, Mr Everton had three nephews. The words may have had no reference at all to Geoffrey Grey.’

  ‘It’s the time that matters,’ said Hilary. ‘If we can only prove that the clock was fast—oh, Miss Silver, we must be able to prove it! Because if James was shot at eight, Geoff couldn’t possibly have done it.’

  TWENTY SEVEN

  MISS SILVER PRODUCED a copybook and wrote down Mrs Ashley’s address, after which she wrote, ‘Church clock, Oakley Road.’ Under this she put the word ‘Nephew’. Then she turned back to the file.

  ‘There are a number of points on which I should like a little more information. Do you know either of Mr Everton’s other two nephews, Captain Cunningham?’

  ‘I met Bertie Everton the other day for the first time,’ said Henry.

  ‘An accidental meeting?’

  ‘No—he came to my shop. I told you I’d had an antique shop left me. Well, he came in there and talked about china.’

  Hilary sat up bright-eyed.

  ‘Henry, he came there on purpose to tell you Mrs Mercer was mad. You know he did!’

  ‘Well, I don’t know it,’ said Henry. ‘He did talk about china.’

  ‘And he did say Mrs Mercer was mad—and that’s what he came there for. And that’s what Mercer followed me for, tagging after me all round Putney and telling me his poor wife wasn’t right in her head till I was ready to scream. And if you can believe it all happened by accident the very morning after Mrs Mercer talked to me in the train, well, I can’t, and that’s all about it!’

  Miss Silver coughed.

  ‘Will you tell me the whole thing from the beginning? I have heard Captain Cunningham’s version of it, and I would like to hear it from yourself.’

  Hilary began at the beginning and went right through to the end. She told about Mrs Mercer in the train, and she told about everything that had happened since. She enjoyed telling it, and she told it very well. She made Miss Silver see the people. When she had finished she said, ‘There!’ and Miss Silver wrote in her copybook for a minute or two.

  ‘And now,’ she said, ‘now, Captain Cunningham, I would like to know what impression Mr Bertie Everton made on you.’

  Henry looked puzzled.

  ‘I’ve heard such a lot about him—over the case, I mean. If I hadn’t, I don’t know that I should have thought anything about him at all. He’s not my sort of chap, you know—a bit finicky, a bit mincing in his talk.’

  ‘He’s got red hair and foxy eyes,’ said Hilary in a tone of warm dislike.

  ‘Thank you, Miss Carew,’ said Maud Silver. She wrote in her copybook. ‘And the other nephew, Francis Everton—what about him?’

  ‘Bad hat,’ said Henry. ‘Remittance man. Old Everton paid him to keep away. Glasgow was a safe distance—he could soak quietly in the cheaper brands of alcohol without any danger of getting into the London papers. That was about the size of it, wasn’t it, Hilary?’

  Hilary nodded.

  ‘Very interesting,’ said Miss Silver, ‘very, very interesting. And has he also got red hair?’

  ‘I’ve never set eyes on him,’ said Henry.

  ‘Nor have I,’ said Hilary. ‘But he hasn’t, Miss Silver, because I remember Marion and Geoff talking about him. At least what they were really talking about was red hair. Marion said she hated it, and that she’d never have married Geoff if she’d known it was in the family—because of not having gingery babies, you know. They were chaffing, of course. And Geoff said she needn’t worry, because Bertie was the only one, and he got it from his mother. And she said hadn’t Frank got it too, and he said no, he hadn’t, he’d come out black, and that all his Aunt Henrietta’s family were either black or red. So you see—’

  ‘Yes,’ said Miss Silver, in rather an abstracted tone, ‘I see.’ She turned the pages of the file and read in them here and there. Then she said, ‘Would you care to go to Edinburgh, Captain Cunningham?’

  ‘No,’ said Henry, with the utmost decision.

  ‘May I enquire why?’

  ‘I think Hilary wants someone to look after her.’ The fact that he used the Christian name was a tribute to Miss Silver’s success in creating the impression that she was some kind of semi-professional aunt.

  ‘Quite so. I was thinking that it might be as well if Miss Hilary could go, too. So many people have relations in Edinburgh. It occurred to me to wonder whether a short visit—’

  ‘There’s Cousin Selina,’ said Hilary in rather a gloomy voice.

  ‘Yes?’ said Miss Silver brightly. ‘That sounds very suitable.’

  Hilary made a face.

  ‘She’s Marion’s cousin as well as mine. And she thinks Geoffrey did it, so Marion won’t go near her, but she has asked Henry and me to stay—at least she did before we broke off our engagement.’

  ‘It’s on again,’ said Henry firmly. After a moment’s pause he added, ‘It wasn’t ever off.’

  Hilary cocked an eyebrow. Miss Silver said quickly, ‘Nothing could be better. You have a most admirable excuse for going to Edinburgh—a delightful city, and one of the most beautiful in Europe, so I am told. I think it very advisable indeed that Miss Carew should not be e
xposed to the risk of any more motor accidents. Edinburgh has an exceedingly good record in that respect, I believe—the Scotch are a careful people. It will be an excellent place for you to visit, and while you are there you can interview Annie Robertson whose statement we have here, and Captain Cunningham can make some enquiries at the local garages. I should be glad also if he would run over to Glasgow. You could accompany him if your cousin does not object. Some enquiries about Mr Francis Everton. I will make a few notes which will indicate the line I should advise you to take in each case.’

  Hilary leaned forward.

  ‘What about the Mercers?’

  ‘Yes,’ said Henry, ‘what about the Mercers?’

  TWENTY EIGHT

  MISS SILVER LOOKED up from her copybook with an air of bright helpfulness.

  ‘Ah yes—to be sure. I have some information for you, Captain Cunningham. I have not seen you since it came in.’

  ‘Yes?’said Henry.

  Miss Silver leaned across the table and picked up the half finished infant’s coatee and the ball of pale blue wool. Then she sat back in her chair and began to knit.

  ‘Yes,’ she said. ‘I put a small advertisement in the paper. It is so fortunate that Mrs Mercer should have had an uncommon name like Anketell. One could feel practically sure that there would not be more than one Louisa Kezia Anketell, or at least not more than one in the same generation. These peculiar names generally run in a family. My own second name is Hephzibah—most unsuitable with Maud, but there has been a Hephzibah in our family for at least two hundred years.’ She coughed. ‘I have wandered from the point—I apologise.’ She clicked a needle out and clicked it in again. ‘To resume—I interviewed a woman yesterday who says she is a cousin of Mrs Mercer’s. She wrote in answer to the advertisement, and I called upon her in Wood Green. Her name was Sarah Anketell—not a very pleasant person, but, I think, truthful. She seemed to have some kind of grudge against her cousin, but I can see no reason to doubt what she told me.’

 

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