Chapter Six
SIX
Alec didn’t get home till midnight. When he let himself in, Daisy was in the front room reading, in her dressing-gown. Elsie had closed the curtains but left the windows open to the soft night air.
“Darling?”
He came into the room and slumped into a chair. “Whew! What a day!”
“You look more in need of a whisky than cocoa. Mrs. D left out veal-and-ham pie and gooseberry fool, too, if you’re hungry.”
“Ravenous! I’ve been running all over the Home Counties all day. I can’t even remember when I last had a bite to eat.”
“You stay there. I’ll bring the tray. If it’s not enough, I can always get you some bread and cheese to fill in the chinks.”
“When did Mrs. D ever not provide enough? Ta, love. And whisky sounds like an excellent idea.”
Daisy bustled about, and soon, jacket and tie discarded, he was wolfing his belated dinner.
She let him eat in peace, took away the tray and topped up the whisky glass, then, as he leant back with a satisfied sigh, she asked, “I hope all your running about was productive?”
“Yes, thank heaven. And I can tell you some of it as we’ve notified the papers. We’ve reached the point where we need tips from the public. All three victims have been identified.”
“Already? That’s pretty good going, isn’t it?”
Alec grinned. “The super’s happy. He went so far as to ring up the AC at home to tell him.”
“Mr. Crane’s happy, all’s well with the world. Who are—were they?”
“As you might expect, the most recent was the easiest. Vincent Halliday, son and heir of Sir Daniel Halliday, Baronet, of Hertfordshire. You’re not acquainted with the Hallidays, are you?”
“No,” Daisy said in surprise. “I’ve never heard of them, as far as I can remember. Why?”
“Oh, the super’s got a bee in his bonnet about you, that’s all.”
“I know that.” Indignantly, she added, “I don’t see how he can possibly accuse me of meddling in this case!”
“He’s not accusing you, just faintly nervous that you may turn out to be somehow involved.”
“I call that a bit much! I’ve a good mind to try and dig up some mutual acquaintance who can introduce me to the Hallidays.”
“This is not exactly a good time to meet them,” Alec said dryly.
“In any case, they seem to be a rather reclusive family. The old couple appear to disapprove thoroughly of the modern world and to do their best to keep the family from contamination. Lady Halliday’s mouth is all pursed up as though it’s set in an expression of disapproval. ”
“I know exactly what you mean!” Daisy forebore to remind him that his mother’s mouth was much the same.
“Very strong on the Victorian virtues. Not much hope with the youngest generation, of course. Two boys at a public school—well, heaven knows, those are old-fashioned enough—but the granddaughter is going to be a thorn in their flesh, if she isn’t already.”
“Good for her! Old couple? How old?”
“In their early seventies, at a guess. Vincent was forty-five. His daughter’s about Bel’s age, a year or two older.
As far as we can find out, he was a quiet, harmless farmer, running the Halliday estate to the satisfaction of all concerned.
He wasn’t in the habit of going off to London for an occasional spree, or anything suggestive like that.
We’re still completely stumped for motive. ”
“What about the second victim?”
“Martin Devine, a Surrey man. He was the youngest, at thirty-three. Junior partner in a very prosperous firm of solicitors in Guildford. Unmarried. Father deceased, lived with his mother. I haven’t had time to talk to her yet, or anyone else who knew him, come to that.
That’s on tomorrow’s agenda. The local police are supposed to have informed her of his death this evening, so that his name in tomorrow’s news won’t come as a shock. ”
“Poor woman! Even if he’s been missing for months, she must still have hoped he’d turn up. Alive, I mean.”
“Yes. That doesn’t seem to hold true for the last man, however. Or rather, the first.”
“Oh?”
“William Pelham. His widow seemed more relieved than anything else that he wasn’t coming back. She immediately started talking about repainting the house, and having seen it, I can’t blame her! I had to call on her briefly tonight. We couldn’t be sure of the identification without talking to her.”
“How on earth did you identify him? You said there wasn’t much left.”
“Feeling ghoulish now, are you? We recovered two toe bones that had been broken and badly set. Not bad enough to make walking difficult, but his toes would have been misshapen and his wife could hardly help but know.”
“And his doctor, presumably.”
“Yes, but it’s hopeless approaching doctors until you can assure them their patient is dead, which, of course, we couldn’t. It’s ticklish even then. They’re extremely reluctant to part with information, as bad as—or worse than—solicitors and banks.”
“So you had to see Mrs. Pelham, who was not over distressed to hear her vanished hubby had vanished for good.”
“Rather to the contrary. I didn’t have time to talk to her for long, nor, of course, to anyone else who knew Colonel Pelham. Have to go back tomorrow—”
“Later today,” said Daisy, glancing at the clock on the mantelpiece.
This innocent remark prompted a vast yawn from Alec.
“Later today,” he agreed, standing up. “And if I don’t go to bed now, it’ll be time to get up.
Come on. Oh, I managed to find a moment to buy some chocolate peppermint creams for Bel.
I put them on the hall table. Don’t forget to take them to her. ”
“I won’t. She’d rather have you, but I don’t suppose she’ll reject them.”
* * *
A wholly insufficient number of hours later, Daisy, again in her dressing-gown, joined Alec at the breakfast table.
She wasn’t awake enough to eat, and intended to go back to bed the minute he left.
Nursing a cup of tea, she waited until he had finished with his bacon and eggs, poured him a second cup of coffee, and said:
“I woke up with an idea.”
“An idea?”
“Well, it’s not really enough to qualify as an idea. Call it a wonder. The first victim was Colonel Pelham, so I presume he’s a soldier?”
“Retired. Territorials during the War, I think. I’m sure Ernie knows.”
“I just wondered if you knew what the other two did in the War.”
“No,” he said thoughtfully. “I don’t suppose Ernie does, either.
It’s long enough ago that I never considered a possible connection there.
Even if they served together at some point, it seems unlikely that it could have anything to do with their murders eight years after the Armistice. As tenuous as the pub link.”
“Pub link?”
“I shouldn’t have mentioned that. Definitely not to be passed on.”
“I won’t.”
“Nor your idea about their war service, just in case. But I will find out about it. I must run.” He gulped the rest of his coffee. “’Bye, love, and give Belinda my apologies and my love, won’t you.”
“Of course, darling. And the peppermint creams. Good luck.”
He kissed her cheek and was gone.
“Oh well, it was an idea,” she said to the empty air, and went back to bed.
* * *
On time to the minute, the Prasads’ dark red Sunbeam tourer pulled up in front of the house.
It was another gorgeous June day, so Kesin had let down the hood.
Knowing Sakari, though, she would probably have it put up as soon as they got out of town.
She wasn’t one to put up with the inconvenience of wind in her face at thirty or forty miles an hour.
Melanie, in her typical self-effacing way, had moved to the passenger seat in front as soon as the car stopped in Constable Circle. Daisy joined Sakari in the back. Kesin hopped back in, and they proceeded in a stately manner round the circle and out into Well Walk.
“Kesin tells me,” said Sakari, her tone dramatic, “that the most direct route runs through Epping Forest! I told him on no account to go that way, so we shall make a circuit. He says we shall not go far out of our way. Daisy, have you any further information from Alec?”
“Oh no!” Melanie protested, looking back. “Can’t we let that subject rest for today?”
“You need not listen, Melanie.”
“Short of putting my fingers in my ears, which would look very odd, I can hardly help it.”
“I shan’t talk about gruesome details,” Daisy assured her, “if that’s what you’re worried about. In any case, Alec didn’t tell me much beyond what was to be given to the papers, so you’ve probably read everything already.”
“I never read about murders,” said Melanie, somewhat self-righteously. “I hardly ever read the papers at all.”
“I do,” Sakari declared, “but this morning I had not time enough even to open the Times. Tell all, Daisy.”
“It’s mostly that all three victims have been identified, and their names. Alec’s hoping for tips from the public about any connections between them.”
“What sort of connections?”
“Any sort. As long as they’re three discrete individuals—”
“My dear Daisy, being dead, they cannot help but be discreet!”
“Discrete spelt e-t-e.”
“This is a word I do not know. Perhaps I should stay home from classes and lectures for a while and study the English dictionary instead.”
“I don’t know it, either, Sakari,” said Melanie, proving she had been listening closely. “Remember Daisy is a writer. Words are her business.”
“I wouldn’t use that discrete in an article. It would go over the heads of too many of the sort of readers I write for.”
“But you expected us to be better educated,” said Sakari mournfully.
“English was always my best—my favourite—subject.”
Sakari laughed. “Do not apologise, Daisy. We cannot hold you to blame for our ignorance, can we, Melanie?”
“Of course not, Daisy dear. It must mean something like separate, does it?”
“Yes, more or less, though in that context … But I’m not going to try and define it more precisely!”
“These are so far three separate individuals,” said Sakari, “and Alec must discover what is the connection between them that explains why they were all murdered by the same person.”
“Very well put.”