'Flavia,' I said. 'My name is Flavia de Luce. I live near here--at Buckshaw.'

I jerked my thumb in the general direction.

She was still staring at me like a woman in the grip of a nightmare.

'I'm sorry,' I said. 'I didn't mean to startle you.'

She pulled herself up to her full height--which couldn't have been much more than five feet and an inch or two--and took a step towards me, like a hot-tempered version of the Botticelli Venus that I'd once seen on a Huntley and Palmers biscuit tin.

I stood my ground, staring at her dress. It was a creamy cotton print with a gathered bodice and a flaring skirt, covered all over with a myriad of tiny flowers, red, yellow, blue, and a bright orange the color of poppies and, I couldn't help noticing, a hem that was stained with half-dried mud.

'What's the matter?' she asked, taking an affected drag on her angled cigarette. 'Never seen anyone famous before?'

Famous? I hadn't the faintest idea who she was. I had half a mind to tell her that I had indeed seen someone famous, and that it was Winston Churchill. Father had pointed him out to me from a London taxicab. Churchill had been standing in front of the Savoy with his thumbs hooked in his waistcoat pockets, talking to a man in a yellow mackintosh.

'Good old Winnie,' Father had breathed, as if to himself.

'Oh, what's the use?' the woman said. 'Bloody place ... bloody people ... bloody motorcars!' And she began to cry again.

'Is there something I can do to help?' I asked.

'Oh, go away and leave me alone,' she sobbed.

Very well, then, I thought. Actually, I thought more than that, but since I'm trying to be a better person ...

I stood there for a moment, leaning forward a bit to see if her fallen tears were reacting with the porous surface of the tombstone. Tears, I knew, were composed largely of water, sodium chloride, manganese, and potassium, while limestone was made up chiefly of calcite, which was soluble in sodium chloride--but only at high temperatures. So unless the temperature of St. Tancred's churchyard went up suddenly by several hundred degrees, it seemed unlikely that anything chemically interesting was going to be happening here.

I turned and walked away.

'Flavia ...'

I looked back. She was reaching out a hand to me.

'I'm sorry,' she said. 'It's just that it's been an awfully bloody day, all round.'

I stopped--then paced slowly, warily back as she wiped her eyes with the back of her hand.

'Rupert was in a foul mood to begin with--even before we left Stoatmoor this morning. We'd had rather a row, I'm afraid, and then the whole business with the van--it was simply the last straw. He's gone off to find someone to fix it, and I'm ... well, here I am.'

'I like your red hair,' I said. She touched it instantly and smiled, as I somehow knew she would.

'Carrot-top, they used to call me when I was your age. Carrot-top! Fancy!'

'Carrot tops are green,' I said. 'Who's Rupert?'

'Who's Rupert?' she asked. 'You're having me on!'

She pointed a finger and I turned to look: Parked in the lane at the corner of the churchyard was a dilapidated van--an Austin Eight. On its side panel, in showy gold circus letters, still legible through a heavy coating of mud and dust, were the words PORSON'S PUPPETS.

'Rupert Porson,' she said. 'Everyone knows Rupert Porson. Rupert Porson, as in Snoddy the Squirrel--The Magic Kingdom. Haven't you seen him on the television?'

Snoddy the Squirrel? The Magic Kingdom?

'We don't have the television at Buckshaw,' I said. 'Father says it's a filthy invention.'

'Father is an uncommonly wise man,' she said. 'Father is undoubtedly--'

She was interrupted by the metallic rattle of a loose chain guard as the vicar came wobbling round the corner of the church. He dismounted and leaned his battered Raleigh up against a handy headstone. As he walked towards us, I reflected that Canon Denwyn Richardson was not anyone's image of a typical village vicar. He was large and bluff and hearty, and if he'd had tattoos, he might have been mistaken for the captain of one of those rusty tramp steamers that drags itself wearily from one sun-drenched port to another in whatever God-awful outposts are still left of the British Empire.

His black clerical outfit was smudged and streaked with chalky dust, as if he'd come a cropper on his bicycle.

'Blast!' he said when he spotted me. 'I've lost my trouser clip and torn my cuff to ribbons,' and then, dusting himself off as he walked towards us, he added, 'Cynthia's going to have me on the carpet.'

The woman's eyes widened and she shot me a quick glance.

'She's recently begun scratching my initials on my belongings with a needle,' he went on, 'but that hasn't kept me from losing things. Last week, the hectograph sheets for the parish bulletin, the week before, a brass doorknob from the vestry. Maddening, really.

'Hello, Flavia,' he said. 'Always nice to see you at church.'

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