‘Yes. And there was something else,’ Rory went on. ‘Mrs Narton said that her husband had been forced to leave the police force three years ago.’
‘Then why was he still so interested in Serridge?’
‘I’m coming to that. I thought I’d go and see the Vicar again, see if he could help. It was lunchtime so I had to kick my heels for a time. I was in the churchyard and I saw a gravestone for Amy Narton, who died in 1931. She was the daughter. Then I talked to the Vicar, who more or less came out and said that Narton had been unbalanced by his daughter’s death. She died in childbirth and nobody knew who the baby’s father was. She had worked at Morthams Farm, but the Vicar saw no reason to believe that it was Serridge. But later I talked to the maid, and she told a rather different story. She had no doubt Serridge was responsible.’ He hesitated and then plunged on. ‘She’d found a photograph of Amy in the nude on a bicycle. Apparently that was part of his courting technique.’
Lydia snorted with laughter. ‘Surely that’s a joke? Please tell me it is.’
‘I don’t think so. Serridge persuaded the village maidens that it was how you smart ladies up in London learned to ride their bikes.’
‘Imagine it. Hyde Park on a Sunday afternoon.’
He smiled at her. ‘Rebecca thought he was keeping Miss Penhow a virtual prisoner at the farm, and that he had another mistress in London as well. A strange girl was seen at the farm just before Miss Penhow disappeared. And there were two other things which were even stranger. The first was that Serridge used to come to Rawling Hall — that’s the big house near the village — before the war. So he knew the place already. And the second thing was even stranger, and I don’t pretend to understand it. There were — some skulls, the skulls of animals, in the place where the maid was talking to me. Her nephew was with us, and they were his pride and joy. And it seemed one of them had gone missing. The skull of a billy goat.’
Lydia stiffened. ‘With very long horns? Sort of swept back?’
‘So you saw it too?’
‘Yes. Or something very like it. It came in the post for Mr Serridge. He opened it in here.’ She caught up with the implication of the word
‘Last week. It was in one of the dustbins downstairs. Along with the Mavering newspaper that mentioned Narton’s death.’
‘None of it makes sense, does it? Not if you try to put it all together. What will you do?’
Rory ran his fingers through his hair. ‘I don’t know.’
‘And now Mrs Renton? How does she come into it?’
‘No idea. Have a look at the parcel. I suppose I should give it to Miss Kensley.’
He watched Lydia reading the letters and examining the skirt. She looked at him.
‘Why don’t you show this to Mrs Renton first? After all, it’s addressed to her. See what she says — it can’t do any harm. So when you give it to Miss Kensley, you can say you’ve done everything that you possibly could.’
‘All right. I’ll ask her now. Thanks awfully. You’ve been very helpful.’
She glanced sideways at him. ‘Not at all.’
He picked up the skirt and the letters and went downstairs, leaving her folding the wrapping paper at the table. He knocked on the door of Mrs Renton’s room. There was no answer. He knocked again with the same result. He went back upstairs. As he reached the first-floor landing, Lydia came out from the little kitchen.
‘No luck?’ she said.
‘She’s not in.’ Rory’s mind ran ahead to the rest of the day: he himself would have to go out, back to combing through the Situations Vacant boards in the public library. ‘It will have to wait. I need to go out.’
‘Would you like me to ask her about it?’ Lydia said. ‘As it happens, I’ll be in for most of the day.’
‘Would you? That’s very decent. If you’re sure it’s no trouble?’
‘Not at all. I want to see Mrs Renton about some mending.’
Rory handed over the parcel and Miss Penhow’s letter. He continued upstairs, with Mrs Narton’s note in his hand. Lydia Langstone was really quite a good sort, he thought, despite the airs and graces and the cut-glass accent. Almost pretty too. She had, he thought, a trustworthy face. But perhaps that was wishful thinking, and what the devil was her connection with Mrs Alforde?
17
Reading this now, it’s obvious to you that even then Serridge was desperate to get away from Philippa May Penhow. Be honest. She probably revolted him.
Tuesday, 8 April 1930
How you laugh too. He fooled everyone. Even Jacko.
Finding Mrs Renton was harder than Lydia had expected. She wasn’t in her room all day. That in itself was not unusual because she often visited her clients, who were scattered across London, and sometimes would work in their homes. Mrs Renton returned to Bleeding Heart Square at some point in the evening but it was too late to call on her.
The following day, Wednesday, Lydia was at Shires and Trimble. The job was becoming less of an ordeal than it had been. Mr Reynolds had decided that Lydia was quite useful for a woman. She had what he called a refined telephone manner and was also capable of understanding his filing system.
As for the others, Marcus’s roses had effected a decisive shift in the balance of power in the general office. Miss Tuffley confided to Lydia that Smethwick could be ‘an awfully vulgar little tyke’ and that he had had too much cider and been a bit fresh with her on the firm’s summer outing in July, which frankly was a bit thick. She also volunteered the opinion that ‘Us girls should stick together.’ It wasn’t just the roses that had done it. It was also the realization that Lydia had some sort of a connection with godlike males who were ferried around in silver