“No, you didn’t,” he said curtly. “You wanted to prove that you were better at detecting than I.”
He walked a little way away from her.
“I thought
Daisy shrugged. “If she won’t, I can’t.”
Rose pointed to where she had seen something shining. Kerridge told the policemen to put the ladder up against the house at that point and begin the search.
Rose kept glancing at Harry’s set face. She knew in that instant that anything he found out about the case he would keep to himself in future.
The policeman on the ladder gave a shout. “I see it!”
“Lift it with your hankie,” shouted Kerridge. “Don’t want your prints on it. Is it a syringe?”
“Yes.”
Kerridge turned to Rose. “Good work, my lady,” he said. “We should have you on the force.”
Then he turned to Harry. “Let’s go inside. I want to discuss this.”
He waited until the policeman had climbed down the ladder and then he and Harry walked off together, followed by Becket and Inspector Judd.
“Just look at them!” raged Rose. “I find their evidence, but because I’m a woman they never think that I should be part of their rotten discussion. When I return to London I shall contact the suffragettes and support them once more.”
¦
“I’ll get my men to search this place from top to bottom,” Kerridge said to Harry in the estate office. “Then I’ll need to let them all go. Lady Glensheil has tried to help, but I am now being leaned on heavily from above. Oh, yes, they want me to solve the case but without upsetting the nobs. And this old place has so many nooks and crannies.”
Come the revolution, thought Kerridge, this would make a good orphanage and this lot would be out there working in the kitchens and gardens. He had a vision of Lady Glensheil scrubbing the pots in the kitchen with a piece of sackcloth as an apron tied round her waist.
“Mr Kerridge,” said Harry sharply.
“Eh, what? Oh, yes, I don’t suppose there will be prints on that syringe.”
A policeman entered. “Whose window was it under, lad?” asked Kerridge.
“It was under the window on the first-floor landing.”
Kerridge sighed. “So any one of them could have thrown it out as they went up or down the stairs. Blast! Are you sure, Captain Cathcart, that neither Mrs Stockton nor Lord Alfred have been particularly friendly?”
“Not that I have seen. None of them are particularly what I would call friendly, except perhaps Tristram Baker-Willis, who has proposed to Lady Rose. Probably after her title and money.”
Kerridge looked amused. “Why do you jump to that conclusion? Lady Rose is very beautiful.”
“Lady Rose is irritating and unfeminine.”
“I would have said you both had a lot in common.”
“Tommy-rot!”
¦
The fact that they were all told they could leave on the following morning had lightened spirits considerably and an air of relief pervaded the dining-table.
Only Rose felt unhappy because Harry would not look at her and Tristram kept breathing compliments in her ear.
She was glad when Lady Glensheil finally rose to lead the ladies to the drawing-room. Maisie and Frederica spoke of the coming season. Maisie said that if she did not ‘take’ at this, her second season, she would be sent to India. Frederica said roundly that she had half a mind not to get married at all. There weren’t any decent chaps on offer. Lady Glensheil said loftily it was the duty of every young miss to marry. There was no other future for a lady.
Rose protested and said that a number of ladies these days were earning their living.
“Not
When they were joined by the gentlemen, the card tables were set up. Harry sat down with Lady Glensheil, Tristram and Sir Gerald and did not once look in Rose’s direction.
Rose excused herself and followed by Daisy went up to her room. “The captain is angry with me,” she said.
“You should maybe have told him,” ventured Daisy.
“I don’t care what he thinks,” said Rose angrily.
¦
Harry and the rest of them left for London the following morning. Harry went straight to his office and looked at the pile of mail waiting for him. He decided to employ another secretary. He drafted out an advertisement to appear in
He felt guilty about Miss Jubbles. He should have noticed she had fallen in love with him. And he had told her all about Lady Rose working at the bank!
? Hasty Death ?
Eleven
Rudyard Kipling
Two weeks had passed since the return from Farthings, and Rose felt she had entered again into a type of luxurious convent. Once more she had to change at least six times a day and make calls with her mother or various ladies of society. She had to remember all the trivial things not to do, such as never opening a door herself, never looking round when she sat down – one had to assume a footman would be there to place the chair – and never to sit down on a chair still warm from a gentleman’s bottom.
Daisy, too, was bored and restless. She tried to console herself by remembering the hard times in the business women’s hostel. Now that it seemed as if Captain Harry was determined never to see Rose again, Daisy knew that meant she would not get a chance to see Becket.
The only freedom the pair had was when they were allowed go out on their bicycles in the park, and that was because the earl had taken the precaution of furnishing two of the footmen with bicycles and making sure they accompanied Rose and Daisy when they cycled.
And then, to make life really horrible, Tristram called and asked the earl’s permission to pay his addresses and that permission was granted. Rose refused him again and was in deep disgrace.
Perhaps her parents would not have been so angry had they known that Rose had actually refused with a certain amount of reluctance this time. She was beginning to realize that the only hope of freedom for a lady of her class was to marry a complacent husband. She would have her own household. Her husband would presumably spend most of his time at his club or in the country killing things.
Daisy had told her about Harry’s advertisement for a secretary and she wished he had asked her. He never called and he never attended any of the long, boring society events where she sat and fretted and counted the hours until she could return home to the sanctuary of books and privacy.
¦
Harry was finding it hard to engage a suitable secretary. He did not want to make another mistake.
But at last he settled on a Miss Ailsa Bridge, daughter of Scottish missionaries. She was tall and thin with a long nose and pale hooded eyes. She was in her late thirties and had travelled extensively to the Far East with her parents to convert the heathen. Ailsa had excellent shorthand and typing. She came with a reference from Brigadier Bill Handy, who said that while she had been abroad she had provided the British government with useful