The parlour door opened and Dido found that she must hastily put away her look of discontent, for the intruder was not Margaret, but Mr Lomax.
‘Miss Kent,’ he exclaimed, coming to a standstill in the middle of the room with a look of great confusion, ‘I have had the most alarming letter …’ He stopped as he saw the anxiety on her face and held out a reassuring hand. ‘Forgive me – I should not have been so violent. There is nothing to distress yourself about. No bad news from any of our friends. I only meant that I have received a letter which has puzzled me very much. I cannot make out what it means.’
‘Indeed?’ She invited him to a seat and for a moment they faced one another in silence across the green baize tablecloth. Rain pattered on the window beside them. He looked as if he did not know how to go on. ‘May I ask who this letter is from?’ she prompted.
‘It is from my friend, George Lockhart,’ he replied, then, seeing her blank look, he added, ‘George lives in Shropshire – very close to old Mrs Foote.’
‘Oh yes!’ cried Dido with rising interest. ‘I recall – it was to him you were to apply for information about Miss Fenn’s family?’
‘It was.’
He pressed together the tips of his fingers – causing her to ask: ‘And what has he told you that is making you think so very deeply, Mr Lomax?’
‘He has told me that there is no family of the name of Fenn living in that neighbourhood.’
‘Is he quite sure?’
‘Oh yes. He is certain that there is no family called Fenn residing within thirty miles of Mrs Foote’s home.’
‘How very strange,’ she cried. ‘I was sure that Miss Fenn had come from that county. I thought that her family were neighbours of Mrs Foote and that is how she came to be recommended to the Harmans. But perhaps,’ she said, considering, ‘I may have mistaken Anne’s information … Perhaps it was an acquaintance Mrs Foote formed in town … But no,’ she added, ‘no, all the gossiping ladies of Badleigh and Madderstone are quite
He was frowning over his linked fingers and she understood his looks well enough to know that he was far from comfortable. There was something else to tell – something which he was reluctant to broach.
‘My friend George is a … singular fellow,’ he began slowly. ‘He is very persistent. Once he is presented with a puzzle he cannot rest until it is solved.’ He smiled. ‘In fact, I know of only one person who can equal him for finding things out – and that is yourself.’
‘Then Mr Lockhart must be a remarkably capable and intelligent man!’
‘I shall not, of course, contradict you,’ he said with a gracious inclination of his head. ‘But I confess that, in the present case, he has been a great deal more …
Dido found herself rather warming to the unknown Mr Lockhart. ‘And what has he discovered?’ she asked eagerly.
‘He has discovered Elinor Fenn. He has discovered that, until twenty two years ago, Elinor Fenn was living in Mrs Foote’s own house.’
‘Oh! But I thought you said that there was no one of that name in the neighbourhood.’
‘Ah no,’ he said gravely. ‘I said that there was no
‘You are too precise!’
‘Not at all. The science of disputation requires precision. Besides …’ He could not suppress a smile. ‘Are you not always reminding me of the importance of noticing details?’
She opened her mouth to argue, but could find nothing to say, and he continued with insufferable self- complacency.
‘Elinor Fenn did indeed reside in Shropshire. She was, in point of fact …’ He stopped – his uneasiness was returned now. ‘She was a maid in Mrs Foote’s household.’
‘A maid!’ cried Dido – her resentment all forgotten in the shock. ‘Elinor Fenn was a maid before coming to Madderstone?’
‘It would seem that she was.’ He looked down at his linked fingers. ‘You must understand,’ he said, after a moment’s struggle, ‘that I did not
‘Did he indeed?’ cried Dido whose regard for Mr Lockhart was increasing rapidly. ‘How very shocking! And what did this gossip reveal?’
He frowned at her severely, but continued. ‘It revealed that the young woman disappeared from her employer’s home …’
‘Twenty-two years ago?’
‘Yes. And it is supposed – as it generally is in such cases – that the reason for her sudden removal was —’
‘She was with child!’
He inclined his head reluctantly and Dido sat for several minutes eagerly considering his information. ‘And do the men of the taverns and stables have anything to say about who the father of her child might be?’ she asked.
‘No,’ he said with a reproving frown. ‘They do not. And,’ he added hastily, ‘before you suggest it, no, I shall
There was something about the set of his jaw as he spoke which determined her against pressing him. Instead she considered the information which Mr Lockhart had supplied.
‘I suppose,’ she mused, ‘that Miss Fenn’s simple possessions – the coarse hairbrush, the old bible –
‘She lived in comfort at Madderstone,’ he remarked, the note of distaste and disapproval very strong in his voice. ‘It would seem that her sin was rather well rewarded.’
‘Yes, but …’
‘But?’ He regarded her questioningly.
‘It is so very strange,’ she mused. ‘That her history should be so … dishonourable.’ She hesitated to go on with the subject; she sensed his discomfort at its indelicacy – and yet, she was too puzzled, too intrigued to stop. ‘Miss Fenn appeared to her neighbours to be such a virtuous woman.’
‘Then it would seem her neighbours were deceived.’
‘That is just what Mr Portinscale says. But I find it very hard to believe.’ She frowned out of the streaming window at a dripping strand of climbing rose, which scraped to and fro across the glass. ‘You see, Mr Lomax, I have always had a great idea that we cannot hide our true selves from our neighbours. At least,’ she added, turning back to him with a smiling shrug of the shoulders, ‘those of us who live in the country cannot. In the hurry and busyness of a town it may be different. But here in the country – where we lack other diversions – I believe we will
‘I grant,’ he said, ‘that in the country a great deal of time is devoted to knowing our neighbours’ business.’
‘And yet, here was Miss Fenn, residing in a country village and so surrounded by a hundred voluntary spies, but she contrived to keep her character completely hidden. Do you not think it quite extraordinary?’
‘It is, perhaps, unusual,’ he admitted. ‘But I believe that, in this case, you must give up your “great idea” to proof and reason. The evidences are all against you.’
Yet she could not give it up, and his urging only made her more determined upon defence. She thought of the simple possessions; the notes written upon sermons; the text above the bed. She began, with great determination, to look around for proofs and reasons of her own. ‘Perhaps she was not guilty …’
‘Her guilt is proved. There is the child – and this sudden removal from her employer’s house.’
‘And yet,’ she pursued, ‘perhaps it is possible that she was innocent … It might be,’ she said, leaning eagerly across the green baize as a new thought occurred, ‘it might be that the sin was not mutual.’
He looked startled as her meaning struck home. ‘I do not think you had better go on,’ he said with grave