'You don't mean I'm
'At the moment, neither less nor more than others,' I replied. His alarm had impressed me to some extent. I did not suspect him of murder. I
I went straight to the police station. The inspector was in his office dealing with various documents, but he received me courteously and asked what he could do.
'I want to know whether a telephone call came for Mrs Kempson while you were at Hill House on the Monday after Miss Patterson was murdered, Inspector.'
'Yes, there was a call.'
'Ah!'
'From the young lady's father.'
'Nobody else?'
'Nobody else. He was very distressed, of course, and asked what we wanted him to do. He said that his wife was in a state of collapse, but if he could be of any help he would come over. I advised him to stay put and we would let him know about the inquest, as his daughter would have to be identified formally.'
And you are positive that there was no other call for Mrs Kempson that day?'
'What
'Probably nothing of importance,' I said. 'I wondered whether the photographer had rung up to explain why he had not come to the house to take the pictures at the birthday party.'
'No, he didn't ring, ma'am.'
I could not understand why the photographer had told me such a lie. I went to the Town Hall. It is a pretentious but ugly building which mars an otherwise charming street. The porter on duty enquired my business in a civil manner, so I asked him whether he had been on duty at the banquet of which I mentioned the date. It appeared that he had.
'I believe some photographs were taken,' I said.
'While he was sober, lucky enough,' said the porter. 'When he left I had to help him down the steps and then blowed if he didn't go tacking away across the street to the
I crossed the road to the
'I always do pretty well when there's a 'do' on in the Town Hall,' he informed me. 'Some of 'em come in before it starts, so as to get themselves into the mood, like, and if I'm still open when it's over, some of 'em comes in for a night-cap, as you might say.'
I mentioned the photographer.
'I understand he belonged to the night-cap contingent,' I said.
'Then you understand wrong,' said the landlord promptly. 'He comes in here in a state which I should describe as unfortunate and I refused to serve him.'
'He did not get anything to drink here?'
'He did not, madam. Do you think I want to lose my licence? I told him I was shutting up shop and he'd best go home and sleep it off.'
'You did not take him behind your bar and minister to him in your back room?'
The landlord stared at me incredulously.
'Who's been telling you
'It was rumoured. You deny it, then?'
'If you wasn't a lady I'd do more than deny it; I'd add a few rude words to make my meaning clear.'
'So what happened to him?'
'My pot-man found him laid out sleeping it off in the gents when he went to hose out on the Sunday morning, but whether he'd been there all night, well, that I couldn't undertake to say.'
Intriguing, don't you think, dear Sir Walter?
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
THE PENNY DROPS
As you will realise, dear Sir Walter, the result of my investigations provided us with four lines of enquiry, for, after my meeting with the photographer, the police and I were pursuing our ends in even closer association than before.
The situation which confronted us was not, as so often happens in cases of murder, the necessity to break down alibis, but to establish them. Among our suspects, as I saw it, four had to be cleared and one retained.
'Psychology first,' said the inspector. 'I'm a great believer in it since one of your lot, ma'am, if I may so refer to a body of learned ladies and gentlemen in whom, usually, our lot don't place much confidence, was able to