at the knees,” said Macdonald, “but I think you’ve got one point. If she went on her knees first, even though she did hit her head somehow on the handrail, she wouldn’t have hit it hard enough to make the bruise described. There wouldn’t have been enough velocity. It’d have been a flop, not a crash.”

“The only other way she could have bruised the back of her head was if she fell flat on her back while walking over the bridge,” added Reeves. “In which case I don’t see how she rolled into the river without assistance. The bridge isn’t that narrow, and it’s perfectly steady.”

“Yes. I agree with you there.”

“We might offer a prize to any near-six-footer who succeeds in banging his/her head on the handrail when they go at the knees on this bridge,” said Reeves. “Seeing’s believing. How much could the folks in the Mill House hear of what goes on out here, Chief?”

“They couldn’t hear any ordinary coming and going, nor voices speaking conversationally. The sound of the water prevents it. They could have heard a scream, I imagine. Also, it’s worth while remembering that farmers develop an uncannily quick ear for hearing any unusual sound at night. It’s second nature to them to listen for any disturbance among their stock—and that house on the other side of the footpath by the Venners’ is a farmhouse.”

“I don’t believe anybody batted the woman over the head while she was on this bridge, Chief. It’s too close to the houses and the road.”

“Yes, and it’s an awkward spot to swing a stick or a cosh,” said Macdonald. “Added to which, footsteps are much more audible on a plank bridge than on solid ground. But nobody would have wanted to lift deceased’s body if they could help it. She was too heavy.”

Macdonald walked across the bridge and stood on the far bank facing the stream; behind him was a hedge of thorn and dog rose, elder, blackthorn, and bramble; to his left the path led on to the sawmill: to his right the hedge was broken by the path leading up through the park. There was a five-barred gate across the path, latched but not padlocked.

“I think it must have happened here,” he said. Reeves, who had followed him, nodded.

“I agree, but where was she going? I’d got it into my head she’d have been walking across the bridge, towards the street, but she must have turned off here and gone left a bit, by the stream.”

“The point we want to decide is, what was she doing here?” said Macdonald.

Reeves looked at him enquiringly. “We’re cutting out all the stuff about ‘Sister was queer-like, awful tired Sister was and her turned dizzy, poor soul’?”

Macdonald nodded. “I think so. I shall know better when I’ve seen her account books and the rest. Nervous disorder nearly always shows in a person’s handwriting and arrangement of the page, as well as in precision or lack of it: mistakes, erasures, and the like. If I find, as I expect to find, that her recent bookkeeping has the same precision and legibility as that of past years, I shall assume that she was in normal control of her faculties.”

“All right,” said Reeves. “My guess would be that she came here to meet somebody, or else to spy on somebody. She may have been one of those dames who get a thing about courting couples.”

“Quite possibly, but I favour the former rather than the latter. You see, the village knew she wandered at night, and villagers share their information among themselves. Courting couples would have avoided this spot.”

“Yes. There’s that,” agreed Reeves, “but if she was meeting somebody, why the heck come right down here? There must be plenty of meeting places in the park where nobody would have been likely to see her at all, and it’s the devil of a steep path, isn’t it?”

“I imagine so. Let’s walk up through the park,” said Macdonald.

“And call on the quality,” said Reeves, a grin flashing across his keen dark face.

“Not yet. I’m going to leave them till last,” said Macdonald.

“That’ll annoy them no end. Gentry expect to be priority,” said Reeves. “Didn’t you sense that Peel believed the gentry was on in this act?”

“I think he felt that they’d been reinforcing the village technique,” said Macdonald as they went through the five-barred gate and turned up the path which had been cut in the steep hillside. To their right the ground dropped almost sheer to the fiver; to their left it rose to the ridge where the village street ran.

“It’d be the hell of a path on a dark night,” said Reeves thoughtfully.

CHAPTER VIII

When the two C.I.D. men reached the little plateau at the top of the hill, Reeves said: “That’s quite a climb, Chief.”

Macdonald nodded, his eyes on the Manor House and the church tower beyond. “As you say—and that’s a lovely house. The smaller one over there would be the Dower House. I think I’ll go and talk to Dr. Ferens, if he’s at home. According to Peel, he’s the one person in the place who talks plain common sense.”

“Right. If it’s all the same to you I’ll go and buy stamps at the post office and shoelaces at the general store and maybe some seeds for my garden.”

“It’s too late in the year to sow seeds. They ought to have been in two months ago.”

“They’re for next year,” said Reeves. “What can I sow for next year?”

“Try wallflowers. Are you playing at being the Royal Navy?”

Reeves hitched up his dark eyebrows. “R.N.? Oh, I see. Showing the flag. Those were the days.”

He grinned as he turned left along a path which led by the walled garden to the village street, and Macdonald opened a handsome gate, strolled across a wide lawn, and entered the garden of the Dower House by the gate in the yew hedge. A slim sunburnt girl, barelegged, bare-armed, dark-headed, clad in a cotton frock

Вы читаете Murder in the Mill-Race
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату
×