So that was it. As at a birth, so at a death. Without so much as a kiss-me-quick-and-mind-the-marmalade, the only female in sight is enlisted to trot off and see that the water is boiled. Rustle something up, indeed! What did he take me for, some kind of cowboy?
'I'll see what can be arranged, Inspector,' I said. Coldly, I hoped.
'Thank you,' Inspector Hewitt said. Then, as I stamped off towards the kitchen door, he called out, 'Oh, and Flavia.'
I turned, expectantly.
'We'll come in for it. No need for you to come out here again.'
The nerve! The bloody nerve!
OPHELIA AND DAPHNE WERE already at the breakfast table. Mrs. Mullet had leaked the grim news, and there had been ample time for them to arrange themselves in poses of pretended indifference.
Ophelia's lips had still not reacted to my little preparation, and I made a mental note to record the time of my observation and the results later.
'I found a dead body in the cucumber patch,' I told them.
'How very like you,' Ophelia said, and went on preening her eyebrows.
Daphne had finished
There was an operatic silence.
'Was there a great deal of blood?' Ophelia asked at last.
'None,' I said. 'Not a drop.'
'Whose body was it?'
'I don't know,' I said, relieved at an opportunity to duck behind the truth.
'The Death of a Perfect Stranger,' Daphne proclaimed in her best BBC Radio announcer's voice, dragging herself out of Dickens, but leaving a finger in to mark her place.
'How do you know it's a stranger?' I asked.
'Elementary,' Daffy said. 'It isn't you, it isn't me, and it isn't Feely. Mrs. Mullet is in the kitchen, Dogger is in the garden with the coppers, and Father was upstairs just a few minutes ago splashing in his bath.'
I was about to tell her that it was me she had heard in the tub, but I decided not to; any mention of the bath led inevitably to gibes about my general cleanliness. But after the morning's events in the garden, I had felt the sudden need for a quick soak and a wash-up.
'He was probably poisoned,' I said. 'The stranger, I mean.'
'It's always poison, isn't it?' Feely said with a toss of her hair. 'At least in those lurid yellow detective novels. In this case, he probably made the fatal mistake of eating Mrs. Mullet's cooking.'
As she pushed away the gooey remains of a coddled egg, something flashed into my mind like a cinder popping out of the grate and onto the hearth, but before I could examine it, my chain of thought was broken.
'Listen to this,' Daphne said, reading aloud. 'Fanny Squeers is writing a letter:
'
'
'Now listen to this next bit:
'
It sounded to me like a classic case of cyanide poisoning, but I didn't much feel like sharing my insight with these two boors.
''Screaming out loud all the time I write,'' Daffy repeated. 'Imagine!'
'I know the feeling,' I said, pushing my plate away, and, leaving my breakfast untouched, I made my way slowly up the east staircase to my laboratory.
WHENEVER I WAS UPSET, I made for my sanctum sanctorum. Here, among the bottles and beakers, I would allow myself to be enveloped by what I thought of as the Spirit of Chemistry. Here, sometimes, I would reenact, step by step, the discoveries of the great chemists. Or I would lift down lovingly from the bookcase a volume from Tar de Luce's treasured library, such as the English translation of Antoine Lavoisier's
'Rank poisons,' Lavoisier called them, but I reveled in the recitation of their names like a hog at a spa.
'King's yellow!' I said aloud, rolling the words round in my mouth—savoring them in spite of their poisonous nature.
'Crystals of Venus! Fuming Liquor of Boyle! Oil of Ants!'