proprietor.
'Yes, I'd like to speak with Mr. Pemberton, please. It's rather important.'
Any barrier, I had learned—even a potential one—was best breached by pretending urgency.
'He's not here,' said Cleaver.
'Oh dear,' I said, laying it on a bit thick. 'I'm sorry I missed him. Could you tell me when he left? Perhaps then I'll know what time to expect him.'
Flave, I thought, you ought to be in Parliament.
'He left Saturday morning. Three days ago.'
'Oh, thank you!' I breathed throatily, in a voice I hoped would fool the Pope. 'You're awfully kind.'
I rang off and returned the receiver to its cradle as gently as if it were a newly hatched chick.
'What do you think you're doing?' demanded a muffled voice.
I spun round and there was Feely, a winter scarf wrapped round the bottom part of her face.
'What are you doing?' she repeated. 'You know perfectly well you're not to use the instrument.'
'What are
Feely made a grab for me and the scarf fell away to reveal a pair of red swollen lips which were the spitting image of a Cameroon mandrill's south pole.
I was too in awe to laugh. The poison ivy I had injected into her lipstick had left her mouth a blistered crater that might have done credit to Mount Popocatepetl. My experiment had succeeded after all. Loud fanfare of trumpets!
Unfortunately, I had no time to write it up; my notebook would have to wait.
MAXIMILIAN, IN MUSTARD CHECKS, was perched on the edge of the stone horse trough which lay in the shadow of the market cross, his tiny feet dangling in the air like Humpty Dumpty. He was so small I almost hadn't seen him.
'
'Hullo, Max,' I said. 'I have a question for you.'
'Ho-ho!' he said. 'Just like that! A question! No preliminaries? No talk of the sisters? No gossip from the great concert halls of the world?'
'Well,' I said, a little embarrassed, 'I did listen to
'And how was it? Dynamically speaking? They always have an alarming tendency to shout Gilbert and Sullivan, you know.'
'Enlightening,' I said.
'Aha! You must tell me in what fashion. Dear Arthur composed some of the most sublime music ever written in this sceptered isle: ‘The Lost Chord,’ for instance. G and S fascinate me to no end. Did you know that their immortal partnership was shattered by a disagreement about the cost of a carpet?”
I looked closely at him to see if he was pulling my leg, but he seemed in earnest.
'Of course I'm simply dying to pump you about the recent unpleasantness at Buckshaw, Flavia dear, but I know your lips are thrice sealed by modesty, loyalty, and legality—and not necessarily in that order, am I correct?'
I nodded my head.
'Your question of the oracle, then?'
'Were you at Greyminster?'
Max tittered like a little yellow bird. “Oh dear, no. No where quite so grand, I'm afraid. My schooling was on the Continent, Paris to be precise, and not necessarily indoors. My cousin Lombard, though, is an old Greyminsterian. He always speaks highly enough of the place—whenever he's not at the races or playing Oh Hell at Montfort's.”
'Has he ever mentioned the head, Dr. Kissing?'
'The stamp wallah? Why, dear girl, he seldom speaks of anything else. He idolized the old gentleman. Claims old Kissing made him what he is today—which isn't much, but still.'
'I shouldn't think he's still alive? Dr. Kissing, I mean. He'd be very old, though, wouldn't he? I'm willing to bet everything I have that he's been dead for ages.'
'Then you shall lose all your money!' said Max with a whoop. 'Every blessed penny of it!'
ROOK'S END WAS TUCKED into the folds of a cozy bed formed by Squires Hill and the Jack O'Lantern, the latter a curious outcropping of the landscape which, from a distance, appeared to be an Iron Age tumulus but, upon approach, proved to be substantially larger and shaped like a skull.
I steered Gladys into Pooker's Lane, which ran along its jaw, or eastern edge. At the end of the lane, dense hedges bracketed the entrance to Rook's End.
Once past these ragged remnants of an earlier day, the lawns spread off to the east, west, and south, neglected and spiky. In spite of the sun, fingers of mist still floated in the shadows above the unkempt grass. Here and there the broad expanse of lawn was broken by one of those huge, sad beech trees whose massive boles and drooping branches always reminded me of a family of despondent elephants wandering lonely on the African veld.
Beneath the beeches, two antique ladies drifted in animated dialogue, as if competing for the role of Lady Macbeth. One was dressed in a diaphanous muslin nightgown, and a mobcap which seemed somehow to have