to go and see her again.”
“What time was that?”
“I don’t remember. About tea-time. It was dark, but then it got dark even earlier than usual that December with the fog. I tapped on her door. There was someone inside, I could hear voices.”
“Her door? Which door?” “This one,’ said Marion surprised, pointing to the door of Landor’s former study.
“Of course,’ said Dalziel. ‘ thought you might have meant her house.”
“Oh, she didn’t have a house. The principal’s house was only built when Dr. Landor came. Miss. Girling had a suite of rooms here, through that door and up the stairs.”
She nodded at the room’s other door which Dalziel had already tried and found to be locked.
“What happened to the rooms?”
“Oh, they’re used for other things now. A library storeroom. The bursar’s office. That kind of thing.”
Dalziel tried the door again. Still unsuccessfully.
“Interesting,’ he said. ‘ voices did you hear?”
“When? Oh, you mean after I’d knocked? I don’t know. One was Miss. Girling’s. The other was a man’s. There may have been two. They all seemed to be talking very loudly. I don’t think anyone even heard my knock, it was so timid. Anyway, it didn’t seem a good moment, so I crept away.”
“Did you try again later?”
“I meant to. But as I was walking over about an hour later, her car went belting by me along the drive. It was going very quickly, I lifted my hand, but I doubt if she saw me. I just stood there in the middle of the drive, feeling quite miserable, watching the tail-lights disappear. I think I’d have stood there for ever if another car hadn’t come up behind me. I was almost knocked down. I don’t think I’d have minded much,’ she said with a wry grin.
“Another car?’ said Dalziel. ‘?”
“I don’t know. I jumped out of the way when he blew his horn and he went on up the drive almost as fast as Miss. Girling.”
“I see,’ said Dalziel thoughtfully. ‘ that was all?”
“Yes. I went back to my room, then spent Christmas with my dull relations. I knew nothing about the avalanche till I came back to college in January. It was terrible news. I suppose I should have been relieved I hadn’t gone. Disney certainly thought so. She alternated between the tragic bereaved bit and the I-savedyour-life line. I was too numb to take much notice. I just hung on till finals were over in the summer, then got out, rejoicing that I’d never see the place again.”
“And here you are.”
She shrugged.
Things change after a couple of years. You grow up. I saw the job, it was a good step career-wise, and I was a bit curious to see the old place. It was quite a surprise to be offered the post in fact. I hadn’t really banked on it. But I said, why not? and here I am. Disney returned to the attack, but apart from that, it was very pleasant, till Dr. Landor decided to move the statue.”
“Miss. Disney bothered you again?”
“No, not bothered. She started by implying that her influence had got me the job, then began dropping in on me, going all girlish, “isn’t it nice that we’re colleagues now?” and “let’s tell each other secrets and talk about Al,” that sort of thing.”
“What happened in the end?”
She laughed.
“It was funny really. The others noticed, of course, and most of them sympathized. But it was only Sam Fallowfield who did anything about it.
I suppose in the end I’d have worked my courage up to the point where I’d have told her myself, but I’m not a very bold person, Superintendent. So I was very pleased when Sam took a hand. All he did was join me as soon as Walt came and sat beside me. And he called to see me a couple of times just after she’d arrived. He just sat and smiled at her, nodding sympathetically every time she spoke. After a couple of weeks, she gave up. I was delighted, of course. But she hated Sam. It was obscene to see how pleased she was after this trouble with the girl blew up. She went around saying it was no more than she had expected. I could have killed her.” “I see,’ said Dalziel, wondering if she was speaking purely figuratively.
“You don’t think there was any chance she could have put the girl up to it, do you?”
This was obviously a brand-new thought to Marion. She gave it careful consideration.
“I don’t think so,’ she said slowly. ‘ was a nice girl, Anita. I’m not saying she couldn’t be influenced, but not by Disney. No, I’m certain of that. It would need a very different kind of influence than a woman like Disney could bring to bear.” “Good,’ said Dalziel, standing up to show that the interview was over.
The move was abrupt, but, as Pascoe would have vouched, it passed for courtesy compared with many of his usual modes of dismissing people.
He watched with open pleasure as Marion uncrossed her legs and stood up.
“Thank you for being so frank, Miss. Cargo,’ he said.
“I’m sorry you had to ask,’ she replied. ‘ was silly of me.”
“Not at all.’ Gallantly he opened the door.
“Just one thing,’ he said as she passed through it. The other voice you heard when you knocked on Miss. Girling’s door that night. It was definitely a man? Or men?”
She hesitated, looking back into the study as if somehow projecting herself back in time to the point where she had stood outside this same door vainly waiting to be invited in.
“Yes,’ she said. ‘ a man.”
“But you didn’t recognize it?”
“I’m not sure,’ she said slowly. ‘ was somehow familiar. But it was so distorted, I couldn’t say.”
“Distorted?” “Yes,’ she said. ‘ anger.”
The cricket match was almost over when Pascoe finally reached it. He had been delayed first of all by the task of getting hold of Marion Cargo and escorting her to Dalziel. She had come without hesitation or protest, almost as if relieved. But Halfdane, still nursing his earlier annoyance, had more than compensated for her easiness. It had only been Marion’s own insistence that prevented him from following her into the study.
Pascoe had been tempted to question him very roughly about his last sighting of Fallowfield, but remembering Dalziel’s invocation of his charm, decided he would leave it till later and start elsewhere. So, leaving Halfdane striding sentry-like up and down outside the study door, he set off on his delayed journey to the playing- fields.
He had missed the day’s main excitement, it seemed. Half-way through the afternoon one of the umpires, an elderly man with a gouty toe which made the time-lag between overs even longer than it usually is, had fallen into a kind of sun-induced trance at square-leg and had to be nursed back to consciousness with iced lemonade in the pavilion. Subsequently he had been weaned on to strawberries and cream and the prognosis seemed good. But his place had been taken by the portly figure of Henry Saltecombe who, determined not to suffer the same fate, protected his bald pate with an incongruous porkpie hat. The hat was the most interesting thing on the field as far as Pascoe was concerned. It would bear looking into, as the actress said to the conjuror, he thought.
His informant about the affairs of the day was George Dunbar who masochistically was hanging on to the bitter end, despite his expression of distaste for the game.
Perhaps he wants to establish exactly where he is, thought Pascoe, laughing at his own conditioned suspiciousness, but not dismissing the suspicion. ‘. Fallowfield around?’ he asked casually.
“Fallowfield? He’s got more bloody sense.”
“Oh. What’s he do at weekends then. Golf?’ asked Pascoe at random.
“No, he hasn’t got that much sense. Why’re you asking, eh?’ Dunbar glanced keenly at the sergeant who grunted noncommittally.
“If he’s wise, he’ll be at the quack’s,’ Dunbar went on.
“Quack’s?’ ‘ doctor’s!’ said Dunbar exasperatedly. ‘ you see him yesterday? Man, he looked ill. All this business must have been a strain. I reckon he’s heading for a crack-up, myself.”
He spoke with some relish.
“So you haven’t seen him today?”