“No, it’s still quite clear,” said Arnold.
“Come along. I’ll help you,” said Agatha. “No, don’t anyone else bother. I’m an expert at this sort of thing.”
She carried the spoiled papers down to the end of the garden and carefully pinned them up, her mind working furiously. Trixie is wearing an expensive dress. She did that deliberately. Trixie must have been stealing from the funds.
“Where is the money kept, Arnold?” she asked.
“In the vicarage.”
“I think you should take it yourself and put it in a safe deposit box in the bank. Think about it. Someone who has committed murder wouldn’t stop short at a robbery.”
The vicar came to join them. “My poor wife begs to be excused. She is very distressed.”
“It’s all right,” said Arnold. “Thanks to Mrs. Raisin’s idea, there is no harm done.”
“Please call me Agatha.”
“Very well. Agatha. Although I find this modern business of calling acquaintances by their first names very … familiar. Agatha has had a splendid idea.”
He outlined the idea for putting all the money in a safe deposit box.
“Excellent,” enthused the vicar. “It certainly is not safe to keep so much money at the vicarage. I’ll go and bag it up. Perhaps we can each have a key to the box, Arnold?”
“Just for yourself and Arnold,” said Agatha quickly. “No one else.”
“Of course.”
There was no sign of Trixie when they entered the vicarage. The money was packed into bags. Then Agatha and Roy escorted Arnold to his bank and waited while he made arrangements for the safe deposit box and saw the money safely stowed away. “I forgot that Mr. Chance should have come with us to sign for the other key,” said Arnold as they left the bank.
Back in the village, they refused Arnold’s invitation to join him for tea in his cottage.
Agatha had parked the car near the church. “We’ll walk from here,” she said. “Must get some exercise.”
“So what was that all about?” asked Roy. “Don’t you trust the vicar?”
“I don’t trust his wife. First, that gown she was wearing cost a fortune. Secondly, she deliberately spilled lemonade over the accounts. Thirdly, I think she’s getting her harpy fingers into the money.”
“But what about that poor accountant? What if someone forces him to get the money and then bumps him off?”
Agatha stood stock-still. Then she said, “Snakes and bastards. I might be risking his life. Back to Arnold’s we go.”
Agatha explained carefully to Arnold that he should give her the key and let it be known that she had it. The elderly accountant looked relieved. “I do feel all that money is a great responsibility. The manager at the bank was very helpful. He said I could use a little room there to do the accounts and that means the money does not need to leave the bank. Then when I have counted it thoroughly—I thought I had already done so, but there seem to be some discrepancies—it can go into a separate account and then cheques can be sent to the various beneficiaries.”
“You mean, money is missing?”
“Oh, I am sure it is all down to my faulty eyesight. Here is the key. I will collect it from you when I need it at your office if you will supply me with the address.”
Agatha handed him a card. “I’ll go with you,” she said. “When it gets to the chequebook stage, there is no reason for anyone else to have to sign the cheques.”
“I had thought of two signatures, mine and Mr. Chance.”
“I don’t think that will be necessary,” said Agatha briskly.
“Now you’ve put your own life at risk,” said Roy as they walked back to their original parking place.
“I think I’ve made it all too complicated for dear Trixie.”
“What if it’s someone else?”
“There is no one else. Oh, here comes the lady of the manor.”
Miss Triast-Perkins came slowly towards them. “Have you just come from the vicarage?” she asked.
“We were there earlier,” said Agatha.
“Was Mrs. Chance wearing a lace gown?”
“Yes, she was.”
“Now that is too bad of her. That was one of my grandmother’s gowns. I lent it to her for amateur theatricals, to be worn carefully onstage but not around the house. I shall go and get it back now. I should never have lent it to her.”
Miss Triast-Perkins tottered off on a pair on unsuitable high-heeled sandals.
“Now, what have I done?” said Agatha gloomily.
“Maybe it’s the vicar.”
“Maybe it’s just Arnold’s eyesight,” said Agatha. “I should have gone over the books with him. I wonder if those papers have been collected off the washing line, or Trixie’s found some way to destroy them.”