asked her.
'No,' said Laura. 'No, I didn't go to the inquest.'
'He seems to have felt very revengeful,' the inspector commented.
Laura gave a sad smile. 'It must have affected his brain, I think,' she agreed.
Jan, who had gradually been getting very excited, came up to them. 'If I had an enemy,' he exclaimed aggressively, 'that's what I'd do. I'd wait a long time, and then I'd come creeping along in the dark with my gun. Then – ' He shot at the armchair with an imaginary gun. 'Bang, bang, bang.'
'Be quiet, Jan,' Laura ordered him, sharply.
Jan suddenly looked upset. 'Are you angry with me, Laura?' he asked her, childishly.
'No, darling,' Laura reassured him, 'I'm not angry. But try not to get too excited.'
'I'm not excited,' Jan insisted.
CHAPTER TEN
Crossing the front hall, Miss Bennett paused to admit Starkwedder and a police constable who seemed to have arrived on the doorstep together.
'Good morning, Miss Bennett,' Starkwedder greeted her. I'm here to see Inspector Thomas.'
Miss Bennett nodded. 'Good morning – oh, good morning. Constable. They're in the study, both of them – I don't know what's going on.'
'Good morning, madam,' the police constable replied. I've brought these for the inspector. Perhaps Sergeant Cadwallader could take them.'
'What's this?' Laura asked, over the rumble of voices outside.
The inspector rose and moved towards the door. 'It sounds as if Mr Starkwedder is back.'
As Starkwedder entered the room, Sergeant Cadwallader went out into the hall to deal with the constable. Meanwhile, young Jan sank into the armchair, and observed the proceedings eagerly.
'Look here,' exclaimed Starkwedder as he came into the room. 'I can't spend all day kicking my heels at the police station. I've given you my fingerprints, and then I insisted that they bring me along here. I've got things to do. I've got two appointments with a house agent today.' He suddenly noticed Laura. 'Oh – good morning, Mrs Warwick,' he greeted her. I'm terribly sorry about what has happened.'
'Good morning,' Laura replied, distantly.
The inspector went across to the table by the armchair. 'Last night, Mr Starkwedder,' he asked, 'did you by any chance lay your hand on this table, and subsequently push the window open?'
Starkwedder joined him at the table. 'I don't know,' he admitted. 'I could have done. Is it important? I can't remember.'
Sergeant Cadwallader came back into the room, carrying a file. After shutting the door behind him, he walked across to the inspector. 'Here are Mr Starkwedder's prints, sir,' he reported. 'The constable brought them. And the ballistics report.'
'Ah, let's see,' said the inspector. 'The bullet that killed Richard Warwick definitely came from this gun. As for the fingerprints, well, we'll soon see.' He went to the chair by the desk, sat, and began to study the documents, while the sergeant moved into the alcove.
After a pause, Jan, who had been staring intently at Starkwedder, asked him, 'You've just come back from Abadan , haven't you? What's Abadan like?'
'It's hot,' was the only response he got from Starkwedder, who then turned to Laura. 'How are you today, Mrs Warwick?' he asked. 'Are you feeling better?'
'Oh yes, thank you,' Laura replied. 'I've got over the shock now.'
'Good,' said Starkwedder.
The inspector had risen, and now approached Starkwedder on the sofa. 'Your prints,' he announced, 'are on the window, decanter, glass and cigarette lighter. The prints on the table are not yours. They're a completely unidentified set of prints.' He looked around the room. 'That settles it, then,' he continued. 'Since there were no visitors here –' he paused and looked at Laura – 'last night – ?'
'No,' Laura assured him.
'Then they must be MacGregor's,' continued the inspector.
'MacGregor's?' asked Starkwedder, looking at Laura.
'You sound surprised,' said the inspector.
'Yes – I am, rather,' Starkwedder admitted. 'I mean, I should have expected him to have worn gloves.'
The inspector nodded. 'You're right,' he agreed. 'He handled the revolver with gloves.'
'Was there any quarrel?' Starkwedder asked, addressing his question to Laura Warwick. 'Or was nothing heard but the shot?'
It was with an effort that Laura replied, 'I – we – Benny and I, that is – we just heard the shot. But then, we wouldn't have heard anything from upstairs.'
Sergeant Cadwallader had been gazing out at the garden through the small window in the alcove. Now, seeing someone approaching across the lawn, he moved to one side of the french windows. In through the windows there entered a handsome man in his mid-thirties, above medium height, with fair hair, blue eyes and a somewhat military aspect. He paused at the entrance, looking very worried. Jan, the first of the others in the room to notice him, squealed excitedly, 'Julian! Julian!'
The newcomer looked at Jan and then turned to Laura Warwick. 'Laura!' he exclaimed. I've just heard. I'm – I'm most terribly sorry.'
'Good morning. Major Farrar,' Inspector Thomas greeted him.
Julian Farrar turned to the inspector. 'This is an extraordinary business.' he said. 'Poor Richard.' 'He was lying here in his wheelchair,' Jan told Farrar excitedly. 'He was all crumpled up. And there was a piece of paper on his chest. Do you know what it said? It said 'Paid in full'.'
'Yes. There, there, Jan,' Julian Farrar murmured, patting the boy's shoulder.
'It is exciting, isn't it?' Jan continued, looking eagerly at him.
Farrar moved past him. 'Yes. Yes, of course it's exciting,' he assured Jan, looking enquiringly towards Starkwedder as he spoke.
The inspector introduced the two men to each other. 'This is Mr Starkwedder – Major Farrar, who may be our next Member of Parliament. He's contesting the by-election.'
Starkwedder and Julian Farrar shook hands, politely murmuring, 'How do you do?' The inspector moved away, beckoning to the sergeant who joined him. They conferred, as Starkwedder explained to Major Farrar, 'I'd run my car into a ditch, and I was coming up to the house to see if I could telephone and get some help. A man dashed out of the house, almost knocking me over.'
'But which way did this man go?' Farrar asked.
'No idea,' Starkwedder replied. 'He vanished into the mist like a conjuring trick.' He turned away, while Jan, kneeling in the armchair and looking expectantly at Farrar, said, 'You told Richard someone would shoot him one day, didn't you, Julian?'
There was a pause. Everyone in the room looked at Julian Farrar.
Farrar thought for a moment. Then, 'Did I? I don't remember,' he said brusquely.
'Oh, yes, you did,' Jan insisted. 'At dinner one night. You know, you and Richard were having a sort of argument, and you said, 'One of these days, Richard, somebody'll put a bullet through your head.''
'A remarkable prophecy,' the inspector commented.
Julian Farrar moved to sit on one end of the footstool. 'Oh well,' he said, 'Richard and his guns were pretty fair nuisance value, you know. People didn't like it. Why, there was that fellow – you remember, Laura? Your gardener, Griffiths. You know – the one Richard sacked. Griffiths certainly said to me – and on more than one occasion – 'One of these days, look you, I shall come with my gun and I shall shoot Mr Warwick.''
'Oh, Griffiths wouldn't do a thing like that,' Laura exclaimed quickly.
Farrar looked contrite. 'No, no, of course not,' he admitted. 'I – I didn't mean that. I mean that it was the sort of thing that – er – people said about Richard.'