Laurels are Poison

Gladys Mitchell

Bradley 14

1942

A 3S digital back-up edition 1.0

click for scan notes and proofing history

Contents

Chapter 1: OPEN, SESAME

Chapter 2: THE THREE MUSKETEERS

Chapter 3: CLINICAL THERMOMETER

Chapter 4: A MULTIPLICITY OF PROMISCUOUS VESSELS

Chapter 5: INTRUSION OF SERPENTS

Chapter 6: HIGH JINKS WITH A TIN-OPENER

Chapter 7: REVENGE UPON GOLDILOCKS

Chapter 8: SKIRLING AND GROANS

Chapter 9: EVIDENCE OF THE SUBMERGED TENTH

Chapter 10: THE FLYING FLACORIS

Chapter 11: THE EVE OF WATERLOO

Chapter 12: IN AND OUT THE WINDOWS

Chapter 13: HARLEQUINADE AND YULE LOG

Chapter 14: FIELD-WORK

Chapter 15: RAG

Chapter l6: BONE

Chapter 17: NYMPHS AND SATYRS

Chapter l8: IDDY UMPTY IDDY UMPTY IDDY

Chapter 19: ITYLUS

laurels are poison

Mrs Beatrice Lestrange Bradley, psychologist and detective, has become the warden of a house in a college so that she can investigate the disappearance of a previous warden. As soon as the term starts, strange things begin to happen: a bath is left to overflow, girls’ clothes are torn to shreds, snakes appear, and a girl’s hair is cut off as she sleeps.

Can Mrs Bradley solve the mysteries of the college?

First published 1942

by Michael Joseph

This edition 2001 by Olivers Press published by arrangement with the author’s estate

ISBN 0 7540 8584 8

Copyright © 1942 by Gladys Mitchell British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data available

Printed and bound in Great Britain by Redwood Books, Trowbridge, Wiltshire

LAURELS ARE POISON

Chapter 1

OPEN, SESAME

^ »

Deborah, who had that true sense of humour — if connoisseurs of it are to be believed — the ability to laugh at herself, felt that she must look rather like Will Hay in The Ghost of St Michael’s. Up the hill and over the moor she was toiling, suitcase in hand, and although she had been informed at the station that the distance to College was approximately two miles, she already felt as though she had walked at least ten.

The suitcase, which had seemed light enough at starting, now weighed, she thought, not less than three- quarters of a hundredweight, and she was further handicapped against rough country walking by her handbag and a large bunch of chrysanthemums which her landlady had thrust upon her at parting and which she had not liked to leave in the train. In addition to these other discomforts she was wearing a tiresome hat.

Fortunately the College buildings, once she was clear of the town, formed the dominating feature of an almost treeless landscape, and made at once a landmark there was no escaping and a goal towards which, without fear of error, her steps could be directed.

The moorland road was narrow and stony, and it bore out the description given by people apt at simile that it was ribbon-like. Deborah walked along in the middle of it, and was so much occupied by her physical discomforts and mental fears that she did not hear the car until a respectful sounding of the horn caused her to move aside and glance round.

The car stopped purposefully, Deborah politely, although she knew that it would be of little use for anyone to demand of her any knowledge of the country-side. The chauffeur got out and saluted. He was a stocky, grave-faced, irresistibly respectable man, and he spoke quietly, with firmness.

‘Madam would be honoured if you would accept a lift, miss, if perhaps you were bound for the College.’

‘A lift? To the College? Oh, thank you so much. It’s awfully kind. I’d be very glad indeed,’ she responded

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