Envious Casca Read online



  ‘You knew nothing of that! Over and over again I’ve told them so!’

  ‘Yes, my dear uncle, and if you had not previously told Valerie that I was the heir I daresay the Inspector might listen to you. As it is, I have just sustained a cross-examination which leaves me with the conviction that not one word I said was believed.’

  ‘But you are still at large,’ Mathilda pointed out.

  ‘Being given rope to hang myself, no doubt.’

  ‘Don’t be absurd!’ she said sharply. ‘I don’t believe any of this! They’ll have to find out how Nat was murdered behind locked doors before they can arrest you!’

  ‘From the trend of the questions put to me,’ said Stephen, ‘I infer that I entered the room through one of the windows.’

  ‘But they were all shut!’ Joseph said.

  ‘A pity I didn’t get you to verify that fact,’ said Stephen. ‘The police have only my word for it.’

  Joseph smote his brow with one clenched fist. ‘Fool that I was! But I never thought – never dreamed – Oh, if one could but look into the future!’

  Maud, who came into the room at that moment, overheard this wish, and said: ‘I am sure it would be very uncomfortable. I once had my fortune told, and I remember that it quite upset me, for I was told that I should travel far across the seas, and I am not at all fond of foreign travel, besides suffering from sea-sickness.’

  ‘Well, that is a very valuable contribution to our discussion,’ said Stephen, with suspicious amiability. ‘On the whole I prefer the Empress.’

  At the sound of this word Maud’s placid countenance clouded over a little. ‘It is a most extraordinary thing where that book can have got to,’ she said. ‘I am sure I have looked everywhere. However, the Inspector, who is a very civil and obliging man, has promised to keep his eyes open, so I daresay it will turn up.’

  Mathilda’s ever-lively sense of humour overcame the gloom induced by Stephen’s morbid prognostications, and she burst out laughing. ‘You haven’t really told the Inspector to look for your book, have you?’ she asked.

  ‘After all, dear,’ said Maud mildly, ‘it is a detective’s business to look for things.’

  ‘My dear, you shouldn’t have taken up the Inspector’s time with such a trivial matter!’ said Joseph, a little shocked. ‘You must remember that he is engaged on far, far more important work.’

  Maud was unimpressed. Seating herself in her accustomed chair by the fire, she said: ‘I do not think that it will do anyone any good to know who killed Nat, Joe, for as he is dead there is nothing to be done about it, and it will only create a great deal of unpleasantness to pry into the affair. Like Hamlet,’ she added. ‘Simply upsetting things. But the Life of the Empress of Austria belongs to the lending library, and if it is lost I shall be obliged to pay for it. Besides, I hadn’t finished it.’

  This was so unanswerable that beyond begging her, rather feebly, not to waste the Inspector’s time in such an absurd fashion, Joseph allowed the matter to drop. The rest of the party began to assemble in the room for tea, and everyone’s attention was diverted from the major anxiety of the moment by Valerie’s simple but effective way of carrying off what could only be regarded as a difficult situation. Surveying the company with cornflower blue eyes of limpid innocence, she said: ‘Oh, I say, has Stephen told you that we’re unengaged? I expect you probably think it’s fairly lousy of me to call it off just because the police think he murdered Mr Herriard, but actually it wasn’t me at all, but Mummy. And anyway, we’d completely gone off each other, so it doesn’t matter.’ She smiled in a dazzling way, and added: ‘The funny thing is that I like him much more now that we’re not engaged. As a matter of fact, I was loathing him before.’

  ‘Both sentiments, let me tell you, are entirely reciprocated,’ said Stephen, grinning.

  ‘I’m afraid,’ said Joseph sadly, ‘that you haven’t learnt yet, my dear, what it is to care for someone.’

  ‘Oh gosh, yes, I have. I’ve been simply madly in love often and often. I mean, utterly over at the knees!’ Valerie told him.

  ‘Young people nowadays,’ pronounced Maud, ‘do not attach so much importance to engagements as they did when I was a girl. It was considered to be very fast to be engaged more than once.’

  ‘How quaint!’ said Valerie. ‘I expect I shall be engaged dozens of times.’

  ‘Well, when you get married, I will give you a handsome wedding present,’ said Stephen.

  ‘Oh, Stephen, you are a lamb! I do hope they don’t go and convict you!’ said Valerie, with a naïve sincerity that robbed her words of offence.

  She then settled down to flirt with Roydon, in which agreeable occupation she was uninterrupted until her mother came into the room, radiating brassy good-humour and a somewhat overpowering scent.

  It took a strong-minded hostess to prevent Mrs Dean usurping the centre of the stage, and as Maud was not strong-minded, and refused to look upon herself as a hostess, that forceful lady at once assumed the functions of a doyenne. Seating herself in a commanding position, she encouraged conversation, directed people to suitable chairs, and suggested that in spite of the tragic circumstances under which they had all met they ought to try to get up a few quiet games to play after dinner. ‘After all, we must not forget that it is Christmas Day, must we?’ she asked, with a toothy smile. ‘It does no good to sit and brood. Of course, there must not be anything rowdy, but I know some very good paper-games which I know you young people will enjoy.’

  This suggestion smote everyone dumb with dismay. Paula was the first to recover the power of speech, and said, with her customary forthrightness: ‘I abominate paper-games!’

  ‘Lots of people say that to begin with,’ said Mrs Dean, ‘but they always join in in the end.’

  ‘Mummy’s absolutely marvellous at organising things,’ explained Valerie, quite unnecessarily.

  ‘No one,’ said Paula, tossing back her hair, ‘has ever yet succeeded in organising me!’

  ‘If you were one of my girlies,’ said Mrs Dean archly, ‘I should tell you not to be a silly child.’

  The expression on Paula’s face was so murderous that Mathilda, feeling that she had borne enough emotional stress during the past twenty-four hours, got up, on a murmured excuse, and left the room. She had barely crossed the hall when she was joined by Stephen.

  ‘Did your nerve fail you?’ he asked.

  ‘Badly. She behaves like a professional hostess at a hydro.’

  ‘Paula will settle her hash,’ he said indifferently.

  ‘I’ve no doubt she will, but I’m not feeling strong enough to watch the encounter. Let it be understood, Stephen, that if there are to be Quiet Games I shall go to bed with a headache!’

  ‘There won’t be. I may not be master in this house for very long, but I am tonight.’

  ‘I make all allowances for your perverted sense of humour, but I wish you wouldn’t talk like that!’

  He laughed, and pushed open the library door. ‘Go in. I’ll send for tea here.’

  ‘Do you think we ought to? It’ll look rather rude.’

  ‘Who cares?’

  ‘Not you, I know. I’m past caring.’

  He rang the bell, regarding her with an expression in his eyes hard to read. ‘Can’t you take it, Mathilda?’

  ‘Not much more of it, at all events. There’s a good deal to be said for Maud’s point of view. This kind of thing is sheer hell. What did that policeman say to you?’

  He shrugged. ‘Just what you’d expect. I rather fancy that he came to me fresh from an illuminating chat with Sturry.’

  ‘I detest Sturry!’ Mathilda said.

  ‘Yes, so do I. If I get out of this imbroglio, I shall sack

  him. I caught him with his ear to the keyhole yesterday, when Uncle was favouring us with his opinion of Roydon’s play. He won’t forgive that in a hurry.’

  ‘I’ve always thought he was the sort who’d stab you in –’ She broke off short, colour flooding her f