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  Inspector Neele surmised accurately that Vivian Dubois had asked Adele Fortescue to destroy his letters and that Adele Fortescue had told him she had done so.

  Well, now they had two more deaths on their hands. And that meant, or should mean, that Adele Fortescue had not killed her husband.

  Unless, that is – Inspector Neele considered a new hypothesis – Adele Fortescue had wanted to marry Vivian Dubois and Vivian Dubois had wanted, not Adele Fortescue, but Adele Fortescue's hundred thousand pounds which would come to her on the death of her husband. He had assumed, perhaps, that Rex Fortescue's death would be put down to natural causes. Some kind of seizure or stroke. After all, everybody seemed to be worried over Rex Fortescue's health during the last year. (Parenthetically, Inspector Neele said to himself that he must look into that question. He had a subconscious feeling that it might be important in some way.) To continue, Rex Fortescue's death had not gone according to plan. It had been diagnosed without loss of time as poisoning, and the correct poison named.

  Supposing that Adele Fortescue and Vivian Dubois had been guilty, what state would they be in then? Vivian Dubois would have been scared and Adele Fortescue would have lost her head. She might have done or said foolish things. She might have rung up Dubois on the telephone, talking indiscreetly in a way that he would have realised might have been overheard in Yewtree Lodge. What would Vivian Dubois have done next?

  It was early as yet to try and answer that question, but Inspector Neele proposed very shortly to make inquiries at the Golf Hotel as to whether Dubois had been in or out of the hotel between the hours of 4:15 and 6 o'clock. Vivian Dubois was tall and dark like Lance Fortescue. He might have slipped through the garden to the side door, made his way upstairs and then what? Looked for the letters and found them gone? Waited there, perhaps, till the coast was clear, then come down into the library when tea was over and Adele Fortescue was alone?

  But all this was going too fast –

  Neele had questioned Mary Dove and Elaine Fortescue; he must see now what Percival Fortescue's wife had to say.

  Chapter 16

  I

  Inspector Neele found Mrs Percival in her own sitting-room upstairs, writing letters. She got up rather nervously when he came in.

  "Is there anything – what – are there –"

  "Please sit down, Mrs Fortescue. There are only just a few more questions I would like to ask you."

  "Oh, yes. Yes, of course. Inspector. It's all so dreadful, isn't it? So very dreadful."

  She sat down rather nervously in an armchair. Inspector Neele sat down in the small, straight chair near her. He studied her rather more carefully than he had done heretofore. In some ways a mediocre type of woman, he thought – and thought also that she was not very happy. Restless, unsatisfied, limited in mental outlook, yet he thought she might have been efficient and skilled in her own profession of hospital nurse. Though she had achieved leisure by her marriage with a well-to-do man, leisure had not satisfied her. She bought clothes, read novels and ate sweets, but he remembered her avid excitement on the night of Rex Fortescue's death, and he saw in it not so much a ghoulish satisfaction but rather a revelation of the arid deserts of boredom which encompassed her life. Her eyelids fluttered and fell before his searching glance. They gave her the appearance of being both nervous and guilty, but he could not be sure that that was really the case.

  "I'm afraid," he said soothingly, "we have to ask people questions again and again. It must be very tiresome for you all. I do appreciate that, but so much hangs, you understand, on the exact timing of events. You came down to tea rather late, I understand? In fact. Miss Dove came up and fetched you."

  "Yes. Yes, she did. She came and said tea was in. I had no idea it was so late. I'd been writing letters."

  Inspector Neele just glanced over at the writing-desk.

  "I see," he said. "Somehow, or other, I thought you'd been out for a walk."

  "Did she say so? Yes – now I believe you're right. I had been writing letters, then it was so stuffy and my head ached so I went out and – er – went for a walk. Only round the garden."

  "I see. You didn't meet anyone?"

  "Meet anyone?" She stared at him. "What do you mean?"

  "I just wondered if you'd seen anybody or anybody had seen you during this walk of yours."

  "I saw the gardener in the distance, that's all." She was looking at him suspiciously.

  "Then you came in, came up here to your room and you were just taking your things off when Miss Dove came in to tell you that tea was ready?"

  "Yes. Yes, and so I came down."

  "And who was there?"

  "Adele and Elaine, and a minute or two later Lance arrived. My brother-in-law, you know. The one who's come back from Kenya ."

  "And then you all had tea?"

  "Yes, we had tea. Then Lance went up to see Aunt Effie and I came up here to finish my letters. I left Elaine there with Adele."

  He nodded reassuringly.

  "Yes. Miss Fortescue seems to have been with Mrs Fortescue for quite five or ten minutes after you left. Your husband hadn't come home yet?"

  "Oh no. Percy – Val – didn't get home until about half-past six of seven. He'd been kept up in town."

  "He came back by train?"

  "Yes. He took a taxi from the station."

  "Was it unusual for him to come back by train?"

  "He does sometimes. Not very often. I think he'd been to places in the city where it's rather difficult to park the car. It was easier for him to take a train home from Cannon Street ."

  "I see," said Inspector Neele. He went on, "I asked your husband if Mrs Fortescue had made a will before she died. He said he thought not. I suppose you don't happen to have any idea?"

  To his surprise Jennifer Fortescue nodded vigorously.

  "Oh, yes," she said. "Adele made a will. She told me so."

  "Indeed! When was this?"

  "Oh, it wasn't very long ago. About a month ago, I think."

  "That's very interesting," said Inspector Neele.

  Mrs Percival leant forward eagerly. Her face now was all animation. She clearly enjoyed exhibiting her superior knowledge.

  "Val didn't know about it," she said. "Nobody knew. It just happened that I found out about it. I was in the street. I had just come out of the stationer's, then I saw Adele coming out of the solicitor's office. Ansell and Worrall's you know. In the High Street."

  "Ah," said Neele, "the local solicitors?"

  "Yes. And I said to Adele 'Whatever have you been doing there?' I said. And she laughed and said 'Wouldn't you like to know?' And then as we walked along together she said 'I'll tell you, Jennifer. I've been making my will.' 'Well,' I said, 'why are you doing that, Adele, you're not ill or anything, are you?' And she said no, of course she wasn't ill. She'd never felt better. But everyone ought to make a will. She said she wasn't going to those stuck-up family solicitors in London , Mr Billingsley. She said the old sneak would go round and tell the family. 'No,' she said, 'My will's my own business, Jennifer, and I'll make it my own way and nobody's going to know about it.' 'Well, Adele,' I said, 'I shan't tell anybody.' She said 'It doesn't matter if you do. You won't know what's in it.' But I didn't tell anyone. No, not even Percy. I do think women ought to stick together, don't you, Inspector Neele?"

  "I'm sure that's a very nice feeling on your part, Mrs Fortescue," said Inspector Neele, diplomatically.

  "I'm sure I'm never ill-natured," said Jennifer. "I didn't particularly care for Adele, if you know what I mean. I always thought she was the kind of woman who would stick at nothing in order to get what she wanted. Now she's dead, perhaps I misjudged her, poor soul."

  "Well, thank you very much, Mrs Fortescue, for being so helpful to me."

  "You're welcome, I'm sure. I'm only too glad to do anything I can. It's all so very terrible, isn't it? Who is the old lady who's arrived this morning?"

  "She's a Miss Marple. She very kindly came here to give us what
information she could about the girl Gladys. It seems Gladys Martin was once in service with her."

  "Really? How interesting."

  "There's one other thing, Mrs Percival. Do you know anything about blackbirds?"

  Jennifer Fortescue started violently. She dropped her handbag on the floor and bent to pick it up.

  "Blackbirds, Inspector? Blackbirds? What kind of blackbirds?"

  Her voice was rather breathless. Smiling a little. Inspector Neele said:

  "Just blackbirds. Alive or dead or even, shall we say, symbolical?"

  Jennifer Fortescue said sharply:

  "I don't know what you mean. I don't know what you're talking about."

  "You don't know anything about blackbirds, then, Mrs Fortescue?"

  She said slowly:

  "I suppose you mean the ones last summer in the pie. All very silly."

  "There were some left on the library table, too, weren't there?"

  "It was all a very silly practical joke. I don't know who's been talking to you about it. Mr Fortescue, my father-in-law, was very much annoyed by it."

  "Just annoyed? Nothing more?"

  "Oh. I see what you mean. Yes, I suppose – yes, it's true. He asked us if there were any strangers about the place."

  "Strangers!" Inspector Neele raised his eyebrows.

  "Well, that's what he said," said Mrs Percival defensively.

  "Strangers," repeated Inspector Neele thoughtfully. Then he asked, "Did he seem afraid in any way?"

  "Afraid? I don't know what you mean."

  "Nervous. About strangers, I mean."

  "Yes. Yes, he did, rather. Of course I don't remember very well. It was several months ago, you know. I don't think it was anything except a silly practical joke. Crump perhaps. I really do think that Crump is a very unbalanced man, and I'm perfectly certain that he drinks. He's really very insolent in his manner sometimes. I've sometimes wondered if he could have had a grudge against Mr Fortescue. Do you think that's possible, Inspector?"

  "Anything's possible," said Inspector Neele and went away.

  II

  Percival Fortescue was in London , but Inspector Neele found Lancelot sitting with his wife in the library. They were playing chess together.

  "I don't want to interrupt you," said Neele, apologetically.

  "We're only killing time. Inspector, aren't we, Pat?"

  Pat nodded.

  "I expect you'll think it's rather a foolish question I'm asking you," said Neele. "Do you know anything about blackbirds, Mr Fortescue?"

  "Blackbirds?" Lance looked amused. "What kind of blackbirds? Do you mean genuine birds, or the slave trade?"

  Inspector Neele said with a sudden, disarming smile:

  "I'm not sure what I mean, Mr Fortescue. It's just that a mention of blackbirds has turned up."

  "Good Lord." Lancelot looked suddenly alert, "Not the old Blackbird Mine, I suppose?"

  Inspector Neele said sharply:

  "The Blackbird Mine? What was that?"

  Lance frowned in a puzzled fashion.

  "The trouble is. Inspector, that I can't really remember much myself. I just have a vague idea about some shady transaction in my papa's past. Something on the West Coast of Africa . Aunt Effie I believe, once threw it in his teeth, but I can't remember anything definite about it."

  "Aunt Effie? That will be Miss Ramsbottom, won't it?"

  "Yes."

  "I'll go and ask her about it," said Inspector Neele. He added ruefully, "She's rather a formidable old lady, Mr Fortescue. Always makes me feel quite nervous."

  Lance laughed.

  "Yes. Aunt Effie is certainly a character, but she may be helpful to you. Inspector, if you get on the right side of her. Especially if you're delving into the past. She's got an excellent memory, she takes a positive pleasure in remembering anything that's detrimental in any way." He added thoughtfully, "There's something else. I went up to see her, you know, soon after I got back here. Immediately after tea that day, as a matter of fact. And she was talking about Gladys. The maid who got killed. Not that we knew she was dead then, of course. But Aunt Effie was saying she was quite convinced that Gladys knew something that she hadn't told the police."

  "That seems fairly certain," said Inspector Neele. "She'll never tell it now, poor girl."

  "No. It seems Aunt Effie had given her good advice as to spilling anything she knew. Pity the girl didn't take it."

  Inspector Neele nodded. Bracing himself for the encounter he penetrated to Miss Ramsbottom's fortress. Rather to his surprise, he found Miss Marple there. The two ladies appeared to be discussing foreign missions.

  "I'll go away, Inspector." Miss Marple rose hurriedly to her feet.

  "No need, madam," said Inspector Neele.

  "I've asked Miss Marple to come and stay in the house," said Miss Ramsbottom. "No sense in spending money in that ridiculous Golf Hotel. A wicked nest of profiteers, that is. Drinking and card playing all the evening. She'd better come and stay in a decent Christian household. There's a room next door to mine. Dr Mary Peters, the missionary, had it last."

  "It's very, very kind of you," said Miss Marple, "but I really think I mustn't intrude in a house of mourning."

  "Mourning? Fiddlesticks," said Miss Ramsbottom. "Who'll weep for Rex in this house? Or Adele either? Or is it the police you're worried about? Any objections, Inspector?"

  "None from me, madam."

  "There you are," said Miss Ramsbottom.

  "It's very kind of you," said Miss Marple gratefully. "I'll go and telephone to the hotel to cancel my booking." She left the room and Miss Ramsbottom said sharply to the Inspector:

  "Well, and what do you want?"

  "I wondered if you could tell me anything about the Blackbird Mine, ma'am."

  Miss Ramsbottom uttered a sudden, shrill cackle of laughter.

  "Ha. You've got on to that, have you! Took the hint I gave you the other day. Well, what do you want to know about it?"

  "Anything you can tell me, madam."

  "I can't tell you much. It's a long time ago now – oh, twenty to twenty-five years maybe. Some concession or other in East Africa . My brother-in-law went into it with a man called MacKenzie. They went out there to investigate the mine together and MacKenzie died out there of fever. Rex came home and said the claim or the concession or whatever you call it was worthless. That's all I know."

  "I think you know a little more than that, ma'am," said Neele persuasively.

  "Anything else is hearsay. You don't like hearsay in the law, so I've been told."

  "We're not in court yet, ma'am."

  "Well, I can't tell you anything. The MacKenzies kicked up a fuss. That's all I know. They insisted that Rex had swindled MacKenzie. I daresay he did. He was a clever, unscrupulous fellow, but I've no doubt whatever he did it was all legal. They couldn't prove anything. Mrs MacKenzie was an unbalanced sort of woman. She came here and made a lot of threats of revenge. Said Rex had murdered her husband. Silly, melodramatic fuss! I think she was a bit off her head – in fact, I believe she went into an asylum not long after. Came here dragging along a couple of young children who looked scared to death. Said she'd bring up her children to have revenge. Something like that. Tomfoolery, all of it. Well, that's all I can tell you. And mind you, the Blackbird Mine wasn't the only swindle that Rex put over in his lifetime. You'll find a good many more if you look for them. What put you on to the Blackbird? Did you come across some trail leading to the MacKenzies?"

  "You don't know what became of the family, ma'am?"

  "No idea," said Miss Ramsbottom. "Mind you, I don't think Rex would have actually murdered MacKenzie, but he might have left him to die. The same thing before the Lord, but not the same thing before the law. If he did, retribution's caught up with him. The mills of God grind slowly, but they grind exceeding small – you'd better go away now, I can't tell you any more and it's no good your asking."

  "Thank you very much for what you have told me," said Inspector N
eele.

  "Send that Marple woman back," Miss Ramsbottom called after him. "She's frivolous, like all Church of England people, but she knows how to run a charity in a sensible way."

  Inspector Neele made a couple of telephone calls, the first to Ansell and Worrall and the second to the Golf Hotel, then he summoned Sergeant Hay and told him that he was leaving the house for a short period.

  "I've a call to pay at a solicitor's office – after that, you can get me at the Golf Hotel if anything urgent turns up."

  "Yes, sir."

  "And find out anything you can about blackbirds," added Neele over his shoulder.

  "Blackbirds, sir?" Sergeant Hay repeated, thoroughly mystified.

  "That's what I said – not blackberry jelly – blackbirds."

  "Very good, sir," said Sergeant Hay bewilderedly.

  Chapter 17

  I

  Inspector Neele found Mr Ansell the type of solicitor who was more easily intimidated than intimidating. A member of a small and not very prosperous firm, he was anxious not to stand upon his rights but instead to assist the police in every way possible.

  Yes, he said, he had made a will for the late Mrs Adele Fortescue. She had called at his office about five weeks previously. It had seemed to him rather a peculiar business but naturally he had not said anything. Peculiar things did happen in a solicitor's business, and of course the Inspector would understand that discretion, etc., etc. The Inspector nodded to show he understood. He had already discovered Mr Ansell had not transacted any legal business previously for Mrs Fortescue or for any of the Fortescue family.

 

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