Three-Act Tragedy Read online

Page 11


  ‘Have patience,’ counselled Mr Satterthwaite. ‘Everything comes right in the end, you know.’

  ‘I’m not patient,’ said Egg. ‘I want to have things at once, or even quicker.’

  Mr Satterthwaite laughed, and Sir Charles turned and came towards them.

  As they sipped their drinks, they arranged a plan of campaign. Sir Charles should return to Crow’s Nest, for which he had not yet found a purchaser. Egg and her mother would return to Rose Cottage rather sooner than they had meant to do. Mrs Babbington was still living in Loomouth. They would get what information they could from her and then proceed to act upon it.

  ‘We’ll succeed,’ said Egg. ‘I know we’ll succeed.’

  She leaned forward to Sir Charles, her eyes glowing. She held out her glass to touch his.

  ‘Drink to our success,’ she commanded.

  Slowly, very slowly, his eyes fixed on hers, he raised his glass to his lips.

  ‘To success,’ he said, ‘and to the Future…’

  Third Act

  Discovery

  Chapter 1

  Mrs Babbington

  Mrs Babbington had moved into a small fisherman’s cottage not far from the harbour. She was expecting a sister home from Japan in about six months. Until her sister arrived she was making no plans for the future. The cottage chanced to be vacant, and she took it for six months. She felt too bewildered by her sudden loss to move away from Loomouth. Stephen Babbington had held the living of St Petroch, Loomouth, for seventeen years. They had been, on the whole, seventeen happy and peaceful years, in spite of the sorrow occasioned by the death of her son Robin. Of her remaining children, Edward was in Ceylon, Lloyd was in South Africa, and Stephen was third officer on the Angolia. They wrote frequently and affectionately, but they could offer neither a home nor companionship to their mother.

  Margaret Babbington was very lonely…

  Not that she allowed herself much time for thinking. She was still active in the parish—the new vicar was unmarried, and she spent a good deal of time working in the tiny plot of ground in front of the cottage. She was a woman whose flowers were part of her life.

  She was working there one afternoon when she heard the latch of the gate click, and looked up to see Sir Charles Cartwright and Egg Lytton Gore.

  Margaret was not surprised to see Egg. She knew that the girl and her mother were due to return shortly. But she was surprised to see Sir Charles. Rumour had insisted that he had left the neighbourhood for good. There had been paragraphs copied from other papers about his doings in the South of France. There had been a board ‘TO BE SOLD’ stuck up in the garden of Crow’s Nest. No one had expected Sir Charles to return. Yet return he had.

  Mrs Babbington shook the untidy hair back from her hot forehead and looked ruefully at her earth-stained hands.

  ‘I’m not fit to shake hands,’ she said. ‘I ought to garden in gloves, I know. I do start in them sometimes; but I always tear them off sooner or later. One can feel things so much better with bare hands.’

  She led the way into the house. The tiny sitting-room had been made cosy with chintz. There were photographs and bowls of chrysanthemums.

  ‘It’s a great surprise seeing you, Sir Charles. I thought you had given up Crow’s Nest for good.’

  ‘I thought I had,’ said the actor frankly. ‘But sometimes, Mrs Babbington, our destiny is too strong for us.’

  Mrs Babbington did not reply. She turned towards Egg, but the girl forestalled the words on her lips.

  ‘Look here, Mrs Babbington. This isn’t just a call. Sir Charles and I have got something very serious to say. Only—I—I should hate to upset you.’

  Mrs Babbington looked from the girl to Sir Charles. Her face had gone rather grey and pinched.

  ‘First of all,’ said Sir Charles, ‘I would like to ask you if you have had any communication from the Home Office?’

  Mrs Babbington bowed her head.

  ‘I see—well, perhaps that makes what we are about to say easier.’

  ‘Is that what you have come about—this exhumation order?’

  ‘Yes. Is it—I’m afraid it must be—very distressing to you.’

  She softened to the sympathy in his voice.

  ‘Perhaps I do not mind as much as you think. To some people the idea of exhumation is very dreadful—not to me. It is not the dead clay that matters. My dear husband is elsewhere—at peace—where no one can trouble his rest. No, it is not that. It is the idea that is a shock to me—the idea, a terrible one, that Stephen did not die a natural death. It seems so impossible—utterly impossible.’

  ‘I’m afraid it must seem so to you. It did to me—to us—at first.’

  ‘What do you mean by at first, Sir Charles?’

  ‘Because the suspicion crossed my mind on the evening of your husband’s death, Mrs Babbington. Like you, however, it seemed to me so impossible that I put it aside.’

  ‘I thought so, too,’ said Egg.

  ‘You too,’ Mrs Babbington looked at her wonderingly. ‘You thought someone could have killed—Stephen?’

  The incredulity in her voice was so great that neither of her visitors knew quite how to proceed. At last Sir Charles took up the tale.

  ‘As you know, Mrs Babbington, I went abroad. When I was in the South of France I read in the paper of my friend Bartholomew Strange’s death in almost exactly similar circumstances. I also got a letter from Miss Lytton Gore.’

  Egg nodded.

  ‘I was there, you know, staying with him at the time. Mrs Babbington, it was exactly the same—exactly. He drank some port and his face changed, and—and—well, it was just the same. He died two or three minutes later.’

  Mrs Babbington shook her head slowly.

  ‘I can’t understand it. Stephen! Sir Bartholomew—a kind and clever doctor! Who could want to harm either of them? It must be a mistake.’

  ‘Sir Bartholomew was proved to have been poisoned, remember,’ said Sir Charles.

  ‘Then it must have been the work of a lunatic.’

  Sir Charles went on:

  ‘Mrs Babbington, I want to get to the bottom of this. I want to find out the truth. And I feel there is no time to lose. Once the news of the exhumation gets about our criminal will be on the alert. I am assuming, for the sake of saving time, what the result of the autopsy on your husband’s body will be. I am taking it that he, too, died of nicotine poisoning. To begin with, did you or he know anything about the use of pure nicotine?’

  ‘I always use a solution of nicotine for spraying roses. I didn’t know it was supposed to be poisonous.’

  ‘I should imagine (I was reading up the subject last night) that in both cases the pure alkaloid must have been used. Cases of poisoning by nicotine are most unusual.’

  Mrs Babbington shook her head.

  ‘I really don’t know anything about nicotine poisoning—except that I suppose inveterate smokers might suffer from it.’

  ‘Did your husband smoke?’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘Now tell me, Mrs Babbington, you have expressed the utmost surprise that anyone should want to do away with your husband. Does that mean that as far as you know he had no enemies?’

  ‘I am sure Stephen had no enemies. Everyone was fond of him. People tried to hustle him sometimes,’ she smiled a little tearfully. ‘He was getting on, you know, and rather afraid of innovations, but everybody liked him. You couldn’t dislike Stephen, Sir Charles.’

  ‘I suppose, Mrs Babbington, that your husband didn’t leave very much money?’

  ‘No. Next to nothing. Stephen was not good at saving. He gave away far too much. I used to scold him about it.’

  ‘I suppose he had no expectations from anyone? He wasn’t the heir to any property?’

  ‘Oh, no. Stephen hadn’t many relations. He has a sister who is married to a clergyman in Northumberland, but they are very badly off, and all his uncles and aunts are dead.’

  ‘Then it does not seem as though ther
e were anyone who could benefit by Mr Babbington’s death?’

  ‘No, indeed.’

  ‘Let us come back to the question of enemies for a minute. Your husband had no enemies, you say; but he may have had as a young man.’

  Mrs Babbington looked sceptical.

  ‘I should think it very unlikely. Stephen hadn’t a quarrelsome nature. He always got on well with people.’

  ‘I don’t want to sound melodramatic,’ Sir Charles coughed a little nervously. ‘But—er—when he got engaged to you, for instance, there wasn’t any disappointed suitor in the offing?’

  Amomentary twinkle came into Mrs Babbington’s eyes.

  ‘Stephen was my father’s curate. He was the first young man I saw when I came home from school. I fell in love with him and he with me. We were engaged for four years, and then he got a living down in Kent, and we were able to get married. Ours was a very simple love story, Sir Charles—and a very happy one.’

  Sir Charles bowed his head. Mrs Babbington’s simple dignity was very charming.

  Egg took up the rôle of questioner.

  ‘Mrs Babbington, do you think your husband had met any of the guests at Sir Charles’s that night before?’

  Mrs Babbington looked slightly puzzled.

  ‘Well, there were you and your mother, my dear, and young Oliver Manders.’

  ‘Yes, but any of the others?’

  ‘We had both seen Angela Sutcliffe in a play in London five years ago. Both Stephen and I were very excited that we were actually going to meet her.’

  ‘You had never actually met her before?’

  ‘No. We’ve never met any actresses—or actors, for the matter of that—until Sir Charles came to live here. And that,’ added Mrs Babbington, ‘was a great excitement. I don’t think Sir Charles knows what a wonderful thing it was to us. Quite a breath of romance in our lives.’

  ‘You hadn’t met Captain and Mrs Dacres?’

  ‘Was he the little man, and the woman with the wonderful clothes?’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘No. Nor the other woman—the one who wrote plays. Poor thing, she looked rather out of it, I thought.’

  ‘You’re sure you’d never seen any of them before?’

  ‘I’m quite sure I hadn’t—and so I’m fairly sure Stephen hadn’t, either. You see, we do everything together.’

  ‘And Mr Babbington didn’t say anything to you—anything at all,’ persisted Egg, ‘about the people you were going to meet, or about them, when he saw them?’

  ‘Nothing beforehand—except that he was looking forward to an interesting evening. And when we got there—well, there wasn’t much time—’ Her face twisted suddenly.

  Sir Charles broke in quickly.

  ‘You must forgive us badgering you like this. But, you see, we feel that there must be something, if only we could get at it. There must be some reason for an apparently brutal and meaningless murder.’

  ‘I see that,’ said Mrs Babbington. ‘If it was murder, there must be some reason…But I don’t know—I can’t imagine—what that reason could be.’

  There was silence for a minute or two, then Sir Charles said:

  ‘Can you give me a slight biographical sketch of your husband’s career?’

  Mrs Babbington had a good memory for dates. Sir Charles’s final notes ran thus:

  ‘Stephen Babbington, born Islington, Devon, 1868. Educated St Paul’s School and Oxford. Ordained Deacon and received a title to the Parish of Hoxton, 1891. Priested 1892. Was Curate Eslington, Surrey, to Rev. Vernon Lorrimer, 1894–1899. Married Margaret Lorrimer, 1899, and presented to the living of Gilling, Kent. Transferred to living of St Petroch, Loomouth, 1916.’

  ‘That gives us something to go upon,’ said Sir Charles. ‘Our best chance seems to me the time during which Mr Babbington was Vicar of St Mary’s, Gilling. His earlier history seems rather far back to concern any of the people who were at my house that evening.’

  Mrs Babbington shuddered.

  ‘Do you really think—that one of them—?’

  ‘I don’t know what to think,’ said Sir Charles. ‘Bartholomew saw something or guessed something, and Bartholomew Strange died the same way, and five—’

  ‘Seven,’ said Egg.

  ‘—of these people were also present. One of them must be guilty.’

  ‘But why?’ cried Mrs Babbington. ‘Why? What motive could there be for anyone killing Stephen?’

  ‘That,’ said Sir Charles, ‘is what we are going to find out.’

  Chapter 2

  Lady Mary

  Mr Satterthwaite had come down to Crow’s Nest with Sir Charles. Whilst his host and Egg Lytton Gore were visiting Mrs Babbington, Mr Satterthwaite was having tea with Lady Mary.

  Lady Mary liked Mr Satterthwaite. For all her gentleness of manner, she was a woman who had very definite views on the subject of whom she did or did not like.

  Mr Satterthwaite sipped China tea from a Dresden cup, and ate a microscopic sandwich and chatted. On his last visit they had found many friends and acquaintances in common. Their talk today began on the same subject, but gradually drifted into more intimate channels. Mr Satterthwaite was a sympathetic person—he listened to the troubles of other people and did not intrude his own. Even on his last visit it had seemed natural to Lady Mary to speak to him of her preoccupation with her daughter’s future. She talked now as she would have talked to a friend of many years’ standing.

  ‘Egg is so headstrong,’ she said. ‘She flings herself into a thing heart and soul. You know, Mr Satterthwaite, I do not like the way she is—well, mixing herself up in this distressing business. It—Egg would laugh at me, I know—but it doesn’t seem to be ladylike.’

  She flushed as she spoke. Her brown eyes, gentle and ingenuous, looked with childish appeal at Mr Satterthwaite.

  ‘I know what you mean,’ he said. ‘I confess that I don’t quite like it myself. I know that it’s simply an old-fashioned prejudice, but there it is. All the same,’ he twinkled at her, ‘we can’t expect young ladies to sit at home and sew and shudder at the idea of crimes of violence in these enlightened days.’

  ‘I don’t like to think of murder,’ said Lady Mary. ‘I never, never dreamed that I should be mixed up in anything of that kind. It was dreadful.’ She shivered. ‘Poor Sir Bartholomew.’

  ‘You didn’t know him very well?’ hazarded Mr Satterthwaite.

  ‘I think I’d only met him twice. The first time about a year ago, when he came down to stay with Sir Charles for a weekend, and the second time was on that dreadful evening when poor Mr Babbington died. I was really most surprised when his invitation arrived. I accepted because I thought Egg would enjoy it. She hasn’t many treats, poor child, and—well, she had seemed a little down in the mouth, as though she didn’t take any interest in anything. I thought a big house-party might cheer her up.’

  Mr Satterthwaite nodded.

  ‘Tell me something about Oliver Manders,’ he said. ‘The young fellow rather interests me.’

  ‘I think he’s clever,’ said Lady Mary. ‘Of course, things have been difficult for him…’

  She flushed, and then in answer to the plain inquiry of Mr Satterthwaite’s glance she went on.

  ‘You see, his father wasn’t married to his mother…’

  ‘Really? I had no idea of that.’

  ‘Everyone knows about it down here, otherwise I wouldn’t have said anything about it. Old Mrs Manders, Oliver’s grandmother, lives at Dunboyne, that biggish house on the Plymouth road. Her husband was a lawyer down here. Her son went into a city firm and did very well. He’s quite a rich man. The daughter was a good-looking girl, and she became absolutely infatuated with a married man. I blame him very much indeed. Anyway, in the end, after a lot of scandal, they went off together. His wife wouldn’t divorce him. The girl died not long after Oliver was born. His uncle in London took charge of him. He and his wife had no children of their own. The boy divided his time between them and his grandmothe
r. He always came down here for his summer holidays.’

  She paused and then went on:

  ‘I always felt sorry for him. I still do. I think that terribly conceited manner of his is a good deal put on.’

 

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