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  And so, naturally, Walter shot him.'

  Inspector Curry, adding some out-sized whiskers to one of the cats on his blotting pad, said: 'Ye - es.'

  'Don't you agree with me that that's what must have happened?'

  'It could be - yes,' admitted the Inspector.

  'What other solution could there be? Christian had no enemies. What I can't understand is why you haven't already arrested Walter?'

  'Well, you see, Mrs Strete, we have to have evidence.'

  'You could probably get that easily enough. If you wired to America '

  'Oh yes, we shall check up on Mr Walter Hudd. You can be sure of that. But until we can prove motive, there's not very much to go upon. There's opportunity, of course '

  'He went out just after Christian, pretending the lights had fused '

  'They did fuse.'

  'He could easily arrange that.'

  'True.'

  'That gave him his excuse. He followed Christian to his room, shot him and then repaired the fuse and came back to the Hall.'

  'His wife says he came back before you heard the shot from outside.'

  'Not a bit of it! Gina would say anything. The Italians are never truthful. And she's a Roman Catholic, of course.'

  Inspector Curry side-stepped the ecclesiastical angle.

  'You think his wife was in it with him?' Mildred Strete hesitated for a moment.

  'No - no, I don't think that.' She seemed rather disappointed not to think so. She went on: 'That must have been partly the motive - to prevent Gina's learning the truth about him. After all, Gina is his bread and butter.'

  'And a very beautiful girl.'

  'Oh yes. I've always said Gina is good looking. A very common type in Italy, of course. But if you ask me, it's money that Walter Hudd is after. That's why he came over here and has settled down living on the Serrocolds.'

  'Mrs Hudd is very well off, I understand?'

  'Not at present. My father settled the same sum on Gina's mother as he did on me. But of course she took her husband's nationality (I believe the law is altered now) and what with the war and his being a Fascist, Gina has very little of her own. My mother spoils her, and her American aunt, Mrs Van Rydock, spent fabulous sums on her and bought her everything she wanted during the war years. Nevertheless, from Walter's point of view, he can't lay his hands on much until my mother's death, when a very large fortune will come to Gina.'

  'And to you, Mrs Strete.'

  A faint colour came into Mildred Strete's cheek.

  'And to me, as you say. My husband and myself always lived quietly. He spent very little money except on books - he was a great scholar. My own money has almost doubled itself. It is more than enough for my simple needs. Still one can always use money for the benefit of others. Any money that comes to me, I shall regard as a sacred trust.'

  'But it won't be in a Trust, will it?' said Curry, wilfully misunderstanding. 'It will come to you absolutely.'

  'Oh yes - in that sense. Yes, it will be mine absolutely.' Something in the ring of that last word made Inspector Curry raise his head sharply. Mrs Strete was not looking at him. Her eyes were shining, and her long thin mouth was curved in a triumphant smile.

  Inspector said in a considering voice:

  'So in your view - and of course you've had ample opportunities of judging - Master Walter Hudd wants the money that will come to his wife when Mrs Serrocold dies. By the way, she's not very strong, is she, Mrs Strete?'

  'My mother has always been delicate.'

  'Quite so. But delicate people often live as long or longer than people who have robust health.'

  'Yes, I suppose they do.'

  'You haven't noticed your mother's health failing just lately?'

  'She suffers from rheumatism. But then one must have something as one grows older. I've no sympathy with people who make a fuss over inevitable aches and pains.'

  'Does Mrs Serrocold make a fuss?'

  Mildred Strete was silent for a moment. She said at last:

  'She does not make a fuss herself, but she is used to being made a fuss of. My stepfather is far too solicitous.

  And as for Miss Bellever, she makes herself positively ridiculous. In any case, Miss Bellever has had a very bad influence in this house. She came here many years ago, and her devotion to my mother, though admirable in itself, has really become somewhat of an infliction. She literally tyrannizes over my mother. She runs the whole house and takes far too much upon herself. I think it annoys Lewis sometimes. I should never be surprised if he told her to go. She has no tact - no tact whatever, and it is trying for a man to fred his wife completely dominated by a bossy woman.' Inspector Curry nodded his head gently.

  'I see… I see…' He watched her speculatively.

  'There's one thing I don't quite get, Mrs Strete. The position of the two Restarick brothers?'

  'More foolish sentiment. Their father married my poor mother for her money. Two years afterwards he ran away with a Jugoslavian singer of the lowest morals. He was a very unworthy person. My mother was softhearted enough to be sorry for these two boys. Since it was out of the question for them to spend their holidays with a woman of such notorious morals, she more or less adopted them. They have been hangers-on here ever since. Oh yes, we've plenty of spongers in this house, I can tell you that.'

  'Alex Restarick had an opportunity of killing Christian Gulbrandsen. He was in his car alone - driving from the Lodge to the house - what about Stephen?'

  'Stephen was in the Hall with us. I don't approve of Alex Restarick - he is getting to look very coarse, and I imagine he leads an irregular life - but I don't really see him as a murderer. Besides, why should he kill my brother?'

  'That's what we always come back to, isn't it?' said Inspector Curry genially. 'What did Christian Gulbrandsen know - about someone - that made it necessary for that someone to kill him?'

  'Exactly,' said Mrs Strete triumphantly. 'It must be Walter Hudd.'

  'Unless it's someone nearer home.'

  Mildred said sharply: 'What did you mean by that?' Inspector Curry said slowly: 'Mr Gulbrandsen seemed very concerned about Mrs Serrocold's health whilst he was here.' Mrs Strete frowned.

  'They always fuss over mother because she looks fragile. I think she likes them to! Or else Christian had been listening to Juliet Believer.'

  'You're not worried about your mother's health yourself, Mrs Strete?'

  'No. I hope I'm sensible. Naturally mother is not young-'

  'And death comes to all of us,' said Inspector Curry. 'But not ahead of its appointed time. That's what we have to prevent.' He spoke meaningly. Mildred Strete flared into sudden animation.

  'Oh it's wicked - wicked. No one else here really seems to care. Why should they? I'm the only person who was a blood relation to Christian. To mother, he was only a grown-up stepson. To Gina, he isn't really any relation at all. But he was my own brother.'

  'Half-brother,' suggested Inspector Curry.

  'Half-brother, yes. But we were both Gulbrandsens in spite of the difference in age.' Curry said gently: 'Yes - yes, I see your point…'

  Tears in her eyes, Mildred Strete marched out. Curry looked at Lake.

  'So she's quite sure it's Walter Hudd,' he said. 'Won't entertain for a moment the idea of its being anybody else.'

  'And she may be right.'

  'She certainly may. Wally fits. Opportunity - and motive. Because if he wants money quick, his wife's mother would have to die. So Wally tampers with her tonic, and Christian Gulbrandsen sees him do it - or hears about it in some way. Yes, it fits very nicely.' He paused and said:

  'By the way, Mildred Strete likes money… She mayn't spend it, but she likes it. I'm not sure why… She may be a miser - with a miser's passion. Or she may like the power that money gives. Money for benevolence, perhaps? She's a Gulbrandsen. She may want to emulate Father.'

  'Complex, isn't it?' said Sergeant Lake, and scratched his head.

  Inspector Curry said:

&
nbsp; 'We'd better see this screwy young man Lawson, and after that we'll go to the Great Hall and work out who was where - and if- and why - and when… We've heard one or two rather interesting things this morning.'

  It was very difficult, Inspector Curry thought, to get a true estimate of someone from what other people said.

  Edgar Lawson had been described by a good many different people that morning, but looking at him now, Curry's own impressions were almost ludicrously different.

  Edgar did not impress him as 'queer' or 'dangerous,' or 'arrogant' or even as 'abnormal.' He seemed a very ordinary young man, very much cast down and in a state of humility approaching that of Uriah Heep's. He looked young and slightly common and rather pathetic.

  He was only too anxious to talk and to apologize.

  'I know I've done very wrong. I don't know what came over me - really I don't. Making that scene and kicking up such a row. And actually shooting off a pistol. At Mr Serrocold too, who's been so good to me and so patient, too.'

  He twisted his hands nervously. They were rather pathetic hands, with bony wrists.

  'If I've got to be had up for it, I'll come with you at once. I deserve it. I'll plead guilty.'

  'No charge has been made against you,' said Inspector Curry crisply. 'So we've no evidence on which to act.

  According to Mr Serrocold, letting off the pistol was an accident.'

  'That's because he's so good. There never was a man as good as Mr Serrocold! He's done everything for me. And I go and repay him by acting like this.'

  'What made you act as you did?' Edgar looked embarrassed.

  'I made a fool of myself.' Inspector Curry said drily:

  'So it seems. You told Mr Serrocold in the presence of witnesses that you had discovered that he was your father. Was that true?'

  'No, it wasn't.'

  'What put that idea into your head? Did someone suggest it to you?'

  'Well, it's a bit hard to explain.'

  Inspector Curry looked at him thoughtfully, then said in a kindly voice: 'Suppose you try. We don't want to make things hard for you.'

  'Well, you see, I had a rather hard time of it as a kid.

  The other boys jeered at me. Because I hadn't got a father. Said I was a little bastard - which I was, of course.

  Mum was usually drunk and she had men coming in all the time. My father was a foreign seaman, I believe. The house was always filthy, and it was all pretty fair hell. And then I got to thinking, supposing my Dad had been not just some foreign sailor, but someone important - and I used to make up a thing or two. Kid stuff first - changed at birth - really the rightful heir - that sort of thing. And then I went to a new school and I tried it on once or twice hinting things. Said my father was really an Admiral in the Navy. I got to believing it myself. I didn't feel so bad then.' He paused and then went on: 'And then - later - I thought up some other ideas. I used to stay at hotels and told a lot of silly stories about being a fighter pilot - or about being in Military Intelligence. I got all sort of mixed up. I didn't seem able to stop telling lies.

  'Only I didn't really try to get money by it. It was just swank so as to make people think a bit more of me. I didn't want to be dishonest. Mr Serrocold will tell you and Dr Maverick - they've got all the stuff about it.' Inspector Curry nodded. He had already studied Edgar's case history and his police record.

  'Mr Serrocold got me clear in the end and brought me down here. He said he needed a secretary to help him and I did help him! I really did. Only the others laughed at me. They were always laughing at me.'

  'What others? Mrs Serrocold?'

  'No, not Mrs Serrocold. She's a lady - she's always gentle and kind. No, but Gina treated me like dirt. And Stephen Restarick. And Mrs Strete looked down on me for not being a gentleman. So did Miss Bellever - and what's she? She's a paid companion, isn't she?' Curry noted the signs of rising excitement.

  'So you didn't find them very sympathetic?'

  Edgar said passionately: 'It was because of me being a bastard. If I'd had a proper father they wouldn't have gone on like that.'

  'So you appropriated a couple of famous fathers?' Edgar blushed.

  'I always seem to get to telling lies,' he muttered.

  'And finally you said Mr Serrocold was your father.

  Why?'

  'Because that would stop them once for all, wouldn't it? If he was my father they couldn't do anything to me.'

  'Yes. But you accused him of being your enemy - of persecuting you.'

  'I know -' He rubbed his forehead. 'I got things all wrong. There are times when I don't - when I don't get things quite right. I get muddled.'

  'And you took the revolver from Mr Walter Hudd's room?' Edgar looked puzzled.

  'Did I? Is that where I got it?'

  'Don't you remember where you got it?' Edgar said:

  'I meant to threaten Mr Serrocold with it. I meant to frighten him. It was kid stuff all over again.'

  Inspector Curry said patiently: 'How did you get the revolver?'

  'You just said - out of Walter's room.'

  'You remember doing that now?'

  'I must have got it from his room. I couldn't have got hold of it any other way, could I?'

  'I don't know,' said Inspector Curry. 'Somebody might have given it to you?' Edgar was silent - his face a blank.

  'Is that how it happened?'

  Edgar said passionately: 'I don't remember. I was so worked up. I walked about the garden in a red mist of rage. I thought people were spying on me, watching me, trying to hound me down.

  Even that nice white-haired old lady… I can't understand it all now. I feel I must have been mad. I don't remember where I was and what I was doing half the time!'

  'Surely you remember who told you Mr Serrocold was your father?' Edgar gave the same blank stare.

  'Nobody told me,' he said sullenly. 'It just came to me.' Inspector Curry sighed. He was not satisfied. But he judged he could make no further progress at present.

  'Well, watch your step in future,' he said.

  'Yes, sir. Yes indeed I will.' As Edgar went, Inspector Curry slowly shook his head.

  'These pathological cases are the devil!'

  'D'you think he's mad, sir?'

  'Much less mad than I'd imagined. Weak-headed, boastful, a liar - yet a certain pleasant simplicity about him. Highly suggestible I should imagine…'

  'You think someone did suggest things to him?'

  'Oh yes, old Miss Marple was right there. She's a shrewd old bird. But I wish I knew who it was. He won't tell. If we only knew that… Come on, Lake, let's have a thorough reconstruction of the scene in the Hall.'

  'That fixes it pretty well.'

  Inspector Curry was sitting at the piano. Sergeant

  Lake was in a chair by the window overlooking the lake.

  Curry went on:

  'If I'm half-turned on the piano stool, watching the study door, I can't see you.'

  Sergeant Lake rose softly and edged quietly through the door to the library.

  'All this side of the room was dark. The only lights that were on were the ones beside the study door. No, Lake, I didn't see you go. Once in the library, you could go out through the other door to the corridor - two minutes to run along to the oak suite, shoot Gulbrandsen and come back through the library to your chair by the window.

  'The women by the fire have their backs to you. Mrs Serrocold was sitting here - on the right of the fireplace, near the study door. Everyone agrees she didn't move and she's the only one who's in the line of direct vision.

  Miss Marple was here. She was looking past Mrs Serrocold to the study. Mrs Strete was on the left of the fireplace - close to the door out of the Hall to the lobby, and it's a very dark corner. She could have gone and come back. Yes, it's possible.' Curry grinned suddenly.

  'And I could go.' He slipped off the music stool and sidled along the wall and out through the door. 'The only person who might notice I wasn't still at the piano would be Gina Hudd
. And you remember what Gina said: "Stephen was at the piano to begin with. I don't know where he was later."'

  'So you think it's Stephen?'

  'I don't know who it is,' said Curry. 'It wasn't Edgar Lawson or Lewis Serrocold or Mrs Serrocold or Miss Jane Marple. But for the rest -' He sighed. 'It's probably the American. Those fused lights were a bit too convenient - a coincidence. And yet, you know, I rather like the chap. Still, that isn't evidence.' He peered thoughtfully at some music on the side of the piano. 'Hindemith? Who's he? Never heard of him.

  Shostakovitch! What names these people have.' He got up and then looked down at the old-fashioned music stool. He lifted the top of it.

  'Here's the old-fashioned stuff. Handel's Largo, Czerny's Exercises. Dates back to old Gulbrandsen, most of this. "I know a lovely Garden" - Vicar's wife used to sing that when I was a boy ' He stopped - the yellow pages of the song in his hand.

  Beneath them, reposing on Chopin's Preludes, was a small automatic pistol.

  'Stephen Restarick,' exclaimed Sergeant Lake joyfully.

  'Now don't jump to conclusions,' Inspector Curry warned him. 'Ten to one that's what we're meant to think.'

  Chapter 15

  Miss Marple climbed the stairs and tapped on the door of Mrs Serrocold's bedroom.

  'May I come in, Carrie Louise?'

  'Of course, Jane dear.'

  Carrie Louise was sitting in front of the dressing table, brushing her silvery hair. She turned her head over her shoulder.

  'Is it the police? I'll be ready in a few minutes.'

  'Are you all right?'

  'Yes, of course. Jolly insisted on my having my breakfast in bed. And Gina came into the room with it on tiptoe as though I might be at death's door! I don't think people realize that tragedies like Christian's death are much less shock to someone old. Because one knows by then how anything may happen - and how little anything really matters that happens in this world.'

  'Ye - es,' said Miss Marple dubiously.

  'Don't you feel the same, Jane? I should have thought you would.'

  Miss Marple said slowly:

  'Christian was murdered.'

  'Yes… I see what you mean. You think that does matter?'

 

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