A POCKET FULL OF RYE BY AGATHA CHRISTIE

A POCKET FULL OF RYE

A POCKET FULL OF RYE

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IT was Miss Somers’s turn to make the tea.

Miss Somers was the newest and the most

inefficient of the typists. She was no longer

young and had a mild worried face like a

sheep. The kettle was not quite boiling when

Miss Somers poured the water on to the tea,

but poor Miss Somers was never quite sure

when a kettle was boiling. It was one of the

many worries that afflicted her in life.

She poured out the tea and took the cups

round with a couple of limp, sweet biscuits in

each saucer.

Miss Griffith, the efficient head typist, a

grey-haired martinet who had been with Consolidated

Investments Trust for sixteen years,

said sharply: “Water not boiling again, Somers!” and Miss Somers’s worried meek

face went pink and she said, “Oh dear, I did think it was boiling this time.”

Miss Griffith thought to herself. “She’ll

last for another month, perhaps, just while

we’re so busy . . . But really! The mess the

silly idiot made of that letter to Eastern

Developments–a perfectly straightforward

job, and always so stupid over the tea. If it

weren’t so difficult to get hold of any intelligent

typists–and the biscuit tin lid wasn’t

shut tightly last time, either. Really—-”

Like so many of Miss Griffith’s indignant

inner communings the sentence went unfinished.

At that moment Miss Grosvenor sailed in

to make Mr. Fortescue’s sacred tea. Mr.

Fortescue had different tea, and different

china and special biscuits. Only the kettle and

the water from the cloakroom tap were the

same. But on this occasion, being Mr.

Fortescue’s tea, the water boiled. Miss

Grosvenor saw to that.

Miss Grosvenor was an incredibly glamorous

blonde. She wore an expensively cut little

black suit and her shapely legs were encased

in the very best and most expensive blackmarket

nylons.

She sailed back through the typists’ room

without deigning to give anyone a word or a

glance. The typists might have been so many

blackbeetles. Miss Grosvenor was Mr. Fortescue’s

own special personal secretary; unkind

rumour always hinted that she was something

more, but actually this was not true. Mr.

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Fortescue had recently married a second wife,

both glamorous and expensive, and fully

capable of absorbing all his attention. Miss

Grosvenor was to Mr. Fortescue just a

necessary part of the office decor–which was

all very luxurious and very expensive.

Miss Grosvenor sailed back with the tray

held out in front other like a ritual offering.

Through the inner office and through the

waiting-room, where the more important

clients were allowed to sit, and through her

own ante-room, and finally with a light tap on

the door she entered the holy of holies, Mr.

Fortescue’s office.

It was a large room with a gleaming

expanse of parquet floor on which were

dotted expensive oriental rugs. It was

delicately panelled in pale wood and there

were some enormous stuffed chairs upholstered

in pale buff leather. Behind a colossal

sycamore desk, the centre and focus of the

room, sat Mr. Fortescue himself.

Mr. Fortescue was less impressive than he

should have been to match the room, but he

did his best. He was a large flabby man with a

gleaming bald head. It was his affectation to

wear loosely cut country tweeds in his city

office. He was frowning down at some papers

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on his desk when Miss Grosvenor glided up

to him in her swanlike manner. Placing the

tray on the desk at his elbow, she murmured

in a low impersonal voice, “Your tea, Mr.

Fortescue,” and withdrew.

Mr. Fortescue’s contribution to the ritual

was a grunt.

Seated at her own desk again Miss Grosvenor

proceeded with the business in hand.

She made two telephone calls, corrected some

letters that were lying there typed ready for

Mr. Fortescue to sign and took one incoming

call.

“Ay’m afraid it’s impossible just now,” she

said in haughty accents. “Mr. Fortescue is in

conference.”

As she laid down the receiver she glanced at

the clock. It was ten minutes past eleven.

It was just then that an unusual sound

penetrated through the almost soundproof

door of Mr. Fortescue’s office. Muffled, it

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