A POCKET FULL OF RYE BY AGATHA CHRISTIE

fire an old lady was sitting laying out a

patience. She wore a maroon-coloured dress

and her sparse grey hair was slicked down

each side other face.

Without looking up or discontinuing her

game she said impatiently:

“Well, come in, come in. Sit down if you

like.”

The invitation was not easy to accept as

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every chair appeared to be covered with tracts

or publications of a religious nature.

As he moved them slightly aside on the sofa

Miss Ramsbottom asked sharply:

“Interested in mission work?”

“Well, I’m afraid I’m not very, ma’am.”

“Wrong. You should be. That’s where the

Christian spirit is nowadays. Darkest Africa.

Had a young clergyman here last week. Black

as your hat. But a true Christian.”

Inspector Neele found it a little difficult to

know what to say.

The old lady further disconcerted him by

snapping:

“I haven’t got a wireless.”

“I beg your pardon?”

“Oh I thought perhaps you came about a

wireless licence. Or one of these silly forms.

Well, man, what is it?”

“I’m sorry to have to tell you. Miss

Ramsbottom, that your brother-in-law, Mr.

Fortescue, was taken suddenly ill and died

this morning.”

Miss Ramsbottom continued with her

patience without any sign of perturbation,

merely remarking in a conversational way:

“Struck down at last in his arrogance and

sinful pride. Well, it had to come.”

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“I hope it’s not a shock to you?”

It obviously wasn’t but the Inspector

wanted to hear what she would say.

Miss Ramsbottom gave him a sharp glance

over the top of her spectacles and said:

“If you mean I am not distressed, that is

quite right. Rex Fortescue was always a sinful

man and I never liked him.”

“His death was very sudden——”

“As befits the ungodly,” said the old lady

with satisfaction.

“It seems possible that he may have been

poisoned——”

The Inspector paused to observe the effect

he had made.

He did not seem to have made any. Miss

Ramsbottom merely murmured “Red seven

on black eight. Now I can move up the

King.”

Struck apparently by the Inspector’s

silence, she stopped with a card poised in her

hand and said sharply:

“Well, what did you expect me to say? I

didn’t poison him if that’s what you want to

know.”

“Have you any idea who might have done

so?”

“That’s a very improper question,” said

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the old lady sharply. “Living in this house

are two of my dead sister’s children. I decline

to believe that anybody with Ramsbottom

blood in them could be guilty of murder.

Because it’s murder you’re meaning, isn’t

it?”

“I didn’t say so, madam.”

“Of course it’s murder. Plenty of people

have wanted to murder Rex in their time. A

very unscrupulous man. And old sins have

long shadows, as the saying goes.”

“Have you anyone in particular in mind?”

Miss Ramsbottom swept up the cards and

rose to her feet. She was a tall woman.

“I think you’d better go now,” she said.

She spoke without anger but with a kind of

cold finality.

“If you want my opinion,” she went on, “it

was probably one of the servants. That butler

looks to me a bit of a rascal, and that

parlourmaid is definitely subnormal. Good

evening.”

Inspector Neele found himself meekly

walking out. Certainly a remarkable old lady.

Nothing to be got out other.

He came down the stairs into the square

hall to find himself suddenly face to face with

a tall dark girl. She was wearing a damp

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mackintosh and she stared into his face with a

curious blankness.

“I’ve just come back,” she said. “And they

told me—about Father—that he’s dead.”

“I’m afraid that’s true.”

She pushed out a hand behind her as

though blindly seeking for support. She

touched an oak chest and slowly, stiffly, she

sat down on it.

“Oh no,” she said. “No . . .”

Slowly two tears rolled down her cheeks.

“It’s awful,” she said. “I didn’t think that I

even liked him. … I thought I hated him. . . .

But that can’t be so, or I wouldn’t mind. I do

mind.”

She sat there, staring in front of her and

again tears forced themselves from her eyes

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