X

A POCKET FULL OF RYE BY AGATHA CHRISTIE

She ended up by saying anyway she didn’t

know anything at all.”

“You don’t think,” Lance hesitated, “that

she was just making herself important?”

“No, I don’t. I think she was scared. I think

she saw something or heard something that’s

given her some idea about the whole thing. It

may be important, or it mayn’t be of the least

consequence.”

“You don’t think she herself could’ve had a

grudge against Father and—-” Lance hesitated.

Miss Ramsbottom was shaking her head

decidedly.

126

“She’s not the kind of girl your father

would have taken the least notice of. No man

ever will take much notice other, poor girl.

Ah, well, it’s all the better for her soul, that, I

dare say.”

Lance took no interest in Gladys’s soul. He

asked:

“You think she may have run along to the

police station?”

Aunt Effie nodded vigorously.

“Yes. I think she mayn’t like to’ve said anything

to them in this house in case somebody

overheard her.”

Lance asked, “Do you think she may have

seen someone tampering with the food?”

Aunt Effie threw him a sharp glance.

“It’s possible, isn’t it?” she said.

“Yes, I suppose so.” Then he added apologetically.

“The whole thing still seems so

wildly improbable. Like a detective story.”

“Percival’s wife is a hospital nurse,” said

Miss Ramsbottom.

The remark seemed so unconnected with

what had gone before that Lance looked at

her in a puzzled fashion.

“Hospital nurses are used to handling

drugs,” said Miss Ramsbottom.

Lance looked doubtful.

127

“This stuff–taxine–is it ever used in

medicine?”

“They get it from yewberries, I gather.

Children eat yewberries sometimes,” said

Miss Ramsbottom. “Makes them very ill,

too. I remember a case when I was a child. It

made a great impression on me. I never forgot

it. Things you remember come in useful

sometimes.”

Lance raised his head sharply and stared at

her.

“Natural affection is one thing,” said Miss

Ramsbottom, “and I hope I’ve got as much of

it as anyone. But I won’t stand for wickedness.

Wickedness has to be destroyed.”

II

“Went off without a word to me,” said Mrs.

Crump, raising her red, wrathful face from

the pastry she was now rolling out on the

board. “Slipped out without a word to anybody.

Sly, that’s what it is. Sly! Afraid she’d

be stopped and I would have stopped her if I’d

caught her! The idea! There’s the master

dead, Mr. Lance coming home that hasn’t

been home for years and I said to Crump, I

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said, ‘Day out or no day out, I know my duty.

There’s not going to be cold supper tonight

as is usual on a Thursday, but a proper

dinner. A gentleman coming home from

abroad with his wife, what was formerly

married in the aristocracy, things must be

properly done.’ You know me, miss, you

know I take a pride in my work.”

Mary Dove, the recipient of these confidences, nodded her head gently.

“And what does Crump say?” Mrs.

Crump’s voice rose angrily. ” ‘It’s my day off

and I’m goin’ off,’ that’s what he says. ‘And a

fig for the aristocracy,’ he says. No pride in

his work. Crump hasn’t. So off he goes and I

tell Gladys she’ll have to manage alone tonight.

She just says. ‘Alright, Mrs. Crump,’

then, when my back’s turned out she sneaks.

It wasn’t her day out, anyway. Friday’s her day. How we’re going to manage now, I don’t

know! Thank goodness, Mr. Lance hasn’t

brought his wife here with him today.”

“We shall manage, Mrs. Crump,” Mary’s

voice was both soothing and authoritative, “if

we just simplify the menu a little.” She

outlined a few suggestions. Mrs. Crump

nodded unwilling acquiescence. “I shall be

129

able to serve that quite easily,” Mary

concluded.

“You mean you’ll wait at table yourself,

Miss?” Mrs. Crump sounded doubtful.

“If Gladys doesn’t come back in time.”

“She won’t come back,” said Mrs. Crump.

“Gallivanting off, wasting her money somewhere

in the shops. She’s got a young man,

you know, miss, though you wouldn’t think it

to look at her. Albert his name is. Going to

get married next spring, so she tells me.

Don’t know what the married state’s like, these girls don’t. What I’ve been through

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