A POCKET FULL OF RYE

do except open and shut the gates when

required, and there were always plenty of

rabbits and an occasional pheasant or so for

the pot. Mrs. Neele had never discovered the

pleasures of electric irons, slow combustion

stoves, airing cupboards, hot and cold water

from taps, and the switching on of light by a

mere flick of a finger. In winter the Neeles

had an oil lamp and in summer they went to

bed when it got dark. They were a healthy

family and a happy one, all thoroughly

behind the times.

36

So when Inspector Neele heard the word

Lodge, it was his childhood memories that

stirred. But this place, this pretentiously

named Yewtree Lodge was just the kind of

mansion that rich people built themselves

and then called it “their little place in the

country.” It wasn’t in the country either,

according to Inspector Neele’s idea of the

country. The house was a large solid red

brick structure, sprawling lengthwise rather

than upwards, with rather too many gables,

and a vast number of leaded paned windows.

The gardens were highly artificial—all laid

out in rose beds and pergolas and pools, and

living up to the name of the house with large

numbers of clipped yew hedges.

Plenty of yew here for anybody with a

desire to obtain the raw material of taxine.

Over on the right, behind the rose pergola,

there was a bit of actual Nature left—a vast

yew tree of the kind one associates with

churchyards, its branches held up by

stakes—like a kind of Moses of the forest

world. That tree, the Inspector thought, had

been there long before the rash of newly built

red brick houses had begun to spread over the

countryside. It had been there before the golf

courses had been laid out and the fashionable

37

architects had walked round with their rich

clients pointing out the advantages of the

various sites. And since it was a valuable

antique, the tree had been kept and incorporated

in the new set up and had, perhaps,

given its name to the new desirable residence.

Yewtreee Lodge. And possibly the berries

from that very tree—-

Inspector Neele cut off these unprofitable

speculations. Must get on with the job. He

rang the bell.

It was opened promptly by a middle-aged

man who fitted in quite accurately with the

mental image Inspector Neele had formed of

him over the phone. A man with a rather

spurious air of smartness, a shifty eye and a

rather unsteady hand.

Inspector Neele announced himself and his

subordinate and had the pleasure of seeing an

instant look of alarm come into the butler’s

eye. . . . Neele did not attach too much

importance to that. It might easily have

nothing to do with the death of Rex Fortescue.

It was quite possibly a purely automatic

reaction.

“Has Mrs. Fortescue returned yet?” “No, sir.”

38

“Nor Mr. Percival Fortescue? Nor Miss

Fortescue?”

“No, sir.”

“Then I would like to see Miss Dove,

please.”

The man turned his head slightly.

“Here’s Miss Dove now–coming downstairs.”

Inspector Neele took in Miss Dove as she

came composedly down the wide staircase.

This time the mental picture did not correspond

with the reality. Unconsciously the

word housekeeper had conjured up a vague

impression of someone large and authoritative

dressed in black with somewhere

concealed about her a jingle of keys.

The Inspector was quite unprepared for the

small trim figure descending towards him.

The soft dove-coloured tones other dress, the

white collar and cuffs, the neat waves of hair, the faint Mona Lisa smile. It all seemed,

somehow, just a little unreal, as though this

young woman of under thirty was playing a

part: not, he thought, the part of a housekeeper,

but the part of Mary Dove. Her

appearance was directed towards living up to

her name.

She greeted him composedly.

39

“Inspector Neele?”

“Yes. This is Sergeant Hay. Mr. Fortescue, as I told you through the phone, died in St.

Jude’s Hospital at 12.43. It seems likely that

his death was the result of something he ate at

breakfast this morning. I should be glad

therefore if Sergeant Hay could be taken to

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85

Leave a Reply 0

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *