A POCKET FULL OF RYE

because Mr. Crump had gone out this

afternoon. Well, it was his day out, wasn’t it?

Quite right of him, Gladys thought. Mrs.

Crump called out from the kitchen:

“The kettle’s boiling its head off. Aren’t

you ever going to make that tea?”

“Coming.”

She jerked some tea without measuring it

113

into the big silver pot, carried it into the

kitchen and poured the boiling water on it.

She added the teapot and the kettle to the big

silver tray and carried the whole thing

through to the library where she set it on the

small table near the sofa. She went back

hurriedly for the other tray with the eatables

on it. She carried the latter as far as the hall

when the sudden jarring noise of the

grandfather clock preparing itself to strike

made her jump.

In the library, Adele Fortescue said

querulously, to Mary Dove.

“Where is everybody this afternoon?”

“I really don’t know, Mrs. Fortescue. Miss

Fortescue came in some time ago. I think

Mrs. Percival’s writing letters in her room.”

Adele said pettishly, “Writing letters,

writing letters. That woman never stops

writing letters. She’s like all people of her

class. She takes an absolute delight in death

and misfortune. Ghoulish, that’s what I call

it. Absolutely ghoulish.”

Mary murmured tactfully, “I’ll tell her that

tea is ready.”

Going towards the door she drew back a

little in the doorway as Elaine Fortescue came

into the room. Elaine said:

114

“It’s cold,” and dropped down by the

fireplace, rubbing her hands before the blaze.

Mary stood for a moment in the hall. A

large tray with cakes on it was standing on

one of the hall chests. Since it was getting

dark in the hall, Mary switched on the light.

As she did so she thought she heard Jennifer

Fortescue walking along the passage upstairs.

Nobody, however, came down the stairs and

Mary went up the staircase and along the

corridor.

Percival Fortescue and his wife occupied a

self-contained suite in one wing of the house.

Mary tapped on the sitting-room door. Mrs.

Percival liked you to tap on doors, a fact

which always roused Crump’s scorn of her.

Her voice said briskly:

“Come in.”

Mary opened the door and murmured:

“Tea is just coming in, Mrs. Percival.”

She was rather surprised to see Jennifer

Fortescue with her outdoor clothes on. She

was just divesting herself of a long camel-hair

coat.

“I didn’t know you’d been out,” said

Mary.

Mrs. Percival sounded slightly out of

breath.

115

“Oh, I was just in the garden, that’s all.

Just getting a little air. Really, though, it was

too cold. I shall be glad to get down to the

fire. The central heating here isn’t as good as

it might be. Somebody must speak to the

gardeners about it. Miss Dove.”

“I’ll do so,” Mary promised.

Jennifer Fortescue dropped her coat on a

chair and followed Mary out of the room. She

went down the Stairs ahead of Mary, who

drew back a little to give her precedence. In

the hall, rather to Mary’s surprise, she

noticed the tray of eatables was still there.

She was about to go out to the pantry and call

to Gladys when Adele Fortescue appeared in

the door of the library, saying in an irritable

voice:

“Aren’t we ever going to have anything to

eat for tea?”

Quickly Mary picked up the tray and took

it into the library, disposing the various

things on low tables near the fireplace. She

was carrying the empty tray out to the hall

again when the front-door bell rang. Setting

down the tray, Mary went to the door herself.

If this was the prodigal son at last she was

rather curious to see him. “How unlike the

rest of the Fortescues,” Mary thought, as she

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opened the door and looked up into the dark

lean face and the faint quizzical twist of the

mouth. She said quietly:

“Mr. Lancelot Fortescue?”

“Himself.”

Mary peered beyond him.

“Your luggage?”

“I’ve paid off the taxi. This is all I’ve got.”

He picked up a medium-sized zip bag.

Some faint feeling of surprise in her mind,

Mary said:

“Oh, you did come in a taxi. I thought

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