A POCKET FULL OF RYE

always mistrusted it. And now that mistrust

of his was justified.

“The whole thing takes on an entirely different

aspect,” the A.C. had said, striding up

and down his room and frowning. “It looks to

me, Neele, as though we’d got someone

mentally unhinged to deal with. First the

husband, then the wife. But the very circumstances

of the case seem to show that it’s an

inside job. It’s all there, in the family. Someone

who sat down to breakfast with Fortescue

put taxine in his coffee or on his food,

someone who had tea with the family that day

put potassium cyanide in Adele Fortescue’s

cup of tea. Someone trusted, unnoticed, one

of the family. Which of’em, Neele?”

Neele said dryly:

“Percival wasn’t there, so that lets him out

again. That lets him out again,” Inspector

Neele repeated.

146

The A.C. looked at him sharply. Something

in the repetition had attracted his

attention.

“What’s the idea, Neele? Out with it,

man.”

Inspector Neele looked stolid.

“Nothing, sir. Not so much as an idea. All

I say is it was very convenient for him.”

“A bit too convenient, eh?” The A.C. reflected and shook his head. “You think he

might have managed it somehow? Can’t see

how, Neele. No, I can’t see how.”

He added, “And he’s a cautious type, too.”

“But quite intelligent, sir.”

“You don’t fancy the women. Is that it? Yet

the women are indicated. Elaine Fortescue

and Percival’s wife. They were at breakfast

and they were at tea that day. Either of them

could have done it. No signs of anything

abnormal about them? Well, it doesn’t always

show. There might be something in their past

medical record.”

Inspector Neele did not answer. He was

thinking of Mary Dove. He had no definite

reason for suspecting her, but that was the

way his thoughts lay. There was something

unexplained about her, unsatisfactory. A taint, amused antagonism. That had been her

147

attitude after the death of Rex Fortescue.

What was her attitude now? Her behaviour

and manner were, as always, exemplary.

There was no longer, he thought, amusement.

Perhaps not even antagonism, but he

wondered whether, once or twice, he had not

seen a trace of fear. He had been to blame,

culpably to blame, in the matter of Gladys

Martin. That guilty confusion others he had

put down to no more than a natural nervousness

of the police. He had come across that

guilty nervousness so often. In this case it had

been something more. Gladys had seen or

heard something which had aroused her

suspicions. It was probably, he thought, some

quite small thing, something so vague and

indefinite that she had hardly liked to speak

about it. And now, poor little rabbit, she

would never speak.

Inspector Neele looked with some interest

at the mild, earnest face of the old lady who

confronted him now at Yewtree Lodge. He

had been in two minds at first how to treat

her, but he quickly made up his mind. Miss

Marple would be useful to him. She was

upright, of unimpeachable rectitude and she

had, like most old ladies, time on her hands

and an old maid’s nose for scenting bits of

148

gossip. She’d get things out of servants and

out of the women of the Fortescue family

perhaps, that he and his policemen would

never get. Talk, conjecture, reminiscences,

repetitions of things said and done, out of it

all she would pick the salient facts. So

Inspector Neele was gracious.

“It’s uncommonly good of you to have

come here. Miss Marple,” he said.

“It was my duty. Inspector Neele. The girl

had lived in my house. I feel, in a sense, responsible

for her. She was a very silly girl,

you know.”

Inspector Neele looked at her appreciatively.

“Yes,” he said, “just so.”

She had gone, he felt, to the heart of the

matter.

“She wouldn’t know,” said Miss Marple, “what she ought to do. If, I mean, something

came up. Oh, dear, I’m expressing myself

very badly.”

Inspector Neele said that he understood.

“She hadn’t got good judgment as to what

was important or not, that’s what you mean,

isn’t it?”

“Oh yes, exactly. Inspector.”

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