A POCKET FULL OF RYE

“Rex Fortescue is dead, isn’t he? You said

so.”

“He was poisoned,” said Inspector Neele.

Rather disconcertingly, Mrs. MacKenzie

laughed.

“What nonsense,” she said, “he died of

fever.”

“I’m talking about Mr. Rex Fortescue.”

“So am I.” She looked up suddenly and her

pale blue eyes fixed his. “Come now,” she

said, “he died in his bed, didn’t he? He died

in his bed?”

“He died in St. Jude’s Hospital,” said

Inspector Neele.

“Nobody knows where my husband died,”

said Mrs. MacKenzie. “Nobody knows how

he died or where he was buried. . . . All

anyone knows is what Rex Fortescue said.

And Rex Fortescue was a liar!”

239

“Do you think there may have been foul

play?”

“Foul play, foul play, fowls lay eggs, don’t

they?”

“You think that Rex Fortescue was responsible

for your husband’s death?”

“I had an egg for breakfast this morning,”

said Mrs. MacKenzie. “Quite fresh, too. Surprising,

isn’t it, when one thinks that it was

thirty years ago?”

Neele drew a deep breath. It seemed

unlikely that he was ever going to get

anywhere at this rate, but he persevered.

“Somebody put dead blackbirds on Rex

Fortescue’s desk about a month or two before

he died.”

“That’s interesting. That’s very, very

interesting.”

“Have you any idea, madam, who might

have done that?”

“Ideas aren’t any help to one. One has to

have action. I brought them up for that, you

know, to take action.”

“You’re talking about your children?”

She nodded her head rapidly.

“Yes. Donald and Ruby. They were nine

and seven and left without a father. I told

240

them. I told them every day. I made them

swear it every night.”

Inspector Neele leant forward.

“What did you make them swear?”

“That they’d kill him, of course.”

“I see.”

Inspector Neele spoke as though it was the

most reasonable remark in the world.

“Did they?”

“Donald went to Dunkirk. He never came

back. They sent me a wire saying he was

dead, ‘Deeply regret killed in action.’ Action,

you see, the wrong kind of action.”

“I’m sorry to hear that, madam. What

about your daughter?”

“I haven’t got a daughter,” said Mrs.

MacKenzie.

“You spoke of her just now,” said Neele.

“Your daughter. Ruby.”

“Ruby. Yes, Ruby.” She leaned forward.

“Do you know what I’ve done to Ruby?”

“No, madam. What have you done to her?”

She whispered suddenly:

“Look here at the Book.”

He saw then that what she was holding in

her lap was a Bible. It was a very old Bible

and as she opened it, on the front page,

Inspector Neele saw that various names had

241

been written. It was obviously a family Bible

in which the old-fashioned custom had been

continued of entering each new birth. Mrs.

MacKenzie’s thin forefinger pointed to the

two last names. “Donald MacKenzie” with

the date of his birth, and “Ruby MacKenzie”

with the date of hers. But a thick line was

drawn through Ruby MacKenzie’s name.

“You see?” said Mrs. MacKenzie. “I

struck her out of the Book. I cut her off for

ever! The Recording Angel won’t find her

name there.”

“You cut her name out of the book? Now,

why madam?”

Mrs. MacKenzie looked at him cunningly.

“You know why,” she said.

“But I don’t. Really, madam, I don’t.”

“She didn’t keep faith. You know she

didn’t keep faith.”

“Where is your daughter now, madam?”

“I’ve told you. I have no daughter. There

isn’t such a person as Ruby MacKenzie any

longer.”

“You mean she’s dead?”

“Dead?” The woman laughed suddenly.

“It would be better for her if she were dead.

Much better. Much, much better.” She

sighed and turned restlessly in her seat. Then

242

her manner reverting to a kind of formal

courtesy, she said, “I’m so sorry, but really

I’m afraid I can’t talk to you any longer. You

see, the time is getting very short, and I must

read my book.”

To Inspector Neele’s further remarks Mrs.

MacKenzie returned no reply. She merely

made a faint gesture of annoyance and

continued to read her Bible with her finger

following the line of the verse she was

reading.

Neele got up and left. He had another brief

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