A POCKET FULL OF RYE

upsets her. Poor Mumsy, she was so devoted

to Dad, you know.”

“And she brought you up to have very

melodramatic ideas of revenge?”

“Yes,” said Jennifer. “She kept making us

swear on the Bible that we’d never forget and

that we’d kill him one day. Of course, once

I’d gone into hospital and started my training,

I began to realise that her mental balance

wasn’t what it should be.”

“You yourself must have felt revengeful

though, Mrs. Fortescue?”

“Well, of course I did. Rex Fortescue practically

murdered my father! I don’t mean he

actually shot him, or knifed him or anything

like that. But I’m quite certain that he did leave Father to die. That’s the same thing, isn’t it?”

“It’s the same thing morally–yes.”

“So I did want to pay him back,” said

Jennifer. “When a friend of mine came to

nurse his son I got her to leave and to propose

my replacing her. I don’t know exactly what I

meant to do … I didn’t, really I didn’t, Inspector, I never meant to kill Mr. Fortescue.

I had some idea, I think, of nursing

325

his son so badly that the son would die. But

of course if you are a nurse by profession you

can’t do that sort of thing. Actually I had

quite a job pulling Val through. And then he

got fond of me and asked me to marry him

and I thought, ‘Well, really that’s a far more

sensible revenge than anything else.’ I mean,

to marry Mr. Fortescue’s eldest son and get

the money he swindled Father out of back

that way. I think it was a far more sensible

way.”

“Yes, indeed,” said Inspector Neele, “far

more sensible.” He added, “It was you, I

suppose, who put the blackbirds on the desk

and in the pie?”

Mrs. Percival flushed.

“Yes. I suppose it was silly of me really….

But Mr. Fortescue had been talking about

suckers one day and boasting of how he’d

swindled people—got the best of them. Oh, in

quite a legal way. And I thought I’d just like

to give him—well, a kind of fright. And it did

give him a fright! He was awfully upset.” She

added anxiously, “But I didn’t do anything

else\ I didn’t really. Inspector. You don’t—

you don’t honestly think I would murder

anyone, do you?”

Inspector Neele smiled.

326

“No,” he said, “I don’t.” He added, “By

the way, have you given Miss Dove any

money lately?”

Jennifer’s jaw dropped.

“How did you know?”

“We know a lot of things,” said Inspector

Neele and added to himself: “And guess a

good many, too.”

Jennifer continued, speaking rapidly.

“She came to me and said that you’d

accused her of being Ruby MacKenzie. She

said if I’d get hold of five hundred pounds

she’d let you go on thinking so. She said if

you knew that I was Ruby MacKenzie, I’d be

suspected of murdering Mr. Fortescue and

my stepmother. I had an awful job getting the

money, because of course I couldn’t tell

Percival. He doesn’t know about me. I had to

sell my diamond engagement ring and a very

beautiful necklace Mr. Fortescue gave me.”

“Don’t worry, Mrs. Percival,” said

Inspector Neele, “I think we can get your

money back for you.”

Ill

It was on the following day that Inspector

327

Neele had another interview with Miss Mary

Dove.

“I wonder. Miss Dove,” he said, “if you’d

give me a cheque for five hundred pounds

payable to Mrs. Percival Fortescue.”

He had the pleasure of seeing Mary Dove

lose countenance for once.

“The silly fool told you, I suppose,” she

said.

“Yes. Blackmail, Miss Dove, is rather a

serious charge.”

“It wasn’t exactly blackmail. Inspector. I

think you’d find it hard to make out a case of

blackmail against me. I was just doing Mrs.

Percival a special service to oblige her.”

“Well, if you’ll give me that cheque. Miss

Dove, we’ll leave it like that.”

Mary Dove got her cheque book and took

out her fountain pen.

“It’s very annoying,” she said with a sigh.

“I’m particularly hard up at the moment.”

“You’ll be looking for another job soon, I

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