A POCKET FULL OF RYE

been after him for a long time but he’s been

too clever for them. Quite a financial genius,

the late Mr. Fortescue.”

“The sort of man,” said Constable Waite,

“who might have enemies?”

He spoke hopefully.

31

“Oh yes–certainly enemies. But he was

poisoned at home remember. Or so it would

seem. You know, Waite, I see a kind of

pattern emerging. An old-fashioned familiar

kind of pattern. The good boy, Percival. The

bad boy. Lance–attractive to women. The

wife who’s younger than her husband and

who’s vague about which course she’s going

to play golf on. It’s all very very familiar. But

there’s one thing that sticks out in a most

incongruous way.”

Constable Waite asked “What’s that?” just

as the door opened and Miss Grosvenor, her

poise restored, and once more her glamorous

self, inquired haughtily:

“You wished to see me?”

“I wanted to ask you a few questions about

your employer–your late employer perhaps I

should say.”

“Poor soul,” said Miss Grosvenor unconvincingly.

“I want to know if you have noticed any

difference in him lately.”

“Well, yes. I did, as a matter of fact.”

“In what way?”

“I couldn’t really say. … He seemed to

talk a lot of nonsense. I couldn’t really believe

half of what he said. And then he lost his

32

temper very easily–especially with Mr.

Percival. Not with me, because of course I never argue. I just say, “Yes, Mr. Fortescue,’

whatever peculiar thing he says–said, I

mean.”

“Did he–ever–well–make any passes at you?”

Miss Grosvenor replied rather regretfully:

“Well, no, I couldn’t exactly say that.” “There’s just one other thing. Miss Grosvenor. Was Mr. Fortescue in the habit of

carrying grain about in his pocket?”

Miss Grosvenor displayed a lively surprise.

“Grain? In his pocket? Do you mean to

feed pigeons or something?”

“It could have been for that purpose.”

“Oh I’m sure he didn’t. Mr. Fortescue?

Feed pigeons? Oh no.”

“Could he have had barley–or rye–in his

pocket to-day for any special reason? A

sample, perhaps? Some deal in grain?”

“Oh no. He was expecting the Asiatic Oil

people this afternoon. And the President of

the Atticus Building Society. . . . No one

else.”

“Oh well—-” Neele dismissed the subject

and Miss Grosvenor with a wave of the hand.

“Lovely legs she’s got,” said Constable

33

Waite with a sigh. “And super nylons——”

“Legs are no help to me,” said Inspector

Neele. “I’m left with what I had before. A

pocketful of rye—and no explanation of it.”

34

4

MARY DOVE paused on her way

downstairs and looked out through

the big window on the stairs. A car

had just driven up from which two men were

alighting. The taller of the two stood for a

moment with his back to the house surveying

his surroundings. Mary Dove appraised the

two men thoughtfully. Inspector Neele and

presumably a subordinate.

She turned from the window and looked at

herself in the full-length mirror that hung on

the wall where the staircase turned. . . . She

saw a small demure figure with immaculate

white collar and cuffs on a beige grey dress.

Her dark hair was parted in the middle and

drawn back in two shining waves to a knot in

the back of the neck. . . . The lipstick she

used was a pale rose colour.

On the whole Mary Dove was satisfied with

her appearance. A very faint smile on her

lips, she went on down the stairs.

Inspector Neele, surveying the house, was

saying to himself:

35

Call it a lodge, indeed! Yewtree Lodge!

The affectation of these rich people! The

house was what he. Inspector Neele, would

call a mansion. He knew what a lodge was.

He’d been brought up in one! The lodge at

the gates of Hartington Park, that vast

unwieldy Palladian house with its twentynine

bedrooms which had now been taken

over by the National Trust. The lodge had

been small and attractive from the outside,

and had been damp, uncomfortable and

devoid of anything but the most primitive

form of sanitation within. Fortunately these

facts had been accepted as quite proper and

fitting by Inspector Neele’s parents. They

had no rent to pay and nothing whatever to

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