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CHAPTER ONECOPPLESTONE COURT, the elegant, eighteenth-century country home of Henry and Clarissa Hailsham-Brown, set in gently undulating hilly country in Kent, looked especially attractive in the moonlight which illuminated its facade on a clear, chilly evening in March. Inside the house, in a tastefully furnished ground-floor drawing-room whose French windows overlooked the garden, two men stood near a console table on which there was a tray with three glasses of port, each marked with a sticky label, one, two and three. Also on the table were a pencil and sheet of paper.Sir Rowland Delahaye, a distinguished-looking man in his early fifties with a charming and cultivated manner, moved away to sit on the arm of a comfortable chair, and allowed his companion, Hugo Birch, to blindfold him. Birch, a man of about sixty and inclined to be somewhat irascible in manner, then placed in Sir Rowland's hand one of the glasses from the table. Raising the glass to his lips, Sir Rowland sipped, considered for a moment, and then said, "I should think – yes – definitely – yes, this is the Dow 'forty-two."Taking the glass from him, Hugo replaced it on the table, murmured, "Dow 'forty-two" as he jotted down on the piece of paper Sir Rowland's opinion, and then handed him the next glass. Again Sir Rowland sipped the wine. He paused, took another sip, and then nodded affirmatively. "Ah, yes," he declared with conviction. "Now, this is a very fine port indeed." He took another sip. "No doubt about it. Cockburn 'twenty-seven."He handed the glass back to Hugo as he continued, "Fancy Clarissa wasting a bottle of Cockburn 'twenty-seven on a silly experiment like this. It's positively sacrilegious. But then women just don't understand port at all."Hugo took the glass from him, noted his opinion of the wine on the piece of paper on the table, and handed him the third glass. After a quick sip, Sir Rowland's reaction was immediate and violent. "Ugh!" he exclaimed in disgust. "Rich ruby-port-type wine. I can't imagine why Clarissa has such a thing in the house."His opinion was duly noted, after which he removed his blindfold and put it on the back of the armchair. "Now it's your turn," he told Hugo.Removing the horn-rimmed spectacles he habitually wore, Hugo allowed Sir Rowland to blindfold him. "Well, I imagine Clarissa uses the cheap port for jugged hare or for flavouring soup," he suggested. "I don't imagine Henry would allow her to offer it to guests.""There you are, Hugo," Sir Rowland declared as he finished tying the blindfold over his companion's eyes. "Perhaps I ought to turn you around three times like they do in blind-man's buff," he added as he led Hugo to the armchair and turned him around to sit in it."Here, steady on," Hugo protested. He felt behind him for the chair."Got it?" asked Sir Rowland. "Yes," replied Hugo as he sat. "Then I'll swivel the glasses around instead," Sir Rowland said as he moved the glasses on the table slightly."There's no need to," Hugo told him. "Do you think I'm likely to be influenced by what you said? I'm as good a judge of port as you are any day, Roly, my boy.""Don't be too sure of that. In any case, one can't be too careful," Sir Rowland insisted.Just as he was about to bring one of the glasses across to Hugo, the third of the Hailsham-Browns' guests entered the room by the French windows. Jeremy Warrender, an attractive young man in his twenties, was wearing a raincoat over his suit. Panting, and obviously out of breath, he headed for the sofa and was about to flop into it when he noticed what was going on. "What on earth are you two up to?" he asked, as he removed his raincoat and jacket. "The three-card trick with glasses?""What's that?" the blindfolded Hugo wanted to know. "It sounds as though someone's brought a dog into the room." "It's only young Warrender," Sir Rowland assured him "Behave yourself.""Oh, I thought it sounded like a dog that's been chasing a rabbit," Hugo declared."I've been three times to the lodge gates and back, wearing a mackintosh over my clothes," Jeremy explained as he fell heavily onto the sofa. "Apparently the Herzoslovakian Minister did it in four minutes fifty-three seconds, weighed down by his mackintosh. I went all out, but I couldn't do any better than six minutes ten seconds. And I don't believe he did, either. Only Chris Chataway himself could do it in that time, with or without a mackintosh.""Who told you that about the Herzoslovakian Minister?" Sir Rowland inquired."Clarissa," Jeremy replied."Clarissa!" exclaimed Sir Rowland, chuckling."Oh, Clarissa," Hugo snorted. "You shouldn't pay any attention to what Clarissa tells you."Still chuckling, Sir Rowland continued, "I'm afraid you don't know your hostess very well, Warrender. She's a young lady with a very vivid imagination."Jeremy rose to his feet. "Do you mean she made the whole thing up?" he asked indignantly."Well, I wouldn't put it past her," Sir Rowland answered as he handed one of the three glasses to the still blindfolded Hugo. "And it certainly sounds like her idea of a joke.""Does it, indeed? You just wait till I see that young woman," Jeremy promised. "I'll certainly have something to say to her. Gosh, I'm exhausted." He got up, walked across to a door leading to the hall, went out momentarily to put his raincoat on the staircase in the hallway, and came back into the room."Stop puffing like a walrus," Hugo complained. "I'm trying to concentrate. There's a fiver at stake. Roly and I have got a bet on.""Oh, what is it?" Jeremy enquired as he went to sit on an arm of the sofa."It's to decide who's the best judge of port," Hugo told him. "We've got Cockburn 'twenty-seven, Dow 'forty-two, and the local grocer's special. Quiet now. This is important." He sipped from the glass he was holding, and then murmured rather non-committally, "Mmm-ah.""Well?" Sir Roland queried. "Have you decided what the first one is?""Don't hustle me, Roly," Hugo exclaimed. "I'm not going to rush my fences. Where's the next one?"He still held one glass in his right hand as he was handed another, which he took in his left hand. He sipped from it, and then announced, "Yes, I'm pretty sure about those two." He sniffed at both glasses again. "This first one's the Dow," he decided as he handed one glass to Sir Rowland. "The second was the Cockburn," he continued, handing the other glass back to Sir Rowland, who repeated, "Number three glass the Dow, number one the Cockburn" as he wrote them down."Well, it's hardly necessary to taste the third," Hugo declared, "but I suppose I'd better go through with it.""Here you are," said Sir Rowland, handing over the final glass.After sipping from it, Hugo made an exclamation of extreme distaste. "Tschah! Ugh! What unspeakable muck." He returned the glass to Sir Rowland, then took a handkerchief from his pocket and wiped his lips to get rid of the offending taste. "It'll take me an hour to get the taste of that stuff out of my mouth," he complained. "Get me out of this, Roly.""Here, I'll do it," Jeremy offered, rising and moving behind Hugo to remove his blindfold while Sir Rowland thoughtfully sipped the last of the three glasses before putting it back on the table."So that's what you think, Hugo, is it? Glass number two grocer's special?" He shook his head. "Rubbish! That's the Dow 'forty-two, not a doubt of it."Hugo put the blindfold in his pocket. "Pah! You've lost your palate, Roly," he declared."Let me try," Jeremy suggested. Going to the table, he took a quick sip from each glass. He paused for a moment, sipped each of them again, and then admitted, "Well, they all taste the same to me.""You young people!" Hugo admonished him. "It's all this confounded gin you keep on drinking. Completely ruins your palate. It's not just women who don't appreciate port. Nowadays, no man under forty does, either."Before Jeremy had a chance to reply to this, the door leading to the library opened, and Clarissa Hailsham-Brown, a beautiful dark-haired woman in her late twenties, entered. "Hello, my darlings," she greeted Sir Rowland and Hugo. "Have you settled it yet?""Yes, Clarissa," Sir Rowland assured her. "We're ready for you.""I know I'm right," said Hugo. "Number one's the Cockburn, number two's the port-type stuff, and three's the Dow. Right?""Nonsense," Sir Rowland exclaimed before Clarissa could answer. "Number one's the port-type stuff, two's the Dow, and three's the Cockburn. I'm right, aren't I?""Darlings!" was Clarissa's only immediate response. She kissed first Hugo and then Sir Rowland, and continued, "Now one of you take the tray back to the dining-room. You'll find the decanter on the sideboard." Smiling to herself, she took a chocolate from a box on an occasional table, and went across to the sofa.Sir Rowland had picked up the tray with the glasses on it, and was about to leave with them. He stopped. "The decanter?" he asked warily.Clarissa sat on one end of the sofa. "Yes," she replied. "Just one decanter." She put her feet up. "It's all the same port, you know," she told them, laughing.CHAPTER TWOCLARISSA'S ANNOUNCEMENT produced a different reaction from each of her hearers. Jeremy burst into hoots of laughter, went across to his hostess and kissed her, while Sir Rowland stood gaping with astonishment, and Hugo seemed undecided what attitude to adopt to her having made fools of them both.When Sir Rowland finally found words, they were "Clarissa, you unprincipled humbug." But his tone was affectionate."Well," Clarissa responded, "it's been such a wet afternoon, and you weren't able to play golf. You must have some fun, and you have had fun over this, darlings, haven't you?""Upon my soul," Sir Rowland exclaimed as he carried the tray and glasses to the door. "You ought to be ashamed of yourself, showing up your elders and betters. It turns out that only young Warrender here guessed they were all the same."Hugo, who by now was laughing, accompanied him to the door. "Who was it?" he asked, putting an arm around Sir Rowland's shoulder. "Who was it who said that he'd know Cockburn 'twenty-seven anywhere?""Never mind, Hugo," Sir Rowland replied resignedly, "let's have some more of it, whatever it is." Talking as they went, the two men left by the door leading to the hall, Hugo closing the door behind them.Jeremy moved away from Clarissa on her sofa, and then turned to face her accusingly. "Now then, Clarissa," he said, "what's all this about the Herzoslovakian Minister?"Clarissa looked at him innocently. "What about him?" she asked.Pointing a finger at her, Jeremy spoke clearly and slowly. "Did he ever run to the lodge gates and back, in a mackintosh, three times in four minutes fifty-three seconds?"Clarissa smiled sweetly as she replied, "The Herzoslovakian Minister is a dear, but he's well over sixty, and I doubt very much if he's run anywhere for years.""So you did make the whole thing up. They told me you probably did. But why?" Jeremy wanted to know."Well," Clarissa suggested, her smile even sweeter than before, "you'd been complaining all day about not getting enough exercise. So I thought the only friendly thing to do was to help you get some. It would have been no good my ordering you to go for a brisk run through the woods, but I knew you'd respond to a challenge. So I invented someone for you to challenge."Jeremy gave a comical groan of exasperation. "Clarissa," he asked her, "do you ever speak the truth?""Of course I do – sometimes," Clarissa admitted. "But when I am speaking the truth, nobody ever seems to believe me. It's very odd." She thought for a moment, and then continued. "I suppose when you're making things up, you get carried away and that makes it sound more convincing." She rose from the sofa and went across to the French windows."I might have broken a blood vessel," Jeremy complained. "A fat lot you'd have cared about that."Clarissa laughed. Opening the window and looking out into the garden, she observed, "I do believe it's cleared up. It's going to be a lovely evening. How delicious the garden smells after rain." She sniffed. "Narcissus."As she closed the window again, Jeremy came over to join her. "Do you really like living down here in the country?" he asked."I love it," Clarissa told him."But you must get bored to death," he exclaimed. "It's all so incongruous for you, Clarissa. You must miss the theatre terribly. I hear you were passionate about it when you were younger.""Yes, I was. But I manage to create my own theatre right here," said Clarissa with a laugh."But you ought to lead an exciting life in London."Clarissa laughed again. "What – parties and nightclubs?" she asked."Parties, yes. You'd make a brilliant hostess," Jeremy told her, laughing.She turned to face him. "It sounds like an Edwardian novel," she said. "Anyway, diplomatic parties are terribly dull.""But it's such a waste, your being tucked away down here," Jeremy persisted, moving close to her and attempting to take her hand in his."A waste – of me?" asked Clarissa, withdrawing her hand."Yes," Jeremy responded fervently. "Then there's Henry.""What about Henry?" Clarissa asked as she moved away to pat a cushion on an easy chair.Jeremy looked at her steadily. "I can't imagine why you ever married him," he replied, plucking up his courage. "He's years older than you, with a daughter who's a school-kid." He leaned on the armchair, still observing her closely. "He's an excellent man, I have no doubt, but really, of all the pompous stuffed shirts... Going about looking like a boiled owl." He paused, waiting for a reaction from Clarissa. When none came, he continued, "He's as dull as ditch-water."Again Clarissa said nothing. Jeremy tried again. "And he has no sense of humour," he muttered somewhat petulantly.Clarissa looked at Jeremy, smiled, but said nothing."Oh, I suppose you think I oughtn't to say these things," Jeremy exclaimed.Clarissa sat on one end of a stool. "Oh, I don't mind," she told him. "Say anything you like."Jeremy went over to sit beside her on the stool. "So you do realize that you've made a mistake?" he asked eagerly."But I haven't made a mistake," was Clarissa's softly uttered response. Then, teasingly, she added, "Are you making immoral advances to me, Jeremy?""Definitely," was his prompt reply."How lovely," exclaimed Clarissa. She nudged him with her elbow. "Do go on.""I think you know how I feel about you, Clarissa," Jeremy responded somewhat moodily. "But you're just playing with me, aren't you? Flirting. It's another one of your games. Darling, can't you be serious just for once?""Serious? What's so good about 'serious'?" Clarissa replied. "There's enough seriousness in the world already. I like to enjoy myself, and I like everyone around me to enjoy themselves as well."Jeremy smiled ruefully. "I'd be enjoying myself a great deal more at this moment if you were serious about me," he observed."Oh, come on," she ordered him playfully. "Of course you're enjoying yourself. Here you are, our house-guest for the weekend, along with my lovely godfather, Roly. And sweet old Hugo's here for drinks this evening as well. He and Roly are so funny together. You can't say you're not enjoying yourself.""Of course I'm enjoying myself," Jeremy admitted. "But you won't let me say what I really want to say to you.""Don't be silly, darling," she replied. "You know you can say anything you like to me.""Really? You mean that?" he asked her."Of course," Clarissa assured him."Very well, then," said Jeremy. He rose and turned to face her. "I love you," he declared."I'm so glad," replied Clarissa cheerfully."That's entirely the wrong answer," Jeremy complained. "You ought to say, 'I'm so sorry' in a deep, sympathetic voice.""But I'm not sorry," Clarissa insisted. "I'm delighted. I like people to be in love with me."Jeremy sat down beside Clarissa again, but turned away from her. He now seemed deeply upset. Looking at him for a moment, Clarissa then asked, "Would you do anything in the world for me?"Turning to her, Jeremy responded eagerly. "You know I would. Anything. Anything in the world," he declared."Really?" said Clarissa. "Supposing, for instance, that I murdered someone, would you help – no, I must stop." She rose and walked away a few paces.Jeremy turned to face Clarissa. "No, go on," he urged her.She paused for a moment and then began to speak. "You asked me just now if I ever get bored, down here in the country.""Yes.""Well, I suppose in a way, I do," she admitted. "Or, rather, I might, if it wasn't for my private hobby."Jeremy looked puzzled. "Private hobby? What is that?" he asked her.Clarissa took a deep breath. "You see, Jeremy," she said, "my life has always been peaceful and happy. Nothing exciting ever happened to me, so I began to play my little game. I call it 'supposing.'"Jeremy looked perplexed. "Supposing?""Yes," said Clarissa, beginning to pace about the room. "For example, I might say to myself, 'Supposing I were to come down one morning and find a dead body in the library, what should I do? Or 'Supposing a woman were to be shown in here one day and told me that she and Henry had been secretly married in Constantinople, and that our marriage was bigamous, what should I say to her?' Or 'Supposing I'd followed my instincts and become a famous actress.' Or 'Supposing I had to choose between betraying my country and seeing Henry shot before my eyes?' Do you see what I mean?" She smiled suddenly at Jeremy. "Or even..." She walked over to the armchair and sat. "'Supposing I were to run away with Jeremy, what would happen next?'"Jeremy went across to Clarissa and knelt beside her. "I feel flattered," he told her. "But have you ever really imagined that particular situation?""Oh, yes," Clarissa replied with a smile."Well? What did happen?" He took her right hand in his.Again Clarissa withdrew her hand. "Well, the last time I played, we were on the Riviera at Juan-les-Pins, and Henry came after us. He had a revolver with him."Jeremy looked startled. "My God!" he exclaimed. "Did he shoot me?"Clarissa smiled again as she recalled the imaginary occasion. "I seem to remember," she told Jeremy, "that he said..." She paused, and then, adopting a highly dramatic delivery, continued, "'Clarissa, either you come back with me, or I kill myself.'"Jeremy rose and moved away. "Jolly decent of him," he said, sounding unconvinced. "I can't imagine anything more unlike Henry. But, anyway, what did you say to that?"Again Clarissa smiled in reminiscence. "Actually, I've played it both ways," she admitted. "On one occasion I told Henry that I was terribly sorry. I didn't really want him to kill himself, but I was very deeply in love with Jeremy, and there was nothing I could do about it. Henry flung himself at my feet, sobbing, but I was adamant. 'I am fond of you, Henry,' I told him, 'but I can't live without Jeremy. This is goodbye.' Then I rushed out of the house and into the garden, where you were waiting for me. As we ran down the garden path to the front gate, we heard a shot ring out in the house, but we went on running.""Good heavens!" Jeremy gasped. "Well, that was certainly telling him, wasn't it? Poor Henry." He thought for a moment, and then continued, "But you say you've played it both ways. What happened the other time?""Oh, Henry was so miserable, and pleaded so pitifully that I didn't have the heart to leave him. I decided to give you up, and devote my life to making Henry happy."Jeremy now looked absolutely desolate. "Well, darling," he declared ruefully, "you certainly do have fun. But please, please be serious for a moment. I'm very serious when I say I love you. I've loved you for a long time. You must have realized that. Are you sure there's no hope for me? Do you really want to spend the rest of your life with boring old Henry?"Clarissa was spared from answering, for the door from the hall suddenly opened and a young girl entered – a thin, tallish child of twelve, wearing a school uniform and carrying a satchel. She called out, "Hello, Clarissa" by way of greeting as she came into the room."Hullo, Pippa," her stepmother replied. "You're late."Pippa went over to an easy chair and put her hat and satchel down on it. "Music lesson," she explained laconically."Oh, yes," Clarissa remembered. "It's your piano day, isn't it? Was it interesting?""No," said Pippa. "Ghastly. Awful exercises I had to repeat and repeat. Miss Farrow said it was to improve my fingering. She wouldn't let me play the nice solo piece I'd been practising. Is there any food about? I'm starving."Clarissa got to her feet. "Didn't you get the usual buns to eat in the bus?" she asked."Oh, yes," Pippa admitted, "but that was half an hour ago." She gave Clarissa a pleading look that was almost comical. "Can't I have some cake or something to last me till supper?"Taking her hand, Clarissa led Pippa to the hall door, laughing. "We'll see what we can find," she promised. As they left, Pippa asked excitedly, "Is there any of that cake left – the one with the cherries on top?""No," Clarissa told her. "You finished that off yesterday."Jeremy shook his head, smiling, as he heard their voices trailing away down the hallway. Then, as soon as they had got out of earshot, he moved quickly to the desk and hurriedly opened one or two of the drawers. But suddenly hearing a hearty female voice calling from the garden, "Ahoy there!" he gave a start, and hastily closed the drawers. He turned towards the French windows in time to see a big, jolly-looking woman of about forty, in tweeds and gumboots, coming into the room from the garden. She paused as she saw Jeremy. Standing on the window-step, she asked brusquely, "Mrs. Hailsham-Brown about?"Jeremy moved casually away from the desk and ambled across to the sofa as he replied, "Yes, Miss Peake. She's just gone to the kitchen with Pippa to get her something to eat. You know what a ravenous appetite Pippa always has.""Children shouldn't eat between meals," was the response of Mildred Peake, the Hailsham-Browns' gardener, delivered in ringing, almost masculine tones."Will you come in, Miss Peake?" Jeremy asked."No, I won't come in because of my boots," she explained with a hearty laugh. "I'd bring half the garden with me if I did." Again she laughed. "I was just going to ask her what veggies she wanted for tomorrow's lunch.""Well, I'm afraid I – " Jeremy began, when Miss Peake interrupted him. "Tell you what," she boomed, "I'll come back."She began to go, but then turned back to Jeremy. "Oh, you will be careful of that desk, won't you, Mr. Warrender?" she said peremptorily."Yes, of course I will," replied Jeremy."It's a valuable antique, you see," Miss Peake explained. "You really shouldn't wrench the drawers out like that."Jeremy looked bemused. "I'm terribly sorry," he apologised. "I was only looking for notepaper.""Middle pigeon-hole," Miss Peake barked, pointing at it as she spoke.Jeremy turned to the desk, opened the middle pigeonhole, and extracted a sheet of writing-paper."That's right," Miss Peake continued brusquely. "Curious how often people can't see what's right in front of their eyes." She chortled heartily as she strode out of the room through the French windows. Jeremy joined in her laughter, but stopped abruptly as soon as she had gone. He was about to return to the desk when the door to the hallway suddenly opened, and Pippa came in, munching a bun.CHAPTER THREE"HMM. SMASHING bun," said Pippa with her mouth full, as she closed the door behind her and wiped her sticky fingers on her school costume."Hello, there," Jeremy greeted her. "How was school today?""Pretty foul," Pippa responded cheerfully as she put what was left of the bun on the table. "It was World Affairs today." She opened her satchel. "Miss Wilkinson loves World Affairs. But she's terribly wet. She can't keep the class in order."As Pippa took a book out of her satchel, Jeremy asked her, "What's your favourite subject?""Biology," was Pippa's immediate and enthusiastic answer. "It's heaven."Jeremy sat on one end of the sofa as Pippa continued, "Yesterday we dissected a frog's leg." She pushed her book in his face. "Look what I got in the second-hand bookstall. It's awfully rare, I'm sure. Over a hundred years old.""What is it, exactly?" Jeremy asked her."It's a kind of recipe-book," Pippa explained. She opened the book. "It's thrilling, absolutely thrilling.""But what's it all about?" Jeremy wanted to know.Pippa was already enthralled by her book. "What?" she murmured as she turned its pages.Jeremy rose to his feet. "It certainly seems very absorbing," he observed."What?" Pippa repeated, still engrossed in the book. To herself she murmured, "Gosh!" as she turned another page."Evidently a good tuppenny-worth," Jeremy commented, as he went across to the stool and picked up a newspaper.Apparently puzzled by what she was reading in the book, Pippa asked him, "What's the difference between a wax candle and a tallow candle?"Jeremy considered for a moment before replying. "I should imagine that a tallow candle is markedly inferior," he said. "But surely you can't eat it. What a strange recipe-book."Much amused, Pippa got to her feet. "'Can you eat it?' she declaimed. "Sounds like Twenty Questions." She laughed, threw the book onto the easy chair, and went across to the bookshelves to get a pack of cards from the bottom shelf. "Do you know how to play demon patience?" she asked Jeremy.By now Jeremy was totally occupied with his newspaper. "Um" was his only response.Pippa tried again to engage his attention. "I suppose you wouldn't like to play beggar-my-neighbour?" she asked him."No," Jeremy replied firmly. He replaced the newspaper on the stool, then went to the desk, sat, and addressed an envelope."No, I thought you probably wouldn't," Pippa murmured wistfully. Kneeling on the floor in the middle of the room, she spread out her cards and began to play a game of demon patience. "I wish we could have a fine day for a change," she complained. "It's such a waste being in the country when it's wet."Jeremy looked across at her. "Do you like living in the country, Pippa?" he asked."Rather," Pippa replied enthusiastically. "I like it much better than living in London. This is an absolutely wizard house, with a tennis court and everything. We've even got a priest's hole.""A priest's hole?" Jeremy queried, smiling. "In this house?""Yes, we have," said Pippa."I don't believe you," Jeremy told her. "It's the wrong period.""Well, I call it a priest's hole," Pippa insisted. "Look, I'll show you."She got up from the floor, went to the right-hand side of the bookshelves, took out a couple of books, and pulled down a small lever in the wall behind the books. A portion of wall to the right of the shelves, revealing itself to be a concealed door, swung open. Behind it was a good-sized recess, with another concealed door in its back wall, evidently leading to the library."I know it isn't really a priest's hole, of course," Pippa admitted. "But it's certainly a secret passageway. Actually, that door goes through into the library.""Oh, does it?" said Jeremy as he rose and went across to the recess. He walked into it, opened the door at the back, glanced into the library and then closed the door again. "So it does," he confirmed as he came back into the room."But it's all rather secret, and you'd never guess it was there unless you knew," Pippa said as she lifted the lever to close the panel. "I'm using it all the time," she continued. "It's the sort of place that would be very convenient for putting a dead body, don't you think?"Jeremy smiled. "Absolutely made for it," he agreed.Pippa came back to the centre of the room and resumed her card game on the floor as Clarissa entered from the hall.Jeremy looked up as she came into the room. "The Amazon is looking for you," he informed Clarissa."Miss Peake? Oh, what a bore," Clarissa exclaimed as she picked up Pippa's bun from the table and took a bite.Pippa immediately got to her feet. "Hey, that's mine!" she protested."Greedy thing," Clarissa murmured as she handed what was left of the bun to Pippa, who placed it back on the table and returned to her card game."The Amazon first hailed me as though I were a ship," Jeremy told Clarissa, "and then she ticked me off for manhandling this desk.""She's a terrible pest," Clarissa admitted, leaning over one end of the sofa to peer down at Pippa's card game. "But we're only renting the house, and she goes with it, so – " She broke off to say to Pippa, "Black ten on the red jack," before continuing, to Jeremy, "– so we have to keep her on. And in any case she's really a very good gardener.""I know," Jeremy agreed, moving to Clarissa and putting an arm around her. "I saw her out of my bedroom window this morning. I heard these sounds of exertion, so I stuck my head out of the window, and there was the Amazon, in the garden, digging something that looked like an enormous grave.""That's called deep trenching," Clarissa explained to him. "I think you plant cabbages in it, or something."Jeremy leaned over to study the card game on the floor. "Red three on the black four," he advised Pippa, who responded with a furious look.Sir Rowland and Hugo now came into the room from the library. Sir Rowland gave a meaningful look at Jeremy, who still had his arm around Clarissa, at which Jeremy tactfully dropped his arm and moved away from her."The weather seems to have cleared at last," Sir Rowland announced. "Too late for golf, though. Only about twenty minutes of daylight left." Looking down at Pippa's card game, he pointed at a card with his foot. "Look, that goes on there," he told her. Crossing to the French windows, he failed to notice the fierce glare Pippa shot his way. "Well," he said, glancing out at the garden, "I suppose we might as well go across to the golf house now, if we're going to eat there.""I'll go and get my coat," Hugo announced, leaning over Pippa to point out a card as he passed her. Pippa, really furious by now, leaned forward and covered the cards with her body, as Hugo turned back to address Jeremy. "What about you, my boy?" he asked. "Coming with us?""Yes," Jeremy answered. "I'll just go and get my jacket." He and Hugo went out into the hall together, leaving the door open."You're sure you don't mind dining at the clubhouse this evening, darling?" Clarissa asked Sir Rowland."Not a bit," he assured her. "Very sensible arrangement, since the servants are having the night off."Elgin, the Hailsham-Browns' middle-aged butler, came into the room from the hall and went across to Pippa. "Your supper is ready in the schoolroom, Miss Pippa," he told her. "There's some milk, and fruit, and your favourite biscuits.""Oh, good!" Pippa shouted, springing to her feet. "I'm ravenous."She darted towards the hall door but was stopped by Clarissa, who told her sharply to pick up her cards first and put them away."Oh, bother," Pippa exclaimed. She went back to the cards, knelt, and slowly began to shovel them into a heap against one end of the sofa.Elgin now addressed Clarissa. "Excuse me, madam," he murmured respectfully."Yes, Elgin, what is it?" Clarissa asked.The butler looked uncomfortable. "There has been a little – er – unpleasantness, over the vegetables," he told her."Oh, dear," said Clarissa. "You mean with Miss Peake?""Yes, madam," the butler continued. "My wife finds Miss Peake most difficult, madam. She is continually coming into the kitchen and criticizing and making remarks, and my wife doesn't like it, she doesn't like it at all. Wherever we have been, Mrs. Elgin and myself have always had very pleasant relations with the garden.""I'm really sorry about that," Clarissa replied, suppressing a smile. "I'll – er – I'll try to do something about it. I'll speak to Miss Peake.""Thank you, madam," said Elgin. He bowed and left the room, closing the hall door behind him."How tiresome they are, servants," Clarissa observed to Sir Rowland. "And what curious things they say. How can one have pleasant relations with the garden? It sounds improper, in a pagan kind of way.""I think you're lucky, however, with this couple – the Elgins," Sir Rowland advised her. "Where did you get them?""Oh, the local registry office," Clarissa replied.Sir Rowland frowned. "I hope not that what's-its-name one where they always send you crooks," he observed."Cooks?" asked Pippa, looking up from the floor where she was still sorting out cards."No, dear. Crooks," Sir Rowland repeated. "Do you remember," he continued, now addressing Clarissa, "that agency with the Italian or Spanish name – di Botello, wasn't it? – who kept sending you people to interview, most of whom turned out to be illegal aliens? Andy Hulme was virtually cleaned out by a couple he and his wife took on. They used Andy's horse-box to move out half the house. And they've never caught up with them yet.""Oh, yes," Clarissa laughed. "I do remember." Then, "Come on, Pippa, hurry up," she ordered the child.Pippa picked up the cards and got to her feet. 'There!" she exclaimed petulantly as she replaced the cards on the bookshelves. "I wish one didn't always have to do clearing up." She went towards the door, but was stopped by Clarissa who, picking up what was left of Pippa's bun from the table, called to her, "Here, take your bun with you," and handed it to her.Pippa started to go again. "And your satchel," Clarissa continued.Pippa ran to the easy chair, snatched up her satchel, and turned again towards the hall door."Hat!" Clarissa shouted.Pippa put the bun on the table, picked up her hat, and ran to the hall door."Here!" Clarissa called her back again, picked up the piece of bun, stuffed it in Pippa's mouth, took the hat, jammed it on the child's head, and pushed her into the hall. "And shut the door, Pippa," she called after her.Pippa finally made her exit, closing the door behind her. Sir Rowland laughed, and Clarissa, joining in his laughter, went to the table and took a cigarette from a box. Outside, the daylight was now beginning to fade, and the room was becoming a little darker."You know, it's wonderful!" Sir Rowland exclaimed. "Pippa's a different child, now. You've done a remarkably good job there, Clarissa."Clarissa went across to the sofa, and sat. "I think she really likes me now and trusts me," she said. "And I quite enjoy being a stepmother."Sir Rowland picked up a lighter from the occasional table by the sofa, and lit Clarissa's cigarette for her. "Well," he observed, "she certainly seems a normal, happy child again."Clarissa nodded in agreement. "I think living in the country has made all the difference," she suggested. "And she goes to a very nice school and is making lots of friends there. Yes, I think she's happy, and, as you say, normal."Sir Rowland frowned. "It's a shocking thing," he exclaimed, "to see a kid get into the state she was in. I'd like to wring Miranda's neck. What a dreadful mother she was.""Yes," Clarissa agreed. "Pippa was absolutely terrified of her mother."Sir Rowland joined Clarissa on the sofa. "It was a shocking business," he murmured.Clarissa clenched her fists and made an angry gesture. "I feel furious every time I think of Miranda," she said. "What she made Henry suffer, and what she made that child go through. I still can't understand how any woman could.""Taking drugs is a nasty business," Sir Rowland went on. "It alters your whole character."They sat for a moment in silence. Then Clarissa asked, "What do you think started her on drugs in the first place?""I think it was her friend, that swine Oliver Costello," Sir Rowland declared. "I believe he's in on the drug racket.""He's a horrible man," Clarissa agreed. "Really evil, I always think.""She's married him now, hasn't she?" Sir Rowland asked."Yes, they married about a month ago," Clarissa answered.Sir Rowland shook his head. "Well, there's no doubt Henry's well rid of Miranda," he said. "He's a nice fellow, Henry." He repeated emphatically, "A really nice fellow."Clarissa smiled, and murmured gently, "Do you think you need to tell me that?""I know he doesn't say much," Sir Rowland went on. "He's what you might call undemonstrative – but he's sound all the way through." He paused, and then added, "That young fellow, Jeremy. What do you know about him?"Clarissa smiled again. "Jeremy? He's very amusing," she replied."Tschah!" Sir Rowland snorted. "That's all people seem to care about, these days." He gave Clarissa a serious look and continued, "You won't – you won't do anything foolish, will you?"Clarissa laughed. "Don't fall in love with Jeremy Warrender," she answered him. "That's what you mean, isn't it?"Sir Rowland still regarded her seriously. "Yes," he told her, "that's precisely what I mean. He's obviously very fond of you. Indeed, he seems unable to keep his hands off you. But you have a very happy marriage with Henry, and I wouldn't want you to do anything to put that in jeopardy."Clarissa gave him an affectionate smile. "Do you really think I would do anything so foolish?" she asked playfully."That would certainly be extremely foolish," Sir Rowland advised. He paused before continuing, "You know, Clarissa darling, I've watched you grow up. You really mean a great deal to me. If ever you're in trouble of any kind, you would come to your old guardian, wouldn't you?""Of course, Roly, darling," Clarissa replied. She kissed him on the cheek. "And you needn't worry about Jeremy. Really, you needn't. I know he's very engaging, and attractive and all that. But you know me, I'm only enjoying myself. Just having fun. It's nothing serious."Sir Rowland was about to speak again when Miss Peake suddenly appeared at the French windows.CHAPTER FOURMlSS PEAKE had by now discarded her boots and was in her stockinged feet. She was carrying a head of broccoli."I hope you don't mind my coming in this way, Mrs. Hailsham-Brown," she boomed, as she strode across to the sofa. "I shan't make the room dirty, I've left my boots outside. I'd just like you to look at this broccoli." She thrust it over the back of the sofa in a belligerent manner, and stuck it under Clarissa's nose."It – er – it looks very nice," was all Clarissa could think of by way of reply.Miss Peake thrust the broccoli under Sir Rowland's nose. "Take a look," she ordered him.Sir Rowland did as he was told, and after surveying the broccoli he pronounced his verdict. "I can't see anything wrong with it," he declared. But he took the broccoli from her in order to give it a closer investigation."Of course there's nothing wrong with it," Miss Peake barked at him. "I took another one just like this into the kitchen yesterday, and that woman in the kitchen – " She broke off to add, by way of parenthesis, "Of course, I don't want to say anything against your servants, Mrs. Hailsham-Brown, though I could say a great deal." Returning to her main theme, she continued, "But that Mrs. Elgin actually had the nerve to tell me that it was such a poor specimen she wasn't going to cook it. She said something about, 'If you can't do better than that in the kitchen garden, you'd better take up some other job.' I was so angry I could have killed her."Clarissa began to speak, but Miss Peake ploughed on regardless. "Now you know I never want to make trouble," she insisted, "but I'm not going into that kitchen to be insulted." After a brief pause for breath, she resumed her tirade. "In future," she announced, "I shall dump the vegetables outside the back door, and Mrs. Elgin can leave a list there – "Sir Rowland at this point attempted to hand the broccoli back to her, but Miss Peake ignored him, and continued, "She can leave a list there of what is required." She nodded her head emphatically.Neither Clarissa nor Sir Rowland could think of anything to say by way of reply, and just as the gardener opened her mouth to speak again, the telephone rang. "I'll answer it," she bellowed. She crossed to the phone and lifted the receiver. "Hello – yes," she barked into the mouthpiece, wiping the top of the table with a corner of her overall as she spoke. "This is Copplestone Court – You want Mrs. Brown? – Yes, she's here."Miss Peake held out the receiver, and Clarissa rose, stubbed out her cigarette, went over to the phone, and took the receiver from her."Hello," said Clarissa, "This is Mrs. Hailsham-Brown. Hello-hello." She looked at Miss Peake. "How odd," she exclaimed. "They seem to have rung off."As Clarissa replaced the receiver, Miss Peake suddenly darted to the console table and set it back against the wall. "Excuse me," she boomed, "but Mr. Sellon always liked this table flat against the wall."Clarissa surreptitiously pulled a face at Sir Rowland, but hastened nevertheless to assist Miss Peake with the table. "Thank you," said the gardener. "And," she added, "you will be careful about marks made with glasses on the furniture, won't you, Mrs. Brown-Hailsham?" Clarissa looked anxiously at the table as the gardener corrected herself. "I'm sorry – I mean Mrs. Hailsham-Brown." She laughed in a hearty fashion. "Oh well, Brown-Hailsham, Hailsham-Brown," she continued. "It's really all the same thing, isn't it?""No, it's not, Miss Peake," Sir Rowland declared, with very distinct enunciation. "After all, a horse chestnut is hardly the same thing as a chestnut horse."While Miss Peake was laughing jovially at this, Hugo entered the room from the hall. "Hello, there," she greeted him. "I'm getting a regular ticking off. Quite sarcastic, they're being." Going across to Hugo, she thumped him on the back, and then turned to the others. "Well, good night, all," she shouted. "I must be toddling back. Give me the broccoli."Sir Rowland handed the broccoli to Miss Peake. "Horse chestnut – chestnut horse," she boomed at him. "Jolly good – I must remember that." With another boisterous laugh she disappeared through the French windows.Hugo watched her leave, and then turned to Clarissa and Sir Rowland. "How on earth does Henry bear that woman?" he wondered aloud."He does actually find her very hard to take," Clarissa replied as she picked up Pippa's book from the easy chair and put it on the table.She collapsed into the easy chair as Hugo responded, "I should think so. She's so damned arch! All that hearty school-girl manner.""A case of arrested development, I'm afraid," Sir Row land added, shaking his head.Clarissa smiled. "I agree she's maddening," she said, "but she's a very good gardener and, as I keep telling everyone, she goes with the house, and since the house is so wonderfully cheap – ""Cheap? Is it?" Hugo interrupted her. "You surprise me.""Marvellously cheap," Clarissa told him. "It was advertised. We came down and saw it a couple of months ago, and took it then and there for six months, furnished.""Whom does it belong to?" Sir Rowland asked."It used to belong to a Mr. Sellon," Clarissa replied. "But he died. He was an antique dealer in Maidstone.""Ah, yes!" Hugo exclaimed. "That's right. Sellon and Brown. I once bought a very nice Chippendale mirror from their shop in Maidstone. Sellon lived out here in the country, and used to go into Maidstone every day, but I believe he sometimes brought customers out here to see things that he kept in the house.""Mind you," Clarissa told them both, "there are one or two disadvantages about this house. Only yesterday, a man in a violent check suit drove up in a sports car and wanted to buy that desk." She pointed to the desk. "I told him that it wasn't ours and therefore we couldn't sell it, but he simply wouldn't believe me and kept on raising the price. He went up to five hundred pounds in the end.""Five hundred pounds!" exclaimed Sir Rowland, sounding really startled. He went across to the desk. "Good Lord!" he continued. "Why, even at the Antique Dealers' Fair I wouldn't have thought it would fetch anything near to that. It's a pleasant-enough object, but surely not especially valuable."Hugo joined him at the desk as Pippa came back into the room. "I'm still hungry," she complained."You can't be," Clarissa told her firmly."I am," Pippa insisted. "Milk and chocolate biscuits and a banana aren't really filling." She made for the armchair and collapsed into it.Sir Rowland and Hugo were still contemplating the desk. "It's certainly a nice desk," Sir Rowland observed. "Quite genuine, I imagine, but not what I'd call a collector's piece. Don't you agree, Hugo?""Yes, but perhaps it's got a secret drawer with a diamond necklace in it," Hugo suggested facetiously."It has got a secret drawer," Pippa chimed in."What?" Clarissa exclaimed."I found a book in the market, all about secret drawers in old furniture," Pippa explained. "So I tried looking at desks and things all over the house. But this is the only one that's got a secret drawer." She got up from the armchair. "Look," she invited them. "I'll show you."She went over to the desk and opened one of its pigeon-holes. While Clarissa came and leaned over the sofa to watch, Pippa slid her hand into the pigeon-hole. "See," she said as she did so, "you slide this out, and there's a sort of little catch thing underneath.""Humph!" Hugo grunted. "I don't call that very secret.""Ah, but that's not all," Pippa went on. "You press this thing underneath – and a little drawer flies out." Again she demonstrated, and a small drawer shot out of the desk. "See?"Hugo took the drawer and picked a small piece of paper out of it. "Hello," he said, "what's this, I wonder?" He read aloud. "'Sucks to you.'""What!" Sir Rowland exclaimed, and Pippa went off into a gale of laughter. The others joined in, and Sir Rowland playfully shook Pippa, who pretended to punch him in return as she boasted, "I put that there!""You little villain!" said Sir Rowland, ruffling her hair. "You're getting as bad as Clarissa with your silly tricks.""Actually," Pippa told them, "there was an envelope with an autograph of Queen Victoria in it. Look, I'll show you." She dashed to the bookshelves, while Clarissa went to the desk, replaced the drawers, and closed the pigeonhole.At the bookshelves, Pippa opened a small box on one of the lower shelves, took out an old envelope containing three scraps of paper, and displayed them to the assembled company."Do you collect autographs, Pippa?" Sir Rowland asked her."Not really," replied Pippa. "Only as a sideline." She handed one of the pieces of paper to Hugo, who glanced at it and passed it on to Sir Rowland."A girl at school collects stamps, and her brother's got a smashing collection himself," Pippa told them. "Last autumn he thought he'd got one like the one he saw in the paper – a Swedish something or other which was worth hundreds of pounds." As she spoke, she handed the two remaining autographs and the envelope to Hugo, who passed them on to Sir Rowland."My friend's brother was awfully excited," Pippa continued, "and he took the stamp to a dealer. But the dealer said it wasn't what he thought it was, though it was quite a good stamp. Anyway, he gave him five pounds for it."Sir Rowland handed two of the autographs back to Hugo, who passed them on to Pippa. "Five pounds is pretty good, isn't it?" Pippa asked him, and Hugo grunted his agreement.Pippa looked down at the autographs. "How much do you think Queen Victoria's autograph would be worth?" she wondered aloud."About five to ten shillings, I should think," Sir Rowland told her, as he looked at the envelope he was still holding."There's John Ruskin's here too, and Robert Browning's," Pippa told them."They're not worth much either, I'm afraid," said Sir Rowland, handing the remaining autograph and the envelope to Hugo, who passed them on to Pippa, murmuring sympathetically as he did so, "Sorry, my dear. You're not doing very well, are you?""I wish I had Neville Duke's and Roger Bannister's," Pippa murmured wistfully. "These historical ones are rather mouldy, I think." She replaced the envelope and autographs in the box, placed the box back on the shelf, and then began to back towards the hall door. "Can I see if there are any more chocolate biscuits in the larder, Clarissa?" she asked hopefully."Yes, if you like," Clarissa told her, smiling."We must be off," said Hugo, following Pippa towards the door and calling up the staircase, "Jeremy! Hi! Jeremy!""Coming," Jeremy shouted back as he hurried down the stairs, crossed the hall, and entered the room carrying a golf club."Henry ought to be home soon," Clarissa murmured, to herself as much as to the others.Hugo went across to the French windows, calling to Jeremy, "Better go out this way. It's nearer." He turned back to Clarissa. "Good night, Clarissa dear," he said. "Thank you for putting up with us. I'll probably go straight home from the club, but I promise to send your weekend guests back to you in one piece.""Good night, Clarissa," Jeremy joined in, as he and Hugo left by the French windows.Clarissa waved them goodbye, as Sir Rowland came across and put his arm around her. "Good night, my dear," he said. "Warrender and I will probably not be in until about midnight."Clarissa accompanied him to the French windows. "It's really a lovely evening," she observed. "I'll come with you as far as the gate onto the golf course."They strolled across the garden together, making no attempt to catch up with Hugo and Jeremy. "What time do you expect Henry home?" Sir Rowland asked Clarissa."Oh, I'm not sure. It varies. Quite soon, I imagine. Anyway, we'll have a quiet evening together and some cold food, and we'll probably have retired to bed by the time you and Jeremy get back.""Yes, don't wait up for us, for heaven's sake," Sir Rowland told her.They walked on in companionable silence until they reached the garden gate. Then, "All right, my dear, I'll see you later, or probably at breakfast tomorrow," said Clarissa.Sir Rowland gave her an affectionate peck on the cheek and walked on briskly to catch up with his companions, while Clarissa made her way back to the house. It was a pleasant evening, and she walked slowly, stopping to enjoy the sights and smells of the garden, and allowing her thoughts to wander. She laughed to herself as the image of Miss Peake with her broccoli came into her mind, then found herself smiling when she thought of Jeremy and his clumsy attempt to make love to her. She wondered idly whether he had really been serious about it. As she approached the house, she began to contemplate with pleasure the prospect of a quiet evening at home with her husband.CHAPTER FIVECLARISSA AND Sir Rowland had hardly been gone more than a few minutes when Elgin, the butler, entered the room from the hall, carrying a tray of drinks, which he placed on a table. When the front-door bell suddenly rang, he went out into the hall, leaving the door open behind him. He opened the front door to find a theatrically handsome, dark-haired man standing outside."Good evening, sir," Elgin greeted him."Good evening. I've come to see Mrs. Brown," the man told him rather brusquely."Oh, yes, sir, do come in," said Elgin. Closing the door behind the man, he asked, "What name, sir?""Mr. Costello," he was told."This way, sir," Elgin invited him, leading the way along the hall. He stood aside to allow the newcomer to enter the drawing-room, and then said, "Would you wait here, sir. Madam is at home. I'll see if I can find her." He started to go, then stopped and turned back to the man. "Mr. Costello, did you say?""That's right," the stranger replied. "Oliver Costello.""Very good, sir," murmured Elgin as he left the room, closing the door behind him.Left alone, Oliver Costello looked around the room, walked across to listen first at the library door and next at the hall door, and then approached the desk, bent over it, and looked closely at the drawers. Hearing a sound, he quickly moved away from the desk, and was standing in the centre of the room when Clarissa came in through the French windows.Costello turned. When he saw who it was, he looked amazed.It was Clarissa who spoke first. Sounding intensely surprised, she gasped, "You?""Clarissa! What are you doing here?" exclaimed Costello. He sounded equally surprised."That's a rather silly question, isn't it?" Clarissa replied. "It's my house.""This is your house?" His tone was one of disbelief."Don't pretend you don't know," said Clarissa sharply.Costello stared at her without speaking for a moment or two. Then, adopting a complete change of manner, he observed, "What a charming house this is. It used to belong to old what's-his-name, the antique dealer, didn't it? I remember he brought me out here once to show me some Louis Quinze chairs." Costello took a cigarette case from his pocket. "Cigarette?" he offered."No, thank you," replied Clarissa abruptly. "And," she added, "I think you'd better go. My husband will be home quite soon, and I don't think he'll be very pleased to see you."Costello strolled across to the armchair and stood behind it as he responded with rather insolent amusement, "But I particularly do want to see him. That's why I've come here, really, to discuss suitable arrangements.""Arrangements?" Clarissa asked, her tone one of puzzlement."Arrangements for Pippa," Costello explained. "Miranda's quite agreeable to Pippa's spending part of the summer holidays with Henry, and perhaps a week at Christmas. But otherwise-"Clarissa interrupted him sharply. "What do you mean?" she asked. "Pippa's home is here."Costello wandered casually over to the table with the drinks on it. "But, my dear Clarissa," he exclaimed, "you're surely aware that the court gave Miranda the custody of the child?" He picked up a bottle of whisky. "May I?" he asked, and without waiting for a reply poured a drink for himself. "The case was undefended, remember?"Clarissa faced him belligerently. "Henry allowed Miranda to divorce him," she declared, speaking clearly and concisely, "only after it was agreed between them privately that Pippa should live with her father. If Miranda had not agreed to that, Henry would have divorced her."Costello gave a laugh which bordered on a sneer. "You don't know Miranda very well, do you?" he asked. "She so often changes her mind."Clarissa turned away from him. "I don't believe for one moment," she said contemptuously, "that Miranda wants that child or even cares twopence about her.""But you're not a mother, my dear Clarissa," was Costello's impertinent response. "You don't mind my calling you Clarissa, do you?" he went on, with another unpleasant smile. "After all, now that I'm married to Miranda, we're practically relations-in-law."He swallowed his drink in one gulp and then put his glass down. "Yes, I can assure you," he continued, "Miranda is now feeling violently maternal. She feels she must have Pippa to live with us for most of the time.""I don't believe it," Clarissa snapped."Please yourself," Costello replied as he made himself comfortable in the armchair. "But there's no point in your trying to contest it. After all, there was no arrangement in writing, you know.""You're not going to have Pippa," Clarissa told him firmly. "The child was a nervous wreck when she came to us. She's much better now, and she's happy at school, and that's the way she's going to remain.""How will you manage that, my dear?" Costello sneered. "The law is on our side.""What's behind all this?" Clarissa asked him, sounding bewildered. "You don't care about Pippa. What do you really want?" She paused, and then struck her forehead. "Oh! What a fool I am. Of course, it's blackmail."Costello was about to reply when Elgin entered abruptly from the hall. "I was looking for you, madam," the butler told Clarissa. Seeing Costello with her, he asked, "Will it be quite all right for Mrs. Elgin and myself to leave now for the evening, madam?""Yes, quite all right, Elgin," Clarissa replied."The taxi has come for us," the butler explained. "Supper is laid all ready in the dining-room." He was about to go, but then turned back to Clarissa. "Do you want me to shut up in here, madam?" he asked, keeping an eye on Costello as he spoke."No, I'll see to it," Clarissa assured him. "You and Mrs. Elgin can go off for the evening now.""Thank you, madam," said Elgin. He went to the hall door and turned to say, "Good night, madam.""Good night, Elgin," Clarissa responded.Costello waited until the butler had closed the door behind him before he spoke again. Then, "'Blackmail' is a very ugly word, Clarissa," he pointed out to her somewhat unoriginally. "You should take a little more care before you accuse people wrongfully. Now, have I mentioned money at all?""Not yet," replied Clarissa. "But that's what you mean, isn't it?"Costello shrugged his shoulders and held his hands out in an expressive gesture. "It's true that we're not very well off," he admitted. "Miranda has always been very extravagant, as you no doubt know. I think she feels that Henry might be able to spare her a much larger allowance. After all, he's a rich man."Clarissa went up to Costello and faced him squarely. "Now listen," she ordered him. "I don't know about Henry, but I do know about myself. You try to get Pippa away from here, and I'll fight you tooth and nail." She paused, then added, "And I don't care what weapons I use."Apparently unmoved by her outburst, Costello chuckled, but Clarissa continued, "It shouldn't be difficult to get medical evidence proving Miranda's a drug addict. I'd even go to Scotland Yard and talk to the Narcotic Squad, and I'd suggest that they keep an eye on you as well."Costello gave a start at this. "The upright Henry will hardly care for your methods," he warned Clarissa."Then Henry will have to lump them," she retorted fiercely. "It's the child that matters. I'm not going to have Pippa bullied or frightened."At this point, Pippa came into the room from the hall. Seeing Costello, she stopped short and looked terrified."Why, hello, Pippa," Costello greeted her. "How you've grown."Pippa backed away from him as he moved towards her. "I've just come to make some arrangements about you," he told her. "Your mother is looking forward to having you with her again. She and I are married now, and – ""I won't come," Pippa cried hysterically, running to Clarissa for protection. "I won't come. Clarissa, they can't make me, can they? They wouldn't – ""Don't worry, Pippa darling," Clarissa said soothingly, putting her arm around the child. "Your home is here with your father and with me, and you're not leaving it.""But I assure you – " Costello began, only to be interrupted angrily by Clarissa. "Get out of here at once," she ordered him.Mockingly pretending to be afraid of her, Costello put his hands above his head and backed away."At once!" Clarissa repeated. She advanced upon him. "I won't have you in my house, do you hear?"Miss Peake suddenly entered through the French windows, carrying a large garden fork. "Oh, Mrs. Hailsham-Brown," she began, "I – ""Miss Peake," Clarissa interrupted her. "Will you show Mr. Costello the way through the garden to the gate onto the golf links?"Costello looked at Miss Peake, who lifted her garden fork as she returned his gaze."Miss... Peake?" he queried."Pleased to meet you," she replied robustly. "I'm the gardener here.""Indeed, yes," said Costello. "I came here once before, you may remember, to look at some antique furniture.""Oh, yes," Miss Peake replied. "In Mr. Sellon's time. But you can't see him today, you know. He's dead.""No, I didn't come to see him," Costello declared. "I came to see... Mrs. Brown." He gave the name a certain emphasis."Oh, yes? Is that so? Well, now you've seen her," Miss Peake told him. She seemed to realize that the visitor had outstayed his welcome.Costello turned to Clarissa. "Goodbye, Clarissa," he said. "You will hear from me, you know." He sounded almost menacing."This way," Miss Peake showed him, gesturing to the French windows. She followed him out, asking as they went, "Do you want the bus, or did you bring your own car?""I left my car round by the stables," Costello informed her as they made their way across the garden.CHAPTER SIXAS SOON as Oliver Costello had left with Miss Peake, Pippa burst into tears. "He'll take me away from here," she cried, sobbing bitterly as she clung to Clarissa."No, he won't," Clarissa assured her, but Pippa's only response was to shout, "I hate him. I always hated him."Fearing that the girl was on the verge of hysteria, Clarissa addressed her sharply, "Pippa!"Pippa backed away from her. "I don't want to go back to my mother, I'd rather die," she screamed. "I'd much rather die. I'll kill him.""Pippa!" Clarissa admonished her.Pippa now seemed completely hysterical. "I'll kill myself," she cried. "I'll cut my wrists and bleed to death."Clarissa seized her by the shoulders. "Pippa, control yourself," she ordered the child. "It's all right, I tell you. I'm here.""But I don't want to go back to Mother, and I hate Oliver," Pippa exclaimed desperately. "He's wicked, wicked, wicked.""Yes, dear, I know. I know," Clarissa murmured soothingly."But you don't know." Pippa now sounded even more desperate. "I didn't tell you everything before – when I came to live here. I just couldn't bear to mention it. But it wasn't only Miranda being so nasty and drunk or something, all the time. One night, when she was out somewhere or other, and Oliver was at home with me – I think he'd been drinking a lot – I don't know-but – " She stopped, and for a moment seemed unable to continue. Then, forcing herself to go on, she looked down at the floor and muttered indistinctly, "He tried to do things to me."Clarissa looked aghast. "Pippa, what do you mean?" she asked. "What are you trying to say?"Pippa looked desperately about her, as though seeking someone else who would say the words for her. "He – he tried to kiss me, and when I pushed him away, he grabbed me, and started to tear my dress off. Then he – " She stopped suddenly, and burst into a fit of sobbing."Oh, my poor darling," Clarissa murmured, as she hugged the child to her. "Try not to think about it. It's all over, and nothing like that will ever happen to you again. I'll make sure that Oliver is punished for that. The disgusting beast. He won't get away with it." Pippa's mood suddenly changed. Her tone now had a hopeful note, as a new thought apparently came to her. "Perhaps he'll be struck by lightning," she wondered aloud."Very likely," Clarissa agreed, "very likely." Her face wore a look of grim determination. "Now pull yourself together, Pippa," she urged the child. "Everything's quite all right." She took a handkerchief from her pocket and handed it to Pippa. "Here, blow your nose." Pippa did as she was told, and then used the handkerchief to wipe her tears off Clarissa's dress.Clarissa managed to summon up a laugh at this. "Now, you go upstairs and have your bath," she ordered, turning Pippa around to face the hall door. "Mind you have a really good wash – your neck is absolutely filthy." Pippa seemed to be returning to normal. "It always is," she replied as she went to the door. But, as she was about to leave, she turned suddenly and ran to Clarissa. "You won't let him take me away, will you?" she pleaded."Over my dead body," Clarissa replied with determination. Then she corrected herself. "No – over his dead body. There! Does that satisfy you?"Pippa nodded, and Clarissa kissed her forehead. "Now, run along," she ordered.Pippa gave her stepmother a final hug and left. Clarissa stood for a moment in thought, and then, noticing that the room had become rather dark, switched on the concealed lighting by a switch near the hall door. She went to the French windows and closed them, then sat on the sofa, staring ahead of her, apparently lost in thought.Only a minute or two had passed when, hearing the front door of the house slam, she looked expectantly towards the hall door through which, a moment later, her husband, Henry Hailsham-Brown, entered. Henry was a quite good-looking man of about forty with a rather expressionless face, wearing horn-rimmed spectacles and carrying a brief-case."Hello, darling," Henry greeted his wife, as he switched on the wall-bracket lights by a switch below the hall door, and put his brief-case on the armchair."Hello, Henry," Clarissa replied. "Hasn't it been an absolutely awful day?""Has it?" asked Henry, as he came across to lean over the back of the sofa and kiss Clarissa."I hardly know where to begin," she told him. "Have a drink first." "Not just now," Henry replied, going to the French windows and closing the curtains. "Who's in the house?"Slightly surprised at the question, Clarissa answered, "Nobody. It's the Elgins's night off. Black Thursday, you know. We'll dine on cold ham, chocolate mousse, and the coffee will be really good because I shall make it." A questioning "Um?" was Henry's only response to this.Struck by his manner, Clarissa asked, "Henry, is anything the matter?""Well, yes, in a way," he told her."Something wrong?" she queried. "Is it Miranda?""No, no, there's nothing wrong, really," Henry assured her. "I should say quite the contrary. Yes, quite the contrary." "Darling," said Clarissa, speaking with affection and only a very faint note of ridicule, "do I perceive behind that impenetrable Foreign Office façade a certain human excitement?"Henry wore an air of pleasurable anticipation. "Well," he admitted, "it is rather exciting in a way." He paused, then added, "As it happens, there's a slight fog in London." "Is that very exciting?" Clarissa asked."No, no, not the fog, of course." "Well?" Clarissa urged him.Henry looked quickly around, as though to assure himself that he could not be overheard, and then went across to the sofa to sit beside Clarissa. "You'll have to keep this to yourself," he impressed upon her in a very grave tone of voice."Yes?" Clarissa prompted him hopefully."It's really very secret," Henry reiterated. "Nobody's supposed to know. But, actually, you'll have to know." "Well, come on, tell me," she urged him.Henry looked around again, and then turned to Clarissa. "It's all very hush-hush," he insisted. He paused for effect, and then announced, "The Soviet Premier, Kalendorff, is flying to London for an important conference with the Prime Minister tomorrow." Clarissa was unimpressed. "Yes, I know," she replied.Henry looked startled. "What do you mean, you know?" he demanded."I read it in the paper last Sunday," Clarissa informed him casually."I can't think why you want to read these low-class papers," Henry expostulated. He sounded really put out. "Anyway," he continued, "the papers couldn't possibly know that Kalendorff was coming over. It's top secret." "My poor sweet," Clarissa murmured. Then, in a voice in which compassion was mixed with incredulity, she continued, "But top secret? Really! The things you high-ups believe." Henry rose and began to stride around the room, looking distinctly worried. "Oh dear, there must have been some leak," he muttered."I should have thought," Clarissa observed tartly, "that by now you'd know there always is a leak. In fact, I should have thought that you'd all be prepared for it." Henry looked somewhat affronted. "The news was only released officially tonight," he told her. "Kalendorff's plane is due at Heathrow at eight-forty, but actually..." He leaned over the sofa and looked doubtfully at his wife."Now, Clarissa," he asked her very solemnly, "can I really trust you to be discreet?""I'm much more discreet than any Sunday newspaper," Clarissa protested, swinging her feet off the sofa and sitting up.Henry sat on an arm of the sofa and leaned towards Clarissa conspiratorially. "The conference will be at Whitehall tomorrow," he informed her, "but it would be a great advantage if a conversation could take place first between Sir John himself and Kalendorff. Now, naturally the reporters are all waiting at Heathrow, and the moment the plane arrives, Kalendorff's movements are more or less public property." He looked around again, as though expecting to find the gentlemen of the press peering over his shoulder, and continued, in a tone of increasing excitement, "Fortunately, this incipient fog has played into our hands." "Go on," Clarissa encouraged him. "I'm thrilled, so far." "At the last moment," Henry informed her, "the plane will find it inadvisable to land at Heathrow. It will be diverted, as is usual on these occasions – ""To Bindley Heath," Clarissa interrupted him. "That's just fifteen miles from here. I see." "You're always very quick, Clarissa dear," Henry commented rather disapprovingly. "But yes, I shall go off there now to the aerodrome in the car, meet Kalendorff, and bring him here. The Prime Minister is motoring down here direct from Downing Street. Half an hour will be ample for what they have to discuss, and then Kalendorff will travel up to London with Sir John."Henry paused. He got up and took a few paces away, before turning to say to her disarmingly, "You know, Clarissa, this may be of very great value to me in my career. I mean, they're reposing a lot of trust in me, having this meeting here." "So they should," Clarissa replied firmly, going to her husband and flinging her arms around him. "Henry, darling," she exclaimed, "I think it's all wonderful." "By the way," Henry informed her solemnly, "Kalendorff will be referred to only as Mr. Jones." "Mr. Jones?" Clarissa attempted, not altogether successfully, to keep a note of amused incredulity out of her voice."That's right," Henry explained, "one can't be too careful about using real names." "Yes – but – Mr. Jones?" Clarissa queried. "Couldn't they have thought of something better than that?" She shook her head doubtfully and continued, "Incidentally, what about me? Do I retire to the harem, as it were, or do I bring in the drinks, utter greetings to them both and then discreetly fade away?"Henry regarded his wife somewhat uneasily as he admonished her, "You must take this seriously, dear." "But Henry, darling," Clarissa insisted, "can't I take it seriously and still enjoy it a little?"Henry gave her question a moment's consideration before replying gravely, "I think it would be better, perhaps, Clarissa, if you didn't appear." Clarissa seemed not to mind this. "All right," she agreed, "but what about food? Will they want something?""Oh, no," said Henry. "There need be no question of a meal." "A few sandwiches, I think," Clarissa suggested. She sat on an arm of the sofa and continued, "Ham sandwiches would be best. In a napkin to keep them moist. And hot coffee, in a thermos jug. Yes, that'll do very well. The chocolate mousse I shall take up to my bedroom to console me for being excluded from the conference." "Now, Clarissa," Henry began disapprovingly, only to be interrupted by his wife as she rose and flung her arms around his neck. "Darling, I am being serious, really," she assured him. "Nothing will go wrong. I shan't let it." She kissed him affectionately.Henry gently disentangled himself from her embrace. "What about old Roly?" he asked."He and Jeremy are dining at the clubhouse with Hugo," Clarissa told him. "They're going to play bridge afterwards, so Roly and Jeremy won't be back here until about midnight." "And the Elgins are out?" Hugo asked her."Darling, you know they always go to the cinema on Thursdays," Clarissa reminded him. "They won't be back until well after eleven." Henry looked pleased. "Good," he exclaimed. "That's all quite satisfactory. Sir John and Mr. – er – ""Jones," Clarissa prompted him."Quite right, darling. Mr. Jones and the Prime Minister will have left long before then." Henry consulted his watch. "Well, I'd better have a quick shower before I start off for Bindley Heath," he announced."And I'd better go and make the ham sandwiches," Clarissa said, dashing out of the room. Picking up his briefcase, Henry called after her, "You must remember about the lights, Clarissa." He went to the door and switched off the concealed lighting. "We're making our own electricity here, and it costs money." He switched off the wall-brackets as well. "It's not like London, you know." After a final glance around the room, which was now in darkness except for a faint glow of moonlight coming in through the windows, Henry nodded and left, closing the door behind him.CHAPTER SEVENWHEN THE three men arrived at the golf club, Hugo was busily complaining about Clarissa's behaviour in making them test the port. "Really, she ought to stop playing these games, you know," Hugo said as they made their way to the bar. "Do you remember, Roly, the time I received that telegram from Whitehall telling me that I was going to be offered a knighthood in the next Honours List? It was only when I mentioned it in confidence to Henry one evening when I was dining with them both, and Henry was perplexed but Clarissa started giggling – it was only then that I discovered she'd sent the bloody thing. She can be so childish sometimes." Sir Rowland chuckled. "Yes, she can indeed. And she loves play-acting. You know, she was actually a damned good actress in her school's drama club. At one time I thought she'd take it up seriously and go on the stage professionally. She's so convincing, even when she's telling the most dreadful lies. And that's what actors are, surely. Convincing liars." He was lost in reminiscence for a moment, and then continued, "Clarissa's best friend at school was a girl called Jeanette Collins, whose father had been a famous footballer. And Jeanette herself was a mad football fan. Well, one day Clarissa rang Jeanette in an assumed voice, claiming to be the public relations officer for some football team or other, and told her that she'd been chosen to be the team's new mascot, but that it all depended on her dressing in a funny costume as a rabbit and standing outside the Chelsea Stadium that afternoon as the customers were queuing up to get in. Somehow Jeanette managed to hire a costume in time, and got to the stadium dressed as a bunny rabbit, where she was laughed at by hundreds of people and photographed by Clarissa, who was waiting there for her. Jeanette was furious. I don't think the friendship survived." "Oh, well," Hugo growled resignedly, as he picked up a menu and began to devote his attention to the serious business of choosing what they would eat later.Meanwhile, back in the Hailsham-Browns' drawing-room, only some minutes after Henry had gone off to have a quick shower and change his clothes before setting out for the aerodrome, Oliver Costello entered the empty room stealthily through the French windows, leaving the curtains open so that moonlight streamed in. He shone a torch carefully around the room, then went to the desk and switched on the lamp that was on it. After lifting the flap of the secret drawer, he suddenly switched off the lamp and stood motionless for a moment as though he had heard something. Apparently reassured, he switched the desk lamp on again, and opened the secret drawer.Behind Costello, the panel in the bookshelf slowly and quietly opened. He shut the secret drawer in the desk, switched the lamp off again, and then turned sharply as he was struck a fierce blow on the head by someone behind the panel. Costello collapsed immediately, falling behind the sofa, and the panel closed again, this time more quickly.The room remained in darkness for a moment, until Henry Hailsham-Brown entered from the hall, switched on the wall-brackets, and shouted, "Clarissa!" Putting his spectacles on, he filled his cigarette-case from the box on a table near the sofa as Clarissa came in, calling, "Here I am, darling. Do you want a sandwich before you go?""No, I think I'd better start," Henry replied, patting his jacket nervously."But you'll be hours too early," Clarissa told him. "It can't take you more than twenty minutes to drive there." Henry shook his head. "One never knows," he declared. "I might have a puncture, or something might go wrong with the car." "Don't fuss, darling," Clarissa admonished him, straightening his tie as she spoke. "It's all going to go very smoothly." "Now, what about Pippa?" Henry asked anxiously. "You're sure she won't come down or barge in while Sir John and Kalen – I mean, Mr. Jones – are talking privately?""No, there's no danger of that," Clarissa assured him. "I'll go up to her room and we'll have a feast together. We'll toast tomorrow's breakfast sausages and share the chocolate mousse between us." Henry smiled affectionately at his wife. "You're very good to Pippa, my dear," he told her. "It's one of the things I'm most grateful to you for." He paused, looked embarrassed, and then continued speaking. "I can never express myself very well... I... you know... so much misery... and now, everything's so different. You..." Taking Clarissa in his arms, he kissed her.For some moments they remained locked in a loving embrace. Then Clarissa gently broke away, but continued to hold hands with him. "You've made me very happy, Henry," she told him. "And Pippa is going to be fine. She's a lovely child." Henry gazed at her fondly. "Now, you go and meet your Mr. Jones," she ordered him, pushing him towards the hall door. "Mr. Jones," she repeated. "I still think that's a ridiculous name to have chosen." Henry was about to leave the room when Clarissa asked him,"Are you going to come in by the front door? Shall I leave it unlatched?"He paused in the doorway to consider. Then, "No," he said. "I think we'll come in through the French windows." "You'd better put on your overcoat, Henry. It's quite chilly," Clarissa advised, pushing him into the hall as she spoke. "And perhaps your muffler as well." He took his coat obediently from a rack in the hall, and she followed him to the front door with a final word of advice. "Drive carefully, darling, won't you?""Yes, yes," Henry called back. "You know I always do." Clarissa shut the door behind him and went off to the kitchen to finish making the sandwiches that she had begun to prepare earlier. As she put the sandwiches on a plate, wrapping a damp napkin around the plate to keep them fresh, she could not help thinking of her recent unnerving encounter with Oliver Costello. She was frowning as she carried the sandwiches back to the drawing-room, where she put them on the small table.Suddenly fearful of incurring Miss Peake's wrath for having marked the table, she snatched the plate up again, rubbed unsuccessfully at the mark it had made, and compromised by covering it with a nearby vase of flowers. She transferred the plate of sandwiches to the stool, then carefully shook the cushions on the sofa. Singing quietly to herself, she picked up Pippa's book and took it across to replace it on the bookshelves. "Can a body meet a body, coming through the – " She suddenly stopped singing and uttered a scream as she stumbled and nearly fell over Oliver Costello's body.Bending over the body, Clarissa recognised who it was. "Oliver!" she gasped. She stared at him in horror for what seemed an age. Then, convinced that he was dead, she straightened up quickly and ran towards the door to call Henry, but immediately realised that he had gone. She turned back to the body, and then ran to the telephone and lifted the receiver. She began to dial, but then stopped and replaced the receiver again. She stood thinking for a moment, and looked at the panel in the wall. Making up her mind quickly, she glanced at the panel again, and then reluctantly bent down and began to drag the body across to it.While she was engaged in doing this, the panel slowly opened and Pippa emerged from the recess, wearing a dressing-gown over her pyjamas. "Clarissa!" she wailed, rushing to her stepmother.Trying to stand between her and the body of Costello, Clarissa gave Pippa a little shove, in an attempt to turn her away. "Pippa," she advised, "don't look, darling. Don't look." In a strangled voice, Pippa cried, "I didn't mean to. Oh, really, I didn't mean to do it." Horrified, Clarissa seized the child by her arms. "Pippa! Was it – you?" she gasped."He's dead, isn't he? He's quite dead?" Pippa asked.Sobbing hysterically, she cried, "I didn't – mean to kill him. I didn't mean to." "Quiet now, quiet," Clarissa murmured soothingly. "It's all right. Come on, sit down." She led Pippa to the armchair and sat her in it."I didn't mean to. I didn't mean to kill him," Pippa went on crying.Clarissa knelt beside her. "Of course you didn't mean to," she agreed. "Now listen, Pippa..." When Pippa continued to cry even more hysterically, Clarissa shouted at her. "Pippa, listen to me. Everything's going to be all right. You've got to forget about this. Forget all about it, do you hear?""Yes," Pippa sobbed, "but – but I – ""Pippa," Clarissa continued more forcefully, "you must trust me and believe what I'm telling you. Everything is going to be all right. But you've got to be brave and do exactly what I tell you." Still sobbing hysterically, Pippa tried to turn away from her."Pippa!" Clarissa shouted. "Will you do as I tell you?" She pulled the child around to face her. "Will you?""Yes, yes, I will," Pippa cried, putting her head on Clarissa's bosom."That's right." Clarissa adopted a consoling tone as she helped Pippa out of the chair. "Now, I want you to go upstairs and get into bed." "You come with me, please," the child pleaded."Yes, yes," Clarissa assured her, "I'll come up very soon, as soon as I can, and I'll give you a nice little white tablet. Then you'll go to sleep, and in the morning everything will seem quite different." She looked down at the body and added, "There may be nothing to worry about." "But he is dead – isn't he?" Pippa asked."No, no, he may not be dead," Clarissa replied evasively. "I'll see. Now go on, Pippa. Do as I tell you." Pippa, still sobbing, left the room and ran upstairs. Clarissa watched her go and then turned back to the body on the floor. "Supposing I were to find a dead body in the drawing-room, what should I do?" she murmured to herself. After standing for a moment in thought, she exclaimed more forcefully, "Oh, my God, what am I going to do?"CHAPTER EIGHTFIFTEEN MINUTES later, Clarissa was still in the drawing-room and murmuring to herself. But she had been busy in the meantime. All the lights were now on in the room, the panel in the wall was closed, and the curtains had been drawn across the open French windows. Oliver Costello's body was still behind the sofa, but Clarissa had been moving the furniture about, and had set up a folding bridge table in the centre of the room, with cards and markers for bridge, and four upright chairs around the table.Standing at the table, Clarissa scribbled figures on one of the markers. "Three spades, four hearts, four no trumps, pass," she muttered, pointing at each hand as she made its call. "Five diamonds, pass, six spades – double – and I think they go down." She paused for a moment, looking down at the table, and then continued, "Let me see, doubled vulnerable, two tricks, five hundred – or shall I let them make it? No." She was interrupted by the sudden arrival of Sir Rowland, Hugo and young Jeremy, who entered through the French windows. Hugo paused a moment before coming into the room, to close one of the windows.Putting her pad and pencil on the bridge table, Clarissa rushed to meet them. "Thank God you've come," she told Sir Rowland, sounding extremely distraught."What is all this, my dear?" Sir Rowland asked her with concern in his voice.Clarissa turned to address them all. "Darlings," she cried, "you've got to help me." Jeremy noticed the table with the playing cards spread out on it. "Looks like a bridge party," he observed gaily."You're being very melodramatic, Clarissa," Hugo contributed. "What are you up to, young woman?"Clarissa clutched Sir Rowland. "It's serious," she insisted. "Terribly serious. You will help me, won't you?""Of course we'll help you, Clarissa," Sir Rowland assured her, "but what's it all about?""Yes, come on, what is it this time?" Hugo asked somewhat wearily.Jeremy, too, sounded unimpressed. "You're up to something, Clarissa," he insisted. "What is it? Found a body or something?""That's just it," Clarissa told him. "I have – found a body." "What do you mean – found a body?" Hugo asked. He sounded puzzled, but not all that interested."It's just as Jeremy said," Clarissa answered him. "I came in here, and I found a body." Hugo gave a cursory glance around the room. "I don't know what you're talking about," he complained. "What body? Where?""I'm not playing games. I'm serious," Clarissa shouted angrily. "It's there. Go and look. Behind the sofa." She pushed Sir Rowland towards the sofa, and moved away.Hugo went quickly to the sofa. Jeremy followed him and leaned over the back of it. "My God, she's right," Jeremy murmured.Sir Rowland joined them. He and Hugo bent down to examine the body. "Why, it's Oliver Costello," Sir Rowland exclaimed."God Almighty!" Jeremy exclaimed. He went quickly to the French windows and closed the curtains again."Yes," said Clarissa. "It's Oliver Costello." "What was he doing here?" Sir Rowland asked her."He came this evening to talk about Pippa," Clarissa replied. "It was just after you'd gone to the club." Sir Rowland looked puzzled. "What did he want with Pippa?""He and Miranda were threatening to take her away," Clarissa told him. "But all that doesn't matter now. I'll tell you about it later. We have to hurry. We've got very little time." Sir Rowland held up a hand in warning. "Just a moment," he instructed, coming closer to Clarissa. "We must have the facts clear. What happened when he arrived?"Clarissa shook her head impatiently. "I told him that he and Miranda were not going to get Pippa, and he went away." "But he came back?""Obviously," said Clarissa."How?" Sir Rowland asked her. "When?""I don't know," Clarissa answered. "I just came into the room, as I said, and I found him – like that." She gestured towards the sofa."I see," said Sir Rowland, moving back to the body on the floor and leaning over it. "I see. Well, he's dead, all right. He's been hit over the head with something heavy and sharp." He looked around at the others. "I'm afraid this isn't going to be a very pleasant business," he continued, "but there's only one thing to be done." He went across to the telephone as he spoke. "We must ring up the police and – ""No," Clarissa exclaimed sharply.Sir Rowland was already lifting the receiver. "You ought to have done it at once, Clarissa," he advised her. "Still, I don't suppose they'll blame you much for that." "No, Roly, stop," Clarissa insisted. She ran across the room, took the receiver from him, and replaced it on its rest."My dear child – " Sir Rowland expostulated, but Clarissa would not let him continue."I could have rung up the police myself if I'd wanted to," she admitted. "I knew perfectly well that it was the proper thing to do. I even started dialling. Then, instead, I rang you up at the club and asked you to come back here immediately, all three of you." She turned to Jeremy and Hugo. "You haven't even asked me why yet." "You can leave it all to us," Sir Rowland assured her. "We will – "Clarissa interrupted him vehemently. "You haven't begun to understand," she insisted. "I want you to help me. You said you would if I was ever in trouble." She turned to include the other two men. "Darlings, you've got to help me." Jeremy moved to position himself so that he hid the body from her sight. "What do you want us to do, Clarissa?" he asked gently."Get rid of the body," was her abrupt reply."My dear, don't talk nonsense," Sir Rowland ordered her. "This is murder." "That's the whole point," Clarissa told him. "The body mustn't be found in this house." Hugo gave a snort of impatience. "You don't know what you're talking about, my dear girl," he exclaimed. "You've been reading too many murder mysteries. In real life you can't go monkeying about, moving dead bodies." "But I've already moved it," Clarissa explained. "I turned it over to see if he was dead, and then I started dragging it into that recess, and then I realized I was going to need help, and so I rang you up at the club, and while I was waiting for you I made a plan." "Including the bridge table, I assume," Jeremy observed, gesturing towards the table.Clarissa picked up the bridge marker. "Yes," she replied. "That's going to be our alibi." "What on earth – " Hugo began, but Clarissa gave him no chance to continue. "Two and a half rubbers," she announced. "I've imagined all the hands, and put down the scores on this marker. You three must fill up the others in your own handwriting, of course." Sir Rowland stared at her in amazement. "You're mad, Clarissa. Quite mad," he declared.Clarissa paid no attention to him. "I've worked it out beautifully," she went on. "The body has to be taken away from here." She looked at Jeremy. "It will take two of you to do that," she instructed him. "A dead body is very difficult to manage – I've found that out already." "Where the hell do you expect us to take it to?" Hugo asked in exasperation.Clarissa had already given this some thought. "The best place, I think, would be Marsden Wood," she advised. "That's only two miles from here." She indicated the direction with her left hand. "You turn off into that side road, just a few yards after you've passed the front gate. It's a narrow road, and there's hardly ever any traffic on it." She turned to Sir Rowland. "Just leave the car by the side of the road when you get into the wood," she instructed him. "Then you walk back here." Jeremy looked perplexed. "Do you mean you want us to dump the body in the wood?" he asked."No, you leave it in the car," Clarissa explained. "It's his car, don't you see? He left it here, round by the stables." All three men now wore puzzled expressions. "It's really all quite easy," Clarissa assured them. "If anybody does happen to see you walking back, it's quite a dark night and they won't know who you are. And you've got an alibi. All four of us have been playing bridge here." She replaced the marker on the bridge table, looking almost pleased with herself, while the men, stupefied, stared at her.Hugo walked about in a complete circle. "I – I – " he spluttered, waving his hands in the air.Clarissa went on issuing her instructions. "You wear gloves, of course," she told them, "so as not to leave fingerprints on anything. I've got them here all ready for you." Pushing past Jeremy to the sofa, she took three pairs of gloves from under one of the cushions, and laid them out on an arm of the sofa.Sir Rowland continued to stare at Clarissa. "Your natural talent for crime leaves me speechless," he informed her.Jeremy gazed at her admiringly. "She's got it all worked out, hasn't she?" he declared."Yes," Hugo admitted, "but it's all damned foolish nonsense just the same." "Now, you must hurry," Clarissa ordered them vehemently. "At nine o'clock Henry and Mr. Jones will be here." "Mr. Jones? Who on earth is Mr. Jones?" Sir Rowland asked her.Clarissa put a hand to her head. "Oh dear," she exclaimed, "I never realized what a terrible lot of explaining one has to do in a murder. I thought I'd simply ask you to help me and you would, and that is all there'd be to it." She looked around at all three of them. "Oh, darlings, you must." She stroked Hugo's hair. "Darling, darling Hugo – ""This play-acting is all very well, my dear," said Hugo, sounding distinctly annoyed, "but a dead body is a nasty, serious business, and monkeying about with it could land you in a real mess. You can't go carting bodies about at dead of night." Clarissa went to Jeremy and placed her hand on his arm. "Jeremy, darling, you'll help me, surely. Won't you?" she asked, with urgent appeal in her voice.Jeremy gazed at her adoringly. "All right, I'm game," he replied cheerfully. "What's a dead body or two among friends?""Stop, young man," Sir Rowland ordered. "I'm not going to allow this." He turned to Clarissa. "Now, you must he guided by me, Clarissa. I insist. After all, there's Henry to consider, too." Clarissa gave him a look of exasperation. "But it's Henry I am considering," she declared.CHAPTER NINETHE THREE men greeted Clarissa's announcement in silence. Sir Rowland shook his head gravely, Hugo continued to look puzzled, while Jeremy simply shrugged his shoulders as though giving up all hope of understanding the situation.Taking a deep breath, Clarissa addressed all three of them. "Something terribly important is happening tonight," she told them. "Henry's gone to – to meet someone and bring him back here. It's very important and secret. A top political secret. No one is supposed to know about it. There was to be absolutely no publicity." "Henry's gone to meet a Mr. Jones?" Sir Rowland queried dubiously."It's a silly name, I agree," said Clarissa, "but that's what they're calling him. I can't tell you his real name. I can't tell you any more about it. I promised Henry I wouldn't say a word to anybody, but I have to make you see that I'm not just..." She turned to look at Hugo as she continued, "... not just being an idiot and play-acting, as Hugo called it." She turned back to Sir Rowland. "What sort of effect do you think it will have on Henry's career," she asked him, "if he has to walk in here with this distinguished person – and another very distinguished person travelling down from London for this meeting – only to find the police investigating a murder – the murder of a man who has just married Henry's former wife?""Good Lord!" Sir Rowland exclaimed. Then, looking Clarissa straight in the eye, he added suspiciously, "You're not making all this up now, are you? This isn't just another of your complicated games, intended to make fools of us all?"Clarissa shook her head mournfully. "Nobody ever believes me when I'm speaking the truth," she protested."Sorry, my dear," said Sir Rowland. "Yes, I can see it's a more difficult problem than I thought." "You see?" Clarissa urged him. "So it's absolutely vital that we get the body away from here." "Where's his car, did you say?" Jeremy asked."Round by the stables," Clarissa told him."And the servants are out, I gather?"Clarissa nodded her head. "Yes." Jeremy picked up a pair of gloves from the sofa. "Right," he exclaimed decisively. "Do I take the body to the car, or bring the car to the body?"Sir Rowland held out a hand in a restraining gesture. "Wait a moment," he advised. "We mustn't rush it like this." Jeremy replaced the gloves, but Clarissa turned to Sir Rowland, crying desperately, "But we must hurry." Sir Rowland regarded her gravely. "I'm not sure that this plan of yours is the best one, Clarissa," he declared. "Now, if we could just delay finding the body until tomorrow morning – that would meet the case, I think, and it would be very much simpler. If, for now, we merely moved the body to another room, for instance, I think that might be just excusable." Clarissa turned to address Sir Rowland directly. "It's you I've got to convince, isn't it?" she told him. Looking at Jeremy, she continued, "Jeremy's ready enough." She glanced at Hugo. "And Hugo will grunt and shake his head, but he'd do it all the same. It's you..." She went to the library door and opened it. "Will you both go next door for a short time?" she asked Jeremy and Hugo. "I want to speak to Roly alone." Hugo and Jeremy did as they were told. "Don't you let her talk you into any tomfoolery, Roly," Hugo warned as he left the room with Jeremy, who gave Clarissa a reassuring smile and a murmured "Good luck!"Sir Rowland, looking grave, took a seat at the bridge table."Now!" Clarissa exclaimed, as she sat and faced him on the other side of the table."My dear," Sir Rowland warned her, "I love you, and I will always love you dearly. But, before you ask, in this case the answer simply has to be no." Clarissa began to speak seriously and with emphasis. "That man's body mustn't be found in this house," she insisted. "If he's found in Marsden Wood, I can say that he was here today for a short time, and I can also tell the police exactly when he left. Actually, Miss Peake saw him off, which turns out to be very fortunate. There need be no question of his ever having come back here." She took a deep breath. "But if his body is found here," she continued, "then we shall all be questioned." She paused before adding, with great deliberation, "And Pippa won't be able to stand it." "Pippa?" Sir Rowland was obviously puzzled.Clarissa's face was grim. "Yes, Pippa. She'll break down and confess that she did it." "Pippa!" Sir Rowland repeated, as he slowly took in what he was hearing.Clarissa nodded."My God!" Sir Rowland exclaimed."She was terrified when he came here today," Clarissa told him. "I tried to reassure her that I wouldn't let him take her away, but I don't think she believed me. You know what she's been through – the nervous breakdown she's had? Well, I don't think she could have survived being made to go back and live with Oliver and Miranda. Pippa was here when I found Oliver's body. She told me she never meant to do it, I'm sure she was telling the truth. It was sheer panic. She got hold of that stick, and struck out blindly." "What stick?" Sir Rowland asked."The one from the hall-stand. It's in the recess. I left it there; I didn't touch it." Sir Rowland thought for a moment, and then asked sharply, "Where is Pippa now?""In bed," said Clarissa. "I've given her a sleeping-pill. She ought not to wake up till morning. Tomorrow I'll take her up to London, and my old nanny will look after her for a while." Sir Rowland got up and walked over to look down at Oliver Costello's body behind the sofa. Returning to Clarissa, he kissed her. "You win, my dear," he said. "I apologise. That child mustn't be asked to face the music. Get the others back." He went across to the French windows, looked out, and then closed the curtains, while Clarissa opened the library door, calling, "Hugo, Jeremy. Would you come back, please?"The two men came back into the room. "That butler of yours doesn't lock up very carefully," Hugo announced. "The window in the library was open. I've shut it now." Addressing Sir Rowland, he asked abruptly, "Well?" "I'm converted," was the equally abrupt reply he received."Well done!" was Jeremy's comment."There's no time to lose," Sir Rowland declared. "Now, those gloves." He picked up a pair of gloves and put them on. Jeremy picked up the other two pairs, handed one pair to Hugo, and they both put them on. Sir Rowland went over to the panel. "How does this thing open?" he asked.Jeremy went across to join him. "Like this, sir," he said. "Pippa showed me." He moved the lever and opened the panel.Sir Rowland looked into the recess, reached in, and brought out the walking-stick. "Yes, it's heavy enough," he commented. "Weighted in the head. All the same, I shouldn't have thought..." He paused."What wouldn't you have thought?" Hugo wanted to know.Sir Rowland shook his head. "I should have thought," he replied, "that it would have to have been something with a sharper edge – metal of some kind." "You mean a goddamn chopper," Hugo observed bluntly."I don't know," Jeremy interjected. "That stick looks pretty murderous to me. You could easily crack a man's head open with that." "Evidently," said Sir Rowland drily. He turned to Hugo and handed him the stick. "Hugo, will you burn this in the kitchen stove, please," he instructed him. Then, addressing Jeremy, he continued, "Warrender, you and I will get the body to the car." He and Jeremy bent down on either side of the body. As they did so, a bell suddenly rang. "What's that?" Sir Rowland exclaimed, startled."It's the front-door bell," said Clarissa, sounding bewildered. They all stood petrified for a moment. "Who can it be?" Clarissa wondered aloud. "It's much too early for Henry and – er – Mr. Jones. It must be Sir John." "Sir John?" asked Sir Rowland, now sounding even more startled. "You mean the Prime Minister is expected here this evening?""Yes," Clarissa replied."Hm." Sir Rowland looked momentarily undecided. Then, "Yes," he murmured. "Well, we've got to do something." The bell rang again, and he stirred into action. "Clarissa," he ordered, "go and answer the door. Use whatever delaying tactics you can think of. In the meantime, we'll clear up in here." Clarissa went quickly out to the hall, and Sir Rowland turned to Hugo and Jeremy. "Now then," he explained urgently, "this is what we do. We'll get him into that recess. Later, when everyone's in this room having their pow-wow, we can take him out through the library." "Good idea," Jeremy agreed, as he helped Sir Rowland lift the body."Want me to give you a hand?" asked Hugo."No, it's all right," Jeremy replied. He and Sir Rowland supported Costello's body under the armpits and carried it into the recess, while Hugo picked up the torch. A moment or two later, Sir Rowland emerged from the recess and pressed the lever as Jeremy hastened out behind him. Hugo quickly slipped under Jeremy's arm into the recess with the torch and stick. The panel then closed.Sir Rowland, after examining his jacket for signs of blood, murmured, "Gloves," removed the gloves he was wearing, and put them under a cushion on the sofa. Jeremy removed his gloves and did likewise. Then, "Bridge," Sir Rowland reminded himself, as he hastened to the bridge table and sat.Jeremy ran to the bridge table, sat, and picked up his cards. "Come along, Hugo, make haste," Sir Rowland urged as he picked up his own cards.He was answered by a knock from inside the recess. Suddenly realizing that Hugo was not in the room, Sir Rowland and Jeremy looked at each other in alarm. Jeremy got up, rushed to the switch and opened the panel. "Come along, Hugo," Sir Rowland repeated urgently as Hugo emerged. "Quickly, Hugo," Jeremy muttered impatiently, closing the panel again.Sir Rowland took Hugo's gloves from him and put them under the cushion. The three men took their seats quickly at the bridge table and picked up their cards, just as Clarissa came back into the room from the hall, followed by two men in uniform.In a tone of innocent surprise, Clarissa announced, "It's the police, Uncle Roly." CHAPTER TENTHE OLDER of the two police officers, a stocky, grey-haired man, followed Clarissa into the room, while his colleague remained standing by the hall door. "This is Inspector Lord," Clarissa declared. "And – " She turned back to the younger officer, a dark-haired man in his twenties with the build of a footballer. "I'm sorry, what did you say your name was?" she asked.The Inspector answered for him. "That's Constable Jones," he announced. Addressing the three men, he continued, "I'm sorry to intrude, gentlemen, but we have received information that a murder has been committed here." Clarissa and her friends all spoke simultaneously. "What?" Hugo shouted. "A murder!" Jeremy exclaimed. "Good heavens," Sir Rowland cried, as Clarissa said, "Isn't it extraordinary?" They all sounded completely astonished."Yes, we had a telephone call at the station," the Inspector told them. Nodding to Hugo, whom he apparently knew by sight, he added, "Good evening, Mr. Birch." "Er – good evening, Inspector," Hugo mumbled."It looks as though somebody's been hoaxing you, Inspector," Sir Rowland suggested."Yes," Clarissa agreed. "We've been playing bridge here all evening." The others nodded in support, and Clarissa asked, "Who did they say had been murdered?""No names were mentioned," the Inspector informed them. "The caller just said that a man had been murdered at Copplestone Court, and would we come along immediately. They rang off before any additional information could be obtained." "It must have been a hoax," Clarissa declared, adding virtuously, "What a wicked thing to do." Hugo tut-tutted, and the Inspector replied, "You'd be surprised, madam, at the potty things people do." He paused, glancing at each of them in turn, and then continued, addressing Clarissa. "Well now, according to you, nothing out of the ordinary has happened here this evening?" Without waiting for an answer, he added, "Perhaps I'd better see Mr. Hailsham-Brown as well." "He's not here," Clarissa told the Inspector. "I don't expect him back until late tonight." "I see," he replied. "Who is staying in the house at present?""Sir Rowland Delahaye, and Mr. Warrender," said Clarissa, indicating them in turn. She added, "And Mr. Birch, whom you already know, is here for the evening." Sir Rowland and Jeremy murmured acknowledgements. "Oh, and yes," Clarissa went on as though she had just remembered, "my little stepdaughter." She emphasised "little." "She's in bed and asleep." "What about servants?" the Inspector wanted to know."There are two of them. A married couple. But it's their night out, and they've gone to the cinema in Maidstone." "I see," said the Inspector, nodding his head gravely.The door from the hall suddenly opened and Elgin the butler entered, almost colliding with the Constable, who was still keeping guard there. After a quick questioning look at the Inspector, Elgin addressed Clarissa. "Would you be wanting anything, madam?" he asked.Clarissa looked startled. "I thought you were at the pictures, Elgin," she exclaimed, as the Inspector gave her a sharp glance."We returned almost immediately, madam," Elgin explained. "My wife was not feeling well." Sounding embarrassed, he added delicately, "Er – gastric trouble. It must have been something she ate." Looking from the Inspector to the Constable, he asked, "Is anything... wrong?""What's your name?" the Inspector asked him."Elgin, sir," the butler replied. "I'm sure I hope there's nothing – "He was interrupted by the Inspector. "Someone rang up the police station and said that a murder had been committed here." "A murder?" Elgin gasped."What do you know about that?""Nothing. Nothing at all, sir." "It wasn't you who rang up, then?" the Inspector asked him."No, indeed not." "When you returned to the house, you came in by the back door – at least I suppose you did?""Yes, sir," Elgin replied, nervousness now making him rather more deferential in manner."Did you notice anything unusual?"The butler thought for a moment, and then replied, "Now I come to think of it, there was a strange car standing near the stables." "A strange car? What do you mean?""I wondered at the time whose it might be," Elgin recalled. "It seemed a curious place to leave it." "Was there anybody in it?""Not so far as I could see, sir." "Go and take a look at it, Jones," the Inspector ordered his constable."Jones!" Clarissa exclaimed involuntarily, with a start."I beg your pardon," said the Inspector, turning to her.Clarissa recovered herself quickly. Smiling at him, she murmured, "It's nothing – just – I didn't think he looked very Welsh." The Inspector gestured to the Constable and to Elgin, indicating that they should go. They left the room together, and a silence ensued. After a moment, Jeremy got up, went across to the sofa, sat and began to eat the sandwiches. The Inspector, who was still carrying his hat and gloves, put them on the armchair, and then, taking a deep breath, addressed the assembled company."It seems," he declared, speaking slowly and deliberately, "that someone came here tonight who is unaccounted for." He looked at Clarissa. "You're sure you weren't expecting anyone?" he asked her."Oh, no – no," Clarissa replied. "We didn't want anyone to turn up. You see, we were just the four of us for bridge." "Really?" said the Inspector. "I'm fond of a game of bridge myself." "Oh, are you?" Clarissa replied. "Do you play Blackwood?""I just like a common-sense game," the Inspector told her. "Tell me, Mrs. Hailsham-Brown," he continued, "you haven't lived here for very long, have you?""No," Clarissa told him. "About six weeks." The Inspector regarded her steadily. "And there's been no funny business of any kind since you've been living here?" he asked.Before Clarissa could answer, Sir Rowland interjected. "What exactly do you mean by funny business, Inspector?"The Inspector turned to address him. "Well, it's rather a curious story, sir," he informed Sir Rowland. "This house used to belong to Mr. Sellon, the antique dealer. He died six months ago." "Yes," Clarissa remembered. "He had some kind of accident, didn't he?""That's right," said the Inspector. "He fell downstairs, pitched on his head." He looked around at Jeremy and Hugo, and added, "Accidental death, they brought in. It might have been that, but it might not." "Do you mean," Clarissa asked, "that somebody might have pushed him?"The Inspector turned to her. "That," he agreed, "or else somebody hit him a crack on the head – "He paused, and the tension among his hearers was palpable. Hugo rose, took a few steps to the desk stool, and sat again. The others froze, and the Inspector went on speaking. "Someone could have arranged Sellon's body to look right, at the bottom of the stairs." "The staircase here in this house?" Clarissa asked nervously."No, it happened at his shop," the Inspector informed her. "There was no conclusive evidence, of course – but he was rather a dark horse, Mr. Sellon." "In what way, Inspector?" Sir Rowland asked him."Well," the Inspector replied, "once or twice there were a couple of things he had to explain to us, as you might say. And the Narcotic Squad came down from London and had a word with him on one occasion..." He paused before continuing, "But it was all no more than suspicion." "Officially, that is to say," Sir Rowland observed.The Inspector turned to him. "That's right, sir," he said meaningfully. "Officially." "Whereas, unofficially... ?" Sir Rowland prompted him."I'm afraid we can't go into that," the Inspector replied. He turned to Jeremy and Hugo, and added, "There was, however, one rather curious circumstance. There was an unfinished letter on Mr. Sellon's desk, in which he mentioned that he'd come into possession of something which he described as an unparalleled rarity, which he would..." Here the Inspector paused, and turned back to Sir Rowland before continuing, "... would guarantee wasn't a forgery, and he was asking fourteen thousand pounds for it." Sir Rowland looked thoughtful. "Fourteen thousand pounds," he murmured. In a louder voice he continued, "Yes, that's a lot of money indeed. Now, I wonder what it could be? Jewellery, I suppose, but the word 'forgery' suggests – I don't know, a picture, perhaps?"Jeremy continued to munch at his sandwiches as the Inspector replied, "Yes, perhaps. There was nothing in the shop worth such a large sum of money. The insurance inventory made that clear. Mr. Sellon's partner was a woman who has a business of her own in London, and she wrote and said she couldn't give us any help or information." Sir Rowland nodded his head slowly. "So he might have been murdered, and the article, whatever it was, stolen," he suggested."It's quite possible, sir," the Inspector agreed, "but again, the would-be thief may not have been able to find it.""Now, why do you think that?" Sir Rowland asked."Because," the Inspector replied, "the shop has been broken into twice since then. Broken into and ransacked." Clarissa looked puzzled. "Why are you telling us all this, Inspector?" she wanted to know."Because, Mrs. Hailsham-Brown," said the Inspector, turning to her, "it's occurred to me that whatever was hidden away by Mr. Sellon may have been hidden here in this house, and not at his shop in Maidstone. That's why I asked you if anything peculiar had come to your notice." Holding up a hand as though she had suddenly remembered, Clarissa said excitedly, "Somebody rang up only today and asked to speak to me, and when I came to the phone, whoever it was had just hung up. In a way, that's rather odd, isn't it?" She turned to Jeremy, adding, "Oh, yes, of course. You know, that man who came the other day and wanted to buy things – a horsy sort of man in a check suit. He wanted to buy that desk." The Inspector crossed the room to look at the desk. "This one here?" he asked."Yes," Clarissa replied. "I told him, of course, that it wasn't ours to sell, but he didn't seem to believe me. He offered me a large sum, far more than it's worth." "That's very interesting," the Inspector commented as he studied the desk. "These things often have a secret drawer, you know." "Yes, this one has," Clarissa told him. "But there was nothing very exciting in it. Only some old autographs." The Inspector looked interested. "Old autographs can be immensely valuable, I understand," he said. "Whose were they?""I can assure you, Inspector," Sir Rowland informed him, "that these weren't anything rare enough to be worth more than a pound or two." The door to the hall opened, and the Constable entered, carrying a small booklet and a pair of gloves."Yes, Jones? What is it?" the Inspector asked him."I've examined the car, sir," Constable Jones replied."Just a pair of gloves in the driving seat. But I found this registration book in the side pocket." He handed the book to the Inspector, and Clarissa exchanged a smile with Jeremy as they heard the Constable's strong Welsh accent.The Inspector examined the registration book. "Oliver Costello, twenty-seven Morgan Mansions, London SW3," he read aloud. Then, turning to Clarissa, he asked sharply, "Has a man called Costello been here today?"CHAPTER ELEVENTHE INSPECTOR'S question caused the four friends to cast guiltily furtive glances at one another. Clarissa and Sir Rowland both looked as though they were about to attempt an answer, but it was Clarissa who spoke. "Yes," she admitted. "He was here about – " She paused, and then, "let me see," she continued. "Yes, it was about half past six." "Is he a friend of yours?" the Inspector asked her."No, I wouldn't call him a friend," Clarissa replied. "I had met him only once or twice." She deliberately assumed an embarrassed look, and then said hesitantly, "It's – a little awkward, really..." She looked appealingly at Sir Rowland, as though passing the ball to him.That gentleman was quick to respond to her unspoken request. "Perhaps, Inspector," he said, "it would be better if I explained the situation." "Please do, sir," was the Inspector's somewhat tersely spoken response."Well," Sir Rowland continued, "it concerns the first Mrs. Hailsham-Brown. She and Hailsham-Brown were divorced just over a year ago, and recently she married Mr. Oliver Costello.""I see," observed the Inspector. "And Mr. Costello came here today." He turned to Clarissa. "Why was that?" he asked. "Did he come by appointment?""Oh, no," Clarissa replied glibly. "As a matter of fact, when Miranda and my husband divorced, she took with her one or two things that weren't really hers. Oliver Costello happened to be in this part of the world, and he just looked in to return them.""What kind of things?" the Inspector asked quickly.Clarissa was ready for this question. "Nothing very important," she said with a smile. Picking up the small silver cigarette box from a table by the sofa, she held it out to the Inspector. "This was one of them," she told him. "It belonged to my husband's mother, and he values it for sentimental reasons."The Inspector looked at Clarissa reflectively for a moment, before asking her, "How long did Mr. Costello remain here when he came at six-thirty?""Oh, a very short time," she replied as she replaced the cigarette box on the table. "He said he was in a hurry. About ten minutes, I should think. No longer than that.""And your interview was quite amicable?" the Inspector inquired."Oh, yes," Clarissa assured him. "I thought it was very kind of him to take the trouble to return the things."The Inspector thought for a moment, before asking, "Did he mention where he was going when he left here?""No," Clarissa replied. "Actually, he went out by that window," she continued, gesturing towards the French windows. "As a matter of fact, my lady gardener, Miss Peake, was here, and she offered to show him out through the garden.""Your gardener – does she live on the premises?" the Inspector wanted to know."Well, yes. But not in the house. She lives in the cottage.""I think I should like a word with her," the Inspector decided. He turned to the Constable. "Jones, go and get her from the cottage," he ordered."There's a telephone connection through to the cottage. Shall I get her for you, Inspector?" Clarissa offered."If you would be so kind, Mrs. Hailsham-Brown," the Inspector replied."Not at all," Clarissa murmured. She went to the telephone and lifted the receiver, while the Inspector gestured to the Constable indicating that he should stay in the room."I don't suppose she'll have gone to bed yet," Clarissa said, pressing a knob on the telephone. She flashed a smile at the Inspector, who responded by looking bashful. Jeremy smiled to himself and took another sandwich.Clarissa spoke into the telephone. "Hello, Miss Peake. This is Mrs. Hailsham-Brown... I wonder, would you mind coming over? Something rather important has happened... Oh, yes, of course that will be all right. Thank you."She replaced the receiver and turned to the Inspector. "Miss Peake has been washing her hair, but she'll get dressed and come right over.""Thank you," said the Inspector. "After all, Costello may have mentioned to her where he was going.""Yes, indeed, he may have," Clarissa agreed.The Inspector looked puzzled. "The question that bothers me," he announced to the room in general, "is why Mr. Costello's car is still here, and where is Mr. Costello?"Clarissa gave an involuntary glance towards the bookshelves and the panel, then walked across to the French windows to watch for Miss Peake. Jeremy, noticing her glance, sat back innocently and crossed his legs as the Inspector continued, "Apparently this Miss Peake was the last person to see him. He left, you say, by that window. Did you lock it after him?""No," Clarissa replied, standing at the window with her back to the Inspector."Oh?" the Inspector queried.Something in his tone made Clarissa turn to face him. "Well, I – I don't think so," she said hesitantly."So he might have re-entered that way," the Inspector observed. He took a deep breath and announced importantly, "I think, Mrs. Hailsham-Brown, that, with your permission, I should like to search the house.""Of course," Clarissa replied with a friendly smile. "Well, you've seen this room. Nobody could be hidden here." She held the window curtains open for a moment, as though awaiting Miss Peake, and then exclaimed, "Look! Through here is the library." Going to the library door and opening it, she suggested, "Would you like to go in there?""Thank you," said the Inspector. "Jones!" he called to the Constable, and the two police officers went into the library. As they did so, the Inspector added, "Just see where that door leads to, Jones," gesturing towards another door immediately inside the library."Very good, sir," the Constable replied, as he went through the door indicated.As soon as the police officers were out of earshot, Sir Rowland got up and strode quickly across to the panel. "What's on the other side?" he asked Clarissa, gesticulating."Bookshelves," she replied tersely.Sir Rowland nodded and strolled nonchalantly across to the sofa, as the Constable's voice was heard calling, "Just another door through to the hall, sir."The two officers returned from the library. "Right," said the Inspector. He looked at Sir Rowland, apparently taking note of the fact that he had moved. "Now we'll search the rest of the house," he announced, going to the hall door."I'll come with you, if you don't mind," Clarissa offered, "in case my little stepdaughter should wake up and be frightened. Not that I think she will. It's extraordinary how deeply children can sleep. You have to practically shake them awake."As the Inspector opened the hall door, she asked him, "Have you got any children, Inspector?""One boy and one girl," he replied shortly, as he made his way out of the room, crossed the hall, and began to ascend the stairs."Isn't that nice?" Clarissa observed. She turned to the Constable. "Mr. Jones," she invited him with a gesture to precede her. He made his way out of the room and she followed him closely.As soon as they had gone, the three remaining occupants of the room looked at one another. Hugo wiped his hands and Jeremy mopped his forehead. "And now what?" Jeremy asked, taking another sandwich.Sir Rowland shook his head. "I don't like this," he told them. "We're getting in very deep.""If you ask me," Hugo advised him, "there's only one thing to do. Come clean. Own up now before it's too late.""Damn it, we can't do that," Jeremy exclaimed. "It would be too unfair to Clarissa.""But we'll get her in a worse mess if we keep on with this," Hugo insisted. "How are we ever going to get the body away? The police will impound the fellow's car.""We could use mine," Jeremy suggested."Well, I don't like it," Hugo persisted. "I don't like it at all. Damn it, I'm a local J. P. I've got my reputation with the police here to consider." He turned to Sir Rowland. "What do you say, Roly? You've got a good level head."Sir Rowland looked grave. "I admit I don't like it," he replied, "but personally I am committed to the enterprise."Hugo looked perplexed. "I don't understand you," he told his friend."Take it on trust, if you will, Hugo," said Sir Rowland. He looked gravely at both men and continued, "We're in a very bad jam, all of us. But if we stick together and have reasonable luck, I think there's a chance we may be able to pull it off."Jeremy looked as though he was about to say something, but Sir Rowland held up a hand and went on, "Once the police are satisfied that Costello isn't in this house, they'll go off and look elsewhere. After all, there are plenty of reasons why he might have left his car and gone off on foot." He gestured towards them both and added, "We're all respectable people – Hugo's a J. P., as he's reminded us, and Henry Hailsham-Brown's high up in the Foreign Office – ""Yes, yes, and you've had a blameless and even distinguished career, we know all that," Hugo intervened. "All right, then, if you say so, we brazen it out."Jeremy rose to his feet and nodded towards the recess. "Can't we do something about that straightaway?" he asked."There's no time now," Sir Roland decreed tersely. "They'll be back any minute. He's safer where he is."Jeremy nodded his head in reluctant agreement. "I must say Clarissa's a marvel," he observed. "She doesn't turn a hair. She's got that police inspector eating out of her hand."The front door bell suddenly rang. "That'll be Miss Peake, I expect," Sir, Rowland announced. "Go and let her in, Warrender, would you?"Jeremy went to do as he was bidden. As soon as he had left the room, Hugo beckoned to Sir Rowland, who went over to him."What's up, Roly?" Hugo asked in an urgent whisper. "What did Clarissa tell you when she got you to herself?"Sir Rowland began to speak, but, hearing the voices of Jeremy and Miss Peake exchanging greetings at the front door, he made a gesture indicating "Not now.""I think you'd better come in here," Jeremy told Miss Peake as he slammed the front door shut. A moment later, the gardener preceded him into the drawing-room, looking as though she had dressed very hastily. She wore a towel around her head."What is all this?" she wanted to know. "Mrs. Hailsham-Brown was most mysterious on the phone. Has anything happened?"Sir Rowland addressed her with the utmost courtesy. "I'm so sorry you've been routed out like this, Miss Peake," he apologised. "Do sit down," he invited her, indicating a chair by the bridge table.Hugo pulled the chair out for Miss Peake, who thanked him. He then sat himself in a more comfortable easy chair, while Sir Rowland informed the gardener, "As a matter of fact, we've got the police here, and – ""The police?" Miss Peake interrupted, looking startled. "Has there been a burglary?""No, not a burglary, but – "He stopped speaking as Clarissa, the Inspector and the Constable came back into the room. Jeremy sat on the sofa, while Sir Rowland took up a position behind it."Inspector," Clarissa announced, "this is Miss Peake."The Inspector went across to the gardener. His "Good evening, Miss Peake" was accompanied by a stiff little bow."Good evening, Inspector," Miss Peake replied. "I was just asking Sir Rowland – has there been a robbery, or what?"The Inspector regarded her searchingly, allowed a moment or two to elapse, and then spoke. "We received a rather peculiar telephone call which brought us out here," he told her. "And we think that perhaps you might be able to clear up the matter for us."CHAPTER TWELVETHE INSPECTOR'S announcement was greeted by Miss Peake with a jolly laugh. "I say, this is mysterious. I am enjoying myself," she exclaimed delightedly.The Inspector frowned. "It concerns Mr. Costello," he explained. "Mr. Oliver Costello of twenty-seven Morgan Mansions, London SW3. I believe that's in the Chelsea area.""Never heard of him," was Miss Peake's robustly expressed response to this."He was here this evening, visiting Mrs. Hailsham-Brown," the Inspector reminded her, "and I believe you showed him out through the garden."Miss Peake slapped her thigh. "Oh, that man," she recalled. "Mrs. Hailsham-Brown did mention his name." She looked at the Inspector with a little more interest. "Yes, what do you want to know?" she asked."I should like to know," the Inspector told her, speaking slowly and deliberately, "exactly what happened, and when you last saw him."Miss Peake thought for a moment before replying. Then, "Let me see," she said. "We went out through the French windows, and I told him there was a short cut if he wanted the bus, and he said no, he'd come in his car, and he'd left it round by the stables."She beamed at the Inspector as though she expected to be praised for her succinct recollection of what had occurred, but he merely looked thoughtful as he commented, "Isn't that rather an odd place to leave a car?""That's just what I thought," Miss Peake agreed, slapping the Inspector's arm as she spoke. He looked surprised at this, but she continued, "You'd think he'd drive right up to the front door, wouldn't you? But people are so odd. You never know what they're going to do." She gave a hearty guffaw."And then what happened?" the Inspector asked.Miss Peake shrugged her shoulders. "Well, he went off to his car, and I suppose he drove away," she replied."You didn't see him do so?""No – I was putting my tools away," was the gardener's reply."And that's the last you saw of him," the Inspector asked with emphasis."Yes, why?""Because his car is still here," the Inspector told her.

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