LADY
ANGKATELL. (SIR
HENRY. I should certainly have thought so, my dear.LADY
ANGKATELL. Yes, obviously I must have hadSIR
HENRY. My wife is extremely absentminded, Inspector.INSPECTOR
. So it seems.LADY
ANGKATELL. Why should I have taken that pistol?INSPECTOR
. (LADY
ANGKATELL. ((
And I remember opening the drawer and taking out the Derringer—it was a nice handy little gun—I’ve always liked it—and dropping it in the egg basket. And then I . . . No, there were so many things in my head—(
SERGEANT
. (LADY
ANGKATELL. Yes, chocolate, eggs and cream. John Cristow loved a really rich sweet.INSPECTOR
. (LADY
ANGKATELL. (INSPECTOR
. I think I’ll have a few more words with Gudgeon. ((
LADY
ANGKATELL. Of course. Things come back to one quite suddenly sometimes, don’t they?INSPECTOR
. Yes.(
SIR
HENRY. (LADY
ANGKATELL. I’m really not quite sure, Henry—I suppose I had some vague idea about an accident.SIR
HENRY. Accident?LADY
ANGKATELL. Yes, all those roots of tree sticking up—so easy to trip over one. I’ve always thought that an accident would be the simplest way to do a thing of that kind. One would be dreadfully sorry, of course, and blame oneself . . . (SIR
HENRY. Who was to have had the accident?LADY
ANGKATELL. John Cristow, of course.SIR
HENRY. ((LADY
ANGKATELLLADY
ANGKATELL. Oh, Henry, I’ve been so dreadfully worried. About Ainswick.SIR
HENRY. I see. So it was Ainswick. You’ve always cared too much about Ainswick, Lucy.LADY
ANGKATELL. You and Edward are the last of the Angkatells. Unless Edward marries, the whole thing will die out—and he’s so obstinate—that long head of his, just like my father. I felt that if only John were out of the way, Henrietta would marry Edward—she’s really quite fond of him—and when a person’s dead, you do forget. So, it all came to that—get rid of John Cristow.SIR
HENRY. (