Behold Here's Poison (14 page)

Read Behold Here's Poison Online

Authors: Georgette Heyer

'It's enough to get on anyone's nerves,' said Stella defiantly. 'You don't live here, so you don't know what it's like.'

'I hesitate to proffer advice unasked,' drawled Randall, 'but if I were Guy's fond sister I would tell him to go to work as usual. For one thing, it would look better.'

'He won't. I did say I thought he ought to carry on; in fact, I even got Mr Rumbold to advise him to go back to work, but he's frightfully highly-strung, and things do get on his nerves very easily. I think it's through having too much imagination. Because he has, you know.'

Judging by the only example of his work which I have been privileged to behold I should describe his imagination as being not only excessive, but morbid,' said Randall.

Stella, who was not an admirer of her brother's decorative schemes, made no reply to this, but merely said: 'Well, I'm going down again. And I may as well warn you, Randall, if the police ask me I shall tell them how I saw you coming out of uncle's bathroom.'

'A very good idea,' said Randall cordially. 'Let us start a General Information Bureau. You can inform about me in uncle's bathroom, and I can counter with some of Guy's remarks.'

'You rotten cad!' Stella flashed.

He smiled. 'Do you want a truce, my sweet?'

She stood quite still, gripping the banisters, for a moment, and then, without a word, flung round on her heel, and ran downstairs. Still smiling, Randall followed her at his leisure.

Mrs Lupton had not waited for her husband to join her, but after having delivered herself of some sweeping strictures on her elder nephew's manners and morals, had left the house to attend a meeting of the local Nursing Association. Henry Lupton had just come away from the study when Randall reached the hall, and was hovering about in an uncertain fashion near the front door. He looked a little surprised when Stella, with the briefest of greetings, went past him into the library, but a moment later he saw Randall on the bend of the staircase, and started forward. 'I want to speak to you!' he said in an urgent undertone.

'Do you?' said Randall, continuing his languid progress down the stairs.

'Yes, I do! I —' He cast a quick look behind him to be sure that Stella had shut the library door. 'I want to know what you meant by the—the disgracefully rude things you said to your aunt!'

'The desire evinced by so many people of apparently normal intelligence of being informed of what they know very well already is a source of constant wonder to me,' remarked Randall. 'However, I'm quite willing to oblige you if you're sure you want me to.'

Henry Lupton looked up at him, his own eyes strained and questioning. 'What did your uncle tell you about me?' he demanded. 'That's what I want to know! That Sunday before he died, when he asked you into his study. I might have known! I might have guessed he'd tell you!'

'You might, of course,' agreed Randall. 'Did you suppose he wouldn't? He thought it would appeal to my sense of humour.'

'I've no doubt it did,' said Lupton bitterly.

'Up to a point,' said Randall. 'Have we now finished this discussion?'

'No. I want to know—I insist on knowing what you mean to do!'

'What I mean to do?' repeated Randall, dropping the words out disdainfully one by one. 'Is it possible—is it really possible that you imagine I am going to concern myself with your utterly uninteresting love-affairs?'

Lupton flushed, but his muscles seemed to relax. 'I don't know. I'd believe anything of your family, anything! As for you, if you saw a chance to make mischief you'd take it!'

'In this case,' said Randall unpleasantly, 'it affords me purer gratification to dwell upon the thought of my dear Aunt Gertrude duped and betrayed.'

'Your aunt doesn't suffer through it!'

'What a pity!' said Randall.

The baize-door at the back of the hall opened at this moment, and Miss Matthews came through carrying her replenished bowl of flowers. 'Oh, Henry! Gertrude's gone,' she said. 'And I must say, Randall, I think it was most uncalled-for, whatever it was you said to her. Not that I know what it was, for I don't, and I'm sure I don't want to. And if you mean to stay to lunch I do think you might have let me know, because whatever your Aunt Zoë's ideas of housekeeping may be mine are different, and there won't be enough.'

'Fortunately,' said Randall, 'I have no such intention.'

'Well, I hope I am not inhospitable,' said Miss Matthews, slightly mollified, 'but I must say I'm glad to hear it. There are quite enough people to feed in this house without adding to them. I've already had to make it plain to Zoë that I'm not going to have her friends coming here to meals all day and every day, and behaving as though the drawing-room existed just for them to play Bridge in. I know very well what her idea is, and I'm not going to put up with it! The house is just as much mine as it is hers. More so, if everyone had their rights, and so is the car, and I won't have it used without her even asking me if I want it!… Yes, Zoë I am talking about you, and I don't care who hears me!'

Mrs Matthews who, possibly attracted by her sister-in-law's voice, had come out of the library, said sweetly: 'Were you, dear? Well, you can talk about me as much as you like, if you want to.'

'I shall,' said Miss Matthews. 'And I hope you heard what I said!'

Mrs Matthews gave her an indulgent smile. 'No, dear, I'm afraid I didn't. I came to remind you that I shall want the car this afternoon, if you are sure it is quite convenient to you.'

'Well, it isn't,' said Miss Matthews, with ill-concealed triumph. 'Pollen has taken it to be decarbonised.'

Mrs Matthews' smile faded, and a certain rigidity stole over her face. After a slight pause she said, carefully polite: 'My dear Harriet, surely you knew that I have an appointment to have my hair done this afternoon? I distinctly remember telling you about it, and asking whether you wanted the car yourself. Surely the car might have been decarbonised another day?'

'Pollen said it ought to be done,' replied Miss Matthews, obstinately.

Mrs Matthews compressed her lips. There was a distinctly un-Christian light in her eyes, but she said smoothly: 'I am sure you did it for the best, Harriet, but in future perhaps, it would be wiser if we consulted one another before giving quite such arbitrary orders. Don't you agree?'

'No, I don't!' snapped Miss Matthews, and walked off to put her flowers down in the drawing-room.

Randall watched her go, and glanced down at Mrs Matthews. 'My poor Aunt Zoë, do you find life very trying?' he said softly.

She was looking after her sister-in-law, but at Randall's words she turned. She met his cynical eyes, and said without a trace of annoyance in her voice: 'No, Randall, not at all. When you reach my age you will have learned not to judge people harshly, my dear boy. I am very, very fond of your Aunt Harriet, and all those little idiosyncrasies which you young people are so impatient of mean just nothing to me. You should always try to look beneath the surface, and remember that when people do things that are not very kind there may be a very good reason for it.'

'I am silenced,' bowed Randall.

She came to the foot of the stairs, and laid her hand on his arm for a moment as she passed him. 'Try to be more tolerant, Randall dear,' she said thrillingly. 'It is always such a mistake to condemn people's little foibles. One should try to understand, and to help them.'

She gave his arm a faint squeeze, and went on up the stairs. Randall looked anxiously at his sleeve, smoothed it, and said: 'After that I feel that anything else would be in the nature of an anti-climax. I shall go home.'

'Your aunt is a very sweet woman,' Henry Lupton said warmly. 'I admire her more than I can say.'

'So do I,' said Randall. 'I always have.'

'And I think you might at least refrain from sneering at her!'

'That,' said Randall, 'is the second time today I have been accused of sneering at my clever Aunt Zoë. I am quite guiltless, believe me. In fact, my admiration for her is growing by leaps and bounds.'

Henry Lupton stared at him suspiciously, but Randall only gave a tantalising smile, and walked across the hall to pick up his hat and gloves. 'I suppose you'll come down for the Inquest?' Lupton said.

Randall yawned. 'If nothing more amusing offers, I might,' he answered. 'Not if it is going to be held at some unearthly hour of the morning, of course. Convey my respectful farewells to my aunts if you see them again.' With which casual recommendation he strolled out of the house, leaving his uncle half-indignant and half-relieved.

Contrary to the expectations of his relatives he did not put in an appearance at the Inquest next morning, a circumstance which caused his three aunts to form a whole-hearted if brief alliance. Mrs Lupton supposed him to be ashamed to look her in the face, but considered that decency should have compelled him to be present; Miss Matthews read in his absence a deliberate slight to his uncle's memory; and Mrs Matthews, more charitable, feared that there was a callous streak in his nature, due, no doubt, to his youth.

The other members of the family all attended the Inquest. Even Owen Crewe came, though reluctantly. Agnes, looking brightly cheerful, but speaking in the hushed tones she considered suitable to the occasion, explained audibly to her mother that she had had quite a fight with Owen to get him to come, but had felt that he really ought to, if only to support her.

'I cannot see what the affair has to do with either of us,' said Owen in the disagreeable voice of one dragged unwillingly from his work.

'I suppose you will permit Agnes to feel some concern in her uncle's death?' said Mrs Lupton austerely.

Owen, who never embarked on an argument with his mother-in-law, merely replied: 'I can see no reason why I should be called upon to waste an entire morning over it,' and moved away to a seat as far removed from her as possible. When he discovered that Randall was not present he gave a short laugh, and said: 'Wise man!' the only effect of which was to make his wife say with unimpaired jollity that Owen was always cross in the mornings.

Mrs Rumbold, beside whom Owen had seated himself, said in a confidential voice: 'It is kind of horrid, isn't it? I mean, knowing poor Mr Matthews, and all.'

Owen looked round at her with the instinctive distrust of a shy man accosted by a stranger, and said: 'Quite,' in a stiff voice.

Mrs Rumbold smiled dazzlingly. 'You don't remember me, do you? Well, I'm sure I don't know why you should! My name's Rumbold. We knew poor Mr Matthews very well. We live next door, you know.'

Owen blushed, and half rose from his seat to shake hands. 'Oh, of course! I'm sorry, I'm afraid I'm very bad at remembering faces. How do you do? Er—very nice of you to come.'

'Well, we sort of felt we had to,' whispered Mrs Rumbold. 'I must say I'm not one for this sort of thing myself, but those two poor old dears wanted Ned—that's my husband—to come, so here we are. Ned doesn't think anything much will happen, though.'

'Nothing at all, I should imagine,' replied Owen, dwelling fondly on the thought of Mrs Matthews' emotions could she but have heard herself described as a poor old dear.

'We're not the only people outside the family here, that's one thing,' remarked Mrs Rumbold. 'Half Grinley seems to have turned up. Just curiosity, if you ask me. Oh, there's Dr Fielding come in! Well, he doesn't look as if he was worrying much, I must say.'

'No reason why he should,' said Owen.

'Well, I don't know,' said Mrs Rumbold doubtfully. 'I mean, he didn't seem to know Mr Matthews had been poisoned, and him a doctor! Ned keeps on telling me no one can blame him, but what I say is, if he's a doctor he ought to have known. Don't you agree?'

'Really, I don't understand these matters,' replied Owen, who, though not particularly observant, had by this time taken in not only Mrs Rumbold's blue eyelashes, but also her arresting picture-hat, with its trail of huge pink roses, and was in consequence feeling acutely self-conscious at being seen with anyone so spectacular. He said something about wanting to have a word with his father-in-law, and retreated to a place beside Henry Lupton just as the Coroner came into court.

The Inquest, in the opinions of those people who had come to it in the hopes of witnessing a thrilling drama, was most disappointing. Beecher was called first, and described how he had found his master's body on the morning of the 15th May. Very few questions were asked him, and he soon stood down to give place to Dr Fielding.

It was generally felt that the proceedings were now going to become more interesting, and a little stir ran through the court-room as the doctor got up. Several ladies thought that he looked very handsome, and one or two people confided to their neighbours, very much as Mrs Rumbold had done, that he looked as cool as a cucumber.

He was indeed perfectly self-possessed, and gave his evidence with easy assurance, and no waste of words. Questioned, he admitted that he had not discovered, upon a cursory examination, anything about the body incompatible with his first verdict of death from syncope. He became rather technical, and one half of his audience thought: Well, even doctors can't know everything; while the other half adhered to its belief that doctors ought to know everything. Questioned further, Fielding gave a still more technical description of the cardiac trouble for which he had been treating the deceased. When asked what circumstances had led him to communicate his patient's death to the Coroner he said at once: 'The dissatisfaction expressed by a member of the family with my diagnosis.'

This reply, delivered though it was in a calm voice, caused another stir to run through the court-room. It was felt that the details of some shocking family scandal were at any moment going to come to light, and when Mrs Lupton got up to give her evidence everyone stared at her hopefully, and waited in pent silence to hear what she was going to divulge.

But Mrs Lupton, who made nearly as good a witness as the doctor, divulged nothing. She knew of no reason why her brother should have been poisoned; simply she had felt that his death had not been due to natural causes. No, she did not think she could explain why she had had this feeling. It had attacked her forcibly on her first sight of the corpse. Her instinct was seldom at fault.

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