The Complete Tommy & Tuppence Collection (128 page)

‘He knew something about who killed Mary Jordan.
It was one of us
…' Tuppence's face lit up. ‘US,' she said with emphasis, ‘we'll have to know just all about US. An “US” here in this house in the past. It's a crime we've got to solve. Go back to the past to solve it–to where it happened and why it happened. That's a thing we've never tried to do before.'

‘Where on earth have you been, Tuppence?' demanded her husband when he returned to the family mansion the following day.

‘Well, last of all I've been in the cellar,' said Tuppence.

‘I can see that,' said Tommy. ‘Yes, I do see. Do you know that your hair is absolutely full of cobwebs?'

‘Well, it would be of course. The cellar is full of cobwebs. There wasn't anything there, anyway,' said Tuppence. ‘At least there were some bottles of bay rum.'

‘Bay rum?' said Tommy. ‘That's interesting.'

‘Is it?' said Tuppence. ‘Does one drink it? It seems to me most unlikely.'

‘No,' said Tommy, ‘I think people used to put it on their hair. I mean men, not women.'

‘I believe you're right,' said Tuppence. ‘I remember my uncle–yes, I had an uncle who used bay rum. A
friend of his used to bring it him from America.'

‘Oh really? That seems very interesting,' said Tommy.

‘I don't think it is particularly interesting,' said Tuppence. ‘It's no help to us, anyway. I mean, you couldn't hide anything in a bottle of bay rum.'

‘Oh, so that's what you've been doing.'

‘Well, one has to start somewhere,' said Tuppence. ‘It's just possible if what your pal said to you was true, something
could
be hidden in this house, though it's rather difficult to imagine where it could be or what it could be, because, you see, when you sell a house or die and go out of it, the house is then of course emptied, isn't it? I mean, anyone who inherits it takes the furniture out and sells it, or if it's left, the next person comes in and
they
sell it, and so anything that's left in now would have belonged to the last tenant but one and certainly not much further back than that.'

‘Then why should somebody want to injure you or injure me or try to get us to leave this house–unless, I mean, there was something here that they didn't want us to find?'

‘Well, that's all
your
idea,' said Tuppence. ‘It mightn't be true at all. Anyway, it's not been an entirely wasted day. I have found
some
things.'

‘Anything to do with Mary Jordan?'

‘Not particularly. The cellar, as I say, is not much good. It had a few old things to do with photography,
I think. You know, a developing lamp or something like they used to use in old days, with red glass in it, and the bay rum. But there were no sort of flagstones that looked as though you could pull them up and find anything underneath. There were a few decayed trunks, some tin trunks and a couple of old suitcases, but things that just couldn't be used to put anything in any more. They'd fall to bits if you kicked them. No. It was a wash-out.'

‘Well, I'm sorry,' said Tommy. ‘So no satisfaction.'

‘Well, there
were
some things that were interesting. I said to myself, one has to say something to oneself–I think I'd better go upstairs now and take the cobwebs off before I go on talking.'

‘Well, I think perhaps you had,' said Tommy. ‘I shall like looking at you better when you've done that.'

‘If you want to get the proper Darby and Joan feeling,' said Tuppence, ‘you must always look at me and consider that your wife, no matter what her age, still looks lovely to you.'

‘Tuppence dearest,' said Tommy, ‘you look excessively lovely to me. And there is a kind of roly-poly of a cobweb hanging down over your left ear which is most attractive. Rather like the curl that the Empress Eugenie is sometimes represented as having in pictures. You know, running along the corner of her neck. Yours seems to have got a spider in it, too.'

‘Oh,' said Tuppence, ‘I don't like that.'

She brushed the web away with her hand. She duly went upstairs and returned to Tommy later. A glass was awaiting her. She looked at it doubtfully.

‘You aren't trying to make
me
drink bay rum, are you?'

‘No. I don't think I particularly want to drink bay rum myself.'

‘Well,' said Tuppence, ‘if I may get on with what I was saying–'

‘I should like you to,' said Tommy. ‘You'll do it anyway, but I would like to feel it was because I urged you to do so.'

‘Well, I said to myself, “Now if I was going to hide anything in this house that I didn't want anyone else to find, what sort of place would I choose?”'

‘Yes,' said Tommy, ‘very logical.'

‘And so I thought, what places are there where one can hide things? Well, one of them of course is Mathilde's stomach.'

‘I beg your pardon,' said Tommy.

‘Mathilde's stomach. The rocking-horse. I told you about the rocking-horse. It's an American rocking-horse.'

‘A lot of things seem to have come from America,' said Tommy. ‘The bay rum too, you said.'

‘Well, anyway, the rocking-horse did have a hole in
its stomach because old Isaac told me about it; it had a hole in its stomach and a lot of sort of queer old paper stuff came out of it. Nothing interesting. But anyway, that's the sort of place where anyone might have hidden anything, isn't it?'

‘Quite possibly.'

‘And Truelove, of course. I examined Truelove again. You know it's got a sort of rather old decayed mackintosh seat but there was nothing there. And of course there were no personal things belonging to anyone. So I thought again. Well, after all, there's still the bookcase and books. People hide things in books. And we haven't quite finished doing the book-room upstairs, have we?'

‘I thought we had,' said Tommy hopefully.

‘Not really. There was the bottom shelf still.'

‘That doesn't really need doing. I mean, one hasn't got to get up a ladder and take things down.'

‘No. So I went up there and sat down on the floor and looked through the bottom shelf. Most of it was sermons. Sermons of somebody in old times written by a Methodist minister, I think. Anyway, they weren't interesting, there was nothing in them. So I pulled all those books out on the floor. And then I did make a discovery. Underneath, some time or other, somebody had made a sort of gaping hole, and pushed all sorts of things in it, books all torn to pieces more or less. There
was one rather big one. It had a brown paper cover on it and I just pulled it out to see. After all, one never knows, does one? And what do you think it was?'

‘I've no idea. First edition of
Robinson Crusoe
or something valuable like that?'

‘No. It was a birthday book.'

‘A birthday book. What's that?'

‘Well, they used to have them. Goes back a long time. Back to the Parkinsons, I think. Probably before that. Anyway, it was rather battered and torn. Not worth keeping, and I don't suppose anyone would have bothered about it. But it
does
date back and one
might
find something in it, I thought.'

‘I see. You mean the sort of thing people might have slipped something into.'

‘Yes. But nobody has done that, of course. Nothing so simple. But I'm still going through it quite carefully. I haven't gone through it properly yet. You see, it might have interesting names in it and one might find out something.'

‘I suppose so,' said Tommy, sounding sceptical.

‘Well, that's one thing. That's the only thing in the book line that I came across. There was nothing else on the bottom shelf. The other thing to look through, of course, is the cupboards.'

‘What about furniture?' said Tommy. ‘Lots of things like secret drawers in furniture, and all that.'

‘No, Tommy, you're not looking at things straight. I mean, all the furniture in the house now is
ours
. We moved into an empty house and brought our furniture with us. The only thing we found here from really old times is all that mess out in the place called KK, old decayed toys and garden seats. I mean, there's no proper antique furniture left in the house. Whoever it was lived here last took it away or else sent it to be sold. There's been lots of people, I expect, since the Parkinsons, so there wouldn't be anything left of theirs here. But, I
did
find something. I don't know, it may mean something helpful.'

‘What was that?'

‘China menu cards.'

‘China menu cards?'

‘Yes. In that old cupboard we haven't been able to get into. The one off the larder. You know, they'd lost the key. Well, I found the key in an old box. Out in KK, as a matter of fact. I put some oil on it and I managed to get the cupboard door open. And, well, there was nothing in it. It was just a dirty cupboard with a few broken bits of china left in it. I should think from the last people who were here. But shoved up on the top shelf there was a little heap of the Victorian china menus people used to have at parties. Fascinating, the things they ate–really the most delicious meals. I'll read you some after we've had dinner. It was fascinating.
You know, two soups, clear and thick, and on top of that there were two kinds of fish and then there were two entrées, I think, and then you had a salad or something like that. And then after that you had the joint and after that–I'm not quite sure what came next. I think a sorbet–that's ice cream, isn't it? And actually after that–lobster salad! Can you believe it?'

‘Hush, Tuppence,' said Tommy, ‘I don't really think I can stand any more.'

‘Well, anyway I thought it might be interesting. It dates back, you know. It dates back, I should think, quite a long time.'

‘And what do you hope to get from all these discoveries?'

‘Well, the only thing with possibilities is the birthday book. In it I see there is a mention of somebody called Winifred Morrison.'

‘Well?'

‘Well, Winifred Morrison, I gather, was the maiden name of old Mrs Griffin. That's the one I went to tea with the other day. She's one of the oldest inhabitants, you know, and she remembers or knows about a lot of things that happened before her time. Well, I think she might remember or have heard of some of the other names in the birthday book. We might get something from that.'

‘We might,' said Tommy still sounding doubtful. ‘I still think–'

‘Well, what do you still think?' said Tuppence.

‘I don't know what to think,' said Tommy. ‘Let's go to bed and sleep. Don't you think we'd better give this business up altogether? Why should we want to know who killed Mary Jordan?'

‘Don't you
want
to?'

‘No, I don't,' said Tommy. ‘At least–oh I give in. You've got me involved now, I admit.'

‘Haven't
you
found out anything?' asked Tuppence.

‘I hadn't time today. But I've got a few more sources of information. I put that woman I told you about–you know, the one who's quite clever about research–I put
her
on to a few things.'

‘Oh well,' said Tuppence, ‘we'll still hope for the best. It's all nonsense, but perhaps it
is
rather fun.'

‘Only I'm not so sure it's going to be as much fun as you think,' said Tommy.

‘Oh well. No matter,' said Tuppence, ‘we'll have done our best.'

‘Well, don't go on doing your best all by yourself,' said Tommy. ‘That's exactly what worries me so much–when I'm away from you.'

‘I wonder what Tuppence is doing now,' said Tommy, sighing.

‘Excuse me, I didn't quite hear what you said.'

Tommy turned his head to look at Miss Collodon more closely. Miss Collodon was thin, emaciated, had grey hair which was slowly passing through the stage of recovering from a peroxide rinse designated to make her look younger (which it had not done). She was now trying various shades of artistic grey, cloudy smoke, steel blue and other interesting shades suitable for a lady between sixty and sixty-five, devoted to the pursuit of research. Her face represented a kind of ascetic superiority and a supreme confidence in her own achievements.

‘Oh, it was nothing really, Miss Collodon,' said Tommy. ‘Just–just something I was considering, you know. Just thinking of.'

And what is it, I wonder, thought Thomas, being careful this time not to utter the words aloud, that she can be doing today. Something silly, I bet. Half killing herself in that extraordinary, obsolete child's toy that'll come to pieces carrying her down the hill, and she'll probably end up with a broken something or other. Hips, it seems to be nowadays, though I don't see why hips are more vulnerable than anything else. Tuppence, he thought, would at this moment be doing something silly or foolish or, if not that, she would be doing something which might not be silly or foolish but
would
be highly dangerous. Yes, dangerous. It was always difficult keeping Tuppence out of danger. His mind roved vaguely over various incidents in the past. Words of a quotation came into his mind, and he spoke them aloud:

‘Postern of Fate…

Pass not beneath, O Caravan, or pass not singing.

Have you heard

That silence where the birds are dead, yet something

pipeth like a bird?'

Miss Collodon responded immediately, giving Tommy quite a shock of surprise.

‘Flecker,' she said. ‘Flecker. It goes on:

“Death's Caravan…Disaster's Cavern, Fort of Fear.”'

Tommy stared at her, then realized that Miss Collodon had thought he was bringing her a poetic problem to be researched, full information on where a certain quotation came from and who the poet had been who had uttered it. The trouble with Miss Collodon was that her research covered such a broad field.

‘I was just wondering about my wife,' said Tommy apologetically.

‘Oh,' said Miss Collodon.

She looked at Tommy with a rather new expression in her eye. Marital trouble in the home, she was deducing. She would presently probably offer him the address of a marriage advice bureau wherein he might seek adjustment in his matrimonial affairs and troubles.

Tommy said hurriedly, ‘Have you had any success with that enquiry I spoke to you about the day before yesterday?'

‘Oh yes. Not very much trouble in
that
. Somerset House is very useful, you know, in all those things. I don't think, you know, that there is likely to be anything particular that you want there, but I've got the names and addresses of certain births, marriages and deaths.'

‘What, are they all Mary Jordans?'

‘Jordan, yes. A Mary. A Maria and a Polly Jordan. Also a Mollie Jordan. I don't know if any of them are likely to be what you want. Can I pass this to you?'

She handed him a small typewritten sheet.

‘Oh, thank you. Thank you very much.'

‘There are several addresses, too. The ones you asked me for. I have not been able to find out the address of Major Dalrymple. People change their addresses constantly nowadays. However, I think another two days ought to get that information all right. This is Dr Heseltine's address. He is at present living at Surbiton.'

‘Thanks very much,' said Tommy. ‘I might start on him, anyway.'

‘Any more queries?'

‘Yes. I've got a list here of about six. Some of them may not be in your line.'

‘Oh well,' said Miss Collodon, with complete assurance, ‘I have to make things my line, you know. You can easily find out first just where you can find out, if that isn't a rather foolish way of speech. But it does explain things, you know. I remember–oh, quite a long time ago, when I was first doing this work, I found how useful Selfridge's advice bureau was. You could ask them the most extraordinary questions about the most extraordinary things and they always seemed to be able to tell you something about it or where you could get the information quickly. But of course they don't do that sort of thing nowadays. Nowadays, you know, most enquiries that are made are–well, you know, if you want to commit suicide, things like that.
Samaritans. And legal questions about wills and a lot of extraordinary things for authors, of course. And jobs abroad and immigration problems. Oh yes, I cover a very wide field.'

‘I'm sure you do,' said Tommy.

‘And helping alcoholics. A lot of societies there are who specialize in that. Some of them are much better than others. I have quite a list–comprehensive–and some most reliable–'

‘I'll remember it,' Tommy said, ‘if I find myself shaping that way any time. It depends how far I get today.'

‘Oh, I'm sure, Mr Beresford, I don't see any signs of alcoholic difficulties in you.'

‘No red nose?' said Tommy.

‘It's worse with women,' said Miss Collodon. ‘More difficult, you know, to get them off it, as you might say. Men do relapse, but not so notably. But really, some women, they seem quite all right, quite happy drinking lemonade in large quantities and all that, and then some evening, in the middle of a party–well, it's all there again.'

In turn, she looked at her watch.

‘Oh dear, I must go on to my next appointment. I have to get to Upper Grosvenor Street.'

‘Thank you very much,' said Tommy, ‘for all you've done.'

He opened the door politely, helped Miss Collodon on with her coat, went back into the room and said,

‘I must remember to tell Tuppence this evening that our researches so far have led me to impress a research agent with the idea that my wife drinks and our marriage is breaking up because of it. Oh dear, what next!'

II

What next was an appointment in an inexpensive restaurant in the neighbourhood of Tottenham Court Road.

‘Well I never!' said an elderly man, leaping up from his seat where he was sitting waiting. ‘Carroty Tom, on my life. Shouldn't have known you.'

‘Possibly not,' said Tommy. ‘Not much carrots left about me. It's grey-haired Tom.'

‘Ah well, we're all that. How's your health?'

‘Much the same as I always was. Cracking. You know. Decomposing by degrees.'

‘How long is it since I've seen you? Two years? Eight years? Eleven years?'

‘Now you're going too far,' said Tommy. ‘We met at the Maltese Cats dinner last autumn, don't you remember?'

‘Ah, so we did. Pity that broke up, you know. I always thought it would. Nice premises, but the food was rotten. Well, what are you doing these days, old boy? Still in the espionage-up-to-date do?'

‘No,' said Tommy, ‘I'm nothing to do with espionage.'

‘Dear me. What a waste of your activities.'

‘And what about you, Mutton-Chop?'

‘Oh, I'm much too old to serve my country in that way.'

‘No espionage going on nowadays?'

‘Lots of it, I expect. But probably they put the bright boys on to it. The ones who come bursting out of universities needing a job badly. Where are you now? I sent you a Christmas card this year. Well, I didn't actually post it till January but anyway it came back to me with “Not known at this address”.'

‘No. We've gone to the country to live now. Down near the sea. Hollowquay.'

‘Hollowquay. Hollowquay? I seem to remember something. Something in your line going on there once, wasn't there?'

‘Not in my time,' said Tommy. ‘I've only just got to hear of it since going to live there. Legends of the past. At least sixty years ago.'

‘Something to do with a submarine, wasn't it? Plans of a submarine sold to someone or other. I forget who we were selling to at that time. Might have been the
Japanese, might have been the Russians–oh, and lots of others. People always seemed to meet enemy agents in Regent's Park or somewhere like that. You know, they'd meet someone like a third Secretary from an Embassy. Not so many beautiful lady spies around as there used to be once in fiction.'

‘I wanted to ask you a few things, Mutton-Chop.'

‘Oh? Ask away. I've had a very uneventful life. Margery–do you remember Margery?'

‘Yes, of course I remember Margery. I nearly got to your wedding.'

‘I know. But you couldn't make it or something, or took the wrong train, as far as I remember. A train that was going to Scotland instead of Southall. Anyway, just as well you didn't. Nothing much came of it.'

‘Didn't you get married?'

‘Oh yes, I got married. But somehow or other it didn't take very well. No. A year and a half and it was done with. She's married again. I haven't, but I'm doing very nicely. I live at Little Pollon. Quite a decent golf-course there. My sister lives with me. She's a widow with a nice bit of money and we get on well together. She's a bit deaf so she doesn't hear what I say, but it only means shouting a bit.'

‘You said you'd heard of Hollowquay. Was it really something to do with spying of some kind?'

‘Well, to tell you the truth, old boy, it's so long ago that I can't remember much about it. It made a big stir at the time. You know, splendid young naval officer absolutely above suspicion in every way, ninety per cent British, rated about a hundred and five in reliability, but nothing of the kind really. In the pay of–well, I can't remember now who he was in the pay of. Germany, I suppose. Before the 1914 war. Yes, I think that was it.'

‘And there was a woman too, I believe, associated with it all,' said Tommy.

‘I seem to remember hearing something about a Mary Jordan, I think it was. Mind you, I am not clear about all this. Got into the papers and I think it was a wife of his–I mean of the above-suspicion naval officer. It was his wife who got in touch with the Russians and–no, no, that's something that happened since then. One mixes things up so–they all sound alike. Wife thought he wasn't getting enough money, which meant, I suppose, that
she
wasn't getting enough money. And so–well, why d'you want to dig up all this old history? What's it got to do with you after all this time? I know you had something to do once with someone who was on the
Lusitania
or went down with the
Lusitania
or something like that, didn't you? If we go back as far as that, I mean. That's what you were mixed up in once, or your wife was mixed up in.'

‘We were both mixed up in it,' said Tommy, ‘and it's such a very long time ago that I really can't remember anything about it now.'

‘There was some woman associated with that, wasn't there? Name like Jane Fish, or something like that, or was it Jane Whale?'

‘Jane Finn,' said Tommy.

‘Where is she now?'

‘She's married to an American.'

‘Oh, I see. Well, all very nice. One always seems to get talking about one's old pals and what's happened to them all. When you talk about old friends, either they are dead, which surprises you enormously because you didn't think they would be, or else they're not dead and that surprises you even more. It's a very difficult world.'

Tommy said yes it was a very difficult world and here was the waiter coming. What could they have to eat…The conversation thereafter was gastronomic.

III

In the afternoon Tommy had another interview arranged. This time with a sad, grizzled man sitting in an office and obviously grudging the time he was giving Tommy.

‘Well, I really couldn't say. Of course I know roughly what you're talking about–lot of talk about it at the time–caused a big political blow-up–but I really have no information about that sort of thing, you know. No. You see, these things, they don't last, do they? They soon pass out of one's mind once the Press gets hold of some other juicy scandal.'

He opened up slightly on a few of his own interesting moments in life when something he'd never suspected came suddenly to light or his suspicions had suddenly been aroused by some very peculiar event. He said:

‘Well, I've just got one thing might help. Here's an address for you and I've made an appointment too. Nice chap. Knows everything. He's the tops, you know, absolutely the tops. One of my daughters was a godchild of his. That's why he's awfully nice to me and will always do me a good turn if possible. So I asked him if he would see you. I said there were some things you wanted the top news about, I said what a good chap you were and various things and he said yes, he'd heard of you already. Knew something about you, and he said, Of course come along. Three forty-five, I think. Here's the address. It's an office in the City, I think. Ever met him?'

‘I don't think so,' said Tommy, looking at the card and the address. ‘No.'

‘Well you wouldn't think he knew anything, to look at him, I mean. Big, you know, and yellow.'

‘Oh,' said Tommy, ‘big and yellow.'

It didn't really convey much information to his mind.

‘He's the tops,' said Tommy's grizzled friend, ‘absolute tops. You go along there. He'll be able to tell you
something
anyway. Good luck, old chap.'

IV

Tommy, having successfully got himself to the City office in question, was received by a man of 35 to 40 years of age who looked at him with the eye of one determined to do the worst without delay. Tommy felt that he was suspected of many things, possibly carrying a bomb in some deceptive container, or prepared to hijack or kidnap anyone or to hold up with a revolver the entire staff. It made Tommy extremely nervous.

Other books

Dante's Dilemma by Lynne Raimondo
The Sex Surrogate by Gadziala, Jessica
Bug Eyed Monsters by Jean Ure
B-Movie War by Alan Spencer
Sandstorm by James Rollins
Lucky Damnation by Joel M. Andre
Bad Sisters by Rebecca Chance