They were people used to spying on others and so seemed to expect to be spied on here. That didn't mean they stared at the Low Pastures windows, trying to spot a watcher. But they put on a flattering little charade, aimed to please any onlooker in the property. They acted out what Margaret regarded as token awe at the sight of the house and gardens, gazing around in nicely equal spells, left, right, up to the roof and chimneys, down to the paddocks and terraces: a very capable performance.
She couldn't tell whether they'd seen her behind the curtain in the screening room, but reckoned it wouldn't matter whether they had or not. They'd suppose there would be eyes on them from somewhere and the show must continue. They had their established notion of what windows were for and assumed one or more of them in the Low Pastures frontage might now be operating as such: windows invited occupants to observe things and people outside. Beryl and Frank would automatically adjust their behaviour to suit. Margaret admired the phoney thoroughness of it. She could almost feel their put-on reverence for the place. And it deserved reverence, though not this cooked-up sort.
Why were they here? How did they trace her and find the house? She had not given them even her first name, and certainly no address.
Frank nodded at the Lexus parked near the front door and smiled. The bell rang, and she did her own bit of acting, too â delayed for three minutes before responding, as though she'd been in the back part of the house and unaware of the visitors' arrival, not having a nervy squint from behind drapes.
âYou'll wonder what brings us to your fine home,' Beryl said.
âAnd magnificent setting,' Frank said.
There was a kind of rhythm to their statements. It reminded Margaret of Psalms learned at school: first, the main pronouncement, then an addition or adjustment â
the heavens declare the glory of God; and the firmament showeth his handiwork.
âOh, yes, the setting, too. Obviously,' Beryl said. âThe trees bordering the drive. A real autumn colour display, bright red, russet, evergreen.'
âIt was something of a gamble, our coming here,' Frank said.
âA gamble?' Margaret said. She did her best to keep from her voice the irritation she felt, bordering on fury. This had replaced her apprehension. They talked in the porch so far. She wasn't ready to ask them in. She didn't want another duet about the distinction of the house â its interior now. Well, she didn't want these two in the house at all. For one thing, Ralph might return from wherever he'd gone. For another thing  . . . for another thing she just didn't want them on the premises.
âWe knew we had it right when we saw the Lexus,' Frank said. âDistinctive.' He wore a Barbour jacket, perhaps put on to come into the country and visit a manor house.
âWe looked in on Karen this morning and told her that you'd called but couldn't wait any longer,' Beryl said. âShe was very curious and mystified. Of course, we had no name, and she asked us to describe you. I think we must have done it quite well because almost at once she said, “It sounds like Margaret Ember.” I mentioned the red Lexus and she exclaimed, “Yes! Margaret Ember from Low Pastures. Her husband is in business and runs The Monty club. But what did she want? Do you know? Margaret Ember turned up here? Really?” That's more or less what she said, isn't it, Frank? I definitely remember that “really”. It showed true surprise at such an occurrence.'
âYes, indeed,' Frank said. âExtremely curious and mystified.'
Beryl said: âWe didn't mention that we'd seen her leave the house just after that visitor â the maybe police detectiveâ'
âThe fair-haired Rocky Marciano almost-look-alike,' Frank said. âPerhaps Harpur.'
ââand seem to follow him,' Beryl said. âThat might have sounded as if we were snooping on her.'
âYes, I suppose it might,' Margaret said.
âIt's this detective â the possibly Colin Harpur â that we'd like to discuss with you, Mrs Ember,' Frank said.
Margaret had a sudden notion, an instinct, that the two might, after all, have something worth listening to. She said: âBut we shouldn't be talking out here. Please, do come in. What can I have been thinking of?' She'd been thinking of how to get rid of them without blatant rudeness. Now, she amended that.
âThanks so much,' Beryl said.
âSuch a wonderful hall,' Frank said, gazing. âSpacious and yet welcoming, even cosy. One can imagine long ago the squire returning gratefully to a hall like this after an arduous day's hunting.'
âThe exposed stone â so authentic,' Beryl said. âQuite a difference from plasterboard! Oh, yes, plasterboard is smoother and easier to hang wallpaper on, but this is a building obviously built to last, proud of its rugged, genuine materials.'
Margaret took them into the drawing room. It had views over the paddocks and fields to the sea. She went to the kitchen and put the kettle on.
When she came back, Frank said: âYes, this police officer â the possible Detective Chief Superintendent Harpur â interests Beryl and me.'
âYou know him?' Margaret asked.
âHave you seen the local TV news this morning?' Frank replied. He seemed to have taken over from Beryl the main role in their chat team. The way he ignored Margaret's question and went on to one of his own got close to being autocratic, despite that feeble moustache and sad, old stoop.
âI did glance at the news,' Margaret said.
âSome kind of crisis in the Valencia,' Frank said. âGladstone Square.'
âYes, I think I remember. An area cordoned off,' Margaret said. âA lot of cars. A large Chrysler? An ambulance.'
âA lot of cars, yes,' he replied.
âFrank thinks one of them rather significant,' Beryl said. âHe's not good on motors and their make, but he did notice the Chrysler and another.' She had on a brown car coat of high-grade leather over an amber blouse and tan corduroy trousers.
âI'd like you, if you would, Mrs Ember, to think back to our conversation over the front fence in Carteret Drive last evening,' Frank said. He sounded now like a QC, lulling a witness before the cross-examination onslaught started. Frank could have made good use of a courtroom wig.
âHow small and architecturally insignificant those houses seem against this one,' Beryl said. âYet it suits us. What would we be doing with paddocks at our age, I wonder?'
âI happened to look along the street as we talked then, if you recall,' Frank said.
âObservant. Frank is like that. He seeks the full picture,' Beryl said. âThe context, if, in fact, that full picture, that context, is available. They're not always, of course, but fragments placed together â skilfully placed together â inspirationally placed together, in fact â can sometimes add up to such a picture, as might be so in this case. Frank refuses to blow his own trumpet so, occasionally, I will blow it for him.' She put a hand up to her lips for a moment as though she'd spotted a double entendre here and wanted to push the words back, particularly the word âblow', most probably.
âA black car â a Mazda you said, Mrs Ember â was parked some way from where we talked, facing in our direction and, at first, I thought it empty. My eyes are not what they were, you know,' Frank said.
âThere might not have been much significance to it were that so,' Beryl said.
âWhat significance
was
there?' Margaret replied. âAn unoccupied parked car. There are always plenty in the street, especially at night.'
âBut
was
it empty, you see?' Beryl said.
âAh,' Margaret said. Of course, she'd noticed Frank had said that âat first' he'd thought the Mazda empty. Stand by for a revision. She accepted a kind of duty, though, to play half stupid, so they would feel superior, keen to correct her by getting on with the tale.
âFrank was describing his original impression,' Beryl said.
They intended to roll out the story in their own style â place together those âfragments' Beryl had spoken of, and do it at their chosen pace, which was not hell-for-leather. Margaret realized they aimed to intrigue her, make her desperate to hear what they knew, subordinate her to their insights, because she lived in a gorgeous house with authentic bare stone walls, as against their smaller and very average one held together by plasterboard.
She went back to the kitchen and made tea. She returned with a tray and mugs, not china cups, which might have looked chichi, or, worse than that, middle-class. She put the tray on the rosewood table. Beryl was sitting on the blue, loose-covered chesterfield. Frank had an armchair near the Regency sideboard. Margaret took another armchair opposite him.
Frank said: âYou mentioned a Chrysler in the TV footage of the Gladstone Square incident. I'd agree. There
was
a Chrysler. Yes, one of the big models. Even I could recognize a Chrysler.'
â“A Chrysler trying to look like a Bentley.” This was Frank's comment when he saw it on the film. It sort of
punctured
the car's pretensions, as it were,' Beryl said. âFrank loathes grandiosity.'
Margaret didn't mention that her husband might turn up soon in a Bentley that
was
a Bentley. Did that amount to grandiosity? She'd like to get them back into their Focus and fucked off before Ralph appeared and didn't want to provoke extra chat about car makes. In any case, a reference to Ralph's sublime limo might be the equivalent of the good china: blatant swank.
âBut a little behind the Chrysler?' Frank asked gently.
âDon't remember,' Margaret said. That was true. There'd been a lot of vehicles. She realized now, though, that the Mazda must have been there. The particles of Frank's and Beryl's yarn were about to add up to something. She couldn't tell what.
âA black Mazda,' Frank declared.
âHonestly?' Margaret exclaimed, making sure the word reeked of astonishment.
Beryl said: âWe both noted it, in fact, and we cried out the words themselves, “A black Mazda!” to guarantee the other noticed it, which, clearly, was unnecessary, since we jointly observed the vehicle standing there and â also jointly â appreciated its significance.'
âWhat significance did you think it had, jointly?' Margaret said.
âI would like to take you back again to previous events in Carteret Drive,' My Learned Friend Frank said. âI'll reach in due course another relevant mention of the Mazda. But sequence is important â a saga properly managed.'
âFrank has always striven for that kind of orderliness and clarity in describing a pattern of events,' Beryl said. âIt's very much him.'
âMrs Ember, you left Carteret Drive when there continued to be no answer at number eleven,' Frank said. âShortly afterwards, Jason returned in the estate car with the same friends â at least, the same as far as one could tell, under the street lights â not very bright â and in the brief pause they made while Jason got out of the vehicle. He appeared to give a thumbs-up gesture. Presumably they'd had a pleasant evening somewhere.'
âThumbs up?' Margaret said.
âTo the pair in the Volvo,' Beryl said.
âIt could have been a “thank you” for the lift home, or a signal that they'd successfully pulled off something â achieved something â or simply an acknowledgement that they'd had that pleasant evening together.'
âAchieved what?' Margaret said.
âWell, obviously Frank can't answer that, can he?' Beryl said. There was no sharpness in her tone, just a mild, patient reasonableness.
Margaret would agree her question had been absurd. Frank wasn't clairvoyant, merely a grade-A neighbourhood watcher. Margaret would have to go on wondering about the thumbs up, suspecting about the thumbs up, disliking the thumbs up.
âNumber eleven had remained in darkness until Jason arrived. Now, there were lights on downstairs,' Beryl said.
âAnd then, fortunately, we were in the front room again when Karen's Mini appeared,' Frank said. âShe found parking a little way up the street and came back on foot to the house â came back running to the house, and I mean
really
running, an undoubted sprint, although in heels. Joy â that's what showed in her face, despite the exertion â joy, considerable excitement, relief.'
âRelief at what?' Margaret said.
âNow, Mrs Ember, you may well ask what has happened to the black Mazda in our account of things,' Frank replied.
âYes,' Margaret said.
âI've said I thought the car looked empty when I noticed it during our conversation over the front fence,' Frank said, âalthough I had an unexplainable inkling that it might contain somebody.'
âNow and then, or even oftener, Frank does have inklings,' Beryl said. âHow, then, do we define “inklings” â i.e., what
is
an inkling, especially the kind of inkling Frank has? A strange word, isn't it? Strange, yet seeming to contain within itself â that is, within its sound when spoken â yes, seeming to contain its own meaning. Doesn't it suggest something insubstantial, even slight â perhaps because it rhymes with “tinkling” â insubstantial even slight, but of a subtle, unexplainable, undeniable power?'
Shut your gob and let Frank get on with his dissertation, you tinkling old cow
. âFascinating,' Margaret replied.
âSuddenly, this inkling became something else,' Frank said.
âIt's the way inklings occasionally will â inklings generally, not just Frank's,' Beryl explained.
âA little while after Karen returned at such a gallop to their house, the Mazda moved off,' Frank said.
âHad you seen anyone go to it?' Margaret said.
âNot in the sense that you probably mean,' Frank said. âNobody had come out from one of the houses and climbed in.'
âSo the inkling had been a correct inkling, although insubstantial?' Margaret asked. âThere had been someone in the car?'