Light shone dimly behind the windows of Miss Cost’s Gifte Shoppe.
“P.C. Pender’s locked up in there with Miss Cissy Pollock on the switchboard,” Alleyn muttered. “I’ll just have a word with him.” He tapped on the door. After a moment, it was opened a crack and Pender said: “Bean’t no manner of use pesterin—” and then saw Alleyn. “Beg pardon, sir, I’m sure,” he said. “Thought you was one of they damned kids come back.” He flung open the door. Alleyn called to Fox and the others and they went in.
The shop smelt fustily of cardboard, wool and gum. In the postal section, Miss Cissy Pollock bulged at a switchboard: all eyes and teeth when she saw the visitors.
Pender said that a call had come through for Alleyn from Dunlowman. “Sir James Curtis, it were, sir,” he said with reverence. Curtis was the Home Office pathologist. “Wishful to speak with you. I intercepted the call, sir, and informed the station and the Boy-and-Lobster.”
“Where was he?”
“Dunlowman mortuary, sir, along with the body and the Doctor. I’ve got the number.”
“Aw, dear!” Miss Pollock exclaimed. “Bean’t it shocking though!” She had removed her headphones.
Alleyn asked if she could put him through. She engaged to do so and directed him to an instrument in a cubbyhole.
The mortuary attendant answered and said Sir James was just leaving but he’d try to catch him. He could be heard pounding off down a concrete passage. In a minute or two the great man spoke.
“Hullo, Rory, where the devil have you been? I’ve done this job for you. Want the report?”
“Please.”
It was straightforward enough. Death by drowning, following insensibility caused by a blow on the head. The piece of rock was undoubtedly the instrument. Contents of stomach, Sir James briskly continued, showed that she’d had a cup of tea and a biscuit about an hour and three quarters before she died. On Dr. Mayne’s evidence he would agree that she had probably been dead about an hour when Alleyn found her. Sir James had another case more or less on the way back to London and would like to get off before he himself was drowned. Would Alleyn let him know about the inquest? Dr. Mayne would tell him anything else he wanted to hear and was now on his way back to Portcarrow. “I’m told you’re on an island,” said Sir James, merrily. “You’ll be likely to stay there if the weather report’s to be trusted. What book will you choose if you can only have one?”
“The Gentle Art of Making Enemies,” said Alleyn and hung up.
He told Pender that he and Fox would return after dinner and asked him what he himself would do for a meal. Pender said that there was a cut loaf and some butter and ham in Miss Cost’s refrigerator, and would it be going too far if he and Cissy made sandwiches? There was also some cheese and pickle. They could, he said, be replaced.
“You can’t beat a cheese and pickle sandwich,” Fox observed, “if the cheese is tasty.”
Alleyn said that under the circumstances he felt Pender might proceed on the lines indicated, and left him looking relieved.
They climbed the hotel steps, staggering against the gale, and entered the Boy-and-Lobster. It was now five minutes to eight.
Alleyn asked the reception clerk if he could find rooms for his three colleagues and learned that the guests had dwindled to thirty. All incoming trains and buses had been met at Dunlowman and intending visitors told about the situation. Accommodation had been organized with various establishments over a distance of fifteen miles, and, in view of the weather forecast and the closing of the spring, most of the travellers had elected, as the clerk put it, to stay away. “We can be cut off,” he said, “if it’s really bad. It doesn’t often happen, but if this goes on it might.” The guests in residence had all come by car and were now at dinner.
Alleyn left the others to collect their suitcases and arranged to meet them in the dining-room. He went to his own room, effected a quick change and called on Miss Emily, who was four doors away.
She was finishing her dinner, sitting bolt upright peeling grapes. A flash of red wine was before her and a book was at her elbow with a knife laid across to keep it open. She was perfectly composed.
“I’ve only looked in for a moment,” he said. “We’re running late. How are you, Miss Emily? Bored to sobs, I’m afraid.”
“Good evening, Rodrigue. No, I am not unduly bored though I have missed taking my walk.”
“It’s no weather for walking, I assure you. How are they treating you?”
“This morning the chambermaid’s manner was equivocal and at luncheon I found the waiter impertinent. Tonight, however, there is a marked change. It appears that I am, or was, suspected of murder,” said Miss Emily.
“What makes you think so?”
“Before taking my siesta I ventured out on the balcony. There was a group of children on the steps leading to the hotel. When they saw me they began to chant. I will not trouble you with the words. The intention was inescapable.”
“Little animals.”
“Oh, perfectly. It was of no moment.”
There was a tap on the door and a waiter came in.
“Thank you,” said Miss Emily. “You may clear.”
Alleyn watched the man for a moment and then said: “I’d like a word with you, if you please.”
“With me, sir?”
“Yes. I am a superintendent of Scotland Yard, in charge of investigations into the death of Miss Elspeth Cost. I think perhaps the staff of the hotel should be informed that this lady is associated with me in the case and may be regarded as an expert. Do you understand?”
“Yes, sir. Certainly, sir. I’m sure I hope Madam has no complaints, sir.”
“I hope so, too. She hasn’t made any, but I shall do so if any more idiotic nonsense is circulated. You may say so to anybody that is interested.”
“Thank you, sir,” said the waiter and withdrew.
“Chose remarquable!” said Miss Emily. “So now, it appears I am a detectrice.”
“It’ll be all over the hotel in five minutes and Portcarrow will have it by morning…About your transport to Dunlowman—”
“Do not trouble yourself. The young man — Patrick — has offered to drive us,” Miss Emily said with an air of amusement.
“I see. It may be pretty rough going, across to the village, if this weather persists.”
“No matter.”
“Before I go, would you mind very much if we went over one incident? The few minutes, round about twenty to eight, when you hung your notice by the spring?”
“Certainly,” Miss Emily said. She repeated her story, she had seen Wally down on the road. He had whooped, chanted, waved his arms and afterwards disappeared. She had seen nobody else, and had returned to the hotel with her umbrella between herself and the prospect.
“Yes,” he said. “I know. I just wanted to hear it again. Thank you, Miss Emily. You don’t ask me how the case progresses, I notice.”
“You would tell me, no doubt, if you wished to do so.”
“Well,” he said. “’I always think it’s unlucky to talk at this stage. But it does progress.”
“Good. Go and have your dinner. If you are not too fatigued I should be glad if you would call upon me later in the evening.”
“When do you retire?”
“Not early. I find I am restless,” said Miss Emily. They fell silent. The wind made a sudden onslaught on her windows. “Perhaps it is the storm,” she said.
“I’ll see if there’s a light under your door. Au revoir, then, Miss Emily.”
“Au revoir, my dear Rodrigue. Enjoy, if that is not too extravagant a word, your dinner. The dressed crab is not bad. The filet mignon, on the other hand, is contemptible.”
She waved her hand and he left her.
Fox, Bailey and Thompson were already in the dining-room, Alleyn had been given a table to himself. As there was not room at theirs, he took it, but joined them for a minute or two before he did so.