And by that time London was shutting up shop for the night and there was nothing more he could do until the police of Jobling, Connecticut, supplied him with the information he had asked for. So he went home early for once, had a light supper, and went to bed. He lay for a long time working it out in his mind. Working out the details. Working out the wherefore.
Toby Tullís had wanted to know what made Leslie Searle tick; and Grant, too, lying with his eyes on the ceiling, unmoving for an hour at a time, was looking for the mainspring of Leslie Searle's mind.
NINETEEN
It was forty-eight hours before word came from Jobling, Connecticut, and half a dozen times in those forty-eight hours Grant was on the brink of going to that woman in Hampstead and dragging the truth from her by main force. But he restrained himself. He would deal with her presently. Her lies would be neatly laid out on a plate, and presented to her when the time came.
He would wait for that report.
And the report when it came proved worth waiting for.
Grant read it through in one swift eye movement, and then he sat back and laughed.
"If anyone wants me for the rest of the day," he said to Sergeant Williams, "I'll be at Somerset House."
"Yes, sir," Williams said, subdued.
Grant glanced at Williams's unwontedly sober features—Williams was a little hurt that Grant was playing a lone hand over this—and was reminded of something.
"By the way, Williams, Miss Hallard is very anxious to meet you. She has asked me if I would bring you to dinner one night."
"Me?" said Williams going pink. "What on earth for?"
"She has fallen a victim to your reported charms. She asked me to arrange a night when you were free. I feel in my bones this morning that by Saturday both you and I will be in a state for celebration; and it would be appropriate if we celebrated with Marta, I think. Saturday any good to you?"
"Well, Nora and 1 usually go to the movies on Saturday, but when Tm on duty she goes with Jen. That's her sister. So I don't see why she shouldn't go with Jen this week."
"When she hears that you are going to dine with Marta Hallard she'll probably start divorce proceedings."
"Not her. Shell wait up for me so that she can ask me what Marta Hallard was wearing," said Williams, the Benedict.
Grant rang to ask Marta if he could bring Sergeant Williams to meet her on Saturday night, and then went away and buried himself in Somerset House.
And that night he did not lie awake. He was like a child that goes to sleep because that way it will quickly be tomorrow. Tomorrow, the one small piece would fall into place and make the pattern whole.
If the one small piece happened not to fit, of course, then the whole picture was wrong. But he was pretty sure that it would fit.
In the short interval between putting out the lamp and falling asleep he ranged sleepily over the "field." When that one small piece fell into place tomorrow, Life would be a great deal happier for a great many people. For Walter, naturally; Walter would have the shadow of suspicion lifted from him. For Emma Garrowby, with her Liz made safe. For Liz? Relief unspeakable for Liz. And relief for Miss Fitch—who might, he suspected, be a little sad, too. But she could always put it in a book. In a book was where the thing belonged.
Toby would have quite special reasons for self-congratulation, Grant thought; and laughed. And Serge Ratoff would be comforted.
Silas Weekley would not care at all
He remembered that Marta had remarked on how "nice" Leslie and Liz had been together. ("A natural pair," she said—but she could never have guessed how natural!) Was it just possible that Liz would be hurt when that one small piece fell into place tomorrow? He hoped not He liked Liz Garrowby. He would like to think that Searle had meant nothing to her. That she would find nothing but happiness and relief in the vindication of her Walter. What was it Marta had said? "I don't think Walter knows anything about Liz, and I have an idea that Leslie Searle knew quite a lot." (Surprising, how Marta had seen that without any clue to the source of Searle's understanding.) But it did not matter very much, Grant thought, that Walter did not know very much about Liz. Liz, he was quite sure, knew all that was to be known about Walter; and that was a very good basis for a happy married Life.
He fell asleep wondering if being married to someone as nice and intelligent and lovable as Liz Garrowby would compensate a man for the loss of his freedom.
A procession of his loves—romantic devotions most of them—trailed away into the distance as his mind blurred into unconsciousness.
But in the morning he had thought for only one woman. That woman in Hampstead.
Never, even at his most callow, had he gone to see any woman with an eagerness as great as the one that was taking him to Holly Pavement this morning. And he was a little shocked as he got off the bus and walked towards the Holly Pavement turning to find that his heart was thumping. It was a very long time indeed since Grant's heart had thumped for any but a purely physical reason.
Damn the woman, he thought, damn the woman.
Holly Pavement was a backwater filled with sunlight; a place so quiet that the strutting pigeons seemed almost rowdy. Number nine was a two-storey house, and the upper storey had been apparently converted into a studio. There were two push-buttons on the bell plaque with neat wooden labels alongside. "Miss Lee Searle," said the upper one; "Nat Gansage: Accessories," said the lower.
Wondering what "accessories" were, Grant pressed the upper button, and presently heard her coming down the wooden stairs to the door. The door opened, and she was standing there.
"Miss Searle?" he heard himself say.
"Yes," she said, waiting there in the sunlight, unperturbed but puzzled.
"I am Detective-Inspector Grant of the C.I.D." Her puzzlement deepened at that, he noticed. "A colleague of mine, Sergeant Williams, came to see you in my stead a week ago because I was otherwise engaged. I would like very much to talk to you myself, if it is convenient."
And it had better be convenient, blast you, he said in his mind; furious at his racing heart.
"Yes, of course," she said equably. "Come in, won't you. I live upstairs."
She shut the door behind him and then led him up the wooden stairs to her studio. A strong smell of coffee—good coffee—pervaded the place and as she led him in she said: "I've just been having my breakfast. I have made a bargain with the paper boy that he should leave a roll for me every morning with the paper, and that is my breakfast. But there is lots of coffee. Will you have some, Inspector?"
They said at the Yard that Grant had two weaknesses: coffee, and coffee. And it smelt wonderful. But he wasn't going to drink anything with Lee Searle.
"Thank you, but I have just had mine."
She poured another cup for herself, and he noticed that her hand was quite steady. Damn the woman, he was beginning to admire her. As a colleague she would be wonderful.
She was a tall woman, and spare-, very good-looking in her bony fashion and still quite young. She wore her hair in a thick plait, coronet-wise. The long housecoat she was wearing was made of some dull green stuff, rather like one Marta had; and she had the long legs that helped to give Marta her elegance.
"Your resemblance to Leslie Searle is remarkable," he said.
"So .we have been told," she said shortly.
He moved round the room to look at the Scottish pictures that were still propped up on view. They were orthodox impressions of orthodox scenes, but they were painted with a savage confidence, a fury, so that they shouted at one from the canvas. They didn't present themselves to one, they attacked. "Look, I'm Suilven!" shouted Suilven, looking odder and more individual than even that mountain had ever looked. The Coolin, a grape-blue rampart against a pale morning sky, were a whole barrier of arrogance. Even the calm waters of Kishorn were insolent.
"Did it stay fine for you?" Grant asked, and then, feeling that that was too impudent, added: "The West of Scotland is very wet."
"Not at this
time of year. This is the best time."
"Did you find the hotels comfortable? I hear they are apt to be primitive."
"I didn't trouble the hotels. 1 camped out in my car."
Neat, he thought. Very neat.
"What was it you wanted to talk to me about?"
But he was in no hurry. She had caused him a lot of trouble, this woman. He would take his time.
He moved from the pictures to the rows of books on the shelves, and considered the titles.
"You have a liking for oddities, I see."
"Oddities?"
"Poltergeists. Showers of fish. Stigmata. That sort of thing."
"I think all artists are attracted by the odd, what ever their medium, don't you?"
"You don't seem to have anything on transvestitism."
"What made you think of that?"
"Of course."
"It is something that doesn't interest you?"
"The literature of the subject is very unsatisfactory, I understand. Nothing between learned pamphlets and News of the World."
"You ought to write a treatise on the subject"
"I?"
"You like oddities," he said smoothly.
"I am a painter, Inspector, not a writer. Besides, no one is interested nowadays in female pirates."
"Pirates?"
"They were all pirates or soldiers or sailors, weren't they?"
"You think the fashion went out with Phoebe Hessel? Oh, by no means. The thing is continually turning up. Only the other day a woman died in Gloucestershire who had worked for more than twenty years hauling timber and coal, and even the doctor who attended her in her last illness had no idea that she was not a man. I knew a case personally, not long ago. A young man was charged in a London suburb with theft Quite a normal popular young man. Played a good game of billiards, belonged to a men's club and was walking out with one of the local beauties. But when medically examined he turned out to be quite a normal young woman. It happens somewhere or other every year or two. Glasgow. Chicago. Dundee. In Dundee a young woman shared a lodging-house ward with ten men and was never questioned. Am I boring you?"
"Not at all. I was only wondering whether you considered them oddities in the sense that stigmata and poltergeists are." "No; oh, no. Some, of course, are genuinely happier in men's things; but a great many do it from love of adventure, and a few from economic necessity. And some because it is the only way in which they can work out their schemes."
She sipped her coffee with polite interest, as one indulging an uninvited guest until he should reach the point of stating what he had come for.
Yes, he thought, she would make a wonderful ally.
His heart had slowed down to its proper rate. These were i-ioves in a game that he had been playing a long time; the game of mind against mind. And now he was interested in her reaction to his moves. She had withstood undermining. How would she stand up to direct attack?
He came away from the bookshelves and said: "You were very devoted to your cousin, Miss Searle."
"Leslie? But I have already-------"
"No. Marguerite Merriam."
"Mar------. I don't know what you are talking
about."
That was a mistake. If she had stopped to think for a moment, she would have realised that there was no reason at all to deny the connection with Marguerite. But the unexpectedness of that name or his bps had startled her, and she had fallen headlong.
"So devoted that you couldn't think quite straight about her."
"I tell you-------"
"No, don't tell me anything. Hi tell you something. Something that ought to make confidences between us quits easy, Miss Searle. I encountered Leslie Searle at a party in Bloomsbury. One of those literary gatherings. He wanted to be introduced to Lavinia Fitch and I agreed to present him. As we pushed through the crowd we were flung together at very close quarters; in fact it was breathing-room only. A policeman is trained to observe, but I think even without that I would have noticed any variation in detail that was presented to me at that range. He had very fine grey eyes, Leslie Searle, and there was a small brown fleck in the iris of the left one. I have lately spent a good deal of time, and a great deal of labour and thought, trying to account for Leslie Searle's disappearance, and with native wit and considerable luck I got to the stage where I needed only one small thing to make my case complete. A small brown fleck. I found it on the doorstep down there."
There was complete silence. She was sitting with her coffee cup in her lap, looking down at it. The slow ticking of a wall clock sounded loud and ponderous in the quiet.
"It's an odd thing, sex," Grant said. "When you laughed with me, caught in the crush that day, I had a moment of being suddenly out of countenance. Disconcerted. The way a dog is sometimes when it is laughed at. I knew it had nothing to do with your laughing, and I could not think why else I should have been disconcerted. About 12.45 last Monday I began the process of realising why; and was very nearly run over by a taxi in consequence."
She had looked up at this; and now she said in a kind of detached interest: "Are you the star turn at Scotland Yard?"
"Oh, no," Grant assured her. "I come in bundles."
"You don't talk like something out of a bundle. Not any bundles I've been acquainted with. And no one
out of a bundle could have—could have found out what happened to Leslie Searle."
"Oh, I'm not responsible for that."
"No? Who is, then?"
"Dora Siggins."
"Dora------? Who is she?"
"She left her shoes on the seat of my car. Tied up in a neat parcel. At the time they were just Dora Siggins's shoes tied up in a parcel. But at 12.45 last Monday, right in the path of a taxi, they became a parcel of the required dimensions."
"What dimensions?"
"The dimensions of that empty space in your photographic box. I did try a pair of Searle's shoes in that space—you must allow me so much—but you'll admit that no run-of-the-mill hard-working one-of-a-bundle detective would think up anything so outré as a parcel containing one pair of women's shoes and a coloured silk head-square. By the way, my sergeant's recorded description of the woman who joined the bus at that cross-roads where the fair is, says: Loose gaberdine raincoat."
"Yes. My burberry is a reversible one."
"Was that part of the preparation too?"
"No; I got it years ago, so that I could travel light. I could camp out in it, and go to afternoon tea with the inside out."
"It is a little galling to think that it was I who paved the way for this practical joke of yours by my anxiety to be helpful to the strangers within the gates. I'll let strangers stand after this."
"Is that how it seems to you?" she said slowly. "A practical joke?"
"Let us not quibble about terms. I don't know what you call it to yourself. What it actually is, is a practical joke of particular brutality. I take it that your plan was either to make a fool of Walter Whitmore or to leave him in the soup."
"Oh, no," she said simply. "I was going to kill him."
Her sincerity was so patent that this brought Grant up all standing.
"Kill him?" he said, all attention and his flippancy gone.
"It seemed to me that he shouldn't be allowed to go on living," she said. She took her coffee cup off her lap to put it on the table, but her hand was shaking so much that she could not lift it.
Grant moved over and took it from her, gently, and set it down.
"You hated him because of what you imagined he had done to Marguerite Merriam," he said, and she nodded. Her hands were clasped in her lap in a vain effort to keep them steady.
He was silent for a moment or two, trying to get used to the idea that all the ingenuity that he had taken to be her slick exit from a masquerade had been in reality a planned get-out to murder.
"And what made you change your mind?"
"Well—oddly enough, the first small thing was something Walter said. It was one evening after Serg
e Ratoff had made a scene in the pub."
"Yes?"
"Walter said that when one was as devoted as Serge was to anyone one ceased to be quite sane about it. That made me think a bit." She paused. "And then, I liked Liz. She wasn't at all what I had pictured. You see, I had pictured her as the girl who had stolen Walter from Marguerite. And the real Liz wasn't like that at all. That sort of bewildered me a little. But the real thing that stopped me was—was that—that------"
"You found out that the person you loved had never existed," Grant said quietly.
She caught her breath and said: "I don't know how you could have guessed that"
"But that is what happened, isn't it?" "Yes. Yes, I found out—People didn't know that I had any connection with her, you see, and they talked quite unguardedly. Marta, especially. Marta Hallard. I went back with her one night after dinner. She told me things that—shocked me. I had always known that she was wild and—and headstrong—Marguerite, I mean—but one expects that of genius, and she seemed so—so vulnerable that one forgave-------"
"Yes, I understand."
"But the Marguerite that Marta and those other people knew was someone I didn't know at all. Someone I wouldn't even have liked if-------. I remember
when I said at least she lived, Marta said: 'The trouble was that she didn't allow anyone else to. The suction she created' Marta said Vas so great that her neighbours were left in a vacuum. They either expired from suffocation or they were dashed to death against the nearest large object.' So you see, I didn't feel like killing Walter any more. But I still hated him for leaving her. I couldn't forget that. That he had walked out on her and she had killed herself because of it. Oh, I know, I know!" she added, as she saw his interruption coming. "It was not that she loved him so much. I know that now. But if he had staved with her she would be alive today, alive, with her genius and her beauty and her gay loveliness. He might have waited------"
Till she tired?" Grant supplied, more dryly than he had intended, and she winced.
"It wouldn't have been long," she said, with sad honesty.