"Oh yes! I lied to my aunt," said Neville. "That's what makes it all so awkward. I told her I was coming here last night, to see Miss Drew. I can't but see that that is going to cast an extremely bilious hue over my whole story."
"You didn't come here, in fact?"
"No," said Neville unhappily.
"Where did you go?"
"I'd better tell the truth, hadn't I?" Neville asked Sally. "One is at such a disadvantage with the police: they always know more than they say. On the other hand, if I tell the truth now I may find it awfully hard to lie afterwards."
"Mr. Fletcher, this sort of thing no doubt amuses you, but it fails entirely to amuse me!" said Hannasyde.
"You must think I've got a perverted sense of humour!" said Neville. "I haven't; I'm not in the least abnormaclass="underline" it's only other people's troubles that amuse me. I'm wriggling in the toils."
"I am still waiting for an answer to my question, Mr. Fletcher."
"If I had my way you'd wait for ever," said Neville frankly. "Oh God, why didn't I go to Oxford, and call on my tutor? He'd have been very glad to see me, too. You mightn't think it, but they all hoped for great things of me at Oxford. You know: Fellowships, and what-nots. I was thought to have an intellect."
"That doesn't surprise me at all," said Hannasyde dryly.
"Yes, but doesn't it all go to show that a classical education is so much dross? Double firsts - yes, I did really! - are of no practical use whatsoever. Oh, let us end this ghastly suspense! I was in London last night."
"Intrigue!" said Sally, her eyes dancing. "He lied to his aunt, and went to the great, wicked city! Spill it, Neville! What haunt of vice did you visit?"
"I didn't. I wish I had. All I sought was rational companionship."
"Beast! You could have found that here!"
"Oh no, darling! No, really! Not with Helen in the offing!"
"Where did you find this rational companionship?" interrupted Hannasyde.
"I didn't. I went to call upon one Philip Agnew, who lives in Queen's Gate, and pursues a delightfully scholarly and ineffective career at the South Kensington Museum. But he was out."
"Indeed? So what did you do?"
"I wandered lonely as a cloud, trying to think of anyone besides Philip whom I could bear to consort with. But I couldn't, so I came home, and went to bed."
"Thank you. At what hour did you leave Greystones?" "Oh, but I don't know! After dinner. I expect it was somewhere between half-past eight and nine."
"How were you dressed?"
"God, I can see the pit yawning at my feet! You could get the answer to that one out of my aunt, or Simmons, couldn't you? Black tie, Superintendent. Rather a nice one, too. Even my aunt was pleased."
"Did you wear an overcoat?"
"What, in the middle of June? No, of course not."
"Hat?"
"Yes."
"What sort of a hat?"
"A black felt hat."
"What, that thing?" exclaimed Sally.
"It's a very good hat. Besides, I haven't got another."
"Forgive the interruption," said Sally to Hannasyde, "but if you are trying, as I gather you are, to convict Mr. Fletcher of having murdered his uncle, do you mind telling me how you account for the man Malachi saw leaving Greystones at 10.02?"
"I have an idea, Miss Drew," replied Hannasyde deliberately, "that that man is dead."
Neville blinked at him. "Did - did I kill him?" he asked in an anxious voice.
"Someone killed him," said Hannasyde, looking searchingly at him.
"Who was he?" Sally demanded.
"His name was Charles Carpenter. He was present at Greystones on the night of the murder, and was murdered yesterday evening between the hours of 9.30 and 10.00."
"How do you know he was present at Greystones?"
"His finger-prints were discovered, Miss Drew."
"Oh! Known to the police, was he?"
"How acute!" said Neville admiringly. "I should never have thought of that."
"Yes, he was known to the police," said Hannasyde. "But before the police could interrogate him he was killed - as Ernest Fletcher was killed."
"Can't we pretend he murdered my uncle?" begged Neville.
"No, Mr. Fletcher, we can not."
"Killed because he knew too much," said Sally, getting up, and beginning to walk up and down the room. "Yes, I see. Not Neville, though. Any weapon discovered?"
"No," said Hannasyde. "In both cases, the murderer contrived to conceal his weapon with - let us say - extraordinary ingenuity."
"Oh!" Sally threw him a somewhat scornful smile. "You think that points to Mr. Fletcher, do you? There's a difference, Superintendent, between ingenuity of mind and practical cleverness. Neville - practically speaking - is half-witted."
"I suppose I ought to be grateful," murmured Neville. "What was my weapon, by the way? You know, I don't want to upset the only theory left to you, but I doubt very much if I could nerve myself to commit an act of such repulsive violence - let alone two of them."
"Just a moment!" Sally intervened. "My sister's evidence now becomes of vital importance. I'd better go and see if she's fit enough to see you, Superintendent."
"I should be very grateful to you if you would," said Hannasyde.
"I will, but I don't suppose I shall be frightfully popular," said Sally, going to the door.
"Tell her a man's life is at stake," recommended Neville, swinging his legs over the window-sill, and stepping into the room. "That'll appeal to her morbid mind."
Sally went upstairs to her sister's bedroom. She entered to find that Helen, having recovered consciousness, was indulging in a comfortable fit of weeping on her husband's shoulder, gasping at intervals: "You didn't do it! You didn't do it!"
,No, darling, of course I didn't do it. If you'd only told me!"
Sally paused for a moment in the doorway, and then came in and shut it behind her. "Delicately nurtured female suffering from a fit of strong hysterics?" she inquired. "Come on, Helen. Snap out of it! You're wanted downstairs." She walked into the adjoining bathroom, discovered a bottle of sal volatile in the medicine-chest, mixed a ruthless dose of it, and returned to the bedroom, and put the glass into North's hand. "Push that down her throat," she said.
"Come, Helen! Drink this!" North commanded.
Helen gulped some of the mixture and choked. "Oh! Filthy stuff! I'm all right; really I am! Oh, John, tell me it's true, and I'm not dreaming? It wasn't you I saw that awful night?"
"Of course it wasn't. Is that what you have been thinking all this time?"
"I've been so much afraid! Then that ghastly Superintendent told me you weren't in your flat that evening, and it seemed to make it quite certain. I hoped you'd get away while I talked to the police. That's why I sent Baker up to tell you. I hoped you'd understand it was a warning."
"Was that why you told the Superintendent you had committed the murder?" he asked.
"Yes, of course. I couldn't think of anything else to do. I was too unhappy to mind what happened to me. It didn't matter."
He took her hands, and held them. "You cared as much as that, Helen?"
John, John, I've always cared! You thought I didn't, and I know I behaved like a beast, but I never meant to let this awful gulf grow between us!"
"It was my fault. I didn't try to understand. I even made you afraid to turn to me when you were in a mess. But, Helen, believe me, I never meant to lose your trust like that! I would have got you out of it, no matter what it cost me!"
"Oh, no, no, it was all my utter folly! Oh, John, forgive me!"
Sally polished her monocle. "Don't mind me!" she said. North raised his head. "Oh, Sally, do go away!"
"I would if I could. Don't think it's any pleasure to me to watch a couple of born idiots dripping all over one another," said Miss Drew with brutal frankness. "I'm here on a mission. The Superintendent wants to see Helen. Do you think you could pull yourself together, sister?" Helen sighed, still clinging to North's hand. "I never want to set eyes on the Superintendent again."