“The case is fluffy with doubts at the moment.”
“The Rivera case? It ties up with that?”
“Off the record, it does.”
“By God,” said Nigel profoundly, “if Ned Manx spews up that page it explains the secrecy! By God, it does.”
“We’ll have to ask him,” Alleyn said. “But I’d have liked to have a little more to go on. Still, we can muscle in. Where’s the Harmony office?”
“Five Materfamilias Lane. The old Triple Mirror place.”
“When does this blasted rag make its appearance? It’s a monthly, isn’t it?”
“Let’s see. It’s the twenty-seventh today. It comes out in the first week of the month. They’ll be going to press any time now.”
“So G.P.F.’s likely to be on tap at the office?”
“You’d think so. Are you going to burst in on Manx with a brace of manacles?”
“Never you mind.”
“Come on,” Nigel said. “What do I get for all this?”
Alleyn gave him a brief account of Rivera’s death and a lively description of Lord Pastern’s performance in the band.
“As far as it goes, it’s good,” Nigel said, “but I could get as much from the waiters.”
“Not if Caesar Bonn knows anything about it.”
“Are you going to pull old Pastern in?”
“Not just yet. You write your stuff and send it along to me.”
“It’s pretty!” Nigel said. “It’s as pretty as paint. Pastern’s good at any time but like this he’s marvellous. May I use your typewriter?”
“For ten minutes.”
Nigel retired with the machine to a table at the far end of the room. “I can say you were there, of course,” he said hurriedly.
“I’ll be damned if you can.”
“Come, come, Alleyn, be big about this thing.”
“I know you. If we don’t ring the bell you’ll print some revolting photograph of me looking like a half-wit. Caption: ‘Chief Inspector who watched crime but doesn’t know whodunit.’ ”
Nigel grinned. “And would that be a story, and won’t that be the day! Still, as it stands, it’s pretty hot. Here we go, chaps.” He began to rattle the keys.
Alleyn said: “There’s one thing, Fox, that’s sticking out of this mess like a road sign and I can’t read it. Why did that perishing old mountebank look at the gun and then laugh himself sick? Here! Wait a moment. Who was in the study with him when he concocted his dummies and loaded his gun? It’s a thin chance but it might yield something.” He pulled the telephone towards him. “We’ll talk once more to Miss Carlisle Wayne.”
Carlisle was in her room when the call came through and she took it there, sitting on her bed and staring aimlessly at a flower print on the wall. A hammer knocked at her ribs and her throat constricted. In some remote part of her mind she thought: “As if I was in love, instead of frightened sick.”
The unusually deep and clear voice said: “Is that you, Miss Wayne? I’m sorry to bother you again so soon but I’d like to have another word with you.”
“Yes,” said Carlisle. “Would you? Yes.”
“I can come to Duke’s Gate or, if you would rather, can see you here at the Yard.” Carlisle didn’t answer at once and he said: “Which would suit you best?”
“I–I think — I’ll come to your office.”
“It might be easier. Thank you so much. Can you come at once?”
“Yes. Yes, I can, of course.”
“Splendid.” He gave her explicit instructions about which entrance to use and where to ask for him. “Is that clear? I shall see you in about twenty minutes then.”
“In about twenty minutes,” she repeated and her voice cracked into an absurd cheerful note as if she were gaily making a date with him. “Right-ho,” she said and thought with horror: “But I never say ‘right-ho.’ He’ll think I’m demented.”
“Mr. Alleyn,” she said loudly.
“Yes? Hullo?”
“I’m sorry I made such an ass of myself this morning. I don’t know what happened. I seem to have gone extremely peculiar.”
“Never mind,” said the deep voice easily.
“Well — all right. Thank you. I’ll come straight away.”
He gave a small, polite, not unfriendly sound and she hung up the receiver.
“Booking a date with the attractive Inspector, darling?” said Félicité from the door.
At the first sound of her voice Carlisle’s body had jerked and she had cried out sharply.
“You are jumpy,” Félicité said, coming nearer.
“I didn’t know you were there.”
“Obviously.”
Carlisle opened her wardrobe. “He wants to see me. Lord knows why.”
“So you’re popping off to the Yard. Exciting for you.”
“Marvellous, isn’t it,” Carlisle said, trying to make her voice ironical. Félicité watched her change into a suit. “Your face wants a little attention,” she said.
“I know.” She went to the dressing-table. “Not that it matters.”
When she looked in the glass she saw Félicité’s face behind her shoulder. “Stupidly unfriendly,” she thought, dabbing at her nose.
“You know, darling,” Félicité said, “I’m drawn to the conclusion you’re a dark horse.”
“Oh Fée!” she said impatiently.
“Well, you appear to have done quite a little act with my late best young man, last night, and here you are having a sly assignation with the dynamic Inspector.”
“He probably wants to know what kind of toothpaste we all use.”
“Personally,” said Félicité, “I always considered you were potty about Ned.”
Carlisle’s hand shook as she pressed powder into the tear stains under her eyes.
“You are in a state, aren’t you,” said Félicité.
Carlisle turned on her. “Fée, for pity’s sake come off it. As if things weren’t bad enough without your starting these monstrous hares. You must have seen that I couldn’t endure your poor wretched incredibly phony young man. You must see that Mr. Alleyn’s summons to Scotland Yard has merely frightened seven bells out of me. How you can!”
“What about Ned?”
Carlisle picked up her bag and gloves. “If Ned writes the monstrous bilge you’ve fallen for in Harmony I never want to speak to him again,” she said violently. “For the love of Mike pipe down and let me go and be grilled.”
But she was not to leave without further incident. On the first floor landing she encountered Miss Henderson. After her early morning scene with Alleyn on the stairs, Carlisle had returned to her room and remained there, fighting down the storm of illogical weeping that had so suddenly overtaken her. So she had not met Miss Henderson until now.
“Hendy!” she cried out. “What’s the matter?”
“Good morning, Carlisle. The matter, dear?”
“I thought you looked — I’m sorry. I expect we all look a bit odd. Are you hunting for something?”
“I’ve dropped my little silver pencil somewhere. It can’t be here,” she said as Carlisle began vaguely to look. “Are you going out?”
“Mr. Alleyn wants me to call and see him.”
“Why?” Miss Henderson asked sharply.
“I don’t know. Hendy, isn’t this awful, this business? And to make matters worse I’ve had a sort of row with Fée.”
The light on the first landing was always rather strange, Carlisle told herself, a cold reflected light coming from a distant window making people look greenish. It must be that because Miss Henderson answered her quite tranquilly and with her usual lack of emphasis. “Why, of all mornings, did you two want to have a row?”
“I suppose we’re both scratchy. I told her I thought the unfortunate Rivera was ghastly and she thinks I’m shaking my curls at Mr. Alleyn. It was too stupid for words.”