“Let it go, then. What clothes did you wear last night?”
“Clothes? Oldest I’ve got. By the time the party was over, I looked pretty much like the original tar-baby myself.”
“What were they?”
“A heavy R.A.F. sweater and a pair of old cream slacks.”
“Good,” Alleyn said. “May we borrow them?”
“Look here, I don’t much like this. Why?”
“Why do you think? To see if there’s any blood on them.”
“Thanks,” said Simon turning pale, “very much!”
“We’ll be asking for everybody’s.”
“Safety in numbers?” He hesitated and then looked again at Dr. Otterly. “Not my job,” he muttered, “to try and teach the experts. I know that. All the same—”
“Come on,” Alleyn said. “All the same, what?”
“I just happen to know. Anybody buys his bundle that way, there isn’t just a little blood.”
“I see. How do you happen to know?”
“Show I was in. Over Germany.”
“Can you elaborate a bit?”
“It’s not all that interesting. We got clobbered and I hit the silk the same time as she exploded.”
“His bomber blew up and they parachuted down,” Dr. Otterly translated drily.
“That’s the story,” Simon agreed.
“Touch and go?” Alleyn hazarded.
“You can say that again.” Simon drew his brows together. His voice was unemphatic and without dramatic values, yet had the authentic colour of vivid recollection.
“I could see the Jerries before I hit the deck. Soon as I did they bounced me. Three of them. Two went the hard way. But the third, a little old tough-looking type he was, with a hedge-cutter, came up behind while I was still busy with his cobs. I turned and saw him. Too late to cope. I’d have bought it if one of my own crew hadn’t come up and got operational. He used his knife.”
Simon made an all too graphic gesture. “That’s how I know,” he said. “O.K., isn’t it, Doc? Buckets of blood?”
“Yes,” Dr. Otterly agreed. “There would be.”
“Yes. Which ought to make it a simple story,” Simon said and turned to Alleyn. “Oughtn’t it?”
“The story,” Alleyn said, “would be a good deal simpler if everyone didn’t try to elaborate it. Now, keep still. I haven’t finished with you yet. Tell me this: as far as I can piece it out, you were either up at the back exit or just outside it when Ernie Andersen came backstage.”
“Just outside it’s right.”
“What happened?”
“I told you. After the morris, I left Ralphy to it. I could hear him squeaking away and the mob laughing. I had a drag at a gasper and took the weight off the boots. Then the old Corp — that’s Ernie, he was my batman in the war — came charging out in one of his tantrums. I couldn’t make out what was biting him. After a bit, Ralphy turned up and gave Ernie his whiffler. Ralphy started to say, ‘I’m sorry,’ or something like that, but I told him to beat it. So he did.”
“And then?”
“Well, then it was just about time for me to go back. So I did. Ernie went back, too.”
“Who threw tar on the bonfire?”
“Nobody. I knocked the drum over with the edge of ‘Crack’s’ body. It’s a dirty big clumsy thing. Swings round. I jolly nearly went on fire myself,” Simon reflected with feeling. “By God, I did.”
“So you went back to the arena? You and Ernie?”
“That’s the story.”
“Where exactly did you go?”
“I don’t know where Ernie got to. Far as I remember, I went straight in.” He half shut his eyes and peered back through the intervening hours. “The boys had started their last dance. I think I went fairly close to the dolmen that time because I seem to remember it between them and me. Then I sheered off to the right and took up my position there.”
“Did you notice the Guiser lying behind the dolmen?”
“Sort of. Poor visibility through the hole in that canvas neck. And the body sticks out like a great shelf just under your chin. It hides the ground for about three feet all round you.”
“Yes, I see. Do you think you could have kicked anything without realizing you’d done it?”
Simon stared, blinked and looked sick. “Nice idea I must say,” he said with some violence.
“Do you remember doing so?”
He stared at his hands for a moment, frowning.
“God, I don’t know. I don’t know. I hadn’t remembered.”
“Why did you stop Ernie Andersen answering me when I asked if he’d done this job?”
“Because,” Simon said at once, “I know what Ernie’s like. He’s not more than nine-and-fivepence in the pound. He’s queer. I sort of kept an eye on him in the old days. He takes fits. I knew. I fiddled him in as a batman.” Simon began to mumble. “You know, same as the way he felt about his ghastly dog, I felt about him, poor old bastard. I know him. What happened last night got him all worked up. He took a fit after it happened, didn’t he, Doc? He’d be just as liable to say he’d done it as not. He’s queer about blood and he’s got some weird ideas about this dance and the stone and what-have-you. He’s the type that rushes in and confesses to a murder he hasn’t done just for the hell of it.”
“Do you think he did it?” Alleyn said.
“I do not. How could he? Only time he might have had a go, Ralphy had pinched his whiffler. I certainly do not.”
“All right. Go away and think over what you’ve said. We’ll be asking you for a statement and you’ll be subpoenaed for the inquest. If you’d like, on consideration, to amend what you’ve told us, we’ll be glad to listen.”
“I don’t want to amend anything.”
“Well, if your memory improves.”
“Ah, hell!” Simon said disgustedly and dropped into his chair.
“You never do any good,” Alleyn remarked, “by fiddling with the facts.”
“Don’t you just,” Simon rejoined with heartfelt emphasis and added, “You lay off old Ern. He hasn’t got it in him: he’s the mild one in that family.”
“Is he? Who’s the savage one?”
“They’re all mild,” Simon said, grinning. “As mild as milk.”
And on that note they left him.
When they were in the car, Dr. Otterly boiled up again.
“What the devil does that young bounder think he’s up to! I never heard such a damned farrago of lies. By God, Alleyn, I don’t like it. I don’t like it at all.”
“Don’t you?” Alleyn said absently.
“Well, damn it, do you?”
“Oh,” Alleyn grunted. “It sticks out a mile what Master Simon’s up to. Doesn’t it, Fox?”
“I’d say so, Mr. Alleyn,” Fox agreed cheerfully.
Dr. Otterly said, “Am I to be informed?”
“Yes, yes, of course. Hullo, who’s this?”
In the hollow of the lane, pressed into the bank to make way for the oncoming car, were a man and a woman. She wore a shawl pulled over her head and he a woollen cap and there was a kind of intensity in their stillness. As the car passed, the woman looked up. It was Trixie Plowman.
“Chris hasn’t lost much time,” Dr. Otterly muttered.
“Are they engaged?”
“They were courting,” Dr. Otterly said shortly. “I understood it was all off.”
“Because of the Guiser?”
“I didn’t say so.”
“You said Chris hadn’t lost much time, though. Did the Guiser disapprove?”
“Something of the sort. Village gossip.”
“I’ll swap Simon’s goings-on for your bit of gossip.”
Dr. Otterly shifted in his seat. “I don’t know so much about that,” he said uneasily. “I’ll think it over.”
They returned to the fug and shadows of their room in the pub. Alleyn was silent for some minutes and Fox busied himself with his notes. Dr. Otterly eyed them both and seemed to be in two minds whether or not to speak. Presently, Alleyn walked over to the window. “The weather’s hardening. I think it may freeze tonight,” he said.
Fox looked over the top of his spectacles at Dr. Otterly, completed his notes and joined Alleyn at the window.
“Woman,” he observed. “In the lane. Looks familiar. Dogs.”
“It’s Miss Dulcie Mardian.”
“Funny how they will do it.”