“Sylly, how could you pick it up when they were on one side of the hedge and you were on the other?”
Sylvia stared with those blue eyes of hers.
“He shot Francis, and he threw it down and I picked it up.”
“You mean he threw it in at the window? Is that what you mean?”
“I suppose so,” said Sylvia in a helpless voice. “Yes, that’s what he must have done, because something hit my shoulder and made a bruise there. I expect it was the pistol.”
“Did you tell Colonel Anstruther that?”
“Oh, no darling,” said Sylvia. “I’ve only just thought about it myself.”
“You must tell him,” said Gay. “Now, Sylly-think! What happened to the letters?”
“I don’t know, darling.”
“Just think. Did you give them to Mr. Zero? You say he told you to, but did you do it? Did you?”
“I don’t know, darling-at least-”
“Good girl-go on.”
Sylvia looked puzzled.
“If I’d given them to him I wouldn’t remember crunching them up in my hand when they were fighting, would I?”
“I shouldn’t think so. Is that what you remember?”
Sylvia’s voice had a groping sound.
“Well, I did think so-just now-when you asked me-but I don’t know really-I just had the sort of feeling of the corners running into my hand-” She gazed at her open palms as if she expected to find the mark of the stolen letter there.
“But Sylly-”
The telephone bell rang from the table beside the big four-post bed. Sylvia got up as if she were glad of the interruption. She put the receiver to her ear, and heard a voice which set her heart knocking against her side.
“You know who is speaking, Lady Colesborough.”
Sylvia said, “Do I?” And then panic took her, and she added in a choking hurry, “Yes, yes, yes-of course I do. What do you want?”
The voice said, “I want those letters. Where are they?”
“I don’t know. Everyone asks me that, and I don’t know.”
“The police haven’t got them?” Mr. Zero’s voice was smooth, but there was a sound in it as if the smoothness might break-quite suddenly, at any moment.
Sylvia said, “Oh, no. Oh, I’m sure they haven’t, because they keep asking me-everyone does.”
“And what do you say?”
“I don’t know,” said Sylvia. “I mean, that’s what I say, but I don’t know.”
“Keep right on saying it,” said Mr. Zero, and rang off.
Sylvia, turning round with an expression of relief, was met by a demanding look from Gay and a quick “What was that?” The relief faded.
“He wanted to know about the letters too. I told him I didn’t know.”
“Sylly, who was it? Who were you speaking to? Who asked you about the letters?”
“It was Mr. Zero,” said Sylvia. Her voice began confidently and then shook. It shook most on the name.
“Mr. Zero!”
Sylvia caught her breath in something like a sob.
“He oughtn’t to, ought he? Not if he shot Francis. I don’t think he ought to ring me up like that.”
Gay had a startled look.
“You ought to tell them at once. They ought to find out where the call came from.”
But Sylvia shook her head.
“Oh, no,” she said.
“Sylly!”
“He wouldn’t like it at all,” said Sylvia with conviction.
Gay looked, opened her mouth to speak, shut it again, and ran out of the room. What was the good of speaking to Sylvia?
She ran all the way downstairs and into the study. The three men who were there all turned to look at her. Inspector Boyce admired the scarlet in her cheeks and the sparkle in her eyes. Mr. Brook wondered what had brought her there in such a flying hurry. Colonel Anstruther was confirmed in his convictions that girls had no manners nowadays.
Gay stood with the open door in her hand and said, with the words tripping over each other,
“He’s just called her up! He’s been talking to her-on the telephone-Mr. Zero! So it couldn’t be Algy-you must see that it couldn’t be Algy if he’s just been talking to Sylvia on the telephone!”
Colonel Anstruther said, “Bless my soul!” and Mr.
Brook said, “Won’t you please come in and shut the door, Miss Hardwicke, and sit down and tell us what you mean?”
She came in, and the door fell to with a bang.
“You must see that it can’t be Algy now!”
Mr. Brook said, “Why?” and looked at her.
She stamped an angry foot.
“Didn’t you hear what I said? Or are you all too stupid to take it in? I tell you Mr. Zero rang up-just now, just this minute, while I was up in Sylvia’s room. He wanted to know about the letters. So how could he be Algy? Algy couldn’t be telephoning to Sylvia-you must see that. Algy’s in the house.”
Colonel Anstruther said “Tcha!” and would have gone on to say something else, but Mr. Brook was before him.
“Mr. Somers went out in his car about twenty minutes ago,” he said.
XXVII
When Algy left Gay in the drawing-room he went straight down to the stables and got out the Bentley, which had been consigned to a coach-house. He wondered whether anyone would stop him. Hardly, at this juncture-unless they were prepared to arrest him then and there. No, he fancied that they wouldn’t do that-not till the safe had been opened at any rate. His own feeling was that if he stayed in the house another minute he would find himself telling Gay just what he thought of her, or old Anstruther just what he thought of him, and he didn’t want to do either. He wanted to get on a straight road and let the Bentley out.
He emerged upon the lane, turned right-handed, and was aware of a plodding figure head, a figure in a dark blue suit and a bowler hat, not at all the figure of a man who walks for pleasure in the muddy lane. Algy recognized Sturrock the butler, wondered where he was off to, and then remembered that this was Sunday afternoon. It was probably Sturrock’s afternoon out, and the fact that his master had been shot last night was not, apparently, to interfere with his taking it. On an impulse Algy slowed down as he passed, opened the door on the butler’s side, and said,
“Like a lift, Sturrock?”
The man stood still. He had an egg-shaped face, pale and smoothly shaved. His manner was respectful as he said,
“I should be very much obliged, if it wouldn’t be troubling you, sir.”
His voice suggested that he served a house in mourning-a rich voice, with a kind of funeral hush upon it. Algy didn’t like it very much-or him. He was shortly, “No trouble at all-jump in,” and shut his own door again.
At any time in the past fifteen years it would have been impossible for Sturrock to jump. He climbed in at the back and closed the door noiselessly behind him. A man of weight, a man of dignity, a man who certainly would not walk for choice. Algy wondered where he was bound for, and said without turning round,
“Well, where can I drop you? Colebrook?”
“If you are not going any farther, sir.”
“Railing any good to you?”
“I shall be very grateful, sir. I was afraid I might have missed the bus, but I shall get one back all right. It’s my half day, and there seemed no reason why I should stay in. I mentioned it to the Inspector.”
“I’m afraid I didn’t,” said Algy.
Sturrock pursued the subject in an earnest, painstaking manner.
“The Inspector said it would be quite all right, sir. But I shall not be taking the full time. There is a bus at half past four-I thought of catching that. I shall be in the house again before five o’clock. I told the Inspector that such was my intention. I told him I shouldn’t feel comfortable about being out of the house for long-not in the circumstances. William has only been there a short time, and, as I said to the Inspector, if there was to be any emergency it would be beyond him, especially after last night.”
Algy was profoundly bored with Sturrock’s scruples. Railing was, mercifully, only four miles away. He dropped the butler in the market-place, and as he drove out of the square on the farther side, his driving mirror showed him a blue suit and bowler hat disappearing within the doors of the Hand and Flower. If the walls had been transparent, he would presently have seen them esconced within a telephone booth, the bowler hat a thought pushed back, the eyes beneath its brim intent, watchful, and aware.