Stay Pilgrim in thy Rest, or thou shalt find
III luck before, Death but one pace behind.’ ”
He gave a short nervous laugh.
“A lot of nonsense, but I should think everyone in the village believes that’s why the mare bolted and my father broke his neck.”
Miss Silver continued to knit.
“Superstitions are extremely tenacious. After your father’s death, Major Pilgrim, were the negotiations for the sale carried on?”
“Well, as a matter of fact they weren’t. You see, by that time I’d managed to get taken prisoner. I was in a prisoners of war camp in Italy, and nothing more happened. Then when Musso got the sack I escaped. I was in hospital for a bit, and then I got home. The chap who wanted to buy the place bobbed up again, and I thought I’d play. That’s when the ceiling came down on me.”
Miss Silver coughed.
“Literally-or metaphorically?”
Seeing that he was a little out of his depth, she amended her question.
“Do you mean that the ceiling really came down?”
That emphatic nod again.
“I should just about think it did! Rather a spot ceiling too- nymphs, and garlands, and all that sort of thing. It’s not the best bedroom-that’s next door-but the eighteenth-century chap who put in the ceiling there had it carried on into his dressing-room. He cribbed it from some Italian palace, and it’s the sort of thing people come and look at. Well, about a month ago my particular lot came down all over where I’d have been if I had been in bed, which I would have been if I hadn’t gone to sleep over a poisonously dull book in the study.”
“Dear me! Why did it come down?”
“Because there was a leak from one of the water-pipes and the nymphs and whatnots had all got wringing wet. They weighed quite enough to start with, and the water brought them down like a cartload of bricks. If I’d been in that bed I’d have been dead-there isn’t any doubt about that.”
“A very providential escape. I think you mentioned another incident?”
He nodded.
“A week ago. There’s a sort of small room my father used to keep his papers in. Odd sort of place. Pigeonholes right up to the ceiling, all crammed with papers. Well, I’d been getting on with going through them a bit at a time, and last Tuesday afternoon I’d had a good old worry at them. Round about half past six I had a drink, and the next thing I knew I couldn’t keep my eyes open. I sat down in a chair by the fire and went to sleep. I must have been dead to the world, because I didn’t wake up till the whole place was in a blaze. I don’t know what started it. It could have been a spark from the fire- wood throws them out-and there was a pretty fair litter of papers, one of them might have caught. But what made me go off to sleep like that, and why didn’t I wake up? I’m a pretty light sleeper, you know.”
Miss Silver said, “What do you mean?”
The frowning gaze met hers.
“I think someone doped me and set light to the papers,” said Roger Pilgrim.
chapter 4
Miss Silver laid down her knitting, balancing it carefully on the arm of her chair, after which she got up and, crossing over to the writing-table, seated herself there, all without hurry. When she had opened a drawer and taken out an exercise-book with a bright green cover she addressed herself to Roger Pilgrim.
“Perhaps you will come over here-it will be more convenient. I should like to take some notes.”
By the time he had settled himself in an upright chair which faced her across the table she was waiting for him, the exercise-book laid open before her and a neatly pointed pencil in her hand. Her manner, though perfectly kind, was brisk and businesslike as she said,
“If these two incidents were deliberate attempts upon your life, you are certainly in need of advice and protection. But I would like to know a little more. You spoke of a leaky pipe. I suppose that you had it examined. Was there any sign of its having been tampered with?”
He had an embarrassed look.
“Well, as a matter of fact it wasn’t a pipe-it was a tap.”
Her look reproved him.
“Accuracy is of the very first importance, Major Pilgrim.”
He pulled off his glasses and began to polish them with a dark blue handkerchief. Without them his eyes had a defenceless look. They avoided hers.
“Yes-that’s just it. We thought it must be a pipe, but there wasn’t anything wrong with the pipes. As a matter of fact there wasn’t any water laid on upstairs until my father put it in, so the plumbing is fairly modern. On the attic floor they turned a dressing-room into a bathroom and cut a bit off to make a housemaid’s cupboard with a sink. When the ceiling came down, the tap over this sink was found running. Someone had left the plug in, so of course it had overflowed. The trouble is, I don’t think that would account for my ceiling coming down. The cupboard is not directly over it, for one thing, and I don’t think there’d have been enough water, for another. I’ve thought about it a lot. There’s a loose board in the room right over mine. The room hasn’t been used for years. Suppose someone bunged up the sink and left the tap running to make it look as if the water came from there, and then helped out by sloshing a few buckets of water under that board-it would have brought the ceiling down all right. What do you think about that?”
Miss Silver nodded slowly.
“What is the distance from the sink to the edge of your ceiling?”
“Something like eight or nine feet.”
“Was there water under the boards all that way?”
“Well, that’s just it-there was. Some, you know, but not an awful lot. The passage ceiling underneath didn’t come down. And mind you, the ceiling that did-the one in my room- would sop up quite a lot of water-all those heavy mouldings, and the nymphs and things.”
“Quite so.” She coughed. “Of what does the staff at Pilgrim’s Rest consist?”
“Well, there’s only Robbins and his wife that sleep in. They’ve been there ever since I can remember. There’s a village girl of about fifteen who comes in by the day. She might have left the tap running. But she goes away at six, and Mrs. Robbins says she drew water from it at ten o’clock herself when she and Robbins went up to bed. And she says she’s never left a tap running in her life, and would she be likely to begin now?”
Miss Silver made a note-“Robbins to bed at ten o’clock.” Then she asked,
“What time did the ceiling come down?”
“About one o’clock. It made no end of a row-woke me up.”
Miss Silver repeated a remark she had already made.
“You had a most providential escape. You believe that your life was attempted. I can see that you are quite sincere in this belief. May I ask who it is that you suspect?”
He replaced his glasses and looked her straight in the face.
“I haven’t the slightest idea.”
“Have you any enemies?”
“Not that I know about.”
“What motive do you suggest?”
He looked away again.
“Well, there’s that business about selling the house. My father starts to sell it, and a quiet old mare he’d ridden for years bolts with him and breaks his neck. I start to sell it, and a ceiling that’s been there for a hundred and sixty years or so comes down across my bed, and a room where I’m sorting papers is burned out whilst I’m too dead asleep to do anything about it.”
Miss Silver looked at him gravely.
“You were indeed fortunate to escape. You have not told me how you did so.”
“Well, as a matter of fact it was my trouser-leg catching that brought me round. I had come in from outside, and my old waterproof was hanging over the back of a chair. I put it over my head and got to the door. You couldn’t see across the room for smoke-all the wooden pigeon-holing had caught. And when I got to the door I couldn’t get it open. You know, I’ve an idea that it was locked. The key was there quite handy on the outside, so that I could just leave the papers and lock up when I got through.”