“I am busy at the moment. Is all well with Lady Rose?”
“He says his daughter has disappeared. The staff believe she left during the night by climbing over the garden wall.”
“Now what?” Harry looked at Kerridge in dismay. “Where would she go?”
“I hope it’s anywhere but Apton Magna.”
“Oh dear. I have an awful feeling that’s just where she would go. She wanted to come here this morning and I wouldn’t let her. Lady Rose, being as stubborn as a mule, has probably decided to investigate the Tremaines for herself.” He turned to Judd. “Tell Lord Hadfield I am sure I know where his daughter has gone. I am going to collect her. Kerridge, we’ll take my car. It’s faster.”
“I’ll phone the Oxford police to get out there.”
“No,” said Harry. “If the Tremaines are guilty, something might happen to them if the police go crashing in first. We’ll call on them in Oxford and get them to follow us.”
“How kind of you to visit us again,” twittered Mrs. Tremaine over the teacups. “Such an honour.”
The rector and his son said nothing.
“Most kind of you,” said Rose, “but we really must leave.”
“Our carriage will be here shortly. Have another cake.”
Daisy’s green eyes were wide and frightened. Why did I come here? thought Rose desperately. No one knows we are here. But what can they do? I am not now going to ask Jeremy about his prison visits.
The rector spoke at last. “Who were you visiting in the neighbourhood?”
“We weren’t really visiting anyone,” said Rose. “The countryside here is so pretty, and after London, we felt in the need of fresh air.”
“I am surprised,” said Mrs. Tremaine, “that a great lady such as yourself should travel into the country in a hired cab with only your companion.”
“I do like a little freedom sometimes. Now we really must go. If the carriage is not ready, we will walk.” She got to her feet. “Come, Daisy.”
“Just another moment or two,” said Mrs. Tremaine. “I am still mourning my poor daughter. Why, only the other day, I found a number of Dolly’s things in one of the attics. It turns out the poor girl kept a diary.”
Rose decided this was too good a chance to miss. “Perhaps I may see her diary?”
“By all means. Follow me.”
“You wait there, Daisy,” said Rose.
“I’m coming with you.”
Mrs. Tremaine led the way to the top of the house. She opened a low door and stood inside. “Go ahead. You will find her things in here.”
Rose and Daisy walked into the room. As the door slammed behind them and the key turned in the lock, Rose realized they had been tricked.
They hammered on the door and screamed and shouted. Surely one of the servants would hear them. But they had not seen any servants. Mrs. Tremaine had made and served tea herself.
“Jeremy!” said Rose. “He must have run out of the church and dismissed the servants for the day. Then he must have told his mother what he planned. I don’t think she was in church when we arrived. She must have turned up towards the end of the service.”
“The window’s barred,” said Daisy. “We’ve got to get out of here.”
They sat in silence and then Rose whispered, “Listen. I can hear voices. It’s coming from the fireplace.”
They both crouched down beside the tiny fireplace. They could hear the voices of the Tremaine family. Jeremy was saying, “We must make sure they came on their own. I am sure her family doesn’t know she is here.”
Then Mrs. Tremaine: “I will take the pony and trap and go to the public phone-box in Moreton and phone the earl’s household. I will say I am still distressed over Dolly’s death and must speak to Lady Rose.”
“You will just be told she is not at home.” The rector’s voice.
“I am a very good actress,” said his wife. “Leave it to me.”
The voices faded.
Rose and Daisy looked at each other in alarm. “Please God, Brum just says I am not at home without elaborating. They daren’t do anything to us if they think anyone knows we are here.”
Daisy’s voice choked on a sob. “I was so nasty to Becket. If I ever see him again, I’ll give him a great big kiss.”
♦
Mrs. Tremaine asked the telephone operator to connect her to the earl’s residence. Brum answered. “May I speak to Lady Rose?” asked Mrs. Tremaine in a quavering voice.
“I am afraid Lady Rose is not at home.”
“Oh dear,” wailed Mrs. Tremaine. “Lady Rose has been helping me get over my terrible grief. I-I d-don’t know what to do.”
The inveterate gossip in Brum rose to the surface. He lowered his voice. “Between you and me, madam, Lady Rose sneaked out this morning and nobody knows where she is. Always wilful, she is.”
“Oh, thank you. I will call again.”
“I hear a carriage coming back,” said Rose. They both crouched down by the fireplace again.
The chimney must lead straight down to the parlour, thought Rose, because she could clearly hear Mrs. Tremaine say, “The butler said she sneaked out this morning and nobody knows where she is.”
“Good,” came Jeremy’s voice. “We’d better wait until dark.”
Rose looked wildly round the attic room. “We’ve got to get out of here. They must be really mad. If anything happened to us, the captain would think immediately of Apton Magna and check all the cabbies at the station.”
Daisy went over and put her eye to the keyhole. “They’ve left the key on the other side. Maybe I can poke it out. We need a piece of paper or cardboard to slide under the door.”
“There’s that old trunk over there. I’ll lift the lid and see if we can find anything useful.” She threw back the lid. “School-books. Just the thing.” She tore the cardboard cover off one of the books and gave it to Daisy.
Daisy slipped the cardboard under the door and then took a hat-pin out of her hat and poked at the lock. “It’s no good,” she said at last, sitting back on her heels. “I need a straight piece of metal. I know, me stays.”
Daisy took off her coat and frock and Rose helped her out of her corset. Then Rose took a little pair of scissors out of her reticule and they unpicked stitches and slid out one of the steels. Daisy put her corset and frock and coat back on again and set to work on the lock. An hour passed while Rose fretted, until Daisy said, “Got it!”
She drew the cardboard from under the door with the key on it.
“Quietly now,” said Rose. “Let’s take our boots off.”
They slipped off their boots. Daisy gently unlocked the door and then locked it again behind them.
Holding their boots, they crept down the stairs. The house was silent. “Back door,” murmured Daisy.
They walked softly down to the basement, opened the back door and let themselves out into the garden. They put their boots on and went out through the garden gate and began to run across the fields.
Rose finally stopped running. “We’d better circle round to the main road or we’ll be lost.”
“There’s a farmhouse over there,” said Daisy. “Let’s go there and get someone to get the police.”
“I don’t trust anyone,” said Rose. “The farmer is probably a tenant of the Tremaines and would tell them first. If we bear left, we should meet the road to Moreton.”
They trudged on, always looking fearfully to the left and right.
At last they reached the road. “Now I feel free,” said Rose as they both strode out in the direction of Moreton.
They rounded a bend in the road and Rose let out a scream of dismay. Jeremy and his father were just emerging from a copse.
They ran towards them. “Get the maid,” shouted the rector. “I’ll get the other.”
Daisy shrieked in fright as Jeremy reached for her, and kicked him as hard in the crotch as she could. He doubled up and fell on the road. Rose seized a hat-pin out of her hat and drove it into the rector’s arm. Undeterred, he threw his arms round her and began to drag her towards the trees. Daisy jumped on his back and clawed at his eyes.