“No?” said Miss Vane, “and why not? Don’t you know that I passionately dote on every chin on his face?”
“If it’s chins you admire,” said Wimsey, “I will try to grow some, though it will be rather hard work. Anyway, keep smiling – it suits you.”
“It’s all very well, though,” he thought to himself, when the gates had closed behind him. “Bright back-chat cheers the patient, but gets us no forrarder. How about this fellow Urquhart? He looked all right in court, but you never can tell. I think I’d better pop round and see him.”
He presented himself accordingly in Woburn Square, but was disappointed. Mr. Urquhart had been called away to a sick relative. It was not Hannah Westlock who answered the door, but a stout elderly woman, whom Wimsey supposed to be the cook. He would have liked to question her, but felt that Mr. Urquhart would hardly receive him well if he discovered that his servants had been pumped behind his back. He therefore contented himself with enquiring how long Mr. Urquhart was likely to be away.
“I couldn’t rightly say, sir. I understand it depends how the sick lady gets on. If she gets over it, he’ll be back at once, for I know he is very busy just now. If she should pass away, he would be engaged some time, with settling up the estate.”
“I see,” said Wimsey. “It’s a bit awkward, because I wanted to speak to him rather urgently. You couldn’t give me his address, by any chance?”
“Well, sir, I don’t rightly know if Mr. Urquhart would wish it. If it’s a matter of business, sir, they could give you information at his office in Bedford Row.”
“Thanks very much,” said Wimsey, noting down the number. “I’ll call there, possibly they’d be able to do what I want without bothering him.”
“Yes, sir. Who should I say called?” Wimsey handed over his card, writing at the top, “In re R. U. Vane,” and added:
“But there is a chance he may be back quite soon?”
“Oh, yes, sir. Last time he wasn’t away more than a couple of days, and a merciful providence I am sure that was, with poor Mr. Boyes dying in that dreadful manner.”
“Yes, indeed,” said Wimsey, delighted to find the subject introducing itself of its own accord. “That must have been a shocking upset for you all.”
“Well, there,” said the cook, “I don’t hardly like to think of it, even now. A gentleman dying in the house like that, and poisoned too, when one’s had the cooking of his dinner – it do seem to bring it home to one, like.”
“It wasn’t the dinner that was at fault, anyway,” said Wimsey, genially.
“Oh, dear, no, sir – we proved that most careful. Not that any accident could happen in my kitchen – I should like to see it! But people do say such things if they get half a chance. Still, there wasn’t a thing ate but master and Hannah and I had some of it, and very thankful I was for that, I needn’t tell you.”
“You must be; I am sure.” Wimsey was framing a further enquiry, when the violent ringing of the area bell interrupted them.
“There’s that butcher,” said the cook, “you’ll excuse me, sir. The parlour-maid’s in bed with the influenza, and I’m singlehanded this morning. I’ll tell Mr. Urquhart you called.”
She shut the door, and Wimsey departed for Bedford Row, where he was received by an elderly clerk, who made no difficulty about supplying Mr. Urquhart’s address.
“Here it is, my lord. Care of Mrs. Wrayburn, Applefold, Windle, Westmorland. But I shouldn’t think he would be very long away. In the meantime, could we do anything for you?”
“No, thanks. I rather wanted to see him personally, don’t you know. As a matter of fact, it’s about that very sad death of his cousin, Mr. Philip Boyes.”
“Indeed, my lord? Shocking affair, that. Mr. Urquhart was greatly upset, with it happening in his own house. A very fine young man, was Mr. Boyes. He and Mr. Urquhart were great friends, and he took it greatly to heart. Were you present at the trial, my lord?”
“Yes. What did you think of the verdict?”
The clerk pursed up his lips.
“I don’t mind saying I was surprised. It seemed to me a very clear case. But juries are very unreliable, especially nowadays, with women on them. We see a good deal of the fair sex in this profession,” said the clerk with a sly smile, “and very few of them are remarkable for possessing the legal mind.”
“How true that is,” said Wimsey. “If it wasn’t for them, though, there’d be much less litigation, so it’s all good for business.”
“Ha, ha! Very good, my lord. Well, we have to take things as they come, but in my opinion – I’m an old-fashioned man – the ladies were most adorable when they adorned and inspired and did not take an active part in affairs. Here’s our young lady clerk – I don’t say she wasn’t a good worker – but a whim comes over her and away she goes to get married, leaving me in the lurch, just when Mr. Urquhart is away. Now, with a young man, marriage steadies him, and makes him stick closer to his job, but with a young woman, it’s the other way about. It’s right she should get married, but it’s inconvenient, and in a solicitor’s office one can’t get temporary assistance, very well. Some of the work is confidential, of course, and in any case, an atmosphere of permanence is desirable.”
Wimsey sympathised with the headclerk’s grievance, and bade him an affable good-morning. There is a telephone box in Bedford Row, and he darted into it and immediately rang up Miss Climpson.
“Lord Peter Wimsey speaking – oh, hullo, Miss Climpson! How is everything? All bright and beautiful? Good! – Yes, now listen. There’s a vacancy for a confidential female clerk at Mr. Norman Urquhart’s, the solicitor’s, in Bedford Row – Have you got anybody? – Oh, good! – Yes, send them all along – I particularly want to get someone in there – Oh, no! no special enquiry – just to pick up any gossip about the Vane business – Yes, pick out the steadiest looking, not too much face-powder, and see that their skirts are the regulation four inches below the knee – the head-clerk’s in charge, and the last girl left to be married, so he’s feeling anti-sex-appeal. Right ho! Get her in and I’ll give her her instructions. Bless you, may your shadow never grow bulkier!”
CHAPTER VIII
“Bunter!”
“My lord?”
Wimsey tapped with his fingers a letter he had just received.
“Do you feel at your brightest and most truly fascinating? Does a livelier iris, winter weather notwithstanding, shine upon the burnished Bunter? Have you got that sort of conquering feeling? The Don Juan touch, so to speak?”
Bunter, balancing the breakfast tray on his fingers, coughed deprecatingly.
“You have a good, upstanding, impressive figure, if I may say so,” pursued Wimsey, “a bold and roving eye when off duty, a ready tongue, Bunter – and, I am persuaded, you have a way with you. What more should any cook or house-parlourmaid want?”
“I am always happy,” replied Bunter, “to exert myself to the best of my capacity in your lordship’s service.”
“I am aware of it,” admitted his lordship. “Again and again I say to myself, Wimsey, this cannot last. One of these days this worthy man will cast off the yoke of servitude and settle down in a pub. or something, but nothing happens. Still, morning by morning, my coffee is brought, my bath is prepared, my razor laid out, my ties and socks sorted and my bacon and eggs brought to me in a lordly dish. No matter. This time I demand a more perilous devotion – perilous for us both, my Bunter, for if you were to be carried away a helpless martyr to matrimony, who then would bring my coffee, prepare my bath, lay out my razor and perform all those other sacrificial rites? And yet -”
“Who is the party, my lord?”
“There are two of them, Bunter, two ladies lived in a bower, Binnorie, O Binnorie! The parlourmaid you have seen. Her name is Hannah Westlock. A woman in her thirties, I fancy, and not ill-favored. The other, the cook – I cannot lisp the tender syllables of her name, for I do not know it, but doubtless it is Gertrude, Cecily, Magdalen, Margaret, Rosalys or some other sweet symphonious sound – a fine woman, Bunter, on the mature side, perhaps, but none the worse for that.”