Miss Silver coughed.
“Why did you say that?”
Florence moved for the first time-moved and shifted her gaze. The fine dark eyes rested for a moment upon Miss Silver. They had a blank look. She said in that slow way,
“Well, you don’t, do you? Perhaps she doesn’t know hers. Perhaps it will catch up on her. It does sometimes when you’re not expecting it.”
Miss Silver said, “Dear me! Now what did you mean by that?”
Something flickered in the dark eyes. The heavy, monotonous voice said,
“Wouldn’t you like to know?”
She turned with a jerk and walked into the lounge.
Geoffrey Taverner was lighting the wall-lamps. As the light came on it showed Florence Duke standing over the fire. She had a handkerchief, and she was rubbing her hands and wiping them dry. When she had finished she dropped the handkerchief into the fire, where it presently blazed up and fell away to a light ash.
Jeremy was getting everyone into the lounge and doing it very well.
Jacob Taverner came over from the dining-room with Castell and said that the police were on their way. He looked like a mummied monkey, but his manner was brisk and businesslike. He was very much in command, and was pleased to approve what had been done.
“Quite right, quite right! The police will want to see everyone-they said so. And of course nothing must be touched. But we’re not all here. Who’s missing? I don’t see Mildred- or the Thorpe-Enningtons… Yes, that’s it-Mildred, and the Thorpe-Enningtons, and Annie Castell.”
Fogarty bounded into the conversation. He didn’t exactly run his hands through his hair and tear it out, but he gave the impression that he might do so at any moment.
“Annie?” he said on a piercingly interrogative note. “And what has Annie got to do with it? Does anyone imagine that she rises from her bed in the middle of the night to assassinate the best waiter we have ever had? I am her husband, and I can tell you that when she is in her bed she stays there, and that when she puts on her clothes it takes her three-quarters of an hour.”
“Then she had better start now,” said Jacob drily. “The police will probably want to see her.” He frowned and looked about him. “Someone had better see about the Thorpe-Enningtons and Mildred Taverner. I should have thought they’d have been down. There’s been enough noise to wake the dead.”
There was a gasp from Eily. Jane had got her into one of the big chairs by the fire. She sat on the arm of it herself with her hand on Eily’s shoulder. Eily leaned towards her, her head against Jane’s knee, her face hidden.
Jacob touched Miss Silver on the arm.
“You, madam-I don’t know your name, but you seem to have a head on your shoulders-will you go upstairs with Mr. Castell and see if Miss Taverner and Lady Marian Thorpe-Ennington and her husband are all right. They’d better come down.”
Miss Silver said nothing at all. Even if she had wanted to, Fogarty Castell would have given her very little opportunity. He talked with passion about his house, his reputation, his loss, the purity of his motives, his devotion to the interests of the public and his patron, the excellency of his wife Annie as a cook and her virtue as a woman.
This got them to the Thorpe-Enningtons’ door, where Fogarty tapped and met with no response. When repeated knockings, each louder than the last, had failed to elicit a reply, Miss Silver turned the handle of the door and opened it half way.
If there had been any anxiety, it was immediately dispelled. The deep blended sound of two persons snoring filled the room. There was quite unmistakably a male snore and a female snore. Fogarty Castell threw up his hands.
“What do we do? You can hear? They are asleep-the two of them. As to him, I could have told you it would be ten o’clock in the morning before he was awake. And the Lady Marian-am I to assault her, to wake her up, to shake her by the shoulder? If she is like my wife Annie who is her cousin she will not wake for anything less than that.”
He held a lighted candle. Miss Silver took it from his hand and entered the room.
In the big four-poster bed Freddy Thorpe-Ennington lay with his face to the wall. His fair hair stuck up all over his head. He looked young and defenceless. His mouth was wide open, and he snored in irregular jerks. Lady Marian lay on her back. She looked exactly like a lady on a tomb, with her hands folded on her breast and a long dark plait lying outside the bedclothes and reaching almost to her knee. In the wavering candlelight even the chinstrap added to the medieval effect. She looked beautiful and imposing, and she snored in a deep, harmonious way.
Miss Silver allowed the candlelight to shine upon the closed lids. Except for the fact that it displayed the magnificence of Marian Thorpe-Ennington’s eyelashes, nothing happened.
Miss Silver coughed and retreated.
“I think they may be left until the arrival of the police,” she said in her natural tone. “It can then be decided whether it is necessary to rouse them.”
Fogarty threw up his hands.
“What a gift! If I could sleep like that! What a magnificent woman! What a heart-what lungs-what a digestion! It is worth all the fortunes in the world to be able to put your head on your pillow and not to think again until the morning! My wife Annie is like that too, but for me, I’ll be thinking, and tossing round, and tossing back, and turning everything upside down in my mind a hundred times in the night. And that is how I can tell the police who is the assassin. If I am asleep I do not hear him. But I am awake. I am thinking that the house must be painted outside without fail in the spring, and that the spring is a bad time for the outside painting, because if by some miracle we have a hot summer, the paint will blister. And that if I cannot have the best paint it will not be worth while to have it done, because for bad paint it is not worth the labour expenses. Over and over, and round and round, it goes in my head. And then I hear him go whistling past the end of the house.”
They were in the passage. Miss Silver still held the candle. It illuminated her small prim features, her neat hair, the crochet edging of the warm red dressing-gown. She said,
“Dear me!” And then, “Who was it?”
Castell made an expansive gesture.
“It will be for the police to say. But when they hear that he comes round the house at night whistling under my niece Eily’s window, and always the same tune-” He pursed up his mouth and rendered very melodiously the first two lines of Bishop Heber’s celebrated hymn. “Does he come in the day? He does not! It is in the night that he comes and whistles under Eily’s window-like that. And when I ask my wife Annie she says it is a hymn tune called ‘Greenland’s Rocky Mountains.’ ”
Scholastic tradition was too strong for Miss Silver. She coughed and said,
“Icy.”
Fogarty looked outraged.
“Icy-rocky-it is all one what you call it! I do not sing hymns. It is John Higgins who sings them, and whistles them under Eily’s window. And my poor Luke who is in love with her, wouldn’t he be angry now? Wouldn’t it come to words between them, and maybe fighting? And maybe a knife in the back? And Eily out of her bed and downstairs there in the hall where she had no business to be in the middle of the night!”
Miss Silver coughed again.
“You will have to say all that to the police, Mr. Castell. Do you not think we should knock on Miss Taverner’s door?”
They knocked, and received no reply. This time Miss Silver did not wait to knock again. She opened the door and stepped across the threshold.
The room was of a fair size and sparsely furnished. The bed, a small modern one, stood back against the right-hand wall. It was empty, and so was the room. Mildred Taverner wasn’t there. Her clothes were neatly folded on a chair at the foot of the bed. The room offered no place of concealment. She wasn’t there.