Albert gazed through his thick lenses with an air of industrious concern. Miss Silver was reminded of an ant. La Fontaine ’s fable floated through her mind as he said,
“Why, yes, I believe he did-in fact I am sure of it. It was on his table when I said goodnight.”
“He was not reading it when you went in?”
“Oh, no. It was on the table.”
“On the left-hand side?”
“Why, yes, Miss Silver.”
He received a gracious smile.
“Thank you, Mr. Pearson. Then I think Lane will have it. No, pray do not trouble-I will ask him myself.”
She encountered Lane in the hall. He produced the Times of the 31st without any delay. The sight of it appeared to affect him and Miss Silver in quite opposite ways. Whilst a gratified expression showed itself upon her face, Lane came near to being overcome. The fact that the paper did not seem to have been unfolded was the text of a mournful homily.
“Dreadful, isn’t it?” he said. “I never knew him not to read his Times before. Regular as clockwork he’d sit down to it after dinner.”
“Then did nobody else read it?”
Lane shook his head.
“No, madam. The ladies had their own papers. The Times was special for Mr. Paradine-he didn’t like anyone else to touch it. He must have been very much put about not to have thought about it on Thursday.”
“Did you see it when you went into the study after dinner?”
“Oh, yes, madam. It was lying on the table on his left.”
“He wasn’t reading it?”
“Oh, no, madam-it wasn’t unfolded.”
“Can you remember whether it was lying flat on the table?”
“No, madam, it wasn’t.”
“Are you sure about that?”
Quietly and with decision Lane was sure.
“You see, madam, I couldn’t help wondering why it didn’t lay flat. There seemed to be something under it, and I couldn’t help wondering what it was, Mr. Paradine being a gentleman who kept his table very neat.”
“Thank you, Lane.”
Times in hand, Miss Silver ascended the stairs. She met Phyllida Wray just at the top and enquired without more ado,
“Did you see this paper on the study table when you were talking to your uncle on Thursday night?”
Phyllida looked vague for a moment, then collected herself and murmured,
“Yes, I think so-oh, yes, I did.”
Further questions elicited that she hadn’t noticed particularly, but now she came to think of it the paper was sort of pushed up as if there was something underneath it. She really hadn’t thought about it at the time, but looking back, that was how it was.
Miss Silver proceeded to her bedroom, where she found Polly Parsons, in lilac print with a duster. Shutting the door behind her, she said,
“You can go on with your dusting in a moment, Polly. I only want to ask you a question.” She held out the Times. “Was this paper lying on the study table when you went in to make up the fire on Thursday night? Think carefully before you answer.”
Polly stared round-eyed at the Times. Then she said,
“Oh, no, miss, it wasn’t.”
“Are you sure, Polly?”
“Oh, yes, miss. It wouldn’t be on the writing-table-Mr. Lane would never have put it there. There’s a table special for the papers. I’d have noticed at once if it was out of its place.”
There was none of the embarrassment of the night before-not a stammer, not a blush. The colour in the rosy cheeks varied as little as if they had really been apples. The blue eyes met Miss Silver’s with the blankest innocence.
She said, “Thank you, Polly,” and went out, closing the door behind her.
Mr. Wray was in his room next door. She could hear him moving.
At her tap he said “Come in!” with just a touch of impatience in his tone.
He must have been walking up and down in the room, for he now stood at the window looking out. When the door shut he looked over his shoulder and appeared surprised. He said,
“Miss Silver!”
She said, “I would like to talk to you, Mr. Wray. Shall we sit down?”
“What is it? All right, you have the chair, I’ll sit on the bed. What do you want to talk about?”
She was regarding him with grave attention. She still held the Times of December 31st. She offered it now for his inspection.
“Did you see this paper on Thursday night when you went in to say goodnight to Mr. Paradine?”
“Yes-it was on his desk-I thought he had been reading it.”
“Oh, no, Mr. Wray, it had never been unfolded.”
He gave a half impatient laugh.
“Then I suppose he was going to read it.”
“It has never been unfolded, Mr. Wray.”
He leaned his elbows on the brass foot-rail of the bed, propped his chin on his hands, and said,
“All right-where do we go from there?”
Miss Silver coughed, not exactly in reproof but, as it were, to recall her own attention to the matter in hand. A strange idiom but really quite expressive- she must remember it… She wondered what dear Lord Tennyson would have said about modern slang. Something intolerant, she feared… The cough recalled her. She said crisply,
“Mr. Paradine was accustomed to read the Times every evening after dinner. On Thursday night he was in his study from nine till twelve o’clock, and he did not even unfold it. What does that suggest to you?”
Elliot looked at her very straight.
“Suppose you tell me what it suggests to you?”
“Very well. In someone else the reason might have been distress of mind, but from your observation of Mr. Paradine you assert that he was not distressed. Mrs. Wray gives me the same impression, and so does Mr. Mark. Mrs. Wray was helped and comforted by her interview. Mr. Mark was treated with sympathy and affection. ‘The heart at leisure from itself to soothe and sympathise’ is not usually met with in anyone who is under a severe personal strain.”
Elliot grinned.
“You know, that doesn’t sound awfully like Mr. Paradine to me.”
Miss Silver coughed.
“We have different ways of expressing ourselves, Mr. Wray. It is a fact that Mrs. Wray and Mr. Mark received sympathetic treatment.”
“Mark?”
“Yes. He was with Mr. Paradine between eleven and eleven-thirty on Thursday night. I think you just missed him when you came downstairs with Mr. Pearson. There is a perfectly satisfactory reason for this interview, but we need not go into that now. Pray let us return to the Times. I believe there were two reasons why it remained unopened. The first is that it was used to conceal something, and the second that Mr. Paradine was too fully occupied.”
“And how was he occupied?”
Miss Silver looked at him with bright intelligence.
“I think he had a number of visitors.”
“A number?”
“I believe so. There were, first, Mr. Pearson and yourself. Then Mrs. Wray, for about twenty minutes between ten and ten-thirty. Mr. Mark could not have arrived much before eleven, but I have reason to believe that there was another visitor at half past ten, since Mrs. Wray seems to have left the study in some haste and by way of the late Mrs. Paradine’s bedroom.”
Elliot looked at her.
“I suppose you were there!”
Miss Silver smiled. In the manner of one who instructs a backward class, she explained.
“She left her fingerprints on both doors of that room. She would hardly have gone out that way if she had not wished to avoid someone who was coming in by the study door.”
Elliot said, “Well, well. She’s one of the unfortunate people who can’t tell a lie, you know. Don’t be too hard on her.”
Miss Silver’s cough appeared to deprecate this levity. She said,
“I do not, of course, know who the visitor was.”
“You surprise me.”
“But I am quite sure that Mrs. Wray knows. However, we will leave that for the moment and come back to the other reason why the Times remained unopened. It is the more important of the two.”
Elliot’s face went grim.