A Lesson in Secrets
Maisie could barely meet her friend's eyes, so filled with concern. "I wish I could, but the sooner I go, the sooner I'll be back again. James understands."
"I think you'll find there's a distinction between understanding and tolerance. I don't think he'll be that happy about it for much longer."
"He'll surprise you, Pris."
"I hope you're right, my friend. I do hope you're right." They began making their way down the staircase. "You'll stay for a quick lunch, then?"
"Yes, that would be nice."
"We've some salmon in aspic, very nice with new potatoes and a salad. And cook made some freshly baked bread."
"I could eat that--we didn't have a moment for breakfast."
Priscilla winked at her friend. "Didn't we now?"
Maisie liked Priscilla's dining room. It could have been so much more formal, and indeed, when they were entertaining on a larger scale, the room appeared very grand. But at other times, there always seemed to be something to indicate that this was a house where children lived and were not only loved by their parents, but enjoyed. A cricket bat might have been left behind a door, or a rugger ball under a side table. She had once discovered a muddy sock by the French windows, and it seemed there was a model airplane or an abandoned toy motor car to be found in almost every room. At intervals Priscilla was known to announce, "That's enough! All toys to your room!" But such discipline was soon lost with her desire to have fun with her boisterous sons--a sentiment that most of their friends found incomprehensible, if not alarming.
"So, Maisie, what did you discover about Sandra's foray into the world of cat burglary?" asked Priscilla.
"She didn't tiptoe over any tiles, yet I wouldn't have put it past her. But she was on the scent of the man who killed her husband, though he didn't touch him with his own hands."
"What happened?"
"First of all, it was my assistant who did most of the legwork, as I've been concerned with an assignment on behalf of another client. Essentially, here's what happened. A man named William Walling--who appears respectable and businesslike enough but runs a fairly large criminal corporation and controls all sorts of rackets--had stepped up pressure on his people recently. Everything he's done has been under the cover of a legitimate business, but like many such men, he has a protection operation--shopkeepers and so on have to pay a certain amount to him, and if they don't go along with his 'proposition,' then he exerts some force. On the other hand, the business is protected from a similar approach by other men with the same intention, and of course from the attentions of smaller-time crooks."
"I understand there's been an increase in this sort of thing, Maisie," said Douglas Partridge.
"I had a similar case just recently," added Maisie. "Only the villain in that one was a loan shark who had expanded his business interests."
"This is all making me very nervous, Maisie," said James.
"Me, too," said Priscilla, turning to James. "I've been telling Maisie for a long time that she should find something less threatening to do."
"Oh, but that wouldn't be Maisie, would it, darling?" James leaned across and squeezed Maisie's hand, while Maisie smiled at Priscilla, who rolled her eyes.
"Walling had acquired some motor cars needing repairs--likely all of them were stolen," said Maisie. "He asked--by which I mean he told--Reg Martin, Eric Tapley's employer, that he had the job, and was to complete the work in a very short time--or else. Reg and Eric were working flat out."
"I would have thought that, on the contrary, they might have had time on their hands--aren't those sort of businesses having trouble at the moment?" said James.
Maisie shook her head. "If you've decided not to buy a new motor car, you have to spend more on keeping the old one on the road, so Reg wasn't doing too badly, but he was worried about taking on another mechanic to help out, only to lay him off when this influx of work from Walling dried up. To cut the story short, Reg ran late with a job, he complained that it was more than they could take on, and Walling had equipment tampered with, just to scare Reg. But Walling's men obviously took things a bit too far, because Eric was killed. And Sandra was not going to let it go. She had been suspicious for a while, because she had been doing the books for Reg, then he had suddenly told her he didn't need her to do them anymore. She realized what had transpired, and broke into Walling's offices--to go through his books--only to discover that he was sending money overseas. Of course, little of this came out when she was held at Vine Street. I asked Billy to speak to a Scotland Yard man we know, and apparently they've had their eyes on Walling for a while. He's increased his activities to enable him to send as much money as possible to relatives in Spain--his mother is Spanish. Surprisingly, it wasn't for reasons of criminal intent, though there are people in Spain who would think so. It was to help family members, people who had become dispossessed due to the political turbulence over there."
"This is the sort of talk that rather scares me, to tell you the truth," said Priscilla, extinguishing a cigarette, then placing another in the long holder, lighting it, and inhaling deeply.
At that moment, Douglas and Priscilla's sons came bounding into the dining room, and it seemed the four walls echoed with the sounds of childhood exuberance.
The three boys clustered around James Compton--the fact that he had been with the Royal Flying Corps during the war had made him a firm favorite with Priscilla's airplane-mad boys. Maisie looked at James as he pulled the youngest, Tarquin, onto his lap and fielded their questions. She turned her attention to Priscilla, who was seated next to her, and realized her eyes had filled with tears.
"I get so inexplicably scared at times, Maisie," Priscilla whispered to her friend.
Maisie took her hand, knowing the memory of losing three beloved brothers in the war sometimes filled Priscilla with a dark dread of the future.
"Look at the time. I suppose you ought to be on your way, Maisie." Priscilla stood up, squaring her shoulders as if she were prepared to take command of the world once more. "Right, you three toads. I don't know what made you think you could return from the park and rush straight into the dining room without washing hands, or while grown-ups are talking. Elinor doubtless has your lunch ready in the kitchen--special treat while cook's out on Saturday errands."
"We should leave now, James," said Maisie.
"Don't worry, I'll ensure Sandra remains under our roof until you return," said Priscilla. "And I am sure that, if she gets bored, Douglas will have plenty of work for her to catch up on. Should we expect a visit from your friends at Scotland Yard?"
"I'll telephone Caldwell; he won't have you bothered unduly, though Sandra will have to make another statement."
Priscilla kissed Maisie on both cheeks, then turned to James.
"For my sake, James--make an honest woman out of her. Her exploits are turning me gray."
James laughed and shook hands with Douglas, then turned to Maisie and led the way to the MG--he had followed the taxi in Maisie's motor car.
"Still leaving me, are you?"
"I can be in Ipswich by half past four if I leave now. It's terribly important that I go now; sooner rather than later. And I have a memorial service to attend tomorrow. Don't worry, James. I promise I will be back soon."
It was four by the time Maisie reached Ipswich, and half past the hour when she parked the MG alongside the cottage where Alice Thurlow lived with her family in the village of Knowsley. She leaned her head forward and rubbed her neck. "A little soft would be awfully welcome right about now," she said aloud to herself.
Hearing voices coming from the back of the cottage, she followed a path leading around the side of the property to the back garden. The family was outside--the sky was overcast, though it had not started to rain. It seemed as if they had all spent Saturday afternoon tending vegetables and clearing leaves. Cups of tea had been passed around, and Ursula Thurlow was teasing her eldest son, who then pointed to his sister Amber and professed to know who she was in love with.
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Ursula was the first to notice the visitor.
"Miss Dobbs. So lovely to see you again. Alice! Alice, your friend from Cambridge is here."
Alice stood up; her cheeks reddened when she saw Maisie, but she approached as if she were indeed the friend her mother believed her to be.
"Miss Dobbs--Maisie--we've just had tea, but I can make another pot. And my sister made some quite delicious fruit cake today--mother dried the fruit last year so it's very rich, and Amber added a little brandy."
Maisie accepted the offering, and after properly greeting the family, she followed Alice into the kitchen.
"May I ask you some more questions, Alice?"
Alice rinsed out the brown teapot and took it to the stove, where she poured in a little of the water that had been kept at a simmer. She did not answer Maisie immediately, but instead used an iron handle to lift the hot-plate cover, then drew the kettle across so that it could be brought to a rolling boil. Maisie watched the young woman's deliberate movements, as if with each element of the task at hand she were slowing down time, buying herself a moment here, a moment there, while she anticipated the questions that had brought Maisie back to the cottage.
"Yes, of course. Would you like to sit down?" Alice glanced at Maisie, then fixed her attention back to the kettle while she waited for it to boil. A series of cloths were hanging on a line above the stove; she pulled at one, and was wiping her hands when she sat down opposite Maisie.
"Alice, did you see Dunstan or Robson Headley on the day Greville Liddicote was murdered?"
She nodded.
"Which one?"
"Both."
"Did you speak to either one of them?"
Alice sighed. "Mr. Dunstan Headley."
"Would you tell me what you spoke to him about?"
Alice looked back at the stove, and stood up. She grasped the kettle handle with the cloth, and poured boiling water into the pot. Setting the kettle back down again, she put the lid on the teapot, then placed it on the old pine table, which was almost white from years of scrubbing. She placed clean cups and saucers in front of herself and Maisie, stirred the tea once, and left it to brew for a few minutes. She sighed.
"I told him about my father, Miss Dobbs. I told him that he was a conscientious objector, that he had died in Wandsworth Prison, and that the book published under the name of Greville Liddicote was in fact written by my mother--as were others that he passed off as his own. I told Dunstan Headley that Liddicote did well out of those books--which is true, he did--and that my mother never saw a penny. I told him it was a woman's work that set the cat among the pigeons; a woman who wrote stories for her children, to help them to understand the war, and why their father could not hold with such a thing."
"What made you tell him?"
Alice lifted the teapot lid again and stirred the tea. She did not ask Maisie how she liked her tea but poured milk into each cup, then the tea. She pulled a cosy over the teapot, and leaned back to take up her tea and sip. She kept the cup in her hands.
"All right, you might as well know what I did." She took another sip, but this time returned the cup to its saucer. She crossed her arms. "Miss Dobbs, I like to think I can tell a lot about people just by watching them."
"That's very true." Maisie crossed her own arms, and smiled. The crossed arms reminded her of a wooden plank pulled across to secure a drawbridge. She knew that while Alice Thurlow had declared that she would tell everything, there could well be details that she would keep locked inside.
"There was something about Dunstan Headley--I mean, there he was, with his son, two men rattling around together and no woman, unless you count the servants. Did you notice that he couldn't quite meet your eyes? I saw him talk to Dr. Thomas, and to Delphine Lang, so I knew it wasn't just me--the man really didn't like women; I reckon he saw us as the root of everything that's bad in the world."
Maisie nodded. "So what made you approach him, if you knew he was prejudiced in such a way? Wasn't that asking for trouble?"
She smiled and shook her head, uncrossing her arms. "I didn't really care by that time. I came to the college and applied for a job because I wanted to see Liddicote. I wanted to know if he recognized me--which he didn't--and I wanted to . . . I wanted to make him sorry. He caused my mother great distress, Miss Dobbs. He broke her heart, and she's a very good woman. She is the most wonderful, darling mother anyone could have, and she had to bring us up alone. After Father was gone, and after Liddicote stole her work--and it was as good as theft--well, if it wasn't for Aunt Rose, we would have starved. She was an angel, just an angel. So, I wanted to . . . I wanted him to hurt, just like we've all been hurt. I am sure it was the deep worry about everything that caused my mother to become so crippled."
"How do you think you hurt Dr. Liddicote?"
"I told Dunstan Headley everything--everything. I let him know that the book that caused his son to do what he did, and go in front of a firing squad, was written by a woman. I told him Greville Liddicote took the stories and claimed they were his. Then I let the truth do the work for me."
"What did you think he might do?"
"I thought he might withdraw his money from the college. I thought he would have nothing to do with Liddicote ever again, so the college would fail--and then where would the famous, world-renowned author be? No college, no job, no reputation. No nothing."
"What happened when you told him?"
"He was so angry, I thought the top of his head would just explode. He was furious, but the part that really must have caught in his craw was the fact that Liddicote had taken a woman's work to bolster his reputation and his coffers, and Martin Headley paid the price and was labeled a mutineer and a coward. And the cause of all this was a woman who wanted to excuse her coward husband's absence in a story--well, that's how he must have seen my father."
"Then?"
She shrugged. "He went flying off, his coat flapping, with those bits of gray hair at the side of his head spiraling up in the air with the breeze. He went into Liddicote's office through the French doors--they were open--and I suppose that's when . . . well, that's when he killed Liddicote."
Maisie nodded. "And how do you feel about that?"
Alice turned her head to look out of the window at her family; Ursula was seated on her chair, her sketchbook in hand, watercolors on a small table at her side. The younger siblings were working in the garden, and her older brother was engaged in repairing a part of the fence. She looked back at Maisie.
"I went to the college wanting to kill Greville Liddicote and I found I couldn't do such a thing--it was a stupid, childish idea. But I burned with hatred for him, if you can understand that. So, am I sorry? No, I can't say I am, entirely. But I am sorry about what came to pass in another way, Miss Dobbs." She stopped talking as the words caught in her throat.
"Go on, Alice." Maisie set down her cup.
"My father would have been so very disappointed in me. He would have been . . . so sad. He was a pacifist, you see. He did not care for killing. We hardly ever had meat on the table, not simply because there was rarely enough money, but because he couldn't bear the thought of animals being killed. He died because he did not believe that one person should take the life of another, so I am haunted by what I did. I might not have done whatever Dunstan Headley had to do to kill Dr. Liddicote, but I am just as much to blame. As I said, part of me thinks, 'Good riddance, you deserved it all.' And the other thinks, 'Oh, poor man.' "
On the road back to Cambridge, Maisie wondered whether MacFarlane and Stratton were still at the Old Fenland Mill, or whether they had returned to Scotland Yard. For his part, Stratton hated being apart from his son. She hoped they had decided to remain in Cambridge until at least next week, for she wanted to see them both on a matter of some urgency.
Chapter Nineteen
According to the landlord at the Old Fenland Mill, the gentlemen had returned to London, but were expected back in Cambridge on Monday--they had asked for their rooms
to be held for another week. Maisie thanked the man and was about to leave when the aroma of cooking coming from the kitchen caught her senses; she decided to take supper at the inn and gather her thoughts. Having ordered a half-pint of cider and a plate of beef pie and potatoes, she took her drink over to a seat by the window, which was ajar. As she settled herself, she heard her name called.
"Miss Dobbs! Miss Dobbs! Would you care to join us?"
Maisie looked up in the direction of the voice, and saw her student Daniel, with a group from her second-year class. They raised their glasses in her direction, so she took up her drink and joined them, leaving her jacket on her chair so she could return to her seat to eat supper when it was served.
"Good evening, ladies and gentlemen--I won't squeal on you, but I know that at least one of your number shouldn't be in this hostelry. College rules are stricter than the laws of the land when it comes to pubs." Maisie smiled as she seated herself on the chair Daniel had pulled up for her.
"We know you won't tell, Miss Dobbs. And we're doing nothing to give the college a bad name," offered Daniel, raising his glass to his lips.
"Have you all made the most of your days off?" Maisie smiled again to let them know she was teasing--just a little. "I'll be checking my pigeonhole tomorrow morning before the memorial service, and I do believe I should see a number of completed essays waiting for my attention."
One of the students reddened, while another claimed he worked better at the last moment, so although his essay had not been delivered, it would be there in the morning. Maisie raised an eyebrow at the young man. "On a Sunday morning? When I know very well there's a dance at the hall along the road this evening--I'm surprised you're not there already."
"Just a quick one before we go, Miss Dobbs," said Daniel.
The others laughed, then went quiet. It appeared they did not know quite what to say with one of their teachers in their midst. It was Daniel, again, who broke the silence.