It went out.

  I had moved too quickly.

  I seized another—struck it—and slowly, agonizingly slowly, bent my elbow back toward her.

  There was a moment’s grace, as if nothing had happened, and then a sound as if an exceptionally large Saint Bernard had just said “Woof!”

  A great globe of fire rose up like an orange hot-air balloon to the low ceiling, then came roiling down the walls in waves of black greasy smoke only to boil up again around our ankles in a dense, choking cloud.

  For a paper-thin slice of time, Miss Tanty was a frozen statue, one arm holding a flaming torch aloft above her head like Demeter searching the underworld for Persephone, her lost daughter.

  And then she screamed.

  And went on screaming.

  She dropped the blazing handkerchief and blundered from wall to wall, beginning now to cough.

  Cough … scream … cough … scream.

  It was enough to shatter anyone’s nerves.

  Round and round the room she spun, crashing into the furniture like a monstrous and maddened bluebottle fly, rebounding from one smoking wall to another.

  By this time, I was coughing, too, and my face felt as if I had fallen asleep for hours in an August seaside sun.

  I stamped out the flames of the burning handkerchief.

  Miss Tanty was still screaming.

  “Stop it,” I told her, throwing open the window, but she paid me no attention, flying round the room with one wrist clasped in her other hand.

  “Stop it,” I said again. “Let me have a look.”

  I had already had a look, and could see that her hand was burned.

  “Stop it,” I told her, but she screamed on and on. “Stop it!”

  I slapped her face.

  I may not be as nice a person as I like to believe I am, because I have to admit that in rather an unexpected way, it gave me a great deal of pleasure to let her have it. Not because this was a creature who just moments ago had tried to murder me—not because there was any vengeance in the act—but somehow because it was, in the circumstances, the correct thing to do.

  She stopped screaming instantly and looked at me as if she had never seen me before in her life.

  “Sit down,” I ordered, and wonder of wonders, she meekly obeyed. “Now give me your hand.”

  She stuck out a reddened fist, staring at it as if it belonged to a stranger—anyone but her.

  I rummaged through half a dozen kitchen drawers before finding a lint dishcloth, which I draped over her wrist. I reached for the bottle of ether which she had put down on the draining board.

  I pulled out the stopper and poured it over the dishcloth, watching the look of cool relief which spread across her face as she looked up at me in dumb adoration or something.

  I flung open cupboards beneath the sink and finally, in a swiveled storage bin, found what I was looking for: a potato.

  I half peeled it, then cut slices so thin that you could have read the Bible through them. With these, I made a wet poultice with which, having removed the cloth, I dressed her hand and wrist.

  “Hurts,” Miss Tanty said, staring up into my face with her great moon eyes, her glasses trampled to shards on the floor.

  “Hard cheese,” I told her.

  • TWENTY-EIGHT •

  I FLEW OUT OF Miss Tanty’s house as if all the hunting hounds of Hell were at my heels, and perhaps they were.

  Round the corner and into the high street I ran, and within a minute I was pounding on the door of PC Linnet’s cottage, part of which served as Bishop’s Lacey’s police station.

  In a surprisingly short time, the tousle-haired constable was at the door, pulling on his blue uniform jacket, his brow wrinkled, his eyebrows raised into a pair of upward-pointing Vs.

  “Miss Tanty’s house,” I shouted. “Quickly! Attempted murder!” Leaving the astonished constable standing on his doorstep, I dashed off in the opposite direction toward Dr. Darby’s surgery.

  Would Miss Tanty still be in her kitchen when the police arrived? I had reason to believe she would. In the first place, the woman was in shock, and in the second, she was not constructed with sprinting in mind. And in the third, come to think of it, there was nowhere to hide. Bishop’s Lacey was not big enough for bolt-holes.

  I was in luck. When I reached the surgery, Dr. Darby was already outside, using a pail and sponge to wash the mud and dust of a country practice from his bull-nosed Morris.

  “Miss Tanty’s burned her hand,” I told him breathlessly. “Ether explosion! I’ve already applied cold ether and a potato poultice.”

  Dr. Darby nodded wisely, as if this happened every morning before breakfast. As he ducked into the surgery for his bag, I was off again.

  I could be there before him. Or so I thought.

  But his Morris passed me even before I reached Cow Lane.

  I overtook PC Linnet just as he reached Miss Tanty’s gate.

  “Stay here,” he ordered, holding up a most official hand. “Outside,” he added, as if I might not have understood.

  “But—”

  “No buts,” he said. “This is now a crime scene. We have our orders.”

  What did he mean by that? Had Inspector Hewitt specifically forbidden me access?

  After all that I had done for him?

  Constable Linnet vanished into the house before I could ask a single question.

  A moment later, Miss Tanty began screaming again.

  …

  Father, Feely, and Daffy were walking along the road toward me as I came round the corner of the churchyard wall.

  The heat from the ether explosion had left my face feeling as if it had been irradiated, but now, at least, I knew firsthand how Madame Curie must have felt.

  My skirt and sweater were in ruins, my hair ribbons hanging in scorched remnants.

  “Look at you!” Feely said. “Where have you been? You can’t possibly go into the church like that, can she, Father?”

  Although Father glanced in my direction, I knew he was not really seeing me.

  “Flavia,” was all he said, before looking sluggishly away and fixing his gaze on some far horizon of his own.

  “I thought you were sick,” Daffy said.

  Daffy was always the one to dredge up the incriminating details.

  “I’m feeling much better now,” I said, remembering suddenly that I still had burned cork smudged around my eyes.

  “Good morning, all,” said a voice behind me. It was Adam Sowerby. I hadn’t heard him pull up in his silent Rolls-Royce.

  “What’s happened to you, then?” he asked. “Bit too much sun?”

  I nodded. I could have hugged the man.

  “I’ve just come from Dr. Darby’s surgery,” I said, which was true. “He says it’s nothing to worry about.” Which was a lie.

  “Hmmm,” Adam said. “Well, I’m no doctor, I’m afraid, but I do have a few clever tricks up my sleeve from my wanderings up the Limpopo, and so forth. If it’s all right with you, Haviland,” he said, addressing Father, “I think we—”

  Father nodded vaguely, not as if he had really heard, but as if he were trying to keep his head from rolling off his shoulders and into the dirt.

  “Let’s get on with it,” Feely said. “I need to run through the anthem, and I’ve no time for …”

  She waved a hand at me as if to add “this sort of thing.” She was anxious, I knew, to get at the organ. After all, today was her official debut on the bench.

  Father was still staring vaguely off across the fields, but as Feely and Daffy marched off toward the church door, he followed slowly—almost obediently.

  Daffy looked back over her shoulder at me as if I were a freak in the peep show.

  What on earth, I wondered, could be happening with the sale of Buckshaw? I had been so busy with my own concerns I hadn’t even thought to ask.

  Dared to ask.

  But now, seeing Father so like a wraith had moved something somewhere deep
inside me.

  In a way, I was proud of him. Whatever devils were gnawing at his guts hadn’t kept him from his Easter duty. Somewhere inside, my father was a man who still had faith, and I hoped, for his sake, that it would be enough.

  “This way,” Adam was saying, and he led me round the church, through the churchyard, past the still-slumbering Cassandra Cottlestone to the river bank. I shuddered slightly as I recalled that it was here, on this very spot, that I had once encountered the murderer of Horace Bonepenny. That had been almost a year ago, but it might as well have been in another life.

  Adam scrambled down the damp bank and pulled out a cluster of daffodils by their roots.

  “You’re getting your boots muddy,” I told him.

  “So I am,” he said, glancing down, but he didn’t seem to care.

  He climbed back up and fished a penknife from the pocket of his vest.

  “Do you know what this is?” he asked, cutting a bulb into several slices.

  “A daffodil,” I said.

  “Besides that.”

  “Narcissine,” I said. “In the roots. C16H17ON. Deadly poison. If someone crosses you, serve them boiled daffodil bulbs and pretend you thought they were onions.”

  “Phew!” Adam whistled. “You certainly know your onions, don’t you?”

  “Yes, I do,” I told him. “And my daffodils as well.”

  He separated the cool slices of bulb and rubbed them gently, one at a time, on my face, singing as he worked:

  “When daffodils begin to peer,

  With, hey! the doxy over the dale,

  Why, then comes in the sweet o’ the year,

  For the red blood reigns in the winter’s pale.”

  He had a pleasant voice, and sang the song with as much confidence as if he were used to performing it on stage.

  “What does it mean?” I asked. “The red blood reigns in the winter’s pale?”

  “That blood will out,” he said, “even in the coldest surroundings.”

  In spite of myself, I shivered, and it wasn’t just because Adam was rubbing the cooling poison onto my face and neck.

  Blood and daffodils. It sounded like the title of a mystery novel by some sweet old lady who dealt in death and crumpets.

  This whole business had been blood from beginning to end: my blood, bat’s blood, frog’s blood, saint’s blood, and Mr. Collicutt’s lack of.

  And daffodils. A fistful of daffodils and crocuses had brought me face-to-face with Miss Tanty. What was it she had said—Don’t waste your crocuses?

  “Do you suppose—” I asked.

  “Shhh!” Adam said. “We don’t want to get any of this in your mouth, do we?”

  With no encouragement on my part, he went on:

  “Daffodils,

  That come before the swallow dares, and take,

  The winds of March with beauty.”

  His words painted images in my mind, and I thought of Father and of Gladys and of flowers. We would never see another spring at Buckshaw.

  “I hate daffodils,” I said, and was suddenly in tears.

  Adam went on, pretending he hadn’t noticed.

  “ ‘Violets … pale primroses … bold oxlips and the crown imperial … lilies of all kinds, the flower-de-luce being one.’ Old Bill Shakespeare was well up on the plant kingdom, you know.”

  “You’re making this up to make me feel better,” I said.

  “I assure you I’m not,” he said. “You’ll find it in The Winter’s Tale. You de Luces have been around for a remarkably long time.”

  “Ouch!” I said. Adam was now applying the daffodil juice to a particularly tender spot on my nose.

  “Yes, they do sting a bit, don’t they?” Adam asked. “I expect it’s the narcissine. The alkaloids have a tendency to—”

  “Oh, shut up,” I said, but now I was laughing at him.

  How could he ever understand?

  It was quite hopeless.

  “That’s you patched up, then,” he said. “Shall we go inside?”

  “Inside?” I asked, taking hold of my skirt and spreading it like a fan. “Won’t you be ashamed to be seen with me?”

  Adam only laughed and, taking my arm, led me upward between the old stones of the churchyard.

  Heads turned and bodies swiveled in pews as we made our way up the aisle. No sooner had we squeezed into the front pew beside Father and Daffy than Feely struck up the opening chords of the processional hymn.

  Now the choir was coming in procession from the back of the nave, singing their rousing morning song as the organ roared.

  As they came abreast of our little party, not one of the singers failed to swivel his or her eyes sideways for a furtive glance at me, although they pretended not to.

  There I sat as primly as I could manage, my eyes blackened with burned cork, my face and neck reddened by the blast and shiny with the poisonous juices of the daffodil, my clothing filthy with dust from the organ chamber, scorched and charred with the soot of an ether explosion.

  Even the vicar’s eyes widened as he went past singing:

  “The lamb’s high banquet call’d to share,

  Array’d in garments white and fair …”

  The diapason rumbled, shivering the age-stained pews, making the old wood tremble as it shook the fabric of the ancient church.

  • TWENTY-NINE •

  I DON’T REMEMBER MUCH about the Easter service. To me, it was no more than a blur of singing, standing, kneeling, and parroting responses.

  I was told afterward that Feely was brilliant, that the choir sang like angels (even without Miss Tanty), and that the keyboard work set a new standard of musical virtuosity in Bishop’s Lacey. Of course, I had only Sheila Foster’s word to go on, and since Fossie was Feely’s best friend, I wouldn’t bet a bundle on her opinion.

  The unwritten rule for exiting St. Tancred’s was “Front rows first,” so that after the benediction, as we bolted for the doors, we always had the opportunity to see who had come in after us.

  As we shuffled toward the back of the church, there, completely unexpected, about four rows from the back and seated on the aisle, were Inspector Hewitt and his wife, Antigone. Because I was still suffering some embarrassment over my brash behavior last time we had met, I needed to proceed with caution. Should I look away, perhaps? Give an elaborate greeting to someone on the far aisle and pretend I hadn’t seen her? Fake a coughing fit and stumble past with eyes squeezed shut?

  I needn’t have worried. As I hove alongside, Antigone got to her feet, reached out a slender gloved hand, took my arm, and pulled me to her.

  She whispered in my ear.

  And when she had finished, I’m afraid I fairly beamed. I even shoved a fist into her seated husband’s surprised face and insisted on giving him a hearty shake.

  No wonder he adored the woman!

  Outside, everyone was gathering in knots in the churchyard to gossip and pretend they were exchanging Easter greetings. Even though the real old chin-wagging wouldn’t take place until the later service, the villagers of Bishop’s Lacey put on rather a good show for such an ungodly hour—except for Father, who came out the door, gave the vicar a token handshake, and walked slowly off toward home, his eyes fixed firmly on the ground.

  I decided definitely in that instant to tackle him. As soon as I got back to Buckshaw I would march straight in and demand to be told what was going on— What was the situation with Buckshaw?

  I would demand to hear the gist of his mysterious telephone call and why it had thrown him into such a tizzy.

  I had not seen the estate agent since the day he’d pounded in the For Sale sign at the Mulford Gates. Perhaps Dogger would know.

  Yes, that was it—I would consult with Dogger before bearding Father in his den.

  I was idling beside a gravestone waiting for the Hewitts to emerge when Adam came strolling toward me.

  “How’s the narcissine holding up?” he asked. “Any pain?”

  I shook my head
. I wasn’t going to share my inner workings with Adam Sowerby, MA., FRHortS, etc., even if we were partners, so to speak, bound together by my most solemn pledge.

  Not that that meant anything.

  “Wizard stuff,” I said in as offhand a manner as I could manage. “A neat trick. Wherever did you learn it?”

  “As I told you,” he began, “in my wanderings up the Limpopo—”

  And then he stopped.

  “Actually,” he said, “Mad Meg taught me. As a boy, I stayed with an auntie at Malplaquet Farm. One day on my summer rambles I ran across Meg at the old gibbet in Gibbet Wood. She was digging for moss from dead men’s skulls.”

  Even though it hurt, my eyes widened.

  “All nonsense, of course. And yet …”

  “And yet?” I asked.

  “When it comes right down to it, she was my first instructor in botany.”

  “I think she’s a witch,” I told him. “A Christian witch, but still a witch. Rather like the woman in the story Daffy read to us who could believe in the banshee and also in the Holy Ghost.”

  Adam laughed. “She’s what they used to call a ‘simpler.’ Someone who gathers herbs in the wild and sells them to the chemists.”

  “Meg?”

  “Yes, Meg. Sells them to the doctors, too, but don’t let on I told you.”

  I must have looked skeptical.

  “Where do you suppose the chemists and apothecaries got all their knowledge about plants? Most of those old boys have never set foot in the countryside.”

  “From the simplers?” I guessed.

  “Right. From the simplers, the old women who gather the plants of the woods and hedgerows. Centuries of secrets handed down in whispers. And where do you think the physicians learn the same secrets?”

  “From the chemists and apothecaries.”

  “Bull’s-eye!” Adam said. “It’s a pleasure having you as a partner, Flavia de Luce. I predict that we have great things ahead of us.

  “Speaking of which,” he added, “here comes one of them now.

  “Ah, Inspector Hewitt,” he said. “I knew it would be only a matter of time.”