Authors: Margery Allingham
âYes,' the young man nodded. âAs soon as we got the message we heard the shot.'
âI see. And that was when you was over at the Dower House? That makes it seem very deliberate, don't it, sir?' said Peck, turning to the doctor.
âThere's no doubt that it was deliberate.' The medical man spoke emphatically.
âAnd you two gentlemen found the body, I suppose?' said Peck, coming to the end of his entries with relief. âNo idea of cause or reason, sir, I suppose?' he added, turning to Giles.
âNone at all,' said Giles.
âMr Topliss's letter will explain all that, be sure,' said Dr Wheeler, pulling on his gloves with an air of finality. âI'll go over to your sister now, Giles.'
At this juncture the question of who was to remain with the body of the old rector became a pressing one. Giles and Campion sat down, one on either side of the fireplace, and prepared for the vigil, and would have stayed there alone in spite of Marlowe's generous offer to remain with them, had not Alice, the old housekeeper, appeared in the doorway.
She had got over her first outburst of grief, and the stolid stoicism of the countrywoman who accepts birth and death, spring and winter in the same spirit had come to her rescue. Her red face was set and unmoved.
âYou go to your bed, Master Giles,' she said. âI'm staying.' She waved aside his protestations. âI looked arter him in loife. I'll look arter him in death,' she said. âHe's old,' she explained quaintly. âHe wouldn't loike nobody but me. Good night to you.'
They accepted their dismissal.
Campion was the last to leave, and some thought of the old woman alone with the horror passing through his mind,
he turned to her and whispered a few words of warning.
She looked at him, faint surprise showing in her small eyes. âI shan't be afeard o' him,' she said. âWhat if there's blood? 'Tis his, ain't it? I looked arter him since I were a young woman, but no doubt you meant well. Good night.'
He followed the others out into the drive. They walked in silence over to the Dower House, where the doctor was soothing the two girls in his brisk professional manner.
Old Lobbett moved quietly over to Campion. âI'll take my girl up to the Manor,' he said. âI guess we won't intrude on you people any longer. Get Miss Paget to go to bed. There's nothing like sleep. Time for talking in the morning.'
With the departure of the Lobbetts the affair assumed a more intimate aspect. Giles sat with his arm round Biddy. Campion stood on the hearthrug, one elbow on the mantelpiece.
The doctor and Peck departed with the reassurance that all needful arrangements would be made.
âNow,' said Giles explosively, âwhat in the name of creation does it all mean?'
Biddy turned to Campion appealingly. âWhat does it all mean, Albert? How did it happen? You know him almost as well as we did. Why did he do it?'
Campion thrust his hand into his coat pocket and produced a bulky yellow envelope and handed it to them.
It was addressed, âFor Giles, Biddy, and Albert Campion', and was marked in the corner âConfidential'.
âThis was lying on the desk beside the note for the coroner,' he said. âI thought it best to keep it till we were alone. You open it, Giles.'
The boy tore open the flap with unsteady fingers and drew out the contents. There was a second envelope marked âGiles', a folded paper for Biddy, and something hard wrapped in a piece of notepaper for Campion. Giles handed them out gravely.
Biddy glanced at her message. There were only two lines. The old man's writing was shaky and almost illegible.
Tell Albert about our longest walk [it ran]. God bless you, my dear.
She handed the slip of paper to Campion, an expression of utter bewilderment on her face. âHe must have suddenly gone mad,' she said. âHow horrible â over there in the dark.'
Campion took the message from her and stared at it. Then he shook his head.
âHe wasn't mad, Biddy. He was trying to tell us something, something that he didn't want anyone but us to know. Perhaps this will help us.' He began to unwrap the little package which bore his name. He drew off the paper and a murmur of surprise escaped him. He held out the little object in the palm of his hand.
It was a single ivory chessman, the red knight.
â
WHAT DOES IT
mean?' Biddy sat back in her chair, her eyes fixed upon the little ivory figure in Campion's hand.
Giles was startled also. âI recognize it, of course,' he said. âIt's one of his best set â the ones we seldom played with. What do you think, Albert?'
Campion dropped the chessman into his coat pocket. âSuppose you read your letter?' he suggested.
Giles ripped open the thick envelope he held in his hand. âOf course,' he said.
To everyone's surprise he drew out two sheets of closely written paper upon which the ink was dried and black. The letter had evidently been written some time before. Giles read it aloud, his young voice husky in the chill room.
âM
Y DEAR
B
OY
:
âIf ever you read this letter it will be because I shall have committed a crime the magnitude of which I realize fully. If, however, it does come to this, I ask you to believe that it was because I preferred to go to my death with my health and sanity than to weary out a tortured existence in which I should be a burden to you all, and a wretchedness to myself.
âI have known for a long time that I was a victim of a malignant and incurable disease, and my increasing fear has been that it would enfeeble not only my body but my mind. I ask you and Biddy to forgive me. I shall leave a note for the coroner which should relieve you from any ordeal in the court. However . . .
âThis is underlined,' said Giles.
â. . .
in the event of any serious trouble
arising directly after my death, send Albert Campion to my old friend Alaric Watts, the Vicar of Kepesake in Suffolk, who will know the correct procedure in this situation.
âSomething is crossed out here,' said Giles, holding the paper up to the light. âThe “this” has been put in afterwards. As far as I can see it looks as if he had first written “in so terrible a situation”. Then it goes on, getting very wobbly towards the end.
âIn any case I do most particularly ask your forgiveness and your prayers. My temptation was great. I succumbed to it. All my love to you, my children.
S
T
S
WITHIN
.
P.S. â My will, bequeathing my few belongings, is in my desk.'
âThat's all,' said Giles.
Biddy broke the silence. There were tears in her eyes, but she spoke firmly. âAlbert, the whole thing's a mistake; it's not true.'
Campion looked at her thoughtfully. âHow do you mean?' he said.
âI mean' â Biddy's voice rose a little â âSt Swithin was no more ill than you or I. He's hiding something, or shielding someone, or â' Her voice died away into silence.
Campion took the letter from Giles and spread it out on the table in front of him. âIt's been written a long time,' he said, âbefore we'd heard of the Lobbetts. Not long after your father died, I should say.'
Biddy was sitting bolt upright, her eyes shining. âThat doesn't alter it,' she said. âSt Swithin's never been ill in his life. I've never heard him complain even of a headache. He's been moody lately, a little strange, but not ill. Besides, why did he chose such a curious time to kill himself? Just after that â that man was here.'
The brother and sister looked at Campion. He sat regarding them, his pale eyes grave behind his spectacles.
âMy dear old birds,' he said, âI don't know him. You say you've heard of him, Giles?'
The boy nodded. âYes. From all over the county. I told you about Guffy, and a man who had a place round by Hadleigh spoke of him. He's been going for several years, I believe, off
and on. He turned up at Maplestone Hall on Christmas Day and was a great success. That's when Guffy saw him.'
âMaplestone Hall?' said Campion, looking up. âWasn't there a bit of a row there a month or so ago? I thought I read something about it.'
Giles nodded. âA libel case or something,' he said. âSomething fishy, anyway. Guffy had some rambling yarn about it.'
Biddy leaned across the table and put her hand on Campion's arm. âAlbert,' she said, âthat man killed St Swithin.'
âBut my dear old girl,' he protested gently. âWe had watchers all along the road and the seven whistles came quite clearly. Besides, it was obviously a suicide. There's no getting away from it.'
âOh, I
know
.' Biddy spoke impatiently. âI know. I'm not saying that poor old St Swithin didn't shoot himself over there in the dark, but it was the man who really did it. That terrible man with the little red beard. He told him something. While we were all sitting here laughing round the fire, he said something that made St Swithin go right out and kill himself. I know it, I'm sure of it.'
Campion hesitated. âIt's too far-fetched,' he said.
âDo you think he was just an ordinary fortune teller?' Biddy's tone implied her opinion of the theory.
Campion shook his head. âOh no, I don't believe that for a moment. That bird, whoever he was, was up to some most fishy stunt. Oh no,' he went on thoughtfully, âhe was no ordinary gipsy's warning. That neat little exercise in telepathy was a stout piece of work. A chap like that could earn a fortune. And yet, what did he get at Maplestone Hall last Christmas? Certainly not fifty quid. And what did he get tonight? Oh no, he was up to some really nasty nap and double. I can't help feeling that he came to spy out the nakedness of the land.' His hand closed over Biddy's and he smiled at her wryly from behind his spectacles. âDear old St Swithin was too small game for him, I think, Biddy.'
âThen do you believe this?' Biddy tapped the letter lying on the table.
For some time Campion was silent. âNot altogether,' he said at last. âWhere is Kepesake, Giles?'
âAbout twenty miles across country. It's not far from Bury. It's a tiny little village on the Larksley Estate. The story goes that an ancient Larksley, setting off to some war or other, left it to his mistress as a keepsake. I remember old Watts. He used to come over here and preach sometimes. He's an authority on Church history, I believe. Quite a nice old boy.'
âI think,' said Campion, âthat a visit is indicated. “In the event of any serious trouble” sounds ominous, without leading us anywhere.'
âAnd the red chessman?' said Giles.
Albert Campion drew the ivory knight out of his pocket and set it on the table before them. It was small, beautifully carved, and of a slightly unusual pattern, the horse's head being much more realistic than in most pieces. It was stained a bright scarlet and stood vivid and beautiful upon the polished walnut table. Giles picked it up and turned it over and then weighed it in his hand.
âIt's too light to contain anything,' he said. âBesides, that's such a fanastic idea. I'm afraid he was quite right, Biddy. The old boy had some disease that was affecting his mind and suddenly it sent him clean crazy.'
âThat won't wash.' Biddy spoke vehemently. âIf St Swithin had actually thought he was ill he would have gone straight to Dr Wheeler. He believed in doctors. When he got that lump on his foot that he thought might be gout he was off to Heronhoe within the hour. The Shrine of Aesculapius he used to call it, you know.'
âHow do you know he hasn't been to Wheeler?' Giles objected.
Biddy shot a withering glance at him. âHow could he, without us knowing? I should have had to drive him if he'd gone, and if Wheeler had come within a mile of the Rectory the village would have been full of it. That man â that man with the horrible red beard â I'm sure he is the real explanation. That chessman means something. The very fact that he sent it to Albert proves something.'
Giles looked at Campion. âYou think that fortune teller chap came here because of Judge Lobbett?' he asked.
Campion nodded. âIt doesn't seem unlikely.'
âAnd yet,' Giles persisted, âyou said yourself that he was a brilliant man. Could he be an ordinary spy? I never heard that Guffy Randall's fortune teller had a red beard. Straight, Campion, is there a chance that he could be Simister himself?'
Campion raised his head and his pale eyes did not waver.
âWell, there's always a chance, isn't there?' he said.
He got up and walked over to the fireplace and kicked a smouldering log in the grate. âThat's all there is to it for tonight,' he said. âThere's nothing else to be done as far as I can see. Unless â' he swung round, a frown upon his face â âI'd forgotten. Of course. Perhaps the most important thing of all. Your message, Biddy. What did it mean?'
For an instant she looked at him blankly, she had forgotten the last of the three curious bequests. She took up the slip of paper from her lap, where it had been lying.
âTell Albert about our longest walk. God bless you, my dear.'
âYour longest walk? Where was it? Where did you go?'
Campion spoke eagerly, coming across the room to her and looking down into her face.
The girl strove to compose her mind. âWe've gone for so many walks,' she began desperately. âWe've walked all over the place together. We got lost on the saltings one night. Alice came out to meet us with a hurricane. That must have been the time,' she went on suddenly. âWe reckoned we'd done fifteen miles.'
Campion shook his head. âThat doesn't tell us much. What else happened? Where did you go?'
The girl struggled to remember. âWe crossed the Stroud and went off on the farther saltings,' she said slowly. âWe went on for miles until we came to a belt of quick mud. Then we turned back. I remember it now. The sky grey and the water the same colour, the drab mud with the saltings brown beside it and the dykes cut out in red. Then there was the great pool of “soft”. That was all.'