Authors: Marian Babson
âWere awfully sorry,' Arnold said. âWe wouldn't have had this happen for the world, but the kids â'
âYes, I know,' Richard said. âThe children told me.' It was quite clear that that was not all they had told him.
âYou're back early.' Lania was still trying to preserve a smooth social surface. âWere your conferences cancelled?'
âThey were never scheduled,' he said. âI thought it was about time we brought this to a head.'
âI think we should go home â' Lania rose to her feet.
âWhy? I don't think Nancy and Arnold can have any illusions left after last night.' Richard turned to us. âHave you?'
âPoor Esmond must be starving,' I said quickly. âI'll take him out in the kitchen and feed him.'
âI'll help you.' Arnold lurched to his feet.
âI was just leaving â' Piers got up and moved hastily towards the exit.
âDon't let me spoil your weekend,' Richard told Piers coldly. âI haven't unpacked. I thought â' he looked at Arnold â âyou might be able to put me up for a night or two, while I look around for something else? I know your sofa opens into a bed.'
âOh, sure,' Arnold said. âSure. Glad to have you â I mean, it's okay with us. Stay as long as you like.'
âThank you.' Richard deposited his suitcase in a corner.
âRichard, don't be absurd,' Lania said. âCome home and we'll settle this quietly.'
âIt's too late,' he said. âI thought I could trust you to be discreet, at least. But now â'
âThat isn't fair!' I spoke without thinking. âHow could anybody be discreet with their bedroom wall missing?'
Arnold sunk his elbow into my ribs and hustled me towards the kitchen. I didn't object. Even Esmond seemed glad to get out of that room.
We hung around in the kitchen until we heard the front door slam. It seemed to take a long while. After the silence had gone on for some time, we went back to the living-room, hoping for the best. We didn't get it. Lania and Piers had left, but Richard was still there.
Still there â and making himself at home. He had pulled the sofa out, turning it into a bed, and unpacked his pyjamas. Well, we
had
said he could stay. There was nothing to do but put the best face on it.
âLet me get you a drink,' Arnold said.
âThanks, I could use one.'
I went round the room and collected the empty glasses. It didn't seem tactful to have them cluttering up the place â and reminding us of the people who had so recently been drinking from them.
âI think we ought to tell him, honey,' Arnold said, as I returned empty-handed from the kitchen. âHe might be able to help us.'
âTell me?' Richard asked nervously. âWhat more is there?' He had the nerve-racked look of a man who has been told: âThat was the good news, now for the bad.'
âSomebody,' I said, âis trying to murder Arnold.'
âOh,' Richard breathed a sigh of relief. âIs that â ?' He broke off abruptly, obviously having realized that
Is that all
? was not quite the comment called for.
âTruly,' I said.
âWhat makes you think so?' Richard was intrigued rather than convinced.
âAll those accidents I've been having,' Arnold said. âDon't they make you think?'
âHmmm ...' Richard said non-committally.
âThe brakes
could
have failed,' Arnold said. âBut didn't it strike you as too much of a coincidence that a gang of soccer hooligans should set on me when I was minding my own business at the other end of the station from them?'
âI hadn't thought of that,' Richard said soothingly â too soothingly. He was humouring Arnold.
âAnd somebody deliberately tried to push me under that bus,' Arnold wound up his case. âI
felt
that shove. No way could it have been an accident. Somebody's out to get me!'
âWhy?' Richard asked simply. It was an excellent question. One we had not been able to answer.
âNot only that â' I leaped in, avoiding the question. âWe'd like to know more about John Blake's death. In view of what's been happening to Arnold, it strikes us as highly suspicious!'
âThat's insane!' Richard shook his head dazedly. âI mean â' He remembered his manners â and that he was our guest for the night and perhaps several nights to come. âI mean, there was never any question about that. It was an accident. The Coroner's Inquest said so.'
âIt's true!' All I had needed to convince me of that truth was a bit of opposition. âArnold is in desperate danger of his life. They killed John Blake â now they're trying to kill Arnold, too! You've got to help us. You know Blake's background. There must be something in it somewhere that will explain all this.'
âEr, yes, certainly.' Richard looked profoundly uncomfortable. âI'll, er, do all I can ... er, to help.' Now he was humouring both of us.
âI know it sounds incredible â' Arnold had caught Richard's longing look towards his own half of the house; he was quite obviously having second thoughts about spending the night with a pair of lunatics. âWe've sprung it on you too quickly. We should have led up to it gradually â'
âNo, no,' Richard murmured, edging away. âQuite all right. Er, as you say, it's a bit sudden. I dare say I'll get used to the idea.'
âJust think about it,' I urged. âI didn't believe it at first, either.'
âBut it doesn't make sense,' Richard protested mildly, still cautious about upsetting us. âThere's no reason in the world why anyone should have wanted to kill ... John Blake.' I noticed he wasn't so certain about Arnold.
âHow well did you know Blake â
really
know him?' I was growing desperate. Here we had somebody who might have the key to the mystery hidden away in some recess of his brain, in his knowledge of background and events before we had appeared on the scene â and he was balking. He wasn't taking it seriously.
âPlease, please,' I begged. â
Think!
There
must
be something, somewhere. Maybe just some tiny thing that didn't ring true at the time ... something you noticed but forgot again ... something you don't even
know
you know ...
âPlease â' I was close to tears. I felt like the beleaguered heroine in some old film, pleading for her lover's life while the mood music swelled in the background. âYou
must
believe us. Arnold's
life
is at stake!'
There was deep silence from Richard, while the orchestra soared in a crescendo ...
Wait a minute â there
was
an orchestra playing in the background!
âGod damn it!' I exploded. âThose brats have sneaked down to the study and are watching television again!'
Richard flinched. For a moment, I'd almost had him convinced. Now he was back to thinking we were crazy again.
âShhh!' I held up my hand. âWe'll catch them in the act â' I tiptoed over to the study door and eased it open silently.
It was a black and white movie, with all the moody shades of grey that established foreboding and dread. The music throbbed softly.
In the middle of the screen, a man lifted bandaged hands to his bandaged head and slowly began unwinding the bandages â upon emptiness.
âSee â' Donald nudged his sister. âI told you. She had a date with the Invisible Man!'
âOkay, you kids â' I snapped on the light abruptly, but my anger had disappeared, driven out by a new thought. âSuppose you explain.'
âWe only wanted to watch for a few minutes â just this part.' Donald was frightened by my expression.
âJust this one movie â' Donna began to sniffle. âWe won't do it again.'
âNever mind that â' I snapped the television off. âI want to know what you meant about the Invisible Man â it's not the first time you've made that crack. Was that what you saw in Boulogne?' I waved towards the darkened screen. âHazel, meeting a man in bandages?'
âWell ...' Donald said carefully, not understanding what this was about, but grateful that I had been deflected from the major issue of their deliberate disobedience. âWell, his
hands
weren't bandaged.'
âBut his head was?'
âHis face,' Donna corrected. âIt wasn't an all-around bandage, like that. I guess they'd never have let him out of the hospital these days, if it was. But there were bandages all over his face â and he had dark glasses over his eyes.'
âOkay!' I threw discipline to the winds. âYou can go back to watching the movie. It's a good one. Very illuminating.' I withdrew back into the living-room and closed the door behind me.
âWhat is it, Babe?' Arnold studied my face anxiously. âWhat's the matter?'
âI was just thinking,' I said slowly. âMaybe we've been approaching this from the wrong angle. Maybe we shouldn't have been worrying about John Blake's past at all. Maybe he was just an innocent bystander ... like Arnold.'
âWhat do you mean?' Richard was caught by my tone.
âThink about it â' My mind was travelling like lightning in a dozen different directions â all converging on the same point. âJohn Blake died after he'd spent a couple of hours with Hazel. Then, the first attack on Arnold occurred after
he'd
been alone with Hazel for a couple of hours. The next attack was after he'd been snuggling up to her in public, right under her porch light â'
âI wasn't snuggling up,' Arnold protested. âIt was just a friendly hug â'
âAnd the third attack was after that day trip to Boulogne, when Arnold boarded the bus with Hazel, looking very chummy.'
âYou told me not to wait while you parked â'
âAnd now we find out that Hazel met a strange man in Boulogne â after she'd told us she was going to a dressmaker for fittings. A man in bandages.
âI don't know how it seems to you â' I looked from Arnold to Richard â âbut it strikes me that any man who spends much time around Hazel has a pretty rough time. She ought to carry a Government warning: she's more hazardous to health than high-tar cigarettes!'
âHello -?' The voice at the other end of the phone was wary. It was late at night and any woman had a right to feel uneasy about a sudden unexpected call. I wondered if Hazel had special reason to fear. A wildly jealous husband, perhaps?
âHazel,' I said quickly, âit's Nancy Harper. I'm sorry to be ringing so late, but I wanted to catch you before you made too many plans for the children â'
âPlans?' She sounded surprised. âFor the twins?'
âNo, not
my
children,' I said. â
Yours.
The school holidays have started. You'll have them home again. I wanted to â'
âOh, no,' she said. âNo, I won't! They â they've gone to their grandparents ... in Wales. It seemed better â I mean, they love it there and I'm still getting the house in order here. Their rooms aren't finished. There'll be less upheaval for them â'
That was what I had thought. I listened for a moment as she tied herself into verbal knots trying to justify how much nicer and more convenient it would be for the children to spend their holidays in Wales and go back to school directly from there. She'd get down to see them, of course ...
âListen, Hazel â' I interrupted her. âI think it's time we had a little talk.'
âA talk? But we
are
talking â' There was the sharp peal of a bell in the distance and a trace of genuine fear crept into her voice. âWill you hold the line a minute, please? There's someone at the door â'
âDon't be frightened, Hazel,' I said. âIt's only Richard. Richard Sandgate. He volunteered to collect you and bring you over here.'
âAt this hour?'
Please come, Hazel. It really
is
a matter of life and death.'
âIs everything all right?' Lania was at the door as I hung up the phone. âI saw Richard drive off. Has he -? Is he ... coming back?'
âYou'd better come in.' I swung the door wide resignedly. âHe'll be back â and it's high time we all found out what's been going on.'
âGoing on?' Lania followed me into the living-room. I saw her swift relieved glance at Richard's suitcase.
“This is nonsense, of course.' She took possession of the suitcase and began repacking it. âPiers has left now and Richard is coming home with me. I'm sorry you've been troubled.'
âI think we'd better fold the sofa back into shape before they get here,' Arnold said. âCan you help me, honey?'
âBefore who get here?' Lania snapped the suitcase shut.
âRichard's picking up Hazel.' I helped Arnold get the sofa in order. âWe decided it's time for a showdown.'
âHazel?' Lania was still caught up in her own problems. âWhat has she to do with all this?'
âEverything,' I said grimly.
We'd briefed Lania by the time Richard and Hazel arrived. She had been initially uncertain, but more than willing to admit that something strange might have been going on.
âJohn was always such a careful driver,' she remembered. âI must admit, I did think it ironic that such a thing should have happened to him â of all people. In fact, I sometimes wondered â'
The doorbell rang and I left â her in full flow of hindsight while I went to admit Hazel and Richard. They preceded me into the living-room. Richard seemed displeased, but not surprised, to find Lania there; Hazel just seemed numbed. I knew then that I was right.
âSit down â' I gestured her to a seat. She perched unhappily on the edge of a chair, looked around fearfully, and seemed relieved to find no strangers in the room.