Джозефина Тэй – Загадочные события во Франчесе / The Franchise Affair (страница 11)
He was smiling, relaxed and reminiscent, when both his quiet and his peace were shattered by the irruption of Nevil.
“Why didn’t you
“Who?”
“The Sharpe woman! Why didn’t you tell me?”
“I didn’t expect you would meet her,” Robert said. “All you had to do was drop the letter through the door.”
“There was nothing in the door to drop it through, so I rang, and they had just come back from wherever they were. Anyhow,
“I thought she slept in the afternoons.”
“I don’t believe she ever sleeps. She doesn’t belong to the human family at all. She is all compact of fire and metal.”
“I know she’s a very rude old woman but you have to make allowances. She has had a very hard—”
“
“Old Mrs. Sharpe, of course.”
“I didn’t even see old Mrs. Sharpe. I’m talking about Marion.”
“Marion Sharpe? And how did you know her name was Marion?”
“She told me. It does suit her, doesn’t it? She couldn’t be anything but Marion.”
“You seem to have become remarkably intimate for a doorstep acquaintance.”
“Oh, she gave me tea.”
“Tea! I thought you were in a desperate hurry to see a French film.”
“I’m never in a desperate hurry to do anything when a woman like Marion Sharpe invites me to tea. Have you noticed her eyes? But of course you have. You’re her lawyer. That wonderful shading of grey into hazel. And the way her eyebrows lie above them, like the brush-mark of a painter genius. Winged eyebrows, they are. I made a poem about them on the way home. Do you want to hear it?”
“No,” Robert said firmly. “Did you enjoy your film?”
“Oh, I didn’t go.”
“You didn’t
“I told you I had tea with Marion instead.”
“You mean you have been at The Franchise
“I suppose I have,” Nevil said dreamily, “but, by God, it didn’t seem more than seven minutes.”
“And what happened to your thirst for French cinema?”
“But Marion
“Not even Rosemary?” Robert was in the state known to Aunt Lin as “put out.”
“Oh, Rosemary is a darling, and I’m going to marry her, but that is quite a different thing.”
“Is it?” said Robert, with deceptive meekness.
“Of course. People don’t marry women like Marion Sharpe, any more than they marry winds and clouds. Any more than they marry Joan of Arc. It’s positively blasphemous to consider marriage in relation to a woman like that. She spoke very nicely of you, by the way.”
“That was kind of her.”
The tone was so dry that even Nevil caught the flavour of it.
“Don’t you like her?” he asked, pausing to look at his cousin in surprised disbelief.
Robert had ceased for the moment to be kind, lazy, tolerant Robert Blair; he was just a tired man who hadn’t yet had his dinner and was suffering from the memory of a frustration and a snubbing.
“As far as I am concerned,” he said, “Marion Sharpe is just a skinny woman of forty who lives with a rude old mother in an ugly old house, and needs legal advice on occasion like anyone else.”
But even as the words came out he wanted to stop them, as if they were a betrayal of a friend.
“No, probably she
“I can’t imagine why you should think that.”
“All the women you nearly married were that type.”
“I have never ‘nearly married’ anyone,” Robert said stiffly.
“That’s what you think. You’ll never know how nearly Molly Manders landed you.”
“Molly Manders?” Aunt Lin said, coming in flushed from her cooking and bearing the tray with the sherry. “Such a silly girl. Imagined that you used a baking-board for pancakes. And was always looking at herself in that little pocket mirror of hers.”
“Aunt Lin saved you that time, didn’t you, Aunt Lin?”
“I don’t know what you are talking about, Nevil dear. Do stop prancing about the hearthrug, and put a log on the fire. Did you like your French film, dear?”
“I didn’t go. I had tea at The Franchise instead.” He shot a glance at Robert, having learned by now that there was more in Robert’s reaction than met the eye.
“With those strange people? What did you talk about?”
“Mountains – Maupassant – hens—”
“
“Yes; the concentrated evil of a hen’s face in a close-up.”
Aunt Lin looked vague. She turned to Robert, as to terra firma.
“Had I better call, dear, if you are going to know them? Or ask the vicar’s wife to call?”
“I don’t think I would commit the vicar’s wife to anything so irrevocable,” Robert said, dryly.
She looked doubtful for a moment, but household cares obliterated the question in her mind. “Don’t dawdle too long over your sherry or what I have in the oven will be spoiled. Thank goodness, Christina will be down again tomorrow. At least I hope so; I have never known her salvation take more than two days. And I don’t really think that I will
Yes; that was a sample of the reaction he might expect where the Sharpes were concerned. Ben Carley had gone out of his way today to let him know that, if there was police trouble at The Franchise, he wouldn’t be able to count on an unprejudiced jury. He must take measures for the protection of the Sharpes. When he saw them on Friday he would suggest a private investigation by a paid agent. The police were overworked – had been overworked for a decade and more – and there was just a chance that one man working at his leisure on one trail might be more successful than the orthodox and official investigation had been.
Chapter 6
But by Friday morning it was too late to take measures for the safety of The Franchise.
Robert had reckoned with the diligence of the police; he had reckoned with the slow spread of whispers; but he had reckoned without the
The
And it was the
Robert had been out early into the country on that Friday morning to see an old woman who was dying and wanted to alter her will. This was a performance she repeated on an average once every three months and her doctor made no secret of the fact that in his opinion she “would blow out a hundred candles one day without a second puff.” But of course a lawyer cannot tell a client who summons him urgently at eight-thirty in the morning not to be silly. So Robert had taken some new will forms, fetched his car from the garage, and driven into the country. In spite of his usual tussle with the old tyrant among the pillows – who could never be brought to understand the elementary fact that you cannot give away
He had decided to forgive her for liking Nevil. After all, Nevil had never tried to palm her off on Carley. One must be fair.
He ran the car into the garage, under the noses of the morning lot going out from the livery stable, parked it, and then, remembering that it was past the first of the month, strolled over to the office to pay his bill to Brough, who ran the office side. But it was Stanley who was in the office; thumbing over dockets and invoices with the strong hands that so surprisingly finished off his thin forearms.
“When I was in the Signals,” Stanley said, casting him an absent-minded glance, “I used to believe that the Quarter-bloke was a crook, but now I’m not so sure.”
“Something missing?” said Robert. “I just looked in to pay my bill. Bill usually has it ready.”
“I expect it’s somewhere around,” Stanley said, still thumbing. “Have a look.”