I didn't post, I'm so sorrry I didn't post I feel so ill I don't even know whiah way up I am
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Chapter 9
Jeff Morrell arrived as the company was finishing eating.
“Here, we’ve some odds and ends left over, dig in,” said Alexander.
“Well, I don’t mind if I do; it isn’t like accepting a drink,” said Jeff. “I wanted to find out where everyone was, yesterday, between ten-fifteen when Helen spoke to Irma, and half after midday when Alexander and Jimmy Campbell found the body. It’s a fairly tight window. We believe she walked down Sandy Lane – oh, all right, Lover’s Lane,” he amended as he heard an interrogative noise from one of the cast, “And on to the footbridge over the weir. Which is visible at its centre from the road bridge the other side of Lover’s Lane, because I tested it. I don’t know that you could identify people though. But anything anyone saw, might help.”
“Oh! I must have been on the footbridge right before that poor child got there!” cried Miss Thripp. “I went to Oxford to buy... something.” She flushed.
“They do better lingerie there than one can get locally,” said Ida.
“Oh! Well, I don’t know if you’d call it l...lingerie,” said Miss Thripp, blushing again.
“I don’t need details about a lady’s undergarment needs,” said Jeff, hastily. “You went to Oxford, that’s all I need.”
“Yes, I remember, you almost missed the train,” said Fred Chaffinch.
“I thought you left in plenty of time,” said Edgar.
“I did,” said Miss Thripp. “I... I encountered a problem on the way. I had to find a secluded place and a safety pin. And do you know, I would swear the elastic had been cut but who would do a thing like that? Or look in my tallboy for... for...” she fell into blushing incoherence.
Ida drew her aside.
“Shopping for corsets and had your drawers fall down on the way?” she asked, quietly.
“Oh, my dear! Such a thing to have to mention in front of policemen!” said the poor little woman.
“I have no inhibitions about such things, but there are ways and ways to go about it,” said Ida. “I’ll handle it. A nasty trick if it was cut.”
“I suppose anyone could wander into the house when I am teaching; Edgar goes out for walks or cycle rides, and nobody locks their house, of course! I don’t recall any little boy being truant – it is such a prank of a small boy, such as Fred might have perpetrated when he was young, but of course, he grew out of such things! But I had to find a bush where I might be private and join the two ends in a hurry so I would not miss my train, because the Easter holidays are not long, and my corset is quite worn, and I had to have another, and one cannot attend church if one is not properly accoutred, and I was ashamed that I was starting to sag quite horribly!”
“Indeed, any woman understands,” said Ida. “Would Edgar play such a trick?”
“Oh, my dear! Surely he is too old for such... and he is so attentive to me, I cannot think... I know he has tales of high jinks he and other students cut at Oxford, but... no, surely not!”
Ida personally suspected that Edgar’s attentiveness owed more to a cash flow problem than familial respect, and did not put it past him to embarrass his aunt if it could not be brought home to him, but she did not push the matter. It might, after all, be down to her personal dislike for Edgar, who had made a pass at her on Monday.
Jeff had determined that Fred, the Busby brothers and Les Edgington were at work at the station, and Sam Reckitt was in the post office, as post master.
“I was out, delivering a car,” said Sid Smith. “I can’t prove my whereabouts, but there was a cow which ate my hat when the damn junkpile broke down again, and I had to stop and fix it, again. I fixed the damn thing with chewing gum this time, which I should have done in the first place instead of doing it all Sir Garnet.”
“It’s all Sir Garnet if it works, never mind the method,” said Alexander. “Is that the new Model T Ford David bought?”
“Yes, that’s the one, it got a hole in the radiator,” said Sid.
“David will drive on gravel,” said Alexander. “Fourwinds is in the other direction than the station.”
Jeff made a note.
“I can’t prove where I was,” said Dan Reckitt. “I’d been out to Heywood Hall, and I was just setting out with second post.”
“You brought the bill for Fred’s new braces as I was hanging out the washing,” said Polly Chaffinch. “I heard the up train to Oxford whistle, so it must have been about eleven.”
“I didn’t see Irma when I crossed the footbridge, and I stopped, because Ma came out with two official-looking envelopes to add to the post, in case they were important,” said Dan. “I did see Miss Thripp coming out of a bush, looking nervous; I thought she might be caught short so I didn’t greet her, in case it embarrassed her. Sorry ma’am,” he added.
“Most sensitive of you,” twittered Miss Thripp.
“I did drop off a parcel for you, from your friend in Wales,” said Dan. “I took it inside as nobody answered the door.”
“I had gone back to bed with a coffee,” said Edgar. “I’m sorry, Aunt Betty, I ignored the knock.”
“I rang the bell,” said Dan.
“Did you? I didn’t hear it. I thought I heard a knock but it must have been you shutting the door,” said Edgar.
“Well, I need to have a word with Mrs. Reckitt, to see if she saw anything on her way back from catching up with you,” said Jeff. “No sign of Irma at all?”
“I... she may have been on the path along the river from Lover’s Lane,” said Dan. “Ma took Weir Alley to catch me, it’s a shorter route to the footbridge. I saw... I thought I saw a couple of people on the footpath, but I might be wrong. Or it might have been another day. I walk it every day; I don’t notice ordinary things like passers-by.”
Jeff nodded.
“Understood. I’d like to know who the couple were, if people would ask around,” he said.
“I doubt Ma can tell you much,” said Dan. “She won’t wear her glasses in public, and even if she looked along the path, I doubt she could tell you if there were people or bushes.”
“Well, I can but ask,” said Jeff.
Sam Reckitt frowned and opened his mouth, but shut it again, as Alexander noticed. He caught Dan’s eye and gave him a quick, approving nod.
Alexander caught Jeff’s arm.
“Best let Sam introduce you to his wife; she has a reputation for being a bit knacky,” he said. “And if you missed the byplay, Dan was protecting his mother by making her eyesight out to be worse than it is.”
“Sharp lad,” said Jeff. “Of course, she’s on the suspect list.”
“And might have used important letters as an excuse to meet Irma, I know,” said Alexander. “To be honest, I’m formulating a suspect in my mind, but I can’t for the life of me see why, or what there is to be gained.”
“I thought it was all about these here hormone things women get,” said Jeff. “Makes them loopy for a while.”
“Which is why I’m confused,” said Alexander. “Bear with me; I’ll go through my notes with you later.”
Jeff nodded.
“You have the flair for this, where I only have order and method without the advantage of the little grey cells fine tuned like that fellow in the books,” he said.
“I also have the advantage of knowing some of the protagonists,” said Alexander. “Do you want me along?”
“Yes; these people accept you as one of theirs,” said Jeff.
They fell into step with Sam and Dan Reckitt.
“What’s the missus having for tea, Sam?” asked Alexander.
“Oh, I had Braithwaite drop her off a fish supper first so she wouldn’t resent us staying,” said Sam. “She got upset about Irma and hardly slept, worrying that she might be the last person to see her alive. She isn’t well, but she likes to pop out to catch up with Dan if there’s important mail, rather than lie all the time on the couch. I think it does her good, but it often knocks her back for days on end.”
Alexander nodded.
He had no idea if Mrs.Reckitt imagined her illness half the time, or if it was just something doctors did not yet know, but he had seen pain lines on her face, which made it real enough for her.
The Reckitts lived behind and above the post office and newsagent shop, a reclining chair behind the counter for Mrs. Reckitt, though a spotty youth was currently manning the shop.
“No problems, Hugh?” asked Sam.
“Nossir, I made herself a cup of tea, and myself, and she enjoyed the fish,” said the boy.
“You’ll be Hugh Carlton, one of the lads who was friendly with Irma Savin?” asked Jeff.
“Yessir, and I wish I’d made her tell me who she saw. And there I was parsing Latin and she was being killed,” he added, looking upset.
“I doubt she’d have been forthcoming if you pressed her; more likely to clam up,” said Jeff.
“Yessir, I tell myself that, but you know how it is. I... I took this job because I wanted to save up for a token for her while I was at university,” he added. “Mr. Reckitt doesn’t mind me doing my prep here, and having a cuppa over it.”
“It won’t do you any harm to have some funds behind you, Hugh,” said Alexander. “And what’s more, it must be quieter here; don’t you have half a dozen stepsiblings?”
“Fancy you knowing that, sir!” said Hugh, impressed. “Yes, it is nice and quiet, a few people come in from working in London or Oxford and want evening papers, or tobacco or cigarettes. Mr. Savin gave me a hand with my algebra; he likes an excuse not to go home too soon,” he added.
Alexander gave an enigmatic smile over his apparent omniscience; he had most of his intelligence from Mary Fringford.
Sam showed them through into the back room, which was a large kitchen, made into a kitchen dining room, with a piece of furniture which could not make up its mind if it was a sofa or a chaise longue. Here Emily Reckitt reclined, with a table beside her. She had cleared away the newspaper of the fish supper, and a knife and fork resided in the sink.
“I’m glad I’m not the only one to like eating irons but to eat straight out of the paper,” said Jeff.
Emily Reckitt smiled a tired smile.
“I don’t like using my fingers,” she said. “Dan and Sam laugh at me, but now I can say that the distinguished man from London does the same.”
“Not that distinguished, but I am official,” said Jeff. “I’m also a friend of your own local man, Alex Armitage so I’m not too much of an interloper.”
“Ah, you understand how people will feel,” said Mrs. Reckitt. “And you want to talk to me because I may be the last person to see Irma Savin alive.”
“I let it be known you couldn’t recognise anyone because you’re too vain to wear glasses, Ma,” said Dan.
His mother frowned.
“I only have reading glasses for close work,” she said.
“But nobody knows that, so you won’t get killed for knowing anything,” said Dan. “Like Irma, who I wager was at least half playacting.”
Mrs. Reckitt gave a little gasp and clutched at her throat.
“Your son was wise,” said Jeff. “Once a poison-pen starts killing, it can get nasty; and we still believe that the killing was because of Irma claiming to know who it was. It may have been dressed up to look like the Braithwaite girl, but there are too many coincidences.”
“Yes, I see,” said Mrs. Reckitt. “I don’t think I saw anything useful, but that might still be enough, if only in being a timing.”
“Quite so,” said Jeff.
“It was almost quarter to eleven,” said Mrs. Reckitt. “I recall I heard the church peal the third quarter after I left Dan.”
“Oh, that’s right, I heard it too,” said Dan.
“I thought of it particularly because of the words to the Westminster chimes, and it seemed appropriate,” said Mrs. Reckitt.
“Words?” said Jeff.
Mrs. Reckitt flushed.
“Oh, I thought it was common knowledge, like nursery rhymes,” she said. She sang to the sound of the distinctive Westminster chime,
Now then, young man
Tis time you ran,
Kiss her goodbye...
“And of course, the last phrase for O’clock is, ‘Tis time to fly,’” she added.
“And this seemed appropriate?”
“Well, I saw Irma Savin; you can’t mistake that bright shingled head, and her red tam-o-shanter, and matching jacket,” said Mrs. Reckitt. “She seemed to be in a passionate clinch with someone, which I assumed at the time was kissing a swain of hers. But there was vegetation in the way; that path is badly overgrown, and should be cut back. I’ve complained about it before, but the Parish council does nothing.”
“I’ll see if Widow Hall will bring her goats down,” said Alexander, hastily, knowing that this was the parish council’s usual means of dealing with verges. That, or Oliver Oliver and a scythe. The goats were more efficient and less inclined to divert their labour into the snug of the Clene Shepe.
“Well, that’s it, really,” said Mrs. Reckitt. “I did not really want to watch that little hussy sharing her tonsils with someone, so I averted my eyes and went back up Weir Alley. I had no intention of pushing past what I thought was such blatant lewdness. But... but I can’t help wondering if it wasn’t a passionate kiss, but someone strangling her. And I can’t swear it was a man, just that I had that impression, and I expected her to be with a man.”
“We need to see if we can find her tam o’shanter,” said Alexander, “And maybe footprints near the hat, which may give some clue.”
“Too dark now,” said Jeff. “Before breakfast.”
“When’s Harris coming?” asked Alexander.
“He isn’t; silly fool broke his leg showing off playing football,” sighed Jeff.
“Oh, well; Campbell will help,” said Alexander.