“Does it?” he said.
“I expect I have been remiss. One doesn’t talk about one’s failures. It was all rather hasty. That marriage, I mean.
A mistake from the first. The child was born and Laura died. That’s really all there is to it. It wouldn’t have been very satisfactory, even if that hadn’t happened. “
“If Bridget had been a boy …” I began.
His face darkened slightly.
“Perhaps it is as well. But it’s all over now. It was a mistake. I have made a few in my life, but that was the greatest. I meant to tell you about it, but somehow I could not bring myself to. It’s a depressing subject.”
“She was very young to die.”
“She was eighteen. It all happened so quickly. She did not like the Grange. She said it was old and full of ghosts and shadows and the ghosts didn’t want her. It was so different from everything she was used to. Her father made a great deal of money out of coal. She couldn’t understand the customs of a family like mine. And then there was the child. She was terrified of having it. She seemed to know she was going to die.
She lived in fear of death, and that woman never left her. “
“You mean Jemima Cray?”
He nodded.
“She was the only one who could calm her. It was a wretched time for us all.”
“The little girl is charming. I should have thought she would be a comfort to you and Lady Crompton.”
“That woman was always there.”
“She is certainly rather odd.”
“She is good with the child. She would do anything for her.”
“Have you ever thought of replacing her?”
He lifted his shoulders.
“We’ve wanted to, of course. But there’s some promise. In the circumstances, the easiest thing is to let her remain here. So it seems Jemima Cray is a fixture. Oh, let’s talk about something pleasant! You must come down again soon.”
I said: “This visit is not yet over.”
“No, but I can’t tell you how much I enjoy them. My mother is saying that we must entertain more. She is not well enough to do a great deal, but she did enjoy it in the old days. We have some interesting characters round about-the usual mixture of traditional country types and the occasional eccentric. I can’t tell you how we look forward to your coming-my mother as well as myself.”
“And you will come up to Town for the wedding, won’t you?”
“I must, of course.”
And I went on thinking of Jemima Cray.
Castle Folly
Gertie wanted Aunt Beatrice and Uncle Harold to give a dinner-party.
“We’ll have the Rowlands, Lawrence Emmerson and his alter ego Dorothy, you, myself and the romantic Lucian. I think it will be fun. You’ve had so much hospitality … all those weekends … and you’re our responsibility. Soon we shall be cluttered with wedding obligations, so we’d better do it soon.”
Aunt Beatrice was delighted, and then she was a little apprehensive.
“Shall we be grand enough?” she asked.
“The Emmersons are all right, but what about that Sir Lucian?”
I assured her there was nothing to fear on that score.
It would have to be dinner, not lunch, said Gertie. Lunch was not quite the same. The Emmersons would be all right. They had their place close by, but what about Lucian? He lived in the country. They couldn’t put him up for the night.
I said he would stay in a hotel. He did when he came to London for a brief period. We would invite him to the dinner-party in any case.
The invitations were given and accepted. Lucian said he would stay at Walden’s in Mayfair, as he had done on previous occasions. He had some business to do in London and he would arrange to do it at the same time. So it was all satisfactorily arranged.
Gertie was in ecstasy. She was over almost everything at this time.
She was so delighted with life. It would not be long now before she was Mrs. Ragland. The house was almost ready and the future looked rosy. All she needed now was to see me in a similar state. Dear Gertie. She had been such a wonderful friend.
She and Aunt Beatrice talked constantly of the coming dinner-party.
What flowers should they have? The best china, used only on special occasions, was brought out; there was a higher gloss on the furniture than usual.
“Dorothy might notice,” I said.
“The others certainly won’t.”
The great day arrived. We had an aperitif in the drawing-room before dinner and in due course assembled at the dinner-table.
Conversation was lively and ran smoothly. Lawrence told a few anecdotes about life in the hospital to which he was attached; Lucian talked animatedly of the estate and country life and the rest of us joined in: even Uncle Harold had something to contribute, while Aunt Beatrice kept an alert eye on the food, so anxious was she that nothing should go wrong.
She need have had no qualms. Everything went according to plan and I think the guests were so interested in the conversation that they would not have been aware of it if it had not.
We had left the table and had gone to the drawing-room for coffee when Dorothy started to talk about a book she had read.
“You would not suspect Dorothy of being interested in such gruesome subjects, would you?” said Lawrence.
“But crime has always fascinated her.”
“I know she wrote a book on the subject,” I said.
“She lent it to me.
I found it fascinating. “
“It was inspired by the Jameson case,” said Dorothy.
“Do you remember it? It took place years ago. A Martin Jameson married women for their money and then, when he had arranged for it all to come to him, he just disposed of them. The interesting thing was that he was such a charmer. No one believed he could commit such crimes, and he was able to operate with success for some time. “
“The charm would equip him for the work he had decided to do, I imagine,” said Lucian.
“But it was not exactly a pose. The man was kind … it turned out that he had helped lots of people. They came forward to testify for him. He was highly respected wherever he went. And all the time, he was seeking out these women with money, going through a form of marriage with them, then murdering them. Right up to the moment of his death, he was gentle and charming.”
“There must have been some violence in him,” said Lawrence.
“And don’t forget, he did it for the money.”
“A murderer deserves to hang,” said Bernard.
“I think Dorothy wanted to understand the man,” explained Lawrence.
“To discover what his thoughts were as he put aside his gentler instincts and became a killer.”
“That’s clear enough,” put in Uncle Harold.
“He wanted the money.”
“And so he was hanged,” said Gertie.
“Anyone who kills someone deserves to hang.” She looked at Bernard.
“Especially husbands who kill their wives.”
“I’m listening,” said Bernard.
“I don’t think you’d think what I’ve got would be worth while,” retorted Gertie.
“Well,” replied Bernard, “I shall have to look into it!”
Dorothy had no intention of allowing this kind of lovers’ banter to intrude on a serious subject.
“It’s interesting to study these cases,” she said.
“It gives one a certain understanding of people, and people are fascinating. There is this case I have just been reading about. A young girl was shot in a place called Cranley Wood. It is in Yorkshire. This was some years ago. There is a possibility that they hanged the wrong man.”
Lucian leaned forward, listening.
“I don’t remember this case,” he said.
“There was not a great deal of publicity about it. I think people thought the man who confessed some time after was mad.”
“Do tell us,” said Lucian.
“I am sure Dorothy will,” replied Lawrence.
“She’s on her favourite hobbyhorse.”
“Murder is so interesting,” said Gertie.
“Briefly, this is the case,” began Dorothy.
“Marion Jackson was the daughter of a farmer. She was engaged to marry Tom Eccles, also a farmer living in the neighbourhood. A small landowner, also in the district and known to be something of a lady’s man, had been abroad and when he came back, a number of the local girls were fascinated by him, and it seems that Marion was one of those who fell under his spell. It is not a very usual story. Marion was seduced by the philanderer and became pregnant. She made an attempt to pass off the child as Tom Eccles’s. There was a scene in the woods between Marion and Tom, which was overheard. Tom had discovered that the child was not his and made Marion confess who was in fact the father. That afternoon Marion was found in the woods, shot through the heart.”
“The farmer fiance did it,” said Gertie.
“I expect he was furious.”
“Understandably,” said Bernard.
“So it was thought,” went on Dorothy.
“There was an inquiry. There was nothing special about the shot. It was fired from an ordinary sort of gun. Tom Eccles had one, so did Marion’s father and countless other people around the district.”
“What about the philanderer?” asked Aunt Beatrice.
“He too, I dare say. Several people had heard the shot. Tom Eccles could not account for his whereabouts at that time. He had, however, been heard to say, ” I’ll kill you for this,” during the scene with Marion earlier on; and he was in a rather hysterical state at the time. The trial did not last long. It seemed certain that, overcome by an excess of jealousy, Tom Eccles had killed Marion Jackson. He was found guilty and hanged. That happened more than twenty years ago. You might say it was a perfectly commonplace crime, the sort of thing that has happened again and again.”
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