In mystery detection, seemingly insignificant details—such as a clock set to the wrong time, a napkin folded incorrectly, or bread cut at an unusual thickness—can reveal crucial information about events and relationships, as these small departures from normal patterns often indicate someone was present when they shouldn't have been, or that something out of the ordinary occurred.
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The Cat Who Returned With Bloody Paws | A Miss Marple MysteryAñadido:
Miss Marple and the cat who returned with bloody paws. Hello, dear friends.
It's wonderful to have you back with us at Warm Pages. I'm Edward here to keep you company as the day winds down.
Sending a warm and special hello to everyone tuning in from New York. We'd love to know where you're listening from. And do you have a pet? If so, what's their name? If you enjoy spending these quiet moments with our stories, you can now find them on Spotify. The link is in the description. Now, settle back and listen. Chapter 1. The Easter cakes beneath the parish tent. The middle of April had arrived in St. Mary me with all the mild and considered generosity that the season occasionally permitted. A week of cool gray mornings had given way quite unexpectedly to three successive days of genuine warmth, and the village had responded to this gift in the manner villagers always do, with immediate and thoroughly organized pleasure. The Easter church fet had been arranged for the Saturday, and by 11 in the morning, the parish lawn presented a picture of white canvas, bunting, and quiet festivity that would have satisfied the most demanding of watercolor painters.
Miss Jane Marple arrived shortly before noon, carrying a covered basket containing two jars of her green gauge preserve, and a small packet of lemon shortbreads she'd made the previous evening.
She wore her second best gray coat and her sensible shoes, and she moved between the trestle tables with the unhurried ease of a woman who had attended a great many fetss, and expected on the whole to enjoy this one as thoroughly as all the rest. The parish lawn of St. Mary me ran southward from the church porch, and was bordered on two sides by an old uh hedge, clipped annually by Mr. Pharaoh the Sexton, with an attention to symmetry that he brought to very little else in his professional duties. Beneath three large white tents, the village had arranged itself into the familiar geography of such occasions.
One tent for cakes, preserves, and homemade confectionery, a second for the raffle and white elephant stall, and a third somewhat smaller, where Reverend Emry's wife dispensed tea from an urn of considerable age and unreliable temperament. Children wo between the tables with the purposeful energy of creatures who understand instinctively that such events offer unusual freedom, and the hum of polite conversation rose and fell across the afternoon air like the sound of a contented and slightly overheated beehive. Miss Marple settled herself at the raffle table to help sort the stubs, a task requiring rather less agility than some of the others on offer, and rather more opportunity for quiet observation.
From her position she could see most of the lawn quite comfortably, and she applied herself to the stubs with that pleasant quality of half attention she had long perfected, appearing entirely absorbed in the task, while actually absorbing rather a great deal more of her surroundings than most people would have supposed. The first person to catch her eye with any particular interest was Miss Beatatric Lyall, who was moving between the cake stall and the preserve tables, with the precise and purposeful step of someone completing a route already mapped in the mind. Miss Lyall was a woman of perhaps 62 or 63, lean and straightbacked, with cropped gray hair and small, clear eyes that missed very little and forgave somewhat less.
She had come to St. Mary me some 20 years before upon her retirement, from a long career as a governness to families of good standing, and she had arranged her life in the village with the same systematic thoroughess she had presumably brought to the education of other people's children. Her cottage on Chapel Lane was kept in immaculate order. Her garden was pruned and staked according to a scheme that appeared in a small notebook she kept for the purpose.
She rose at 6 each morning, breakfasted at 7, and was known to have declined three separate invitations to join the parish council on the grounds that committees invariably substituted discussion for action and produced neither with any efficiency.
She was respected in St. Mary me in the way that capable and exacting women so often are thoroughly and without particular warmth. People were glad she was there in the way that one is glad of a well-made fence or a reliable clock.
They did not for the most part invited to tea. Standing rather nearer the cake stall and watching Miss Lyle circuit of the tables with an expression of pleasant concern was Mrs. Helen Kraock.
Helen Kraock was a widow of some 45 years, slender and fair, with the kind of graceful, unhurried manner that made whatever she did appear entirely effortless.
She had lived in St. Mary me for nearly a decade, in a comfortable cottage at the upper end of Church Street, and she had established herself in village life with the quiet thoroughess of someone who understands instinctively how such things are done. She was liked everywhere and universally described by those who knew her only moderately well as sweet-natured and endlessly patient, which was quite true as far as it went, though Miss Marple had occasionally wondered, as she sometimes did with very smooth surfaces, what lay below the pleasant shine. Beside Helen, and rather obviously attempting to appear less uncomfortable than he was, stood a young man whom Miss Marple had not previously encountered. He was perhaps 30 with Edward Kraock's unmistakable family resemblance to his sister. The same fair coloring, the same slightly too studded ease of manner. But where Helen's ease was genuine, or at least habitual, her younger brothers sat upon him like a coat belonging to someone slightly taller. He had, Miss Marple had been told, returned from London some 3 weeks earlier, following what Mrs. Hargreaves had described with considerable relish, as financial difficulties of a rather serious nature. He stood now at the fet with his hands in his pockets and his eyes moving between the tables in the manner of someone who expects to be spoken to about something unpleasant and has not yet determined how he will respond. Mrs. Violet Hargreaves, who would certainly have been happy to expand upon her account of Edward Kraduk's difficulties at any length required, was standing not far from the tier in conversation with two other women whom she was supplying, with information at a rate that suggested she'd been saving it up since Thursday.
Mrs. Hargreaves was the owner and proprietor of Hargreaves Bakery on the high street. A stout and energetic woman of 50 odd years with a fine memory for detail and an even finer appreciation for its potential. She knew every household in St. Mary me with the intimacy that comes from supplying them with bread and tea cakes for 20 years, and she had never been known to acquire a piece of information without promptly finding somewhere to put it. Reverend Paul Emory moved across the lawn with the gentle, slightly abstracted air he generally wore outside the pulpit. He was a tall man, thin-shouldered and kind-faced, with spectacles that he had a habit of removing to polish at moments of mild perplexity, which were frequent.
He was generally considered an excellent clergyman, warm-hearted, faithful, genuinely concerned for his parishioners, though he had a well-documented tendency to misremember the details of any situation in which more than three facts were simultaneously present. He greeted Miss Marple with evident pleasure, and remarked upon the fine weather, with the slightly surprised heir of someone for whom fine weather, however welcome, remains faintly unexpected. Gertrude Bell was stationed at the white elephant stall, pricing items from a cardboard box with the expression of someone who knows the true value of everything and is not at all sure the public deserves it. She was the village laress, or rather the woman who took in laundry from those households that required it, a compact, sharpeyed woman of 55 with gray hair pulled back under a practical hat and the slightly weathered hands of someone who has spent a great deal of her life in proximity to hot water. She knew the domestic arrangements of half the village from the inside out, which was to say from the laundry basket, and she held this knowledge with the proprietary satisfaction of a surveyor who has personally mapped every field.
Her opinion of Miss Ly's housekeeping was, so far as Miss Marple had gathered, one of professional admiration reluctantly conceded.
Dr. Haddock arrived at the fate at 2, somewhat later than he had intended, and declined tea on the grounds that he had already had three cups, and was not, as he put it, constructed for a fourth. He was a comfortable, solid man with a dry manner, and the calm gaze of someone who has seen enough of human nature to find it interesting rather than distressing.
He bought two raffle tickets, won a small pot of heather honey on the first, declared himself satisfied with the afternoon, and stood for a little while near the cake stall in conversation with Miss Marple, who was glad of his company.
The afternoon proceeded with the easy, unhurried pleasure of such occasions.
The raffle stubs mounted in their tin.
The ern produced tea at intervals of varying temperature. Children ate rather more cake than their parents had sanctioned. The u- hedge glowed a deep and satisfied green in the late afternoon light, and the smell of warm grass and iced sponge, and something faintly floral drifted across the parish lawn, in a manner that seemed, as Miss Marple later reflected, entirely too pleasant to be a prelude to anything difficult.
It was at perhaps 4 that Miss Beatatrice Lyle completed her final circuit of the tables, paused to purchase two jars of dams and jam and a bag of sugared almonds, and collected from the cake stall several leftover Easter cakes, small iced things decorated with yellow and white sugar, which the stoolholder wrapped neatly in a sheet of white paper and tied with a length of cotton twine.
Miss Lyall tucked the parcel under her arm, exchanged a brief and perfectly civil nod with Reverend Emory, spoke for approximately 90 seconds with Mrs. Hargreaves, which was, Miss Marple noted, approximately 90 seconds less than Mrs. Hargreaves had hoped for, and then walked at her usual measured pace across the parish lawn, through the gate in the UGGE, and away along Chapel Lane toward her cottage. She carried herself, as always, with perfect straightness.
She did not look back. She was not seen again by anyone in St. Mary me that evening, nor indeed at any point thereafter.
Before sunrise the following morning, her black cat, a lean, elderly creature of considerable personal dignity named as Mrs. Hargreavves subsequently informed anyone who would listen, Wellington, appeared at the door of Hargreav's bakery on the high street.
Its paws were marked with reddish stains, and the same dark color had dried in streaks along its tail. It sat on the bakery step and cried in the manner of a cat with something definite to communicate until Mrs. Hargreaves arrived to begin her morning baking. The village upon hearing the news assumed first that some mishap had occurred along the river path, a fall perhaps, or some sudden medical difficulty, and the initial reactions were those of genuine concern mixed, as village reactions so often are, with a degree of interested speculation. Miss Marple heard the news at 7:00 that morning from her daily help, Mrs. Glover, who had heard it from the butcher's boy, who had heard it from Mrs. Hargreaves directly. She sat down her cup of morning tea and was still for a moment, looking out at her garden, where the early apple blossom was just beginning to open against the pale April sky. She had that same morning accompanied Dolly Bantry on a brief errand to Chapel Lane, and the two of them had stood for a few minutes in Miss Ly's front garden while the matter was being discussed.
The cottage sat quiet and undisturbed in the morning light, curtains drawn as though everything within were in order.
A constable had looked inside and reported nothing a miss. Nothing, that was, except for one small thing. Miss Marple had noticed it herself almost at once, standing in the kitchen doorway, while the constable spoke with Dolly Bantry about the riverbank search. On the shelf above the kitchen table beside the breadboard and the blue ring sugar bowl sat a small round alarm clock with a white face and a plain black rim. A perfectly ordinary clock of the kind sold by any iron monger in England. It had been wound and set for 20 5. Miss Marple stood looking at it for rather longer than the constable noticed.
Beatric Lyall in 20 years of early rising in St. Mary me had never once set her alarm for anything other than 6:00 precisely. Someone had been in this kitchen after Bitrus Lyall had not.
Chapter 2. The cat at Hargreaves Bakery before dawn.
By 8:00 that Sunday morning, St. Mary me had organized itself into the particular kind of concerned activity that a village undertakes when something has gone wrong, and no one yet knows precisely how wrong. It was a different quality of busyness from the fet of the afternoon before, quieter in its way and more purposeful, but threaded through with the same persistent hum of conversation that serves in such communities as both comfort and intelligence, gathering in approximately equal measure. The men had gone to the river path. This had been decided without any great ceremony, by the simple fact that several of them had turned up at the bakery at more or less the same time, and the riverbank was the obvious place to look for someone who had walked home alone after dark along a route that ran close to the water for a good quarter of a mile. Mr. Pharaoh the Sexton went, and the two Hollis brothers from the farm at the top end of the lane, and young Tom Crips from the garage, who had sensible rubber boots, and was always amendable to a useful errand. Constable Briggs accompanied them with a slight air of authority that he wore rather better in the field than he did in the station. The women, for the most part, gathered at the bakery.
This was not strictly speaking a conscious decision. It was simply that Mrs. Targreavves had opened her side door at an unusually early hour, partly because she had been awake since the cat arrived, and partly because she was congenally incapable of remaining in possession of significant news without an audience, and the side door of Hargreavves Bakery on a Sunday morning was, in the social geography of St. Mary me, a perfectly natural place for people to collect. By 8, there were seven women standing in the bakery yard and a further two in the shop itself, all in various stages of receiving and transmitting information over cups of strong tea and the slightly misshapen rolls that Mrs. Hargreaves produced on Sunday mornings from dough that had been proving overnight. Wellington the black cat had been brought inside and given a saucer of warm milk and now sat upon the windowsill in the inner room with its tail wrapped around its feet and its amber eyes directed at the middle distance in the manner of a creature that has done what it could and considers the rest to be someone else's problem. The stains upon its paws had dried to a darker color in the hours since dawn. Mrs. Hargreaves had been persuaded after some discussion not to wash them on the grounds that Constable Briggs had said nothing specific about this, but would almost certainly prefer that nothing be altered until he had seen the animal himself.
Miss Marple arrived at the bakery yard at a quarter to 9, having first stopped at the chapel end of Chapel Lane to satisfy herself that the cottage was as she had left it. It was. The curtains remained drawn. The front gate stood slightly open as it had been when she and Dolly Bantry had stood there earlier that morning. The alarm clock on the kitchen shelf was presumably still set for 20 5, though she could not see it from the lane. She found Mrs. Har Greaves in a state of tremendous narrative energy, retelling for what appeared to be at least the third time the precise sequence of events that had begun when she came downstairs at 20 minutes past 4 to check on a proving batch of hot cross bundo, and heard, as she put it, the most persistent and distressing scratching at the side door she had ever encountered in all her years of early baking. Her account was detailed, circumstantially rich, and entirely consistent across its repetitions, which Miss Marple thought spoke well for it as a record of events, whatever one might feel about its length. Helen Kraock arrived at the bakeryard at 9:00, having already, it appeared, visited two neighboring households, to inquire whether anyone required assistance. She had brought with her a covered plate of sandwiches, cold beef and mustard, neatly cut, which she pressed upon Mrs. Hargreaves for the benefit of the search party when they returned. And she had the calm, slightly heightened attentiveness of someone who is being both genuinely kind and genuinely useful, and knows it, without this knowledge making the kindness any less real. She moved about the bakery yard with easy competence, refilling cups and collecting empty ones, and speaking to each of the gathered women with a particular and rather lovely quality of focused attention, the sort that makes the person being spoken to feel that their worry specifically has been heard and considered.
Several women remarked upon it quietly to one another. Miss Marple did not remark upon it, but she noticed it, and she also noticed the form it took. Helen referred to Beatrice Lyall in the course of three separate conversations that Miss Marple was able to hear clearly from her position near the bakery window as having led a rather solitary life.
The first occasion she put it as a sad sort of solitude, the second as the particular loneliness of a disciplined woman without family, and the third in response to something Mrs. Hollis said about how dreadful it was to think of her walking home alone, as the kind of aloneeness that becomes so habitual that one suspects the person has ceased to notice it. It was kindly said on each occasion. It was also, Miss Marple reflected, entirely inaccurate. Beatric Lyall had not considered herself lonely in the slightest. She had said as much on several recorded occasions to anyone who raised the subject, and her manner of saying it had carried the politely firm finality of a woman correcting an error of fact rather than rejecting a consolation. She had chosen her solitary habits as deliberately as she had chosen everything else about her life, and she had found them as satisfying as a well-kept accounts book, orderly, sufficient, and entirely her own.
Dolly Bantry arrived at 9, somewhat out of breath, and immediately attached herself to Miss Marple with the relieved air of someone who has located the one person in the room most likely to be thinking clearly. "They haven't found anything along the river," she said in a lowered voice that was nonetheless audible to anyone within 6 ft. "Tom Crips came back for an extra pair of boots and said they've gone all the way to the millbridge and back without so much as a footprint. The ground was dry yesterday evening," Miss Marple said.
There has been no rain since Wednesday.
Yes, but surely if she had fallen, Dolly began, and then stopped, because the implication of what she was saying caught up with her, and she found she did not wish to complete it in the middle of a bakery yard. Quite, said Miss Marple gently. She accepted a cup of tea from Helen Kraock, who brought it to her with a pleasant smile, and then stood for a little while in a thoughtful silence that Dolly Bantry had learned over many years to respect. The morning wore on. The search party returned from the river, having found nothing of significance, and regrouped with less certainty about what to do next.
Constable Briggs sent word to Inspector Slack, who was expected by midday. The sandwiches Helen had brought were distributed and consumed with the mechanical gratitude of tired and puzzled people. It was Constable Briggs who, in the course of a second careful look through the cottage that Miss Marple managed to attend by the simple expedient of accompanying Dolly Bantry, and saying nothing that anyone felt able to object to, drew attention to the fact that everything in the kitchen was in complete order. The supper things had been put away. The table was clean. The chairs were straight. The blue- ringed sugar bowl sat precisely in its customary position beside the bread box, and there was no indication anywhere in the room that anything had occurred which ought not to have. Miss Marple stood for a moment near the sideboard, looking at the neatly laid surface with its precise arrangement of objects. The candlestick, the small framed verse from scripture, the two silver rings that held the dining napkins.
One of the napkins had been slipped back into its ring. She looked at it for rather a long time without drawing anyone's attention to the fact that she was doing so. The fold was neat. The napkin had been replaced carefully with some deliberateness, but it had been replaced after use. The linen had been used and then returned to the ring rather than left unfolded for theress as Beatric Lyall invariably did. Miss Marple knew this because Gertude Bell had mentioned it once in the way that Gertude Bell mentioned all departures from correct domestic practice with a sorrowful precision of a woman who has seen a great deal of disorder and finds it never becomes easier to bear. She said nothing about it to Constable Briggs and nothing about it to Dolly Bantry until they were walking back together up the lane toward the village, at which point she remarked quite quietly and without particular emphasis that habits were far more difficult to imitate than people generally imagined.
Dolly glanced at her, "What sort of habits?" "All sorts," Miss Marple said.
"The small domestic kind, particularly the things one does without thinking, because one has always done them precisely that way. the fold of a napkin, the setting of a clock. She paused for a moment, looking ahead along the lane to where the village rooftops were just visible above the Hawthorne hedge. Someone was in that kitchen after Miss Ly was not, and they were trying with very considerable care to make it appear that nothing in the cottage required any explanation at all. Dolly was quiet for a step or two. And does it, she asked, require explanation? a great deal of it," Miss Marple said, with the mild and almost comfortable certainty of someone who has encountered this sort of thing before, and knows from long experience that the explanation, when it comes, will be found to have been present all along in the smallest and most ordinary of details.
They walked on together through the April morning, and the hawthornne above the hedge was just coming into bud, pale and tentative in the clear light, and Wellington the cat sat inside the bakery window and watched them go with the amber, unreadable patience of a creature that has already seen what it has seen, and is waiting without particular urgency for the rest of the world to catch up. Chapter 3. An alarm clock set for 20 5. Inspector Slack arrived in St. Mary me at 20 minutes 12, which was rather later than Constable Briggs had hoped and rather earlier than Miss Marple had expected, and he brought with him the particular brand of energetic competence that she had observed in him on previous occasions, thorough, rapid, and possessed of a tendency to arrive at the most plausible conclusion, at approximately twice the speed that the evidence strictly warranted. He was a lean, brisk man with a clipped mustache and a notebook that he produced and replaced with the practiced ease of a long habit, and he had the manner of someone who finds every investigation fundamentally similar to the last one, and is mildly impatient with whatever local color has been added in the interval. He spoke first with Constable Briggs, then with Mrs. Targreaves, then with two of the men who had searched the riverbank, and then he went to Chapel Lane and stood in Miss Ly's kitchen for a considerable time, looking at things with the steady, cataloging attention of a man constructing an inventory.
Miss Marple was not present for this particular examination, having been firmly and not unkindly redirected toward the lane by Constable Briggs, who had evidently been given some instruction on the subject of well-meaning elderly ladies and the preservation of scenes. She was not especially troubled by this. She had seen the kitchen twice already, and she had the alarm clock and the napkin ring settled in her mind, with the comfortable precision of objects placed on a reliable shelf. What she had not yet done and now turned her attention to with the pleasant purposefulness of a woman with a free afternoon and a specific destination in mind was speak at some length with Gertrude Bell.
Gertrude Bell lived in a narrow terrace house in Back Lane which ran parallel to the high street and was connected to it by two covered passages that the village referred to as the entries for reasons lost to any living memory.
The house was kept with the defensive neatness of someone who takes disorder as a personal affront, and the step was whitened, and the curtains were straight, and the small front garden contained nothing that had not been either deliberately planted or summarily removed. Gertrude answered the door in her second apron, which indicated she'd expected a visitor of middling importance, not important enough for the sitting room, not unimportant enough to catch her without an apron at all. She admitted Miss Marple to the front parlor and produced tea with the speed of someone who had been thinking about it since before it was asked for, and they sat in the two chairs beside the window that overlooked the entry, and spoke for the better part of an hour. Gertrude Bell had done Miss Ly's laundry for the past 11 years. She knew, in consequence, the precise rhythms of her household with the thoroughess of a naturalist who has spent a decade observing the same small territory. She knew which days Miss Lyall changed her bed linen, and which days she preferred her tablecloths returned pressed with a center crease rather than diagonally, and she knew that Miss Lyall rose at 6:00 in the morning with the reliable regularity of a mechanism that has been correctly wound, and has never given anyone reason to suspect it of imprecision.
6:00, Gertrude confirmed, setting her cup down with a small, decisive sound.
winter and summer alike, she told me herself when I first took on the laundry, because she said she liked everything arranged for eight, and that gave her two hours, which she considered sufficient.
2 hours, she repeated, with the air of someone quoting a philosophical position for washing, dressing, breakfast, and correspondence. She was precise about it, and she never varied the time, Miss Marple asked. Not that I ever heard of, and I should have heard. This was not said with any particular vanity. It was simply a statement of practical fact, and Miss Marple accepted it as such. The alarm clock then settled that matter rather firmly. It had been touched by someone who did not know, or perhaps had not thought carefully enough about the exact hour at which Beatrice Lyall began her day. Someone who had set it to an hour that seemed plausibly early, without knowing that Miss Ly's particular brand of precision was not approximated by plausibility, but governed by exact and long-established routine. 20 5 was early enough to seem convincing to anyone who had not thought the matter through. It was the sort of hour that spoke of earnestness, of discipline, of the kind of stringent character that Beatrice L was known to possess. But it was the wrong hour, and the wrongness of it was quite as informative, Miss Marple reflected, as though someone had chockked a note upon the kitchen wall. Inspector Slack, when Miss Marple encountered him later that afternoon in the lane outside the cottage, was pursuing a somewhat different line of thought. He had been speaking with Mrs. Har Greavves, who had recalled with a slightly increased clarity that tends to arrive in such matters after the first official inquiry has confirmed their significance, that she had heard raised voices from the direction of Chapel Lane on Saturday evening, sometime after the fate had closed, but while there was still sufficient light to see by, she could not say whose voices precisely, nor could she say with complete confidence that they had come from the cottage rather than simply from the lane, but she was firm on the point that they had been raised, and that one of them had been female. Slack had also through Constable Briggs established that Edward Kredock had visited Miss Ly's cottage on the previous Wednesday evening, 3 days before the fate, in connection with what Edward himself described, with visible discomfort, as a private financial matter. He had admitted when pressed that the visit had concerned a sum of money he had borrowed from Miss Lyall some months before his departure to London, which had not been repaid, and that Miss Lyle had recently written to him, expressing a wish that the matter be attended to before it became inconvenient to either party. "A loan," Slack said to Miss Marple, with the air of someone presenting conclusive evidence to a slightly slow witness. a loan that hadn't been repaid, a man back from London in financial difficulties, and raised voices heard from the lane.
"Yes," said Miss Marple thoughtfully. "I had heard something of the loan."
"There's your motive," Slack said. "It is certainly a motive of a kind," Miss Marple agreed with perfect pleasantness.
Slack looked at her with the expression he generally wore when she agreed with him, which combined satisfaction at the agreement with a faint and not entirely comfortable sense that something in the vicinity of the agreement was not quite as it appeared. He replaced his notebook in his breast pocket and departed up the lane at a purposeful pace, and Miss Marple stood for a moment looking after him with the benign and faintly maternal expression that she occasionally directed at persons who had concluded with great efficiency the wrong thing.
The cottage did not feel searched, she had noted that morning, and she noted it again now in its absence, so to speak, by standing in the kitchen doorway and feeling in the way that long observation of domestic spaces had taught her to feel what sort of event a room had recently contained. Robbery, even untidy robbery, leaves a room feeling disturbed. Things are displaced, surfaces are scanned, drawers are opened and imperfectly closed. The particular emotional residue of someone looking urgently for something external to themselves, money, valuables, documents, is as distinct to a careful observer as the smell of a fire that has been recently put out. Miss Ly's kitchen felt none of that. It felt instead as though someone had stood in it for a long time after something happened, and had then, with considerable deliberateness, made it as correct as they could manage. The dishes washed and dried and returned to the dresser. The napkin folded into its ring, the alarm clock wound and set. The table cleared and the chairs pushed in, the surface of the room restored as nearly as possible to its habitual appearance. It was, Miss Marple thought, the work of someone who cared deeply about order, or who was attempting to suggest that Miss Lyall had been in this room quite normally, going about her perfectly ordinary evening, and had then simply and inexplicably ceased to be in it. She went away from the cottage and walked the long way back through the village along the footpath that ran between the churchyard wall and the allotments. And she thought about the particular quality of that restoration.
It had been careful. It had been thorough. It had also been imperfect because perfection requires knowledge.
And the person who had tidied Beatric Lyle's kitchen had not quite had sufficient knowledge of Beatric L's habits to do it correctly. They had not known about the clock. They had not known about the napkin, and there was the bread, which she had not yet fully considered, but which she intended to.
She was still thinking about this when she encountered Edward Krakock at the style where the aotment path met Church Street, and he was in the condition she had half expected to find him in. Pale, agitated, and carrying in his face the expression of someone who has been lying about something, and has discovered rather too late that lying about things to a police inspector is significantly less comfortable than lying about them to oneself. He greeted her with visible relief, which told her several things at once. Miss Marple, he said, I suppose you've heard, the inspector seems to think. He stopped and rubbed the back of his neck with the habitual gesture of a man whose thoughts have outpaced his words. It was a loan. That's all it was.
I borrowed money from Miss Lyle before I went to London, and I hadn't managed to pay it back yet, and yes, I went to speak to her about it on Wednesday because she wrote to me, and I thought I ought to go in person rather than write back and make it seem as though I wasn't taking it seriously. That's all. I see, said Miss Marple. I didn't go near the cottage on Saturday evening, he said.
After the fate, I walked down by the river for a bit because I needed some air, and then I went back to Helens and had supper. You can ask her. I am sure Inspector Slack will, Miss Marple said gently. He looked at her with a slightly desperate sincerity of someone who very much wants to be believed, and has the ill fortune to look at this precise moment, rather, as though he should not be. His eyes were honest and unhappy, and his hands, she noticed, were not particularly steady, but they were the unsteadiness of anxiety rather than concealment. The look of a man who is something embarrassing to admit rather than something dreadful to hide. The loan was for £300, he said abruptly, as though getting it out in one movement would make it easier. I should have repaid it 6 months ago. I know that. She knew it. But she wasn't. He paused. She wasn't unkind about it. That's what I want someone to understand. She wasn't unkind about it at all. She simply expected it to be sorted out, which was her way, and I was going to sort it out.
Miss Marple regarded him with the quiet, considering attention that she brought to most people, and that most people found after a moment considerably more comfortable than they had initially expected.
I believe you, she said simply, "And I think, Mr. Kraock, that what will matter in the end is not the loan at all." He looked at her uncertainly. Then what will matter? Something much smaller, Miss Marple said, and smiled at him with the serenity of someone who already knows, at least in outline, the shape of the answer, and is content to let the details arrange themselves as they will.
She continued up Church Street toward home, and the afternoon light was long and golden across the village rooftops, and she thought about the kitchen at Chapel Lane, and the clock set for the wrong hour. And she thought also with the same quiet attention about Helen Kredock and the particular tenderness with which a person speaks about a life they have for their own private reasons decided to feel sorry for. Chapter 4.
The napkin returned to the silver ring.
Monday morning arrived in St. Mary me with a thin covering of cloud that softened the light without quite obscuring it, and the village went about its early business in the subdued and slightly self-conscious manner of a community that is conscious of being at present the sight of something unresolved. The bread was collected, the milk was taken in, the post office opened at its customary hour, and Mrs. Hargreaves could be observed through the bakery window, arranging the Monday display of cottage loaves and current buns with her usual exactitude, though she paused rather more frequently than usual to speak with customers at the counter. Miss Marple had slept well, as she generally did when a problem had settled itself sufficiently in her mind to become interesting rather than merely troubling, and she rose at her habitual hour, breakfasted on toast and a boiled egg, and then sat for a short while in the garden, with her knitting and the pleasant April light coming steadily through the apple blossom, before making her way at 9 to back lane. Gertrude Bell received her with a slightly compressed expression that indicated she had something further to say and had been waiting with some impatience for the opportunity to say it. "I've been thinking," Gertrude said without preamble as she poured the tea about the supper things. Miss Marple settled herself in the parlor chair and arranged her knitting bag beside her with the unhurried composure of someone who has all morning and intends to use it thoughtfully. "What about them?" she asked. They were washed. Gertrude set the teapot down with the precise click of someone placing emphasis. I spoke to Constable Briggs yesterday evening because I felt it was something he ought to know, and he said he'd pass it along to Inspector Slack, though I can't say I have a great deal of confidence that Inspector Slack will understand why it matters. She folded her hands in her lap. Miss Lyall had arthritis in both hands. Not severe, but enough to make hot water uncomfortable in the evenings when the joints had stiffened from the day's use. She washed her breakfast things in the morning, and she left the supper things in the rack, soaking until the following morning and did them then.
It was her habit. It had been her habit for at least 4 years, because I first noticed it when I came to collect the Tuesday laundry once, and she apologized for the state of the draining board."
Miss Marple nodded, her needles moving at their quiet, meditative pace. "The supper things in the cottage had been washed and dried and put away," Gertrude continued correctly. everything in the right place on the dresser, but they had been washed at night, which Beatrice Lyle never did, and they had been dried with the blue striped cloth, which she kept for glassear, not for crockery. She paused. Whoever washed those dishes knew where things went, but they didn't know which cloth was which. No, said Miss Marple softly, someone who had been in that kitchen as a visitor rather than as a resident. someone who knew the general arrangement of the room well enough to put things away without hesitation, but not the particular distinctions that only habit preserves. Gertrude gave a short, satisfied nod. That's it exactly.
the marmalade on the napkin ring Miss Marple had not yet mentioned to Gertrude, because she had wished to arrive at it by way of conversation rather than direct inquiry, the oblique approach being, in her experience, considerably more productive than the frontal one. She now allowed the conversation to move of its own accord through several adjacent topics. The quality of the supper napkins Miss Lyle had favored, her preference for Irish linen over the continental variety, her habit of keeping the silver rings polished to a standard that Gertrude described as frankly excessive and clearly admirable, until Gertrude herself arrived by the natural gravity of the subject at the question of the ring's current condition.
I noticed the staining on the underside when I looked at it yesterday. Gertrude said in the tone of a professional confronting an insult to her craft under the fold of the napkin. I pointed it out to Constable Briggs and he wrote it in his book, though I couldn't tell you what he made of it. What color would you say it was? Miss Marple asked with a mildness that might have deceived someone who did not know her. Orange, brown, sticky preserves, I should think, or possibly marmalade. Gertude paused.
Beatrice Lyle couldn't stand marmalade.
She'd had it served to her by a particularly trying family she worked for in her earlier years, and she'd never recovered her regard for it. She kept none in the cottage, never had. "I see," said Miss Marple, and her needles continued their quiet work, and she said nothing further on the subject, though a small additional piece of the pattern had settled with a faint and almost audible click into its proper position.
She left Gertrude Bell at 11:00 and walked up through the village to call upon Dolly Bantry, who lived in a state of comfortable, mild disorder, that Miss Marple found after Gertrude's parlor rather restful. Dolly was in the garden attempting to do something constructive with a climbing rose that had developed opinions of its own about the direction of its growth, and she abandoned this project with evident relief, and came to sit on the garden bench with two cups of coffee that she produced from the kitchen in approximately 3 minutes, which gave some indication of how urgently she'd been hoping for company.
"There are a great many theories in the village," Dolly said, with the air of someone reporting from a survey. "Mrs. Hollis thinks it was a from the Dorchester road, which I don't believe for a moment. And the reverend thinks there may have been some kind of medical episode along the riverbank that the search party simply missed. And Edward Kraock looks absolutely wretched, which half the villagers decided means he's guilty, and the other half has decided means he's sensitive.
And what does Helen Kraock say? Miss Marle asked. Dolly considered this.
Helen doesn't say a great deal, actually. She's been very busy being helpful to everyone and bringing things to people, and she asks after how everyone is feeling about it all in that very attentive way she has. But she doesn't actually offer much of an opinion herself, she paused, holding her coffee cup, which is a bit unlike her, I think. Usually Helen has a view on things, a very gentle view, but a view.
Miss Marple thought of Helen at the bakery yard, moving between the gathered women with her covered plate and her focused, careful kindness, and she thought of the three separate occasions on which Helen had described Beatric L's life as lonely, a characterization that was not, strictly speaking, a view about the disappearance itself, but was nonetheless the expression of a particular and considered perspective.
It was, she reflected, rather interesting that Helen had chosen to offer that view with such consistency, and equally interesting that she had offered very little else. She walked home through the churchyard in the early afternoon, taking the longer way around the east end of the church, partly because the path was pleasant, and partly because it brought her past the u hedge, and allowed her to observe, without any particular appearance of observation, the lay of the ground behind it. The hedge was dense and well established, its inner face a deep undisturbed green. Beyond it the ground sloped slightly away toward the church's disused kitchen garden, where a potting shed of considerable age stood with its door latched and its single window opaque with the accumulated grime of several seasons.
Miss Marple paused for a moment and looked at the shed with the thoughtful attention she might have given to an unfamiliar passage in a familiar book, then continued on her way. She was back in her sitting room at 2 with her knitting and a fresh pot of tea when Dr. Haddock arrived on his way back from a call in the village and accepted the offer of a cup with the promptness of a man who has been on his feet since 8:00 and is not above admitting it. Slack is working on the assumption that Krakox the man, he said, stretching his legs comfortably before him and regarding the ceiling, the loan, the voices, the muddy shoes from his walk by the river. It builds up rather neatly if you don't examine any one piece of it too closely.
Yes, said Miss Marple. It does. He glanced at her. I take it you examine things too closely as a general rule. I find it a useful habit, she said pleasantly. He was quiet for a moment, then said with the directness of a practical man raising a practical point.
She's been gone since Saturday evening.
If she went into the river, they'd have found her by now. The current isn't particularly strong this time of year, and they've checked all the likely places twice, he looked at his tea.
Which means she's somewhere else, and the question of where is rather more pressing than it might appear if you go on thinking about river paths and medical episodes. I agree entirely, Miss Marple said.
The afternoon passed quietly. Miss Marple finished the row she was working on and began the next and thought about marmalade and about the particular domestic knowledge that is acquired not through cleaning and laundry but through sitting at someone's table and taking meals and through arriving in someone's kitchen for a cup of tea on a cold afternoon and standing at the worktop while the kettle was filled and noticing without making any effort to notice how things were arranged and where the silver rings were kept and what was on the shelf above the breadboard. She thought about the kind of friendship in which such knowledge accumulates quietly over years, entirely unremarked, until it becomes the sort of intimate and unconscious familiarity that is quite impossible to manufacture in an emergency, but which an intelligent person might nonetheless attempt to simulate if the necessity arose.
She thought about who had sat at Beatric L's table. She thought about who had brought marmalade. Outside the sitting room window the April afternoon softened toward its close, and the garden held its breath in the particular golden stillness of a late spring evening, and Miss Marple sat with her knitting and her thoughts, and the quiet, patient certainty that the smallest things in the end are always the ones that matter most. Chapter 5. Bread cut thick at one end of the loaf.
Tuesday brought a return of proper April weather, a cool, bright morning with a brisk wind that moved the young leaves along the lane, and carried faintly the smell of turned earth from the allotments. Miss Marple put on her coat and her stoutest walking shoes, and made her way to Chapel Lane at 9, having first telephoned Inspector Slack's office, and been informed by a constable that the inspector was not at present available, but that she was welcome to leave a message, which she declined to do. She had formed over the past two days a settled and particular wish to look again at the bread. She had mentioned it to no one. She had thought about it a great deal. The loaf on the kitchen table had been visible during both her earlier visits to the cottage.
A standard tin loaf 3/4 consumed, sitting on the breadboard beside the blue ring sugar bowl, and she had registered it both times with the peripheral but reliable attention she gave to the contents of rooms generally.
It had not seemed at first to require any special consideration. It was simply a loaf of bread on a kitchen table, which is among the most unremarkable things in England. It was only in retrospect, when she had been sitting with her knitting on Monday afternoon, and thinking about the particular domestic knowledge required to tidy a kitchen correctly, that she had thought again about the bread, and found herself wondering about the final slice.
Constable Briggs was at the cottage. He was a conscientious young man with a round, earnest face, and the slightly overwhelmed heir of someone who has been left in charge of something larger than his training has quite prepared him for.
And he admitted Miss Marple to the kitchen with the careful courtesy of a person who knows he is not obliged to do so, and has decided on balance that the reasons for doing so outweigh the reasons against. The loaf was where it had been. The kitchen was undisturbed in the preserved slightly airless way of rooms that have been officially closed and awaiting for further instruction.
The curtains were still drawn, though someone had opened the window a careful 2 in, and the light that came in was pale and narrow and lay in a long strip across the clean surface of the kitchen table. Miss Marple stood beside the breadboard and looked at the loaf with the unhurried attention she might have given to a letter written in a hand she was working to identify. The loaf had been cut cleanly and thoroughly from right to left, and the slices lay in the familiar diminishing sequence of a loaf that has been used across several days, each cut evidently made with care and consistency, except the last. The final slice at the heel end of the loaf was considerably thicker than the preceding ones. not carelessly thick, not torn or compressed, but cut cleanly and at a reasonable angle, simply cut much wider than all the slices that had come before it, perhaps twice the width, perhaps a little more. She stood looking at it for a moment, and then she said to the room in general, and Constable Briggs in particular, "Do you happen to know if anyone has spoken to Dr. Haydock about the bread?" Constable Briggs looked at the loaf with the expression of a person who has walked past the same object 40 times without considering it. "The bread, Miss Marple, this last slice," she said, "it is quite different from the others." He came and looked at it with the obedient attention of a man who does not yet see the relevance, but is willing to be shown. "It's a bit thicker, I suppose," he said. Miss Lyall, Miss Marple said, was a woman of very regular habits in all domestic matters, as I think we have established.
Gertrude Bell told me that she found Beatric's kitchen a model of orderly practice in every particular, she paused. When a person is anxious or frightened or in a state of considerable distress, fine motor precision deteriorates before gross motor control does, the hands still function. But the small trained judgments, the habitual calibration of how much pressure to apply, how far to draw a knife across a loaf, those become unreliable. The mind is occupied elsewhere, and the body, deprived of its usual quiet guidance, makes a slightly larger gesture than it intended.
Constable Briggs looked at the bread again with considerably more interest than before. You're saying someone else cut that slice? I am saying, Miss Marple said gently, that whoever cut that slice was not thinking, as Beatric Lyall invariably thought, about the bread. She thanked Constable Briggs, who wrote something in his notebook with the expression of a man newly converted to a particular line of inquiry, and walked back up the lane toward the village at the measured pace that suited both her joints and her thinking.
The bread told her several things, taken together with what she already knew. It told her that someone had been in the kitchen during the evening, not merely after the fact, not merely in the course of the restoration, but present as a participant in the ordinary domestic scene of supper. Someone who had sat or stood in that kitchen, taken bread from the board, eaten, and only afterward found themselves in the position of needing to restore what they had disrupted. The washing of the dishes, the folding of the napkin, the setting of the clock, all of that was subsequent. The thick slice of bread was prior. It belonged to the evening itself. She was still arranging these reflections into their proper order when she encountered Dr. Haddock outside the post office where he had stopped to collect a parcel. I was going to come and find you this afternoon, he said, falling into step beside her with the easy companionship of someone who has shared a great many village pavements with a person and finds the practice agreeable. Slack has been talking to people about Edward Kredock's walk by the river. Has he? said Miss Marle. His shoes were muddy at the heels on Saturday night when he arrived at his sister's house for supper. Helen mentioned it in passing apparently, and someone passed it along to Briggs, who passed it to Slack, who has decided it's significant. He tucked the parcel under his arm. I don't say it isn't. A man who walks by the river at dusk and subsequently can't produce anyone but his sister to account for his time does look rather exposed. He does," Miss Marple agreed. "And yet I have been thinking about the bread." She explained what she had observed briefly and without theatrical emphasis as they walked. Heddock listened with a particular quality of attention he brought to clinical descriptions.
Precise, engaged, and entirely free of the tendency to interrupt that afflicted many of his sex when receiving information from elderly women. "That's interesting," he said when she had finished. You're suggesting he or she was there for supper. I'm suggesting that whoever cut that slice did so in a state of disturbance, and that the disturbance preceded the restoration of the kitchen rather than causing it. She paused, which means the evening did not begin as a violent occasion. It began as a domestic one, two people in a kitchen, bread on the board, supper. Haduk was quiet for a moment. That changes the character of it rather considerably.
Yes, said Miss Marple. It does.
They parted at the corner of the high street, and Miss Marple continued to the drapers, where she had a small errand concerning a sce of the blue wool she was using for her current project, and she accomplished this errand with her customary efficiency, and then stood for a moment outside the shop in the cool April air, doing what she frequently did in the middle of an investigation, and what frequently appeared to anyone observing her to be nothing at all.
She was thinking about Edward Kraock, not about his muddy shoes, which she did not consider particularly significant, and not about his loan, which he had already assessed and set aside. She was thinking about something Dolly Bantry had said on Monday, that Edward looked wretched, and that half the village had decided this meant he was guilty, and the other half had decided it meant he was sensitive. Miss Marple thought it meant neither, or rather that it meant something more specific than either.
She had met Edward at the style on Sunday afternoon, and she had looked at his face in his hands, and the way he held himself under the weight of the inspector's suspicion, and she had thought then, and continued to think, that he was not a man carrying the private knowledge of a violent act. He was a man carrying a different kind of knowledge, the kind that is not about what you yourself have done, but about what you suspect, or half suspect, or are terribly afraid of suspecting about someone you love. He was frightened for his sister. She was nearly sure of it.
Not entirely sure, she permitted herself the discipline of that reservation, but nearly. The wretched look was not the look of guilt. It was the look of a man who has begun to understand something, and cannot bring himself to follow the understanding to its destination. She wondered how much he knew. She wondered how long he had known it. She walked home along the back lane, and put away her wool, and made herself a cup of tea, and sat with it beside the sitting room window. watching the garden and thinking about the quality of Edward's distress.
She had known over the years a number of people who had discovered unpleasant truths about those close to them, and she had observed that the discovery generally produced one of two effects.
In people of a certain character, it produced a cold, hard clarity, a withdrawing of regard, a straightening of the spine, a decisive rearrangement of loyalties. In people of a warmer and less decided character, it produced exactly what she saw in Edward, a wideeyed, helpless, slightly sick quality of not knowing what to do, like a man standing at the edge of something he hadn't expected to find, and hasn't yet decided whether to step back from or step toward. Edward, she thought, was not a bad young man at all. He had debts and a weak streak where money was concerned, and a tendency to rely rather too heavily on people more capable than himself. But there was no malice in him, and rather a lot of feeling, and the feeling at present was entirely directed outward towards someone else, and it was doing him considerable damage. She refilled her cup and allowed her thoughts to move at their own pace toward the matter of the marmalade. She had not yet been to Helen Kredock's cottage. She intended to go, not yet.
The moment was not yet right, and in her experience the right moment in such matters arrives of its own accord, and is not improved by being anticipated, but soon. She wanted first to know a little more about the friendship between the two women, and about the particular texture of their association over the years, and she had in mind a conversation with Reverend Emory, who had known them both in his quiet and slightly forgetful way for as long as either had been in the village. The afternoon was settling into its comfortable midweek stillness, and a blackbird was singing with tremendous conviction somewhere in the garden hedge, and Miss Marple sat with her tea and her knitting, and the steady, unhurried patience of a woman who has seen a great many springs come and go, and knows from long observation, that the answers to difficult questions, like the season itself, cannot be rushed, but that they will, given sufficient light and time, eventually arrive. Chapter 6.
a laundry receipt tucked inside the psalter. Wednesday was the day that Reverend Emry sorted the church himnels.
This was not a task that required sorting in any urgent or practical sense. The himynelss were so far as anyone could determine in perfectly adequate order and had been since the previous autumn when Mrs. Emery had reorganized them by size. But the reverend had developed over many years of parish life a number of recurring small tasks that serve the same function as a garden does for certain temperaments. They occupied the hands sufficiently to free the mind for the kind of diffuse unhurried reflection that his calling required and that a sitting room with its furniture and its expectations did not easily permit. He sorted the himynelss on Wednesdays. He polished the lectern brass on Friday mornings. He walked the churchyard perimeter on Sunday evenings after even songong. These habits were well known in the village and regarded with the tolerant affection reserved for the amiable eccentricities of a clergyman who is in all more important respects entirely reliable.
Miss Marple arrived at the church at 10 and found him at the south pew working his way through a stack of himnelss with a gentle exploratory attention of a man who is looking partly at what is in his hands and partly at something considerably further away.
He greeted her with the warm, slightly surprised pleasure that characterized most of his social encounters, not because he had forgotten she might come, but because the warmth was entirely genuine and renewed itself each time, regardless of expectation.
Miss Marple, how very good. I was hoping someone sensible would appear. He set down the himynel he was holding and gestured toward the pew opposite, with the unaffected hospitality of a man in his own sitting room. I've been thinking a great deal about all this business, and I find I keep arriving at the same point, and then losing my thread. What point is that?" Miss Marple asked, settling herself. "Miss Lyall," he said simply, "he was not an easy woman in many of the ordinary social ways, but she was a thoroughly honest one, and I have been wondering whether that honesty had lately put her in the way of something she would have found difficult to manage quietly." He polished his spectacles with a corner of his cassich and replaced them with the slightly altered expression of a man who has improved his vision and hopes it will help. She came to see me 3 weeks ago about the parish accounts. There had been some small discrepancy, nothing significant, simply a matter of a column added incorrectly, the sort of thing that happens when one uses last year's ledger as a template and fails to notice that two figures have carried over from a previous entry. I mention it only because she was very firm that it be corrected in the record, even though the actual sum was less than 10 shillings.
That sounds consistent with what one knew of her, Miss Marple said, entirely.
But at the end of our meeting, she said something that I have been turning over in my mind since she disappeared. He looked at the middle distance with the expression of a man consulting an internal record. She said that she had recently become aware of a situation involving someone she was fond of, and that she was not certain whether speaking about it openly would help or harm, but that she was becoming increasingly sure that continued silence was making things worse rather than better. He paused. And then Mrs. Emmery called me to lunchon, and the thread was rather lost, and I have regretted the interruption ever since. Did she give any indication, Miss Marple asked carefully, of the nature of the situation? She said it was a private matter of some years standing. He picked up another himnil and turned it in his hands without opening it. And she said, and this is the part I find I keep returning to, that the person involved had been carrying it alone for far too long, and that whatever the short-term discomfort of honesty, the long-term cost of secrecy was considerably higher.
He looked up. She was quoting herself. I thought it had the sound of a conclusion she had reached through considerable reflection.
Miss Marple sat with this for a moment, watching the light move through the south window and lay its colored patterns across the flagstone floor.
Outside the wind moved through the u hedge with a sound like a long considering breath. It was at this point that the psalter presented itself.
Reverend Emory had moved on to the third stack of himnelss, and he was lifting them one at a time, and checking their spines in a manner that was more ritual than practical, when something slid from between the pages of the fourth himnel, and fell to the pew with the flat, decisive sound of paper landing on wood.
He picked it up with the automatic attention of a man accustomed to retrieving things from between pew cushions and hass, and looked at it.
"Good heavens," he said in the mild tone he applied to most surprises. "This appears to be a receipt. He passed it to Miss Marple, who took it and read it with the composed attention of someone who has been waiting in some not entirely conscious sense for precisely this kind of small and pointed revelation. It was a laundry receipt from Gertrude Bell's establishment dated the previous Thursday, 4 days before the feat. It was made out for two blouses, a skirt, and a set of bed linens. It was not made out to Beatric Lyall. It was made out to Mrs. H. Kraock, Church Street, St. Mary me. Miss Marple read it twice, set it on the pew beside her, and looked at the south window for a moment without appearing to see it. Then she said, "How do you suppose this came to be in Miss L's?"
Reverend Emory was polishing his spectacles again, which meant he was thinking, "I can only imagine Beatrice placed it there herself. She brought her saltter to every service and to most parish meetings. If she wished to keep something safe without taking it home, tucking it inside would be a natural enough impulse." He replaced his spectacles. But why she would wish to keep a receipt belonging to Ellen Kradic is quite another question. Yes, said Miss Mar. It is. She left the church at quart 11 with the receipt in her coat pocket, having asked Reverend Emory if she might borrow it temporarily, and offering no explanation beyond the pleasantly vague indication that it might prove relevant, which he accepted with the uncomplaining trust of a man long accustomed to proceeding on faith rather than complete information. She walked not toward the village, but away from it, along the path that ran beside the churchyard wall toward the fieldgate, because she wanted 10 minutes of movement and open air in which to think without the interruptions that the village street invariably provided. She thought about Gertrude Bell, not about what Gertrude had already told her, that was settled and clear, but about what Gertrude had not told her, which might be considerable. Gertrude Bell knew every household in St. Mary me through its laundry, and she knew Helen Kraock's household as well as any. She was a discreet woman in the professional sense. She did not gossip about her clients linen in the way that Mrs. Hargreaves gossiped about their custom.
But discretion of the professional kind was not the same as a complete absence of knowledge, and Miss Marple suspected that Gertrude's knowledge on the subject of Helen Kredock's laundry arrangements was both more detailed and more interesting than she had thus far chosen to share.
She turned back toward the village and went without particular haste to backlane. Gertrude received her with a slightly different expression from the one she had worn on Monday. Still composed, still precise, but carrying somewhere behind the composure the contained look of a woman who's been wondering when a particular conversation would arrive and has been forming her position on it in the interval. You found something, Gertrude said. It was not quite a question. A receipt, Miss Marple said. yours made out to Helen Kradic and tucked inside Miss Lal's psalter. She watched Gertrude's hands which did not move. I think she continued gently that you know something about the arrangements behind this receipt and I think perhaps that you didn't mention it before because you weren't certain it was relevant, but I believe it may be. Gertrude was quiet for a moment. Then she sat down, which was unusual for her in her own kitchen.
Mrs. Kraock came to me about 2 years ago, she said at last. She asked me a favor. She asked me to collect certain laundry parcels on her behalf from another address and to fold them into her own collection before returning them. She didn't want her brother to see certain items arriving at the house.
What kind of items? Miss Marple asked.
Baby linens, Gertrude said. Very small things cared for and kept clean, but old, not new, not for a current infant.
She looked at her hands now, and her voice was level and careful in the way of a person who has thought about how to say something, and chosen the plainest words available. I assumed they were keepsakes, the kind of thing a woman keeps for reasons she prefers not to explain. I said nothing about it to anyone, because it was not my business, and because Mrs. Kraock was always kind and perfectly correct in her dealings with me. Miss Marple nodded very quietly. Miss Lyall, Gertrude continued, came to me in January and asked me in her direct way whether I'd noticed anything unusual about Mrs. Kredock<unk>'s laundry arrangements. I told her what I have told you because Miss Lyall was the sort of person it was not productive to be indirect with. She paused. She thanked me and said that she'd already suspected as much and that she intended to handle the matter with care.
Gertrude looked up, and in her sharp, weathered face there was something that was not quite distress, but was not entirely composed either. She said that it was not a thing to be left alone any longer. Those were her words exactly.
Miss Marple walked home through the April afternoon, and the receipt was in her pocket, and the shape of the mystery had shifted quietly, irrevocably, and without any single dramatic moment to mark the change, from the question of who had been in Beatric Lyle's kitchen, into the altogether deeper, and more sorrowful question of what had been, for a very long time inside Helen Kraock's heart. The two questions, she understood now, were the same question. They had always been the same question. She had simply needed the receipt to see it clearly. Chapter 7. The wheelbarrow standing behind the u hedge. Thursday arrived with a change in the weather that the village had been expecting for several days without being entirely prepared for when it came. The clouds that had been building since Tuesday evening finally delivered in the small hours a steady and purposeful rain that continued through the morning and had the effect of making the village look both cleaner and more serious than it had appeared in the pale Easter sunshine of the previous week. The lane surfaces darkened. The uge along the parish wall collected the water in small perfect drops along every horizontal branch. The smell of wet earth and stone came pleasantly through windows opened a cautious inch, and the village went about its Thursday business under umbrellas, and with the slightly resigned cheerfulness of a community long accustomed to the English April's readiness to revise its earlier optimism.
Miss Marple was at her sitting room window at 8:00, watching the rain move across her garden, in the companionable way she had always found it did when she was thinking, when Dolly Bantry arrived at the front door with her Macintosh hat rather thoroughly defeated by the weather and the news that they had found Beatric Lyall. It was not, as it turned out, the river path after all. Tom Crips from the garage had gone to look for a piece of equipment he had lent to Mr. Pharaoh the Sexton some weeks before and had never seen returned. a long-handled dber which had no conceivable connection with anything. And in the course of his search through the outbuildings around the church perimeter, he had opened the door of the disused potting shed beyond the uh hedge and found beneath a considerable quantity of old hesshin sacking and a rusted cold frame leaning against the far wall what he had immediately and correctly understood to be a very grave discovery. He had gone directly to Constable Briggs, and Constable Briggs had gone directly to Inspector Slack, and Inspector Slack had gone directly to the shed, and Dr. Haydock had been summoned before 9:00, and had made his examination with the quiet, professional thoroughess that he brought to the more difficult demands of a country practice. Miss Marple heard all of this from Dolly in the first 10 minutes, and then she made tea, because it seemed the right thing to do, and because it gave both of them something purposeful to do with their hands, while the weight of what had been found arranged itself into its proper shape in their minds. Dolly Bantry was a woman of considerable practical fortitude. She had been through enough in her own life to have developed a durable kind of steadiness, but she was also a woman of genuine feeling, and she sat at the kitchen table with her cup and looked at the surface of the tea for a little while without speaking. "Poor soul," she said at last. "She deserved better than that shed." "Yes," said Miss Marple.
"She did. She learned the details from Dr. Hok later that morning when he stopped at her gate on his way back from the village and came in for 20 minutes and spoke plainly and without unnecessary elaboration which he had always valued in him. The death had resulted from a blow to the head consistent with striking the edge of a hard surface at considerable force. A stone sink, he thought from the angle and the nature of the injury. It was not, he said carefully, the kind of injury that necessarily implied deliberate intention. It was the kind that could result from a fall or from a struggle or from some combination of the two that would be difficult to distinguish from the outside. The sacking, Miss Marple said. How much effort would that have required?
Considerable, Haddock said. He looked at his tea. The cold frame as well. It was positioned with some purpose. Someone spent real time in that shed, he paused.
In the dark, I'd imagine or very nearly.
She considered this. The shed was, as she knew from her walk along the east perimeter on Monday, a good 40 yards from the cottage on Chapel Lane, and perhaps 20 from the rear gate of the churchyard. The U-G provided a thorough screen from the lane and from the church itself. At that hour, the post fate, post supper hour of a Saturday evening in midappril, the village would have been quiet, the light largely gone, the gardens and paths empty of pedestrians.
Someone who knew the area, who had walked these paths in the ordinary course of village life, would have known the shed was there and would have known it was disused. "The wheelbarrow," Haddock said as though reading a shared list. Slack's people found it inside the shed alongside everything else. One handle had a stain on it, dried and brownish, but not blood. Organic matter of some kind. They're looking at it.
Miss Marple sat down her cup with the precise quietness of a woman who has just had the final term of a long equation supplied to her and has found that it resolves everything as she had expected it would. The wheelbarrow with its stained handle, the marmalade on the napkin ring, the wrong drying cloth, the alarm clock set for 20 5, the thick slice of bread cut by an unsteady hand.
She had the shape of it all now, and it was a shape she recognized, not because she had encountered this specific sequence of events before, but because she had encountered across a long life in a small village, the particular human configuration from which this sequence had proceeded.
She knew what it looked like when someone had spent years carrying a secret that had grown heavier than they had anticipated. She knew what it looked like when another person, out of genuine care rather than malice, decided that the secret had been carried long enough.
And she knew, with the sad, cleareyed recognition of someone who has seen it before, what it sometimes looked like when those two positions met in a small kitchen on a Saturday evening, and could not find any other way through.
Inspector Slack arrived at her gate at 11, and spoke with her for 20 minutes on the garden path, which was still damp from the morning's rain, but had largely dried by then in a thin April sunlight.
He had, she noted, moved from his earlier certainty about Edward Krauk to a somewhat broader field of consideration, though he had not yet moved far enough or in the right direction, and he conducted the conversation with the slightly aggressive efficiency of a man who has been surprised by circumstances and is compensating with increased speed. "The shed changes things," he said. "You don't move a body 40 yards by accident.
Someone knew what they were doing."
Someone knew where the shed was, Miss Marple agreed, which is a rather specific form of knowledge. Kredock grew up near here, Slack said. He might know these grounds perfectly well. He might, Miss Marple said. So might anyone who has attended this parish for the past several years and walk these paths in the ordinary way. Slack looked at her.
You have someone in mind. I have a great many things in mind, Miss Marple said pleasantly. I think what would be most productive, Inspector, would be for someone to examine the wheelbarrow rather carefully, and in particular to consider what kind of substance might produce a brownish stain on the handle of an implement stored in an unlit shed.
Slack wrote something in his notebook.
She could not see what it was, but she observed that he wrote it with a slightly reluctant decisiveness of a man following someone else's suggestion, while preferring to appear as though the thought had been available to him for some time. He left at 10 minutes to 12 and Miss Marple went inside and stood for a moment in the hallway without taking off her coat thinking about Edward Kraock. She thought about him as she had seen him at the style on Sunday.
Pale and shaken and carrying in his eyes that particular expression she had identified as protective fear. She thought about what he must have suspected and when he had arrived at Helen's for supper on Saturday evening.
He had found perhaps that Helen had not been at home when he arrived. or perhaps he had arrived to find her there, but altered in some way he could not quite account for. Too quiet, too careful, her hands very still on the table. He was a perceptive young man beneath his surface anxieties, she thought, and he would have noticed. And then in the days since, he had watched Inspector Slack construct a circumstantial case from his loan and his muddy shoes and his riverside walk, and he had answered the inspector's questions with the desperate half honesty of someone who is concealing nothing about himself but suspects terribly that his honesty on his own behalf might inadvertently illuminate something about someone else.
He had not lied to protect himself. He had been silent to protect her. It was, Miss Marple reflected, the most understandable thing in the world, and also, if it continued much longer, potentially the most damaging.
She thought about how to proceed. The right moment, she had told herself on Monday, would arrive of its own accord, and she had meant it. But the finding of Beatrice Lyall in the shed had changed the tempo of the matter. Inspector Slack was moving. He was moving in the wrong direction, but he was moving with purpose, and purpose in the wrong direction had a way of gathering its own momentum and producing consequences that were very difficult to reverse once they had been set in motion. She would go to Helen's cottage. Not today. Today was too sharpedged, too full of the morning's discovery, and a conversation conducted in the immediate aftermath of shock was a conversation in which the important things tended to become entangled with the acute things, and she wanted clarity rather than emotion, tomorrow perhaps, or the day after.
She would know when the moment was right. She had always known.
She went to the kitchen and made a fresh pot of tea and stood at the window while it drew, looking out at the garden where the rain had done considerable good to the early sweet peas climbing their string along the south-facing wall. And she thought about a woman who had carried a private grief for a very long time, and about the particular courage and the particular desperation that it sometimes required to continue carrying it when someone you trusted had decided, with the best of intentions, that the carrying should stop. The sweet peas were coming along very nicely. She thought she would need to tie in the new growth before the end of the week or it would get away from her. She poured her tea and attended to the business of the afternoon, and she did not think about the shed beyond the uh hedge or the wheelbarrow with its stained handle, or not in any way that was visible from the outside. But she thought about Helen Kredock. She thought about Helen Kraock a great deal. Chapter 8. Marmalade fingerprints on the cellar door. Friday morning came in quietly with a pale wash sky and the kind of stillness that sometimes follows a day of rain. Not the heavy stillness of a storm waiting to gather, but the lighter, more reflective kind that belongs to a world that has been thoroughly cleaned and is now simply sitting with the result. The birds were busy in Miss Marple's garden.
The sweet peas had advanced another half inch up their strings overnight, just as she had known they would. She had her breakfast, attended to three letters that had been waiting since Wednesday, and then sat for 20 minutes with her knitting, and the particular quality of inner composure that she had learned over many years, was the right condition in which to approach a conversation of some weight, not detachment. She had never found detachment either possible or desirable when dealing with the serious difficulties of human lives, but a kind of still, centered attentiveness, like a lamp turned to its steadiest flame.
She put on her coat at half 10 and walked to Church Street. Helen Kraock's cottage stood near the upper end of the street, set back from the pavement behind a small front garden that was maintained with the pleasant unshowy care of someone who takes genuine pleasure in growing things without requiring anyone to remark upon the fact. The front border held Orbrricia and early wall flowers in shades of purple and warm yellow and a climbing rose, still bare of leaves at this stage of the season, was trained with practiced patience along the cottage's south-facing front wall. It was a welcoming house, and it looked like what it was, the home of a woman who had made herself comfortable in a place, and intended to remain there. Helen answered the door herself and showed no surprise at seeing Miss Marple, though her face, in the brief unguarded moment before social habit reasserted itself, carried the particular expression of someone who has been expecting a visit of this kind for several days, and is experiencing in its arrival something not entirely distinguishable from relief. "Miss Marple," she said, "do come in. I've just made tea." The sitting room was comfortable and quiet and smelled pleasantly of beeswax and the pot of higher synths on the windows sill. The tea tray was already laid, which confirmed what the expression at the door had suggested, that this was not an unexpected call, whatever Helen chose to say about it. They sat on either side of the fireplace, where a small fire had been lit against the persistent coolness of the April morning, and Helen poured the tea with the steady, graceful movements that were habitual to her, and set the cups down precisely, and did not speak first. Miss Marple accepted her cup and looked around the room with the quiet, comprehensive attention that she applied to all domestic spaces, not intrusively but naturally, as a gardener looks at a garden, reading what is there without making any particular performance of the reading. On the far side of the room, beyond the settle and the small bookcase, a narrow door set into the interior wall led, presumably to the cellar steps. It was the kind of door that exists in all older English cottages of a certain type, low-framed, latched rather than knobbed, painted over several times in successive shades of cream, until the molding around its frame had softened to a gentle ridge.
Someone had repainted this particular door recently. She could see the slightly brighter patch where the new paint overlapped the old along the upper right corner of the frame. Below the latch on the wooden surface of the door itself, there was a smear. It was small, and it had been largely addressed, rubbed at, she thought, rather than properly cleaned, but it had the orange, brown, slightly sticky quality that she had come to recognize over the past 5 days as reliably as a signature. She did not look at it for more than a moment.
She looked away and looked at Helen, and Helen was looking at the fire.
I am glad you came, Helen said after a pause that was neither awkward nor entirely comfortable, but occupied the uncertain space between the two. I have been finding it rather difficult to know what to do. I imagine you have, Miss Marple said. Helen set her cup on the tray. Her hands, Miss Marple noticed, were steady in the deliberate, disciplined way of someone who has decided to be steady and is holding to that decision through an act of will rather than an absence of feeling. You know, Helen said it was not quite a question.
I have a fairly clear picture, Miss Marple said. I would rather hear it from you if you're willing. The fire shifted in the great, settling into a lower and more even burn. Outside a car passed in the lane, and its sound diminished comfortably into the ordinary Friday morning distance of the village. Helen looked at her hands for a moment, and then she looked up, and something in her face changed. not dramatically, not with the sudden yielding that sometimes accompanies confession, but with the gradual, almost imperceptible shift of a long-held tension, releasing at last in a direction it had been resisting for some time. Beatrice found out, Helen said, not recently. 2 or 3 years ago, I think, though she said nothing to me until this winter. She came to me in January just as she would directly and at 9:00 in the morning, and she told me that she had come across certain information through Gertrude, and through a letter I'd been foolish enough to leave in my bureau during the autumn, when she came to return a book, and I was out, and she thought she ought to speak to me about it plainly. She paused, and her composure held, but its edges were visible now in the way that the structure of something becomes visible when its surface wears through.
It was a long time ago, she said. Before I came to St. Mary me, I was living in Dorchester briefly between my husband's death and my coming here. It was a difficult period. I was not in a state to make careful decisions, and I did not make careful decisions, and the consequence was something I have carried since with a good deal of private difficulty and very little external acknowledgement. She looked at the window. a child, a daughter given up at birth and placed with a family in Bristol through a private arrangement.
She would be 9 years old now. Miss Marple was quiet. There was nothing useful to say in the space immediately following this, and she had learned long ago that the impulse to fill such spaces with something kind and conventional, was generally more for the comfort of the listener than the speaker. Beatrice was not unkind about it, Helen said after a moment. She was never unkind precisely. She was very clear. She said that the situation had been allowed to remain unresolved for too long and that Edward's return from London had made it actively dangerous because Edward had been making inquiries, financial inquiries, she thought, related to his difficulties, and had come across certain records, and she was not confident that he would manage whatever he discovered with either discretion or wisdom. A short pause. She was probably right about that.
and she proposed to speak to Reverend Emory. Miss Marple said she said that she had already spoken to him in outline. Helen said that she had raised the subject of private family matters requiring pastoral support and that she intended to speak to him in full before the end of April so that whatever happened next would happen with proper guidance and she used the word advisedly, I think, accountability. Her voice remained even, but something in it had the thin, tight quality of a wire stretched beyond its intended tension. I asked her to give me more time. She said she had already given me 3 months since January, and that the kindest thing she could do was not to give me any more.
Miss Marple set down her cup. She was right, Helen said. I understood that even then, but I was I was frightened, and when one is frightened, rightness becomes very difficult to act upon. She looked at her hands again. I went to her cottage on Saturday evening after the fate. I had the Easter cakes as a reason. She had left them on the cake stoall table, and I collected them for her and brought them down. We had tea, we had bread and butter, and we argued for a long time, and I asked her again, and she said no quite gently, but completely finally, and I became rather desperate. The fire burned on in its quiet even way, and the higher synths gave their sweet, faintly heavy scent to the room, and Helen sat with the story that she had been carrying alone for a long time, and that was now at last in another person's careful keeping. It was near the cellar steps, she said. I took her arm, I don't know precisely what I intended, whether I was asking or demonstrating or simply not able to stand still any longer, and she pulled back, and she was older than I sometimes remembered, and the step was there, and she went down very quickly against the stone sink, and she she stopped. "Yes," said Miss Marple quietly. "It was not what I meant," Helen said. "I want someone to know that. I know it does not change anything material about what happened, but I want someone to know. I know, Miss Marple said, and she meant it without qualification in the plain and careful way she meant most things. They sat together for a little while in the quiet room, with the fire and the higher synths, and the smear on the cellar door that had done in its small orange brown way, what smears do when a careful observer is given sufficient time and reason to look for them. Then Miss Marple sat down her cup, and folded her hands in her lap, and told Helen Kraock what she thought needed to happen now.
She did it without heat and without reproach, and with the particular kind of honesty that is not cold, but is nonetheless complete. The honesty of someone who has looked at a difficult situation steadily and without flinching, and who believes, as firmly as she has ever believed anything, that the long-term cost of continued concealment is always, in the end, higher than the short-term courage of the truth.
Beatress Lyall had believed that, too.
She'd been right, as she generally was about such things. She had simply not lived to see it resolved. Chapter nine.
The last slice left on the kitchen plate. The vicorage parlor was a room that had clearly been arranged many years earlier, with some intention of formal comfort, and had since been gradually overtaken by the accumulated evidence of a life actually lived in it.
The bookshelves along the south wall held their volumes in a state of productive disorder, with several lying flat at top the upright ones, and at least two propped open at pages of apparent significance, with whatever had been nearest to hand. The mantelpiece supported a small carriage clock, three invitations to parish events of varying degrees of urgency, and a smooth gray stone that Reverend Emmery had carried in his coat pocket for 20 years, and could not have explained the retention of to anyone's satisfaction, including his own. There were two good armchairs before the fire, and a third that had been moved to accommodate a small table, on which Mrs. Emory had placed before tactfully withdrawing to the kitchen a plate of seedcake and a fresh pot of tea. It was Saturday afternoon, exactly one week since the Easter feat, and the quality of the light through the vicorage windows was softer than it had been the previous Saturday, less brilliant, more considered. The light of a spring that had moved one week further into itself, and found a more settled register. They were gathered without particular ceremony. Miss Marple in the armchair nearest the fire, Reverend Emory in his habitual chair opposite, Inspector Slack on the upright chair he had drawn from near the window, and positioned with the deliberate centrality of a man who wishes it to be clear that he is conducting proceedings, and Dr. Haduk, leaning against the bookcase in a manner that suggested he was present in a consultative capacity, and intended to remain comfortable throughout. Dolly Bantry had arrived with Miss Marple and was seated on the window settle, occupying herself with the seedcake and attending to everything with the focused interest of someone who has been present at a number of Miss Marple's explanations over the years and has learned to listen to all of it, including the parts that initially appear to be about butter dishes. Edward Kraock was there as well. He had come at Inspector Slack's specific request, and he sat in the remaining chair near the door with the expression of a man who's been dreading a particular conversation for a week, and has arrived at a point where the dread has outrun itself and become something closer to exhausted resignation.
He was pale, and the shadows beneath his eyes confirmed what Miss Marple had suspected since Sunday, that he had not been sleeping, and that the reason for it went considerably beyond anxiety about his own position.
Helen was not present. She was at Inspector Slack's somewhat tur instruction at her own cottage with Constable Briggs in attendance, not under formal arrest, which had required a brief, careful conversation between Miss Marple and the inspector that morning, but available, and aware that matters were being resolved. Inspector Slack opened his notebook and looked at Miss Marple with the expression he wore when he had been persuaded to conduct a proceeding he had not entirely designed himself and was managing this fact through the application of crisp professional authority. "Miss Marple," he said, "if you would." Miss Marple sat down her cup, folded her hands in her lap, and looked around the room with the mild, clear gaze of someone about to explain something that she has understood for some time, and is now arranging for the benefit of those who have not. I should like to begin, she said, not with what happened on Saturday evening, but with the kitchen at Chapel Lane on Sunday morning, because it was there that the nature of the matter first made itself apparent, and because the kitchen tells the story in a way that I think makes everything that followed considerably easier to understand. She paused, allowing the room to settle into the particular attentiveness that a clear, quiet voice addressing a considered subject tends to produce. Beatrice Lyall was a woman of thoroughly established habits, she said.
Not merely the large habits of character, her directness, her precision, her preference for honesty over comfort, but the small domestic habits that are in some ways even more distinctively personal. She rose at 6:00 exactly, and had done so for 20 years.
She left her supper dishes for the morning, because arthritis made hot water painful in the evenings. She always cut bread to a consistent thickness that her laress Gertude Bell described with admiration rather than mockery as something approaching the mathematical. She never folded a used napkin back into its silver ring, but always left soiled linen loose for collection. She never kept marmalade in the cottage, having developed a permanent aversion to it during her working years. She set her alarm clock for 6, and had never in two decades set it for any other hour. She looked at Inspector Slack, who had his pen ready.
When I first visited the cottage on Sunday morning, I observed that the alarm clock had been set for 20 5, the supper dishes had been washed and dried and correctly replaced on the dresser.
The napkin had been folded back into its silver ring, and the final slice of bread on the kitchen table had been cut rather more than twice the thickness of all preceding slices. She let these settle. Each of these details, she continued, tells the same story in its own domestic language. Someone had been in that kitchen who was not Beatric Lyle, and who had attempted to restore its appearance to what they imagined it normally looked like, without quite having sufficient detailed knowledge to do it correctly. The clock was wrong, because Beatric's actual rising hour was more precise than this person knew. The napkin was wrong, because the habit of replacing it is not Beatric's habit, but the visitors own. The dishes were wrong because they had been dried with the glass cloth rather than the crockery cloth, a distinction invisible to anyone who does not habitually wash up in that particular kitchen. And the bread was wrong because the person who cut that final slice was not thinking about bread at all. They were thinking about something else entirely, and their hands, deprived of the calibrating guidance of ordinary attention, simply cut wider than they meant to. Dr. Haddock turned his teacup in his hands and said nothing. Reverend Emmery had removed his spectacles and was polishing them with the focused care of a man who needs to do something with his fingers.
Now, Miss Marple said, "A kitchen that has been restored imperfectly, but with real effort is not the kitchen of a robbery. Robbery leaves rooms feeling scanned and abandoned. This kitchen felt corrected. Someone cared about its appearance. Someone felt responsible for it. That is a very different emotional posture, and it pointed immediately away from the theory of financial pressure or opportunistic violence, and towards something much more intimate.
She reached into her knitting bag, and produced the laundry receipt, which she had kept carefully in its envelope, and placed it on the table beside the tea tray, without making any theatrical business of it. The receipt, found in Miss Ly's by Reverend Emmery, confirmed the shape of it. Helen Kraock had for two years been asking Gertrude Bell to manage certain private laundry through an arrangement intended to keep the items from her brother's notice. The items were infant clothes kept with care, washed regularly, and never used by any current child. They were the belongings of a daughter surrendered for adoption 9 years ago, whose existence Helen had concealed since before she came to St. Mary me. Edward Kraock made a small sound. Miss Marple looked at him briefly with an expression that was not without compassion, then returned her attention to the room. Miss Lyall had discovered this, as she discovered most things that she felt it was her business to know through careful, patient observation and the ordinary channels of village life. She had said nothing for 2 years. In January of this year, however, she concluded that silence was no longer serving Helen's interests, and she told Helen directly that she intended to speak to Reverend Emory and help arrange proper acknowledgement and support before the matter became known through other means, specifically through Edward's own financial inquiries, which she believed were bringing him closer to the relevant records. She looked at Reverend Emory. She told you as much herself when she came about the parish accounts. The Reverend replaced his spectacles. She did, he said quietly. I am only sorry I did not press further.
There was nothing to press for at that stage. Miss Marple said her intentions were entirely good and her assessment of the situation was entirely correct. What she perhaps underestimated or had decided in her characteristically direct way to discount was the degree to which Helen had organized the whole of her life in St. Mary me around the maintenance of a composure that this disclosure would fundamentally alter. It was not vanity. It was not selfishness.
Or not only. It was the particular terror of a person who has carried something alone for so long that the idea of setting it down has become more frightening than the weight of carrying it. She was quiet for a moment. Helen went to the cottage on Saturday evening.
She said she brought the Easter cakes that Miss Lyall had collected and left on the cakeall table. They had tea and bread and butter, and they argued for what was probably a considerable time, and Helen asked for more time, and Miss Lyall declined.
Near the cellar steps, in the way that these things sometimes happen, when someone desperate and someone immovable are in the same small space, there was a struggle, not a sustained one, not a deliberate one, and Miss Lyall fell against the stone sink. Inspector Slack's pen had stopped moving, and afterward, Miss Marple said, Helen did what she could, which was considerable and not inconsiderable, and ultimately quite futile, because the things she did not know about Beatric L's domestic routines, were precisely the things that she had never needed to know as a visitor, and those are always, in the end, the things that remain. She looked at the receipt on the table, the marmalade. Helen is accustomed to handling marmalade. She serves it at every breakfast and takes it in her tea.
She did not think about it. One rarely thinks about the things one does without thinking, but it went onto the napkin ring when she folded the napkin and onto the wheelbarrow handle in the dark of the shed and onto the cellar door at her own cottage when she latched it again afterward, and it was there to be found by anyone who was looking for it. The room was very quiet. Edward Kraock had his face in his hands. The clock on the mantelpiece measured the silence in its patient even way. Outside the vicorage windows the April afternoon lay mild and uncommitted over the village, the light doing nothing in particular, which felt, Miss Marple thought, entirely appropriate. That, she said gently, is how truth most commonly presents itself, not through the large and unmissable error, but through the small accumulation of unfamiliarities.
The clock set wrong, the napkin folded wrong, the bread cut wrong, each one a tiny departure from the ordinary, and each one, for those who know what ordinary looks like in that particular kitchen, quite sufficient. Inspector Slack closed his notebook. Dr. Haddock looked at the window. Reverend Emory sat with his hands clasped, and his expression holding the specific gravity of a clergyman who has just heard something that will require him to be useful, in ways for which his training has prepared him only partially.
Edward lowered his hands from his face and looked at Miss Marple, and his face was what she had expected it to be. Not relieved, not resolved, but opened in the way that the face of someone who has been holding something very tightly sometimes opens when the holding is at last no longer possible.
"She asked me on Tuesday," he said. She asked me directly whether I'd noticed anything, whether I suspected. "And what did you tell her?" Miss Marple asked. I said no, he said. He looked at the window. I said no. Miss Marple regarded him with the steady, unhurried compassion of a woman who has seen a great deal of human weakness and has never once found it surprising. I know, she said, and I think, Mr. Kraock, that in the days ahead you will need to decide what you actually mean by that answer. She picked up her knitting bag.
The seedcake remained largely untouched on its plate, and the fire had burned down to a dependable warmth. And outside in the vicorage garden, a thrush was singing with the single-minded conviction of a creature that has one job and intends to do it, regardless of what the human world is getting on with in the rooms nearby. Chapter 10. The cottage kitchen restored before morning.
3 weeks passed. In St. Mary me 3 weeks is sufficient time for the immediate drama of an event to settle into the longer more comfortable narrative that the village constructs around anything of significance. The version that will be told at tea tables and garden gates for years afterward, refined with each telling into something that preserves the essential shape of what happened while softening its sharper edges into the more manageable form of a story that has a beginning, a middle, and an end that everyone can agree upon. The agreed upon end in this instance was still being negotiated. Helen Kraock had departed St. Mary me on the Monday following the vicorage gathering in a taxi that arrived at 8 in the morning and was observed by Mrs. Hargreaves from the bakery window with an attention so thorough that she was able to report to any number of interested parties that Helen had taken two large cases and a hatbox and had been wearing her greywall coat and had not looked to the left or the right as she walked to the vehicle.
She had gone to relations near Bath. a widowed cousin of her late husband, a woman of some practicality and discretion, who had been telephoned by Reverend Emory on Sunday evening, and had agreed, without requiring extensive explanation, to provide temporary accommodation, and the particular kind of company that asks few questions and offers steady meals. Legal arrangements were proceeding, as these things do, at the measured pace of a process that has its own rhythms, and is not accelerated by anyone's anxiety about the outcome.
Inspector Slack had completed his report with the thoroughess that was his professional virtue, and the conclusions that were, all things considered, as accurate as the evidence permitted. He had not entirely concealed his irritation at the path by which those conclusions had been reached. But he was a fair enough man underneath the briskness to acknowledge in his manner, if not in precise words, that several of the more significant observations had originated in directions he had not himself been looking. Dr. Hadock had signed what needed signing and said what needed saying to the relevant authorities and had then returned to his practice with the equitable composure of a man who has seen a great deal of the range that human circumstances can encompass and who takes the view that the proper response to most of it is a decent cup of tea and a willingness to be of practical use. Reverend Emory had written three letters, one to the family in Bristol, one to a solicitor in Bath, and one that he had drafted and reddrafted across four evenings, and eventually sent to Helen herself, which contained nothing that could properly be called advice, but which conveyed in the careful and genuine language of a man who means every word he chooses, that he was available, and that he thought no less of her, and that the parish would still be here when she was ready. He had also, somewhat to his own surprise, found in his correspondence tray the following Wednesday a brief and perfectly formed note from Gertrude Bell, who had written to say that she had always done Miss Ly's laundry with care, and intended to ensure that the standards were maintained for whoever took on the cottage next, and who had added in a postcript that Reverend Emry read that she wished the whole business had gone differently, and that she hoped Mrs. Kraock would find her way through it. Gertrude Bell did not, as a rule, write letters of this kind, and the fact that she had written this one said rather more about her regard for both women involved than anything she had communicated in conversation. Edward Krock remained in St. Mary me. This had surprised one or two people, who had expected that the combination of his sister's departure and his own circumstances would send him back to London or somewhere similarly removed.
But Edward had, it appeared, come to some quiet determination in the days following the vicorage gathering, and one visible consequence of this determination was that he had taken up lodgings at the crown, and had begun making inquiries about the possibility of regular employment in the county rather than the city. He had also, Miss Marple understood, through Dolly Bantry rather than any direct communication, written to Helen in Bath a letter that had taken him several days and three discarded drafts, and had received in return a letter that had taken Helen somewhat longer.
Mrs. Hargreaves continued to operate the bakery with her customary energy, and had by the second week established a fairly comprehensive account of the events of the Easter period that she offered to any customer who appeared uninformed. and that was, to be fair to her, considerably more accurate than the versions that had circulated in the immediate aftermath. She had also, in a moment of genuine rather than performative sentiment, placed a small vase of early roses in the bakery window on the morning after Helen's departure, which the village noticed and did not remark upon. On a rainy evening in the second week of May, Miss Marple walked down Chapel Lane. She had not been specifically intending to pass the cottage. She had been to call on old Mrs. Prenagast in the row of armsouses at the lane's far end, a visit she made monthly, bringing a jar of something preserved and an hour of attentive conversation, and she was returning by the longer way, partly because the rain, though steady, was the kind she had always found pleasant rather than oppressive, and partly because she had reached the age at which one takes the longer way home when it is available, and does not require a reason beyond the fact of its availability.
The cottage was lit from within. Not fully lit, not the warm and various lights of occupation, but the single steady light of a room being worked in by people with a practical purpose.
Through the kitchen window, visible because someone had drawn back the curtains that had been closed since Sunday the 8th. She could see movement and the unmistakable activity of preparation. Shelves being examined, surfaces being assessed, the particular purposeful survey of new tenants, understanding the dimensions of a space they are about to make their own. Fresh curtains had been hung in the kitchen.
They were white with a narrow blue stripe, and they were not the curtains that had hung there in Beatric L's time, which had been cream with a small repeated flower, and the difference was both distinct and entirely appropriate.
The cottage was becoming, as cottages do, someone else's.
Miss Marple stood for a moment at the garden gate, with the rain falling softly around her, and looked at the lit window and the new curtains and the activity within, and she thought about Beatric Lyall, not with grief exactly, because she had not known Beatress well enough for grief in the personal sense, but with the particular quality of respect she held for people who have been thoroughly themselves throughout their lives, and have not found it necessary to apologize for it. Beatrice had been exacting and direct and had made herself useful in the world through the unapologetic application of her considerable capabilities, and she had chosen her solitary life as freely as she had chosen anything else about herself, and had found it sufficient, and had been right to find it sufficient. She had also in her final months tried to do something genuinely kind for someone she cared about in the only way she knew how to do kind things, which was to say directly and without sentiment and with complete honesty about what the situation required. It had not ended as she had intended. But then very few things did, and this was not, Miss Marple thought, a reflection upon the intention.
Dolly Bantry appeared beside her at the gate, having come from the direction of the high street with her umbrella slightly inverted by the same gust that had just required Miss Marple to hold her hat, and they stood together for a moment, looking at the lit cottage in the comfortable, undemanding way of two old friends who do not require conversation to fill a silence. New people moving in, Dolly said, "It appears so good." Dolly regarded the white striped curtains with the approving pragmatism of a woman who believes that empty houses are bad for villages and that the best tribute to a person's home is someone else living happily in it. It'll be better with people in it. Much better, Miss Marple agreed.
They stood a moment longer and then Dolly said in the slightly careful way she had when she was approaching something she genuinely wanted to know.
Do you think Helen will manage it? All of it? the legal side and the other side. Miss Marple considered this with the honesty it deserved. I think she'll find it very hard, she said, for some time, and I think that Edward will be less useless than one might have predicted once he has finished being overwhelmed by everything, which I believe he's already beginning to do, she watched the light in the kitchen window. And I think that what Beatrice intended, the outcome, not the means, will eventually come about because it was the right thing, and right things have a way of persisting, even when the path toward them has been thoroughly disrupted.
Dolly was quiet for a moment. Beatrice would be pleased about that, I suppose.
She would have been relieved, Miss Marple said. I don't think she wasted much energy on pleasure. Dolly laughed briefly and warmly, and the sound went out into the rainy lane and dispersed in a way that was not sad at all. "People," Miss Marple said after a moment, "loice believe that tidying a room will also tidy the past." Dolly glanced at her.
"And does it?" Miss Marple gave a small, thoughtful smile, and looked once more at the cottage kitchen, with its new curtains and its steady light, and the quiet, purposeful movement of strangers becoming residents, making the ordinary arrangements of an ordinary life in a room that had 3 weeks ago been the sight of something that was neither ordinary nor easily set aside. "No," she said gently, "but it comforts them to try."
They walked on together through the soft May rain, and the lane curved ahead of them toward the high street, and the warm lit windows of the village, and behind them the cottage on Chapel Lane continued its quiet work of becoming something you.
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