To Ralph and Anne Newman at whose house I first tasted "Delicious Death!"
Chapter 1A MURDER IS ANNOUNCED
Between 7:30 and 8:30 every morning except Sundays, Johnnie Butt made the round of the village of Chipping Cleghorn on his bicycle, whistling vociferously through his teeth, and alighting at each house or cottage to shove through the letter-box such morning papers as had been ordered by the occupants of the house in question from Mr. Totman, stationer, of the High Street. Thus, at Colonel and Mrs. Easterbrook's he delivered The Times and the Daily Graphic; at Mrs. Swettenham's he left The Times and the Daily Worker; at Miss Hinchliffe and Miss Murgatroyd's he left the Daily Telegraph and the News Chronicle; at Miss Blacklog's he left the Telegraph, The Times and the Daily Mail.At all these houses, and indeed at practically every house in Chipping Cleghorn, he delivered every Friday a copy of the North Benham News and Chipping Cleghorn Gazette, known locally simply as "the Gazette." Thus, on Friday mornings, after a hurried glance at the headlines in the daily paper (International situation critical! U.N.O. meets today! Bloodhounds seek blonde typist's killer! Three collieries idle. Twenty-three die of food poisoning in Seaside Hotel, etc. most of the inhabitants of Chipping Cleghorn eagerly opened the Gazette and plunged into the local news. After a cursory glance at Correspondence (in which the passionate hates and feuds of rural life found full play) nine out of ten subscribers then turned to the personal column. Here were grouped together higgledy piggledy articles, for Sale or Wanted, frenzied appeals for Domestic Help, innumerable insertions regarding dogs, announcements concerning poultry and garden equipment; and various other items of an interesting nature to those living in the small community of Chipping Cleghorn.This particular Friday - October 29th - was no exception to the rule...
II
Mrs. Swettenham, pushing back the pretty little grey curls from her forehead, opened The Times, looked with a lack lustre eye at the left hand centre page, decided that, as usual, if there was any exciting news The Times had succeeded in camouflaging it in an impeccable manner; took a look at the Births, Marriages and Deaths, particularly the latter; then, her duty done, she put aside The Times and eagerly seized the Chipping Cleghorn Gazette.When her son Edmund entered the room a moment later, she was already deep in the Personal Column."Good morning, dear," said Mrs. Swettenham. "The Smedleys are selling their Daimler. 1935 - that's rather a long time ago, isn't it?" Her son grunted, poured himself out a cup of coffee, helped himself to a couple of kippers, sat down at the table and opened the Daily Worker which he propped up against the toast rack."Bull mastiff puppies," read out Mrs. Swettenham. "I really don't know how people manage to feed big dogs nowadays - I really don't... H'm, Selina Lawrence is advertising for a cook again. I could tell her it's just a waste of time advertising in these days. She hasn't put her address, only a box number - that's quite fatal - I could have told her so - servants simply insist on knowing where they are going. They like a good address... False teeth - I can't think why false teeth are so popular. Best prices paid... Beautiful bulbs. Our special selection. They sound rather cheap... Here's a girl wants an 'Interesting post - Would travel.' I dare say! Who wouldn't?... Dachshunds... I've never really cared for dachshunds myself - I don't mean because they're German, because we've got over all that - I just don't care for them, that's all. - Yes, Mrs. Finch?" The door had opened to admit the head and torso of a grim-looking female in an aged velvet beret."Good morning, Mam," said Mrs. Finch. "Can I clear?" "Not yet. We haven't finished," said Mrs. Swettenham. "Not quite finished," she added ingratiatingly.Casting a look at Edmund and his paper, Mrs. Finch sniffed, and withdrew."I've only just begun," said Edmund, just as his mother remarked:"I do wish you wouldn't read that horrid paper, Edmund. Mrs. Finch doesn't like it at all." "I don't see what my political views have to do with Mrs. Finch." "And it isn't," pursued Mrs. Swettenham, "as though you were a worker. You don't do any work at all." "That's not in the least true," said Edmund indignantly. "I'm writing a book." "I meant real work," said Mrs. Swettenham. "And Mrs. Finch does matter. If she takes a dislike to us and won't come, who else could we get?" "Advertise in the Gazette," said Edmund, grinning."I've just told you that's no use. Oh dear me, nowadays unless one has an old Nannie in the family, who it will go into the kitchen and do everything, one is simply sunk." "Well, why haven't we an old Nannie? How remiss of you not to have provided me with one? What were you thinking about?" "You had an ayah, dear." "No foresight," murmured Edmund.Mrs. Swettenham was once more deep in the Personal Column."Second-hand Motor Mower for sale. Now I wonder... Goodness, what a price!... More Dachshunds... 'Do write or communicate - desperate - Woggles.' What silly nicknames people have... Cocker Spaniels... Do you remember darling Susie, Edmund? She really was human. Understood every word you said to her... Sheraton sideboard for Sale. Genuine family antique. Mrs. Lucas, Dayas Hall... What a liar that woman is! Sheraton indeed...!" Mrs. Swettenham sniffed and then continued her reading."All a mistake, darling. Undying love. Friday as usual - J... I suppose they've had a lovers' quarrel - or do you think it's a code for burglars?... More Dachshunds! Really, I do think people have gone a little crazy about breeding Dachshunds. I mean, there are other dogs. Your Uncle Simon used to breed Manchester Terriers. Such graceful little things. I do like dogs with legs... Lady going abroad will sell her navy two piece suiting... no measurements or price given.... A marriage is announced - no, a murder... What?... Well, I never! Edmund, Edmund, listen to this... A murder is announced and will take place on Friday, October 29th at Little Paddocks at 6:30 p.m. Friends please accept this, the only intimation. What an extraordinary thing! Edmund!" "What's that?" Edmund looked up from his newspaper."Friday, October 29th... Why, that's today." "Let me see." Her son took the paper from her. "But what does it mean?" Mrs. Swettenham asked with lively curiosity.Edmund Swettenham rubbed his nose doubtfully."Some sort of party, I suppose. The Murder Game - that kind of thing." "Oh," said Mrs. Swettenham doubtfully. "It seems a very odd way of doing it. Just sticking it in the advertisements like that. Not at all like Letitia Blacklog who always seems to me such a sensible woman." "Probably got up by the bright young things she has in the house." "It's very short notice. Today. Do you think we're just supposed to go?" "It says 'Friends, please accept this, the only intimation?'" her son pointed out."Well, I think these new fangled ways of giving invitations are very tiresome," said Mrs. Swettenham decidedly."All right. Mother, you needn't go." "No," agreed Mrs. Swettenham.There was a pause."Do you really want that last piece of toast, Edmund?" "I should have thought my being properly nourished mattered more than letting that old hag clear the table." "Sh, dear, she'll hear you... Edmund, what happens at a Murder Game?" "I don't know, exactly... They pin pieces of paper upon you, or something... No, I think you draw them out of a hat. And somebody's the victim and somebody else is a detective - and then they turn the lights out and somebody taps you on the shoulder and then you scream and lie down and sham dead." "It sounds quite exciting." "Probably a beastly bore. I'm not going." "Nonsense, Edmund," said Mrs. Swettenham resolutely. "I'm going and you're coming with me. That's settled."
III
"Archie," said Mrs. Easterbrook to her husband, "listen to this." Colonel Easterbrook paid no attention, because he was already snorting with impatience over an article in The Times."Trouble with these fellows is," he said, "that none of them knows the first thing about India! Not the first thing!" "I know, dear, I know." "If they did, they wouldn't write such piffle." "Yes, I know. Archie, do listen. A murder is announced and will take place on Friday, October 29th (that's today) at Little Paddocks at 6:30 p.m. Friends please accept this, the only intimation." She paused triumphantly. Colonel Easterbrook looked at her indulgently but without much interest."Murder Game," he said."Oh." "That's all it is. Mind you," he unbent a little, "it can be very good fun if it's well done. But it needs good organising by someone who knows the ropes. You draw lots. One person's the murderer, nobody knows who. Lights out. Murderer chooses his victim. The victim has to count twenty before he screams. Then the person who's chosen to be the detective takes charge. Questions everybody. Where they were, what they were doing, tries to trip the real fellow up. Yes, it's a good game if the detective knows something about police work." "Like you, Archie. You had all those interesting cases to try in your district." Colonel Easterbrook smiled indulgently and gave his moustache a complacent twirl."Yes, Laura," he said. "I dare say I could give them a hint or two." And he straightened his shoulders."Miss Blacklog ought to have asked you to help her in getting the tiling up." The Colonel snorted."Oh, well, she's got that young cub staying with her. Expect this is his idea. Nephew or something. Funny idea, though, sticking it in the paper." "It was in the Personal Column. We might never have seen it. I suppose it is an invitation, Archie?" "Funny kind of invitation. I can tell you one thing. They can count me out." "Oh, Archie," Mrs. Easterbrook's voice rose in a shrill wail."Short notice. For all they know I might be busy." "But you're not, are you, darling?" Mrs. Easterbrook lowered her voice persuasively. "And I do think, Archie, that you really ought to go - just to help poor Miss Blacklog out. I'm sure she's counting on you to make the thing a success. I mean, you know so much about police work and procedure. The whole thing will fall flat if you don't go and help to make it a success. After all, one must be neighbourly." Mrs. Easterbrook put her synthetic blonde head on one side and opened her blue eyes very wide."Of course, if you put it like that, Laura..." Colonel Easterbrook twirled his grey moustache again, importantly, and looked with indulgence on his fluffy little wife. Mrs. Easterbrook was at least thirty years younger than her husband."If you put it like that, Laura," he said."I really do think it's your duty, Archie," said Mrs. Easterbrook solemnly.
IV
The Chipping Cleghorn Gazette had also been delivered at Boulders, the picturesque three cottages knocked into one inhabited by Miss Hinchliffe and Miss Murgatroyd."Hinch?" "What is it, Murgatroyd?" "Where are you?" "Henhouse." "Oh." Paddling gingerly through the long wet grass, Miss Amy Murgatroyd approached her friend. The latter, attired in corduroy slacks and battledress tunic was conscientiously stirring in handfuls of balancer meal to a repellently steaming basin full of cooked potato peelings and cabbage stumps.She turned her head with its short man-like crop and weatherbeaten countenance toward her friend. Miss Murgatroyd, who was fat and amiable, wore a checked tweed skirt and a shapeless pullover of brilliant royal blue. Her curly bird's nest of grey hair was in a good deal of disorder and she was slightly out of breath."In the Gazette," she panted. "Just listen - what can it mean? A murder is announced... and will take place on Friday, October 29th at Little Paddocks at 6:30 p.m. Friends please accept this, the only intimation." She paused, breathless, as she finished reading, and awaited some authoritative pronouncement."Daft," said Miss Hinchliffe."Yes, but what do you think it means?" "Means a drink, anyway," said Miss Hinchliffe."You think it's a sort of invitation?" "We'll find out what it means when we get there," said Miss Hinchliffe. "Bad sherry, I expect. You'd better get off the grass, Murgatroyd. You've got your bedroom slippers on still. They're soaked." "Oh, dear." Miss Murgatroyd looked down ruefully at her feet. "How many eggs today?" "Seven. That damned hen's still broody. I must get her into the coop." "It's a funny way of putting it, don't you think?" Amy Murgatroyd asked, reverting to the notice in the Gazette. Her voice was slightly wistful.But her friend was made of sterner and more single-minded stuff. She was intent on dealing with recalcitrant poultry and no announcement in a paper, however enigmatic, could deflect her.She squelched heavily through the mud and pounced upon a speckled hen. There was a loud and indignant squawking."Give me ducks every time," said Miss Hinchliffe. "Far less trouble..."
V
"Oo, scrumptious!" said Mrs. Harmon across the breakfast table to her husband, the Rev. Julian Harmon, "there's going to be a murder at Miss Blacklog's." "A murder?" said her husband, slightly surprised. "When?" "This afternoon... at least, this evening. 6:30. Oh, bad luck, darling, you've got your preparations for confirmation then. It is a shame. And you do so love murders!" "I don't really know what you're talking about, Bunch?" Mrs. Harmon, the roundness of whose form and face had early led to the soubriquet of 'Bunch' being substituted for her baptismal name of Diana, handed the Gazette across the table."There. All among the second-hand pianos, and the old teeth." "What a very extraordinary announcement." "Isn't it?" said Bunch happily. "You wouldn't think that Miss Blacklog cared about murders and games and things, would you? I suppose it's the young Simmonses put her up to it - though I should have thought Julia Simmons would find murders rather crude. Still, there it is, and I do think, darling, it's a shame you can't be there. Anyway, I'll go and tell you all about it, though it's rather wasted on me, because I don't really like games that happen in the dark. They frighten me, and I do hope I shan't have to be the one who's murdered. If someone suddenly puts a hand on my shoulder and whispers, 'You're dead,' I know my heart will give such a big bump that perhaps it really might kill me! Do you think that's likely?" "No, Bunch. I think you're going to live to be an old, old woman - with me." "And die on the same day and be buried in the same grave. That would be lovely." Bunch beamed from ear to ear at this agreeable prospect."You seem very happy, Bunch?" said her husband, smiling."Who'd not be happy if they were me?" demanded Bunch, rather confusedly. "With you and Susan and Edward, and all of you fond of me and not caring if I'm stupid... And the sun shining! And this lovely big house to live in!" The Rev. Julian Harmon looked round the big bare dining-room and assented doubtfully."Some people would think it was the last straw to have to live in this great rambling draughty place." "Well, I like big rooms. All the nice smells from outside can get in and stay there. And you can be untidy and leave things about and they don't clutter you." "No labour saving devices or central heating? It means a lot of work for you, Bunch." "Oh, Julian, it doesn't. I get up at half-past six and light the boiler and rush around like a steam engine, and by eight it's all done. And I keep it nice, don't I? With beeswax and polish and big jars of autumn leaves. It's not really harder to keep a big house clean than a small one. You go round with mops and things much quicker, because your behind isn't always bumping into things like it is in a small room. And I like sleeping in a big cold room - it's so cosy to snuggle down with just the tip of your nose telling you what it's like up above. And whatever size of house you live in, you peel the same amount of potatoes and wash up the same amount of plates and all that. Think how nice it is for Edward and Susan to have a big empty room to play in where they can have railways and dolls' tea-parties all over the floor and never have to put them away? And then it's nice to have extra bits of the house that you can let people have to live in. Jimmy Symes and Johnnie Finch - they'd have had to live with their in-laws otherwise. And you know, Julian, it isn't nice living with your in-laws. You're devoted to Mother, but you wouldn't really have liked to start our married life living with her and Father. And I shouldn't have liked it, either. I'd have gone on feeling like a little girl." Julian smiled at her."You're rather like a little girl still. Bunch." Julian Harmon himself had clearly been a model designed by Nature for the age of sixty. He was still about twenty-five years short of achieving Nature's purpose."I know I'm stupid." "You're not stupid, Bunch. You're very clever." "No, I'm not. I'm not a bit intellectual. Though I do try... And I really love it when you talk to me about books and history and things. I think perhaps it wasn't an awfully good idea to read aloud Gibbon to me in the evenings, because if it's been a cold wind out, and it's nice and hot by the fire, there's something about Gibbon that does, rather, make you go to sleep." Julian laughed."But I do love listening to you, Julian. Tell me the story again about the old vicar who preached about Ahasuerus." "You know that by heart. Bunch." "Just tell it me again. Please." Her husband complied."It was old Scrymgour. Somebody looked into his church one day. He was leaning out of the pulpit and preaching fervently to a couple of old charwomen. He was shaking his finger at them and saying, 'Aha! I know what you are thinking. You think that the Great Ahasuerus of the First Lesson was Artaxerxes the Second. But he wasn't!' And then with enormous triumph, 'He was Artaxerxes the Third.'"It had never struck Julian Harmon as a particularly funny story himself, but it never failed to amuse Bunch.Her clear laugh floated out."The old pet!" she exclaimed. "I think you'll be exactly like that some day, Julian." Julian looked rather uneasy."I know," he said with humility. "I do feel very strongly that I can't always get the proper simple approach." "I shouldn't worry," said Bunch, rising and beginning to pile the breakfast plates on a tray. "Mrs. Butt told me yesterday that Butt, who never went to church and used to be practically the local atheist, comes every Sunday now on purpose to hear you preach." She went on, with a very fair imitation of Mrs. Butt's super-refined voice:"'And Butt was saying only the other day, Madam, to Mr. Timkins from Little Worsdale, that we'd got real culture here in Chipping Cleghorn. Not like Mr. Goss, at Little Worsdale, who talks to the congregation as though they were children who hadn't had any education. Real culture, Butt said, that's what we've got. Our Vicar's a highly educated gentleman - Oxford, not Milchester, and he gives us the full benefit of his education. All about the Romans and the Greeks he knows, and the Babylonians and the Assyrians, too. And even the Vicarage cat. Butt says, is called after an Assyrian king!' So there's glory for you," finished Bunch triumphantly."Goodness, I must get on with things or I shall never get done. Come along, Tiglath Pileser, you shall have the herring bones." Opening the door and holding it dexterously ajar with her foot, she shot through with the loaded tray, singing in a loud and not particularly tuneful voice, her own version of a sporting song."It's a fine murdering day, (sang Bunch) And as balmy as May And the sleuths from the village are gone." A rattle of crockery being dumped in the sink drowned the next lines, but as the Rev. Julian Harmon left the house, he heard the final triumphant assertion:"And we'll all go a'murdering today!"
Chapter 2BREAKFAST AT LITTLE PADDOCKS
At Little Paddocks also, breakfast was in progress.Miss Blacklog, a woman of sixty odd, the owner of the house, sat at the head of the table. She wore country tweeds - and with them, rather incongruously, a choker necklace of large false pearls. She was reading Lane Norcott in the Daily Mail. Julia Simmons was languidly glancing through the Telegraph. Patrick Simmons was checking up on the crossword in The Times. Miss Dora Bunner was giving her attention whole-heartedly to the local weekly paper.Miss Blacklog gave a subdued chuckle. Patrick muttered: "Adherent - not adhesive - that's where I went wrong." Suddenly a loud cluck, like a startled hen, came from Miss Bunner."Letty - Letty - have you seen this? Whatever can it mean?" "What's the matter, Dora?" "The most extraordinary advertisement. It says Little Paddocks quite distinctly. But whatever can it mean?""If you'd let me see, Dora dear -"Miss Bunner obediently surrendered the paper into Miss Blacklog's outstretched hand, pointing to the item with a tremulous forefinger."Just look, Letty." Miss Blacklog looked. Her eyebrows went up. She threw a quick scrutinising glance round the table. Then she read the advertisement out loud."A murder is announced and will take place on Friday, October 29th at Little Paddocks at 6:30 p.m. Friends please accept this, the only intimation." Then she said sharply: "Patrick, is this your idea?" Her eyes rested searchingly on the handsome devil-may-care face of the young man at the other end of the table.Patrick Simmons' disclaimer came quickly."No, indeed, Aunt Letty. Whatever put that idea into your head? Why should I know anything about it?" "I wouldn't put it past you," said Miss Blacklog grimly. "I thought it might be your idea of a joke." "A joke? Nothing of the kind." "And you, Julia?" Julia, looking bored, said: "Of course not." Miss Bunner murmured: "Do you think Mrs. Haymes -" and looked at an empty place where someone had breakfasted earlier."Oh, I don't think our Phillipa would try and be funny," said Patrick. "She's a serious girl, she is." "But what's the idea, anyway?" said Julia, yawning. "What does it mean?" Miss Blacklog said slowly, "I suppose - it's some silly sort of hoax." "But why?" Dora Bunner exclaimed. "What's the point of it? It seems a very stupid sort of joke. And in very bad taste." Her flabby cheeks quivered indignantly, and her shortsighted eyes sparkled with indignation.Miss Blacklog smiled at her."Don't work yourself up over it. Bunny," she said. "It's just somebody's idea of humour, but I wish I knew whose." "It says today," pointed out Miss Bunner. "Today at 6:30 p.m. What do you think is going to happen?" "Death!" said Patrick in sepulchral tones. "Delicious Death." "Be quiet, Patrick," said Miss Blacklog as Miss Bunner gave a little yelp."I only meant the special cake that Mitzi makes," said Patrick apologetically. "You know we always call it Delicious Death." Miss Blacklog smiled a little absentmindedly.Miss Bunner persisted: "But Letty, what do you really think -"Her friend cut across the words with reassuring cheerfulness."I know one thing that will happen at 6:30," she said dryly. "We'll have half the village up here, agog with curiosity. I'd better make sure we've'got some sherry in the house."
II
"You are worried, aren't you, Lotty?" Miss Blacklog started. She had been sitting at her writing-table, absentmindedly drawing little fishes on the blotting paper. She looked up into the anxious face of her old friend.She was not quite sure what to say to Dora Bunner. Bunny, she knew, mustn't be worried or upset. She was silent for a moment or two, thinking.She and Dora Bunner had been at school together. Dora then had been a pretty fair-haired, blue-eyed rather stupid girl. Her being stupid hadn't mattered, because her gaiety and high spirits and her prettiness had made her an agreeable companion. She ought, her friend thought, to have married some nice Army officer, or a country solicitor. She had so many good qualities - affection, devotion, loyalty. But life had been unkind to Dora Bunner. She had had to earn her living. She had been painstaking but never competent at anything she undertook.The two friends had lost sight of each other. But six months ago a letter had come to Miss Blacklog, a rambling, pathetic letter. Dora's health had given way. She was living in one room, trying to subsist on her old age pension. She endeavoured to do needlework, but her fingers were stiff with rheumatism. She mentioned their schooldays - since then life had driven them apart - but could - possibly - her old friend help?Miss Blacklog had responded impulsively. Poor Dora, poor pretty silly fluffy Dora. She had swooped down upon Dora, had carried her off, had installed her at Little Paddocks with the comforting fiction that "the housework is getting too much for me. I need someone to help me run the house." It was not for long - the doctor had told her that - but sometimes she found poor old Dora a sad trial. She muddled everything, upset the temperamental foreign "help," miscounted the laundry, lost bills and letters - and sometimes reduced the competent Miss Blacklog to an agony of exasperation. Poor old muddleheaded Dora, so loyal, so anxious to help, so pleased and proud to think she was of assistance - and, alas, so completely unreliable.She said sharply:"Don't, Dora. You know I asked you -""Oh," Miss Bunner looked guilty. "I know. I forgot. But - but you are, aren't you?" "Worried? No. At least," she added truthfully, "not exactly. You mean about that silly notice in the Gazette?""Yes - even if it's a joke, it seems to me it's a - a spiteful sort of joke." "Spiteful?" "Yes. It seems to me there's spite there somewhere. I mean - it's not a nice kind of joke." Miss Blacklog looked at her friend. The mild eyes, the long obstinate mouth, the slightly upturned nose. Poor Dora, so maddening, so muddleheaded, so devoted and such a problem. A dear fussy old idiot and yet, in a queer way, with an instinctive sense of values."I think you're right, Dora," said Miss Blacklog. "It's not a nice joke." "I don't like it at all," said Dora Bunner with unsuspected vigour. "It frightens me." She added, suddenly: "And it frightens you, Letitia." "Nonsense," said Miss Blacklog with spirit."It's dangerous. I'm sure it is. Like those people who send you bombs done up in parcels." "My dear, it's just some silly idiot trying to be funny." "But it isn't funny." It wasn't really very funny... Miss Blacklog's face betrayed her thoughts, and Dora cried triumphantly,"You see. You think so, too!" "But Dora, my dear -"She broke off. Through the door there surged a tempestuous young woman with a well developed bosom heaving under a tight jersey. She had on a dirndl skirt of a bright colour and had greasy dark plaits wound round and round her head. Her eyes were dark and flashing.She said gustily:"I can speak to you, yes, please, no?" Miss Blacklog sighed."Of course, Mitzi, what is it?" Sometimes she thought it would be preferable to do the entire work of the house as well as the cooking rather than be bothered with the eternal nerve storms of her refugee "lady help." "I tell you at once - it is in order, I hope? I give you my notices and I go - I go at once!" "For what reason? Has somebody upset you?" "Yes, I am upset," said Mitzi dramatically. "I do not wish to die! Already in Europe I escape. My family they all die - they are all killed - my mother, my little brother, my so sweet little niece - all, all they are killed. But me I run away - I hide. I get to England. I work. I do work that never - never would I do in my own country - I -""I know all that," said Miss Blacklog crisply. It was, indeed, a constant refrain on Mitzi's lips. "But why do you want to leave now?" "Because again they come to kill me!" "Who do?" "My enemies. The Nazis! Or perhaps this time it is the Bolsheviks. They find out I am here. They come to kill me. I have read it - yes - it is in the newspaper!" "Oh, you mean in the Gazette?" "Here, it is written here." Mitzi produced the Gazette from where she had been holding it behind her back."See - here it says a murder. At Little Paddocks. That is here, is it not? This evening at 6:30. Ah! I do not wait to be murdered - no." "But why should this apply to you? It's - we think it is a joke." "A joke? It is not a joke to murder someone?" "No, of course not. But my dear child, if anyone wanted to murder you, they wouldn't advertise the fact in the paper, would they?" "You do not think they would?" Mitzi seemed a little shaken. "You think, perhaps, they do not mean to murder anyone at all? Perhaps it is you they mean to murder, Miss Blacklog." "I certainly can't believe anyone wants to murder me," said Miss Blacklog lightly. "And really, Mitzi, I don't see why anyone should want to murder you. After all, why should they?" "Because they are bad peoples... Very bad peoples. I tell you, my mother, my little brother, my so sweet niece." "Yes, yes." Miss Blacklog stemmed the flow, adroitly. "But I cannot really believe anyone wants to murder you, Mitzi. Of course, if you want to go off like this at a moment's notice, I cannot possibly stop you. But I think you will be very silly if you do." She added firmly, as Mitzi looked doubtful: "We'll have that beef the butcher sent stewed for lunch. It looks very tough." "I make you a goulash, a special goulash." "If you prefer to call it that, certainly. And perhaps you could use up that rather hard bit of cheese in making some cheese straws. I think some people may come in this evening for drinks." "This evening? What do you mean, this evening?" "At half-past six." "But that is the time in the paper. Who should come then? Why should they come?" "They're coming to the funeral," said Miss Blacklog with a twinkle. "That'll do now, Mitzi. I'm busy. Shut the door after you," she added firmly."And that's settled her for the moment," she said as the door closed behind a puzzled-looking Mitzi."You are so efficient, Letty," said Miss Bunner admiringly.
Chapter 3AT 6:30 P.M.
"Well, here we are, all set," said Miss Blacklog She looked round the double drawing-room with an appraising eye. The rose-patterned chintzes - the two bowls of bronze chrysanthemums, the small vase of violets and the silver cigarette-box on a table by the wall, the tray of drinks on the centre table.Little Paddocks was a medium-sized house built in the early Victorian style. It had a long shallow veranda and green shuttered windows. The long, narrow drawing-room which lost a good deal of light owing to the veranda roof had originally had double doors at one end leading into a small room with a bay window. A former generation had removed the double doors and replaced them with portieres of velvet. Miss Blacklog had dispensed with the portieres so that the two rooms had become definitely one. There was a fireplace each end, but neither fire was lit although a gentle warmth pervaded the room."You've had the central heating lit," said Patrick.Miss Blacklog nodded."It's been so misty and damp lately. The whole house felt clammy. I got Evans to light it before he went." "The precious precious coke?" said Patrick mockingly.