PROLOGUE
November 19th
The group round the fireplace was nearly all composed of lawyers or those who had an interest in the law. There was Martindale, the solicitor; Rufus Lord, K.C.; young Daniels, who had made a name for himself in the Carstairs case; a sprinkling of other barristers - Mr Justice Cleaver, Lewis of Lewis and Trench - and old Mr Treves. Mr Treves was close on eighty, a very ripe and experienced eighty. He was a member of a famous firm of solicitors, and the most famous member of that firm. He had settled innumerable delicate cases out of court, he was said to know more of backstairs history than any man in England and he was a specialist on criminology.Unthinking people said Mr Treves ought to write his memoirs. Mr Treves knew better. He knew that he knew too much.Though he had long retired from active practice, there was no man in England whose opinion was so respected by the members of his own fraternity. Whenever his thin, precise, little voice was raised there was always a respectful silence.The conversation now was on the subject of a much talked of case which had finished that day at the Old Bailey. It was a murder case and the prisoner had been acquitted. The present company was busy trying the case over again and making technical criticisms.The prosecution had made a mistake in relying on one of its witnesses - old Depleach ought to have realized what an opening he was giving to the defense. Young Arthur had made the most of that servant girl's evidence. Bentmore, in his summing up, had very rightly put the matter in its correct perspective, but the mischief was done by then - the jury had believed the girl. Juries were funny - you never knew what they'd swallow and what they wouldn't but let them once get a thing into their heads and no one was ever going to get it out again. They believed that the girl was speaking the truth about the crowbar and that was that. The medical evidence had been a bit above their heads. All those long terms and scientific jargon damned bad witnesses, these scientific johnnies always hemmed and hawed and couldn't say yes or no to a plain question always "under certain circumstances that might take place" and so on!They talked themselves out, little by little, and as the remarks became more spasmodic and disjointed, a general feeling grew of something lacking. One head after another turned in the direction of Mr Treves. For Mr Treves had as yet contributed nothing to the discussion. Gradually it became apparent that the company were waiting for a final word from their most respected colleague.Mr Treves, leaning back in his chair, was absentmindedly polishing his glasses. Something in the silence made him look up sharply."Eh?" he said. "What was that? You asked me something?"Young Lewis spoke:"We were talking, sir, about the Lamorne case."He paused expectantly."Yes, yes," said Mr Treves. "I was thinking of that."There was a respectful hush."But I'm afraid," said Mr Treves, still polishing, "that I was being fanciful. Yes, fanciful. Result of getting on in years, I suppose. At my age one can claim the privilege of being fanciful, if one likes.""Yes, indeed, sir," said young Lewis, but he looked puzzled."I was thinking," said Mr Treves, "not so much of the various points of law raised - though they were interesting very interesting - if the verdict had gone the other way there would have been good grounds for appeal, I rather think - but I won't go into that now. I was thinking, as I say, not of the points of law but of the - well, of the people in the case."Everybody looked rather astonished. They had considered the people in the case only as regarded their credibility or otherwise as witnesses. None of them had even hazarded a speculation as to whether the prisoner had been guilty or as innocent as the court had pronounced him to be."Human beings, you know," said Mr Treves thoughtfully. "Human beings. All kinds and sorts and sizes and shapes of 'em. Some with brains and a good many more without. They'd come from all over the place, Lancashire, Scotland - that restaurant proprietor from Italy, and that schoolteacher woman from somewhere out Middle West. All caught up and enmeshed in the thing and finally all brought together in a court of law in London on a grey November day. Each one contributing his little part. The whole thing culminating in a trial for murder."He paused and gently beat a delicate tattoo on his knee."I like a good detective story," he said. "But, you know, they begin in the wrong place! They begin with the murder. But the murder is the end. The story begins long before that - years before sometimes - with all the causes and events that bring certain people to a certain place at a certain time on a certain day. Take that little maid servant's evidence - if the kitchen-maid hadn't pinched her young man she wouldn't have thrown up her situation in a huff and gone to the Lamornes and been the principal witness for the defense. That Giuseppe Antonelli coming over to exchange with his brother for a month. The brother is as blind as a bat. He wouldn't have seen what Giuseppe's sharp eyes saw. If the constable hadn't been sweet on the cook at No. 48, he wouldn't have been late on his beat..."He nodded his head gently."All converging towards a given slot. And then, when the time comes, over the top! Zero hour. Yes, all of them converging towards zero..."He repeated, "Towards zero..."Then he gave a quick little shudder."You're cold, sir, come nearer the fire.""No, no," said Mr Treves. "Just someone walking over my grave as they say. Well, well, I must be making my way homewards."He gave an affable little nod and went slowly and precisely out of the room.There was a moment's dubious silence and then Rufus Lord, K.C., remarked that poor old Treves was getting on.Sir William Cleaver said:"An acute brain - a very acute brain - but anno domini tells in the end.""Got a groggy heart, too," said Lord. "May drop down any minute I believe.""He takes pretty good care of himself," said young Lewis.At that moment Mr Treves was carefully stepping into his smooth-running Daimler. It deposited him at a house in a quiet square. A solicitous buffer valet helped him off with his coat. Mr Treves walked into his library where a coal fire was burning. His bedroom lay beyond, for out of consideration for his heart he never went upstairs.He sat down in front of the fire and drew his letters towards him.His mind was still dwelling on the fancy he had outlined at the club."Even now," thought Mr Treves to himself, "some drama - some murder to be - is in course of preparation. If I were writing one of these amusing stories of blood and crime, I should begin now with an elderly gentleman sitting in front of the fire opening his letters - going, unbeknownst to himself - towards zero..."He slit open an envelope and gazed down absently at the sheet he extracted from it.Suddenly his expression changed. He came back from romance to reality."Dear me," said Mr Treves. "How extremely annoying! Really, how very vexing. After all these years! This will alter all my plans."
Part I - "OPEN THE DOOR AND HERE ARE THE PEOPLE"
January 11th
The man in the hospital bed shifted his body slightly and stifled a groan.The nurse in charge of the ward got up from her table and came down to him. She shifted his pillows and moved him into a more comfortable position.Andrew MacWhirter only gave a grunt by way of thanks.He was in a state of seething rebellion and bitterness.By this time it ought all to have been over. He ought to have been out of it all! Curse that damned ridiculous tree growing out of the cliff! Curse those officious sweethearts who braved the cold of a winter's night to keep a tryst on the cliff edge.But for them (and the tree!) it would have been over a plunge into the deep icy water, then oblivion and the end of a misused, useless, unprofitable life.And now where was he? Lying ridiculously in a hospital bed with a broken shoulder and with the prospect of being hauled up in a police court for the crime of trying to take his own life.Curse it, it was his own life, wasn't it? And if he had succeeded in the job, they would have buried him piously as of unsound mind!Unsound mind, indeed! He'd never been saner! And to commit suicide was the most logical and sensible thing that could be done by a man in his position.Completely down and out, with his health permanently affected, with a wife who had left him for another man. Without a job, without affection, without money, health or hope, surely to end it all was the only possible solution?And now here he was in this ridiculous plight. He would shortly be admonished by a sanctimonious magistrate for doing the common sense thing with a commodity which belonged to him and to him only - his life.He snorted with anger. A wave of fever passed over him.The nurse was beside him again.She was young, red-haired, with a kindly, rather vacant face."Are you in much pain?""No, I'm not.""I'll give you something to make you sleep.""You'll do nothing of the sort.""But -""Do you think I can't bear a bit of pain and sleeplessness?"She smiled in a gentle, slightly superior way."Doctor said you could have something.""I don't care what doctor said."She straightened the covers and set a glass of lemonade a little nearer to him. He said, slightly ashamed of himself, "Sorry if I was rude.""Oh, that's all right."It annoyed him that she was so completely undisturbed by his bad temper. Nothing like that could penetrate her nurse's armor of indulgent indifference. He was a patient, not a man.He said:"Damned interference - all this damned interference -"She said reprovingly, "Now, now, that isn't very nice.""Nice?" he demanded. "Nice? My God."She said calmly, "You'll feel better in the morning."He swallowed."You nurses. You nurses. You're inhuman, that's what you are!""We know what's best for you, you see.""That's what's so infuriating! About you. About a hospital. About the world. Continual interference! Knowing what's best for other people. I tried to kill myself. You know that, don't you?"She nodded."Nobody's business but mine whether I threw myself off a bloody cliff or not. I'd finished with life. I was down and out!"She made a little clicking noise with her tongue. It indicated abstract sympathy. He was a patient. She was soothing him by letting him blow off steam."Why shouldn't I kill myself if I want to?" he demanded.She replied to that quite seriously."Because it's wrong.""Why is it wrong?"She looked at him doubtfully. She was not disturbed in her own belief, but she was much too inarticulate to explain her reaction."Well, I mean it's wicked to kill yourself. You've got to go on living whether you like it or not.""Why have you?""Well, there are other people to consider, aren't there?""Not in my case. There's not a soul in the world who'd be the worse for my passing on.""Haven't you got any relations? No mother or sister or anything?""No. I had a wife once but she left me - quite right too! She saw I was no good.""But you've got friends, surely?""No, I haven't. I'm not a friendly sort of man. Look here, nurse, I'll tell you something. I was a happy sort of chap once. Had a good job and a good-looking wife. There was a car accident. My boss was driving the car and I was in it. He wanted me to say he was driving under thirty at the time of the accident. He wasn't. He was driving nearer fifty. Nobody was killed, nothing like that, he just wanted to be in the right for the insurance people. Well, I wouldn't say what he wanted. It was a lie. I don't tell lies."The nurse said, "Well, I think you were quite right. Quite right.""You do, do you? That pig-headedness of mine cost me my job. My boss was sore. He saw to it that I didn't get another. My wife got fed up seeing me mooch about unable to get anything to do. She went off with a man who had been my friend. He was doing well and going up in the world. I drifted along going steadily down. I took to drinking a bit. That didn't help me to hold down jobs. Finally I came down to hauling - strained my inside - the doctor told me I'd never be strong again. Well, there wasn't much to live for then. Easiest way, and the cleanest way, was to go right out. My life was no good to myself or anyone else."The little nurse murmured, "You don't know that."He laughed. He was better tempered already. Her naпve obstinacy amused him."My dear girl, what use am I to anybody?"She said confusedly, "You don't know. You may be someday -""Someday? There won't be any someday. Next time I shall make sure."She shook her head decidedly."Oh, no," she said. "You won't kill yourself now.""Why not?""They never do."He stared at her. "They never do." He was one of a class of would-be suicides. Opening his mouth to protest energetically, his innate honesty suddenly stopped him.Would he do it again? Did he really mean to do it?He knew suddenly that he didn't. For no reason. Perhaps the right reason was the one she had given out of her specialized knowledge. Suicides didn't do it again.All the more he felt determined to force an admission from her on the ethical side."At any rate I've got a right to do what I like with my own life.""No - no, you haven't.""But why not, my dear girl, why?"She flushed. She said, her fingers playing with the little gold cross that hung round her neck:"You don't understand. God may need you."He stared taken aback. He did not want to upset her childlike faith. He said mockingly:"I suppose that one day I may stop a runaway horse and save a golden-haired child from death, eh? Is that it?"She shook her head. She said with vehemence and trying to express what was so vivid in her mind:"It may be just by being somewhere not doing anything - just by being at a certain place at a certain time - oh, I can't say what I mean, but you might just just walk along a street someday and just by doing that accomplish something terribly important - perhaps without even knowing what it was."The red-haired little nurse came from the west coast of Scotland and some of her family had "the sight."Perhaps, dimly, she saw a picture of a man walking up a road on a night in September and thereby saving a human being from a terrible death...
February 14th
There was only one person in the room and the only sound to be heard was the scratching of that person's pen as it traced line after line across the paper.There was no one to read the words that were being traced. If there had been, they would hardly have believed their eyes. For what was being written was a clear, carefully detailed project for murder.There are times when a body is conscious of a mind controlling it - when it bows obedient to that alien something that controls its actions. There are other times when a mind is conscious of owning and controlling a body and accomplishing its purpose by using that body.The figure sitting writing was in the last named state. It was a mind, a cool controlled intelligence. This mind had only one thought and one purpose - the destruction of another human being. To the end that his purpose might be accomplished, the scheme was being worked out meticulously on paper. Every eventuality, every possibility was being taken into account. The thing had got to be absolutely foolproof. The scheme, like all good schemes, was not absolutely cut and dried. There were certain alternative actions at certain points. Moreover, since the mind was intelligent, it realized that there must be intelligent provision left for the unforeseen. But the main lines were clear and had been closely tested. The time, the place, the method, the victim...The figure raised its head.With its hand, it picked up the sheets of paper and read them carefully through. Yes, the thing was crystal clear.Across the serious face a smile came. It was a smile that was not quite sane. The figure drew a deep breath.As man was made in the image of his maker, so there was now a terrible travesty of a creator's joy.Yes, everything planned everyone's reaction foretold and allowed for, the good and evil in everybody played upon and brought into harmony with one evil design. There was one thing lacking still...With a smile the writer traced a date - a date in September...Then, with a laugh, the paper was torn in pieces and the pieces carried across the room and put into the heart of the glowing fire. There was no carelessness. Every single piece was consumed and destroyed. The plan was now only existent in the brain of its creator.
March 18th
Superintendent Battle was sitting at the breakfast table. His jaw was set in a truculent fashion and he was reading slowly and carefully a letter that his wife had just tearfully handed to him. There was no expression visible on his face, for his face never did register any expression. It had the aspect of a face carved out of wood. It was solid and durable and, in some way, impressive. Superintendent Battle had never suggested brilliance; he was, definitely, not a brilliant man, but he had some other quality, difficult to define, that was nevertheless forceful."I can't believe it," said Mrs Battle, sobbing. "Sylvia!"Sylvia was the youngest of Superintendent and Mrs Battle's five children. She was sixteen and at school near Maidstone.The letter was from Miss Amphrey, head-mistress of the school in question. It was a clear, kindly and extremely tactful letter. It set out, in black and white, that various small thefts had been puzzling the school authorities for some time, that the matter had been at last cleared up, that Sylvia Battle had confessed and that Miss Amphrey would like to see Mr and Mrs Battle at the earliest possible opportunity "to discuss the position."Superintendent Battle folded up the letter, put it in his pocket, and said, "You leave this to me, Mary."He got up, walked round the table, patted her on the cheek and said, "Don't worry, dear, it will be all right."He went from the room leaving comfort and reassurance behind him.That afternoon, in Miss Amphrey's modern and individualistic drawing-room, Superintendent Battle sat very squarely on his chair, his large wooden hands on his knees, confronting Miss Amphrey and managing to look, far more than usual, every inch a policeman.Miss Amphrey was a very successful head-mistress. She had personality - a great deal of personality, she was enlightened and up to date, and she combined discipline with modern ideas of self-determination.Her room was representative of the spirit of Meadway. Everything was of a cool oat-meal color - there were big jars of daffodils and bowls of tulips and hyacinths. One or two good copies of the antique Greek, two pieces of advanced modern sculpture, two Italian primitives on the walls. In the midst of all this, Miss Amphrey herself, dressed in a deep shade of blue, with an eager face suggestive of a conscientious greyhound, and clear blue eyes looking serious through thick lenses."The important thing," she was saying in her clear, well-modulated voice, "is that this should be taken the right way. It is the girl herself we have to think of, Mr Battle. Sylvia herself! It is more important - most important - that her life should not be crippled in any way. She must not be made to assume a burden of guilt - blame must be very, very sparingly meted out, if at all. We must arrive at the reason behind these quite trivial pilferings. A sense of inferiority, perhaps? She is not good at games, you know an obscure wish to shine in a different sphere, the desire to assert her ego? We must be very, very careful. That is why I wanted to see you alone first - to impress upon you to be very, very careful with Sylvia. I repeat again, it's very important to get at what is behind this.""That, Miss Amphrey," said Superintendent Battle, "is why I have come down."His voice was quiet, his face unemotional, his eyes surveyed the schoolmistress appraisingly."I have been very gentle with her," said Miss Amphrey.Battle said laconically, "Good of you, Miss.""You see, I really love and understand these young things."Battle did not reply directly. He said. "I'd like to see my girl now, if you don't mind, Miss Amphrey."With renewed emphasis Miss Amphrey admonished him to be careful to go slow not to antagonize a child just budding into womanhood.Superintendent Battle showed no signs of impatience. He just looked blank.She took him at last to her study. They passed one or two girls in the passages. They stood politely to attention but their eyes were full of curiosity. Having ushered Battle into a small room not quite so redolent of personality as the one downstairs, Miss Amphrey withdrew and said she would send Sylvia to him.Just as she was leaving the room, Battle stopped her."One minute, m'am, how did you come to pitch upon Sylvia as the one responsible for these - er - leakages?""My methods, Mr Battle, were psychological."Miss Amphrey spoke with dignity."Psychological? H'm. What about the evidence, Miss Amphrey?""Yes, yes, I quite understand, Mr Battle you would feel that way. Your - er - profession steps in. But psychology is ready to be recognized in criminology. I can assure you that there is no mistake - Sylvia freely admits the whole thing."Battle nodded."Yes, yes - I know that. I was just asking how you came to pitch upon her to begin with.""Well, Mr Battle, this business of things being taken out of the girls' lockers was on the increase. I called the school together and told them the facts. At the same time, I studied their faces unobtrusively. Sylvia's expression struck me at once. It was guilty, confused. I knew at that moment who was responsible. I wanted, not to confront her with her guilt, but to get her to admit it herself. I set a little test for her - a word association test."Battle nodded to show he understood."And finally the child admitted it all!"Her father said, "I see."Miss Amphrey hesitated a minute, then went out.Battle was standing looking out of the window when the door opened again.He turned round slowly and looked at his daughter.Sylvia stood just inside the door which she had closed behind her. She was tall, dark, angular. Her face was sullen and bore marks of tears. She said timidly rather than defiantly:"Well, here I am."Battle looked at her thoughtfully for a minute or two. He sighed."I should never have sent you to this place," he said. "That woman's a fool."Sylvia lost sight of her own problem in sheer amazement."Miss Amphrey? Oh, but she's wonderful! We all think so.""H'm," said Battle. "Can't be quite a fool, then, if she sells the idea of herself as well as that. All the same, this wasn't the place for you, although I don't know this might have happened anywhere."Sylvia twisted her hands together. She looked down. She said,"I'm - I'm sorry, Father. I really am.""So you should be," said Battle shortly. "Come here."She came slowly and unwillingly across the room to him. He took her chin in his great square hand and looked closely into her face."Been through a great deal, haven't you?" he said gently.Tears started into her eyes.Battle said slowing:"You see, Sylvia, I've known all along with you, that there was something. Most people have got a weakness of some kind or another. Usually it's plain enough. You can see when a child's greedy, or bad tempered, or got a streak of the bully in him. You were a good child, very quiet, very sweet tempered, no trouble in any way and sometimes I've worried. Because if there's a flaw you don't see, sometimes it wrecks the whole show when the article is tried out.""Like me!" said Sylvia."Yes, like you. You've cracked under strain and in a damned queer way too. It's a way, oddly enough, I've never come across before."The girl said suddenly and scornfully:"I should think you'd come across thieves often enough!""Oh, yes - I know all about them. And that's why, my dear - not because I'm your father (fathers don't know much about their children) - but because I'm a policeman that I know well enough you're not a thief! You never took a thing in this place. Thieves are of two kinds, the kind that yields to sudden and overwhelming temptation (and that happens damned seldom - it's amazing what temptation the ordinary normal honest human being can withstand), and there's the kind that just takes what doesn't belong to them almost as a matter of course. You don't belong to either class."Sylvia began: "But -"He swept on."You've admitted it all? Oh, yes, I know that. There was a saint once went out with bread for the poor. Husband didn't like it. Met her and asked what there was in her basket. She lost her nerve and said it was roses. He tore open her basket and - roses; it was a miracle! Now if you'd been Saint Elizabeth and were out with a basket of roses, and your husband had come along and asked you what you'd got, you'd have lost your nerve and said 'Bread.'"He paused and then said gently, "That's how it happened, isn't it?"There was a longer pause and then the girl suddenly bent her head.Battle said:"Tell me, child. What happened exactly?""She had us all up. Made a speech. And I saw her eyes on me and I knew she thought it was me! I felt myself getting red and I saw some of the girls looking at me. It was awful. And then the others began looking at me and whispering in corners. I could see they all thought so. And then the Amp had me up here with some of the others one evening and we played a sort of word game she said words and we gave answers -"Battle gave a disgusted grunt."And I could see what it meant and and I sort of got paralyzed. I tried not to give the wrong word I tried to think of things quite outside like squirrels or flowers - and the Amp was there watching me with eyes like gimlets you know, sort of boring inside one. And after that - oh, it got worse and worse and one day the Amp talked to me quite kindly and so so understandingly and - and I broke down and said I had done it and - oh! Daddy, the relief!"Battle was stroking his chin."I see.""You do understand?""No, Sylvia, I don't understand, because I'm not made that way. If anyone tried to make me say I'd done something I hadn't, I'd feel more like giving them a sock on the jaw. But I see how it came about in your case and that gimlet-eyed Amp of yours has had as pretty an example of unusual psychology shoved under her nose as any half baked exponent of misunderstood theories could ask for. The thing to do now is to clear up this mess. Where's Miss Amphrey?"Miss Amphrey was hovering tactfully near at hand. Her sympathetic smile froze on her face as Superintendent Battle said bluntly:"In justice to my daughter, I must ask that you call in your local police over this.""But, Mr Battle, Sylvia herself -""Sylvia has never touched a thing that didn't belong to her in this place.""I quite understand that, as a father -""I'm not talking as a father, but as a policeman. Get the police to give you a hand over this. They'll be discreet. You'll find the things hidden away somewhere and the right set of fingerprints on them, I expect. Petty pilferers don't think of wearing gloves. I'm taking my daughter away with me now. If the police find evidence - real evidence to connect her with the thefts, I'm prepared for her to appear in court and take what's coming to her, but I'm not afraid."As he drove out of the gate with Sylvia beside him some five minutes later, he asked,"Who's the girl with fair hair, rather fuzzy, very rink cheeks and a spot on her chin, blue eyes far apart? I passed her in the passage.""That sounds like Olive Parsons.""Ah, well, I shouldn't be surprised if she were the one.""Did she look frightened?""No, looked smug! Calm, smug look I've seen in the police court hundreds of times! I'd bet good money she's the thief but you won't find her confessing - not much!"Sylvia said with a sigh, "It's like coming out of a bad dream. Oh, Daddy, I am sorry! Oh, I am sorry! How could I be such a fool, such an utter fool? I do feel awful about it.""Ah, well," said Superintendent Battle, patting her on the arm with a hand he disengaged from the wheel, and uttering one of his pet forms of trite consolation, "don't you worry. These things are sent to try us. Yes, these things are sent to try us. At least, I suppose so. I don't see what else they can be sent for..."
April 19th
The sun was pouring down on Nevile Strange's house at Hindhead.It was an April day such as usually occurs at least once in the month, hotter than most of the June days to follow.Nevile Strange was coming down the stairs. He was dressed in white flannels and held four tennis rackets under his arm.If a man could have been selected from amongst other Englishmen as an example of a lucky man with nothing to wish for, a Selection Committee might have chosen Nevile Strange. He was a man well known to the British public, a first-class tennis player and all-round sportsman. Though he had never reached the finals at Wimbledon, he had lasted several of the opening rounds and in the mixed doubles had twice reached the semi-finals. He was, perhaps, too much of an all-round athlete to be a champion tennis player. He was scratch at golf, a fine swimmer and had done some good climbs in the Alps. He was thirty-three, had magnificent health, good looks, plenty of money, an extremely beautiful wife whom he had recently married and, to all appearances, no cares or worries.Nevertheless as Nevile Strange went downstairs this fine morning a shadow went with him. A shadow perceptible, perhaps, to no eyes but his. But he was aware of it, the thought of it furrowed his brow and made his expression troubled and indecisive.He crossed the hall, squared his shoulders as though definitely throwing off some burden, passed through the living-room and out onto a glass verandah where his wife, Kay, was curled up amongst cushions drinking orange juice.Kay Strange was twenty-three and unusually beautiful. She had a slender but subtly voluptuous figure, dark red hair, such a perfect skin that she used only the slightest of make-up to enhance it, and those dark eyes and brows which so seldom go with red hair and which are so devastating when they do. Her husband said lightly:"Hullo, gorgeous, what's for breakfast?"Kay replied:"Horribly bloody-looking kidneys for you and mushrooms and rolls of bacon.""Sounds all right," said Nevile.He helped himself to the aforementioned viands and poured out a cup of coffee. There was a companionable silence for some minutes."Oo," said Kay, voluptuously wriggling bare toes with scarlet manicured nails. "Isn't the sun lovely? England's not so bad after all."They had just come back from the south of France.Nevile, after a bare glance at the newspaper headlines, had turned to the sports page and merely said "Um..."Then, proceeding to toast and marmalade, he put the paper aside and opened his letters. There were a good many of these but most of them he tore across and chucked away. Circulars, advertisements, printed matter.Kay said:"I don't like my color scheme in the living-room. Can I have it done over, Nevile?""Anything you like, beautiful.""Peacock blue," said Kay dreamily. "And ivory satin cushions.""You'll have to throw in an ape," said Nevile."You can be the ape," said Kay.Nevile opened another letter."Oh, by the way," said Kay. "Shirty has asked us to go to Norway on the yacht at the end of June. Rather sickening we can't."She looked cautiously sideways at Nevile and added wistfully: "I would love it so."Something, some cloud, some uncertainty, Kay said rebelliously:"Have we got to go to dreary old Camilla's?"Nevile frowned."Of course we have. Look here, Kay, we've had this out before. Sir Matthew was my guardian. He and Camilla looked after me. Gull's Point is my home, as far as any place is home to me.""Oh, all right, all right," said Kay. "If we must, we must. After all we get all that money when she dies, so I suppose we have to suck up a bit."