Rutledge took the packet that was held out to him.
“Will you be going back today?”
“Most likely.”
“Then I’ll come for you.”
Rutledge stepped out onto the quay and waved to the departing mail boat as he reached the path. It ran up the sloping hillside in looping curves, as if a goat had been the first to climb here. As he went, the wind reached him again, and he carried his hat in his hand to keep it from flying off. Halfway up he could see the Scilly Isles spread out before him like a map, the four or five larger ones showing signs of habitation, the smaller ones dotting the sea like afterthoughts. On the northern exposures the bare rocky slopes of the nearest islands were covered with what appeared to be heather, while the sunnier southern parts of the islands were green.
It was a very different world from London or indeed from Cornwall.
The sun began to break through the clouds, watery and half-hearted, as Rutledge reached the road and crossed it to the Evering house. It was beautifully situated, facing the south, and protected from the north by a higher slope than the one on which it stood. He came to the arbor, opened the lovely swan-neck gate, and took the shell path up to the door.
The master of the mail boat told him that there had been shipbuild-ing on the largest island in the last century, but here on St. Anne’s were fields of flowering bulbs and perennials. He could see that the daffodils were already dying back, their yellow and green leaves covering long beds.
The brass knocker on the door was shaped like a pair of swans, like the top of the gate in the arbor.
A middle-aged woman came to answer the door. She seemed surprised to see a stranger there, and craned her neck to look beyond him toward the harbor. The mail boat was just rounding the headland.
“Ronald Evering, please. My name is Ian Rutledge.”
She stepped aside to let him come into the foyer, and said doubtfully, “I’ll ask if Mr. Evering will see you.” Disappearing down a passage, she glanced over her shoulder, as if to see if he was real or had vanished when her back was turned.
After several minutes, she led him into a small parlor that overlooked the sea. Which, he thought, every room in this house must, save for the kitchen quarters.
Evering was standing by the cold hearth and regarded Rutledge with some interest. “Do I know you? We seldom have visitors on St.
Anne’s, but sometimes people come to see the seals or watch the birds.
We let them camp near the headland.”
“I’m here to ask you about your father.”
“My father?” Evering was at a loss.
“Yes. Lieutenant Timothy Barton Evering.”
Ronald Evering said without inflection, “My elder brother. He’s dead. Why should you be interested in him?”
“Because he served in South Africa. Can you tell me the circumstances surrounding his death?”
“They are painful to me. I prefer not to discuss them. Why are you 288
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interested in him?” he asked again. “Are you writing a book on that war? If so, my brother’s death was a footnote, no more. There is more interesting material to be found, I’m sure.”
Rutledge changed his ground. “It’s my understanding that you were one of the investors in the Cumberline stock scheme. Is that true?”
Evering was very still. “Who are you? And what do you want here?”
“I’m Inspector Ian Rutledge, from Scotland Yard, Mr. Evering.” He held out his identification. “Harold Quarles has been murdered—”
Evering turned away toward the mantelpiece, his hands gripping the mahogany edge, his head bowed. “I hadn’t heard. I’m sorry. When did this happen? Where?”
“In Somerset, where his country house is located. Some ten days ago.”
Evering took a deep breath. “I hope you’ve found his killer.”
“Yes, he’s already in custody. It was when I was searching Mr.
Quarles’s rooms that I came across your name in connection with Cumberline. In his study he kept a file on the transactions.”
Evering turned to face Rutledge. “And how did you learn about my brother?”
“We were looking up Harold Quarles’s service records, in an effort to find out what role, if any, his past played in his death.”
“I can’t see how South Africa matters? Or the Cumberline stocks.
Surely neither of those could be connected to murder?”
“Not to my knowledge. But it pays to be thorough, Mr. Evering.
How long have you known Mr. Quarles?”
“Not very long. I invested a sum of money with him, and it didn’t prosper.”
“Did you know when you invested your money that Quarles had served under your brother in the Boer War?”
Evering glanced toward the windows, where a shaft of errant sunlight had turned the sea from gray to deep green. “The War Department gave us very little information about my brother’s death. He died on active duty and served his country well. That’s what my father was told in the telegram. I was very young at the time, and if he learned more, he never spoke of it.”
“And so it was quite by chance that you should choose an investment offered by two men who served in your brother’s company.”
“Neither Mr. Quarles nor Mr. Penrith ever mentioned the fact.
If they recognized the name or knew my relationship to Timothy, I didn’t realize it.”
“Did you deal with both partners? Penrith and Quarles?”
“Yes, I talked to Mr. Quarles first, and then he brought in Mr.
Penrith.”
It sounded straightforward, told without hesitation or attempt to conceal.
“Is that all you came to ask me, Mr. Rutledge?”
“I’m informed that Penrith and Quarles were the only survivors of the Boer attack. Do you know if that’s true?”
“I’ve told you—I know very little about how Timothy died. The fact of his death was enough. My parents never recovered from the shock.”
“Yes, I can understand.”
“Were you in the Great War, Mr. Rutledge? If you were, you can appreciate that many details of what happens in a battle are not reported. My brother’s commanding officer wrote a very fine letter to my father, and it said very little beyond the fact that Timothy died bravely and didn’t suffer. That he was an honor to his regiment, showed great promise as an officer, and would have had a fine career in the army if he’d lived. How many such letters does an officer write?
He could say the same thing to a dozen grieving families, and who would be the wiser?”
“It is meant well. Sometimes the details are—distressing.”
“Yes, I’m sure that must be true. For my mother’s sake, I was grateful. She died not knowing whether he suffered or not. Which is what 290
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really mattered, in the end.” Evering gestured to the chairs that stood between them. “Won’t you sit down, Mr. Rutledge? I’ll ring for tea. It will be some time before the boat returns.”
“Thank you.” Rutledge took the chair indicated and waited until Evering had given the order for tea to the woman who’d answered the door.
“One of the reasons I’m following up on the South African cam-paign is that something that happened in Harold Quarles’s service out there—he served nowhere else, you see—disturbed his wife to such a degree that there was a serious breach with her husband. It lasted until his death.”
Evering considered Rutledge for a moment and then said, “I don’t know what to say. I’ve never met Mrs. Quarles or spoken to her. Does she think this—whatever it was—had to do with my brother?”
“I have no way of knowing what it is. I’m here to learn as much as I can about the only serious action Quarles saw during the war.”
“It’s a mystery to me. But if she tells you anything that I ought to know, please send me word. I’d be grateful.”