Aunt Jaggers lowered the booklet and fixed glittering eyes upon Kate. "I trust that you will agree to do as I desire out of courtesy, if not out of strict requirement."
"I thank you," Kate said, "for communicating your concerns to me." She took a deep breath. A lie would finish this unpleasant business in an instant. Was it honesty or sheer stubbornness that made her so contrary? ' 'But I cannot agree to keep a rule made by another," she said, "when I would not make the same rule for myself."
Aunt Jaggers took off her glasses and stared at Kate. "Impertinence!"
Kate bowed her head. "I do not intend it so, Aunt. But I do plead guilty to candor."
Aunt Jaggers's thin lips pursed into a knot. "You will reap the wages of your transgression!"
Kate stood. "I daresay, Aunt," she said, and walked to the door. As she closed it behind her, she heard the parrot squawk again. "God save the Queen."
And as she turned to go down the gloomy hall, she glimpsed the flying ties of Amelia's lacy white apron fluttering like startled doves around the corner.
15
"When constabulary duty's to be done, A policeman's lot is not a nappy one."
Inspector Howard Wainwright sat at a small table in his dingy office in the even dingier basement of Town Hall, frowning down at die hastily scribbled autopsy report Sergeant Battle had laid before him. His frown deepened to a scowl, and he wished fervently that the borough police could afford one of those new typewriters. It would make Dr. For-sythe's crabbed hand legible.
But his superiors were not likely to authorize the purchase of a typewriter, the inspector knew. And even if they did, his sausage-fingered sergeant would have to learn to operate it. One eventuality was as improbable as the other, and either
was as unlikely as the installation of a telephone, which the inspector also fervently desired.
Inspector Wainwright was a practical man and knew the limitations of his position. But he was also ambitious and wished for the tools that would not only help him do his work but assist him to rise in his profession. His experience with the Essex constabulary, however, had made him pessimistic about the future. His pessimism pervaded his view of his work, indeed, of his life, and deepened his naturally melancholy state of mind.
The inspector was still squinting at Dr. Forsythe's indecipherable scribble when a figure darkened the doorway. He looked up impatiently. "Yes, Sergeant?"
Sergeant Battle came in and closed the door behind him. " 'Tis th' gennulman from th' dig, sir," he said, sotto voce. "Th' one wot I tol' yer 'bout. He's got th' pichures."
"Has he?" Inspector Wainwright put down the report. He looked at Sergeant Battle's fat, oily fingers. Not only improbable and unlikely, but impossible. "Well, show him in."
The gentleman who came into the room was carrying a large leather portfolio. Inspector Wainwright stood.
"I fear I neglected to introduce myself to your subordinates yesterday," the gentleman said, taking off his dusty felt hat. "My name is Charles Sheridan." The sergeant retired discreetly and shut the door.
The inspector was at a disadvantage, and he knew it. He had been absent from the murder scene yesterday because he had been summoned to look for some missing plate at Hammond Hall-plate that had turned up in the kitchen slops while he was questioning Lady Hammond's cook. If he had been at the dig instead of pursuing his futile errand, he would have forbidden the gentleman to take photographs. It was not that he had anything against cameras; quite the contrary. He was firm in his opinion, however, that the documentation of crime should be done by the police-and the borough force, which possessed neither typewriter nor telephone, possessed no camera.
"I was about to have a cup of tea," the inspector said. "Would you take some?"
"Thank you, yes," Mr. Sheridan replied, unstrapping his portfolio.
The inspector went to the corner, where a kettle was boiling on a gas burner, and took down two crockery cups, neither very clean. By the time he returned with the tea, Mr. Sheridan had laid out a dozen photos on the table.
The inspector set down the cups and leaned over the photographs. "Ah," he said to himself after a moment, and then "Oh," and finally, "Yes, I see." When he finished his examination, he took up his cup and sat down, feeling even more gloomy than before. He had viewed the corpse in question, laid out on the mortuary table while Dr. Forsythe stood at the ready. He had viewed the excavation this morning and had seen what there was to see, which wasn't very much. But Mr. Sheridan's photographs of the body in the excavation gave him a far1 more complete understanding of the situation than either his belated inspection or the report of Sergeant Battle and PC Trabb. The fact quite depressed him.
Mr. Sheridan sipped his tea. "You've had experience with photography in criminal investigation, Inspector?"
Inspector Wainwright examined the questioner over the rim of his cup. A man of obvious breeding and intelligence, the sort of man whose social position the inspector could not help but envy. "Can't say as I have," he said sourly. "A local photographer shoots everybody who is arrested. Criminals don't fancy the business, of course. They contort their faces and bodies so that even their mothers wouldn't recognize 'em."
"And what do you do with the photographs, once obtained?"
Inspector Wainwright laughed shortly. "What else?" He gestured toward a cabinet. "We keep 'em. Of course, it's no mean trick to find one that's wanted again. Not many men give a truthful account of their names." He looked at the photograph of the dead man, stretched out on his back, his aquiline features clearly visible, as was his clothing, the ring on his finger, the knife wound in his chest. "But this, now," he said thoughtfully, almost to himself. "This is dif'rent. If I had a camera, and more coppers, a picture like this could
be taken round to innkeepers, the stationmaster, cabbies. P'rhaps somebody could identify the bloke." He put down the photo. "If I had a camera," he repeated morosely. "And more coppers."
"You don't know who he was, then?"
Inspector Wainwright shook his head. "PC Trabb's out in-quirin', but there's nothin' yet. Got the autopsy report, though," he added, "for what it's worth." He scowled at the nearly illegible document.
"Anything unexpected?"
"Only that the tip of the knife was recovered. Broke off against a rib." The inspector picked up the envelope that had come with Dr. Forsythe's report and spilled the contents onto the table. Among the items was a triangular bit of metal about a quarter inch on a side.
"Ah," Mr. Sheridan said, picking it up. "Sharpened on two edges. A dagger. A weapon designed for killing." He looked at the other items that had spilled out of the envelope with the knife tip: a railway ticket, a cutoff clothing label, and the gold scarab ring. "The ticket was found in the victim's pocket?"
The inspector nodded.
"Return ticket, London to Dover," Mr. Sheridan mused. ' 'He came from the Continent-from France, if we trust the evidence of the Parisian label-on a brief errand, planning to return shortly. But something waylaid him. Or rather, someone." He picked up the ring and examined it. "You have noticed the inscription inside this ring, no doubt."
"Inscription?" The inspector frowned. "I noticed some-thin' that looked like child's scribblin'."
"Permit me to copy it," Mr. Sheridan said. From a pocket he took out a jeweler's loupe and inserted it into his eye, holding it firmly between his brow and his cheek. From another pocket he took out a pencil and pad, and commenced to sketch a series of stick figures-hands, birds, snakes, and other, unidentifiable objects.