‘At your earliest convenience, sir.’
Mr. Haile had a thoughtful look. If there had been a hint of bravado it was gone. He said,
‘I don’t know about this place-I haven’t been into anything yet. But the flat in town-I shall keep that on of course. And I shall want a butler and a cook. Your wife is an extremely good cook.’
‘She has always been considered to be so, sir.’
‘And good cooking covers a multitude of sins, doesn’t it!’ He paused, and added with emphasis, ‘You think so-don’t you?’
‘Sir-’
‘You know what I mean, don’t you? Let’s be plain about it. My cousin had discovered that you were fleecing him, and he was about to discharge you without a character. He told me so when I was in the study with him before dinner on the night he-died. If I were to give that information to the police, don’t you think it would interest them?’
Marsham’s face had gone grey, but he stood up to the blow.
‘May I ask if you have said anything to the police, sir?’
‘Not yet.’ He gave a short half laugh. ‘And just in case you should have any idea of removing an inconvenient witness, let me suggest that it would be very difficult to get away with another body on the spot marked X.’
‘Sir!’
‘It would be quite incredibly stupid.’
Marsham said with dignity,
‘You are pleased to amuse yourself, sir. Perhaps you will permit me to make a personal explanation. You employed a very derogatory expression with regard to myself when you used the word “fleecing”. I admit that I overstepped the bounds of legality in accepting a commission from the wine and cigar merchants patronized by Sir Herbert. When I was in service with the late Lord St. Osbert I had his authority to take my commission. He said they made enough out of him, and why shouldn’t I make something out of them? I was with him for ten years, sir.’
‘And my cousin didn’t see things in the same light as Lord St. Osbert?’
‘No, sir.’
Eric Haile gave his easy laugh.
‘He didn’t go into particulars, you know. I suppose you would like me to withdraw-or shall I say soften-the word fleecing.’
‘It is not an expression I should employ to describe the acceptance of a commission.’
‘Nor I!’ He laughed again. ‘Are you going to ask me to believe that Sir Herbert had no more grounds than that for dispensing with the really excellent services of yourself and of your wife?’
Marsham gave a slight deprecating cough.
‘If you will excuse me, sir, you do not appear to have been correctly informed. I tendered my notice to Sir Herbert together with that of Mrs. Marsham a week ago. He was unwilling to accept it, and informed me that it would be to my advantage to stay on with him.’
‘You wanted to leave?’ Mr. Haile sound surprised.
‘I was not happy in the position, sir. On the Saturday night Sir Herbert sent for me whilst I was superintending the laying of the dinner table. He informed me that he would not accept my notice, and offered me a rise of salary. When I refused it he so far forgot himself as to threaten me, saying that if I left, it would be without a character and with the police on my heels.’
‘All on account of a little matter of commission? Come, come, Marsham! If I were to hand all this on to the police, how far do you think that story would take you?’
From where she stood Marsham’s face was plainly visible to Miss Silver. Beneath its smooth and mannerly surface she was aware of something that did not flinch. He said in quite his usual manner,
‘I should consider it inadvisable to import the police into the matter, sir. Everyone has some private affairs which he would not care to have intruded upon. Let us take the question of last Saturday night-or of any other night, sir. There are always a number of persons in a house any one of whom could be about his private business at an hour or in a place which might be considered compromising. By the police for instance. Their profession induces a very suspicious habit of mind. If I may say so, sir, it would be most unwise to import them into the matter under discussion.’
There was quite a prolonged pause, during which Eric Haile looked fixedly at Marsham. There was no change in the butler’s expression, which remained perfectly respectful. In the end Haile said gently,
‘I take it you are suggesting something. What is it?’
‘I was putting a hypothetical case, sir. There is, I believe, a somewhat vulgar proverb regarding the wisdom of letting sleeping dogs lie.’
Haile rapped with his knuckles upon the edge of the table.
‘And how long do they lie? Until they are hungry. And when they have been fed they will presently be hungry again-and again-and again.’
Marsham’s manner took on a faint shade of reproof. He did not care for the way in which his metaphor had been turned against him. He used the tone of one who has observed a social solecism but is too well bred to draw attention to it.
‘I hardly think so, sir. The whole matter must naturally be a painful one-one would not willing recur to it. That would be my point of view, and I imagine that it would be yours also. In my opinion the less said on the subject the better. If you will accept our notice and embody the kind appreciation which you have expressed regarding our services in a testimonial, it would, I think, be satisfactory.’
Eric Haile burst out laughing.
‘What a thundering hypocrite you are, Marsham!’ he said. ‘I don’t know that I can bear to part with you, and I shall probably always regret it if I do. But, as you say, there are things which are better forgotten, and I might find myself wondering about this and that-from time to time, you know. So perhaps we are better apart. You shall have your testimonial. But I advise you to walk warily in the matter of-shall we say-commission? Or anything else that might be likely to interest the police. Good-night!’
Marsham said, ‘Good-night sir.’
As he turned to leave the room, Miss Silver opened the door behind her and stepped back. For a moment the darkness was bewildering. She closed the glass door without making any sound and waited until she could see her way. Then she went down the terrace steps and along the paved walk by which she had come to the window of the Blue Room, which she had left unlatched. A few minutes later she had reached her own room with a good deal to think about.
CHAPTER XXXIII
I could not have felt justified in keeping such a conversation to myself.’
Miss Silver sat in one of the small armless chairs which the Blue Room provided. It had the low padded seat and back of the Victorian period and was tastefully covered with a cross-stitch pattern which represented wan lilies on a ground of deep ultramarine blue. Together with the other furnishings of this small room, it had passed with the house and had been sedulously preserved by the efforts of Adrian Grey. A pre-Raphaelite influence was discernible. There was even an authentic Morris paper on the walls.
Whilst listening attentively to last night’s experience Frank Abbott could not help being aware of how perfectly his Miss Silver fitted into these surroundings. The chair she had chosen had no doubt been specially designed for the use of ladies addicted to needlework. It afforded support to the back and for the swelling skirt of other days. In fact it resembled very strongly the furniture in Miss Silver’s own flat, which she had inherited from a Victorian great-aunt. He really had to make an effort in order to give his entire attention to the business in hand.
‘It was certainly quite a curious conversation,’ he said. ‘I wish I had been there.’
Miss Silver said,
‘I have repeated it as accurately as possible.’
He nodded.
‘You always do-you’re a marvel at it. What I mean is, here were two people who obviously weren’t coming into the open. In that sort of case it is not only what is said that counts, it is every tone, every inflection, every movement, the twitch of a finger, the flick of an eyelash, the atmosphere in the room, that counts. You have your impression from these things, and if I had been there I would have mine. Then if we pooled them and found they were the same-well, it would still not be evidence, but it would be something a little stronger than we’ve got at present.’