When Kate arrived at Devil's Bridge, the coroner had just taken his leave and ridden off. Lawrence and P.C. Gaskell were using the team to drag the wreckage of the Daimler up out of the ravine, while Charles, on his hands and knees, was scouring the area where the motorcar had rested. Kate looked around, remembering her dream and feeling a little frisson of recognition. The two situations were amazingly similarâthe dusty lane, the hill, the bridge. Closing her mind to the recollection of the faceless figure of her dream, and glad for her stout boots and sensible skirt, she climbed down the steep hill to the place where the wreck had been.
“I thought you had gone to the Sunday service,” Charles said, getting to his feet.
“I'm on my way. I stopped for breakfast with Agnes.” She glanced around. “Whatever are you looking for?”
“The left brake shoe is missing,” Charles replied. “A wooden block about six inches long and three wide, covered in leather. The other crucial parts have been located, but that one has yet to turn up.” He rubbed his hand through his brown hair, anxious. “It is the most important of all. It
must
be found.”
“Then why not enlist Lawrence in the task? He is familiar with every part of the carâhe would know what to look for.”
“Because,” Charles said in a low voice, “I have not yet cleared him of suspicion.”
“But you can't think
Lawrence
had anything to do with the crash!” Kate exclaimed. “Why would heâ?”
Then she fell silent. Why would Lawrence tamper with the Daimler? The answer was quite simple, really: he had meant to destroy the motorcar so that he and Amelia should not have to accompany it to London.
“Oh, I hope it is not true,” she said after a moment.
“Yes,” Charles said. “I have kept a close eye on him all morning, and asked P.C. Gaskell to do the same. I am quite sure that neither of them have found the missing brake.”
Kate turned to look up the hill, her attention caught by the trail of broken grasses that led up to a large horse chestnut tree. Following her glance, Charles said, “Albrecht crawled up to that tree. Jessup found him there.”
Kate shivered, thinking once more of her dream, and of the dying man's agony. What had been in his mind as he dragged himself up that hill on his knees and elbows? Had he feared death? Had he hoped for rescue? Musing, she walked slowly up the hill and stood for a moment beside the tree, imagining how the handsome, arrogant young German had lain there, his life and strength and self-confidence ebbing away, leaving only the ragged breath, the unendurable pain, the light dying into dark.
As she stood, her eye suddenly caught a rectangular object, half-buried in a mound of brown leaves. Without touching it, she bent over for a closer look. It was a narrow wooden block, six inches long or so, faced with leather. The leather covering seemed to be impregnated with a greasy red substance. The back was splintered, as if the block had been forcibly struck from its securing mechanism.
“Charles!” she called, and waved.
A moment later, Charles confirmed that she had indeed discovered the missing brake shoe. “It must have broken off in the impact and Albrecht found it,” he said. “Then he carried it with him up the hill to this spot.” He picked up the wooden block and sniffed it.
“But why?” Kate asked wonderingly. “It would have cost him some effort, when the poor man had precious little to spare. Why did he do it?”
“Because it proved his theory of the cause of the crash,” Charles said, “and he wanted to be sure that it was found.” He held out the block to her. “Do you recognize this odor, Kate?”
She sniffed it as well, and pulled back. “Phew!” she exclaimed. “What is it?”
“I don't know,” he admitted. “But whatever it is, it may be the same substance I saw on Albrecht's fingers last night.”
“On his fingers?” She frowned, studying the leather-covered block in Charles's hand. “But the brake is greasy, Charles! Is that what caused the crash?”
“Very likely,” Charles replied. “The right brake caught and held, the left brake slipped, and the motorcar spun out of control. But let me show you something else.” And he took her to where his canvas bag lay, pulled out the small crockery pot, its lid fastened on with a metal bail, and opened it. “Smell,” he commanded.
“It's the same stuff!” she said when she had sniffed it. She looked at the jar, frowning. “Charles, that pot. I recognize it! It is one of the set of three little mustard pots Eleanor sent us from France some weeks ago.” She turned it over and pointed to the tiny word
Dijon
stamped on the bottom. “You see? But that awful substance inside is certainly not mustard.”
“Are you sure of that, Kate?” Charles's voice was tense. “That this pot came from our kitchen, I mean.”
Kate, suddenly sick at heart, knew what he was thinking: that Amelia could have taken the mustard pot from the Bishop's Keep kitchen to the Quibbley cottage, where Lawrence found it and filled it with the grease that ended up on the Daimler brake.
“Well, I'm not absolutely sure, I suppose,” she said hesitantly, even though she
felt
sure enough. “I shall have to see whether Mrs. Pratt can produce all three pots. Where did you get it?”
“I found it hidden in the gondola yesterday, under a pile of rapes.”
“In the gondola?” Kate looked at him, perplexed. “I don't understand.”
But the moment the words were out of her mouth, she thought she
did
understand, after all. Lawrence had had full charge of the balloon on several occasions in the last few days. If he had wanted to cache something where he could readily retrieve it, he might have thought the gondola to be a handy hiding place.
“Oh, dear,” she said sadly.
Charles met her eyes. “Yes,” he said. “Oh, dear.”
Â
After the service that morning, Kate walked across the green churchyard to Miss Crosby's house. Kate had been raised a Roman Catholic, but the nearest priest was several miles away, across the River Stour at East Bergholts, and she regularly attended services at St. Mary the Virgin, on the High Street, in Dedham. The walls of the old church, which dated from 1492, were built of gray stone from Caen, while the imposing tower was faced with the local knapped flint. In the tower hung the bells, five of which had been cast before 1552, as Vicar Talbot was fond of boasting. But because of Warden Russell's fears of damage to the tower, the bells had only been chimed for the past few years, not rungâa sad loss to the village, the parishioners lamented. A solicitation (not the first, according to parish history) was underway to repair the tower.
The small gray cottage belonged to the village school, which kept it for the use of the teacher. She was Miss Estelle Crosby, sister to the apothecary and cousin to the Widow Jessup. Kate's knock was answered by the girl of all work, and she was ushered into the small, chilly front parlor. A coal fire was lit in the fireplace and Mrs. Jessup sat close beside it, her lap covered with a shawl, her slippered feet on the fender. Mrs. Jessup jumped to her feet, dropping the shawl, and ran away to fetch her cousin, who had also just returned from services.
The two ladies, quite flustered, accepted Kate's apologies for calling on Sunday and hurriedly produced an embroidered cloth, a pot of tea and three cups, and a chipped china plate filled with sticky buns. Miss Crosby, clearly sensible of the honor of her ladyship's visit, remarked more than once how good it was of Lady Kathryn to call on her and her poor, bereaved cousin, and the widow herself several times repeated how grateful she was for her ladyship's magnanimous offer of the loan of a pony cart, although of course her poor son, Tomâfatherless now, and broken-heartedâwas now possessed of a gig, so that she would not be required to trespass on her ladyship's extraordinary kindness. They had already heard of the wreck of Lord Marsden's motorcar on the previous day, and were anxious to know if her ladyship had any news of the tragedy. But Kate pled innocent to any knowledge of the crash, and turned their attention back to themselves by mentioning how satisfied she was to find them in such fine health, which gratified them both.
“Another bit of bun, if it please your ladyship?” asked Miss Crosby, offering the china plate so that her hand hid the chipped edge.
“Oh, do,” urged the Widow Jessup, and removed the striped knit tea cozy to peer into the pot. “An' 'ave another cup o' tea, as well, my lady. It's Sunday, and there's a-plenty.”
Kate obliged, and the three ladies were quite companionable for a few moments, sipping their tea and munching their sticky buns and speaking cozily of village matters. Miss Crosby, who seemed to know everything that was going on in the village, regaled them with a report of Mrs. Goettemoeller's seventh child, born that very morningâa boy at last, after six girls, and as fine and lusty a boy as was ever seen, black-haired and sweetly plump as a baby pig. Of Rachel Elam's dahlias winning the first prize at the fete the day before (when everyone knew that Mrs. Gotobed's were by far the nicer), and Tom Whipple's arrest on disorderly conduct charges, and of Squire Thornton's generous payment of his bail.
And then Kate remarked that she had noticed Mrs. Jessup's quite lovely bonnet as that lady had walked on the High Street the week before, and begged, if it were not too great a trial for the widow, to be allowed to see it.
Once the bonnet was on the table before them, in all its splendor of black crepe and black velvet ribbon, it was quite natural of Kate to praise the widow's fine taste in millinery and to inquire where such a fine bonnet might be purchased, and to listen for the widow's next remark, which quite naturally revealed what she had come to hear.
“O' course,” Widow Jessup sighed, reverently wrapping the bonnet in tissue, preliminary to replacing it in the cardboard bonnet box, “I could niver in a âundred years 'ave afforded such an extravagance if it âadn't bin fer the squire, bless 'is soul.”
“Nor Tom 'is fine gig,” observed the widow's cousin.
“Nor Tom 'is gig,” agreed the widow.
“Nor Whipple his bail,” said Kate, thoughtfully.
“Oh, aye,” said the widow. “The squire's bin a tower o' strength, âe 'as, an' genârous b'yond tellinâ.” She colored, and added hastily, “But I shouldn't say so. 'E âas asked Tom an' me pertic'larly
not
to.”
Disregarding the last remark, Kate said warmly, “I am so glad to know that it was the squire who has helped you. I had heard it said round the village that it was Mr. Rolls.”
The widow reddened. “Well...” she said slowly.
“Mis-ter Rolls!” sniffed her indignant cousin. “I'd like to know why âe 'ud want to 'elp. Mis-ter Rolls, indeed!”
“Now, Stella,” the widow said, and nervously turned her bonnet in her hand. “Remember wot the squire sez. We must âold no grudges.” She looked at Kate. “The squire sez t'wud be good if âtwere believed as Mr. Rolls 'elped us out. Not to lie, oâcourse. But wot's past is past, as Jessup 'isself allus sez, an' people wud be more willin' to fergive if they thought the genâleman were willin' t'pay.”
Miss Crosby sighed heavily. “Yer a real Christian soul, Tildy.” She appealed to Kate. “Ain't she, my lady? A real Christian soulâas is the squire, bless âis 'eart. Didn't âe go an' stand bail fer poor Whipple, too? Ye don't 'ear of Mis-ter Rolls standin' bail for nobody, I don't suppose.” Her smile was distinctly uncharitable.
After a few moments, Kate repeated her praise of the bonnet and added a few words in favor of the sticky buns. Taking her leave, she departed into the crisp and refreshing outdoor air.
But while the invigorating chill did much to clear Kate's head, it did little to lift her spirits. She had got the intelligence she came for, but it left her with more questions. Why had Squire Thornton involved himself in this affair, which was truly none of his business? What had he to do with the Jessups, or with Whipple, or with any of it? It was all very confusing.
But the sadness that most heavily burdened Kate as she rode along had nothing to do with Squire Thornton. Her concern and distress lay much closer to home, in the rose-covered cottage at the foot of the lane. She could believe that Lawrence Quibbley had intended to disable the Daimler, although she felt sure he had not intended to kill the driver. But dead was deadâor at least, so a jury would most likely reckon. Poor Lawrenceâwhat would become of him? And what would happen to Ameliaâsweet, loving Ameliaâif her husband were arrested and brought to the dock for the death of Wilhelm Albrecht? How would she bear it? What would she do?
Kate clucked to the gray pony, hurrying him homeward, wondering whether there was any way that she could help.
19
The number of owners and drivers of motor cars who are not gentlemen, would seem to be unduly large. There is no turning a cad into a gentleman, but there is such a thing as making even cads fear the law.
âThe
Times,
September 1901
Â
Â
“
Y
ou can't be serious, man!” exclaimed Arthur Dickson. He rose from his chair at the inn's breakfast table and glowered at the constable. “You expect us to stay
here,
in this wretched inn? Until what o'clock?”
“Until,” Laken said quietly, “the inquiry is complete.” He studied Dickson, thinking that the man looked as if he had scarcely slept. His eyes were shadowed, his pale face lined, and when he sat back down and lifted his teacup, his hands trembled visibly. “I cannot promise you what time it will be concluded, Mr. Dickson. That depends upon Sir Charles's progress in his investigation of the motorcar, and upon the outcome of my interviews with you and these other gentlemen.” He thought of Squire Thornton and the absent Bradford Marsden, who might also be able to throw some light on the shadowed subject. “And one or two others,” he added.