âWhoever she was, she must have been expecting trouble,' Emmeline said.
âWhich proves she must have been on her way to, or from, somewhere else,' Richard insisted. âNo one in this house has ever owned a gun.'
âShe wasn't to know that, was she?' Henry countered. âIn any case, she wasn't shot, she was drowned.'
In deference to Aunt Milly's presence, the conversation had been suspended during lunch. Now that Milly had gone back to the morning room, the others had returned to their speculation with renewed zest.
âI suppose it couldn't have been a mugging in the town that went wrong?' Even Nan was joining in. âAnd they decided to dispose of the body in our grounds?'
âHell of a long way to cart a body!' Christa disposed of that theory briskly. âAnd she was drowned, remember. In our pond.'
âI should have had that pond filled in long ago.' Uncle Wilfred was in breast-beating mood. âIt was never safe with all the children around.' He began searching frantically through his pockets.
âBut none of them ever came to any harm,' Nan reminded him. âOnly this ⦠stranger.'
âA stranger â does that make it any better? The woman is still dead.' Belated guilt was catching up with Uncle Wilfred. He was no longer thinking only of the advantage to Chloe. He found a stray mint, fuzzy with
lint, and popped it into his mouth. âDead â in our garden. How could it have happened?'
Only too easily. Obviously. The real question was why it had happened. And also, to whom?
âThere must be some way to speed up the police procedures,' Margot said tentatively. âCan't Mr Comfrey chivvy them along? With all the computers and internet connections they have access to these days â¦' She trailed off. The others were looking at her incredulously.
âAre you mad?' Christa was plainly speaking for them all. âWe want as little to do with the police as possible. And don't think they'll jump to attention just because the Great Comfrey snaps his fingers. Quite the contrary, it would only antagonise them.'
âLet them get on with it in their own way,' Richard agreed.
âAnd without us!' Christa was determined about that.
âIt was just a thought.' Thoroughly squelched, Margot withdrew from the conversation. Perhaps she was mad. Little side glances aimed at her when they thought she wasn't looking betrayed uncertainty.
But then, Justin and Fenella were always darting little side glances at everyone. They would be glad to get back to the clean and honest cut-throat world of show business and away from the dangers inherent in family life.
In this family, anyway. Margot closed her eyes, too tired to think.
Or too afraid?
Another thought she did not have the energy to explore.
Or the courage?
The doorbell chimed, an unexpected â and unfamiliar - sound. They didn't have many visitors these days.
âThe police are back?' Nan looked dismayed.
âI shouldn't think so,' Richard said. âI had the distinct impression that they were through with us for the day when they finished questioning me this morning. I saw them out myself.'
The doorbell chimed again.
âI'll go,' Margot said, since everyone else seemed so reluctant.
âMargot!' Kingsley stood there. And Verity, of course. âHow well you look.' He stepped in and brushed her cheek with his lips. Verity sniffed.
âI'm sorry I couldn't get here earlier,' Kingsley said, âbut I talked to Lynette on the telephone and she understands.'
Margot nodded, half-listening for the imperious summons of the handbell from upstairs, but there was only silence. That must have been quite some talk Emmeline had had with Lynette this morning. Or perhaps Nan had administered another pill or two, strictly in the interests of keeping the peace â especially with the police present. It would not have done to call Lynette to their attention.
âI think she might be asleep â ' Margot broke off. Kingsley was already heading for the stairs, Verity trailing reluctantly after him.
âWho is it?' The doorbell chimes had done what all other commotion could not and drawn Milly out of her refuge. She looked around eagerly â who did she hope to see? â and her face fell when she saw it was only Kingsley.
âMilly!' He strode forward and bestowed a double kiss, once on each cheek. âHow are you?'
âAll right.' Milly seemed to brace herself against further onslaughts, her gaze still turned hopefully towards the front door. âAre you alone?'
âI'm
with him.' Verity issued the words like a challenge.
âOh ⦠yes.' Aunt Milly averted her gaze and began to retreat.
âWait!' Kingsley said. âDon't go! I've brought you a present.' He fumbled with the latch on his briefcase and wrenched it open, pulling out a large book. âA biography!'
he announced triumphantly. âOf a real Regency character â'
âReal? Oh, no!' Aunt Milly pressed the book back into his hands. âOh, no, dear. Thank you, but no. I never read biographies. Emmeline tried to give me some, but I had to make her understand. You see, you read them and you get so fond of the people and then ⦠they die â¦'
âThey die â¦' Milly took one final step and closed the door behind her, her words echoing forlornly through the hall.
âI â I thought â ' Kingsley stared after her blankly, clutching his disdained offering. âI thought she'd be pleased.'
âShe isn't herself,' Verity said quickly. âYou know that.'
âI brought a present for Lynette, too.' He turned uncertainly to Margot. âThat's why I wasn't here earlier. I stopped to do some shopping along the way.'
âYou should have let me do the shopping,' Verity said. âI told you that.'
âA jigsaw puzzle. Do you think she'll like it?' Ignoring Verity, he was still seeking Margot's approval.
âI think she'd like to go back to London with you,' Margot said. âAt least, for a few days.'
âThat's out of the question!' Verity answered for him. âWe have far too much to do to be able to cope with an invalid, as well. There's nobody there to wait on her all day.'
âActually, Verity's right.' Kingsley was apologetic. âLynette is much better off here. She'd find London too upsetting.'
More upsetting than a place where they kept finding dead bodies in the garden? Margot doubted that.
âI know,' Kingsley said, as though she had spoken the thought. âBut she'd be bored and lonely. Very lonely, with no one around all day. It suits her here.'
Or, more accurately, it suited Kingsley. As it had
suited Claudia. Why had they bothered to have a child at all? Was it just to complete the picture of the perfect political family? To please the voters? To provide good picture fodder?
âShe is all right?' Kingsley's anxious eyes met Margot's. âAt least, she's no worse?'
He did care. And probably Claudia had, too. It was just that a child had cramped their style and it was so convenient, when Milly maintained what amounted to a family nursery, to simply leave the child there and go off about their more exciting concerns. They knew Lynette would have the best of care, Milly was ever-welcoming, so where was the harm?
âI think Lynette is ⦠very disturbed,' Margot said. No need to tell him why.
He nodded and started again for the stairs, then hesitated. âAre you coming up?'
âI'd better not.' The sight of her might start Lynette off again. âYou're the one she wants to see.'
âYes.' He looked as though he had been summoned to a particularly unpleasant interview with the Prime Minister.
âAlone,' Margot added, as Verity started after him.
âShe's right.' Kingsley dismissed Verity. âYou stay down here. I won't be long.'
Verity's eyes flashed, but she turned meekly and followed Margot into the library. The others looked up, regarding Margot as they might have regarded Tikki dragging in something especially unsavoury. Even Verity seemed to notice a certain lack of warmth and feel that she had to overcome it.
âKingsley has gone up to Lynette!' Verity announced, as triumphantly as though she had personally engineered it.
âI should hope so.' Nan gave her an old-fashioned look.
âWell, he's frightfully busy right now,' Verity defended. âHe has all that lost time to make up. It's lucky
the trial was adjourned, it was throwing him way off schedule.'
Another one with a curiously skewed definition of lucky. Margot closed her eyes and found that she didn't feel quite so tired when she didn't have to look at Verity - it was bad enough to have to listen to her.
â ⦠and, perhaps I shouldn't be telling you this, but you
are
family â ' Even more triumph throbbed in Verity's voice. âThis is not for general information yet but â it's pretty certain that Kingsley is going to be offered a Cabinet post in the next reshuffle!'
The murmur of approval managed to sound interested, if not wildly enthusiastic.
âThat's good news.' Richard sounded as though he might be calculating how this information could be used to best advantage.
How thrilled Claudia would have been. The culmination of all her ambitions for Kingsley. Well, perhaps not the absolute culmination: only the position of Prime Minister would have sufficed for that. But it was a giant step in the right direction.
âAre we boring you?' Verity demanded sharply.
âSorry â' Margot had no doubt that the question was aimed at her. âI'm afraid jet lag strikes again.'
âDoes it?' Verity jeered. âYou have the longest case I've ever heard of. Perhaps you should try for the Guinness Book of Records.'
The atmosphere, as everyone avoided looking directly at Margot, told her that Verity was not the only person who had had that thought.
âThat's enough, Verity.' Emmeline called her to order. âMargot has been ill.'
How did she know that?
âVery ill,' Nan confirmed.
Had no one been deceived?
âOh, I'm so sorry.' The gloating look Verity turned on Margot said that it couldn't have happened to a better person. âI had no idea.'
âThere's no reason why you should.'
Even Christa had known.
âIt's nothing to do with you.'
âOh, but, if she's here with Lynette â helping take care of her â¦'
âIt's nothing contagious,' Margot assured her. âI'm just very, very tired. And sometimes very weak.' That was as specific as she cared to get. The others were way ahead of her.
âME!' Verity cried, with barely subdued glee. âMyalgic encephalomyelitis! People with that can't do anything at all. No wonder you're not running around with your camera, photographing everything in sight, the way you used to!'
âThat's right, you haven't really been your old self since you got here.' Nan spoke as though a lot of things were becoming clear to her.
âChronic Fatigue Syndrome,' Christa said. âA lot of people in the theatre have it â and are doing some of their finest acting trying to prove that they haven't.'
âI think â¦' Uncle Wilfred had begun to twitch and, after searching frantically through every pocket, lurched to his feet. âI think there was some lemon curd tart left over â¦' With obvious relief, he left the women to their discussion of ailments and headed for the fridge.
âPost Viral Fatigue,' Emmeline diagnosed. âI should have spotted it myself. Heaven knows I've seen enough of it at school.'
Margot leaned back and closed her eyes again. A faint ringing in her ears and a feeling of dizziness warned her that it would not be wise to stand up now, however much she wanted to escape the room.
âTATT!' Nan declared. “âTired All The Time”, that's what the doctors call it. There's so much of it around that it has its own acronym.'
âYuppie flu â there's a positive epidemic,' Richard confirmed. âEspecially in the City after a heavy weekend.' This levity brought him disapproving looks from the others.
In the distance, a telephone began ringing. They listened as Uncle Wilfred's footsteps diverted from the direction of the kitchen as he went to answer it.
âOooh ⦠but should we be keeping you up like this?' Verity oozed false sympathy. âWouldn't you rather go upstairs and lie down -?' Then she seemed to recollect who else was upstairs and changed tack abruptly. âOr perhaps you could stretch out on the chaise-longue in the morning room. I'm sure Aunt Milly wouldn't mind.'