Someone they knew about at the Foreign Office because it had been a political murder, a famous political murder set round an eternal triangle â¦
Henry Tyler sought out Professor Godiesky and explained.
âIt was recorded by contemporary authors,' Henry said, âthat when the tarts poisoned with mercury were delivered to the Tower of London for Sir Thomas Over-bury, the fingernail of the woman delivering them had accidentally been poked through the pastryâ¦'
The Professor nodded sapiently. âAnd it was stained black?'
âThat's right,' said Henry. History did have some lessons to teach, in spite of what Henry Ford had said. âBut it would wash off?'
âYes,' said Hans Godiesky simply.
âSo I'm afraid that doesn't get us anywhere, does it?'
The academic leaned forward slightly, as if addressing a tutorial. âThere is, however, one substance on which mercury always leaves its mark.'
âThere is?' said Henry.
âIts â how do you say it in English? â its ineradicable mark.'
âThat's how we say it,' said Henry slowly. âAnd which substance, sir, would that be?'
âGold, Mr Tyler. Mercury stains gold.'
âFor ever?'
âFor ever.' He waved a hand. âAn amalgam is created.'
âAnd I,' Henry gave a faint smile, âI was foolish enough to think it was diamonds that were for ever.'
âPardon?'
âNothing, Professor. Nothing at all. Forgive me, but I think I may be able to catch the Inspector and tell him to look to the lady. And her gold wedding ring.'
âLook to the lady?' The refugee was now totally bewildered. âI do not understandâ¦'
âIt's a quotation.'
âAch, sir, I fear I am only a scientist.'
âThere's a better quotation,' said Henry, âabout looking to science for the righting of wrongs. I rather think Mrs Steele may have looked to science too, to â er â improve her lot. And if she carefully scattered the corrosive sublimate over some mince pies and not others, it would have been with her left handâ¦'
âBecause she was left-handed,' said the Professor immediately. âThat I remember. And you think one mince pie would have had â I know the English think this important â more than its fair share?'
âI do. Then all she had to do was to give her husband that one and Bob's your uncle. Clever of her to do it in someone else's house.'
Hans Godiesky looked totally mystified. âAnd who was Bob?'
âDon't worry about Bob,' said Henry from the door. âThink about Melchior and his gold instead.'
The Trouble and Strife
Detective Inspector C. D. Sloan sighed deeply and started to explain all over again to the woman sitting in front of him that people may go missing of their own accord at any time if they so wished. What they called it these days was âdropping out', but he didn't suppose that the aggressive woman before him would want him to use the term about her daughter.
âNot my Susan,' declared Mrs Briggs firmly, âwhatever you're going to try to tell me about it being a free country.'
âAnyone,' stated the policeman, who hadn't been going to say anything about it being a free country. He also forbore to explain that Susan Cavendish wasn't âher' Susan any more but had apparently been a married woman in her own right for nearly three years now. She should have been her own woman long ago.
âShe's not been in touch for a full month,' said Mrs Briggs, ignoring this, âand that's not right, is it?'
âShe doesn't have to be in touch if she doesn't want to be,' repeated Sloan patiently. âShe is, after all, of full age.'
âAnd I may say, officer, she is also an Englishwoman born in wedlock and had her feet on dry land when I last saw her,' Mrs Briggs completed the adage tartly, âbut she's still missing.'
âWhich she has every right to be if she so wishes,' pointed out the Detective Inspector. With a mother like Mrs Briggs, he might very well have opted to go missing himself.
âAnd that's never happened before,' insisted Susan's mother, ignoring this last remark of his too. âThey used to come in to see me every weekend without fail. Susan did my shopping while that no good husband of hers did any odd jobs about the house I needed doing.'
âI see.' Sloan had known a good few sons-in-law who never did a hand's turn in their wife's mother's house but this didn't seem the moment to say so.
âAnd I'm just not satisfied that she's all right,' said Mrs Briggs belligerently. âSo I'm reporting her missing here and now whatever you say.'
âWas your daughter all right when you last saw her?' parried Sloan.
âIt depends what you mean by all right,' responded Mrs Briggs. âPhysically she was as fit as the butcher's dogâ¦'
âThat's something,' put in Detective Constable Crosby from the sidelines.
Mrs Briggs favoured him with a baleful stare and turned back to Sloan. âBut she wasn't happy in herself, even though she said the divorce was working its way through â and not before time too, if you ask me.'
âDivorce?' said Sloan, the policeman in him automatically pricking up his ears.
âShe'd decided to leave him at last,' said Mrs Briggs. âNasty piece of work, I always said, that Christopher Cavendish, for all that he's done well at his job.'
âAnd what was that?' enquired Sloan, pulling a piece of paper towards him.
âHe was one of those computer people,' she said, sniffing. âYou know â the sort who sit at home all day in front of a screen and call it working. How does anyone know whether you're working or not, that's what I want to know?'
âI dare say the usual yardsticks apply,' murmured Sloan.
âCome again?'
âThe making of money,' said Sloan smoothly.
âHe did that,' she admitted grudgingly. âThey had a lovely old house, though a bit on the small side if they'd wanted to start a familyâ¦'
âAh, I was going to ask aboutâ'
âWhich mercifully, the way things have turned out, they hadn't done.' She sniffed. âSusan wanted a baby â don't ask me why. Nothing but trouble, children. I was always telling her that.'
Detective Inspector Sloan made a note.
âOf course, half of the house will be my Susan's when they settle up â half of everything, come to that â so she won't come out of it too badly.' She glared at Sloan. âIf she's all right, that is.'
âTell me, have you approached the husbandâ¦' Sloan paused and looked down at his notes. âYes, he is the husband still, isn't he, if the divorce hasn't come through yet? Have you asked him where she might be? He at least might have some idea, even if they have parted, as you say they have.'
âThat's the trouble,' Mrs Briggs said instantly. âI don't know where he is either.'
âSo the husband is missing too, is he?' asked Sloan with interest.
âWell, I never,' remarked Detective Constable Crosby.
Mrs Briggs bridled. âI wouldn't know about him being missing, but the house has been sold â I do know that â and he's gone too, but where I don't know. Good riddance for Susan, if you ask me.' She gave a self-satisfied smirk. âI always said she should never have married him in the first place. If I told her that once, I told her so a dozen times.'
âNot good enough?' put in Detective Constable Crosby helpfully. He was still a bachelor himself.
âNot by a long chalk,' said Mrs Briggs, taking a deep breath preparatory to enlarging on this at length.
Detective Inspector Sloan forestalled her. âAnd have you made enquiries at her place of work?'
âIn a manner of speaking,' conceded Mrs Briggs. âNot that I got very far.'
âHow come?' asked Detective Constable Crosby, in whom his superiors had so far failed to instil any proper sense of formality when dealing with members of the public.
âSusan worked for a temping agency in Berebury and they say that someone just rang in one day to say she wouldn't be available for work any more.'
âSomeone?' pounced Sloan.
âThey couldn't swear it was her,' said Mrs Briggs. âIn fact, they couldn't even be sure that it was a woman who had rung.' She suddenly became a little more human and admitted, âThat's when I began to get really worried.'
âI see, madam.' He did too. âYou say their marital home has been sold?'
âThe house agents' sale board has come down and Wetherspoons cleared the furniture at the end of last week.' She pursed her lips. âSid Wetherspoon wouldn't tell me where they were taking it. Commercially sensitive information, he called it.'
Detective Inspector Sloan made a note. He'd have a word with the house agents and the removal people himself.
âAnd their solicitors won't tell me either,' she went on in aggrieved tones. âClient confidentiality was what they said.'
âQuite so,' murmured Sloan.
âThere was something else.'
âWhat was that, madam?'
âAll Susan's stuff was in that van that went along with Christopher's.'
âNot just his?' asked Detective Constable Crosby, patently puzzled.
âNo, and I do know that because I watched it go.' She snorted gently. âIt was just as well she wasn't pregnant after allâ¦'
âAfter all?' prompted Sloan, leaving aside for the time being the more germane matter of all the furniture going from the house together.
âShe'd wanted a baby at first but one didn't come along,' said Mrs Briggs. âAnd before you ask, the doctor wouldn't tell me anything either. Said he'd be struck off the register or something like that. Excuses,' she said richly, âall of them.'
âThat'd be because of that chap Hippocrates,' put in Crosby. âHe's the one the doctors swear by.' He frowned. âFunny that, since he wasn't a Christian.'
âAt least,' said Mrs Briggs, ignoring this, âthere being no baby on the way will have made the divorce simpler, which is something to be thankful for.'
âQuite so,' said Detective Inspector Sloan, rising to his feet. âWell, thank you, Mrs Briggs. We'll be looking into the matter for you.'
âThen there's the question of her car,' said the woman, not making a move. âThat's worrying, too.'
Detective Constable Crosby's face brightened. âDo you know the number?'
âCourse, I do,' she came back at him on the instant. âAnd the make.'
âWhat's so worrying about her car?' asked Detective Inspector Sloan quickly.
âShe sold it before she disappeared. At least,' she said meaningfully, âsomeone did. Took it into that big dealers down by the river and sold it.'
âFor cash or a trade-in?' asked Crosby.
âCash,' said Mrs Briggs promptly.
âHow do you know that?' said Sloan.
âI saw it in their showroom.' She twisted her lips. âBesides, car dealers don't have funny ideas about what's commercially sensitive information.'
âExcept the real second-hand value,' muttered Crosby. âThey'll never tell you that about any car you're trading in.'
âThat I wouldn't know, never having been a driver myself,' she said, reminded of another grievance. âAt least their old house was on an easy bus route for me. It suited me nicely being where it was â I could get there whenever I wanted.'
âAnd what car does your son-in-law drive, madam?' enquired Sloan as casually as he could. These days owners of cars and their addresses could be traced by police authorities with the speed of light.
âChristopher?' she said scornfully. âOh, he didn't have a car. Only Susan did. Said he didn't need one, working from home like he did.' She screwed up her face. âAnd anyway he'd got some potty idea about not adding to the world's pollution problems. What he thinks he could do about global warming beats me.'
âI think,' said Detective Inspector Sloan a trifle portentously, âyou'd better leave things as they are at present, madam. We'll be in touch in â er â in due course.'
âI'm sure I hope so,' said Mrs Briggs, âbut if you ask me, he's made away with her and made off with all the money.'
âHave you any particular basis for making these allegations, madam?' asked Sloan wearily. He was beginning to feel quite sorry for both her daughter and her son-in-law.
âI thought you'd never ask,' she said acidly.
âWell?'
Mrs Briggs dived into her handbag, retrieved a glossy sheet of paper and waved it before his eyes. âThis.'
âThe estate agents' sale particulars of their house?' said Sloan.
âThat's right,' she said.
âWhat about it?'
âRead it,' she commanded. âEspecially the bit about the garage.'
â“Detached garage, brick with slate roof,”' he quoted, â“well equipped with workbench, tool cupboard and two electrical points.”' He lifted his gaze. âSounds very nice. What's wrong with it?'
âThere's something missing from the description,' she said stubbornly.
âWhat?' asked Sloan.
âInspection pit,' she said. âThere always used to be one there and it isn't mentioned in this.'
âAnd you think,' began Crosby incautiously.
âYes,' she said. âI do.'
Detective Inspector Sloan got rid of Mrs Briggs by falling back on an age-old police formula that comprised thanking her for coming in and promising to keep in touch with her to let her know how their enquiries were progressing.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
He was nothing like as circumspect when talking to his Superintendent.
âI don't like it, sir. I've had a look at it and the inspection pit in the garage at the Cavendishs' old home has obviously been filled in very recently.'
âGo on,' said Superintendent Leeyes gruffly.