Read Police at the Funeral Online
Authors: Margery Allingham
âSo it's come,' he said. âI wondered when the bad blood in that family was going to show. Forty-seven years have I been in practice and it had to happen at the end of the time. Well, I'll go down and see Mrs Faraday this afternoon. You say she is taking complete control? An amazing woman â always has been. She is as shrewd and quick as ever she was, but I don't think there's a spark of feeling in her body, unless it's for that little girl of yours, Marcus. It's a disgraceful business â disgraceful.'
He paused before one of the long windows and looked down upon Regent Street below. The light falling upon his face revealed still more clearly his peculiar nobility of countenance. Mr Featherstone senior's good looks, a secret vanity of his, were largely responsible for his many years of successful practice, and now, at the age of seventy, he loomed a tall and prophetic-looking personage. His white hair and beard were true silver.
His eyes were grey like his son's, inclined to coldness, and he missed a good deal of what passed before him by refusing steadfastly to wear spectacles. He turned suddenly upon the two young men.
âYou don't remember old Faraday, of course,' he said. âHe would be â let me see now â a hundred odd if he were still alive. He was the eldest of a large family and the only one of them who was any good at all. The others ran right off the rails. John was a learned man. All the goodness in him seemed to run to that. Quite the opposite of his wife. She has intelligence, a different matter â never confuse the two.' He paused and went on slowly: âI don't think she actually disliked him. She had a very great respect for him and made a fetish of his importance in a way. Even nowadays when I go there I'm always afraid I shall sit down by mistake in that yellow chair in the library.'
Campion looked up inquiringly and Marcus explained.
âI ought to have warned you,' he said. âIn the library at Socrates Close there's a big yellow brocade-covered chair. Avoid it like the plague. It was old Faraday's own chair, you see, and as far as I know no one has ever sat in it since he died, certainly not in Mrs Faraday's presence. Of course it's a pitfall for the unwary. It ought to be labelled. But, fortunately, they don't use that room except on state occasions.'
âI will make a note of the yellow peril,' said Mr Campion.
Old Mr Featherstone turned to look dubiously at the young man who had just spoken.
âYou, Campion,' he said. âI don't know what good Mrs Faradays thinks you are going to be to her. I don't know what you think you're going to do. In my experience, and in everyone else's for that matter, the only way of making an appalling affair like this even bearable is to deal with it in a routine manner. No amateur jiggery-pokery ever has done anybody any good.'
Mr Campion accepted this gratuitous insult as if it had been a compliment of the highest order. He smiled affably.
âI'm to be a buffer. Not an old buffer, you know, but a kind of pad â a mechanical apparatus for deadening the forces of a concussion, as in railway carriages. In other words, a sort of private secretary, I suppose.'
Old Featherstone turned a cold and near-sighted eye in his direction.
âDon't behave as though you came from Oxford, my boy,' he said. âBoth the âVarsities engender fools, but thank heaven we endeavour to breed our own special type.'
Marcus glanced apprehensively at Campion. âI'm afraid my father is forgetting your reputation,' he murmured apologetically.
But Featherstone, senior, had no use for any reputation that was under fifty years old.
âI warn everybody,' he said testily, âthis affair is pitch. And in my experience, if you touch pitch you get your hands dirty. I am only concerned in this affair at Socrates Close in an official capacity. There are times when the best of us must be selfish. Marcus, you're in it even more deeply. I suppose you can't get Joyce away? She's not exactly a relative, you know.'
For the first time since Campion had known him a gleam of genuine anger came into Marcus's eyes.
âJoyce will do what she thinks and I shall abide by her decision,' he said uncompromisingly.
The old man shrugged his shoulders. âThere's no fool like a young one,' he observed, âwhatever they say.'
Mr Campion, who was becoming used to family friction by this time, was prepared for further skirmishes, but the proceedings were cut short by the entrance of an elderly clerk with the announcement that the car was waiting. A short period of bustle followed, while the old man was safely arrayed in his coat and hat and a largish woollen muffler and escorted safely downstairs into his chariot. Marcus came up the stairs looking relieved.
âLook here, Campion,' he said, âd'you mind coming into my room? It's more comfortable than this one. Father will be gone for hours. By the way, when do you think this policeman is liable to turn up?'
âQuite soon now,' said Mr Campion, getting up and walking across the passage with his friend. âHe should have got the note I left almost immediately, and when he's finished his preliminary investigations he'll come toddling over here, if I know him. You'll like him. He's one of the best. I've known him for
years. By the way, do you put all those famous names on the boxes in there to impress the unwary visitor?'
Marcus did not smile. âThat's the only advertising they let us do,' he said. âHere we are.'
The room they entered was the smallest of the three which composed the offices of Featherstone and Featherstone. The house, a converted Georgian residence, was owned by the firm, and the other businesses in the building were of an order and propriety to make them suitable neighbours to such an eminently reputable concern.
It was a square comfortable room, light and airy, lined with panelled bookcases of polished mahogany and furnished with the same appropriate wood. Marcus sat down at his desk and Campion took up a position in the leather arm-chair before the fire.
âWe shan't be disturbed in here,' Marcus promised. âImportant visitors are taken into the old boy's office. It's more impressive. Joyce and Ann are meeting here at about half-past four. I said I'd give them a cup of tea.' He passed his hand nervously over his hair. âThis business has upset everything,' he said. âIt makes you see life from an entirely different angle somehow, doesn't it?'
âLife in the newspaper sense,' observed Mr Campion, âis always seen from this point of view. Uncle William must be regarding himself as “today's human story” by this time.'
âMuckrakers!' said Marcus savagely. âI always read the murder cases myself, but when it comes to seeing people you know in print it's rather different.'
Campion nodded absently. âI'd like to know just how that woman came to poison herself,' he said slowly.
The other man stared at him. âYou think it was suicide?' he said. âI thoughtâ?'
Campion shook his head. âOh no,' he said. âThat's the last thing I should say, on the face of it. But it's evident that Miss Faraday took quite passively a large dose of poison, and this could hardly have been done by mistake in the ordinary sense of the word. The sort of poisons that are kept in large quantities in a household are always of the corrosive kind, spirits of
salt, ammonia, carbolic, things quite definitely “not to be taken”. Besides, I've never heard of a suicide in which the door of the room was not locked. People like to be alone when they kill themselves. It's a purely personal affair, anyway.'
âQuite,' said Marcus, and was silent.
It was during this pause in the proceedings that the elderly clerk appeared, to announce that a Mr Oates was inquiring for a Mr Campion.
The two young men sprang to their feet as the Inspector came in. That lank, slightly melancholy figure looked even more dejected than usual as he hesitated just inside the door. Campion grinned at him.
âCome for the body?'
The Inspector's slow childlike smile, which altered his entire personality, dispelled the discomfort of what might otherwise have been a solemn introduction.
âI got your note, Campion,' he said. âI'm glad to see you, Mr Featherstone.' He took off his raincoat and sat down in the chair Marcus indicated, leaning back gratefully. As he looked at Campion his smile broadened. âAnd I'm glad to see you, too, all things considered,' he said affably. âI suppose you're on the right side of the law?'
âI'm not murdering this week, if that's what you suggest,' said Mr Campion with dignity.
Marcus looked a little shocked by this conversation, and the Inspector made haste to explain. âI'm always running into this man in business,' he said, âand his position is generally so delicate that I never know whether I dare admit to his acquaintance or not.' He turned to Campion. âI hear from Mrs Faraday,' he said, âthat you are her personal representative, whatever that may mean. Is this true?'
Campion nodded. The Inspector paused, and Marcus, realizing that whatever the Inspector had to say he had no intention of saying it before him, tactfully withdrew to his father's office. As the door closed behind him Stanislaus Oates heaved a sigh of relief and took out his pipe.
âThis being the old lady's representative,' he began cautiously, âdoes that mean you have some secrets to keep?'
âNo,' said Mr Campion. âApparently I am all out to “apprehend the perpetrator of this dastardly outrage and bring him to the punishment he so justly deserves”.'
The Inspector grunted. âOn the level?' he demanded.
âSure. You're O.K. by me, as we say in the Senate,' said Mr Campion idiotically. âWhat do you make of it? Dogged anything up yet?'
The Inspector rubbed his chin unhappily. âDamn all,' he said. âI knew my luck was going to be out. I've been expecting trouble for days. Then there's that coincidence, me knocking into you with this girl Joyce Blount yesterday. A genuine coincidence always means bad luck for me; it's my only superstition.'
Campion sat back in his chair, eyeing his friend owlishly. Now, he felt, was hardly the time to acquaint the Inspector with the even more important side of the coincidence in question. Stanislaus Oates went on grumbling.
âJust because I speak twelve different varieties of Yiddish and can carry on a conversation with a tight Swede sailor, all of which are invaluable in the East End, I get promoted and promptly sent down on a case like this,' he began. âI tell you, Campion, I can handle an East Lane harridan with Czech and Chinese blood in her veins, but that Mrs Faraday is beyond me, you know. She speaks another new language I've got to learn. I didn't do so badly at first. In fact, when she came into that great library I thought I was going to like her. But as soon as we sat down and got started she froze solidâ'
âAnd you sat there in a yellow brocade chair, looking uncomfortable, no doubt,' said Mr Campion.
âYes,' admitted the Inspector absently, and sat up a moment later, his eyes narrowing. âHere! No monkey tricks, Campion,' he said. âHow d'you know it was a yellow brocade chair? It looked imposing. That's why I chose it.'
âBig policeman makes fatal error,' said Mr Campion, laughing, and went on to explain.
âWell I'm hanged,' said the Inspector ruefully. âBut who's to know a thing like that? It's as bad as a caste system. Oh well, that accounts for that. How about you? Have you got any line on this yet? This death this morning, you know, that's murder whatever this doctor fellow says. Natural inference points to
the other sister, the little snivelling one, Catherine Berry. That doesn't look as though it's going to lead us anywhere.' He paused and shook his head like a puzzled dog. âAs for the other case,' he continued, âit's only reasonable to look toward the household for a motive. There's William, the pompous pink-faced party, there's the old lady herself, there's Joyce Blount. Does any of these look to you like a murderer? Or any of the servants, for that matter? The whole thing doesn't make sense. I ask you, who's going to tie a man up and then shoot him, or shoot a man and then tie him up? It's ridiculous. I had a look round this morning and took the ordinary depositions. There are one or two interesting things in the house, but not much in the people.' He frowned, and as Campion did not speak went on. âI think I see how that thing this morning was done, but I won't commit myself until I have proof. Well, this is the first time you and I have been on a case together, Campion, since nineteen twenty-six. I don't mind telling you I'm glad to see you.'
âNicely said,' said Mr Campion. âWhat is at the back of your mind? What are you hoping I'll say?'
The Inspector took out a notebook. âMy shorthand man took down the verbatim statement,' he said, âbut this is just my own personal stuff.'
âFilled with comic faces, mostly, I see,' said Mr Campion, glancing over his shoulder.
Stanislaus grunted. âAbout this cousin,' he said. âCousin George Makepeace Faraday. I heard about him from William. He was in the vicinity when the first chap died.'
Mr Campion resumed his chair and leant back. He knew from experience that it was no use trying to suppress anything of which Stanislaus had got wind.
âI say,' he said, âI have no actual proof of this, so I suppose it isn't much good to the trained mind, but do you remember that fellow who tackled you yesterday, the fellow who bunked when he saw Miss Blount? I think that was Cousin George. Didn't you notice how extraordinarily like William he was?'
The policeman looked at him incredulously. âThat would just make it impossible,' he said. âIt'd strengthen that coincidence, too, and that always means trouble. We can verify it, though.
There's always the girl. What's she hiding, anyway? I say, you don't think that she . . . ?'
âMy dear man, why should she? She stands to get most of the money in any case,' said Mr Campion hastily. âNo, there's nothing in that. We're getting on too fast. There's the scandal connected with this Cousin George, remember, and a scandal in this crowd is very important, let me tell you. It may be something that would strike the ordinary man as comparatively slight. Cousin George may have had rickets as a child, or T.B., or been divorced. You're looking him up, I suppose?'