She shrugged. âI've no idea. The young fellow came here and Arthur sent me out of the room. They started shouting, and I came back when I heard them begin to scuffle. It was all over by then, but the place was in a right mess, I can tell you. They'd knocked my palm stand over and my aspidistra was on the floor,' she said indignantly, pointing to a narrow, tapering oak stand, now upright, and on its lace doily a leathery potted plant of no great beauty that looked more than capable of surviving such rough treatment.
âAnd your husband?'
âOh, him. He was all right, he went to sit in his chair when I came in, and the young chap left. I will say,' she added grudgingly, âhe had the grace to apologize and pick my aspidistra up before he went.'
âDid Mr Aston say what it was all about?'
Lily looked at him. âWhat makes you think he'd tell
me
?'
There was a small silence. âYou didn't get on, then, you and your husband?'
âI didn't say that. Just that he kept himself to himself.'
âSo you wouldn't know if he had any enemies?'
âLike that young chap, you mean?'
âWell, from what you say, their meeting doesn't seem to have been exactly friendly. Did you happen to overhear anything of what went on?'
She blushed, an ugly dark red that ran in a tide from her chest and throat right up to her hairline. âWhat do you take me for? I don't listen at doors.' She stood up and added with a certain dignity, âIf that's it, Sergeant, then I have to go out soon.'
âAnother few minutes, please, and then I'll be off, I promise.'
âBe as quick as you can then,' she said sharply. âWhat else is it you want?'
You didn't have to read between the lines, Joe thought, to see she was an unhappy woman in what had been an unhappy marriage, but the cowed wife Maisie had known wasn't much in evidence today. She was showing spirit, though anxious to get rid of him. Yet there still remained the somewhat delicate matter of asking permission to go through the dead man's things, papers and perhaps personal belongings. The papers first.
Before making any request, Joe enquired, âBy the way, did Mr Aston happen to keep any duplicate keys for the works?'
âDuplicates? I wouldn't know. Unless there were some at Henrietta Street. He only had the one set as far as I know.'
âHe let himself into the foundry that morning but we haven't found any keys.'
She shrugged and said ungraciously, âBetter have another look, then, hadn't you? A big bunch like that doesn't lose itself easy. They were on a ring with his house keys and that.'
âWe'll do that, of course. Meanwhile, your husband's private papers ⦠I'm afraid I'm going to have to ask for a look at them.'
âYou could if you had the keys, but you'll have to find them first, won't you? It's locked,' she said, with a touch of malice, gesturing towards a dark oak roll-top desk with a green opaque-glass nymph displayed on its top.
He gave her a direct look before saying casually, âRight, well, never mind that, Mrs Aston, I can force it open. No, no, don't worry, I'll be careful not to make too many scratches. Do you have a knife?'
âDon't be so hasty,' she replied like a shot, alarmed for her furniture. âThere might be a spare key somewhere upstairs.'
There was, of course. After some time she came back with it, sucking a bead of blood from her thumb. âKey slipped â I mean the one to the cupboard where this was,' she said, handing him the very small key to the desk. âYou'd think it was Winson Green, this house, the way things were kept locked up.'
Arthur Aston was certainly emerging as a careful man, secretive even, but keys kept within locked cupboards? Number seven, Cherry Avenue must indeed have seemed like a prison to Mrs Aston sometimes.
But when he looked, Joe didn't find anything that warranted such secrecy. Aston had been an orderly man and his desk was very tidy. No personal diary, though. Evidently the appointment book he kept in his office desk had been sufficient for him, along with what appeared to be a scribbled reminder list on the back of a part-used chequebook, items meaningless to anyone else:
Rates, 16th June; Harrison, painter, Queen's Rd; WIM (several times); Car Licence, June 30th; Timber, £5.17.6
. The cheque stubs all appeared to be for small payments of household bills. There were no bank statements and no cash in the desk â now he came to think of it, Aston had had very little on him when he was killed, just some loose change in his pocket and a couple of pound notes in his wallet. Careful chap, Aston.
Apart from these mundane papers, there was a file containing deeds for the house and a bank passbook with a tidy though not excessive balance, which would need to be checked more thoroughly. His business statements and a preliminary look through the books in the safe at his office had revealed similarly satisfactory figures. At the back of the file was a marriage certificate dated June 1911 for Arthur Aston, bachelor, and Lily Jane Tucker, spinster. There was no will, nor had there been one among his papers at the office, though it would have been surprising if he'd kept it there.
âDid your husband keep private documents anywhere else, Mrs Aston? A copy of his will, perhaps?'
âWill? I don't know of any will.' She shrugged, not seeming too concerned at its absence.
So unless Aston had lodged a copy with his bank or his solicitor, it seemed he might have died intestate. It was possible, with all his assets realized and his business wound up, that when Lily Jane Tucker married Arthur Aston, she might not have made such a bad bargain after all.
In preparation for Easter, tonight's choir practice was an extra â just the boys, with none of the deeper male voices as a counterpoint to their piercing sweetness.
â
My soul doth magnify the Lord â¦
'
Perhaps because this setting of the Magnificat was as new and unfamiliar to the boys as it was to Margaret, the choirmaster kept making them stop and go back to the beginning, repeating phrases over and over again. Voices echoing in the empty spaces of the church and around the stone pillars, soaring to the vaulting, becoming ragged, dying away. The choirmaster giving them a note. His interjections, his actual words not quite reaching to where Margaret sat â¦
She had lately found herself coming in here on most choir practice nights, just to listen, much as her father had done. Philip Latham, the young and enthusiastic organist and choirmaster, had been a particular friend of his, their shared love of music, particularly sacred music, having brought them together. She had indeed sometimes been tempted to wonder if her father's faithful adherence to Holy Trinity had as much to do with that as his commitment to his faith. Heretical thought! But who could ever tell with Osbert?
âFor he that is mighty hath magnified me â¦'
Margaret vaguely wondered who the composer was. Her father could have told her. She closed her eyes but that only brought the questions back. For the last few hours, they'd tumbled about in her mind â the doubts, everything that had gone wrong since Osbert's death, the shock at the manner of it â¦
Strangely, tonight she felt closer to him than at any time since his death, as if this new worry that had arisen today had set up some communion with him. But that didn't mean he could tell her what to do now ⦠what to do about things being stirred up again, what to do when she tried to face her fears as she knew she should and her own brisk common sense deserted her.
â
â¦
and ever shall be, world without end. Amen.'
Finally, the choirmaster, having let them sing the canticle right through without any interruptions, was winding up the practice, his voice raised enough now for her to distinguish his words. âAll right, that's it for tonight. But I shall expect a better performance on Sunday. Off you go â
quietly!
' he shouted above the ensuing din that immediately broke out as the choir dispersed. Like choirboys everywhere, they looked and sounded angelic, singing like angels and incapable of mischief or naughtiness when dressed in their dark blue robes and short white surplices, but now they were just ordinary, mortal boys in their rough jerseys and shorts, socks at half-mast as they jostled each other rowdily past her down the aisle and shot out of the door like greyhounds released from a trap.
An uncanny silence was left behind until presently the organ began again â toccata and fugue, eclipsing the gentler notes of the Magnificat, rolling and thunderous, the sort of music that always filled Margaret with melancholy foreboding. An agitation gripped her; she could no longer sit still.
She hurried, almost ran out of the church into a green and gold spring evening, into the tranquil churchyard that was no longer used as a burial ground, shaded by lime trees, bisected by flagged paths where the grass between the old graves was now allowed to grow and become studded with wild flowers. This was not a place that gave off melancholy, nor indeed indulged it; the dead here had slept peacefully for centuries, the inscriptions on their ancient headstones indecipherable now, worn by the passage of time. A fragrance hung around the lych gate from wallflowers which had seeded themselves into the cracks of the old churchyard wall, some already in bloom.
Her footsteps gradually slowed; she felt a hand on her shoulder and spun round. âI saw you in church, my love. I hoped I might catch you.'
âSymon! I didn't see
you
,' she said, still agitated.
âI only popped out from the vestry for a minute. You seemed very ⦠absorbed. What's wrong?' In fact he had watched her from the vestry doorway for longer than that and thought, though he could not be sure from that distance, that she might have been weeping.
âI am
so
pleased to see you, Symon!'
âNow that's good. My future wife is pleased to see me!'
âOf course I am.' His teasing irony had missed its mark. âI need to talk to you,' she said rapidly. âSomething's happened, but ⦠oh, I don't know how to begin!'
He waited, his hand still on her arm.
âThere's â there's been an accident at one of the factories in Arms Green.'
âArthur Aston, I know.'
âYou know? News travels fast.'
âI went to pay a pastoral call on his wife yesterday. Though they were not church attenders.' He added, with slightly heightened colour, âShe refused to speak to me.'
In fact Lily Aston had taken one look at his dog collar and demanded rudely what business it was of his when he had mentioned the purpose of his visit, and then virtually shut the door in his face.
âI suppose it must be a difficult time for her,' Margaret said.
âDo you know her?'
âI've never met her but Maisie used to work for the Astons. And â I did know her husband, slightly. He was my father's batman in South Africa and used to come and see him occasionally â¦' Now that Symon was here, she began to feel less agitated and made an effort to get her thoughts in better order, rolling a small pebble on the path with the pointed toe of her smart kid shoe.
âMargaret?' She went on pushing the pebble about. âYou're upset because of Aston's death?' he prompted.
âNot really. Oh, I mean ⦠well, of course I am, it's shocking news.'
âWhat is it, then?' She was smartly dressed as usual, wearing a light wrap coat, cut to button on the hip, in some material with a silky gleam to it, its bronze colour bringing out the glow in her hazel eyes, but somehow draining the colour from her face. She was bareheaded, twisting the straw hat she had worn in church round and round in her hands. âWhat is it?' he repeated.
Sympathy was always guaranteed to make her cry, but her natural control was gradually reasserting itself. She made an effort and breathed deeply. âThis afternoon, the police came looking for Felix. They â they believe Mr Aston died after being attacked.'
âWhat? And they suspect Felix?' To say he was astounded was putting it mildly. âYour brother Felix?' he repeated, as if she had some other brother. âWhat grounds have they for that?'
âMy brother Felix,' she answered with a shaky laugh, âhas been making more of a fool of himself than usual.'
This was eminently conceivable to Symon, but his private opinions about Felix did not include seeing him as a murderer, even when Margaret went on to tell him about the scrap with Aston that Felix had apparently initiated.
âThat was â foolish,' he said, choosing the word carefully â idiotic, crass and asinine being unpardonable words in the circumstances. âBut he must have had his reasons for picking a fight with the man?'
âHe
believes
he had. You see, the fact is â oh, it's too awful â but the fact is, Mr Lazenby has discovered something â well, unusual, in Father's papers.'
âMr Lazenby? Ah, the accountant.' After a moment he said, âWe'd better find a seat and you can tell me everything. Unless you'd prefer to go somewhere more private? Home, perhaps?'
âNo. Here will do â it could hardly be more private, after all; no one here is likely to repeat what they overhear, are they?'
This time it was he who let the little attempt at frivolity pass. It showed she was feeling more herself, but it was not one of the occasions when he felt it appropriate to laugh and relax and say nonsensical things himself. He led her to one of the seats along a side path, sat her down and then gently held her hand and told her to start from the beginning.
She had been immersed in fashion catalogues when the police arrived, although the elegant creations depicted therein were serving only to reinforce the certainty that her trousseau was not going to be enhanced by anything likely to be purchased from the Misses Schofield on the High Street, whose basic stock-in-trade was lisle stockings and liberty bodices. Her wedding dress was no problem: it was being made by one of Aunt Deborah's friends who had learnt her craft at the Royal School of Needlework. Skirts that year had shot up to barely an inch below the knee, but Margaret had conceded that was a length inappropriate for a wedding dress and had settled for mid-calf, choosing a simple long-waisted deep cream chiffon over a white satin underdress, the bodice and fluted hem embroidered with roses and seed pearls. As for the rest of her trousseau â well, shopping for clothes wasn't normally Kay's idea of a good day out, but perhaps she could be persuaded into a trip to London â¦