âDon't be so silly,' Morning Glory said. âThese clothes belonged to Aunty Audrey.'
I held up a little girl's frock. It was the sort of daft cream puff affair Titania would prance around in. âWhat, even this?'
âAunty Audrey kept
everything
, right from her early childhood. Some of the clothes in this pile must be eighty years old.'
âThey'd fetch a fortune in London.'
She stared at me. âWhat do you mean?'
I held up another frock. Nothing but frills and furbelows and scallops. âPlenty of shops in London sell antique stuff like this. My mother's always strolling past and scoffing at the prices.'
âReally?'
âReally.' I dived in the pile. âLook! You've got matching shoes and handbags!'
âWould they sell too?'
âOf course they would,' I assured her. I waved an arm towards the knick-knack corner. After the grand battle, it had been reduced to a few semi-unravelled owls and a couple of badly chipped piglets. But it still proved my point. âThere's always someone who will pay for any old rubbish.'
âI suppose you're right.' She sighed. âIt would be lovely to have a bit of extra cash . . .' No doubt remembering that my attempt to get some had ended when the phone line was dragged down, she shrugged. âOh, well. Better start thinking about breakfast.'
âAre there no more pork pies?'
âNot quite enough,' she said. âI'm going to eke them out with a few dandelion rissoles.'
âThat'll be nice,' I said faintly as she went off to the kitchen.
âWhat'll be nice?' asked Uncle Tristram, coming in a moment later.
âDandelion rissoles for breakfast.'
He made a face. âAre there no more pork pies?' Glancing into the living room, he saw the clothes on the sofa. âHey! Dress-ups! Excellent! When it starts raining, we can play charades.'
When
, he said, you will notice. Not just
if
. When.
âYou have to be careful,' I warned, following him back into the room. âMorning Glory is planning to sell them in London.'
âNot till we've had some fun.' He rooted through the pile. âWhere's all the men's stuff?'
âThere isn't any,' I explained. âIt all belonged to Aunty Audrey.'
âOh, well.' He tore off his pyjama top and dropped a huge lace frock over his head.
âWe have the matching shoes for that,' I told him as he struggled into it.
âReally?' As soon as he was covered by enough billows of black lace, he modestly turned his back and stepped out of his pyjama bottoms.
âWhat about tights?' I suggested.
âWhat
about
tights?' he asked me, dangerously. âI'm only dressing up, you know. I am not strange.'
âShoes, then?' I handed him a pair like boats. He stepped into them with no trouble. âShe must have had enormous feet.' He tottered around the room. âHand me my bag, please.'
I found him something fetching in sequins and jet.
âWhat about you?' he said. âYou're no fun standing there in boring old trousers and sweater.'
âOh, all right.' And, if I am honest, I was bored enough to be quite keen. So I dug through until I found the cream puff frock again. I even went one better than Uncle Tristram, and pulled on some knee-length little-girl white socks and shining Mary Jane shoes.
âYour hair's all wrong,' he warned me.
âSo is yours.'
So we went back to digging in the pile until I found a lace mantilla for me to drape over my head, and a perky hat for Uncle Tristram that had so many feathers sticking out of it that you couldn't tell he had short hair underneath.
âNow don't we both look splendid!' Uncle Tristram said. âLet's go and give Morning Glory a laugh.'
VERY UNWELCOME VISITOR
We wanted to surprise her, so we crept down the hall. It took a bit of time because of Uncle Tristram's heels. I thought I could hear banging, but just assumed that it was something to do with crushing dandelions. Only when we got closer did we realize that someone was knocking angrily on the back door.
âMorn! Morn! You let me in!'
I was about to prance forward anyway, but Uncle Tristram stopped me. He raised a finger to his lips, then pushed the door a little further open so we could spy on what was happening. Morning Glory was frying rissoles, totally ignoring the racket behind her.
âMorn! I'm on official business here, so you let me in at once!'
âYou go and boil your head, Tom Watkins!' Morning Glory said.
âDon't be so rude! And you should be calling me Officer Watkins, not Tom! I haven't come about anything personal. I represent the law.'
âYou represent your own silly self,' scoffed Morning Glory. âThat door's not even locked. And mind you wipe your feet before you come in here, or you'll be mopping up after yourself on your way out.'
I whispered to Uncle Tristram, âShouldn't we go in?' and added, though it seemed unlikely, âShe may need a little
help
.'
Uncle Tristram glanced down at his black frock and shoes and handbag, and then across at me, dressed in my cream puff. âMaybe creep back and change first?' But he was clearly far too curious to leave his spying place, so we just stood there through what sounded like a very thorough scraping of Tom Watkins' feet.
Finally, in he came. No beard!
Uncle Tristram gave me the nod that meant,
Yes! This is the very same officer who flagged me and Morning Glory down on the trip across the island
.
Officer Watkins took off his cap. âYou've let that garden I dug over become a mud bath,' he complained to Morning Glory.
âI didn't
let
it,' she snapped. âI could hardly
stop
it, since it rained all last week and all the week before and it was raining all day yesterday.'
âIt hasn't
stopped
, you know,' said Officer
Watkins sarcastically. âIf you look out of the window, you might notice that it's still raining now.'
âGood,' Morning Glory said, âif that means
you
get even wetter.'
We turned to raise our eyebrows at one another.
âSo!' Uncle Tristram breathed. âDo we suppose this is the old boyfriend who dumped her?'
âIt certainly sounds like it,' I whispered back. âPerhaps we shouldn't eavesdrop.'
âNo,' Uncle Tristram said. âWe should just tiptoe away at once.'
He made no move.
Inside the kitchen, the very unwelcome visitor reached in the frying pan for a dandelion rissole. Morning Glory slapped at his hand.
âOh, go on,' Officer Watkins said. âYou know I love your grub.'
âCrawler!' I heard Uncle Tristram muttering beside me. âWhy is that man here? What on earth does he want?'
âRissoles?' I whispered.
âOh, do be quiet!' Uncle Tristram hissed. âI'm trying to
listen
.'
âI'll tell you why I'm here,' said Officer Watkins (rather conveniently) to Morning Glory. âI've come to search your house.'
âSearch it?'
âYes,' Officer Watkins said importantly. âFor missing persons.'
âWell, you should recognize
them
easily enough,' said Morning Glory. âBeing a bit of one yourself.'
He glowered at her. âWhat's that supposed to mean?'
âWhere were you on that Saturday night?'
âAt the
dance
,' Officer Watkins snapped. âI hung about for hours, waiting for you.'
âOh.'
I pushed the door a little further open, so we could both watch Morning Glory turn beet-red.
âAnd speaking of missing persons on that same Saturday night,' said Officer Watkins, âwhere, I might ask, were
you
?'
âI was at home,' said Morning Glory, âwaiting to be picked up.'
âI
couldn't
pick you up,' said Officer Watkins. âI couldn't get the squad car because Delia needed it to fetch the chips. I told your dad to
tell
you.'
âThat was a little daft of him,' hissed Uncle Tristram, âto trust that miserable sad sack with any message that might lead to some fun.'
He must have hissed it just a little too loudly, because Officer Watkins suddenly turned. âWho is behind that door?' he asked suspiciously.
âNo one,' said Morning Glory. (I think she must have panicked.)
âReally?' asked Officer Watkins. âBecause the other day you did appear to be out and about with' â he spat the words out quite aggressively â âa brand-new
boyfriend
.'
âNo, I was not,' said Morning Glory. âThat was some smoothie-chops estate agent who happened to pop over to value the house before I try to sell it.'
I looked at Uncle Tristram. Uncle Tristram looked at me.
Officer Watkins persisted, rather unpleasantly, âSo what were you doing in his car? Dressed in that nightie?'
âIt was a
day
dress. And he was simply giving me a lift to my dad's.'
âLetting you
drive
?'
âI wasn't driving. I simply mentioned I was planning to buy a car like his. He was just letting me sit in the driving seat to see how it felt.'
âAt forty miles an hour!'
âI pressed the wrong thing. Then my foot slipped on the pedal.'
âI might believe you,' Officer Watkins offered, âif, when I search this house, I find he isn't here.'
âHe's not!' said Morning Glory, sounding desperate.
âWell, let me look then. Then I'll believe you, and we can make up and go to the fair together.'
âWe can make up and go to the fair together anyway.'
I looked at Uncle Tristram again. He looked at me.
âThat sort of settles it,' I whispered. âYou are quite definitely second-best.'
âIt does seem that way,' he admitted ruefully. Then he cheered up. âMind you, there's always this Delia . . .'
Inside the kitchen, Officer Watkins was pressing home his advantage. âAnyhow, it doesn't matter what you want. We have two missing persons on this island. One of them is probably already dead, and the other is definitely kidnapped. We're searching
everywhere
. And this house is next.'
He tried to push his way past Morning Glory, who thought to distract him with a kiss. It must have been very long kiss, because it gave us more than enough time to creep back down the hall, and while we were on our way I thought about all of Uncle Tristram's other hopeless relationships, and all the speeches I had ever heard my mother make to him.
Then I made this one for her. âListen,' I whispered sternly. âShe's much more in love with him than you are with her. And he loves her back. He even likes her grub. And you and Morning Glory have nothing in common. Nothing. Just think about it. She might even want you to live on this island! So I certainly hope that for once you're going to be sensible, and do The Right Thing.'
THE RIGHT THING
As Officer Watkins burst into the living room a few moments later, Uncle Tristram put out his hand and trilled, âGood morning! Allow me to introduce myself. I am Aunt Susan.'
Morning Glory stared.
Adjusting his feather hat, Uncle Tristram pressed on in what he clearly took to be an aunt-like fashion.
âAnd from the look of you, you are a Man of the Law! Could you,' he simpered, âby any chance, be the delightful PC Tom Watkins of whom we have heard so much from our dear Morn?'