Authors: Dorothy L. Sayers
I’d better see about getting along to Wilvercombe. So I went down to the
vilage and flagged a passing car. That was – let me see – just after ten
o’clock.’
‘Whereabouts was this?’
‘Where the main road enters Darley – the Wilvercombe side.’
‘Why didn’t you hire a car in the vilage?’
‘Have you seen the cars you can hire in the vilage? If you had, you wouldn’t
ask.’
‘Couldn’t you have phoned up a Wilvercombe garage and got them to come
out and pick you and the Morgan up?’
‘I could have, but I didn’t. The only garage I knew at Wilvercombe was the
place I’d tried the night before, and I knew they weren’t any good. Besides,
what’s wrong about taking a lift?’
‘Nothing, if the driver isn’t afraid about his insurance.’
‘Oh! Wel, this one wasn’t. A very decent sort of woman she seemed to be.
Drove a big red open Bentley. Made no bones about it at al.’
‘You don’t know her name, I suppose?’
‘I never thought to ask. But I do remember the number of the car – it was a
comic one: OI0101 – sort of thing you couldn’t help remembering – Oi-oi-oi! I
said to this woman what a funny one it was and we laughed about it a good bit.’
‘Ha ha!’ said Wimsey, ‘that’s a good one. Oi-oi-oi!’
‘Yes – it made us both laugh. I remember saying it was a bit unfortunate
having a number like that, because it ’ud stick in a bobby’s mind. Oi-oi-oi!’ Mr
Weldon yodeled gleefuly.
‘So you got to Wilvercombe?’
‘Yes.’
‘And what did you do there?’
‘The good lady put me down in the Market Square and asked me if I would
like to be taken back. So I said that was very kind of her and when would she
be leaving. She said she had to go just before one o’clock because she had an
appointment in Heathbury, so I said that would do me al right, and she
arranged to meet me in the Market Square again. So then I had a wander
round and went down to the Winter Gardens. The chap I’d talked to said that
this girl of Alexis’ had something to do with the Winter Gardens – sang, or
something.’
‘She doesn’t, as a matter of fact. Her present young man plays in the
orchestra there.’
‘Yes; I know that now. He’d got it al wrong. Anyhow, that’s where I went,
and I wasted a good bit of time listening to a tom-fool classical concert – my
God! Bach and stuff at eleven in the morning! – and wondering when the real
show began.’
‘Were there many people there?’
‘Lord, yes – packed with tabbies and invalids! I soon got fed-up and went
round to the Resplendent. I wanted to get hold of the people there, only of
course I had the luck to run slap-bang into my mother. She was just going out,
and I dodged behind one of these sily palm-trees they have there so that she
couldn’t see me, and then I thought she might be going off to meet Alexis, so I
padded after her.’
‘And did she meet Alexis?’
‘No; she went to some damned miliner’s place.’
‘How provoking!’
‘I believe you. I waited a bit, and she came out and went to the Winter
Gardens. “Hulo!” I said to myself, “what’s al this? Is she on the same tack as I
am?” So away I toddled again, and dash it! If it wasn’t the same infernal
concert, and if she didn’t sit through it al by herself! I can tel you what they
played, too. A thing caled the Eroica Symphony. Such stuff!’
‘Tut-tut! How wearisome.’
‘Yes, I was wild, I can tel you. And the funny thing was, Mother looked as
if she was waiting for somebody because she kept looking round and fidgeting.
She sat on right through the programme, but when it came to God Save the
King, she chucked it and went back to the Resplendent, looking as sick as a
cat when you’ve taken its mouse away. Wel, then I looked at my watch, and
dashed if it wasn’t twenty to one!’
‘A sad waste of time! So I suppose you had to give up your drive home with
the kindly lady in the Bentley?’
‘What, me? Not a bit of it. She was a dashed fine woman. There wasn’t
such a devil of a hurry about Alexis. I went back to the Market Square, and
there she was and we went home. I think that was al. No, it wasn’t. I bought
some colars at a shop near the War Memorial, and I believe I’ve got the bil
about me somewhere, if that’s evidence. Yes, here we are. One stuffs these
things into one’s pocket, you know. I’ve got one of the colars on now, if you’d
like to look at it.’
‘Oh, no – I believe you.’
‘Good! Wel, that’s al, except that I went along and had some lunch at the
Feathers. My good lady dropped me there and I think she went off up the
Heathbury Road. After lunch, that is, at about 1.45, I went and had another go
at the car, but couldn’t get the slightest sign of a spark. So I thought I’d see if
the local man could make anything of it. I went and got him and he came, and
after a time they traced the trouble to a fault in the H.T. lead and put it right.’
‘Wel, that seems pretty clear. What time did you and the lady in the Bentley
get to the Feathers?’
‘Just on one o’clock. I remember hearing the church-clock strike and saying
I hoped she wouldn’t be late for her tennis-party.’
‘And what time did you go to the garage?’
‘Blest if I know. About three or half-past I should think. But they could
probably tel you.’
‘Oh, yes, they’l be able to check that up al right. It’s very lucky you’ve got
so many witnesses to your alibi, isn’t it? Otherwise, as you say, it might have
looked fishy. Now, here’s another thing. While you were in Hinks’s Lane on
Thursday, did you happen to notice anybody or anything going along the
shore?’
‘Not a soul. But, as I’ve been trying to explain, I was only there up to ten
o’clock and after 1.45, so it wasn’t very likely I should see anything.’
‘Nobody passed between 1.45 and three o’clock?’
‘Oh! between 1.45 and three o’clock? I thought you meant earlier. Yes,
there was a chap – a little pip-squeak of a felow, in shorts, with horn-rimmed
goggles on. He came down Hinks’s Lane just after I got back – at 1.55, to be
exact – and asked the time.’
‘Did he? Where did he come from?’
‘From the vilage. I mean, from the direction of the vilage; he seemed to be a
stranger. I told him the time, and he went down to the shore and had his lunch
on the beach. He cleared off later – at least, he wasn’t there after I came back
from the garage, and I think he went earlier than that. I didn’t have much
conversation with him. In fact, he wasn’t keen for any, after I’d booted him one
in the behind.’
‘Great Scott! What for?’
‘Nosey-parkering. I was struggling with the infernal car, and he stood about
asking sily questions. I told him to clear out – standing there bleating “Won’t it
start?” Blasted little idiot!’
Wimsey laughed. ‘He can’t be our man, anyhow.’
‘What man? The murderer? You stil want to make out it’s murder? Wel, I’l
swear that little shrimp had nothing to do with it. Sunday-school teacher, that’s
what he looked like.’
‘And he was the only person you saw? Nothing else: neither man, woman
nor child? Neither bird nor beast?’
‘Why, no. No. Nothing.’
‘H’m. Wel, I’m much obliged to you for being so frank. I’l have to tel
Umpelty about al this, but I don’t imagine he’l bother you much – and I don’t
see the least need to inform Mrs Weldon.’
‘I told you there was nothing in it.’
‘Exactly. What time did you leave on Friday morning, by the way?’
‘Eight o’clock.’
‘Early start, wasn’t it?’
‘There was nothing to stay for.’
‘Why?’
‘Wel, Alexis was dead, wasn’t he?’
‘How did you know that?’
Henry broke into a great guffaw.
‘Thought you’d got something that time, didn’t you? Wel, I knew it because
I was told. I went into the Feathers on Thursday night, and of course, they’d al
heard about the dead man being found. Presently the local hobby came in – he
doesn’t live at Darley, but he comes through on his bike from time to time.
He’d been over to Wilvercombe for something or other, and he told us they’d
got a photo of the body and had just developed it up and identified it as a
felow caled Alexis from the Resplendent. You ask the bobby, and he’l tel
you. So I began to think I’d better pop off home, because that’s where my
mother would expect the condolences to come from. How’s that, eh?’
‘Overwhelming,’ said Wimsey.
He left Henry Weldon and made for the police-station.
‘Water-tight, water-tight, water-tight,’ he muttered to himself. But why did
he lie about the horse? He must have seen it, if it was running loose. Unless it
broke out of the field after eight o’clock in the morning. And why shouldn’t it?
Water-tight, water-tight – damned suspiciously water-tight!
XX
THE EVIDENCE OF THE LADY IN THE CAR
‘Madam, we’re strangers:
And yet I knew some while ago a form
Like thine.’
The Bride’s Tragedy
Thursday, 25 June
The Superintendent and the Inspector were perhaps even more surprised than
pleased to hear of the identification of Mr Haviland Martin. They felt that the
amateurs had somehow stolen a march on them, although, as they both
hastened to point out, the case now remained as obscure as ever, if not more
so. That is to say, considered as a murder, it was obscure; on the other hand,
the evidence for suicide was perhaps a little strengthened, though only
negatively. Instead of the sinister Martin, who might have been anybody, they
now had merely Mr Henry Weldon, whom they knew. True, it was now
extremely plain that Henry Weldon had a most cogent reason for wishing Paul
Alexis out of the way. But his own explanation of his presence at Darley
steemed plausible, if foolish, and there remained the absolute certainty that he
could not possibly have been at the Flat-Iron at two o’clock. Moreover, the
fact that he had been known for five years as the bespectacled Haviland Martin
of the tinted glasses, robbed his latest masquerade of half its significance. The
character of Martin had not been invented for the present purpose, and, since it
already existed, it was natural enough that Weldon should have assumed it for
the purpose of spying on his mother.
As to the outstanding points of Weldon’s story, these could be easily
checked. The bil for the colars was dated June 18th, and the date did not
appear to have been altered in any way. A telephone-cal to the shop confirmed
it, and brought the additional information that the bil referred to was one of the
last half-dozen made out on that day. Since Thursday had been early-closing
day, when the shop closed at one o’clock, it was fairly evident that the
purchase had been made shortly before that time.
Next, perhaps, in importance was the evidence of the Darley policeman. He
was quickly found and interrogated. He admitted that Weldon’s account of the
matter was perfectly true. He had been in Wilvercombe that evening at about
nine o’clock on a visit to his young lady (being then off duty) and had met one
of the Wilvercombe Police, Rennie by name, outside the Resplendent. He had
asked if there was any news about the body found at the Flat-Iron and Rennie
had mentioned the identification. Rennie confirmed this, and there was no
reason to doubt it; the photographs had been developed and printed within an
hour of their arrival at the police-station; the hotels had been among the first
places visited by the police; the identification had been made shortly before nine
o’clock, and Rennie had been on duty with Inspector Umpelty while the
manager of the Resplendent was being interrogated. The Darley constable
further admitted having mentioned the identification in the bar at the Three
Feathers. He had gone into the bar, quite legitimately, just before closing-time,
in search of a man who was suspected of some trifling misdemeanour, and he
distinctly remembered that ‘Martin’ was present at the time. Both constables
were reprimanded for talking too freely; but the fact remained that Weldon had
been told of the identification that night.
‘So what have we got left?’ inquired Superintendent Glaisher.
Wimsey shook his head.
‘Nothing very much, but stil, something. First: Weldon knows something
about that horse – I’l swear he does. He hesitated when I asked him if he’d
seen any person, thing,
or animal
, and I am almost certain he was wondering
whether to say “No” or to make up a tarradiddle. Secondly: al this story is so
thin. A child would know better than to set about his precious inquiries in the
way he did. Why should he twice go into Wilvercombe and twice come away
without realy doing anything much? Thirdly: his story is so glib, and so ful of
exact times. Why, if he wasn’t deliberately preparing an alibi? Fourthly: just at