yes, I remember that,â Jan replied quite cheerfully. âRichard went to the inquest.â
âYes, thatâs right. What else do you remember?â the inspector encouraged him.
âWe had salmon for lunch that day,â Jan said immediately. âRichard and Warby came back together. Warby was a bit flustered, but Richard was laughing.â
âWarby?â the inspector queried. âIs that Nurse Warburton?â
âYes, Warby. I didnât like her much. But Richard was so pleased with her that day that he kept saying, âJolly good show, Warby.â â
The door suddenly opened, and Laura Warwick appeared. Sergeant Cadwallader went across to her, and Jan called out, âHello, Laura.â
âAm I interrupting?â Laura asked the inspector.
âNo, of course not, Mrs Warwick,â he replied. âDo sit down, wonât you?â
Laura came further into the room, and the sergeant shut the door behind her. âIsâis Janâ?â Laura began. She paused.
âIâm just asking him,â the inspector explained, âif he remembers anything about that accident to the boy in Norfolk. The MacGregor boy.â
Laura sat at the end of the sofa. âDo you remember, Jan?â she asked him.
âOf course I remember,â the lad replied, eagerly. âI remember everything.â He turned to the inspector. âIâve told you, havenât I?â he asked.
The inspector did not reply to him directly. Instead, he moved slowly to the sofa and, addressing Laura Warwick, asked, âWhat do you know about the accident, Mrs Warwick? Was it discussed at luncheon that day, when your husband came back from the inquest?â
âI donât remember,â Laura replied immediately.
Jan rose quickly and moved towards her. âOh yes, you do, Laura, surely,â he reminded her. âDonât you remember Richard saying that one brat more or less in the world didnât make any difference?â
Laura rose. âPleaseââ she implored the inspector.
âItâs quite all right, Mrs Warwick,â Inspector Thomas assured her gently. âItâs important, you know, that we get at the truth of that accident. After all, presumably itâs the motive for what happened here last night.â
âOh yes,â she sighed. âI know. I know.â
âAccording to your mother-in-law,â the inspector continued, âyour husband had been drinking that day.â
âI expect he had,â Laura admitted. âItâit wouldnât surprise me.â
The inspector moved to sit at the end of the sofa.âDid you actually see or meet this man, MacGregor?â he asked her.
âNo,â said Laura. âNo, I didnât go to the inquest.â
âHe seems to have felt very revengeful,â the inspector commented.
Laura gave a sad smile. âIt must have affected his brain, I think,â she agreed.
Jan, who had gradually been getting very excited, came up to them. âIf I had an enemy,â he exclaimed aggressively, âthatâs what Iâd do. Iâd wait a long time, and then Iâd come creeping along in the dark with my gun. Thenââ He shot at the armchair with an imaginary gun. âBang, bang, bang.â
âBe quiet, Jan,â Laura ordered him, sharply.
Jan suddenly looked upset. âAre you angry with me, Laura?â he asked her, childishly.
âNo, darling,â Laura reassured him, âIâm not angry. But try not to get too excited.â
âIâm not excited,â Jan insisted.
Chapter 10
Crossing the front hall, Miss Bennett paused to admit Starkwedder and a police constable who seemed to have arrived on the doorstep together.
âGood morning, Miss Bennett,â Starkwedder greeted her. âIâm here to see Inspector Thomas.â
Miss Bennett nodded. âGood morningâoh, good morning,
J. S. Cooper, Helen Cooper