then accurate again. The final sum was always as it should be.
Clarice could understand how people ended up chewing pencils. It made no sense. Why on earth would anyone steal tuppence, or even less? She was convinced it was not carelessness, because the same figures kept recurring in what she realized was a sequence. She placed them side by side, according to date, and then she saw the pattern. The few pence went missing from the church accounts, then from the Reverend Wynterâs personal account. Finally the church accounts were correct again. Someone was taking tiny amounts from the collection for the poor box, irregular and always very small. The Reverend Wynter was replacing them from his own money.
But why? Would it not have been the right thing to do to find out who was the thiefâif that was not too serious a word for such petty amounts? Might it be a child? Perhaps he did not want to have such an accusation made if it could become uglier than a simple question of family discipline.
Whom could she ask? Perhaps William Frazer, who had taken over the bookkeeping, would know, or have an idea? He lived next to the village store, and even in this weather she could walk there quite easily. Of course she would not go across the green. One could barely see where the pond was, never mind avoid treading on the ice beneath the snow, and perhaps falling in.
But Frazer had no idea. âIâm so sorry, Mrs. Corde,â he said earnestly as she sat in the small, crowded room by his parlor fire, still shivering from her journey in the snow. The wind seemed to find its way through even the thickest cloak, and a hat was useless to protect the neck or ears. Now she was almost singeing at the front, and her back was still cold from the draft behind her.
âYour records are immaculate,â she said as flatteringly as she could. âAt the end of the day the money is always correct, but somewhere along the way a few pennies disappear, and then turn up again. It looks as if the Reverend Wynter made up the difference himself.â
Frazer looked startled, his thin, bony face pale with anxiety. âWhy on earth would he do such a thing?â he demanded. âJohn Boscombe never said anything to me, and heâs as honest as the day. Ask anyone. If thereâd been any irregularities, heâd have told me.â
âPerhaps if the Reverend Wynter knew who it was, he might have asked Mr. Boscombe not to say anything,â she suggested, puzzled herself.
âWhy would he do that?â Frazerâs voice was sharp, his big hands were clenched in his lap. âMore like the old gentleman lost a few pence here and there.â He nodded. âCan happen to anyone. Got the wrong change by mistake, pâraps. Or dropped it in the street and couldnât find it. Done that myself. Only pennies, you said?â
âYes.â
âDonât worry about it. Daresay youâll keep better books yourself, being younger and seeing a good bit clearer. Should have had spectacles, maybe.â
âPerhaps.â But she did not agree. She thanked him and went out into the bitter wind to walk all the way to John Boscombeâs house. In the summer there was a shortcut through the woods, when the stream was low and the stepping-stones clear. But the current was strong and deep now, and would pull a person under its dark surface like greedy hands.
It was a long walk, but she found the man at home, kept from his work in the fields by the smothering snow.
âCome in, come in!â he said warmly as he almost pulled her into the hallway and slammed the door against the wind behind her. âWhat a day! Itâs going to be a hard Christmas if it goes on like this. You must be frozen. Letâs dust the snow off you before it thaws and gets you wet.â He suited the action to the word without waiting for her to agree, sending snow flying all over the hallway. Fortunately the floor was polished