Read An Unmentionable Murder Online

Authors: Kate Kingsbury

An Unmentionable Murder (12 page)

Sadie shrugged. “Those kind of men don't think straight, do they. All he'll see is knickers and he'll grab them.”
For the first time Polly felt a stab of fear. “Here, what if he's barmy and he goes after us with a blinking knife or something?”
“That's why we have to make sure he don't see us.” Sadie laid the drawers on the draining board and reached for another pair. “We'll just follow him until he stops somewhere and we can see where he lives. Then we can tell George and Sid to bring him in.”
“What if—” Polly broke off as a faint voice called out from upstairs. “Polly? Is that you?”
Polly shook her head fiercely at Sadie, then opened the door. “It's all right, Ma, it's only me.”
Her mother's voice drifted down the stairs. “What are you doing home this time of day?”
“I had to collect the rents, Ma. I just stopped in to get a woolly. It's a bit chilly at the manor this morning.”
“All right, then.” This was followed by the soft sound of a door closing.
Polly waited a moment longer, then shut the kitchen door. “Let's get this lot outside,” she whispered, “before Ma comes down to see what we're doing.”
Sadie gathered up the wet washing. “You get the pegs,” she whispered back. “I'll take these.”
Polly followed her outside and breathed a sigh of relief as she closed the back door behind her. Grabbing the peg bag off the clothesline, she muttered, “I hope we're not wasting our blinking time. What if he won't come out in daylight? I don't want to sit here all night waiting for him.”
“Neither do I. I'm hoping Joe will be back from his mission so we can go out again tonight. We had such a good time last night. He's really beginning to loosen up now. He even kissed me last night without me having to kiss him first.”
Polly started pegging the wet clothes to the line. “You really like him, then?”
Sadie smiled. “He's a really nice boy. Got really nice manners, too. Knows how to treat a lady, he does.”
“But what about when he goes back to America? Aren't you going to miss him?”
“Well, of course I am.” Sadie stuck a peg between her teeth and hooked another one over the line. “That's why I won't let myself get too fond of him. He's not really my type, anyhow. He's just fun to be with, that's all.” She looked at Polly over the line of washing. “Don't worry, Pol. It's not like it was with you and Sam. It's not going to break my heart when Joe goes back.”
Polly felt a pang at the mention of Sam's name. “I still miss him sometimes,” she said wistfully. “I know one thing: I'll never get that silly over another Yank. I don't even want to go out with another Yank. I'll be sticking to the English from now on.”
“Like the boy you're writing to in Italy?” Sadie grinned. “When's he coming home, then?”
“I dunno. He'd be going home to Surrey, anyway. That's where he lives.”
Sadie shook her head. “You do pick 'em. That's miles away, near London. How're you going to see him if he lives all that way away?”
That was something Polly didn't want to think about right then. “It's a lot closer than America,” she pointed out.
“Yes, but—”
Deciding she'd had enough of the subject, Polly interrupted her. “What if Ma sees all this washing on the line? She'll wonder where it came from. What am I going to tell her? What's going to happen when Lady Elizabeth goes looking for her clean knickers? What's Violet going to say if she finds you missing all day?”
“Would you stop worrying!” Sadie stuck another peg on the knickers on the line. “In the first place, think about when our drawers got stolen—it was daytime, wasn't it? He didn't take them at night.”
“Yes, but—”
“If he doesn't come by the time your mum wakes up, we'll take them all off the line and I'll take them back to the manor. Then we'll try again tomorrow, all right?”
It sounded all right, Polly had to admit. Even so, she couldn't help the niggling feeling deep in her stomach that they were asking for trouble. Somehow, whenever she did things like this with Sadie, something always went wrong. She just hoped that this time, something would go right.
CHAPTER 9
“How long are we supposed to be out here anyway?” Clara whined, wrapping her cardigan closer around her thin body. “My boys will be wanting their dinner before too long.”
“It won't hurt them to wait a bit.” Marge lifted the field glasses and peered through them. She could see nothing but a flat ocean and a sky studded with puffy clouds. No dark shadows beneath the surface that might suggest an enemy submarine. No pinpoints of light twinkling signals to someone onshore. It was all so bloody boring.
“I don't know if they will wait,” Clara grumbled. She leaned back on the hard park bench and stretched out her legs in front of her. “They're growing lads, you know.”
Marge lowered the field glasses. “They're always eating, your boys. I don't know how you manage it with everything on ration like it is.”
“I fill 'em up with bread and potatoes. At least we can get plenty of that.” Clara held out her hand. “Want me to look for a bit?”
“Nah. There's nothing out there. I don't know why Rita's so blinking anxious to have us sit out here all morning. If anything's coming in from the beach they're not going to do it in daylight, now are they?”
Clara shrugged her shoulders. “Dunno. They might, if they want to get across the sand without stepping on a mine.”
“Well, all I can say is, if I were a German, I'd wait until it was dark and take my chances with the mines.”
“Seeing as how the rag and bone man got shot in the head by a German, I'd say they're already here.”
Marge's stomach did a somersault. “Gawd almighty, I never thought of that. All Rita said was that there might be a spy in the village.”
“There could be a whole lot of them. A whole bloody German battalion. How the 'eck would we know if they came in the middle of the night? There's no one out here to watch for them at night. No one wants to leave their children alone at night to watch for Germans.”
Marge's heart started banging away like a big bass drum as Clara began wailing in a high-pitched voice, “What'll we do if they're here already? We can't fight them all by ourselves. They'll take us away and put us in one of them terrible prison camps!”
Already Marge could envision them all starving and freezing to death, staring through the wire fences at the guards pointing guns at them. The picture made her feel faint. Determined not to let Clara know how frightened she was, she said stoutly, “Of course we can't fight them on our own. That's what the army's for, silly. We'll just ring the army base in Beerstowe from the post office and tell them where they are.”
“But we don't know where they are!” Clara wailed even louder.
“Well, we'll just have to find them then.”
“The American base is closer,” Clara said, visibly shivering now. “We could get the Yanks to come. They've got guns, too. They'd get here quicker.”
“We'll ring them both,” Marge assured her. “And the constables. But first we have to find them.”
“Where could they be? Do you think they're hiding in the woods?”
“They might be.” Marge frowned. The idea of traipsing through the woods looking for Germans who could jump out on them any moment or even shoot them was not her idea of a fun afternoon. A thought struck her and she brightened. “You know what? I think they'd hide in the old windmill. They could keep watch from the windows at the top and they'd have shelter at night if it rained.” The more she thought about it, the more feasible it seemed. “Yes, that's where they'd be. I think we should look there first.”
Clara didn't seem at all enthusiastic about the idea. “Why don't we just tell the constables where we think they are? Then they can call in the army.”
“Don't be daft.” Marge shook her head in disgust. “We're going to look right ninnies, aren't we, if we call in the army and there's no one there. First we have to go up there and make sure they're there, then we can go back to the village and raise merry hell.”
“I don't think—,” Clara began, but Marge, who was impatient to get it over with and get back home where it was safe, wouldn't let her finish.
“We're going,” she said firmly. “It won't take that long to walk out there and take a peek at the windmill.”
“It's an awfully long way back,” Clara muttered. “ ' Specially if we have to run all the way.”
Marge crossed her arms across her chest and glared at her friend. “Do you want to win this war or not? How are we going to save the village if we sit on our backsides and do nothing? That's what we joined the Housewives League for, wasn't it? To protect the village?”
“Actually I joined it for the knitting parties,” Clara mumbled.
Marge let out her breath in disgust. “Come on. Let's get one over on Rita. She'll never forgive us if we manage to get a whole battalion of Germans captured. We'll probably be in all the newspapers and on the wireless news.”
Clara's eyes widened. “You really think so? Rita will be so cross.”
“Green with bloody envy, that's what she'll be.” Marge grinned. “I can't wait to see her face when she finds out.” She pushed herself to her feet. “Come on, let's go and find those Nazis before someone else gets there first. This is one war effort we're going to do all by ourselves.”
 
Having sent Polly out to collect the rents, Elizabeth had the office to herself that morning. She found it impossible to concentrate on anything, however. A considerable portion of her mind was engaged in the hope that Earl would call, even though he'd warned her that it could be some time before he could contact her again.
Rather than sit there in what she knew was hopeless futility, she decided to call on Bob Redding. In spite of the favorable opinions she'd heard about the man, she wanted to satisfy herself that he hadn't taken a gun and ended the life of the man who had more or less killed his daughter.
Her conviction that Clyde Morgan was murdered had grown stronger, fueled more by a hunch than anything else. Still, there was a familiar feeling niggling at her brain that told her she was missing something somewhere, and until she discovered what it was, she was compelled to search every avenue open to her. Bob Redding was at the top of the list.
She gave Alfie a ring, and learned that the Reddings lived in one of the cottages down by the bay. Apparently Mr. Redding had been a fisherman before he was called to duty, and no doubt planned on continuing his profession when he returned from the war for good, God willing.
She was halfway down the stairs when the bell clanged, announcing a visitor. Expecting Martin to materialize, she continued down at a leisurely pace, until it dawned on her that Martin wasn't there to open the door.
It didn't appear as if Violet planned on opening it either, probably because she expected Sadie to attend to it. Since there was no sign of the housemaid, Elizabeth had to assume she was somewhere at the other end of the mansion, probably cleaning up after the departure of the American officers.
There was nothing for it but to open the door herself. It took her a few moments to tug back the bolts and latches that held the massive door in place, during which the bell clanged loudly twice, nearly deafening her. As usual, she inwardly cursed the process, vowing as she always did to replace all those bolts and latches with a modern lock and electric bell.
Finally she slid the last bolt back and dragged the door open, breathing a little hard with the exertion. No wonder Martin took forever to open the door, she thought, then stared in shock as she recognized the visitor.
The object of her recent thoughts smiled back at her. “Good morning, madam. I do appreciate your taking the time and trouble to open the door for me. Your pleasant demeanor is a vast improvement over Violet's sour face and caustic tone, I can assure you.” Martin doffed the trilby he wore and swept it in front of him with a deep bow. “I am forever in your debt.”
Elizabeth's first thought was that her butler had been imbibing spirits of some sort. Her relief at seeing him made her voice sharp. “Martin, where on earth have you been?”
Martin blinked at her over the top of his glasses. The half dozen hairs on his head, disturbed by the removal of his hat, stood on end, waving in the breeze. There was something different about him, Elizabeth thought, though she couldn't put her finger on it.
Maybe he was standing a little straighter than usual, his eyes brighter than usual . . . something. The obvious answer that sprang to mind was the raffle ticket lady, Beatrice whatever-her-name-was. “Martin, have you been visiting your raffle lady friend?”
She watched with fascination as a curtain seemed to descend over her butler's face. His eyes took on a vacant stare and his voice sounded frail when he answered. “Raffle lady?”
“Yes. Beatrice somebody or other. She visits the manor quite frequently, ostensibly to sell raffle tickets, though I suspect her main objective is to socialize with you.”
A flicker of interest flashed across his face, then was gone. “Socialize?”
“You know what I mean, Martin. And do come in. I really don't want to have this discussion on the doorstep.”
Martin carefully wiped first one shoe then the other on the mat at his feet before stepping over the threshold. Elizabeth closed the door, then turned to find him shuffling away from her at top speed, which for Martin was little more than the pace of a frightened worm.

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