implication,â OâHagan said suddenly. âYou denigrate the valiant efforts of the American branch, under whose auspices I am proud to appear here.â
He was an indignant rabbit. His face was flushed and his white moustache twitched vigorously. The group hastened to make apologies, which were interrupted by another bang on the table from Kent.
âGood gad, are we going to sit here babbling all night? Dick, I move we adjourn normal business until tomorrow morning; we can have an extra session at ten A.M . to hear the papers that were to have been read tonight. At the momentââ
âThis is not proper procedure,â said the rector, looking shocked. âYou must entertain a motionââ
âTo hell with procedure,â Frank said. âSorry, Mr. Ellis, but I agree with the general, and so do all my scrapes and bruises. This affair may have more serious implications than you realize. If the intruder was not a newspaperman, he may have been after something more important than scandal.â
Surprisingly, few of them had considered this possibility. Weldon was the exception.
âThe letter is locked in my safe,â he said. âNo one but myself has the combination.â
âStrangways may not know that,â mumbled the doctor.
âBut how do we knowââ
âJust a minute,â Thomas interrupted in exasperation. âWeâre beginning to babble again. First of all we ought to find out whether this business aboutStrangways is anything more than an idle rumor. One of us must go to the village in the morning and investigate. Is the stranger really Strangways? If so, can he provide an alibi for tonight?â
âIâm sure heâll be delighted to describe his movements to you,â Liz said sarcastically.
âWe neednât ask him. Discreet questioning of the personnel of the innââ
âGood thinking,â Kent said approvingly. âIâll go âround in the morning.â
âNot you,â Weldon objected. âEvery reporter in England knows your face.â
âHumph,â said Kent.
âIâll go,â Thomas offered. âJacqueline and I are of no interest to the press.â
âYour faces may not be known,â Philip said, with a cynical smile, âbut do you know the face you hope to see? Do any of us know the notorious Strangways by sight?â
A damp silence fell. Finally Jacqueline said mildly, âWould there perhaps be a photograph on the jacket of his book?â
Weldon went trotting out to get the book. When he returned, the others crowded around the head of the table and stared at the small photo on the inside back flap of the jacket.
âNo good,â Frank said. âJust a head and shoulders.â
âI like his nose,â Jacqueline said pensively. âBig and bold and Napoleonic. And a good square jaw.â
âThis is not a male beauty contest,â Thomas said in exasperation. âThe point is that the photo isnât much use as a means of identification. Iâll bet itâs ten years old. That square jaw you admire may be buried in double chins, and the hairâpardon me, Jacqueline, the thick black hairâmay be gone altogether.â
The door burst open. Percy appeared, coated with a blend of cobwebs and crumbs, and followed by the butler. Before Wilkes could speak, Percy announced shrilly, âNo one. But we found a window open.â
âThat is correct, Sir Richard,â said Wilkes, icily proper. He shot Percy a glance of burning hatred.
âThank you, Wilkes.â
The butler left. Percy dropped heavily into one of the chairs and his mother exclaimed, âDarling boy, you are absolutely filthy. You must pop straight into a hot tub.â
âNo,â Percy said insolently. âI might miss something. What happened while I was gone?â
âIsnât he amusing?â asked Lady Ponsonby-Jones fondly.
Skye Malone, Megan Joel Peterson