Authors: M.C. Beaton
Alice tried to withdraw her hand. What if Jeremy had murdered Lady Jane? He looked so odd, older, grimmer, and there was a muscle jumping in his left cheek.
Jeremy turned and looked at her. ‘It wouldn’t have mattered so much if she had written about you,’ said Alice timidly. ‘I mean, it wasn’t so very bad.’
‘You don’t know anything about it,’ snapped Jeremy. In a flat voice, he told Alice of his Oxford scandals, although he omitted the fact he was still paying for the support of
the barmaid’s child.
‘I could never have gone in for politics,’ he said. He felt shaken with nerves and anger. How stupid he’d been not to have told Hamish the whole thing. He needed a drink . . .
or something.
He seized Alice suddenly and pulled her down on the bed. ‘Oh, Jeremy,’ whispered Alice, forgetting that she had thought him a murderer a moment ago, ‘do you love me?’
‘Yes, yes,’ mumbled Jeremy against her hair. He started to unbutton her blouse, and Alice was so thrilled and excited that he had confessed his love that she almost enjoyed the next
ten minutes.
Hope not for minde in women.
–
John Donne
Hamish was up very early. He had been unable to sleep. It had been a miserable dinner party. Only Alice had seemed to enjoy herself. Daphne Gore appeared to be haunted by the
spirit of Lady Jane in that she had seemed hell-bent on ruining the evening for everyone. Hamish could only be glad young Charlie was not present. The boy was suffering enough from hysterical women
in the shape of his mother. Hamish had worn the dark grey suit that he kept for his occasional visits to church, and Daphne Gore had said he looked dressed for a funeral. She had then started to
harangue the Roths over the American Cruise missiles, although it was evident to all that she was merely trying to be bitchy and didn’t care much one way or the other.
They had all drunk too much, because Amy had the nervous habit of constantly refilling their glasses without waiting for the waiter to come around.
And then as the climax to a truly horrible evening, Priscilla had arrived for dinner at the hotel with John Harrington. Harrington was everything Hamish detested in a man. He had a loud,
carrying English voice, he fussed over the wine, he criticized the food. He had beautifully tailored clothes, a square, immaculately barbered chin, a tanned rugged face, and crinkly brown hair. And
he made Priscilla laugh.
Hamish decided to take his boat out and try to catch some mackerel. He wandered down to the beach and untied the painter of his rowing boat. It was then that he saw the small figure of Charlie
Baxter wistfully watching him.
‘Want to go out with me?’ called Hamish, and Charlie scampered down the beach.
‘What are you doing out so early, laddie?’ asked Hamish. ‘It isn’t even six o’clock yet.’
‘I wanted to get out,’ said Charlie. ‘My mother won’t mind. I often go out early for a walk. Things are pretty rough. I want to stay on with Auntie, and Mother wants me
to go back.’
‘Maybe I’ll have a wee word with her,’ said Hamish. ‘Hop in and keep still.’
Charlie obeyed, sitting in the boat while Hamish pushed it out into the still waters of Lochdubh. The sun was just peeping over the horizon. The water was like glass, and the sky above was
cloudless. ‘Looks as if it’s going to be a hot day,’ said Hamish, climbing in and taking the oars. He rowed them steadily out into the loch.
‘Where are we going?’ asked Charlie.
‘To catch mackerel. Dead easy.’
‘What with?’
‘A spinner. I’ll stop in a bit and show you how to do it.’
‘Are we going right out to sea?’
‘No, just a bit further.’
Charlie relapsed into silence, hanging over the side of the boat and staring at the sunlight dancing on the water.
Hamish at last shipped the oars and picked up a reel of stout twine with several hooks and silver spinners attached to it.
‘Do we bait the hooks?’ asked Charlie with interest.
‘No, the spinners do the trick. Mackerel will go for nearly anything. That’s why they’re sometimes called the scavengers of the sea. Just unwind the line and let it trail out
behind the boat,’ said Hamish.
He began to row again, this time slowly and easily, shipping the oars from time to time.
Behind them, smoke began to rise from the chimneys of the village, and the twisted grotesque forms of the mountains stood out sharp against the clear sky.
‘Stop the boat,’ shrieked Charlie suddenly. ‘I think there’s something biting.’
‘Pull in the line,’ said Hamish, shipping the oars. Charlie wound the line in feverishly. ‘There’s fish on the end,’ he said. ‘Fish!’
‘Pull them in, there’s a good lad.’
Charlie jerked the line and hooks, spinners, fish and all crashed behind him in the boat.
‘There’s four mackerel,’ said Charlie as Hamish expertly dislodged the hooks and killed the fish. ‘Can we try again?’
‘Och, no,’ said Hamish. ‘We’ll just keep to what we can eat. Ready for breakfast?’
‘You mean we’ll
cook
them?’
‘Of course we will. It’s too early to wake your mother, so we’ll drop a note through the door to tell her where you are.’
Looking more childlike than Hamish had seen him before, Charlie smiled shyly and said, ‘You know, everything’s really so much better now that terrible woman has gone. I wish I could
stay here.’
‘But your auntie has just come up for the summer.’
‘I overheard her say that she would stay on and put me to the school in Strathbane if my mother would leave me.’
‘And you would like that?’
‘Yes, Mr Macbeth. There’s that Mr Blair waiting for you on the beach,’ said Charlie. ‘Does that mean we can’t cook our catch?’
‘No, whatever happens, we’ll have time to eat.’
But Hamish privately thought it must be something very important to get Mr Blair out of his bed so early.
‘Well, we’ve got our man,’ said Mr Blair after Hamish had pulled up his boat on the beach. ‘While you were out enjoying yourself and playing with the weans, I got a call
from Scotland Yard. Major Peter Frame was arrested two years ago for trying to strangle the secretary of the Buffers Club in Pall Mall. What d’you make of that?’
‘I would say it was still not proof the man strangled Lady Jane.’
‘Yes, well that’s why you’re a village bobby and I’m not. The man threatened her in front of witnesses.’
‘Have you arrested him?’
‘Not yet. He’s just helping us with our inquiries.’
‘I gather he’s got a fine war record.’
‘Not him,’ sneered Blair. ‘That’s something else we found out about him. He looks old enough, God knows, but he’s only fifty-four. He never was in the war, he never
saw any action. He was a major in the Educational Corps in some unit down in Lincolnshire.’
‘I am sure Lady Jane knew that,’ said Hamish slowly.
‘We’re managing fine without your help, although instead of wasting your time fishing, you might see to your duties. That prick, Halburton-Smythe, was howling down the phone last
night about some poacher.’
‘I will see to it,’ said Hamish, but Blair was already striding away.
Hamish stood looking after the detective, lost in thought. What if there had been a Lady Jane present at one of the other fishing classes? Would the same lies and petty snobberies have risen to
the surface as well?
Charlie tugged his sleeve. ‘I rather like Major Frame,’ he said. ‘He’s a bit of an ass, but he’s jolly kind.’
‘Let’s leave a note for your mother,’ said Hamish, ‘and then we will have our breakfast.’
But before he cooked breakfast, he phoned Angus MacGregor, a layabout who lived on the other side of the village.
‘Is that yourself?’ said Hamish. ‘Aye, well, Angus, your sins have found you out because I am coming to arrest you after I have had my breakfast.’
Charlie listened with interest as the phone squawked.
‘Nonsense,’ said Hamish at last. ‘Havers. You bought that new rifle and it is well known that you could not hit the barn door. I will be over soon with the
handcuffs.’
Hamish put the phone down and grinned at Charlie.
‘If he knows you are going to arrest him he might run away,’ said the boy, round-eyed.
‘That’s just what he will do,’ said Hamish, leading the way to the kitchen. ‘We’d best hide out in here, for they’ll be along with the major any moment. Yes,
you see Angus has the wife and three children and it would not be right to take their useless father away from them to prison, so he will probably go to Aberdeen for a bit and he will return when
he thinks I have forgotten about it. But he will not be trying to bag one of the colonel’s stags again.’
After a sustaining breakfast of mackerel dipped in oatmeal and fried in butter, Hamish accompanied Charlie home and was shortly closeted with Mrs Baxter for what seemed to the anxiously awaiting
Charlie a very long time indeed.
When he emerged, he merely ruffled Charlie’s curls and took himself off.
He wandered along to the hotel to learn what the fishing school intended to do for the day. He found them all, with the exception of young Charlie and the major, seated in the lounge, getting a
lecture on the ways of trout and salmon from John.
The Roths, Daphne, Jeremy and Alice were in high spirits. Even John Cartwright was cracking jokes. All had heard of the major’s ‘arrest’, and all were determined to believe him
guilty.
‘It seems as if Mr Blair won’t be needing to grill us anymore,’ said John, ‘so we can go back to Loch Alsh and get some good fishing.’
As they all left the hotel, Hamish noticed that Jeremy had an arm around Alice’s shoulders.
Alice had spent the whole night in Jeremy’s bed. She felt light-headed with debility, happiness and relief. It was awful to have to go to the Cartwrights’ estate car with Charlie who
had just joined the party and leave Jeremy with Daphne, but he had promised to spend the day with her, Alice, and now she was sure he was on the point of proposing.
The nightmare was over. The murderer had been arrested. Alice, like the rest, had not really believed that ‘helping the police with their inquiries’ stuff. She began to wonder if she
would have to give evidence at the trial. That would be exciting since she no longer had anything to fear from the newspapers.
The countryside now looked friendly. Heather blazed purple down the flanks of the mountain sides, and a peregrine falcon soared high in the wind currents in the sky above.
And then a little cloud began to appear on the sunny horizon of Alice’s mind. The clean, clear air was invigorating. Set against it, the dark, blanket-tussled writhings of the previous
night seemed grimy. Then, again, he had not waited for her but had rushed off for breakfast, leaving her to make her own way down. There had been no long days of exchanged glances and holding
hands. Alice shrugged and tried to feel worldly-wise. Wham bang, thank you, ma’am, was reality. All men were the same.
But her heart lifted when she climbed out of the car and Jeremy grinned and winked at her.
Her heart soared again when Daphne failed to lure Jeremy to join her in fishing at the mouth of the river. ‘I’ll stay here with Alice,’ he said. ‘She seems to be
lucky.’
There it was – tantamount to an open declaration of love.
Jeremy and Alice fished amiably, if unsuccessfully, up until lunchtime. Alice had lost her fishing fever. All she wanted was Jeremy’s company. But when they broke for lunch, it transpired
that Jeremy was still gripped by the desire to catch a fish.
‘Where’s Daphne?’ he said crossly. ‘I haven’t even had a nibble. Maybe I should have gone with her.’
‘She’s at the head of the loch by the river,’ said Heather.
‘If she’s still fishing after this time, she must have got something,’ said Jeremy. ‘I think I’ll go and look.’
Heather glanced at Alice’s dismal face. ‘Finish your sandwiches,’ she said placidly, ‘and we’ll all go and look. Oh, drat, here’s the village bobby. Imagine
travelling all this way just to scrounge a sandwich . . .’
Hamish sauntered up, red hair and shiny uniform gleaming in the sun.
‘How is Major Frame?’ asked Alice. ‘Have they taken him off to Strathbane?’
‘No, I thought he would be here by now,’ said Hamish.
‘Here?’ shrieked everyone.
‘Aye,’ said Hamish. ‘They had to let him go. That business where he was said to strangle the club secretary was a bit of a storm in a teacup. The good major was drunk and the
secretary objected to the fact that the major hadn’t paid his membership fee and seemed to have no intention of doing so. One word led to another and the major attacked the secretary. Several
members of the club pulled them apart. The police were called, but no charges pressed. You can’t send a man to prison for a murder just because he got drunk and bad-tempered a wee while
ago.’
‘But if he isn’t the murderer,’ said Alice, ‘who is?’
They all looked at each other in dismay.
Then a faint scream reached their ears, borne on the light breeze.
‘Daphne!’ said John Cartwright, lurching to his feet. They all scrambled for the loch and waded in. Hamish took off his boots, socks and trousers and, cutting a ridiculous figure in
his tunic, cap and underpants, waded into the water after them.
As they ploughed through the shallow loch towards the river, they saw Daphne. Her rod was bent, her line was taut, and she called over her shoulder, ‘Keep clear! I want to get this one
myself.’ They all moved forward, however, watching as she battled with the leaping, plunging fish.
‘She’ll lose it,’ said Heather. ‘John, do something.’
‘Not me,’ said John. ‘She wouldn’t thank me for any help. Just look at her face!’
Daphne seemed to have aged. Her mouth was clamped tight with deep grooves of strain down either side.
Half an hour passed. Even Hamish, ridiculous in his half dress, stayed where he was. Daphne had played her salmon – for a salmon it was – into the shallow water.
With an exclamation of rage, she suddenly threw her rod down and leapt on the salmon, falling on it in a sort of rugby tackle. Then she rose from the frothing, swirling water, clutching the
salmon to her bosom.