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Grave Mistake. Ngaio Marsh
Читать онлайн.Название Grave Mistake
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9780007344857
Автор произведения Ngaio Marsh
Жанр Ужасы и Мистика
Серия The Ngaio Marsh Collection
Издательство HarperCollins
A little removed from the nearest group, she sipped her tea and gazed with satisfaction at this prospect. She thought that the English landscape, more perhaps than any other, is dyed in the heraldic colours of its own history. It is there, she thought, and until it disintegrates, earth, rock, trees, grass, turf by turf, leaf by leaf and blade by blade, it will remain imperturbably itself. To it, she thought, the reed really is as the oak and she found the notion reassuring.
She redirected her gaze from the distant prospect to the foreground and became aware of a human rump, elevated above a box hedge in the rose-garden.
The trousers were unmistakable: pepper-and-salt, shape less, earthy and bestowed upon Angus McBride or purchased by him at some long-forgotten jumble sale. He must be doubled up over a treasured seedling, thought Verity. Perhaps he had forgiven Sybil Foster or perhaps, with his lowland Scots rectitude, he was working out his time.
‘Lovely view, isn’t it?’ said the vicar. He had come alongside Verity, unobserved.
‘Isn’t it? Although at the moment I was looking at the person behind the box hedge.’
‘McBride,’ said the vicar.
‘I thought so, by the trousers.’
‘I know so. They were once my own.’
‘Does it,’ Verity asked, after a longish pause, ‘strike you that he is sustaining an exacting pose for a very long time?’
‘Now you mention it.’
‘He hasn’t stirred.’
‘Rapt, perhaps over the wonders of nature,’ joked the vicar.
‘Perhaps. But he must be doubled over at the waist like a two-foot rule.’
‘One would say so, certainly.’
‘He gave Sybil notice this morning on account of health.’
‘Could he be feeling faint, poor fellow,’ hazarded the vicar, ‘and putting his head between his knees?’ And after a moment, ‘I think I’ll go and see.’
‘I’ll come with you,’ said Verity. ‘I wanted to look at the rose-garden in any case.’
They went out by the french window and crossed the lawn. The sun had come out and a charming little breeze touched their faces.
As they neared the box hedge the vicar, who was over six feet tall, said in a strange voice, ‘It’s very odd.’
‘What is?’ Verity asked. Her heart, unaccountably, had begun to knock at her ribs.
‘His head’s in the wheelbarrow. I fear,’ said the vicar, ‘he’s fainted.’
But McBride had gone further than that. He was dead.
II
He had died, the doctor said, of a heart attack and his condition was such that it might have happened any time over the last year or so. He was thought to have raised the handles of the barrow, been smitten and tipped forward, head first, into the load of compost with which it was filled.
Verity Preston was really sorry. McBride was often maddening and sometimes rude but they shared a love of old-fashioned roses and respected each other. When she had influenza he brought her primroses in a jampot and climbed a ladder to put them on her window-sill. She was touched.
An immediate result of his death was a rush for the services of Mrs Black’s newly arrived brother. Sybil Foster got in first, having already paved the way with his sister. On the very morning after McBride’s death, with what Verity Preston considered indecent haste, she paid a follow-up visit to Mrs Black’s cottage under cover of a visit of condolence. Ridiculously inept, Verity considered, as Mr Black had been dead for at least three weeks and there had been all those fulsomely redundant expressions of sympathy only the previous afternoon. She’d even had the nerve to take white japonica.
When she got home she telephoned Verity.
‘My dear,’ she raved, ‘he’s perfect. So sweet with that dreary little sister and such good manners with me. Called one Madam which is more than – well, never mind. He knew at once what would suit and said he could sense I had an understanding of the “bonny wee flooers”. He’s Scotch.’
‘Clearly,’ said Verity.
‘But quite a different kind of Scotch from McBride. Highland I should think. Anyway – very superior.’
‘What’s he charge?’
‘A little bit more,’ said Sybil rapidly, ‘but, my dear, the difference?’
‘References?’
‘Any number. They’re in his luggage and haven’t arrived yet. Very grand, I gather.’
‘So you’ve taken him on?’
‘Darling! What do you think? Mondays and Thursdays. All day. He’ll tell me if it needs more. It well may. After all, it’s been shamefully neglected – I know you won’t agree, of course.’
‘I suppose I’d better do something about him.’
‘You’d better hurry. Everybody will be grabbing. I hear Mr Markos is a man short up at Mardling. Not that I think my Gardener would take an under-gardener’s job.’
‘What’s he called?’
‘Who?’
‘Your gardener.’
‘You’ve just said it. Gardener.’
‘You’re joking.’
Sybil made an exasperated noise into the receiver.
‘So he’s gardener-Gardener,’ said Verity. ‘Does he hyphenate it?’
‘Very funny.’
‘Oh, come on, Syb!’
‘All right, my dear, you may scoff. Wait till you see him.’
Verity saw him three evenings later. Mrs Black’s cottage was a short distance along the lane from Keys House and she walked to it at 6.30, by which time Mrs Black had given her brother his tea. She was a mimbling little woman, meekly supporting the prestige of recent widowhood. Perhaps with the object of entrenching herself in this state, she spoke in a whimper.
Verity could hear television blaring in the back parlour and said she was sorry to interrupt. Mrs Black, alluding to her brother as Mr Gardener, said without conviction that she supposed it didn’t matter and she’d tell him he was wanted.
She left the room. Verity stood at the window and saw that the flower-beds had been recently dug over and wondered if it was Mr Gardener’s doing.
He came in. A huge sandy man with a trim golden beard, wide mouth and blue eyes, set far apart and slightly, not unattractively, strabismic. Altogether a personable figure. He contemplated Verity quizzically from aloft, his head thrown back and slightly to one side and his eyes half-closed.
‘I didna just catch the name,’ he said, ‘ma-am.’
Verity told him her name and he said, ou aye, and would she no’ tak’ a seat.
She said she wouldn’t keep him a moment and asked if he could give her one day’s gardening a week.
‘That’ll be the residence a wee piece up the lane, I’m thinking. It’s a bonny garden you have there, ma-am. What I call perrrsonality. Would it be all of an acre that you have there, now, and an orchard, forby?’
‘Yes. But most of it’s grass and that’s looked after by