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    Here Comes a Chopper

    Page 26
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    ‘Yes, but what do we do about Mr Lingfield?’

      ‘Mr——?’ He lowered the match, it burnt his fingers and he flung it down and stamped on it, cursing a little.

      ‘That was Harry Lingfield,’ said Dorothy, affecting calmness. ‘I only said—what do we do? I expect he waits there, hoping to see Claudia Denbies.’

      They walked on, and came to the gate which seemed to close the path. They took the side turning which led to the heath, and to the slope upon which they had rested. Roger sat down, and pulled the girl down beside him.

      ‘Say it slowly,’ he said. ‘And tell me how you know.’

      There was no time for this, however. It was Dorothy who heard the twang of the bowstring. She thrust Roger down so that he crashed flat on his back. The arrow sped past, and grazed her cheek in its flight. Roger, whose head had bumped down hard upon the turf, sat up, feeling his skull. Then he caught with a glance the bright blood streaming from the snick on his companion’s delicate, slightly sun-tanned skin. He got up.

      ‘Oh, don’t!’ said Dorothy. ‘I’m not hurt! Don’t go!’

      He shook her off with berserk impatience, disregard and strength. The bow twanged again as he began to run towards the archer. Without slackening speed, Roger swung out to the right in the beautiful, graceful swerve which had often served him on the Rugby football field. He was in flannels, and had been carrying his jacket, but he had flung it down on the turf. He was therefore at an advantage compared with his muck-encrusted, heavy-booted antagonist. He used this advantage to the utmost, and, with a magnificent flying tackle, of a sort which would have earned stern comment on the field of play, he got his man round the knees and brought him down.

      The next moment they were fighting on the ground. Dorothy ran forward. She had not been brought up to believe man to be the master of her fate as well as of his own, and her view was that Roger might well be in need of assistance against an opponent who was already a double murderer.

      Roger, however, was not in need of help. A temperamental man and a poet, he had an artist’s single-minded thoroughness. His aim was to twist his opponent’s head off, and he set to work with a grim zest which had something of religious fanaticism about it.

      Had he been informed, as a matter of cold fact, that the sight of a smear of blood on a young girl’s cheek would have turned him into a compound of Richard Lovelace and a Commando, he would have accepted this reading of his character with reserve and modest caution. He did not even realize how much he had relished the fight and how much good it had done him, and how many problems it had solved, until it was over.

      He got up, wiping mud out of his ear, caught sight of Dorothy’s horrified eyes and, limping a little, came, at ease with himself, towards her. He had almost detached a tooth which he presently discovered and spat out.

      ‘That’s that,’ he said contentedly. The girl recoiled. Roger, who felt like the English equivalent of a million dollars, although rather sore, observed the instinctive reaction, and nodded towards his opponent, who was lying perfectly still upon the turf. ‘He’ll be all right. He fell soft.’

      ‘You’ll—we shall have to get a doctor,’ said Dorothy, who wanted to cry.

      ‘You’ve got one,’ said a rich, amused and incomparably beautiful voice. Mrs Bradley, accompanied by the sergeant and followed closely by the inspector, came out of the copse of hazels through which the woodland ride led on to Whiteledge, and walked towards them. She smiled horribly and knelt to examine Roger’s handiwork.

      ‘Did you bite him on the Mount of Venus?’ she demanded.

      ‘No. That was Healy-Lunn,’ said Roger, grinning.

      ‘Better make direct for the station,’ said Roger, ‘if they’re going to take him up to the house. Don’t want to barge in there. I can get a wash and brush-up in the waiting-room or somewhere, I expect. I say, you aren’t sick with me, are you? I mean, I had to have a go at him, and, having taken him on, to make a do of it. You do see that?’ He spoke anxiously, misunderstanding his companion’s silence.

      ‘I know,’ said Dorothy. ‘It was—a bit frightening, that’s all. You see, I didn’t know you could fight.’

      ‘I can’t. Not in the ordinary way. Don’t go getting wrong ideas. I mean, I’d be no good on the domestic hearth, poker in hand, versus wife.’

      ‘But—it was so horribly scientific.’

      ‘I know. I’m teaching the kids. I think I’ll teach you. It’s really quite handy to know how to make a proper mess of people.’

      She managed to laugh. They walked on again.

      ‘How do you think old Bob will take it?’ asked Roger, at the end of half a mile.

      ‘Take what?’ But a tell-tale flush completely gave her away.

      ‘Us, chump. Now I’ve got a house, what’s stopping us? You’re not going to back out now, are you?’

      ‘I wouldn’t know.’

      ‘Good enough.’ They walked on amid the gold-green gloom of the hazels. Suddenly Dorothy said:

      ‘I thought you were a poet. I hoped you were.’

      ‘Oh, I am … Oh, I see! Well, this is too serious for poetry—my kind of poetry, anyway.’

      ‘Is it? That’s rather a pity.’

      ‘I’m sorry. What can we do? Hullo! Who’s coming now?’ They looked back across the open stretch of the Common. The thunder of hoofs came nearer, and into the space before them swept a horseman. It was the child, George, riding like a Centaur, boy and beast all one. To add to the illusion, the great horse was barebacked except for the boy, and the boy was bare to the waist. His carriage and poise were god-like, and his hair was blown in a breeze of his own creating.

      Dorothy gave a slight sigh.

      ‘There you are, then,’ said Roger. ‘There’s the omen. Eros on the wings of the wind.’ He turned and took her in his arms. ‘But it isn’t my poetry we need.’

      ‘Whose, then?’ She freed herself. Roger kept one arm about her, still faced her, smoothed her cut cheek with a long, strong thumb, leaned forward and kissed her and said:

      ‘To our bodies turn we then, that so

      Weak men on love revealed may look;

      Love’s mysteries in souls do grow,

      But yet the body is his book.’

      ‘But Harry Lingfield, who thought so, is to die,’ she said, soberly, giving the statement all its due.

      ‘Yes, but he had his fun.’

      ‘Killing people, and being hunted and afraid, and perhaps hungry? And not getting what he wanted in the end?’

      ‘Life’s like that. Our generation ought to know it.’

      ‘I don’t want my children to know it.’

      ‘You wanted poetry, and see where it’s led us!’

      ‘I know. Do you still—like—Claudia Denbies?’

      ‘In a way, yes, I do.’ He did not hesitate. Dorothy did not hesitate, either. She gave him a long look and then put her hands on his shoulders.

      MORE VINTAGE MURDER MYSTERIES

      MARGERY ALLINGHAM

      Mystery Mile

      Police at the Funeral

      Sweet Danger

      Flowers for the Judge

      The Case of the Late Pig

      The Fashion in Shrouds

      Traitor’s Purse

      Coroner’s Pidgin

      More Work for the Undertaker

      The Tiger in the Smoke

      The Beckoning Lady

      Hide My Eyes

      The China Governess

      The Mind Readers

      Cargo of Eagles

      E. F. BENSON

      The Blotting Book

      The Luck of the Vails

      NICHOLAS BLAKE

      A Question of Proof

      Thou Shell of Death

      There’s Trouble Brewing

      The Beast Must Die

      The Smiler With the Knife

      Malice in Wonderland

      The Case of the Abominable Snowman

      Minute for Murder

      Head of a Traveller

      The Dreadful Hollow

      The Whisper in the Gloom


      End of Chapter

      The Widow’s Cruise

      The Worm of Death

      The Sad Variety

      The Morning After Death

      EDMUND CRISPIN

      Buried for Pleasure

      The Case of the Gilded Fly

      Holy Disorders

      Love Lies Bleeding

      The Moving Toyshop

      Swan Song

      A. A. MILNE

      The Red House Mystery

      GLADYS MITCHELL

      Speedy Death

      The Mystery of a Butcher’s Shop

      The Longer Bodies

      The Saltmarsh Murders

      Death at the Opera

      The Devil at Saxon Wall

      Dead Men’s Morris

      Come Away, Death

      St Peter’s Finger

      Brazen Tongue

      Hangman’s Curfew

      When Last I Died

      Laurels Are Poison

      Here Comes a Chopper

      Death and the Maiden

      Tom Brown’s Body

      Groaning Spinney

      The Devil’s Elbow

      The Echoing Strangers

      Watson’s Choice

      The Twenty-Third Man

      Spotted Hemlock

      My Bones Will Keep

      Three Quick and Five Dead

      Dance to Your Daddy

      A Hearse on May-Day

      Late, Late in the Evening

      Fault in the Structure

      Nest of Vipers

      This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorized distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.

      Version 1.0

      Epub ISBN 9781448161249

      www.randomhouse.co.uk

      Published by Vintage 2013

      2 4 6 8 10 9 7 5 3 1

      Copyright © The Executors of the Estate of Gladys Mitchell 1946

      Gladys Mitchell has asserted her right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 to be identified as the author of this work

      First published in Great Britain by Michael Joseph in 1946

      Vintage

      Random House, 20 Vauxhall Bridge Road,

      London SW1V 2SA

      www.vintage-books.co.uk

      Addresses for companies within The Random House Group Limited can be found at: www.randomhouse.co.uk/offices.htm

      The Random House Group Limited Reg. No. 954009

      A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

      ISBN 9780099582243

      www.vintage-books.co.uk

     

     

     



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