tourists, which amounted to the same thing. This one in particular, with his lavender ascot and jade green Sobranie, was a perfect match for Jack outside, although not as wooden. No less colorful (metaphorically speaking) was the old woman by the fireplace, tippling her gin and mumbling her gums, who sometimes charred for Dick Scroggs, and sometimes didnât. When she didnât, she talked to the stone hearth cat and drank her wages.
âDo you think Scroggs will ever finish tarting this place up?â asked Marshall Trueblood, who owned the antiques shop next door. He looked round at the polished brass and pewter and recently added gamebird prints and plugged another Balkan Sobranie â pink, this time â into a long cigarette holder.
Melrose Plant thought the question ill-advised, considering the source, but was too polite to say so. Plant had always considered Trueblood more of an event than a person. He kept on with his Times crossword, occasionally stopping to lift his pint of Old Peculier.
âOh, I donât know. I rather like it,â said Vivian Rivington. âIt used to be such a grotty old place. Since the Load of Mischief closed, itâs rather nice having ââ
Marshall Trueblood shut his eyes in pain. â Do stop being so full of bonhomie, darling. I find it quite tiring. Good lord, hereâs old Scroggs parting his hair in the middle and slapping it down with some odious hair tonic. And heâs even doing meals. â He sipped his Campari and lime.
âWell, I like it, anyway. Itâs somewhere to go for a meal if one doesnât feel like cooking ââ
Trueblood dribbled ash into a tin tray. âIf one wants a meal , darling, one goes to London.â
âYouâre such a snob,â said Vivian, matter-of-factly.
âWell, someone has to be one. Look at Melrose sitting there, who should be, and yet is so disgustingly egalitarian. Being a gentleman, darlingâ â this âdarlingâ addressed to Melrose â âwent out with Empire ââ
Melrose assumed he meant furniture and not colonialism.
âYouâre an endangered species, Melrose. And I think itâs terribly boring of you â both of you â to be going away so close to the Christmas hols, and to County Durham. Good heavens, you must be mad. Itâs near Newcastle and all sorts of roughs prowl the streets and brawl and break beer bottles at football matches. And it snows there.â
âIt snows here, too. Itâs that white stuff that was coming down this morning,â said Plant, working quickly through two ups and three downs.
âIâm talking about snow, darling. Tons of it. Walls of it. It doesnât do that here â whatâs the matter Viv-viv? You look a bit pale.â
Her face did look waxen in the firelight. âAll that talk about snow. It reminds me of the big one we had years ago. And the murders.â She turned to Melrose. âHave you heard from Superintendent Jury lately, Melrose?â
Known him for years and still wonât call him by his first name, thought Plant. Mistress Formality. âPhone calls, mostly. Jury hasnât much time to write, I imagine.â
Trueblood slapped his hand on the table, jumping the pints and glasses. âNow there was a perfectly divine man! Stopped by his digs once or twice whilst I was in London. But heâs never there. Letâs murder someone and get him back here. . . . â He looked around at the old lady by the fire. âWithers, old trout,â he called out, âwould you be willing to be done in for a lifetime supply of gin-and-it?â He turned back and said, âNot terribly logical, I expect, but . . . like a cig?â He held out his black box of Sobranies to the others.
âNo thanks, I donât smoke crayons,â said Melrose, getting out a thin cigar.
Mrs. Withersby, hearing the magic word gin,
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