was really shockedâMrs. Symmington was not, somehow, the sort of person you associated with tragedies.
âYes, miss, itâs the truth. Did it deliberate. Not but what she was drove to it, poor soul.â
âDrove to it?â Joanna had an inkling of the truth then. âNotâ?â
Her eyes questioned Partridge and Partridge nodded.
âThatâs right, miss. One of them nasty letters!â
âWhat did it say?â
But that, to Partridgeâs regret, she had not succeeded in learning.
âTheyâre beastly things,â said Joanna. âBut I donât see why they should make one want to kill oneself.â
Partridge sniffed and then said with meaning:
âNot unless they were true, miss.â
âOh,â said Joanna.
She drank her tea after Partridge had left the room, then she threw on a dressing-gown and came in to me to tell me the news.
I thought of what Owen Griffith had said. Sooner or later the shot in the dark went home. It had done with Mrs. Symmington. She, apparently the most unlikely of women, had had a secret⦠It was true, I reflected, that for all her shrewdness she was not a woman of much stamina. She was the anaemic clinging type that crumples easily.
Joanna nudged me and asked me what I was thinking about.
I repeated to her what Owen had said.
âOf course,â said Joanna waspishly, âhe would know all about it. That man thinks he knows everything.â
âHeâs clever,â I said.
âHeâs conceited,â said Joanna. She added, âAbominably conceited!â
After a minute or two she said:
âHow awful for her husbandâand for the girl. What do you think Megan will feel about it?â
I hadnât the slightest idea and said so. It was curious that one could never gauge what Megan would think or feel.
Joanna nodded and said:
âNo, one never does know with changelings.â
After a minute or two she said:
âDo you thinkâwould you likeâI wonder if sheâd like tocome and stay with us for a day or two? Itâs rather a shock for a girl that age.â
âWe might go along and suggest it,â I agreed.
âThe children are all right,â said Joanna. âTheyâve got that governess woman. But I expect sheâs just the sort of creature that would drive someone like Megan mad.â
I thought that was very possible. I could imagine Elsie Holland uttering platitude after platitude and suggesting innumerable cups of tea. A kindly creature, but not, I thought, the person for a sensitive girl.
I had thought myself of bringing Megan away, and I was glad that Joanna had thought of it spontaneously without prompting from me.
We went down to the Symmingtonsâ house after breakfast.
We were a little nervous, both of us. Our arrival might look like sheer ghoulish curiosity. Luckily we met Owen Griffith just coming out through the gate. He looked worried and preoccupied.
He greeted me, however, with some warmth.
âOh, hallo, Burton. Iâm glad to see you. What I was afraid would happen sooner or later has happened. A damnable business!â
âGood morning, Dr. Griffith,â said Joanna, using the voice she keeps for one of our deafer aunts.
Griffith started and flushed.
âOhâoh, good morning, Miss Burton.â
âI thought perhaps,â said Joanna, âthat you didnât see me.â
Owen Griffith got redder still. His shyness enveloped him like a mantle.
âIâmâ Iâm so sorryâpreoccupiedâI didnât.â
Joanna went on mercilessly: âAfter all, I am life size.â
âMerely kit-kat,â I said in a stern aside to her. Then I went on:
âMy sister and I, Griffith, wondered whether it would be a good thing if the girl came and stopped with us for a day or two? What do you think? I donât want to butt inâbut it must be rather grim for the poor child. What would
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