A Pale Horse - Charles Todd [112]
He went for the coffee and brought a cup of it back with him, handing it to Rutledge. “I take mine black. There’s not much choice, actually. I don’t have sugar or milk.” He fetched his own cup and sat down. “I don’t know why I talk to you. I don’t care for people as a rule. But before I know it, I’m telling my life story and thinking nothing of it. You’re a bad influence.”
Rutledge laughed. “So I’ve been told.”
“Did Brady kill Willingham, do you think?” Quincy asked abruptly, changing the subject.
“He confessed to it.”
“All right, for the sake of argument, what about Partridge?”
“I’m not as sure of that.”
“Nor am I. Which makes me wonder if Brady isn’t a scapegoat. And accordingly, I keep my door bolted at night now. I can protect myself. What’s loose amongst us here?”
It was an echo of the question Slater had asked.
“There’s no way of knowing.”
“Well, if it’s Slater, he won’t be using that hand to kill anybody for a while. Then we have Allen, who doesn’t have the strength left to overpower anyone, and Mrs. Cathcart, who is afraid of her own shadow. Which leaves in the suspect category Miller, Singleton, and me. Unless it’s Partridge coming back from the grave. We haven’t been shown his body, and that’s something to be taken into account.”
Rutledge couldn’t tell if this was a fishing expedition or not. But Hamish was warning him to take care.
“I think Hill is planning to dig up the floor of Partridge’s cottage tomorrow. To be certain he’s not under it.” It was a light answer, to avoid the truth.
It was Quincy’s turn to laugh, but it rang hollowly. “Yes, well, I wish him luck.” He drained his cup and held out his hand for Rutledge’s. “I’ll say good night. Thanks for coming by. I was in the mood for company.”
It was said with an edge to it, as if he weren’t particularly pleased to have been disturbed.
He let Rutledge out the door and bolted it behind him.
Rutledge went back to the inn and to bed. It was too late to see what Inspector Hill had to say about the murders.
In the night someone tried to burn Quincy alive in his cottage.
But he’d been telling the truth when he said he was armed. The shotgun blasted a hole through the door and peppered the front garden. Then he was outside, taking a broom to the rags someone had jammed under his door, pulling them apart in smoky masses. Those shoved through the broken windowpane in the bird room took longer to extinguish.
Damage was not as extensive as it might have been. Someone had counted on the door being unlocked, to make fire-starting easier. And when he found it wasn’t, he had tried to improvise, determined to set the house ablaze.
For the rest of the night Quincy sat in his dark sitting room, the shotgun across his knees and the coffeepot at his elbow.
When Rutledge came back the next morning, Quincy said with an edge to his voice, “I want to make a statement.”
20
As soon as it was first light, Quincy had been busy, as he told Rutledge with grim satisfaction. He had gone to Mrs. Cathcart’s cottage and called through the door, “There’s no harm done, no one killed. You’re safe for what’s left of the night.”
Inside he had heard her crying, but he said bracingly, “You’ll make yourself ill in there. Go to bed, sleep while you can. There’s nothing to worry about in the light of day.”
It was two hours later that he’d sent Slater for Hill and Rutledge.
“I’d be dead if it weren’t for the cat. She smelled the smoke and was howling frantically to get out. And when I came down, I could hear whoever it was trying to stuff more rags against the door.”
“Do you think you hit him?”
“I don’t know, and could care even less. But I want to go on record that out the back window I saw a shape running toward the shadows of Singleton’s cottage. He may be dead as well. Or he may have tried to kill me. And I’ll swear to that in any fashion you like. I had a good look, it wasn’t my eyes playing tricks.”
“No feeling for size, shape?”
“None. But if Brady killed Willingham and then himself, who tried to burn me out, I ask you.”
He was incensed