Listerdale Mystery - Agatha Christie [69]
‘What’s this about the Duke of Edgehill?’ demanded George sternly.
‘Me and Bingo? We’re engaged.’
‘But then–what you said just now–’
‘Oh, that,’ said Mary Montresor. ‘You see, I haven’t made up my mind who I shall actually marry.’
‘Then why did you get engaged to him?’
‘Just to see if I could. Everybody seemed to think it would be frightfully difficult, and it wasn’t a bit!’
‘Very rough luck on–er–Bingo,’ said George, mastering his embarrassment at calling a real live duke by a nickname.
‘Not at all,’ said Mary Montresor. ‘It will be good for Bingo if anything could do him good–which I doubt.’
George made another discovery–again aided by a convenient poster.
‘Why, of course, it’s cup day at Ascot. I should have thought that was the one place you were simply bound to be today.’
Mary Montresor sighed.
‘I wanted a holiday,’ she said plaintively.
‘Why, so did I,’ said George, delighted. ‘And as a result my uncle has kicked me out to starve.’
‘Then in case we marry,’ said Mary, ‘my twenty thousand a year may come in useful?’
‘It will certainly provide us with a few home comforts,’ said George.
‘Talking of homes,’ said Mary, ‘let’s go in the country and find a home we would like to live in.’
It seemed a simple and charming plan. They negotiated Putney Bridge, reached the Kingston by-pass and with a sigh of satisfaction Mary pressed her foot down on the accelerator. They got into the country very quickly. It was half an hour later that with a sudden exclamation Mary shot out a dramatic hand and pointed.
On the brow of a hill in front of them there nestled a house of what house-agents describe (but seldom truthfully) as ‘old-world’ charm. Imagine the description of most houses in the country really come true for once, and you get an idea of this house.
Mary drew up outside a white gate.
‘We’ll leave the car and go up and look at it. It’s our house!’
‘Decidedly, it’s our house,’ agreed George. ‘But just for the moment other people seem to be living in it.’
Mary dismissed the other people with a wave of her hand. They walked up the winding drive together. The house appeared even more desirable at close quarters.
‘We’ll go and peep in at all the windows,’ said Mary.
George demurred.
‘Do you think the other people–?’
‘I shan’t consider them. It’s our house–they’re only living in it by a sort of accident. Besides, it’s a lovely day and they’re sure to be out. And if anyone does catch us, I shall say–I shall say–that I thought it was Mrs–Mrs Pardonstenger’s house, and that I am so sorry I made a mistake.’
‘Well, that ought to be safe enough,’ said George reflectively.
They looked in through windows. The house was delightfully furnished. They had just got to the study when footsteps crunched on the gravel behind them and they turned to face a most irreproachable butler.
‘Oh!’ said Mary. And then putting on her most enchanting smile, she said, ‘Is Mrs Pardonstenger in? I was looking to see if she was in the study.’
‘Mrs Pardonstenger is at home, madam,’ said the butler. ‘Will you come this way, please.’
They did the only thing they could. They followed him. George was calculating what the odds against this happening could possibly be. With a name like Pardonstenger he came to the conclusion it was about one in twenty thousand. His companion whispered, ‘Leave it to me. It will be all right.’
George was only too pleased to leave it to her. The situation, he considered, called for feminine finesse.
They were shown into a drawing-room. No sooner had the butler left the room than the door almost immediately reopened and a big florid lady with peroxide hair came in expectantly.
Mary Montresor made a movement towards her, then paused in well-simulated surprise.
‘Why!’ she exclaimed. ‘It isn’t Amy! What an extraordinary thing!’
‘It is an extraordinary thing,’ said a grim voice.
A man had entered behind Mrs Pardonstenger, an enormous man with a bulldog face and a sinister frown. George thought he had never seen such an unpleasant brute. The man closed the door