Mysterious Mr. Quin - Agatha Christie [100]
The butler received Mr Satterthwaite suavely. Mr and Mrs Denman were both out–at a rehearsal–they hoped Mr Satterthwaite would make himself at home until they returned.
Mr Satterthwaite nodded and proceeded to carry out these injunctions by stepping into the garden. After a cursory examination of the flower beds, he strolled down a shady walk and presently came to a door in the wall. It was unlocked and he passed through it and came out into a narrow lane.
Mr Satterthwaite looked to left and right. A very charming lane, shady and green, with high hedges–a rural lane that twisted and turned in good old-fashioned style. He remembered the stamped address: ASHMEAD, HARLEQUIN’S LANE–remembered too, a local name for it that Mrs Denman had once told him.
‘Harlequin’s Lane,’ he murmured to himself softly. ‘I wonder–’
He turned a corner.
Not at the time, but afterwards, he wondered why this time he felt no surprise at meeting that elusive friend of his: Mr Harley Quin. The two men clasped hands.
‘So you’re down here,’ said Mr Satterthwaite.
‘Yes,’ said Mr Quin. ‘I’m staying in the same house as you are.’
‘Staying there?’
‘Yes. Does it surprise you?’
‘No,’ said Mr Satterthwaite slowly. ‘Only–well, you never stay anywhere for long, do you?’
‘Only as long as is necessary,’ said Mr Quin gravely.
‘I see,’ said Mr Satterthwaite.
They walked on in silence for some minutes.
‘This lane,’ began Mr Satterthwaite, and stopped.
‘Belongs to me,’ said Mr Quin.
‘I thought it did,’ said Mr Satterthwaite. ‘Somehow, I thought it must. There’s the other name for it, too, the local name. They call it the “Lovers’ Lane”. You know that?’
Mr Quin nodded.
‘But surely,’ he said gently, ‘there is a “Lovers’ Lane” in every village?’
‘I suppose so,’ said Mr Satterthwaite, and he sighed a little.
He felt suddenly rather old and out of things, a little dried-up wizened old fogey of a man. Each side of him were the hedges, very green and alive.
‘Where does this lane end, I wonder?’ he asked suddenly.
‘It ends–here,’ said Mr Quin.
They came round the last bend. The lane ended in a piece of waste ground, and almost at their feet a great pit opened. In it were tin cans gleaming in the sun, and other cans that were too red with rust to gleam, old boots, fragments of newspapers, a hundred and one odds and ends that were no longer of account to anybody.
‘A rubbish heap,’ exclaimed Mr Satterthwaite, and breathed deeply and indignantly.
‘Sometimes there are very wonderful things on a rubbish heap,’ said Mr Quin.
‘I know, I know,’ cried Mr Satterthwaite, and quoted with just a trace of self-consciousness: ‘Bring me the two most beautiful things in the city, said God. You know how it goes, eh?’
Mr Quin nodded.
Mr Satterthwaite looked up at the ruins of a small cottage perched on the brink of the wall of the cliff.
‘Hardly a pretty view for a house,’ he remarked.
‘I fancy this wasn’t a rubbish heap in those days,’ said Mr Quin. ‘I believe the Denmans lived there when they were first married. They moved into the big house when the old people died. The cottage was pulled down when they began to quarry the rock here–but nothing much was done, as you can see.’
They turned and began retracing their steps.
‘I suppose,’ said Mr Sattertwaite, smiling, ‘that many couples come wandering down this lane on these warm summer evenings.’
‘Probably.’
‘Lovers,’ said Mr Satterthwaite. He repeated the word thoughtfully and quite without the normal embarrassment of the Englishman. Mr Quin had that effect upon him. ‘Lovers…You have done a lot for lovers, Mr Quin.’
The other bowed his head without replying.
‘You have saved them from sorrow–from worse than sorrow, from death. You have been an advocate for the dead themselves.’
‘You are speaking of yourself–of what you have done–not of me.’
‘It is the same thing,’ said Mr Satterthwaite. ‘You know it is,’ he urged, as the other did not speak. ‘You have acted–through me. For some reason or other you do not act directly