The Moor - Laurie R. King [104]
"And I thought, Why should I be burdened with six centuries of Baskervilles? The house was built at a time when there was a huge estate of rich agricultural land, which various ancestors had whittled off over the years, leaving me with no means of keeping the roof standing. To me it was a burden—becoming a prison. To Mr Ketteridge it was a prize. I sold it."
I wondered how she would feel when news reached her that he had already tired of his prize. I was not about to be the one to tell her; rather, I looked at her with a degree of admiration, both for her sense of history's injustices and her self-respect. There was one question to be asked, though, particularly considering the attractive face and deferential manner that nature had wedded to her monetary inheritance.
"Have you ever considered marriage?"
She blushed, very prettily. "I had thought not to be granted that happiness, Miss Russell. I was once engaged, during the war, but six months later my fiancé was killed in France. Afterwards, well, it isn't quite so simple, is it?" She let her voice drift off as she considered me, Miss Russell, a woman five or six years her junior who wore, incongruously, a gold band on the ring finger of the right hand, where it could either be taken for a wedding band in the style of certain European communities, or for a memento. I did not enlighten her, letting her think that perhaps I, too, was one of England's many spinsters. Whole, eligible men in those postwar years were a rare species.
"However," she resumed, studying the spoon in her hand, "recently I have…come to an agreement."
I wished her congratulations and felicitations, and turned back to the all-important question of time.
"As I mentioned, the Reverend Sabine Baring-Gould is writing his memoirs."
"I believe I read something about a volume being published recently," she said, sounding none too definite about it.
"Well, as you can imagine, he is becoming a bit hazy when it comes to remembering specific details, particularly when it comes to the more recent events. You know how forgetful old people become in that way," I said, sending up a plea for forgiveness to the mentally acute if physically deteriorating old man in Lew Trenchard.
"I do," she agreed, sounding more sure of herself. Her charitable work with the aged retainers caused my generalisation to strike a familiar note.
"One of the things that was vexing him the other day was trying to remember when he first met Mr Ketteridge, so to put his mind at rest I told him that I would try to find out, while I was in Plymouth. Would you happen to know?"
"I should have thought very soon after Mr Ketteridge bought the Hall. Thank you, Mary," she said, which startled me for a moment until I saw she was speaking to the servant, who was clearing the plates preparatory to bringing the coffee.
"Do you know when—" I began to say, but she had only paused to recollect her dates.
"He first came to the Hall in April," she said finally. "Yes, it must have been early April, because the pipes burst in the first week of March and we were without water for three weeks altogether, and that's when I decided to see if I could find a tenant and move into town. He happened to arrive the day the plumbers were setting to work. I remember," she said with a smile, "because at first I thought he was one of them, and I was astonished that a plumber could make enough money to buy a car like that."
Her joke and the laugh that followed were wasted on me, because I was alert, almost quivering, like a bird dog at the first scent of the warm, feathered object it was bred to seek.
"The first part of April," I