occurred?â
âYes.â
âAnd you should have seen it last night,â Miss Bunner exclaimed. âSuch a mess. Two little tables knocked over, and the leg off oneâpeople barging about in the darkâand someone put down a lighted cigarette and burnt one of the best bits of furniture. Peopleâyoung people especiallyâare so careless about these things ⦠Luckily none of the china got brokenââ
Miss Blacklock interrupted gently but firmly:
âDora, all these things, vexatious as they may be, are only trifles. It will be best, I think, if we just answer Inspector Craddockâs questions.â
âThank you, Miss Blacklock. I shall come to what happened last night, presently. First of all I want you to tell me when you first saw the dead manâRudi Scherz.â
âRudi Scherz?â Miss Blacklock looked slightly surprised. âIs that his name? Somehow, I thought ⦠Oh, well, it doesnât matter. My first encounter with him was when I was in Medenham Spa for a dayâs shopping aboutâlet me see, about three weeks ago. WeâMiss Bunner and Iâwere having lunch at the Royal Spa Hotel. As we were just leaving after lunch, I heard my name spoken. It was this young man. He said: âIt is Miss Blacklock, is it not?â And went on to say that perhaps I did not remember him, but that he was the son of the proprietor of the Hotel des Alpes at Montreux where my sister and I had stayed for nearly a year during the war.â
âThe Hotel des Alpes, Montreux,â noted Craddock. âAnd did you remember him, Miss Blacklock?â
âNo, I didnât. Actually I had no recollection of ever having seen him before. These boys at hotel reception desks all look exactly alike. We had had a very pleasant time at Montreux and the proprietor there had been extremely obliging, so I tried to be as civil as possible and said I hoped he was enjoying being in England, and he said, yes, that his father had sent him over for six months to learn the hotel business. It all seemed quite natural.â
âAnd your next encounter?â
âAboutâyes, it must have been ten days ago, he suddenly turned up here. I was very surprised to see him. He apologized fortroubling me, but said I was the only person he knew in England. He told me that he urgently needed money to return to Switzerland as his mother was dangerously ill.â
âBut Letty didnât give it to him,â Miss Bunner put in breathlessly.
âIt was a thoroughly fishy story,â said Miss Blacklock, with vigour. âI made up my mind that he was definitely a wrong âun. That story about wanting the money to return to Switzerland was nonsense. His father could easily have wired for arrangements to have been made in this country. These hotel people are all in with each other. I suspected that heâd been embezzling money or something of that kind.â She paused and said dryly: âIn case you think Iâm hardhearted, I was secretary for many years to a big financier and one becomes wary about appeals for money. I know simply all the hard-luck stories there are.
âThe only thing that did surprise me,â she added thoughtfully, âwas that he gave in so easily. He went away at once without any more argument. Itâs as though he had never expected to get the money.â
âDo you think now, looking back on it, that his coming was really by way of a pretext to spy out the land?â
Miss Blacklock nodded her head vigorously.
âThatâs exactly what I do thinkânow. He made certain remarks as I let him outâabout the rooms. He said, âYou have a very nice dining roomâ (which of course it isnâtâitâs a horrid dark little room) just as an excuse to look inside. And then he sprang forward and unfastened the front door, said, âLet me.â I think now he wanted to have a look at the fastening.
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