Death of a Peer
pot.”
    “Mike’ll break it,” said Patch.
    “I won’t,” shouted Mike indignantly.
    “And remember,” continued his mother, “if I suggest a charade you’re all to go out and come back quietly and do one. Then, when you’ve finished, go out again so that Daddy can talk to Uncle Gabriel. And remember—”
    “Can’t we listen?” asked Patch.
    “We’ll probably hear Uncle G. all over the flat,” said Henry.
    “And remember not to mention witchcraft. Uncle G. hates it.”
    “Ssh!”
    “Can’t we be talking?” Frid suggested. “You’d think there was a corpse in the flat.”
    “If you can think of anything to say, say it,” said her father gloomily.
    Frid began to speak in a high voice. “Aren’t those flowers over there
too
marvellous?” she asked. Nobody answered her. In the distance a bell rang. Baskett was heard to walk across the hall.
    “Lovely, darling,” said Lady Charles violently. She appealed mutely to the children who stared in apprehension at the door and grimaced at each other. Lady Charles turned to Roberta.
    “Robin, darling, do tell us about your voyage Home. Did you have fun?”
    “Yes,” said Roberta, whose heart was now thumping against her ribs. “Yes. We had a fancy-dress ball.”
    Lady Charles and Frid laughed musically. The door opened and Baskett came in.
    “Lady Katherine Lobe, m’lady,” said Baskett.
    “Good God!” said Lord Charles.
    Lady Katherine came in. She walked with short steps and peered amiably through the cigarette smoke.
    “Imogen, darling,” she whispered.
    “Aunt Kit!”
    The Lampreys kept their heads admirably. They told Lady Katherine how delighted they were to see her and seated her by the fire. They introduced Roberta to her, teased her gently about her lame ducks and, with panic-stricken glances at each other, asked her to remove her raincoat.
    “So nice to see you all,” whispered Lady Katherine. “Such luck for me to find the whole family. And there’s Michael home for the holidays and grown enormously. Patricia too. And the twins. Don’t speak, twins, and let me see if I can guess. This is Stephen, isn’t it?”
    “Yes, Aunt Kit,” said Colin.
    “There! I knew I was right. You got my note, Imogen darling?”
    “Yes, Aunt Kit. We’re so pleased,” said Charlot.
    “Yes I wondered if you had got it because you all looked quite surprised when I walked in. So I wondered.”
    “We thought you were Uncle Gabriel,” shouted Mike.
    “What, dear?”
    “Uncle Gabriel.”
    Lady Katherine passed a grey-fabric finger across her lips. “Is Gabriel coming, Charles?”
    “Yes, Aunt Kit,” said Lord Charles. And as she merely gazed dimly at him he added loudly: “He’s coming to see me on business.”
    “We’re going to have some charades,” bawled Mike.
    “I’m very glad,” said Lady Katherine emphatically. “I wish to see Gabriel. I have written to him several times but no response did I get. It’s about our Fresh Air Fund. A day in the country for a hundred children and a fortnight in private homes for twenty sickly mites. I want Gabriel to take six.”
    “Six sickly mites?” asked Henry.
    “What, dear?”
    “Do you want Uncle Gabriel to take six sickly mites at Deepacres?”
    “It’s the least he can do. I’m afraid Gabriel is inclined to be too self-centred, Charles. He’s a very wealthy man and he should think of other people more than he does. Your mama always said so. And I hear the most disquieting news of Violet. It appears that she has taken up spiritualism and sits in the dark with a set of very second-rate sort of people.”
    “Not spiritualism, darling,” said Charlot. “Black magic.”
    “What, dear?”
    “Magic.”
    “Oh. Oh, I see. That’s entirely different. I suppose she does it to entertain their house-parties. But that doesn’t alter the fact that both Violet and Gabriel are getting rather self-centred. It would be an excellent thing for both of them if they adopted two

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