now a voluntary patient in a mental home. A very difficult person, sir.â He lowered his voice slightly before adding, âDrugs!â
âQuite,â said the inspector. âThere was no question of drugs with Mr Warwick, I suppose?â
âNo, sir. Brandy was what Mr Warwick liked to resort to.â
âDrank a lot of it, did he?â the inspector asked.
âYes, sir,â Angell replied. âHe was a heavy drinker,but not an alcoholic, if you understand me. He never showed any ill-effects.â
The inspector paused before asking, âNow, whatâs all this about guns and revolvers andâshooting at animals?â
âWell, it was his hobby, sir,â Angell told him. âWhat we call in the profession a compensation. Heâd been a big-game hunter in his day, I understand. Quite a little arsenal heâs got in his bedroom there.â He nodded over his shoulder to indicate a room elsewhere in the house. âRifles, shotguns, air-guns, pistols and revolvers.â
âI see,â said the inspector. âWell, now, just take a look at this gun here.â
Angell rose and stepped towards the table, then hesitated. âItâs all right,â the inspector told him, âyou neednât mind handling it.â
Angell picked up the gun, gingerly. âDo you recognize it?â the inspector asked him.
âItâs difficult to say, sir,â the valet replied. âIt looks like one of Mr Warwickâs, but I donât really know very much about firearms. I canât say for certain which gun he had on the table beside him last night.â
âDidnât he have the same one every night?â asked the inspector.
âOh, no, he had his fancies, sir,â said Angell. âHe kept using different ones.â The valet offered the gun back to the inspector, who took it.
âWhat was the good of his having a gun last night with all that fog?â queried the inspector.
âIt was just a habit, sir,â Angell replied. âHe was used to it, as you might say.â
âAll right, sit down again, would you?â
Angell sat again at one end of the sofa. The inspector examined the barrel of the gun before asking, âWhen did you see Mr Warwick last?â
âAbout a quarter to ten last night, sir,â Angell told him. âHe had a bottle of brandy and a glass by his side, and the pistol heâd chosen. I arranged his rug for him, and wished him good-night.â
âDidnât he ever go to bed?â the inspector asked.
âNo, sir,â replied the valet. âAt least, not in the usual sense of the term. He always slept in his chair. At six in the morning I would bring him tea, then I would wheel him into his bedroom, which had its own bathroom, where heâd bath and shave and so on, and then heâd usually sleep until lunch-time. I understand that he suffered from insomnia at night, and so he preferred to remain in his chair then. He was rather an eccentric gentleman.â
âAnd the window was shut when you left him?â
âYes, sir,â Angell replied. âThere was a lot of fog about last night, and he didnât want it seeping into the house.â
âAll right. The window was shut. Was it locked?â
âNo, sir. That window was never locked.â
âSo he could open it if he wanted to?â
âOh yes, sir. He had his wheelchair, you see. He could wheel himself over to the window and open it if the night should clear up.â
âI see.â The inspector thought for a moment, and then asked, âYou didnât hear a shot last night?â
âNo, sir,â Angell replied.
The inspector walked across to the sofa and looked down at Angell. âIsnât that rather remarkable?â he asked.
âNo, not really, sir,â was the reply. âYou see, my room is some distance away. Along a passage and through a baize door on the other
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