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Death in Ecstasy
âIn our ritual the relationship is one of the spirit.â
âAh, yes,â said Alleyn. âHad you any reason to believe she suffered from depression or was troubled about anything?â
âI am certain of the contrarah. She was in a state of tranquilitah and joy.â
âI see. No worries over money?â
âMoney? No. She was what the world calls rich.â
âWhat do you call it, sir?â
Father Garnette gave a frank and dreadfully boyish laugh.
âWhy, I should call her rich too, Inspector,â he cried gaily.
âAny unhappy love affair, do you know?â pursued Alleyn.
Father Garnette did not answer for a moment. Then he said sadly:
âAh, Inspector Alleyn, we speak in different languages.â
âI didnât realize that,â said Alleyn. âCan you translate my question into your own language, or would you rather not answer it?â
âYou misunderstand me. Cara Quayne was not concerned with earthly love; she was on the threshold of a new spiritual life.â
âAnd apparently she has crossed it.â
âYou speak more faithfully than you realize. I earnestly believe she has crossed it.â
âNo love affair,â said Alleyn, and wrote it down in his notebook. âWas she on friendly terms with the other Initiates?â
âThere is perfect loving kindness among them. Nay, that does not express my meaning. The Initiates have attained to the third plane where all human relationships merge in an ecstatic indifference. They cannot hate for there is no hatred. They realize that hatred is maya â illusion.â
âAnd love?â
âIf you mean earthlah love, that too is illusion.â
âThen,â said Alleyn, âif you follow the idea to a logical conclusion, what one does cannot matter as long as oneâs actions spring from oneâs emotions for if these are illusion â or am I wrong?â
âAh,â exclaimed Father Garnette, âI knew I was right. We must have a long talk some day, my dear fellow.â
âYou are very kind,â said Alleyn. âWhat did Miss Wade mean when she said: âAll that sort of thing should have been kept outâ?â
âDid Miss Wade say that?â
âYes.â
âI cannot imagine what she meant. The poor soul was very distressed no doubt.â
âWhat do you think Mrs Candour meant when she said she knew something dreadful would happen and that she had said so to M. de Ravigne?â
âI did not hear her,â answered Father Garnette. His manner suggested that Alleyn as well as Mrs Candour had committed a gross error in taste.
âAnother question, Mr Garnette. In the course of your interviews with Miss Quayne can you remember any incident or remark that would throw any light on this matter?â
âNone.â
âThis is a very well-appointed hall.â
âWe think it beautiful,â said Father Garnette complacently.
âPlease do not think me impertinent. I am obliged to ask these questions. Is it supported and kept up by subscription?â
âMy people welcome as a privilege the right to share in the hospitalitah of the Sacred Flame.â
âYou mean they pay the running expenses?â
âYes.â
âWas Miss Quayne a generous supporter?â
âDear soul, yes, indeed she was.â
âDo you purchase the wine for the ceremony?â
âI do.â
âWould you mind giving me the name of this wine and the address of the shop?â
âIt comes from Harrods. I think the name is â let me see â âLe Comteâs Invalid Portâ.â
Alleyn repressed a shudder and wrote it down.
âYou decant it yourself? I mean you pour it into the silver flagon?â
âOn this occasion, no. I believe Claude Wheatley made all the preparations this evening.â
âWould you mind telling me exactly what he would have done?â
âCertainly. He would take an unopened bottle of wine from a cupboard in my room, draw the cork and pour the contents into the vessel. He would then make ready the goblet.â
âMake ready â ?â
Father Garnetteâs expression changed a little. He looked at once mulish and haughty. âA certain preparation is necessarah,â he said grandly.
âOh, yes, of course. You mean the flame that appeared. How was that done? Methylated spirit?â
âIn tabloid form,â confessed Father Garnette.
âI know,â cried Alleyn cheerfully. âThe things women use for heating curling-tongs.â
âPossiblah,â said Father Garnette stiffly. âIn our ritual, Inspector Alleyn, the goblet itself is holy and blessed. By the very act of pouring in the wine, this too becomes sacred â sacred by contact with the Cup. Our ceremony of the Cup, though it embraces the virtues of various communions in Christian churches, is actually entirely different in essentials and in intention.â
âI was not,â said Alleyn, coldly, âso mistaken as to suspect any affinity. Having filled the flagon Mr Wheatley would then put it â where?â
âIn that niche over there on our right of the sanctuarah.â
âAnd what is the procedure with the methylated tablet?â
âPrior to the service Claude comes before the altar and after prostrating himself three times, draws the Sacred Cup from its Monstrance. As he does this he repeats a little prayer in Norse. He genuflects thrice and then rising to his feet he â ah â he ââ
âDrops in the tablet and puts the cup away again?â
âYes.â
âI see. Mr Bathgate tells me the flame appeared after you laid your hands over the cup. How is this done?â
âI â ah â I employ a little capsule,â said Father Garnette.
âReally? What does it contain?â
âI believe the substance is known as zinc â ah â ethyl.â
âOh, yes. Very ingenious. You turn away for a moment as you use it perhaps?â
âThat is so.â
âIt all seems quite clear now. One more question. Has there, to your knowledge, ever been any form of poison kept on the premises of this building?â
Father Garnette turned as white as his robes and said no, definitely not.
âThank you very much. I greatly appreciate your courtesy in answering so readily. I hope you will not mind very much if I ask you to wait in the â is that a vestry over there? It is! â in the vestry, while I see these other people. No doubt you will be glad to change into less ceremonial dress.â
âI shall avail myself of the opportunitah to regain in meditation my tranquilitah and spiritual at-oneness.â
âDo,â said Alleyn cordially.
âMy subconscious mind, impregnated with the word, will flow to you-wards. In all humilitah I believe I may help you in your task. There are more things in Heaven and earth, Inspector Alleyn ââ
âThere are indeed, sir,â agreed the inspector dryly. âHave you any objection to being searched before you go?â
âSearched? No â er â no, certainly not. Certainly not.â
âThatâs very sensible. Pure routine you know. Iâll send a man in.â
Father Garnette withdrew to the vestry accompanied by a plain-clothes man.
âDamnâ, sickly, pseudo, bogus, mumbo-jumbo,â said Alleyn with great violence. âWhat do you think of him, Fox?â
âWell, sir,â said Fox placidly, âI must say I wondered if the gentleman knew much more about what he seemed to be talking about than I did.â
âAnd well you might, my Foxkin, well you might. Hullo, Bathgate.â
âHullo,â said Nigel guardedly.
âEnjoying yourself?â
âIâm taking shorthand notes. I seem to remember that you have a passion for shorthand notes.â
âAinât dat de truff, Lawd! Have you read âOle Man Adamâ?â
âYes.â
âI wish Garnette had. Fox!â
âYes, sir?â
âSend someone else into the vestry with Mr Garnette, will you, and get them to look him over. And any of the others I send in. Whereâs the wardress?â
âIn the porch out there.â
âShe can deal with the ladies. Tell them to look for a small piece of crumpled paper or anything that could have held powder. I donât think theyâll find it. Bailey!â
Detective-Sergeant Bailey moved down from the sanctuary.
âYes, sir?â
âThe next, if you please.â
Bailey went through the little door and reappeared with Claude Wheatley and a general air of having taken an unlucky dip in a bran-tub. Fox returned with another plain-clothes man who went into the vestry.
âThis gentleman isnât feeling too good, sir. He wants to go home,â said Bailey.
âOh, yes,â said Claude. âOh, yes, please. Oh, yes.â
âSorry youâre upset, Mr Wheatley,â said Alleyn.
âUpset! Iâm fearfully ill, Inspector. You canât think. Oh, please may I sit down.â
âDo.â
Claude sank into one of the Initiatesâ chairs and gazed wide-eyed at the inspector.
âI feel too ghastly,â he moaned.
âWhat upset you?â
âThat appalling old woman. She said such frightful things. I do think old women are awful.â
âWhom do you mean?â
âThe Candour female.â
âWhat did she say to upset you?â
âOh, I donât know. I do feel shocking.â
Dr Curtis came out of Garnetteâs room and strolled down.
âMr Wheatley felt a bit squeamish,â he said cheerfully, âbut heâll be all right. Heâs had a peg of some really excellent brandy. Father Garnetteâs a lucky man.â
âSplendid,â rejoined Alleyn. âWould you be a good fellow and go back to them, Curtis? Some of the others may need attention.â
âCertainly.â Curtis and Alleyn exchanged a glance and the doctor returned.
âNow, Mr Wheatley,â Alleyn began. âI think you look much better. Iâve a few questions Iâd like to put to you. You can refuse to answer if you think it advisable.â
âYes, but thatâs all very well. Suppose I do refuse, then youâll start thinking things.â
âI might, certainly.â
âYes â well â there!â
âDifficult for you,â remarked Alleyn.
âWell, anyway,â said Claude very peevishly, âyou can ask them. I may as well know what they are.â
âI have already asked the first. What did Mrs Candour say to upset you?â
Claude wriggled.
âJealous old cat. The whole thing is she loathes Father Garnette taking the slightest notice of anybody else. Sheâs always too loathsomely spiteful for words â especially to Lionel and me. How she dared! And anyway everybody knows all about it. Iâd hardly be stupid enough to ââ Here Claude stopped short.
âTo do what, Mr Wheatley?â
âTo do anything like that, even if I wanted to, and anyway I always thought Cara Quayne was a marvellous person â so piercingly decorative.â
âWhat would you hardly be stupid enough to do?â asked Alleyn patiently.
âTo â well â well â to do anything to the wine. Everybody knows it was my week to make preparation.â
âYou mean you poured the wine into the silver flagon and put the methylated tablet into the cup. What did Mrs Candour suggest?â
âShe didnât actually suggest anything. She simply said I did it. She kept on saying so. Old cat.â
âI shouldnât let it worry you. Now, Mr Wheatley, will you think carefully. Did you notice any peculiar, any unusual smell when you poured out the wine?â
âAny smell!â ejaculated Claude opening his eyes very wide. âAny smell!â
âAny smell.â
âWell, of course Iâd just lit all the censers you know. Donât you think our incense is rather divine, Inspector? Father Garnette gets it from India. Itâs sweet-almond blossom. Thereâs the oil too. We burn a dish of the oil in front of the altar. I lit it just before I got the wine. Itâs a gorgeous perfume.â
âEvidently. You got the bottle of wine from Mr Garnetteâs room. Was it unopened?â
âYes. I drew the cork.â
âYou put nothing else in the flagon?â
Claude looked profoundly uncomfortable.
âWell â well, anyway I didnât put any poison in, if thatâs what youâre hinting.â
âWhat else did you put?â
âIf you must know itâs something from a little bottle that Father Garnette keeps. It has a ceremonial significance. Itâs always done.â
âHave you any idea what it is?â
âI donât know.â
âWhere is this bottle kept?â
âIn the little cupboard in Father Garnetteâs room.â
âI see. Now as I understand it you took the wine to each of the Initiates in turn. Did you at any time notice an unusual smell from the cup?â
âI never touched the cup, Inspector. I never touched it. They all handed it round from one to the other. I didnât notice any smell except the incense. Not ever.â
âRight. Did you notice Miss Quayne at all when she took the cup?â
âDid I notice her? My God, yes.â
âWhat happened exactly?â
âIt was simply appalling. You see I thought she was in Blessed Ecstasy. Well, I mean she was, up to the time she took the cup. She had spoken in ecstasy and everything. And then she drank. And then oh, it was frightful! She gave a sort of gasp. A fearfully deep gasp and sort of sharp. She made a face. And then she kind of slewed round and she dropped the cup. Her eyes looked like a dollâs eyes. Glistening. And then she twitched all over â jerked â ugh! She fell down in a sort of jerk. Oh, Iâm going to be sick, I think.â
âNo, youâre not,â said the inspector very firmly. âYou are going home. Go into the vestry and change your clothes.â
âWhereâs Lionel?â
âHeâll join you in a moment. Goodnight.â
âOh,â said Claude rolling a languishing eye at Alleyn, âyou are marvellous, Inspector. Oh, I would so very much rather not be sick. Goodbye.â
âGoodnight.â
Claude, under escort, walked with small steps into the vestry where they could hear him talking in a sort of feeble scream to the officer who searched him.
âOh,â cried Inspector Fox suddenly in a falsetto voice, âoh, Inspector, I think Iâm going to be sick.â
âAnd well you might be,â said Nigel, grinning. âWhat a loathly, what a nauseating, what an unspeakable little dollop.â
âHorrid, wasnât it?â agreed Alleyn absently. âDamn that incense,â he added crossly. âSweet almond too, just the very thing ââ he paused and stared thoughtfully at Fox. âLetâs have Lionel,â he said.
Lionel was produced. His manner was a faithful reproduction of Claudeâs and he added nothing that was material to the evidence. He was sent into the vestry, whence he and Claude presently emerged wearing, the one, a saxe-blue and the other, a pinkish-brown suit. They fussed off down the aisle and disappeared. Alleyn sent for Mrs Candour.
CHAPTER 6 Mrs Candour and Mr Ogden
Mrs Candour had wept and her tears had blotted her make-up. She had dried them and in doing so had blotted her make-up again. Her face was an unlovely mess of mascara, powder and rouge. It hung in flabby pockets from the bone of her skull. She looked bewildered, frightened and vindictive. Her hands were tremulous. She was a large woman born to be embarrassingly ineffectual. In answer to Alleynâs suggestion that she should sit on one of the chairs, she twitched her loose lips, whispered something and walked towards them with that precarious gait induced by excessive flesh mounted on French heels. She moved in a thick aura of essence of violet. Alleyn waited until she was seated before he gave her the customary information that she was under no obligation to answer any questions. He paused, but she made no comment. She simply stared in front of her with lacklustre eyes.
âI take it,â said Alleyn, âthat you have no objection. Was Miss Cara Quayne a personal friend of yours?â
âNot a great friend.â
âAn acquaintance?â
âYes. We â we â only met here.â Her voice was thin and faintly common. âAt least, well, I did go to see her once or twice.â
âHave you got any ideas on the subject of this business?â
âOh my God!â moaned Mrs Candour. âI believe it was a judgment.â
âA judgment?â
Mrs Candour drew a lace handkerchief from her bosom.
âWhat had Miss Quayne done,â asked Alleyn, âto merit so terrible a punishment?â
âShe coveted the vow of Odin.â
âIâm afraid I do not know what that implies.â
âThat is how I feel about it,â said Mrs Candour, exactly as if she had just finished a lucid and explicit statement. âFather Garnette is above all that sort of thing. He is not of this world. He had told us so, often and often. But Cara was a very passionate sort of woman.â She dropped her voice and added with an air of illicit relish: âCara was dreadfully over-sexed. Pardon me.â
âOh,â said Alleyn.
âYes. Of course I know that ecstatic union is blessed, but ecstatic union is one thing and ââ Here Mrs Candour stopped short and looked frightened.
âDo you mean,â said Alleyn, âthat â ?â
âI donât mean anything definite,â interrupted Mrs Candour in a hurry. âPlease, please donât attach any importance to what Iâve just said. It was only my idea. Iâm so dreadully upset. Poor Cara. Poor, poor Cara.â
âMr Claude Wheatley tells me ââ
âDonât you believe anything that little beast says, Mr â er â Inspector â er ââ
âInspector Alleyn, madam.â
âOh â Inspector Alleyn. Claudeâs a little pig. Always prying into other peopleâs affairs. Iâve told Father, but heâs so good he doesnât see.â
âI gather you rather upset Mr Wheatley by referring to his preparations for the service.â
âServes him right if I did. He kept on saying it was murder, he knew it was murder, and that Cara was such a lovely woman and everyone was jealous of her. I just said: âWell,â I said, âif she was murdered,â I said, âwho prepared the goblet and the flagon?â And then he fainted. I thought it looked very queer.â
âMiss Quayne was a very beautiful woman, I believe?â said Alleyn casually.
âI never could see it. Of course, if you admire that type. But just because that M. de Ravigne went silly over her â I mean everyone knows what foreigners are like. If you give them any encouragement, that is. Well, I myself â I suppose Claude told you that â about her looks, I mean. Or was it Father Garnette? Was it?â
âIâm afraid I donât remember,â said Alleyn.
Mrs Candour jerked her chin up. For a second her face was horrible. âCara doesnât look very pretty now,â she said softly.
Alleyn turned away.
âI mustnât keep you any longer,â he said. âThereâs only one other point. You were the first, after Mr Garnette, to take the cup. Did you notice any peculiar smell?â
âI donât know. I donât remember. No, I donât think so.â
âI see. Thank you. That is all, I think.â
âI may go home?â
âCertainly. There is a wardress in the lobby. Would you object to being examined?â
âSearched!â
âJust looked over, you know. Itâs the usual thing.â
âOh, yes, please â Iâd rather â much rather.â
âThank you. You will be given notice of the inquest.â
âThe inquest! Oh, how dreadful. I donât know how Iâm to get over this â Iâm so shockingly sensitive. Inspector Alleyn, youâve been marvellously kind. I always thought that police methods were brutal.â She looked up at him with a general air of feminine helplessness somewhat negatived by a glint of appraisal in her eye. It was a ghastly combination. She held out her hand.
âGoodbye, Inspector Alleyn.â
âGood evening, madam,â said Alleyn.
She wobbled away on her French heels.
âThis is a very unsavoury case,â said Nigel.
âItâs murder,â said Inspector Fox mildly.
âMost foul,â added Alleyn, âas at the best it is. But this most foul â Yes, I agree with you, Bathgate. Bailey!â
âHere,â said that worthy, rising up from behind the lectern.
âNext please.â
âRight, sir.â
âWhat did you make of Mrs Candour?â asked Alleyn.
âA perfectly appalling old girl,â said Nigel fervently.
âOh, yes. All that. Almost a pathological case, one might imagine. Still, the exhibition of jealousy was interesting, didnât you think, Fox?â
âYes, I did,â agreed Fox. âThis Father Garnette seems to be a peculiar sort of man for the ministry.â
âExactly.â
âWhen she made that appalling remark about Cara not looking very pretty now,â said Nigel, âshe was positively evil. Without a shadow of doubt she loathed the poor woman. I am surprised at your allowing her to escape. She should have been handcuffed immediately, I consider.â
âDonât show off,â said Alleyn abstractedly.
âIâll be right there, Ahfficer. Whereâs the Chief?â cried Mr Ogden from afar. He appeared with Bailey by the altar, saw Alleyn, and made straight for him.
âWell, well, well. Look whatâs here!â exclaimed Mr Ogden.
âYes, look,â said Alleyn. âItâs a pathetic sight, Mr Ogden. Here we go grubbing along â however.â
âSay, Inspector, whatâs the big idea? You look kind of world-weary.â
âDo I, Mr Ogden, do I?â
âAnd just when I was congratulating myself on sitting right next the works for an inside survey of British criminal investigation.â
âAnd now youâll never talk again about our wonderful police.â
âIs that so? Well, Iâm not saying anything.â
âYou wonât mind if I ask you a few dreary questions, perhaps? We have to do our stuff, you know.â
âGo right ahead. My, my!â said Mr Ogden contemplating Alleyn with an air of the liveliest satisfaction. âYou certainly are the goods. I guess youâve got British Manufacture stamped some place where it wonât wear off. All this quiet deprecation â itâs direct from a sure-fire British best-seller. I canât hardly believe itâs true.â
Nigel, from his unobtrusive seat by Fox, allowed himself an irritating grin. Alleyn saw it and looked furious.
âThat sounds a very damning description, Mr Ogden,â he said, and hurried on. He asked Ogden if he had noticed a peculiar smell and got the now customary reply that the reek of incense was so strong that it would drown any other smell.
âThough, now I get to thinking about it,â added Mr Ogden, âI do seem to remember it was uncommon powerful tonight. Yes, sir, I believe I thought those two he-he boys were certainly hitting up the atmosphere.â
âCan you remember at what precise moment you thought this?â
Mr Ogdenâs face became very pink. For the first time since Alleyn met him he hesitated.
âWell, Mr Ogden?â
âWell now, Inspector, I canât remember. Isnât that just too bad?â
âMiss Jenkins was next to you in the circle, wasnât she?â
âThat is correct,â said Mr Ogden tonelessly.
âYes. Now look here, sir. Youâre a business man I take it?â
âSurely.â
âThank God for that. I donât know how much this organisation means to you, and I donât want to say anything that will be offensive, but Iâm longing for a sensible manâs view of the whole situation. An intelligent and knowledgeable view.â
âInside dope,â said Mr Ogden.