The Daddy P.I. Casefiles: The First Collection by Frost, J (great novels .txt) π
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We scanned the room from the doorway, though I failed to spot anything out of the ordinary. Beside the window was a small table with a plain white cloth draped over it. The walls on either side held locked cabinets which contained various tools, glasses and paraphernalia for serving. Fellowes would have poured the champagne here, but there were no traces of white powder, unusual objects, or hidden trapdoors. In the mystery novels Iβd read, these were guaranteed signs of foul play.
Happy with his initial sortie, Lord Edgington stepped over the threshold and began a closer examination. Far faster than I could manage, he sought out a popped cork which was lying at the bottom of the thick velvet curtains. He crouched to inspect the floor around it, then raised it to his eyes.
As heβd invited me along on the mission, I felt I could at least ask a question. βSorry, Grandfather, what are you looking for?β
He didnβt answer at first, but, rotating the cork steadily between his gloved finger and thumb, he held it to the light. βWhat do you notice?β
I didnβt like to be put on the spot and felt quite nervous. βWellβ¦ um. Nothing?β
βExactly.β He let this word sit between us, as if it revealed a great deal. I wondered whether I had time to pop to the petit salon for a chocolate Γ©clair whilst he was thinking. βThere are no holes or unusual indents. It is in every way a typical cork from a bottle of Veuve Clicquot champagne, which tells me far more than I was expecting to find out at this point.β
I tried to keep up with him. βDo you mean that no one tampered with the bottle?β
I could already sense a shift in the old police officer. The emotion heβd shown just moments earlier had been shut away in some dark chamber of his heart and he was focussed on the task at hand.
βThatβs right. Assuming that the champagne was poisoned, weβre left with far fewer options for how it came about.β He paused and looked up at me. βEither the bottle was already infected fifty years ago β the probability of which seems low β or the poison was added this evening, after the cork was popped.β
Iβd been carrying a dark thought with me ever since Iβd seen Belinda collapse, and felt compelled to let it out. βIt couldnβt be the delphiniums, could it?β
Grandfather looked at me like I had the wits of a stickleback. βNo of course not. Where would you get such an idea?β
My thoughts came out in a jumble. βYou said yourself that delphiniums can be toxic. Wasnβt that why we wore gloves to handle them?β
βYes, but-β
Now that Iβd started, I had to get all my fears out in one go. βI thought perhaps that, with so many together, the scent or pollen or what have you could turn to poison.β
Pocketing the cork in his waistcoat, Grandfather stood up to explain how far from the truth Iβd already led us. βDelphiniums contain high levels of alkaloids. Theyβre toxic, but not poisonous enough to kill so quickly or violently. Depending on the amount you ingested, youβre more likely to get an upset stomach than keel over dead.β
I felt awfully silly, but that didnβt stop me talking. βSo what did kill Aunt Belinda?β
I could see him consulting the book of poisons he kept neatly filed in the library in his head. βThere are very few substances which would act so swiftly and many of them are only available in far-flung places. Indigenous South Americans use arrows tipped with poison extracted from Chondrodendron plants to incapacitate their prey. There are also a number of venomous sea creatures which could provide you with a suitable weapon, but I think it was something far simpler and more readily available.β
I assumed that he was considering one of the famous poisons that crime novelists love to make use of. Arsenic, strychnine orβ¦
βCyanide, Iβd say.β He rid his mouth of the words as though they had a bitter taste to them. βA short intense death. Iβve heard people say that itβs painless, but it doesnβt look that way to me. And this is not the first time Iβve seen what it can do.β
He took the cork from his pocket and held it to his nose.
I fell for it and instantly had to ask, βWhat can you smell, grandfather?β
βChampagne, of course, boy.β He looked displeased with me once more. βWeβve already established that the poison was added after the cork was popped. To discover how that was possible, we must talk to our first witness.β
Chapter Ten
We left the drinks room and crossed paths with Todd on his way back to the ballroom.
βThe police say theyβll be here within the hour,β he told us. βThe local lot might make it earlier but theyβre sending someone from Scotland Yard. Some inspector who lives nearby.β
βJolly good,β Grandfather said as he strode along with the gait and motivation of a much younger man. βHelp Halfpenny keep the guests in order. Iβll send Fellowes along once Iβve spoken to him. Oh, and lock the drinks room door until the police arrive, we donβt want any stray gawkers to interfere with the evidence.β
βCrime, Milord?β Todd had a rather innocent expression on his face just then. βSo you do think itβs murder?β There was a quickness to the man that told me heβd make a far better assistant than I could.
βIt looks that way. Though you should try to play it down if our guests are getting agitated.β
The two men swapped places and carried on along the corridor in different directions.
We found Fellowes in the kitchen. I did not consider it the obvious choice of location to store a lethal substance, but Iβm sure he had his reasons. Chief among them, no doubt, was the chance to break the bad news to his colleagues.
I was surprised to
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