Chapter One "I'm going to learn
to drive," Daisy decided as the Triumph two-seater slowed
on entering the village of Didmarsh-under-Edge.
"I quite enjoy it," said Gwen. "Except for cranking the
engine when it's cold."
Though the November air was chilly, the sun shone on
pale gold Cotswold stone, and michaelmas daisies still
bloomed in cottage gardens. Here and there, the last bronze
and yellow leaves clung to the twigs of tall beeches and
elms. "It would be spiffing to be able to hop in the car on
a beautiful day like this and buzz out of London into the
country for a few hours. I could go and visit Belinda, my
stepdaughter, at school. Imagine not having to worry about
train timetables and being picked up at the station and all
that rot."
"I don't mind picking you up at the station," Gwen
assured her, her thin face earnest. Turning into a narrow,
steeply rising lane between the churchyard and the Didmarsh
Post Office and General Store, she raised her voice to be
heard over the roar of the motor. "Would your husband let
you drive?"
"Alec? Good gracious, he doesn't tell me what to do!
Just because he's a policeman, it doesn't mean he tries to
lay down the law. At least . . ."
Daisy paused. She had been going to make an exception
for the times when she found herself involved in one of
Alec's cases, when he most definitely, if unsuccessfully,
did attempt to control her actions. But those times were
best not talked of, though Gwen had probably heard rumours
through the Old Girls' network.
"I wouldn't have married him if he'd shown signs of
wanting to dictate what I can or can't do," she amended.
"This is 1924, after all, not the Victorian Dark Ages. By
the way, I hope you haven't told all your family that
Alec's a policeman. Lots of people get a funny look in
their eyes when they find out I'm a policeman's wife."
"No, you asked me not to and I haven't. But I wasn't
thinking so much about that; more about . . ." Gwen took
her eyes from the road to cast a quick glance at Daisy's
bulging midsection.
"The baby?" Daisy patted the bulge, which her coat so
nicely concealed when she was standing but seemed to
emphasize when she was seated. "I suppose I'd better not
take driving lessons until after it's born. Soon I won't be
able to fit behind a steering wheel. Another three months!
I never dreamt nine months could seem so long. But that has
nothing to do with Alec."
"Daisy!"
Daisy laughed. "Sorry, I mean my being pregnant doesn't
have anything to do with Alec being, or not being,
dictatorial. If you see what I mean."
"I do. I'm just so used to my father always getting his
way--not just with Mother, with all of us--that I can't
quite fathom how a modern marriage works. Here we are."
The lane continued slanting upward across the steep
slope, the Cotswold escarpment, between hedges wreathed
with old-man's beard and berried briony. Soon the hedges
gave way to drystone walls. After a quarter mile or so,
always climbing, Daisy saw on their left stone gateposts
bracketing a gap in the wall. Gwen neatly negotiated the
sharp turn into the drive between open wrought-iron gates.
In curlicued script picked out in gold, the left-hand gate
bore the legend Edge, the right-hand Manor. The small
gatehouse looked deserted.
"No gatekeeper since the War," Gwen observed. "Biddle,
our gardener, lives there now. He's not there during the
day, of course, and Mrs. Biddle ‘obliges' in the house, so
we leave the gates open for convenience."
"Hardly anyone has gatekeepers these days."
A row of yews sheltered the cottage to the north. As the
Triumph drew level with the bushy evergreens, a series of
ear-shattering explosions rang out. Daisy's heart skipped a
beat before she realized the car was backfiring.
Or was it? Gwen stamped on the brake, staring back at
the trees. Following her gaze, Daisy saw movement amid the
dark green foliage, and then her ears rang with a second
set of bangs and pops. This time, guessing the cause, she
spotted flashes on the road behind the car.
"Squibs."
"Those little devils!" Gwen jumped out of the car and
tore in among the trees.
She emerged triumphant a few moments later, each hand
grasping the collar of a small, wiry, and decidedly grubby
boy. She marched them over to the car. "Apologize to Mrs.
Fletcher at once," she snapped, "or I'll tell your
grandfather and he'll give you a proper whopping."
"Mummy won't let him," the younger whined. He was eight
or nine, the elder perhaps ten.
"Your mother won't hear about it till it's over. Addie's
brats," she said to Daisy. "I expect you remember my sister
Adelaide from school?"
"Vaguely. She's a couple of years older, isn't she?"
"Yes, she'll be thirty in January." She shook the boys.
"Hurry up and apologize, or it'll be too late."
"Sorry," the elder muttered sullenly, echoed by his
brother.
Gwen gave them another shake. "You can do better than
that."
"We're very sorry, Mrs. Fletcher, but it was only
squibs. They're not dangerous or anything."
"They jolly well are when you throw them at a car,"
their aunt pointed out. "I could have been startled enough
to run it off the road. Get into the dickey, both of you,
and be careful of Mrs. Fletcher's luggage. Adrian will have
to sit on your lap, Reggie."
"We don't want to go to the house," Reggie said
mutinously.
Adrian panicked. "We said sorry, Aunt Gwen. You can't
tell Grandfather now!"
"I ought to. But I won't if you both empty your pockets
and give me every squib you possess."
"But we bought them with our own money!" Reggie
protested. "What if we promise not to throw them at cars?"
"Every one," Gwen said, uncompromising.
Well acquainted with the contents of her eldest nephew's
pockets, Daisy was not surprised at the odds and ends laid
out on the running board. Besides a dozen squibs, and a
roll of caps, which Gwen also confiscated, the collection
included three fluffy toffees, a matchbox containing two
dead beetles, quantities of string, a stub of pencil,
several small, smoothly rounded stones, and a catapult.
Gwen hesitated over this last.
"Didn't Aunt Babs take this away from you?"
"She just gave it back. We promised not to shoot at the
farm animals or the greenhouses or anything. She kept it
for a whole week, and it's a 'specially good one!"
"Oh, all right. Take your stuff and get in."
"Why?"