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Tuppence replied briskly: "All this Blitzkrieg is just the Germans' last effort. I believe the shortage is something frightful in Germany. The men in the factories are very dissatisfied. The whole thing will crack up."
"What's this? What's all this?"
Mr and Mrs Cayley came out on the terrace, Mr Cayley putting his questions fretfully. He settled himself in a chair and his wife put a rug over his knees. He repeated fretfully: "What's that you are saying?"
"We're saying," said Miss Minton, "That it will all be over by the Autumn."
"Nonsense," said Mr Cayley. "It's going to last at least six years."
"Oh, Mr Cayley," protested Tuppence. "You don't really think so?"
Mr Cayley was peering about him suspiciously.
"Now I wonder," he murmured. "Is there a draught? Perhaps it would be better if I moved my chair back into the corner."
The resettlement of Mr Cayley took place. His wife, an anxious-faced woman who seemed to have no other aim in life than to minister to Mr Cayley's wants, manipulating cus.h.i.+ons and rugs, asking from time to time: "Now how is that, Alfred? Do you think that will be all right? Ought you, perhaps, to have your sun-gla.s.ses? There is rather a glare this morning."
Cayley said irritably: "No, no. Don't fuss, Elizabeth. Have you got my m.u.f.fler? No, no, my silk m.u.f.fler. Oh well, it doesn't matter. I dare say this will do - for once. But I don't want to get my throat overheated, and wool - in this sunlight - well, perhaps you had better fetch the other." He turned his attention back to matters of public interest. "Yes," he said. "I give it six years."
He listened with pleasure to the protests of the two women.
"You dear ladies are just indulging in what we call wishful thinking. Now I know Germany. I may say I know Germany extremely well. In the course of my business before I retired I used to be constantly to and fro. Berlin, Hamburg, Munich, I know them all. I can a.s.sure you that Germany can hold out practically indefinitely. With Russia behind her -"
Mr Cayley plunged triumphantly on, his voice rising and falling in pleasurably melancholy cadences, only interrupted when he paused to receive the silk m.u.f.fler his wife brought him and wind it round his throat.
Mrs Sprot brought out Betty and plumped her down with a small woolen dog that lacked an ear and a woolly doll's jacket.
"There, Betty," she said. "You dress up Bonzo ready for his walk while Mummy gets ready to go out."
Mr Cayley's voice droned on, reciting statistics and figures, all of a depressing character. The monologue was punctuated by a cheerful twittering from Betty talking busily to Bonzo in her own language.
"Truckle - truckly - pah bat," said Betty. Then, as a bird alighted near her, she stretched out loving hands to it and gurgled. The bird flew away and Betty glanced round the a.s.sembled company and remarked clearly: "d.i.c.ky," and nodded her head with great satisfaction.
"That child is learning to talk in the most wonderful way," said Miss Minton. "Say 'Ta ta', Betty. 'Ta ta'."
Betty looked at her coldly and remarked: "Gluck!"
Then she forced Bonzo's one arm into his woolly coat and, toddling over to a chair, picked up the cus.h.i.+on and pushed Bonzo behind it. Chuckling gleefully, she said: "Hide! Bow wow. Hide!"
Miss Minton, acting as a kind of interpreter, said with vicarious pride: "She loves hide and seek. She's always hiding things." She cried out with exaggerated surprise: "Where is Bonzo? Where is Bonzo? Where can Bonzo have gone?"
Betty flung herself down and went into ecstasies of mirth.
Mr Cayley, finding attention diverted from his explanation of Germany's methods of subst.i.tution of raw materials, looked put out and coughed aggressively.
Mrs Sprot came out with her hat on and picked up Betty.
Attention returned to Mr Cayley.
"You were saying, Mr Cayley?" said Tuppence.
But Mr Cayley was affronted. He said coldly: "That woman is always plumping that child down and expecting people to look after it. I think I'll have the woollen m.u.f.fler after all, dear. The sun is going in."
"Oh, but, Mr Cayley, do go on with what you were telling us. It was so interesting," Miss Minton begged.
Mollified, Mr Cayley weightily resumed his discourse, drawing the folds of the woolly m.u.f.fler closer round his stringy neck.
"As I was saying, Germany has so perfected her system of -"
Tuppence turned to Mrs Cayley, and asked: "What do you think about the war, Mrs Cayley?"
Mrs Cayley jumped.
"Oh, what do I think? What - what do you mean?"
"Do you think it will last as long as six years?"
Mrs Cayley said doubtfully: "Oh, I hope not. It's a very long time, isn't it?"
"Yes, a long time. What do you really think?"
Mrs Cayley seemed quite alarmed by the question. She said: "Oh, I - I don't know. I don't know at all. Alfred says it will."
"But you don't think so?"
"Oh, I don't know. It's difficult to say, isn't it?"
Tuppence felt a wave of exasperation. The chirruping Miss Minton, the dictatorial Mr Cayley, the nit-witted Mrs Cayley - were these people really typical of her fellow countrymen? Was Mrs Sprot any better with her slightly vacant face and boiled gooseberry eyes? What could she, Tuppence, ever find out here? Not one of these people, surely - Her thought was checked. She was aware of a shadow. Someone behind her who stood between her and the sun. She turned her head.
Mrs Perenna, standing on the terrace, her eyes on the group. And something in those eyes - scorn, was it? A kind of withering contempt. Tuppence thought: I must find out more about Mrs Perenna.
II.
Tommy was establis.h.i.+ng the happiest of relations.h.i.+ps with Major Bletchley.
"Brought down some golf clubs with you, didn't you, Meadowes?"
Tommy pleaded guilty.
"Ha! I can tell you, my eyes don't miss much. Splendid! We must have a game together. Ever played on the links here?"
Tommy replied in the negative.
"They're not bad - not bad at all. Bit on the short side, perhaps, but lovely view over the sea and all that. And never very crowded. Look here, what about coming along with me this morning? We might have a game."
"Thanks very much. I'd like it."
"Must say I'm glad you've arrived," remarked Bletchley as they were trudging up the hill. "Too many women in that place. Gets on one's nerves. Glad I've got another fellow to keep me in countenance. You can't count Cayley - the man's a kind of walking chemist's shop. Talks of nothing but his health and the treatment he's tried and the drugs he's taking. If he threw away all his little pillboxes and went out for a good ten mile walk every day he'd be a different man. The only other male in the place is von Deinim, and to tell you the truth, Meadowes, I'm not too easy in my mind about him."
"No?" said Tommy.
"No. You take my word for it, this refugee business is dangerous. If I had my way I'd intern the lot of them. Safety first."
"A bit drastic, perhaps."
"Not at all. War's war. And I've got my suspicions of Master Carl. For one thing, he's clearly not a Jew. Then he came over here just a month - only a month, mind you - before war broke out. That's a bit suspicious."
Tommy said invitingly: "Then you think -"
"Spying - that's his little game!"
"But surely there's nothing of great military or naval importance hereabouts?"
"Ah, old man, that's where the artfulness comes in! If he were anywhere near Plymouth or Portsmouth he'd be under supervision. In a sleepy place like this, n.o.body bothers. But it's on the coast, isn't it? The truth of it is the Government is a great deal too easy with these enemy aliens. Any one who cared could come over here and pull a a long face and talk about their brothers in concentration camps. Look at that young man - arrogance in every line of him. He's a n.a.z.i - that's what he is - a n.a.z.i."
"What we really need in this country is a witch doctor or two," said Tommy pleasantly.
"Eh, what's that?"
"To smell out the spies," Tommy explained gravely.
"Ha, very good that - very good. Smell 'em out - yes, of course."
Further conversation was brought to an end, for they had arrived at the clubhouse.
Tommy's name was put up as a temporary member, he was introduced to the secretary, a vacant-looking elderly man, and the subscription duly paid. Tommy and the Major started on their round.
Tommy was a mediocre golfer. He was glad to find that his standard of play was just about right for his new friend. The Major won by two up and one to play, a very happy state of events.
"Good match, Meadowes, very good match - you had bad luck with that mas.h.i.+e shot, just turned off at the last minute. We must have a game fairly often. Come along and I'll introduce you to some of the fellows. Nice lot on the whole, some of them inclined to be rather old women, if you know what I mean? Ah, here's Haydock - you'll like Haydock. Retired naval wallah. Has that house on the cliff next door to us. He's our local A.R.P. warden."
Commander Haydock was a big hearty man with a weather-beaten face, intensely blue eyes, and a habit of shouting most of his remarks.
He greeted Tommy with friendliness.
"So you're going to keep Bletchley countenance at Sans Souci? He'll be glad of another man. Rather swamped by female society, eh, Bletchley?"
"I'm not much of a ladies' man," said Major Bletchley.
"Nonsense," said Haydock. "Not your type of lady, my boy, that's it. Old boarding-house p.u.s.s.ies. Nothing to do but gossip and knit."
"You're forgetting Miss Perenna," said Bletchley.
"Ah, Sheila - she's an attractive girl all right. Regular beauty if you ask me."
"I'm a bit worried about her," said Bletchley.
"What do you mean? Have a drink, Meadowes? What's yours, Major?"
The drinks ordered and the men settled on the verandah of the clubhouse, Haydock repeated his question.
Major Bletchley said with some violence: "That German chap. She's seeing too much of him."
"Getting sweet on him, you mean? H'm, that's bad. Of course he's a good looking young chap in his way. But it won't do. It won't do, Bletchley. We can't have that sort of thing. Trading with the enemy, that's what it amounts to. These girls - where's their proper spirit? Plenty of decent young English fellows about."
Bletchley said: "Sheila's a queer girl - she gets odd sullen fits when she will hardly speak to any one."
"Spanish blood," said the Commander. "Her father was half Spanish, wasn't he?"
"Don't know. It's a Spanish name, I should think."
The Commander glanced at his watch.
"About time for the news. We'd better go in and listen to it."
The news was meagre that day, little more in it than had been already in the morning papers. After commenting with approval on the latest exploits of the Air Force - first-rate chaps, brave as lions, the Commander went on to develop his own pet theory - that sooner or later the Germans would attempt a landing at Leahampton itself - his argument being that it was such an unimportant spot.
"Not even an anti-aircraft gun in the place! Disgraceful!"
The argument was not developed, for Tommy and the Major had to hurry back to lunch at Sans Souci. Haydock extended a cordial invitation to Tommy to come and see his little place, "Smugglers' Rest."
"Marvellous view - my own beach - every kind of handy gadget in the house. Bring him along, Bletchley."
It was settled that Tommy and Major Bletchley should come in for drinks on the evening of the following day.
III.
After lunch was a peaceful time at Sans Souci. Mr Cayley went to have his "rest" with the devoted Mrs Cayley in attendance. Mrs Blenkensop was conducted by Miss Minton to a depot to pack and address parcels for the Front.
Mr Meadowes strolled gently out into Leahampton and along the front. He bought a few cigarettes, stopped at Smith's to purchase the latest number of Punch, then after a few minutes of apparent irresolution, he entered a bus bearing the legend, "Old Pier".
The old pier was at the extreme end of the promenade. That part of Leahampton was known to house agents as the least desirable end. It was West Leahampton and poorly thought of. Tommy paid 2d and strolled up the pier. It was a flimsy and weather-worn affair, with a few moribund penny-in-the-slot machines placed at far distant intervals. There was no one on it but some children running up and down and screaming in voices that matched quite accurately the screaming of the gulls, and one solitary man sitting on the end fis.h.i.+ng.
Mr Meadowes strolled up to the end and gazed down into the water. Then he asked gently: "Caught anything?"
The fisherman shook his head.
"Don't often get a bite." Mr Grant reeled in his line a bit. He said without turning his head: "What about you, Meadowes?"
Tommy said: "Nothing much to report as yet, sir. I'm digging myself in."
"Good. Tell me."
Tommy sat on an adjacent bollard, so placed that he commanded the length of the pier. Then he began: "I've gone down quite all right, I think. I gather you've already got a list of the people there?" Grant nodded. "There's nothing to report as yet. I've struck up a friends.h.i.+p with Major Bletchley. We played golf this morning. He seems the ordinary type of retired officer. If anything, a shade too typical. Cayley seems a genuine hypochondriacal invalid. That, again, would be an easy part to act. He has, by his own admission, been a good deal in Germany during the last few years."
"A point," said Grant, laconically.
"Then there's von Deinim."