It wasn’t until after dinner that the call actually came. I was walking with Van Arque toward the hockey field when the police sergeant, LaBelle, appeared as if from nowhere. Had he been lying in wait behind the laundry?
“The inspector wants to see you,” he said, his words reeking of cigarette smoke.
Just like that. No niceties.
I gave Van Arque a helpless shrug and followed the sergeant indoors.
“Big place you’ve got here,” he said as we climbed the stairs to Miss Fawlthorne’s study. “Roomy but gloomy.”
And he was right. Miss Bodycote’s Female Academy was a shadowed maze: a place in which daylight never strayed far from the windows. It was a place designed not to be lived in, but to be prayed in; a place whose narrow zigzag corridors were meant, perhaps, to confound the Devil.
“All that ever escapes a convent,” Daffy had once told me, after reading a rather sensational book about a nun’s life, “is the prayers and the smoke.”
Which brought me back to the body in the chimney.
I had been kept so busy I had scarcely been able to give it more than a moment’s thought.
Who was she? How had she died? How long had she been hidden in the chimney?
And—most tantalizing—how and why had she come to be wrapped in a Union Jack?
We paused at the door of Miss Fawlthorne’s study. The sergeant’s knuckles were raised as if to knock.
He stood for a moment, examining me from head to toe.
“Watch yourself, kid,” he said, adjusting his tie as if it were an uncomfortable noose.
And then he was tapping timidly at the door.
“Ah, Flav-ee-ah,” Inspector Gravenhurst said, mispronouncing my name in precisely the same way as Miss Dupont had done.
Miss Fawlthorne sat quietly at her desk as if she were merely a guest.
“It’s Flavia,” I told him. “The first syllable rhymes with ‘brave’ and ‘grave.’
“And ‘forgave,’ ” I added, in case he thought I was being frivolous.
He nodded, but I noticed he had not begged my pardon.
“Now, then,” he said. “Tell me about your discovery.”
It was obvious that he had not yet interviewed Collingwood; otherwise, he would already have heard her somewhat different version. Better to face up to my fib right away and get credit for honesty.
“Actually, it was someone else, I think, who found the body. What I meant was that I just happened to be there.”
“I see,” he said. “And who might that have been?”
“Collingwood,” I said. “Patricia Anne.”
From the corner of my eye, I noticed that Miss Fawlthorne had stopped whatever she was doing and looked up from her desk.
“She was having a nightmare,” I said. “Walking in her sleep. She tried to climb up the chimney. I was trying to keep from waking her. I’ve heard that sleepwalkers can die of shock if they’re awakened too suddenly.”
I was proud of myself! Here was a sign of my great compassion, an excuse for fibbing to Miss Fawlthorne, and a plausible account all rolled up neatly into one tidy tale.
Three-in-one again: a holy trinity of truth, righteousness, and quick thinking.
“And that’s when the, ah …”
“Body,” I supplied.
“Er, yes, the body, as you say—was dislodged from the chimney.”
“No,” I said. “That didn’t happen until after Miss Fawlthorne came into the room.
“I didn’t know it was a body at the time,” I added.
“Because you were in the dark,” the inspector remarked matter-of-factly.
By the lord Harry! I had to give the man credit: He was as sharp as a tinker’s tack. It was obvious he had already interviewed Miss Fawlthorne and heard her version of the night’s happenings.
“Yes, that’s right,” I said. “Miss Fawlthorne’s candle blew out and we were left in the dark.”
“For how long?”
“Oh, not long at all. A couple of seconds, I should say. Miss Fawlthorne lit a match almost immediately.”
“What kind of match?”
“A paper match. The ones that come in a booklet. They give them away in places like the Savoy, and so forth.”
The inspector glanced at Miss Fawlthorne, who nodded to confirm my statement.
“And then?”
“Well, it was just then that Collingwood fell out of the chimney, and the body right behind her. She must have jarred it loose. Like a chimney sweep—or a pipe cleaner,” I suggested.
I knew as soon as I spoke that I had gone too far.
“Flavia!” Miss Fawlthorne exclaimed.
“I’m sorry, Miss Fawlthorne,” I said. “It’s just that with the amount of soot and tar—”
“That’s quite enough,” she said. “Inspector, I’ll not have my girls exposed to such questioning. They have, after all, been entrusted to my care.”
My girls! She already thought of me as one of her girls. In some odd, but unknown way, that made all the difference in the world.
“Quite right,” the inspector said. “It’s clear that Flavia here”—he pronounced it correctly this time—“has seen enough.”
Whatever did he mean by that?
“You’ve been very helpful,” he said. “Thank you. You may go now.”
I looked at Miss Fawlthorne, who gave her assent.
Although I got to my feet, I lingered at the door (an art of which I have made a particular study, and one which is greatly underestimated by amateurs) long enough to hear him say, “Now, then, Miss Fawlthorne: I’d like a list of everyone who has been in and out of this building within the past twenty-four hours.”
In the corridor, I wondered: Why twenty-four hours? The body had been in the chimney for ages and ages. That was as plain as a pikestaff.
Surely the inspector’s next step wouldn’t be to demand a list of everyone who had crossed the threshold of Miss Bodycote’s Female Academy for the past quarter century?
But wouldn’t a list such as that include the name of my own mother?
A cold chill gripped my spine.