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Authors: Leslie Ford

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BOOK: The Simple Way of Poison
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Her face was white, her stockings were torn where she’d evidently climbed over the broken wall, her feet in suede pumps were covered with snow that was melting and forming in a puddle on the floor.

“Lowell!” I said. “What’s the matter?”

She brushed her hair back from her forehead and peeled off the little grey fur cap she wore. Her eyes were wide and burning, her red lips set in a thin tight line.

“She’s done it,” she said, in a dead brittle voice. “I knew she would.”

I put down the telegrams. My hands were shaking too noticeably to hold them.

“Done what, Lowell?” I demanded sharply.

“She’s poisoned him.”

I steadied myself against the cedar-covered mantel. My heart was in the pit of my stomach. I couldn’t for one terrible instant trust myself to speak. My voice when it did come sounded completely detached and half a million miles away.

“Poisoned
who,
Lowell?”

“Senator McGilvray. When I found him this morning he’d been dead for hours.”

It took me a long time; even then, to remember that it was a fourteen year old liver-and-white cocker spaniel with three feet in the grave and the other tottering on the brink that she was talking about, not a human being. My mind struggled back over a long thorny road that I hadn’t realized it had journeyed. I stared at her standing there, her grey fur cap in her hand, her face white above the high fur collar of her grey wool suit streaked with red brick dust, with a three-cornered tear over one knee. I tried hard to keep then from a crazy burst of laughter.

“She’s always hated him, just as she hates me—because he was mine, and because he didn’t like her.”

She spoke in the same dry hard voice, her lips scarcely moving to form the words.

“Why do you think he was poisoned, Lowell,” I asked. “He was very old. He may have died of old age.”

I must have sounded cold and unsympathetic, of course. If it had been my dog I know how I should have felt, no matter how old and infirm he was. On the other hand, I distinctly remembered seeing Senator McGilvray the day before wheezing peacefully away at Iris’s feet under the folds of her green brocaded house coat.—Or if she’d been crying—then it would have been different too. But she wasn’t. She was perfectly rigid, and terribly, oh terribly like her father.

“He had foam all over his mouth. I took him to the vet.— before breakfast. He said it was poison. I know she did it.”

“That’s ridiculous, Lowell,” I said.

“It isn’t. I… I saw her do it. I should have known, but I didn’t think she was as bad as that, not really. I knew she couldn’t bear him, and she’s never been even decent to him. Last night after dinner I was just coming in the room when I saw her lean down and pet him and give him a piece of candy. The vet says that’s the way he was poisoned.”

I said nothing. I didn’t know anything to say. I’d never seen Lowell Nash like this. She hadn’t moved since she’d come into the room. All the Christmas trappings, the vine cedar and mistletoe, the crazy presents we’d been laughing at, and the bright litter of hastily torn-off wrappings that Lilac hadn’t cleaned up yet, seemed frivolous suddenly and a little unreal.

“I wanted to tell you, because I’m going to get even with her someday. And I don’t want you to think I’m just mean and vindictive. She’s been asking for it a long time.”

My hand was still closed tightly on the mantel, I was still staring stupidly at the wet spot on the floor, long after I heard the garden door slam shut. Lilac’s black face and saucer-wide eyes peering at me from the dining room brought me to my senses.

“Law, Mis’ Grace, what all’s the mattuh with that chil’, come bussin’ in lak that, lookin’ lak death on a pale horse?”

“Her dog died last night,” I said.

“ ’Deed an’ it’s time,” Lilac observed practically. She padded back downstairs to the kitchen to tell Julius, who’s her husband. At least I think he is. We have burned biscuits and the furnace fire goes out when they’re having one of their divorces, and the house was quite warm when I got home from Nassau.

If the telephone hadn’t rung just then, things might have turned out very differently. I might have gone to Iris’s that afternoon. I might have seen Colonel Primrose that evening and told him about the poisoned dog. More important, probably, I should have seen Randall Nash when he came to my house on the late afternoon of the 29th. As it was, I saw none of them, and whatever might have happened didn’t happen. Which is foolish, of course, for in my heart I’m sure I believe that what is to happen pretty much does happen. The telephone ringing when it did was as much a part of the Destiny that had us all by the scruff of the neck as the poison that put Senator McGilvray’s feathered liver-and-white fourth foot in the grave.

Anyway, the phone did ring. It was Mary Lucas on long distance from somewhere this side of Los Angeles, and would I for mercy’s sake go with my kids that afternoon to Virginia and pinch hit as chaperone at young Mary’s house party, because her plane had been held up and she’d be late, and little Mary would be so disappointed, and anyway it was too late to call it off now because most of the youngsters were coming from New York and New England and would be yammering at the door with nobody to chaperone them. It wasn’t her fault California’s weather had gone mad, she really had expected to be home in time.

And she did arrive, but not till the afternoon of the 29th— and I got home not half an hour after Randall Nash had come and waited twenty minutes, pacing up and down the living room, so Lilac said, and then finally had gone. The empty glass and half-empty decanter were still on the table.

“That theah was full to the top when Ah took it in, Mis’ Grace,” Lilac said.

I wasn’t surprised, therefore, when Iris called up and said Randall had decided not to go to the Assembly that night, but that Colonel Primrose and Stephen Donaldson were taking the two of us, and we’d meet Lowell and Mac there at Linthicum Hall. The three of them would come, if I didn’t mind, to my house around eleven. I gathered she preferred we didn’t meet at her house, even though we’d have to pass it going from my place in P Street to Linthicum Hall in O—Beall Street cutting a wedge-shaped section, as it does, from Wisconsin Avenue to 29th.

Steve Donaldson was the first to come. He looked remarkably well in tails and white tie, said something noncommittal about the weather, admitted he thought Lowell was being pretty dramatic about it when I asked him how the Nashes were making out with the passing of Senator McGilvray, and kept looking at his watch and moving about the room. I watched him with considerable interest, after a couple more desultory attempts at conversation had quietly died on my hands. When the doorbell rang he came to life, and slumped again when it was only Colonel Primrose.

As for myself, I was surprised at how glad I was to see the short, grey-haired, somewhat rotund figure of Sergeant Buck’s chief in the door, with Lilac’s polished face shining over his shoulder like a full black moon.

“It’s grand to see you—how are you? Do you know Mr. Donaldson?”

The two men shook hands. Colonel Primrose, who has a slightly stiff neck from stopping a bullet in the Argonne, cocked his head down and looked up with his bright parrot eyes. “Randall Nash was speaking of you this evening,” he said.

But Steve Donaldson was listening to Lilac opening the door again. I doubt if he even heard what Colonel Primrose said. I saw the quick change in his face when Iris came in and his eyes detected before mine did the too bright quality of her greeting.

“It’s nice of you to go along with us.” She toned to him after she’d spoken to me and Colonel Primrose. “Mac put his foot down. He said if Lowell stood him up again he’d join the Foreign Legion, so she had to go with him.”

She toned back to me.

“I hope I’m not terribly late; I was waiting for Randall. He went out and hadn’t got back yet. Angie’s mother got up and went out to a party last night, and today they took her to the Emergency Hospital. I think she’s very sick. I thought maybe Lowell ought to stand by, but Randall said her holiday had been ruined already by her dog’s dying, and her mother was probably just putting on anyway, just to spoil Christmas for everybody.”

She shrugged unhappily.

“Result is, Lowell doesn’t know her mother’s ill again.— Not that she’d care very much.”

She bit her lower lip suddenly. “Oh what am I saying! I didn’t mean that—please forgive me!”

Colonel Primrose’s thumb on the trigger of the soda syphon released its pressure sharply. He cocked his head down and looked around at her with intent sparkling black eyes. Then he pressed the trigger again. The charged water swirled into the amber whisky in the tall glass.

 

The Christmas Assembly, perhaps I should explain, is a traditional Georgetown function, dating from pre-Revolutionary days. The youth and beauty of the Colonies danced at it, George Washington attended it in a tavern in Bridge Street, Dolly Madison and her husband danced at it before the British burned Washington in 1814, the belles of the Forties flirted there. It was discontinued during the Civil War and revived under the gas lights in the smilax-wreathed hall that Mr. Linthicum built in l878 for the education of poor white boys of Georgetown. There are still two gas standards in the corners of the little gallery, but they aren’t lighted now, and the gallery is used chiefly for a surreptitious drink out of a bottle—paper cups for ladies—by a generation very alien, somehow, to the shining-pated old gentlemen with their ladies who sit along the wall under the evergreens downstairs, watching the strange gait of the modern dance.

Iris and I pushed through the mob on the staircase into the ladies’ room, and then back through the corridor into the gallery. It was empty for the moment except for a young man already finding it difficult to move. Colonel Primrose and Steve Donaldson joined us and we stood looking down on the crowded floor. At the opposite end of the room was the Victorian portrait of the Victorian gentleman who gave the hall. Under it sat Lowell Nash.

“Oh dear!” I said. “That means she’s going to be an old maid.”

“Which shows,” Colonel Primrose observed, “how tradition—even in Georgetown—is garbled in seventy years. It used to mean you simply didn’t get any partners for the evening.”

“I expect Lowell isn’t worrying about either,” Iris said, smiling suddenly at Steve.

“Not about the partner end of it,” he agreed with a grin. There were at least eight young men standing around her, with Mac, as usual, glowering in a corner.

“Shall we dance?” I heard Steve say. In a moment we saw them below us on the crowded floor.

“I take it,” Colonel Primrose remarked casually, “Mr. Donaldson is head over heels in love with the beautiful Iris. And Iris either thinks or pretends to think it’s Lowell.”

“Why pretends?”

“Surely, Mrs. Latham, a woman knows when a man’s in love with her.”

I suppose it was because of Sergeant Buck and Lilac that I avoided looking at him.

“Not necessarily,” I said. “She may be too caught up in general complications to sort things out very clearly.”

He smiled. “Not to change the subject at all—why didn’t you let me know you were home?”

“Didn’t Sergeant Buck tell you?—I met him in Gilbert St. Martin’s shop.”

“He didn’t. But I saw something had soured him. And there’s no use being a detective of sorts if you can’t deduce things to your own advantage from time to time.”

“That couldn’t have taken a lot of detecting,” I said. “Meaning Buck’s damnably transparent?”

“He is, rather, isn’t he?” I answered. Then I added, quite on the impulse of the moment and because it had to be said sooner or later, “I only wish he’d get it out of his head that I want to marry you.”

Colonel Primrose cocked his head down and looked around at me the way he does.

“You don’t want to, I take it.”

“No-you’re quite safe, Colonel.”

“I’ve been afraid that was what you were going to say,” he said with a quick smile.

“And rather relieved on the whole?”

“What do you think?”

He asked it so seriously that I changed the subject, out of sheer sympathy for Sergeant Buck.

“Have you seen much of the Nashes recently?”

He smiled again.

“From time to time.”

“I feel terribly sorry for Iris,” I said.

“Do you really,” he said shortly. I looked at him, a little surprised. He got up abruptly. “Let’s dance.”

I thought “Oh dear!” And yet, of course, I could have known he’d be stuffy.

It was half-past one when we left Linthicum Hall. I hadn’t seen much of Lowell, except to say Hello and find out that she was pretty mad at Angie for not showing up.

“I suppose he’s brooding about that silly dust-up with dad Christmas Eve,” she said impatiently.

If she had learned that her mother was seriously ill there was no evidence of it. She and Mac were going, they said, as soon as they’d made a long enough showing to satisfy Mac’s uncle, who’s by way of being a local big shot—banker and what not. Iris and Steve had joined a crowd of young married people in one corner, Colonel Primrose and I got stymied by a doddering old gentleman who’d attended the ball in 1882 with a famous beauty I’d never heard of and had a duel with her husband out by the Chain Bridge the next day. We’d still be there talking to him if Steve hadn’t come and said Iris wanted to go home.

She was in the dressing room getting her white ermine cape when I came in. Her face was almost the color of the fur. She looked desperately unhappy. It occurred to me that she’d probably been having an encounter with her stepdaughter. Heaven knows why I chose that moment to remark casually that I hadn’t seen the St. Martins; it came out of my mouth before I was even conscious of thinking it. She gave a sharp hysterical little laugh. I looked quickly at her; she was steadying herself against the end of the cloak rack. “I’m going to be sick,” she whispered. “Get me some water.”

I got it. Her hands were cold as ice. She stood there a moment with her eyes closed, then gave me a quick sardonic smile as she handed back the cup. “You’d think I had scenes enough at home without staging one in public all by myself.” The Christmas lights were still gleaming in the giant magnolias outside the Nash house. The light in the hall glimmered softly through the elliptical Adam fanlight over the door.

BOOK: The Simple Way of Poison
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