Three
As a reluctant spring crept over the Cotswolds, Agatha's mind often turned to Wilson's offer of a job. At last he phoned her himself and she told him that she might be ready to start work in the autumn, because by the autumn the gardening days would be over. Mary had become a friend, despite Agatha's initial reluctance. She was always claiming, always ready to help, and her close relationship with James Lacey appeared to be at an end.
Daffodils shone in the gardens of the village, and then came the cascades of wisteria and heavy lilac blossoms. It was such a miserable spring that it seemed incredible that anything could blossom at all in the slashing rain and gusts of chilly wind. Agatha intended to plant out her seedlings on the first of May. She had bought more trays of seedlings from the nursery and they lay alongside the 'home-grown' products in her greenhouse waiting for the big day.
She had promised Mrs Bloxby to help at the tombola stand on May Monday, which was when all the village celebrations were to take place. Sunday was to be May the first.
It was on Friday the twenty-ninth of April, that James decided he had been too hard on Agatha. She had in the past made him countless cups of coffee and brought him cakes. They had shared many adventures together. It nagged at his mind that he had taken Mary Fortune out for several dinners while Agatha had been away, and yet he had never asked Agatha out. He had at one time, he admitted, thought that Agatha was keen on him and he had shied away from the thought. But the woman had been all that was normal. In fact, she had never called on him.
So on Friday morning he went and rang her doorbell and asked a flustered Agatha - flustered because she was still in her dressing-gown - out to dinner at a new restaurant in Moreton, the Game Bird.
Gardening forgotten for once, Agatha passed the day in a daze of preparation, finding to her delight that gardening, along with a moderate diet, definitely had its compensations, for all her dresses now fitted her beautifully. She winced at the sight of a green dress. Definitely not green. Mary never wore anything else. She wondered vaguely about the mentality of a woman who always wore one colour. She took herself off to Oxford and got her hair cut and shaped. She bought new cosmetics. She bought new high heels and then, when she returned from Oxford, realized she had only left herself an hour to get ready, and she had originally planned to take two hours beautifying herself.
The doorbell rang just as she had finished. Thinking James was ten minutes early, she went to answer it. Mary stood there wearing the inevitable green; green blouse, green jacket, green slacks, green leather high-heeled sandals. She blinked a little at the sight of the new Agatha Raisin in little black dress, gold jewellery, and with her short brown hair gleaming in the light over the door.
"Coming to the pub?" asked Mary.
"Can't," said Agatha cheerfully. "James is taking me out for dinner."
Mary's blue eyes went quite blank and then she said with a little laugh. "Tomorrow then?"
"I'll meet you there at seven," said Agatha. Mary waited, but no, Agatha was not going to spoil this golden meeting by inviting Mary in and risking having Mary include herself in the invitation when James arrived. "See you," said Agatha brightly and slammed the door.
She then waited in the hall in a frenzy of impatience. What if Mary should now call on James? What if they both came back together?
What if James said, 'Mary's going to join us'? What if...?
The doorbell rang, making her jump. Crossing the fingers of one hand, she opened the door with the other and let out a sigh of relief to see James there on his own, wearing a well-cut dark suit and looking heart-wrenchingly handsome.
"Whose car are we taking?" asked Agatha. "Which one of us is going to do without drink?"
"Neither," he said with a smile. He looked down the lane. "Our taxi is just arriving."
Agatha, made shy by happiness, sat very upright in the back seat of the taxi with James. Mrs Mason stopped on the corner and looked curiously at them as she passed and then made her way to the Red Lion. By midnight, there would be very few people in Carsely who did not know that James Lacey had driven off with Agatha Raisin in a taxi.
Agatha, although she was slowly coming to appreciate good food and yet still was quite happy with junk, nonetheless had a sharp eye for a rip-off and her heart sank a little as they entered the elegant country-house atmosphere of the Game Bird. And yet all was calm and soothing. They had a drink in the small bar, seated in chintz-covered armchairs before a roaring log fire. Perhaps, thought Agatha, it was because the tablecloths in the dining-room were pink, as were the napkins. There was always something suspicious about restaurants which went in for pink tablecloths.
When they sat down at the table, huge menus were handed to them, the kind that are handwritten as if by a doctor, the writing is so nearly indecipherable.
It was very expensive and she blinked at the prices. But she was very hungry after her weeks of dieting and gardening - no fruit diet, just eating less - and decided to splash out. She ordered bouillabaisse, followed by the 'venison special', despite James's murmur that April might not be a good time to order venison.
"You forget," said Agatha, "that there is a lot of farm venison around these days."
They talked about people in the village and James said he, too, would be planting out his seedlings. The bouillabaisse arrived. But it was nothing more than a rather thin fish bisque - no bits of seafood - and served only with one sliver of toast melba, and the soup was served in a very small bowl.
James had a tiny portion of pate, which was beautifully arranged on a small plate.
Determined to be good and not to make a fuss, Agatha drank her soup. She was still hungry when she had finished but then there was the venison to look forward to. The wine, although French vintage, and claiming to be Montrechat, tasted even to Agatha's untutored palate thin and vinegary.
But then her venison arrived. It was a small piece surrounded by carefully sculptured vegetables and covered in a cranberry sauce. No vulgar fattening potatoes. "That looks good," said James heartily, a shade too heartily. He had ordered duck in orange sauce.
Agatha attacked her venison. One cut, one mouthful proved her worst fears. Never had she seen a piece of meat with so much gristle. Her stomach let out a baffled rumble of disappointment.
She cracked.
Agatha imperiously summoned the head waiter. "Yes, madam?" He stooped over the table.
"Can you tell me," said Agatha in a thin voice, "which part of the animal this comes from? Its hooves? Its knees? The bit between its eyes?"
"Perhaps madam is not accustomed to venison?"
Deep down inside her, Agatha's working-class soul flinched. Her temper snapped. "Don't you dare patronize me," she said. "This is a lump of gristle. And while we're on the subject, that bouillabaisse was a rip-off, too."
"Dear me," said an acidulous-looking woman with a strangled would-be upper-class voice from the table behind Agatha, "the tourist season is here again."
Agatha whipped round. "Screw you," she said contemptuously. Then she turned her bearlike eyes back to the head waiter. "I'm telling you this stuff is crap."
Her voice had been overloud. Everyone had stopped talking and was staring at her. She flushed red.
"I don't know about the venison," said James mildly, "but this duck is as tough as old boots and appears to have been microwaved."
"I will get the owner," intoned the head waiter.
"I'm sorry, James," said Agatha miserably.
He leaned across the table and poked at Agatha's venison experimentally with his fork. "You know, you're right," he said. "It is a lump of gristle. And here, unless I am mistaken, comes the owner."
A huge man bore down on their table. He had a large body and a surprisingly small head. "I know your sort," he said in a thick Italian accent. "Get outta here. You don't wanna pay. So don't pay."
"We do not mind paying," said James stiffly, "just so long as you take this away and bring us some decent food."
The owner let out a growl of rage like a Klingon at a death ritual and seized the four corners of the tablecloth. He gathered up the lot and strode off to the kitchen with it over his shoulder, wine and gravy dripping down his massive back.
"Time to leave," said James. He stood up and helped Agatha out of her chair.
Covered in shame, Agatha went outside. It was a clear, starry night. Far above the Fosse they twinkled, cold and remote from the social anguish of one middle-aged lady who felt she had not only blown the evening but destroyed all her hopes of romance. And then she realized James was laughing. He was leaning against the wall of the restaurant, laughing and laughing. At last he looked down at her, his eyes glinting in the streetlights. "Oh, Agatha Raisin," he said, "I do love you when you're angry."
And suddenly the stars above whirled and the Fosse became a Parisian boulevard and the world was young again and Agatha Raisin was young and pretty and attractive.
She grinned and said, "Let's go to the pub next door and get some beer and sandwiches."
Most of the pubs in the Cotswolds are comfortable places, redolent of age and centuries of good living. The sandwiches were delicious and the beer was good. They talked comfortably like old friends, Agatha cautiously determined to be on her best behaviour.
"We must do this again," he said after he had called for a taxi to take them home. "A very cheap evening after all."
And Agatha, a few minutes later sitting beside him in the taxi, reflected that if one is in the grip of an obsession, nothing is ever enough. She had told herself at the beginning of the evening that all she wanted was for them to be friends again, but now she longed for him to put an arm around her shoulders in the darkness of the taxi and kiss her. The longing was so intense that she felt her breathing becoming ragged and was half sad, half relieved when the short journey was over and he refused her offer of coffee, but said he would no doubt see her in the pub on the following day.
Agatha's heart sang as she went to bed. She fell asleep remembering every word and every look.
A visit from Mrs Mason the following day brought her down to earth. "I saw you driving off with Mr Lacey in a taxi," said Mrs Mason, settling her large bottom more comfortably in one of Agatha's armchairs.
"Yes, we had a nice evening," said Agatha.
"Where did you go?"
"That new restaurant in Moreton, the Game Bird."
"He entertains well when he takes the ladies out," said Mrs Mason. "I've heard it's expensive."
"What do you mean, he entertains well?"
"I know he took Mrs Fortune to the Lygon in Broadway at least a couple of times and once to the Randolph in Oxford."
Agatha felt bleak. What was one disastrous dinner compared to what appeared to be a chain of good and expensive dinners he had enjoyed with Mary Fortune? She imagined them together on a long drive to Oxford. All the glory of the previous evening was tarnished. Agatha also found to her surprise that she actually liked Mary. Mary had become a good friend. Perhaps the most graceful thing to do would be to give up trying. On the other hand, James had shown no particular interest in Mary of late.
With only half her mind on what Mrs Mason was saying, Mrs Mason having gone on to talk about parish matters, Agatha wrestled with the problem of whether to go to the Red Lion that evening or not. Perhaps she should give up this village life and return to work in London. She still had not said no to Wilson's offer. He had phoned her again and been most persuasive. But, she thought, looking at the motherly bulk of Mrs Mason, friends had not dropped round to her flat for a chat in London. In fact, she had had no friends at all.
After Mrs Mason left, she went out into her garden, which was cleared and ready for planting. It was a balmy day with big castles of white clouds floating over the Cotswold hills. Yes, she would go to the pub, but not to see James Lacey, just to meet people and have a chat.
But that evening she dressed with special care. She did not want to look too dressed up for a village pub and at last settled on a soft silk chiffon blouse of deep red worn with a short straight black skirt and black suede shoes with a modest heel. She gave herself a temporary facelift with white of egg, very effective provided one did not smile too much, and strolled off in the direction of the pub. James's house had an empty look. He must be already there. With a feeling of going on-stage, she opened the pub door and went into the smoky low-ceilinged room. James was standing at the bar talking to Mr Bernard Spott, the man who headed the horticultural society. James hailed Agatha and bought her a gin and tonic. She had just taken her first sip and was looking for an inroad into the conversation about dahlias that James was having with Bernard when the pub door opened and Mary Fortune sailed in. Agatha had known the pangs of jealousy before but never anything as bad as this. She felt her face becoming stiff, as stiff as if she had just applied the white of egg. Mary was wearing a short white jersey dress and gold jewellery. The dress clung to her excellent figure. It was the first time Agatha had seen her wear anything other than green. The skirt of the dress was very short, exposing Mary's long legs encased in tan stockings and ending in high-heeled strapped sandals. Her golden hair glowed in the light. Her eyes were very wide and very blue. She had never looked more magnificent and her entrance was greeted with a sudden appreciative silence. James, too, had fallen silent and was gazing at Mary in open admiration. Oh, jealousy as sour as bile engulfed Agatha. She felt old and diminished.
James found his voice. "Mary," he said warmly. "What are you having?"
"Campari soda, darling." Mary linked her hand over his arm and smiled at him in an intimate way that made Agatha want to strike her. Old Bernard was tugging at his tie and staring at her in rapture. "What were you talking about?" asked Mary.
"Gardening," said James.
"Tomorrow's my big day," declared Agatha. "I'm planting out my seedlings."
"Oh, I wouldn't do that, Agatha," exclaimed Mary. "There's going to be a big frost on Sunday night. I'm leaving mine until the weather settles."
Was it Agatha's soured imagination, or was this delivered with a certain, well, patronizing air?
"I didn't hear anything about frost," she said mulishly.
Bernard Spott was a tall, thin man in his eighties, whose sparse grey hair was greased in strips over his scalp. He had a large beaky nose with which he looked down at whomever he was speaking to. He waggled an admonitory finger under Agatha's nose. "Better listen to what Mary says. She's our expert."
"Certainly is," murmured James.
Agatha gave what she hoped was an enigmatic smile. The evening then proceeded to be a total disaster for her. If one has never had anything to do with gardening before, then one has little to contribute to a conversation in which a bewildering set of Latin names fly back and forth. And so Agatha stood mostly silent, as the names came and went and mulch was discussed and other organic fertilizers. Mary held court and Agatha stood on the outskirts. At last, when she saw her cleaner, Doris Simpson, and her husband seated over in a corner of the bar, Agatha murmured an excuse and went to join them.
Doris did not help Agatha's burning jealousy by remarking, "Mrs Fortune looks like one of them film stars tonight."
Agatha turned the conversation away from Mary but all the while she talked of village matters she had half an ear tuned to the sound of James's frequent bursts of laughter.
Suddenly she couldn't bear it any more. She rose, said, "Goodnight," abruptly, and walked straight out of the pub, looking neither to right nor left.
Doris looked at her husband, her eyes shrewd behind her spectacles. "The next murder done in this village," she said, "will be committed by our Agatha."
Agatha stared up at the calm starlit sky as she walked home. The night air was balmy against her cheek. Frost, indeed. She was going to plant out her seedlings tomorrow and nothing was going to stop her!
The next day was sunny and warm, warm enough to wear a short-sleeved blouse, and Agatha hummed to herself as she planted out those tender green seedlings in well-weeded flowerbeds. She felt quiet and content. She felt she was getting on top of this gardening thing. That was the trouble about gardeners, they like to blast you with science, when it was all quite easy, really.
Before the light faded, she took a last look around the garden. She shivered in the sudden chill as the large red sun sank down behind the Cotswold hills. She glared up at the sky. There couldn't be frost, could there? Agatha, like most of the British public, swore that the meteorologists were often wrong, forgetting all the times they were right.
She stood there until the sun had disappeared, taking the light from the garden, bleaching the green from the plants. It was all so very still and quiet. A dog barked somewhere up on the fields above, its sudden noise intensifying the silence that followed.
Agatha shook her head like a baffled bull. It was nearly summer. By frost they had meant a little nip in the air, not that nasty white stuff which blanketed the Cotswolds in winter.
She went indoors, determined to watch some television and have an early night. She would set the alarm for six in the morning and would no doubt awake to a warm day.
When the alarm went off at six, shrill and imperative, she looked at it blearily, her first thought being that she had to get to the airport, which had been the case the last time she had set the alarm for six. Then memory came back. She threw back the duvet, went to the window, which overlooked the garden, took a deep breath and pulled back the curtains. White! Everywhere. Thick white frost under the pale dawn sky. Her eyes fell slowly to the plants. Surely they would have survived. She would not fret. She would get back into bed and wait for the sun to rise and then everything would be all right. And, despite her worry, she did fall asleep and did not awake until nine. She determinedly avoided looking out of the window. She showered and dressed in the old skirt and blouse she used for gardening and then she went downstairs and marched out into the garden. The sun was blazing, the frost was melting, and it was melting to reveal each pathetic little shrivelled and blackened plant that she had so lovingly placed in the earth the day before.
She wanted someone to turn to for help. But who? She didn't want her failure spread all over the village. James certainly wouldn't tell anyone but he would tell her she ought to have listened to Mary, and Agatha felt she couldn't bear that.
And then she thought of Roy Silver. She went indoors and rang his London number.
Roy was off work because it was a bank holiday. He complained Agatha's call had dragged him out of bed.
"Listen," snapped Agatha, cutting across his complaints. She told him about the frost and how she had refused to take advice. "And now," she wailed, "I'll be damned as a failed gardener."
"No, no, no, sweetie. It's no use going on like a sandwich short of a picnic. Cunning is what you need here. Low cunning. You've got used to simple village ways. Let me think. You know that nursery chain I handle?"
"Yes, yes. But I'm surrounded with nurseries down here."
"Listen. Keep everyone out of your garden. Can that Lacey chap see into it from next door?"
"There's a hedge between us. He would need to hang out of the window and crane his neck."
"Good. Now that account Wilson wants you to handle. If I can get you to promise you'll give him six months of your time, say, starting in September, I'll be down there with a truck of super-duper fencing."
"I've got fencing!"
"You want the high non-see-through type. I'll come with workmen. We'll put it up all round the garden, and don't let anyone out the back. Then, before the big day, I'll come down with a load of fully grown exotica, stuff it in the good earth, and bingo! You'll be the talk of the village."
"But what about Doris, my cleaner? She'll find out."
"Swear her to secrecy, but no one else."
"I could do it," said Agatha doubtfully, "but six months working for Wilson..."
"Do it. What's six months?"
A lot when you get to my age, thought Agatha sadly after she had agreed to his plan and put down the phone.
She could not help feeling like a criminal. What did it all matter anyway? But she did so hope to score over Mary.
A ring at her doorbell made her jump guiltily. She opened it cautiously and saw Mrs Bloxby.
"Did you sleep in?" asked the vicar's wife anxiously.
"No," said Agatha. "What's the matter?"
"You're supposed to be manning the tombola stand. Is one allowed to say 'manning' these days? Does one say womaning or personing? Anyway Mrs Mason and I have it all set up."
"Oh." Agatha blushed guiltily. "I had forgotten. I've got some men coming to put in new fencing."
Mrs Bloxby looked surprised. "As I remember, there is a very good strong pine fence around your garden."
"Falling apart in bits," lied Agatha. She thought quickly. She could leave a note on the door for Roy saying she was at the tombola stand, and when he came along she could give him the keys. Not that he really needed them. The workmen could get to the back garden along the path at the side of the house.
"Give me five minutes," she said. "I'll follow you along."
She wrote a note for Roy and pinned it to the door. The May festivities would take all day. On the other hand, if she could do a good sales pitch at the tombola stand, perhaps she could clear it quickly and then she would be free.
The one good thing, she thought as she made her way to the fair, which was taking up the length of the main street, blocked off to traffic for the day, was that practically everyone at the village would be working at or watching the festivities, and so there would be no one around to ask awkward questions about the fencing.
She took her place behind the table, which held a motley collection of prizes. Apart from a bottle of whisky and a bottle of wine presented by the Red Lion, the rest were odds and ends, a can of pilchards, for example, and a bottle of shampoo 'for brunettes'.
Most of the crowd of locals and tourists were watching the schoolchildren dancing around the maypole. Agatha fretted until the dancing ended in the crowning of the May Queen, a little girl with a sweet old-fashioned face, and then she gave tongue. "Roll up! Roll up!" she shouted. "Loads of prizes to be won. Tickets only twenty pee."
Startled and then amused at such hustling in a quiet village, people began to gather round.
Agatha had quickly slipped the tickets for the bottle of wine and the bottle of whisky into her pocket. She knew the sight of them, unwon, would spur the punters on.
"Oh, you've won the can of pilchards," she said to elderly Mrs Boggle.
"So what?" grumbled Mrs Boggle. "I wanted the Scotch."
"Lovely for sandwiches, those pilchards," said Agatha cheerfully. "Try again."
So Mrs Boggle reluctantly prised a twenty-pence piece out of an ancient purse and handed it over. She won again, this time the shampoo for brunettes. "This is a rip-off," said Mrs Boggle. "I'm grey-haired."
"Then that'll turn you brown and make you look years younger," snapped Agatha. "Next!"
Mrs Boggle shuffled off. Agatha's voice rose in pitch. "Roll up! Roll up! What have we here? A set of plastic egg-cups. Very useful. Come along. All in a good cause."
"Does she usually go on like that?" Mary Fortune, over at the home-made cake stall, asked Mrs Bloxby.
"Mrs Raisin is an excellent saleswoman," said Mrs Bloxby, "and uses her talents to help the village."
Despite Agatha's efforts, the day crawled on. Just as she got a crowd of people around the tombola stand, another diversion, such as dancing by the morris men, would take them all away again.
It was late afternoon when Roy popped up at Agatha's elbow. "You'd better come home," he said. "I've got the workmen there and they need to put a padlocked gate on that path to the back garden. See, I thought of everything. And the fencing is sectioned. On the big day they'll take the top section off."
"Oh, Roy, look, I'll give you the keys. Go along and take care of everything. I can't move until I've shifted this lot."
"No, you've got to be there yourself."
"Here..." Agatha slipped him a twenty-pound note. "Buy all the tickets and let me out of here."
She quickly slipped the tickets for the whisky and the wine back into the box.
"Damn, I have to open all these," grumbled Roy, opening ticket after ticket. "Really, Aggie, plastic egg-cups, a tea-cosy, and a scarf in magenta and sulphur-yellow."
Finally, before the amused eyes of the spectators, Roy cleared the table and gloomily piled the contents into the box which had held the tickets. Agatha gave the money to a startled Mrs Bloxby, who said, "That was quick. And everything gone! A lot of that stuff has turned up year in and year out."
"Before we go, Aggie," said Roy, leading her back to the now empty tombola table, "sign here, or fence and workmen go right back to London."
He spread a contract out on the table which bound Agatha to Pedmans for six months starting on the first of October.
She hesitated. She could pay Roy for his time and trouble and send the workmen away. But at that moment she heard James's laugh behind her and turned around. He was chatting to Mary and he had already bought two cakes. Mary was wearing a green-and-white-checked shirt with dark green trousers. Her bright hair gleamed in the sunlight.
Agatha turned away and scrawled her signature on the contract, which Roy seized and stuffed in his pocket. "Give that box of stuff back to Mrs Bloxby," said Agatha. "I don't suppose you want any of it apart from the booze."
"Not a bit of it. It'll come in handy for Christmas presents. I've got a little staff now."
"You are conscienceless," said Agatha. "When you worked for me, what would you have said if I had given you a set of plastic egg-cups for Christmas?"
"Times are hard." Roy picked up the box of junk and held it close. "Let's go."
"There's that young friend of Agatha's again," said James to Mary, turning to watch them as they walked away.
Mary laughed. "Quite a goer is our Agatha."
"What do you mean by that?" James's face was stiff.
"Oh, come on, James. Get real. I think she's having a little fling."
"Rubbish. Look, I'd better be getting along."
James marched off but got waylaid by the vicar, who explained he had found a diary in the vicarage which had been kept by one of the villagers during the Napoleonic wars. Agatha temporarily forgotten, James went along to the vicarage in high excitement. Once there, he pored over the diary with a flat feeling of disappointment. The wars may have been raging across Europe, but all this villager had been interested in was the price of everything from wheat to turnips. It was dreary, it was boring, and it was of no use whatsoever, particularly as the prices of everything in England during that period had already been well documented. Still, he thanked the vicar and said he would take it home and study it further.
As he went into his own front garden, he saw a truck with workmen and that Roy Silver driving off from Agatha's. He wondered for the first time that day if Agatha had been stupid enough to plant out her seedlings. He ran upstairs, opened his bedroom window and leaned out.
He blinked. A great high cedarwood fence had been erected around Agatha's garden. What on earth was she doing? That fence was so high it would surely block out any sunlight. Curiosity got the better of him and he went next door and rang her bell.
Agatha answered the door and looked flustered when she saw him.
"That new fence you've got," said James, "will block out all sunlight. What are you doing?"
"It's a surprise," said Agatha. "You'll see on Open Day. Coffee?"
"Yes, please." He followed her into the kitchen. The blind was down over the kitchen window, so he could not see the garden.
"Did you plant out your seedlings?" he asked.
"No, do it tomorrow," said Agatha gruffly.
"That's an enormous fence you've got at the back. Are you sure the sun is going to reach your plants?"
"Oh, yes, don't let's talk about gardening. I'm bored with the subject."
"Is that why you left the pub without saying goodbye?"
Agatha opened her mouth to say crossly that she did not think her going would be noticed, particularly by him, but a new wisdom made her say instead, "I just remembered I had forgotten to feed the cats. By the way, I'll be leaving the village for a bit in the autumn."
"Why?"
"Pedmans, that firm I sold out to, have coaxed me back for six months. May as well make some money."
He looked surprised. "I thought you had put all that life behind you." His eyes sparkled. "I know what it is. There isn't any gory murder to keep you occupied."
"I'm used to being busy, and there's not much for me here."
There was something a trifle lost and wistful at the back of Agatha's small eyes which made him say, "That was rather a disastrous dinner we had. What about another one? There's a new restaurant just off the Evesham road, just outside Evesham. What about trying it?"
The old Agatha would have gushed. The new Agatha said quietly, "That would be nice. When?"
"What about tonight?"
"Lovely."
"Good. I'll call for you at seven. I've got to go now. I promised to see Mary about something."
But the fact that he was leaving to see Mary could not spoil Agatha's sunny mood for the rest of the day. By evening, she was in a high state of excitement. When the phone rang at ten minutes to seven, she looked at it in irritation and then decided not to answer it. Nothing was going to stop her walking out of that door with James at seven. The phone rang for quite a long time and then fell silent. Seven came and went while she sat and fidgeted, handbag on her lap.
Then the doorbell went, and with a little sigh of relief, she went to answer it. James Lacey stood there. His face was pale and his eyes glittered feverishly.
"I'm sorry, Agatha," he said. "I'll need to cancel our dinner. I've been so ill. I've been to the doctor and he is treating me for food poisoning."
"Perhaps if you had something to eat you would feel better?" asked Agatha, willing him to recover.
"No, no. I just want to go to bed. I feel like hell. Another time." And he went off.
Agatha retreated indoors and sat down feeling lost and empty. She had become friends with Mary but now she almost hated her. Mary had entertained James earlier. She had probably slipped him something. Her common sense tried to tell her she was being silly, but her emotions were in a turmoil and she felt she could not bear to have anything to do with Mary again.