for punishing William, and then removed the kid and sent him to Yeominster.
Considering that William had only achieved the distinction of leaping into space because he was in process of regaining admission to the building by night after having been out in the orchard sneaking the head beakâs apples, I thought, personally, that old Couttsâ letter was a bit thick. Still, it was no business of mine, of course.
CHAPTER II
MAGGOTS AT THE MOAT HOUSE
AND BATS AT THE BUNGALOW
W illiam Courtsâ adventures began when the Scouts took their troop cart up to the Moat House on that same Wednesday evening to collect Mrs. Gattyâs three deck chairs for the fête. Mrs. Gatty is fond of boys, and she invited the Scouts into the dining-room and fed them with cake and home-made ginger-beer and home-made treacle toffee. Then, while the rest of them returned with the chairs, William, as Patrol Leader, politely offered to stay and wash up all the plates and glasses. Mrs. Gatty was rather bucked with the offer, because, of course, the maid was out and the cook was in the middle of dinner. It was about seven oâclock or perhaps half-past seven, and still daylight, although the weather, for the end of July, was fearfully unseasonable. In fact, I canât remember a wetter or more depressing summer. Our one hope was that the Bank Holiday Monday would be fine.
William returned to the vicarage in a state of great excitement. This was unusual, for, as I say he was one of those biggish, hefty, good-humoured, practical-minded kids who are always on good terms with everyone and never get seriously ragged even at school, except in the incident last recounted, so to speak. That was an exception. His nature was placid, and he wasinclined to accept things as they came without annoyance, question or perturbation. Thus, when he burst in on Daphne and me with the air of one who has discovered the Gunpowder Plot, I was somewhat astonished. But I couldnât take him seriously. He told me that Mr. Gatty had been murdered. Daphne was scared, so I rose to it.
âSez you!â I observed, ruthlessly.
âNo,â said William. âI had it from Mrs. Gatty herself while we were washing up. She says the deed is done, and that she wanted to tell you and Daphne, only you didnât seem interested in anything but deck-chairs.â
I frowned and lent the theme a little concentrated thought. Those were the words she had used to Daphne and myself in connection with her husband, but one takes it for granted that with anyone of Mrs. Gattyâs singular mentality a few odd remarks are in character and need not be regarded with the same amount of close attention that they would excite if they were uttered by some more normal person. On the other hand, those particular words, âThe deed is done,â do sound a trifle sinister, even when uttered by somebody short-circuited in the brain line. I questioned William closely, but could not shake his evidence. He was going to Constable Brown, our village keeper of the peace, he said, to place matters before him. I was struck quite suddenly with a better idea. Anything, of course, to get rid of William, so that we could be on our own, but not, I thought, the Robert, who is unquestionably wooden-headed, although a jolly good chap.
âListen, William,â I said. âThereâs an old lady called Mrs. Something Bradley, or Mrs. Bradley SomethingâI forget whichâstaying with Sir William Kingston-Fox at the Manor House. Sheâs one of those psychology whales. Take her along to see Mrs. Gatty to-morrow morning. Sheâll turn her inside and out, and find what the trouble is. Believe me, it wonât be a case for the police.â
I persuaded him to abandon the idea of going to Brown with the story, but he insisted on getting Mrs. Bradley right away. I was in favour of the scheme, for it would relieve us of his company, so I decided to incite him, so to