They stopped before a six-sectioned tomb, built like a traditional Creole house. It was painted white and in better repair than most around it. On weathered marble tablets were many names, mostly of Preyscotts. "We're an old family," Marsha said. "It must be getting crowded down among the dust."
Sunshine slanted brightly on the tomb.
"Purty, ain't it?" The sexton stood back admiringly, then pointed to a doorway near the top. "That's the next one for opening, Miss Preyscott.
Your daddy'll go in there." He touched another in a second tier. "That the one to be for you. Doubt, though, I'll be the one to put you in." He stopped, then added contemplatively, "Comes sooner than we want for all of us. Don't do, neither, to waste no time; no sir!" Mopping his head once more, he ambled off.
Despite the heat of the day, Peter shivered. The thought of earmarking a place of death for someone so young as Marsha troubled him.
"It's not as morbid as it seems." Marsha's eyes were on his face and he was aware once more of her ability to understand his thoughts. "It's simply that here we're brought up to see all this as part of us."
He nodded. Just the same, he had had enough of this place of death.
They were on the way out, near the Basin Street gate, when Marsha put a hand on his arm restrainingly.
A line of cars had stopped immediately outside. As their doors opened, people emerged and were gathering on the sidewalk. From their appearance it was obvious that a funeral procession was about to come in.
Marsha whispered, "Peter, we'll have to wait." They moved away, still within sight of the gates, but less conspicuously.
Now the group on the sidewalk parted, making way for a small cortege. A sallow man with the unctuous bearing of an undertaker came first. He was followed by a priest.
Behind the priest was a group of six pallbearers, moving slowly, a heavy coffin on their shoulders. Behind them, four others carried a tiny white coffin. On it was a single spray of oleanders.
"Oh no!" Marsha said.
Peter gripped her hand tightly.
The priest intoned, "May the angels take you into paradise: may the martyrs come to welcome you on your way, and lead you into the holy city, Jerusalem."
A group of mourners followed the second coffin. In front, walking alone, was a youngish man. He wore an ill-fitting black suit and carried a hat awkwardly. His eyes seemed riveted on the tiny coffin. Tears coursed his cheeks. In the group behind, an older woman sobbed, supported by another.
". . . May the choir of angels welcome you, and with Lazarus who was once poor, may you have everlasting rest . . ."
Marsha whispered, "It's the people who were killed in that hit-and-run.
There was a mother, a little girl. It was in the newspapers." He saw that she was crying.
"I know." Peter had a sense of being part of this scene, of sharing its grief. The earlier chance encounter of Monday night had been grim and stark. Now the sense of tragedy seemed closer, more intimately real. He felt his own eyes moisten as the cortege moved on.
Behind the family mourners were others. To his surprise, Peter recognized a face. At first he was unable to identify its owner, then realized it was Sol Natchez, the elderly room-service waiter suspended from duty after the dispute with the Duke and Duchess of Croydon on Monday night. Peter had sent for Natchez on Tuesday morning and conveyed Warren Trent's edict to spend the rest of the week away from the hotel, with pay. Natchez looked across now to where Peter and Marsha were standing but gave no sign of recognition.
The funeral procession moved farther into the cemetery and out of sight.
They waited until all the mourners and spectators had followed it.
"We can go now," Marsha said.
Unexpectedly a hand touched Peter's arm. Turning, he saw it was Sol Natchez. So he had observed them, after all.
"I saw you watching, Mr. McDermott. Did you know the family?"
"No," Peter said. "We were here by chance." He introduced Marsha.
She asked, "You didn't wait for the end of the service?"
The old man shook his head. "Sometimes there's just so much you can bear to watch."
"You knew the family, then?"
"Very well. It's a sad, sad thing."
Peter nodded. There seemed nothing else to say.
Natchez said, "I didn't get to say it Tuesday, Mr. McDermott, but I appreciate what you did. In speaking up for me, I mean."
"It's all right, Sol. I didn't think you were to blame."
"It's a funny thing when you think about it." The old man looked at Marsha, then Peter. He seemed reluctant to leave.
"What's funny?" Peter asked.
"All this. The accident." Natchez gestured in the direction the cortege had gone. "It must have happened just before I had that bit of trouble Monday night. Just think, while you and me were talking . . ."
"Yes," Peter said. He felt disinclined to explain his own experience later at the accident scene.
"I meant to ask, Mr. McDermott - was anything more said about that business with the Duke and Duchess?"
"Nothing at all."
Peter supposed that Natchez found it a relief, as he himself did, to consider something other than the funeral.
The waiter ruminated, "I thought about it a lot after. Seemed almost as if they went out of their way to make a fuss. Couldn't figure it out.
Still can't."
Natchez, Peter remembered, had said much the same thing on Monday night.
The waiter's exact words came back to him. Natchez had been speaking of the Duchess of Croydon. She jogged my arm. If I didn't know better, I'd say it was deliberate. And later Peter had had the same general impression: that the Duchess wanted the incident remembered. What was it she had said? Something about spending a quiet evening in the suite, then taking a walk around the block. They had just come back, she said. Peter recalled wondering at the time why she had made such a point of it.
Then the Duke of Croydon had mumbled something about leaving his cigarettes in the car, and the Duchess had snapped back at him.
The Duke had left his cigarettes in the car.
But if the Croydons had stayed in the suite, then merely walked around the block . . .
Of course, the cigarettes might have been left earlier in the day.
Somehow Peter didn't think so.
Oblivious of the other two, he concentrated.
Why did the Croydons wish to conceal the use of their car on Monday night? Why create an appearance - apparently false - of having spent the evening in the hotel? Was the complaint about spilled shrimp Creole a staged device - deliberately involving Natchez, then Peter - intended to uphold this fiction? Except for the Duke's chance remark, which angered the Duchess, Peter would have accepted it as true.
Why conceal the use of their car?
Natchez had said a moment ago: It's a funny thing ... the accident . .
. must have happened just before I had that bit of trouble.
The Croydons' car was a Jaguar.
Ogilvie.
He had a sudden memory of the Jaguar emerging from the garage last night.
As it stopped, momentarily under a light, there had been something strange. He recalled noticing. But what? With an awful coldness he remembered: it was the fender and headlight, both were damaged. For the first time the significance of police bulletins of the past few days struck home.
"Peter," Marsha said, "you've suddenly gone white."
He scarcely heard.
It was essential to get away, to be somewhere alone where he could think.
He must reason carefully, logically, unhurriedly. Above all, there must be no hasty, ready-made conclusions.
There were pieces of a puzzle. Superficially, they appeared to relate. But they must be considered, reconsidered, arranged, and rearranged. Perhaps discarded.
The idea was impossible. It was simply too fantastic to be true. And yet ...
As if from a distance, he heard Marsha's voice. "Peter! Something's wrong.
What is it?"
Sol Natchez, too, was looking at him strangely.
"Marsha," Peter said, "I can't tell you now. But I have to."
"Go where?"
"Back to the hotel. I'm sorry. I'll try to explain later."
Her voice showed disappointment. "I'd planned we'd have tea."
"Please believe me! It's important."
"If you must go, I'll drive you."
"No." Driving with Marsha would involve talking, explanations. "Please.
I'll call you later."
He left them standing, bewildered, looking after him.
Outside, on Basin Street, he hailed a cruising cab. He had told Marsha that he was going to the hotel but, changing his mind, he gave the driver the address of his apartment.
It would be quieter there.
To think. To decide what he should do.
It was approaching late afternoon when Peter McDermott summarized his reasoning.
He told himself: When you added something twenty, thirty, forty times; when every time the conclusion you arrived at was the same; when the issue was the kind of issue you were facing now; with all of this, your own responsibility was inescapable.
Since leaving Marsha an hour and a half ago, he had remained in his apartment. He had forced himself - subduing agitation and an impulse for haste - to think rationally, carefully, unexcitedly. He had reviewed, point by point, the accumulated incidents since Monday night. He had searched for alternatives of explanation, both for single happenings and the accumulation of them all. He found none that offered either consistency or sense, save the awful conclusion he had reached so suddenly this afternoon.
Now the reasoning had ended. A decision must be made.
He contemplated placing all that he knew and conjectured before Warren Trent. Then he dismissed the idea as being cowardly, a shirking of his own responsibility. Whatever was to be done, he must do alone.
There was a sense of the fitness of things to be served. He changed quickly from his light suit to a darker one. Leaving, he took a taxi the few blocks to the hotel.
From the lobby he walked, acknowledging salutations, to his office on the main mezzanine. Flora had left for the day. There was a pile of messages on his desk which he ignored.
He sat quietly for a moment in the silent office, contemplating what he must do. Then he lifted the telephone, waited for a line, and dialed the number of the city police.
13
The persistent buzzing of a mosquito, which had somehow found its way into the Jaguar's interior, woke Ogilvie during the afternoon. He came awake slowly and at first had difficulty remembering where he was. Then the sequence of events came back: the departure from the hotel, the drive in early morning darkness, the alarm - unfounded, his decision to wait out the day before resuming the journey north; and finally the rutted, grassy track with a cluster of trees at its end where he had concealed the car.
The hideaway had apparently been well chosen. A glance at his watch showed that he had slept, uninterrupted, for almost eight hours.
With consciousness also came intense discomfort. The car was stiffing, his body stiff and aching from confinement in the cramped rear seat. His mouth was dry and tasted foully. He was thirsty and ravenously hungry.
With grunts of anguish Ogilvie eased his bulk to a sitting position and opened the car door. Immediately, he was surrounded by a dozen more mosquitoes. He brushed them away, then glanced around, taking time to reorient himself, comparing what he saw now with his impressions of the place this morning. Then it had been barely light, and cool; now the sun was high and, even under the shade of the trees, the heat intense.