animal magnetism and the air of danger and forbidden fruit surrounding an affair with a member of the lower classes.” He said it deadpan. I could not decide whether I should be irritated or not.
“Whatever it was, it was the greatest thing that had happened in my young life. Hasn’t been much since to eclipse it, either.”
“Like I said, a romantic.” And there he let it lay.
“Lot of changes since I was here,” I said. “The place has been completely done over.”
“You sure it’s the right one?”
“Yeah.” All the memories assured me that it was. We had walked these grounds under the watchful chaperonage of a patient and loving mother who had seen the whole romance as a phase and would not have believed her eyes if she had walked in on us in the cemetery.
Morley took my word for it.
We were still fifty feet from the door when a man in livery stepped outside and came to meet us. “He don’t look like he’s glad we dropped by.”
Morley grunted. “He don’t look like your average houseboy, either.”
He didn’t. He looked like a Saucerhead Tharpe who was past his prime but still plenty dangerous. The way he fisheyed us said that, fancy clothes or not, we were not fooling him.
“Can I help you gents?”
I’d decided to go at it straight ahead, almost honest, and hope for the best. “I don’t know. We’re down from TunFaire looking for Klaus Kronk.”
That seemed to take him from the blind side. He said, “And just when I thought I’d heard all the gags there was.”
“We just a little bit ago found out he was dead.”
“So what are you doing here instead of heading back where you came from if the guy you want is croaked?”
“The only reason I wanted to talk to him was to find out how I could get in touch with his oldest daughter. I know she’s married, but I don’t know who to. I thought maybe her mother or any others of the family who were still around might be able to point me in the right direction. Any of them here?”
He looked like it was getting too complicated for him. “You must be talking about the people who used to live here. They moved out a couple years ago.”
The changes all seemed recent enough to support his statement. “You have any idea where she is?”
“Why the hell should I? I didn’t even know her name till you told me.”
“Thank you for your time and courtesy. We’ll have to trace her some other way.”
“What you want this machuska for, anyway?”
While I considered his question, Morley said, “Throw it in the pond and see which way the frogs jump.”
“We represent the executors of an estate of which she is the principal legatee.”
“I love it when you talk dirty lawyer,” Morley said. He told our new buddy, “She inherited a bundle.” In a ventriloquist’s whisper, he told me, “Hit him with the number so we can see how big his eyes get.”
“It looks like around a hundred thousand marks, less executors’ fees.”
His eyes did not get big. He didn’t even bat one. Instead he muttered, “I thought I heard every gag there was,” again.
So I repeated myself for him. “Thanks for your time and courtesy.” I headed for the lane.
“Next stop?” Morley asked.
“We ask at the houses on either side. The people who lived there knew the family. They might give us something.”
“If they’re not gone, too. What did you think of that guy?”
“I’ll try not to form an opinion till I’ve talked to a few more people.”
We had a less belligerent but no more informative interview at the next house down the lane. The people there had only been in the place a year and all they knew about the Kronks was that Klaus was killed during the last Venageti invasion.
“You make anything of that?” I asked as we turned the rig around and headed for the peacock place.
“Of what?”
“He said Kronk was killed during the Venageti thing. Not by the Venageti.”
“An imprecision due entirely to laziness, no
Alice Brown
Alexis D. Craig
Kels Barnholdt
Marilyn French
Jinni James
Guy Vanderhaeghe
Steven F. Havill
William McIlvanney
Carole Mortimer
Tamara Thorne