the servants all cringing in the kitchen of some arcane country house? All there nice and neat. Here he had to go mucking about over half of Northants, and the trail days old, so cold that a trained bloodhound couldnât snuffle it out. For a moment, looking down the High Street where the winter light glittered on the gum-drop houses and danced off the snowy roofs, he wondered if he had landed bangup in a fairy-tale town on this Christmas Eve.
The Rivingtonsâ house was the large Tudor structure just on the other side of the bridge, in the square. When he got closerto it, from the vantage point of the humpbacked bridge, he could see it was two houses together really, quite large.
 â¢Â â¢Â â¢Â
This morning Isabel Rivington was dressed in a camelâs hair suit and a white silk blouse, looking just as elegant as she had yesterday. Although, frankly, Jury would have preferred Sheila Hogg, who was a bit steamier. This one came on as a kind of piranha. Jury wouldnât have been surprised to see a finger or two missing when he left.
âI was hoping to see your sister â Vivian, is it? â today, too.â
âSheâs up at the vicarage.â
âI see.â
âThe night of the seventeenth, the night Small was murdered, do you recall seeing him in the bar before dinner?â
Having invited Jury to sit down, she plucked a cigarette from a china holder and leaned toward the match he held out. She seemed in no hurry to get down to answers. âIf he was the one sitting with Marshall Trueblood, well, yes, I saw him I suppose. But I didnât take much notice. There were several people in the saloon bar.â
âAnd you didnât go down to the wine cellar after his body had been found?â
âNo.â She crossed silky legs, down one of which the firelight made a band of gold. âIâm a bit of a coward about that sort of thing.â
Jury smiled. âArenât we all? Your sister did though.â
âVivian? Well, Vivianâsââ She shrugged, as if discounting Vivianâs predilection to look at dead bodies. âAnd sheâs not my sister, exactly. Weâre stepsisters.â
âYouâre the trustee of your sisterâs estate?â
âBarclayâs and I, Inspector. Whatâs that to do with the murders of two strangers?â She seemed to expect him to answer.
He didnât. âThen you donât have complete freedom in deciding how the money will be spent.â Her expression shifted from bored acquiescence to irritation. âWhen does she come into the money herself?â Jury asked.
Her heavy gold bracelet clanged against the ashtray as she tapped her cigarette. âWhen sheâs thirty.â
âRather late, isnât it?â
âHer father â my stepfather â was a bit of a chauvinist. Women canât handle money â that sort of thing. Actually, she could have got it any time she married, by the terms of the will. Otherwise, when sheâs thirty.â
âAnd when will that be?â From the way she was looking everywhere except at him, Jury concluded he had found a sore spot. There was something about Isabel Rivington to which he took an instinctive and near-immediate dislike, something dissolute. She was beautiful in a sluggish sort of way that bespoke overindulgence in syrupy liqueurs and two-martini lunches. But her skin was still very good, the pores tight and fine, and her hands well kept. The nails were lacquered in a modish brown-rose shade and so long that the tips were beginning to curl in at the ends. It might be difficult to strangle a man and avoid scratching him with nails like that. He wondered sometimes if that part of his mind which registered such details even as he was talking about other things might not simply have frozen over, impervious to the human tragedy, catching up facts like flies in amber.
âVivianâll be thirty
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