know who âHelenâ isâbut at the same time I do knowâI mean I know that it was âHelenâ lying there ⦠How am I going to find out more?â
âWell, I think the obvious thing to do is to find out definitely if you ever were in England as a child, or if you could have been. Your relativesââ
Gwenda interrupted. âAunt Alison. She would know, Iâm sure.â
âThen I should write to her by airmail. Tell her circumstances have arisen which make it imperative for you to know if you haveever been in England. You would probably get an answer by airmail by the time your husband arrives.â
âOh, thank you, Miss Marple. Youâve been frightfully kind. And I do hope what youâve suggested is true. Because if so, well, itâs quite all right. I mean, it wonât be anything supernatural.â
Miss Marple smiled.
âI hope it turns out as we think. I am going to stay with some old friends of mine in the North of England the day after tomorrow. I shall be passing back through London in about ten days. If you and your husband are here then, or if you have received an answer to your letter, I should be very curious to know the result.â
â Of course, dear Miss Marple! Anyway, I want you to meet Giles. Heâs a perfect pet. And weâll have a good pow-wow about the whole thing.â
Gwendaâs spirits were fully restored by now.
Miss Marple, however, looked thoughtful.
Five
M URDER IN R ETROSPECT
I
I t was some ten days later that Miss Marple entered a small hotel in Mayfair, and was given an enthusiastic reception by young Mr. and Mrs. Reed.
âThis is my husband, Miss Marple. Giles, I canât tell you how kind Miss Marple was to me.â
âIâm delighted to meet you, Miss Marple. I hear Gwenda nearly panicked herself into a lunatic asylum.â
Miss Marpleâs gentle blue eyes summed up Giles Reed favourably. A very likeable young man, tall and fair with a disarming way of blinking every now and then out of a natural shyness. She noted his determined chin and the set of his jaw.
âWeâll have tea in the little waiting room, the dark one,âsaid Gwenda. âNobody ever comes there. And then we can show Miss Marple Aunt Alisonâs letter.
âYes,â she added, as Miss Marple looked up sharply. âItâs come, and itâs almost exactly what you thought.â
Tea over, the airmail letter was spread out and read.
Dearest Gwenda, (Miss Dandy had written)
I was much disturbed to hear you had had some worrying experience. To tell you the truth, it had really entirely escaped my memory that you had actually resided for a short time in England as a young child.
Your mother, my sister Megan, met your father, Major Halliday, when she was on a visit to some friends of ours at that time stationed in India. They were married and you were born there. About two years after your birth your mother died. It was a great shock to us and we wrote to your father with whom we had corresponded, but whom actually we had never seen, begging him to entrust you to our care, as we would be only too glad to have you, and it might be difficult for an Army man stranded with a young child. Your father, however, refused, and told us he was resigning from the Army and taking you back with him to England. He said he hoped we would at some time come over and visit him there.
I understand that on the voyage home, your father met a young woman, became engaged to her, and married her as soon as he got to England. The marriage was not, I gather, a happy one, and I understand they parted about a year later. It was then that your father wrote to us and asked if we were still willing to giveyou a home. I need hardly tell you, my dear, how happy we were to do so. You were sent out to us in the charge of an English nurse, and at the same time your father settled the bulk of his estate upon you and suggested that you
Elizabeth Amelia Barrington