eight-thirty.â
The priest nodded sagely. âThe Press would like that.â
âI do not, Father. The implications are very disturbing. If Sister Anne was dead at half past eight, who sat in her stall at Vespers?â
The priest sat down heavily. âI donât know. The fact that we do not believe inâerâmanifestations will scarcely influence the publicâwho donât know what they believe in. They, and therefore the Press, dearly love a ghost. Canât you see the headlines?â
The Mother Prioress winced.
In intervals between inspecting the Convent Chapel, Sloan took one telephone call and made another from the old-fashioned instrument in the corridor. Both were London calls, but neither would have conveyed very much to Mrs. Briggs at the Cullingoak Post Office, who monitored all calls as a matter of course.
âWith reference to your enquiry,â said the London voice, âwe have found a very interesting will in Somerset House, made by one Alfred Cartwright, father of Josephine Mary Cartwright. It was made a long time ago, and, in fact, several years before his death. Sounds as if he and his brother Joe were pretty cautious blokes. Theyâd got everything worked out carefully enough. If Alfred died first his widow was to have the income from his share of the Consolidated Carbon partnership for her lifetime. If he had children they were to get the share when their mother died. If he didnât have any children or if those children predeceased him or his brother, Joe, then the share in the Cartwright patent was to go to Joe and then his heirs and successors.â
âKeeping it in the family,â said Sloan.
âThatâs the spirit, old chap. Well, they seem to have gone along fairly slowly with the businessâall this was just after the old Queen died, remember. Turn of the century and all that. Then suddenlyâand without any warning eitherâAlfred ups and dies. Pneumonia, it was. We looked up the death certificate, too, while we were about it.â¦â
âThank you.â
âHe doesnât leave very much but not to worry. Not many years afterwards along comes World War One and Cartwrightâs Consolidated Carbons canât help making money. Lots and lots of it. Of course, our Alfred doesnât get the benefit being dead by now, but the stuff keeps on coming in. Must have been pretty well running out of their ears by 1918.â
âWhat about brother Joe?â
âThereâs no will registered of his, so presumably heâs still alive. He probably made a reciprocal will at the same time as his brother, but of course he could have altered it since.⦠By the way, we confirm Mrs. Alfred Cartwrightâs statement that there was only one child of the marriage. This girl Josephine. Her husband died soon after the baby was born.â
âAnd brother Joe?â
âHe had one son by the name of Harold. He must be all of fifty-five now.â
âWeâve met son Harold.â A thought struck Sloan. âSo Joe Cartwright will be quite an age.â
âPractically gaga, I should say,â said the voice helpfully.
âWhat about the firm now?â
âAh, you want he whom we call our City Editor. Iâm only an historian. Fred Jenkins is the chap for the up-to-the-minute stuff. The only policeman who does his beat in striped pants and a bowler. No truncheon either. Says his umbrellaâs better. Iâll give you his number.â
âMuch obliged,â said Sloan. He rang it immediately.
âCartwrightâs Consolidated Carbons? Very sound, Inspector. Good family firm. A bit old-fashioned but most good old family firms are these days. Well run, all the same. Not closed minds, if you know what I mean. Theyâre not entirely convinced that one computer will do the work of fifty men, but if you prove it to them theyâll buy the computer and see the fifty men donât suffer
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