The idea's absolutely absurd."
"Very well - we don't think so either.
She's been away for some years, she has always been on perfectly amicable terms with him.
She has a very generous income and he would have been, I should say, delighted to hear of her engagement to you and would probably have made a handsome marriage settlement on her.
We don't suspect her.
Why should we?
But you can make quite sure of one thing.
If this thing isn't cleared up, that girl won't marry you.
From what you've told me I'm fairly sure of that.
And mark this, it's the kind of crime that may never be cleared up.
We may be reasonably sure that the wife and her young man were in cahoots over it - but proving it will be another matter.
There's not even a case to put up to the D.P.P. so far.
And unless we get definite evidence against her, there'll always be a nasty doubt.
You see that, don't you?"
Yes, I saw that.
The Old Man then said quietly: "Why not put it to her?"
"You mean - ask Sophia if I -" I stopped.
The Old Man was nodding his head vigorously.
"Yes, yes...
I'm not asking you to worm your way in without telling the girl what you're up to.
See what she has to say about it."
And so it came about that the following day I drove down with Chief Inspector Taverner and Detective Sergeant Lamb to Swinly Dean.
A little way beyond the golf course, we turned in at a gateway where I imagined that before the war there had been an imposing pair of gates.
Patriotism or ruthless requisitioning had swept these away.
We drove up a long curving drive flanked with rhododendrons and came out on a gravelled sweep in front of the house.
It was incredible!
I wondered why it had been called Three Gables.
Eleven Gables would have been more apposite!
The curious thing was that it had a strange air of being distorted - and I thought I knew why.
It was the type, really, of a cottage, it was a cottage swollen out of all proportion.
It was like looking at a country cottage through a gigantic magnifying glass.
The slantwise beams, the half-timbering, the gables - it was a little crooked house that had grown like a mushroom in the night!
Yet I got the idea. It was a Greek restauranteer's idea of something English.
It was meant to be an Englishman's home - built the size of a castle!
I wondered what the first Mrs Leonides had thought of it.
She had not, I fancied, been consulted or shown the plans.
It was, most probably, her exotic husband's little surprise.
I wondered if she had shuddered or smiled.
Apparently she had lived there quite happily.
"Bit overwhelming, isn't it?" said Inspector Taverner. "Of course, the old gentleman built on to it a good deal - making it into three separate houses, so to speak, with kitchens and everything.
It's all tip top inside, fitted up like a luxury hotel."
Sophia came out of the front door.
She was hatless and wore a green shirt and a tweed skirt.
She stopped dead when she saw me.
"You?" she exclaimed.
I said: "Sophia, I've got to talk to you.
Where can we go?"
For a moment I thought she was going to demur, then she turned and said:
"This way." We walked down across the lawn.
There was a fine view across Swinly Dean's No 1 course - away to a clump of pine trees on a hill, and beyond it, to the dimness of hazy countryside.