"I don't mind."
I looked at her curiously.
"Did anybody give you some brandy, or some coffee, or some tea after - after you found her?"
Megan shook her head.
I cursed the whole Symmington mйnage.
That stuffed shirt, Symmington, thought of nothing but the police.
Neither Elsie Holland nor the cook seemed to have thought of the effect on the sensitive child who had made that gruesome discovery.
"Come on, slabface," I said. "We'll go to the kitchen."
We went around the house to the back door and into the kitchen.
Rose, a plump pudding-faced woman of forty, was drinking strong tea by the kitchen fire.
She greeted us with a flow of talk and her hand to her heart.
She'd come all over queer, she told me, awful the palpitations were!
Just think of it, it might have been her, it might have been any of them, murdered in their beds they might have been.
"Dish out a good strong cup of that tea for Miss Megan," I said.
"She's had a shock, you know.
Remember it was she who found the body."
The mere mention of a body nearly sent Rose off again, but I quelled her with a stern eye and she poured out a cup of inky fluid.
"There you are, young woman," I said to Megan. "you drink that down.
You haven't got any brandy, I suppose, Rose?"
Rose said rather doubtfully that there was a drop of cooking brandy left over from the Christmas puddings.
"That'll do," I said, and put a dollop of it into Megan's cap.
I saw by Rose's eye that she thought it a good idea.
I told Megan to stay with Rose.
"I can trust you to look after Miss Megan?"
I said, and Rose replied in a gratified way,
"Oh, yes, sir."
I went through into the house.
If I knew Rose and her kind, she would soon find it necessary to keep her strength up with a little food, and that would be good for Megan too.
Confound these people, why couldn't they look after the child?
Fuming inwardly I ran into Elsie Holland in the hall.
She didn't seem surprised to see me.
I suppose that the gruesome excitement of the discovery made one oblivious of who was coming and going.
The constable, Bert Rundle, was by the front door.
Elsie Holland gasped out, "Oh, Mr. Burton, isn't it awful?
Whoever can have done such a dreadful thing?"
"It was murder, then?"
"Oh, yes.
She was struck on the back of the head.
It's all blood and hair - oh! it's awful - and bundled into that cupboard.
Who can have done such a wicked thing?
And why?
Poor Agnes, I'm sure she never did anyone any harm."
"No," I said. "Somebody saw to that pretty promptly."
She stared at me.
Not, I thought, a quick-witted girl.
But she had good nerves.
Her color was as usual, slightly heightened by excitement, and I even fancied that in a macabre kind of way, and in spite of a naturally kind heart, she was enjoying the drama.
She said apologetically, "I must go up to the boys.
Mr. Symmington is so anxious that they shouldn't get a shock.
He wants me to keep them right away."