the covers of her unmade bed and ran his eyes speculatively over the sheets, her self-control snapped.
"My God, Simon, is that absolutely necessary?"
None of them answered. But their silence was enough. And the combination of having been locked up for nearly nine hours like a common criminal and sitting here now while they proposed to question her dispassionate-ly-as if they were not all three tied together by years of pain and friendship-caused anger to swell like a tumour within her. She fought against it with limited success. Her eyes moved back to Lynley, and she made herself ignore the sounds of St. James' movement in the room behind her.
"Tell us about the row that occurred last night."
From their behaviour, Lady Helen had expected Lynley's first question to concern itself with the bedroom. This unexpected start took her by surprise, disarming her momentarily as he no doubt intended.
"I wish I could. All I know for certain is that it involved the play Joy Sinclair was writing. Lord Stinhurst and she had a terrible quarrel about it. Joanna Ellacourt was furious as well."
"Why?"
"From what I could gather, the play Joy brought with her for this weekend run-through was considerably different from the play that everyone signed on to do in London. She did announce at dinner that she'd made a few changes here and there, but evidently the changes were far more extensive than anyone was prepared for. It was still a murder mystery, but little else was the same. So the argument grew from there."
"When did all this occur?"
"We'd gone into the sitting room to do a read-through of the script. The quarrel broke out not five minutes into it. It was so odd, Tommy. They'd hardly begun when Francesca-Lord Stinhurst's sister-absolutely leaped to her feet, as if she'd had the most dreadful shock of her life. She began shouting at Lord Stinhurst, saying something like, 'No! Stuart, stop her!' and then she tried to get out of the room. Only she became confused, or lost her way, because she backed directly into a large curio cabinet and smashed it to pieces. I can't think how she managed not to cut herself to shreds in the process, but she didn't."
"What was everyone else doing?"
Lady Helen sketched out each person's behaviour as best she remembered it: Robert Gabriel staring at Stuart Rintoul, Lord Stinhurst, obviously waiting for him either to deal with Joy or to go to his sister's aid; Irene Sinclair growing pale to the very lips as the situation escalated; Joanna Ellacourt fl inging her script down and stalking out of the room in a rage, followed a moment later by her husband David Sydeham; Joy Sinclair smiling across the walnut reading table at Lord Stinhurst, and that smile apparently fi ring him into action so that he jumped to his feet, grabbed her arm, and dragged her into the morning room next door, slamming the door behind them. Lady Helen concluded with:
"And then Elizabeth Rintoul went after her aunt Francesca. She appeared...it was hard to tell, but she may have been crying, which seems a bit out of character for her."
"Why?"
"I don't know. Elizabeth seems to have given up crying some time ago," Lady Helen replied. "She's given up on lots of things, I think. Joy Sinclair, among them. They used to be close friends, from what Rhys told me."
"You haven't mentioned what he did after the read-through," Lynley pointed out. But he gave her no time to answer, saying instead, "Stinhurst and Joy Sinclair had the quarrel by themselves, then? The others weren't involved?"
"Only Stinhurst and Joy. I could hear their voices from the morning room."
"Shouting?"
"A bit from Joy. But actually I didn't hear much from Stinhurst. He doesn't seem to be the kind of man who has to raise his voice to get one's attention, does he? So the only thing I really heard clearly was Joy shouting hysterically about someone called Alec. She said Alec knew and Lord Stinhurst killed him because of it."
Next to her, Lady Helen heard Sergeant Havers' indrawn breath, which was followed by a speculative look in Lynley's direction. Immediately comprehending, Lady Helen hurried on to say:
"But surely that was a metaphorical statement, Tommy. A bit like, 'If you do that, you'll kill your mother.' You know what I mean. And at any rate, Lord Stinhurst didn't even respond to it. He just left, saying something like as far as he was concerned, she was through. Or words to that effect."
"And after