Bundle reached home about 6 A.M. She was up and dressed by half-past nine, and rang up Jimmy Thesiger on the telephone.
The promptitude of his reply somewhat surprised her, till he explained that he was going down to attend the inquest.
"So am I," said Bundle. "And I've got a lot to tell you."
"Well, suppose you let me drive you down and we can talk on the way. How about that?"
"All right. But allow a bit extra because you'll have to take me to Chimneys. The Chief Constable's picking me up there."
"Why?"
"Because he's a kind man," said Bundle.
"So am I," said Jimmy. "Very kind."
"Oh! you—you're an ass," said Bundle. "I heard somebody say so last night."
"Who?"
"To be strictly accurate—a Russian Jew. No, it wasn't. It was—"
But an indignant protest drowned her words.
"I may be an ass," said Jimmy. "I daresay I am—but I won't have Russian Jews saying so. What were you doing last night, Bundle?"
"That's what I'm going to talk about," said Bundle. "Good-bye for the moment."
She rang off in a tantalizing manner which left Jimmy pleasantly puzzled. He had the highest respect for Bundle's capabilities, though there was not the slightest trace of sentiment in his feeling towards her.
"She's been up to something," he opined, as he took a last hasty drink of coffee. "Depend upon it, she's been up to something."
Twenty minutes later, his little two-seater drew up before the Brook Street house and Bundle, who had been waiting, came tripping down the steps. Jimmy was not ordinarily an observant young man, but he noticed that there were black rings around Bundle's eyes and that she had all the appearance of having had a late night the night before.
"Now then," he said, as the car began to nose her way through the suburbs, "what dark deeds have you been up to?"
"I'll tell you," said Bundle. "But don't interrupt until I've finished."