ILL MET BY
MOONLIGHT
LESLIE FORD
OBERON: Ill met by moonlight, proud Titania.
—A Midsummer Night’s Dream, II.1. 60
Ill Met by Moonlight
Copyright © 1937, renewed 1965, by Zenith Brown.
All rights reserved.
Published by Wildside Press LLC
CHAPTER ONE
I’ve been trying to remember if there was anything different about April Harbor the Saturday Rosemary Bishop and her father came back for the first time in seven years. It was stiflingly hot, but it often is in August, especially when a thunderstorm is brewing over Chesapeake Bay. But whether there was any hint of the ghastly business that was to turn April Harbor inside out and scatter our private lives in a shower of printer’s ink over the front page of every newspaper in America—that’s what I’ve been trying to remember.
I told Colonel Primrose not, the next morning, when he started asking me questions. In fact I was quite positive about it. But I think he sensed the reservations I was keeping carefully guarded in the back of my mind. He’d have been a fool if he hadn’t, and I never heard anyone call him a fool, except himself, and perhaps Elsie Carter. Elsie calls practically everybody a fool, so nobody bothers much about her.
“Does everybody spend Saturday morning in the A & P, my dear Mrs. Latham?” he asked me.
And of course they do. April Harbor is like any other village that’s been practically taken over by a group of city people who descend on it late in May when the schools are about to close and stay until school opens again in September. Some have been staying on till November, since 1929, and Bill and Louise Chetwynd even stayed a couple of winters, when their town place was being sold to pay up their margins. Everybody was hit, of course, because everybody virtually lives off stocks and bonds—the older people own them and the young crowd sell them. They sell other things too, mostly the sort of things everybody stopped buying immediately: architecture, divorces, ten-thousand-dollar portraits and unnecessary operations. Except Elsie Carter’s husband, who’s a glorified grocer of some sort and at April Harbor only because Elsie married him. Elsie’s father was my father’s law partner, and the two of them drew up the charter for the April Harbor Association thirty years ago when a group of young married people decided to buy three hundred acres of the Poplar Hill Estate and make a summer camp. They were mostly Baltimore and Washington and Philadelphia then. That was before the days of airplanes. Now most of the younger crowd live in New York and the men charter a plane to come down for week ends.
Elsie Carter’s family lived at one end of the Estate and mine at the other, and Elsie and I got on just as well—which means no better—when she was thirteen and I was five as we do now that she’s forty-six and I’m thirty-eight. The fact that I’m a widow with two sons, and that Elsie might as well be one, with nothing to do but manage other people’s lives, doesn’t seem to have drawn us any closer. Possibly the fact that Ferney Carter never flies down for a week end except when he has to explain her constantly pointing out to me that if Dick hadn’t been in such a hurry one time, and had taken a train instead of a plane, I shouldn’t be a widow. Or perhaps I know it’s true and just can’t bear to be reminded of it so often. However, why I should object so much to Elsie’s minding other people’s business when the whole story of Jim Gould and his wife and Rosemary Bishop is a veritable epic of me as a busybody, I’m sure I don’t know. Except, I suppose, that in a way I wanted to keep April Harbor the romantic spot for my youngsters that it had been once for me, and Rosemary and Jim became sort of a test case.
April Harbor is a tiny fishing village on the Eastern Shore of the Chesapeake Bay. In the winter it’s as dead as the people who sleep under the lichen-stained slabs and crooked headstones that cluster around the old ivy-colored red brick church at the top of its one street. Then from the end of May the street is alive with the summer colony. The quay at the bottom is a bright tangle of white boats and bronzed laughing people in all degrees of undress. April Harbor is a teeter-totter, balanced between Church Circle and Dock Street, winter and summer; dirty sails and oysters in winter and white sails and colonists in summer. All the shops along the sloping street, except Mr. Toplady’s, are boarded up in the winter. In the spring they’re painted and opened again, and alive with people, mostly laying in food for the influx of week-end husbands and guests from Washington and Baltimore.
The morning of the Saturday when the Bishops were to come back wasn’t any different. Except for the fact that the Bishops were coming. They hadn’t been back to the Harbor since Chapin Bishop, Rosemary’s older brother, was drowned and Rosemary and her father had gone abroad.
That, of course, was the thing about April Harbor that morning that I wanted to keep as quiet as I could, for a lot of reasons—even before the Bishops came; in fact, before anything was supposed to be known about their coming.
I hadn’t, of course, counted on Elsie Carter’s extraordinary nose for news. Elsie is a large and efficient woman. She was standing in front of a bushel basket of cantaloupes, pressing them with her two thumbs and smelling them in the professional manner that when I try it always nets me perfectly green and tasteless melons. She caught sight of me in the long mildewed mirror over the bakery shelves and abandoned the cantaloupes immediately.
“My dear!” she cried. “Isn’t it marvelous about Rosemary Bishop? I’ll bet you’re thrilled to death!”
I’m afraid I looked blanker even than I’d intended to.
“Oh, don’t try to pretend.—About her engagement to Paul Dikranov. He’s coming with them today. I expect she wants to show Jim Gould that she can marry a foreigner too if she wants to. I must say I’ve always thought that business about not coming back here on account of Chapin was a little farfetched.”
She picked up a box of shiny blackberries and turned them out in her hand to see the bottom. I always spill them when I try it. “Still, as you say . . .”
I’d said nothing, except from time to time for seven years that there was no use trying to make out that Chapin Bishop, aged twenty-five, had been murdered just because he’d been found one moonlight night face down in three feet of water at the cove. Everybody knew Chapin Bishop drank more than was good for any ten young men and had spent many a night lying face down somewhere or other where there’d just not happened to be any water.
“It’ll be interesting to see how she and Sandra make out. Have they ever met?”
I said I didn’t know. But I did. They’d never met. In a sense they never could meet, not on any common ground. Sandra Gould was Jim Gould’s wife, and Rosemary Bishop and Jim Gould had played together at April Harbor when they were babies, quarreled there when they were children, fallen in love there when they were adolescents, become engaged there when Rosemary was eighteen and Jim a midshipman home for a month’s leave, aged twenty-two. They hadn’t had their big quarrel there. That had been in China. It seemed horribly sardonic now that Rosemary Bishop should meet Jim Gould’s “foreign” wife at April Harbor.
“I don’t really see what she wants to come here for,” Elsie Carter said.
“It’s her home,” I said curtly, and was annoyed because I let Elsie Carter get under my skin the way I do.
“They’ve been mighty anxious to sell for a long time.”
She turned her attention to the problem of lettuce. I looked out into the street, filled with a gaily chattering crowd—on foot, in station wagons, in big cars and little ones, some properly dressed, a lot of girls and men in shorts, with dogs and children—all people I’d known all my life or all theirs. Except the girl now coming into the store.
I’d known Sandra Gould only four years, if indeed I could say I knew her