Authors: Robert Goddard
Tags: #Early 20th Century, #Historical mystery, #1930s
R O B E R T G O D D A R D
“Yes. Bizarre, isn’t it? I took it for some weird practical joke. I never imagined—never would have—that Beatrix was behind it. Are you sure about this?”
“Lulu is.”
“Well, I don’t know the lady, of course, but couldn’t she be misleading you? It’s easy to blame the dead. They can’t deny anything.”
“What would be the point?”
“I haven’t the least idea. Have you?” Ursula smiled in a thin-lipped signal of disbelief.
“I’m certain Lulu’s told me the truth.”
“No doubt you are, but you’ve always been too trusting, haven’t you?” The smile tightened, conveying more than mere disbelief.
There was now about it the hint of a warning.
“Did you keep the letter?”
“No. Why should I have?”
“Or show it to Maurice?”
“Certainly not. I didn’t want to worry him with such nonsense.”
“You think he would have been worried, then?”
“Perhaps.”
“But you weren’t?”
“It would take more than an envelope full of blank sheets of paper to unsettle me, as you should know. I put it out of my mind.
Frankly, I advise you to do the same.”
“I’m not sure I can.”
“Well, that’s your choice, isn’t it?” Abruptly, Ursula rose to her feet. “I really can’t dally any longer, Charlie. Would you mind awfully if I threw you out?”
All the way to Tunbridge Wells, Charlotte struggled within herself to find reasons to believe what Ursula had said. But there were none. It was as inconceivable that Lulu had sent the letter at her own initiative as it was that Beatrix had wanted to send blank paper to her nephew’s wife after her death. Besides, Ursula had only described the contents of the envelope after establishing that Lulu did not know what they were. If she had intended to lie, Charlotte had given her the perfect opportunity to do so.
But to what purpose? Beatrix’s carefully laid plan defied analysis so long as the nature of her posthumous communications remained unknown. A Welshman; a New Yorker; a Parisienne; and Ursula.
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77
Surely fifty-year-old letters from Tristram Abberley could not connect them. Yet something did. And blank paper was not it.
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FIFTEEN
Dear Miss Ladram,
I have thought long and hard before writing this letter, but I have decided it is the only way to put certain points to you which I strongly feel, on my brother’s behalf, need to be addressed. I greatly regret what happened when I called on you two weeks ago and I hope, by writing, to avoid any of the misunderstanding which arose on that occasion.
The first thing to be said is that my brother, though something of a rogue, is not the sort to involve himself in—
Charlotte thrust the letter impatiently back into its envelope.
She could spare neither time nor attention for Derek Fairfax’s protestations of his brother’s innocence. Indeed, had she been certain that the letter was from him when she found it, lying between a credit inducement and a card from her dentist on the doormat at Ockham House, she might not even have bothered to open it. There was more urgent business to be attended to. Far more urgent.
Yet in its commission she immediately encountered an obstacle.
When she rang Emerson’s London hotel, it was to be informed that he was out. All she could do was to leave a message asking him to call her.
She retreated to the lounge and sat down, feeling suddenly tired, drained by the long drive and her fruitless efforts to untangle Beatrix’s intentions. Idly, she reopened Derek Fairfax’s letter.
The first thing to be said is that my brother, though something of a rogue, is not the sort to involve himself in any kind of violence. He may well have paid your mother less for her 78
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furniture than it was worth, but he would never be a party to burglary, let alone murder. It is simply not in his nature.
The second thing to be said is that he is not a fool. Yet only a fool would leave his calling card at a house he intended to burgle
and
stress his interest in the object of that burglary in front of witnesses. I just cannot believe he would behave so stupidly.
My brother thinks—and so do I—that he is merely the fall guy for Miss Abberley’s murder, that the purpose of the break-in was to kill her, not to steal her collection of Tunbridge Ware. That is why I am writing to you, to appeal for your help in—
Charlotte dropped the letter on to the coffee-table beside her chair and leaned back against the cushions. The house was silent, gripped by the immobility of a windless summer’s day. She had not yet opened a single window and, until she did so, no sound could intrude upon her thoughts. Was it possible that Fairfax was right? Was it conceivable that somebody had wanted Beatrix dead for a reason of which the police had no inkling? If so, Beatrix had known the reason.
The letters had represented her insurance against murder. They had not protected her. They had not even been intended to. But they had served a significant purpose. That Charlotte could not doubt. A Welshman; a New Yorker; a Parisienne; and Ursula. Beatrix had spoken to each of them from beyond the grave. And it would have been unlike her to speak in vain.
Time passed. Charlotte closed her eyes. And became a child again.
She was at Jackdaw Cottage, dressed for the beach. But she could not set off till she had found Beatrix. And though Beatrix was there, calling to her, she could not tell which room she was in. Every room she went to, upstairs and down, seemed the right one as she approached.
Then, as she entered, she realized Beatrix’s voice was coming from somewhere else. As she searched, she became more anxious, fearful that she would never find her at all. Then there came another sound.
It was the ringing of a telephone. She ran into the hall and picked it up. But the line was dead. And the ringing went on.
H A N D I N G L O V E
79
Suddenly, Charlotte was awake. She jumped up and hurried to reach the telephone before it stopped ringing, struggling to order her thoughts as she went.
The caller was Emerson McKitrick, as she had guessed, eager for news. She apologized for not having been in touch sooner and explained why. In her account of her visit to Lulu, she omitted nothing, but, in relating what Ursula had told her, she studiously avoided any implication of what she had already concluded: that Ursula was lying.
“This beats me,” said Emerson when she had finished. “I mean, Jesus,
blank paper
? What the hell’s the point?”
“I don’t know. I was hoping you might.”
“Do you think that’s what all the letters contained?”
“Again, I don’t know. None of it makes any sense.”
“We should ask the other recipients, I guess.”
“But who are they? Lulu’s only absolutely certain of one of their names.”
“You mean Griffith?”
“Yes. But it’s a very common surname in Wales. We don’t even have an initial.”
“I reckon I can supply that.”
“What?”
“It has to be Frank Griffith, doesn’t it? Haven’t you heard of him?”
“Frank Griffith?” Now, at last, she remembered. Frank Griffith had fought with Tristram Abberley in Spain. He had sent Tristram’s possessions back to Mary after his death. And he had visited Mary after returning to England to describe how Tristram had died. Charlotte had heard her mother describe the visit on several occasions. “Of course. Tristram Abberley’s comrade-in-arms. You must have come across him when you were researching your book.”
“I only wish I had. But I couldn’t trace him. He’d cut himself off from the veterans’ association completely. The general consensus was that he was dead. But Beatrix seems to have known better. It looks like she was holding out on me.”
“Then we’re none the wiser. Dyfed’s a big county. And every other settlement must begin with ‘Llan’.”
“We might be able to get round that.”
“How?”
“Can you take me to Rye again tomorrow? There’s something at Jackdaw Cottage I need to check out. It may help.”
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“Of course. But what is it?”
“I’d sooner say nothing till I’m sure. But, if I’m right, there might be a way to track Mr Frank Griffith to his lair.”
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SIXTEEN
It was Thursday morning and Derek had calculated that this was the first day when he might hope for a reply to one of his letters.
Accordingly, he delayed setting off for Fithyan & Co. in case the postman brought some response from either Maurice Abberley or Charlotte Ladram.
As he waited, the thought crossed his mind that they might simply ignore his appeals altogether. What would he do then? The prospect of another unsolicited visit to Ockham House appalled him, yet, without the help of those who had known Beatrix Abberley, he could gain no glimmer of an insight into why she had been murdered. Without that, Colin’s cause was lost. And Derek, though not threatened with imprisonment, stood to lose something only slightly less important than his liberty. For he believed Colin was innocent. And Colin was relying on him to prove it. If he failed to do so, no excuses would suffice. If he could not save his brother, he could not save his self-respect either.
At that moment, the rattle of the letter-box announced the arrival of the post. He hurried into the hall to find nothing but a flimsy card lying on the mat. He grabbed it up and read: Dear Mr Fairfax
The book you ordered—
Tristram Abberley: A Critical
Biography
—is now to hand and awaiting your collection.
Please bring this—
Derek screwed the card into a tight ball in his hand and let it fall to the floor. Another day was bound to pass now with nothing achieved.
Another day would be wasted when every moment was crucial.
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81
Emerson McKitrick refused to tell Charlotte what he hoped to find at Jackdaw Cottage until they arrived there later that morning. Then he led the way to the bureau in the drawing room.
“Beatrix kept some maps here, Charlie, remember?”
“Yes. What of it?”
“Here they are.” He slid four Ordnance Survey maps out of one of the pigeon-holes. “It struck me as weird when I first saw them. But it didn’t seem important till you told me about Frank Griffith. See?” He laid them out across the flap of the bureau.
“I don’t understand,” said Charlotte, staring down at their unremarkable pink covers.
“Three of them are local, right? Sheet 189 covers Rye, Sheet 188
Tunbridge Wells, Sheet 199 Eastbourne and Hastings. But look at the fourth. Sheet 160 is the odd one out.”
“The Brecon Beacons,” said Charlotte, reading the title.
“You got it. Central Wales. Why should Beatrix want a map of that area?”
“Because it’s where Griffith lives?”
“That’s what I reckon.” He unfolded Sheet 160 and spread it out on the floor. Crouching over it, Charlotte saw no obvious clues, merely the bunched contours and green polygons of an afforested upland landscape. But Emerson saw rather more. “This is the Dyfed boundary, look.” He traced a line of dots and dashes across the left-hand side of the map. “We can ignore everything east of that.”
“Even so—”
“I reckon Beatrix went to see Frank Griffith during her fortnights with Lulu. Cheltenham’s a handy staging post on a journey from Rye to Dyfed, wouldn’t you say?”
“Yes. I suppose it is.”
“OK. And we know she travelled by train. So, where’s the rail-road?”
“There.” Charlotte pointed to a firm black line snaking across the north-west corner. She was excited now, sure that Emerson was right.
“And the biggest settlement served by the railway is—”
“Llandovery.” Emerson grinned at her. “I think we’ve found him, don’t you?”
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SEVENTEEN
The following morning found Charlotte driving fast along the main road that skirts the northern fringes of the Brecon Beacons, with Emerson McKitrick navigating in the passenger seat beside her. They had arrived in Wales the previous evening and had stayed overnight at a country house hotel north-east of Brecon. Emerson, it appeared, was used to the best and had insisted that his newly recruited assistant should travel in style. Charlotte, for her part, had not cared to analyse too closely the exhilaration she felt.
Was it the thrill of the chase or the glamour of the company? To be entertained to dinner in a candlelit restaurant by a handsome American was for her a novel and intoxicating experience. To assume the role of equal partner in his endeavours—however briefly—raised in her mind more alluring possibilities than she felt able to cope with.
Emerson was the perfect gentleman, as charming as he was considerate. Entranced by his gallantry, Charlotte was also confused by it.
Was he merely humouring her? Or was he, perhaps, growing to like her as much as she was growing to like him? He was such an altogether grander type of man than those with whom she had previously been entangled. Not that there was any question of entanglement where she and Emerson were concerned. To let her frail hopes and fragile emotions run away with themselves would be, she knew, the sheerest folly.
And yet, when she had been dressing for dinner, and had glanced from the window of her room and seen him strolling in the hotel garden, champagne-glass in hand, she had allowed herself to imagine for a few heady moments what it would be like if they were there for no reason but the pleasure each could give to the other. And what she had imagined she blushed now to recall.
Llandovery was a grey huddle of a town occupying a wedge of flat land where three rivers met beneath rolling mountain slopes. The beauty of its setting was in stark contrast to the grim reality of its