Read The Portuguese Escape Online

Authors: Ann Bridge

Tags: #Thriller, #Crime, #Historical, #Detective, #Women Sleuth, #Mystery, #British

The Portuguese Escape (39 page)

Julia laughed loudly. ‘Nanny, how marvellous!
Did
he make it worth your while?'

‘Indeed he did, Miss Probyn. He gave me a conto.' (A conto is a thousand escudos, worth about
£
12 : 10 : 0 in English money, but a small fortune in Portugal.) As she spoke Nanny drew a bundle of notes out of her bodice. ‘I
shall give it to Dona Maria Francisca for her poor girls, of course. Then I told him that all this was very irregular, and I should get into terrible trouble if he was found, and I was going to lock the door so that none of the servants could get in and find him. He didn't seem to mind that; in fact he looked quite pleased, and settled down in my old armchair as cool as a cucumber! So I locked the door on him, and rang and ordered our supper—and there he is, and here's the key.' She laid it on the table.

‘Nanny, that is splendid. And Luzia,
how
well you did!'

‘I expect you'll want to tell the Major,' Nanny observed, falling to once more on her cold chicken.

‘Yes, I must. Don't go near him again till I've seen you, Nanny.' She got up.

‘
Can't
I be with you when you tell Torrens?' Luzia implored, getting up too. ‘I
did
find him!'

‘
Major
Torrens, Luzia. And you haven't finished your supper!'

‘Bother my supper! Miss Probyn,
please!
'

‘All right, come on,' Julia said.

Down in the hall she summoned Elidio and told him to fetch the Senhor Comandante out to her. ‘But discreetly, you understand—-so as not to attract attention.'

Major Torrens did not really relish the long formal evenings in that huge, inadequately-lit room, and was relieved at the chance of escape.

‘What goes on?' he asked Julia in the hall.

‘Come into the smoking-room and hear.'

When he had heard what Julia had to tell he considered for a little.

‘You haven't seen him yourself?' he asked. She shook her head. ‘So we don't know for certain that it is the man we want.'

‘Oh, Hugh, would any
other
man with a club beard and a German back to his neck show up here in the kitchen, and ask about foreign priests? We know that the “principal” knows that Father Antal is here, and now we have this person arriving. If you won't ring Marques,
I
shall.'

‘I was going to ring Marques anyhow,' the Major said calmly. ‘Of course I shall tell him what's happened. I
suppose we can do it from the study this time? I hope to goodness he's in now.'

Colonel Marques was in. Torrens told him first, very guardedly, what the Communists had found in Hetta's handbag, and went on to relate how someone ‘corresponding to the description of the fourth man' had been found in the house, making enquiries about ‘divines from other countries'.

‘Where is he now?' the Colonel asked.

‘Under lock and key upstairs. He was promised an interview with one of the divines, and has paid a large bribe to secure it. Should we afford him any interview?'

‘
Ah non, mon cher!
That would be too great a risk. I will come up at once; this is certainly worth investigation. You have not seen him yourself? Nor your lady colleague?'

Neither, Torrens told him; only a very youthful member of the family, and an old member of the staff, a foreigner.

‘
Bon!
Now listen closely,
mon ami
. It would be highly desirable that this inquisitive individual should pass the time till I arrive in a deep and restful sleep; the old servant might perhaps offer him a glass of wine, or a cup of coffee. Can this be arranged? Have you what is necessary?'

‘Of course I have the stuff. But not
coffee
, here; it wouldn't disguise the taste of barley-water!' the Major exclaimed hastily, causing Miss Probyn to laugh. ‘Hold on,' he added, and turned to his ribald lady colleague, his hand over the receiver.

‘Can Nanny administer a drug to the beard? I've got the dope.'

‘Yes, I'm sure she'd love to,' Julia responded heartily.

‘That can be done,' Torrens said into the telephone.

‘Excellent. And please arrange for us to be let in when we arrive: in about six hours from now. An awkward time, I am afraid.'

Torrens glanced at his watch—it was just after ten.

‘I'm sure that will be all right,' he said, remembering his entry into the palace in Lisbon with the two priests in the small hours. ‘See you then.' He rang off.

‘So Nanny is to drug him. Oh, what fun for her!' Luzia exclaimed. ‘I
wish
I could do it!'

‘Let's go up and see Nanny,' Julia said, ignoring her. ‘You get your drug, Hugh, while I get something from Elidio to put it in. Vintage port, don't you think? Oddly enough the Duke has some, and that should mask the taste of your stuff as well as anything, though mind you it isn't really
good
. Port simply won't hold in this climate— the summers are too hot.'

It is a curious fact that the Portuguese themselves have small taste for their country's supreme product, vintage port; they greatly prefer lighter wines. The Duke of Ericeira, however, with his wide circle of English friends, kept a small stock of some of the more noted vintages; only, as Miss Probyn had truly remarked, owing to the very hot summers and the lack of adequate cellerage they were seldom at their best.

‘All right,' Torrens said. ‘Only how I am to find Nanny? This house is like the maze at Hampton Court!'

‘
I
go with you, and bring you to Nanny,' Luzia said eagerly.

‘Yes, you do that, Luzia,' her ex-governess said. ‘Take Major Torrens up. I'll meet you there.'

It gave the measure of Miss Probyn's standing in the Ericeira household that she had little difficulty in causing Elidio to decant a bottle of Graham's 1945 port; this, with a rather large glass, she took from the old servant.

‘
Minha Menina
, let
me
bring this to wherever you desire it,' the butler said earnestly. Julia shook her head.

‘On this one occasion, Elidio, I will take it myself,' she said, smiling; an answering smile, coupled with an expression of ineffable intelligence, overspread the rather monkeyfied visage of the Portuguese. ‘
Muito bem, Minha Menina
,' he said, and let her depart. Elidio had not failed to draw his own conclusions from the arrival of two priests in Lisbon after 1 a.m. the previous Friday; nor from ‘Meess Brown's' escorting, tonight, a
pessoa
from the traveller's table in the kitchen into the house.

Torrens, Luzia, and Nanny were waiting in the latter's sitting-room when Julia arrived with her salver.

‘Well, Nanny, has the Major told you what he wants?' she asked.

‘Yes, Miss Probyn. Quite an unusual request!'

‘Do you think he'll take a glass of port?'

‘I'll see that he does. I shall stay and talk about the foreign priests to him while he drinks it, and ask for more money. Asking for money always sort of carries conviction,' Nanny stated, making Torrens laugh.

‘Let's taste that wine, Julia,' he said.

‘I did. It's quite strong. I'd say it would mask most flavours.'

The Major took out the stopper of the decanter, and sniffed. ‘Wonderful! What is it?'

‘Graham's '45. I asked for that because it's still fairly young. Are you going to put your dope into the whole decanter, or pour out a glass?'

‘I am certainly
not
going to ruin a whole bottle of Graham's ‘45!' the Major said emphatically. ‘I see you've brought a fairly large glass—good.' He filled it; then before the fascinated gaze of the others he drew a small ampoule from his pocket, sawed off the neck, and emptied the contents into the glass of port. He stirred the fluid, carefully, with his little finger, then sucked the finger.

‘Perfect,' he pronounced. ‘This particular thing has very little taste.' He replaced the glass on the silver tray. ‘There you are, Nanny; go and do your stuff. I'll come along behind you, just in case he smells a rat and tries something on.' He picked up the poker from the grate and followed her as she took the tray and went out.

He reappeared in about five minutes. ‘It all seems to be going all right,' he observed. ‘He's drinking it, and talking to her, quite jolly. This acts very gently and gradually, you know.' He looked at the table. ‘Pity we haven't some port glasses! We could use some of this decanter.'

‘
I
shall get them!' Luzia flew from the room before anyone could stop her.

‘This really is the most extraordinary set-up,' Torrens said when she had gone.

‘Rather fun, don't you think?' Julia said contentedly, lighting a cigarette.

‘Put that out, Julia, if you're going to drink port,' Torrens said peremptorily. ‘It's desecration to smoke before stuff like this.'

‘Oh, very well.' Always good-natured, Julia flung her
cigarette into the fireplace—the Major looked on her with love.

‘Darling, do you know that you really are an
absolute
darling?' he said, getting up as he spoke.

‘Hugh dear, cut it out! Luzia will be back any minute, and you remember that we agreed to cut all this out till the Hetta-Antal business was finished, only the other day in the knot-garden, when the Duque and the holies interrupted us.'

‘It isn't easy to cut it out when you're so sweet,' the Major was beginning, when Luzia flew in.

‘There you are! Nanny
loves
port,' the young girl said, banging four exquisite Marinha Grande port-glasses down on the table. Like port, the beautiful glass of Marinha Grande is a product which Portugal owes to English enterprise; as long ago as 1748 a factory was started there by John Beare, and carried on by the Stephens brothers, who prudently secured from the great Pombal the right to buy wood for their furnaces in the neighbouring forest of Leiria, the oldest man-controlled forest in the world; since the 13th century this has been felled, replanted, and thinned under human direction. Julia was telling the Major about this when Nanny came in.

‘Gone down?' Torrens asked.

‘Yes, Major; he quite enjoyed it. I
hinted
about some more money, so he gave me another conto!—and he was half-asleep when I left.'

‘Splendid, Nanny!'

‘Hugh, hadn't we better go and have a look at him presently, to see if he really is the man I saw on the road outside Cascais?' Julia asked.

‘Give him another quarter of an hour,' Torrens said, looking at his watch. ‘He'll have passed clean out by then. And meanwhile, I think we might drink Nanny's and Luzia's health.'

After fifteen minutes pleasantly spent drinking admirable port they proceeded along the east corridor to the old night-nurseries, where Nanny unlocked the door. There, slackly sunk down in an old-fashioned nursery armchair, upholstered in faded cretonne patterned with turkey-cocks, lay Nanny's captive, snoring gently, his mouth half-open.
Major Torrens went over to him and lifted an eyelid; getting no response he briskly felt him all over, and from a pocket extracted a small revolver, which he pocketed himself. Then he turned to Julia.

‘Is that your man?' he asked.

‘The beard's all right. Let me see the back of his head.'

The Major heaved the inert figure upwards and forwards, out of the comfortable cup-shaped back of the old chair.

‘Yes, rolls of fat! I'm sure that's him.'

The Major replaced the man in the chair and they all went out, Nanny locking the door.

‘Nanny, I'd better have that key,' Torrens said. ‘The head of the Security Police will be here about 4 a.m. to collect this person, and I don't want to dig you out of bed at that hour.'

‘Very well, Major. Does his Grace know? Elidio will have to wait up.'

‘No, I must see his Grace now.' He looked at his watch. ‘We'd better get hold of him at once.'

‘Yes. And you're for bed, Miss!' Nanny said firmly to Luzia, and swept her off.

Chapter 17

The drawing-room party was just breaking up when Torrens and Julia got downstairs. The girl shepherded Hetta and Mrs. Hathaway to their rooms, while in the study Torrens, over a whisky, was about to inform his host of the events upstairs when Mgr Subercaseaux poked his head round the door. ‘Do I intrude?' he asked; the Monsignor liked a nightcap. Torrens frowned, involuntarily.

‘Yes, I see that I do. Good night, my dear Duke.'

‘No, Monsignor—come in, come in!' his host said. Then he, too, noticed Torrens' face. ‘You did not wish to speak to me
privately
?' he asked, recalling that the Major had rather formally requested a few minutes with him.

‘Well, as a matter of fact I did, Sir; but I don't suppose it much matters the Monsignor hearing what I have to say.'

‘Then shut the door and come and sit down, Monsignor. Say when.'

Torrens told his tale. The Duke listened with half-incredulous delight. ‘Incredible!' he ejaculated. ‘And you mean that man is in the house now?'

‘Yes, Sir; in some disused rooms upstairs.'

‘Do let us see him!' Subercaseaux exclaimed. ‘A spy spotted by a
jeune fille
and drugged by a
bonne
is really something worth looking at!'

The Duke was also quite anxious to see his daughter's prize.

‘I hope I can find the room,' Torrens said, rather doubtfully, as they went upstairs; however, on the landing they encountered Miss Probyn, who had just said Good night to Mrs. Hathaway. ‘Ah good, Julia. You can conduct us to that creature. The Duke and the Monsignor want to see him.'

In the old night-nursery the Duke did not at first so much as look at the man lying slackly in Nanny Brown's armchair by the fireplace; instead his glance strayed to a
little cot in one corner, a tiny chair and a low table, miniatures for a child's use. Julia knew why. He was thinking back to the little son who had not lived to carry on his name and care for his estates. When at last he did examine the drugged figure—‘He looks like a Baltic German,' he observed. ‘How strange.'

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