Read A Proposal to Die For Online
Authors: Vivian Conroy
Alkmene nodded. âVery smart of you. And did you learn anything?'
Oksana Matejevna looked at her blankly.
Alkmene clarified, âDid you go back, and could the bellboy tell you anything about visitors to her room?'
âOh. Yes. She had several visitors. Two ladies, all in black, and a man in a great coat.'
Dubois sat up straighter. âA man in a coat? Old, young, hunched, straight, what?'
Oksana Matejevna shrugged. âThe boy said he wasâ¦how do you say? Bundled up? I do not know what it means exactly, but he was not to be seen clearly. The boy had no idea who he was.'
Alkmene looked at Dubois. âCan it be the same man as the mysterious visitor to her uncle the night he died?'
Dubois grimaced. âCould be, but if he manages to conceal his appearance so well, how will we ever find him?'
Oksana Matejevna sighed. âI gave the boy more money to look for me.'
âYou mean watch out for new visitors?'
Oksana Matejevna shook her head. She looked down into her lap. âTo look through Ms Steinbeck's things.'
âWhat?' Dubois sat up straight. âAnd he agreed to do that?'
Oksana Matejevna shifted her weight in her chair. âI paid him a great deal.'
The countess tut-tut-ed. âYou should not be so free with my money, Oksana.' But there was a half smile around her lips.
Dubois said, âAnd what did he find?'
âI was going to ask him later today.'
âYou do that. Then report back to me. I live on Meade Street â 33 upstairs.' Dubois rose and bowed to the countess. âI am sorry if we caused any inconvenience to your household. But we have to discover who is behind this blackmail. It might also help explain the murder of Mr Silas Norwhich.'
The countess nodded. âOf course. I can tell you that there can never be any proof of me betraying my husband. I have never done that, nor will I ever do it. I love him.'
âThey probably feed off people's fears of being exposed, the idea that where there is smoke, there will probably be a real fire.' Dubois rubbed his chin thoughtfully. âIt is strange though that they asked for this particular brooch.'
He walked up to Alkmene, who still held the brooch in her hand. He took it from her and turned the brooch over and over. âIs there anything particular about it? Different from other heirlooms you have? Is it worth more?'
The countess gestured at him to come over to her. She accepted the brooch from his hand and studied it with a loving smile. âIt is precious to me because of the memories attached. My father giving it to my mother when they got engaged. It is worth money, but so is most of what I own. I really have no idea why they did not ask for something else.'
Dubois nodded. âPerhaps it was chosen with the express purpose of being fastened on that curtain. You cannot do that with a necklace or ring. Thank you for seeing us. We now better be on our way.'
The countess waved her hand at Oksana Matejevna to see them out. Smiling down on the brooch, she reseated herself in the throne-like chair.
Alkmene was already at the door, when the countess called after her, âPity it was not some news about the two of you. You make such a handsome pair.'
Outside in the street Alkmene hoped that Dubois would pretend like he had not heard that last remark, or did not understand it. The countess obviously had no idea how painful it was to pair off people in their presence. If she had not been a Russian princess, and a dear friend, Alkmene might have said something to the point.
But she wanted to protect the acquaintance, especially now that Oksana Matejevna turned out to have some sleuthing talent of her own.
âNormally,' Dubois said in a level tone as he walked beside her, hands folded on his back, âmy next stop would have been the Hotel Metropolitan to see Ms Steinbeck and hear her thoughts on her uncle's death. I have heard she has been very sparse with information, even to the police. She might be afraid of a scandal; she might also be involved somehow and worried it will all come out. But since Oksana Matejevna might get something useful out of that bellboy first, we should not show our faces at the hotel right now. I think we had better walk down to the coffee shop on the corner and see if my police contact is there for lunch. He'll have the latest on the murder.'
âI thought you said the police were your worst enemies in some cases?' Alkmene asked with a frown.
Dubois straightened up, put his hands in his pockets and inhaled the fresh air with relish. âIn some cases. Not in all.'
He seemed to consider how much he could tell her. At last he said, âLook, Norwhich's death was treated as an accident so they just put some young constable on it, who doesn't feel yet like he is above the rest of the world. He doesn't see me as a threat, but an opportunity. He thinks it would be great if he could prove it was murder and he could get a promotion out of it.'
âAnd you the headline,' Alkmene added.
Dubois glanced at her. âI am just doing my job. It is not something dirty.'
âWhy did you become a reporter anyway?'
He shrugged. âI worked in a factory in France and exposed some scheme going on. I earned more with that story than I had in four months of hard labour there. It opened up some doors too, and I suddenly found myself in Paris, investigating a crime ring calling themselves The Accountants, as in those who equalize the balance.'
âRobin Hood like, steal from the rich and give to the poor?'
Dubois nodded. âIt was more like: steal from other criminals who can't go to the police because the things stolen were not theirs to begin with. Suppose you have some stolen jewels in a safe in your home and one morning you find the safe broken into and the jewels missing. What can you do? You cannot report it to the police as they would find out you had stolen them to begin with.'
âThe Accountants used the thieves' only weakness against them.'
âRight. It was an interesting assignment, which took me deep into the heart of the ring.'
âIs that when you got arrested and ended up in prison?'
He glanced at her. âDoes my conviction bother you?'
She shrugged. âIt is intriguing.'
Dubois laughed softly. âJust dangerous, huh, and almost kind of fun? Well, I can tell you it was not fun.'
Alkmene bit her lip. He made it sound like she was completely shallow. It was true she had no idea what it was like to be part of a crime ring, and she might see it a little too much like an adventure. But that was merely because she had no idea of what it was really like. How could she ever know what it was like, unless somebody would tell her?
But she bet that if she asked him to tell her more about it, he'd refuse to share.
So she said, âAnd after your time with that crime ring, you came here?'
âYes, after I got exposed, my face was known to a lot of criminals, so I was better off moving. I came here.'
âTo your father's homeland? I assume since you said your mother was French, she was called Dubois? You have her name?' She wanted to push on and ask if he was looking for his father, but his grim expression at the mention of it made her reconsider. It didn't look like Dubois was eager for a reunion.
He nodded. âI grew up believing my father had been killed in a robbery gone wrong, at the bank where he worked, even before I was born. Only when my mother was on her deathbed, she confessed to me he had been English, staying in Provence for the summer. He had met her, made her promises of taking her to England, where she would have her own bakery.'
His face set in hard lines. âAll lies of course. He deserted her even though she was pregnant by that time. He had never meant to take her back here and give her all the things he had promised her to win her for him. He was already engaged to be married.'
Alkmene winced. That made it painfully clear why he cringed at the idea of what his father had been. A liar who had made his mother's life miserable. Who had forsaken her and his son. âYou came here to find him. To confront him.'
Now a smile curled the corners of his mouth. âThe thought crossed my mind. But no, I am not looking for him. I came here to start a new life, not revel in the past. I don't want to know who he was and why he did it. I don't want to know what weak excuses he might have had for his behaviour. I would rather just loathe him for what he did and swear I will be a better man.'
Alkmene stared ahead where the coffee house they were headed for already beckoned with its bright red and blue sign.
Dubois touched her a moment, with his elbow, like poking her into attention. âI didn't tell you this to make you feel sorry for me. I just don't have any liking for my English father and his English privilege. I came here to London to investigate crime stories and see that there is just as much squalor here as in the back alleys of Calais or Marseilles.'
To prove his heritage was no less. âThere were good people there too, I presume?'
Dubois smiled. âLots.'
âIt's the same thing here.' She glanced at him. âOne bad apple doesn't mean the entire basket full of them is wasted.'
He didn't respond.
Outside the coffee house he looked in through one of the narrow windows, divided into threes by small lead bars. âOh, shoot.'
âWhat is it?'
âHe is not alone but with this large fellow with the red moustache. I don't know his name, but he saw me once during a bar fight and he got the idea I was the cause of the fight and the damage. Say, how about you go in and engage him in some story of your umbrella having been stolen just now? Once he is out with you to retrieve the missing object, I will talk to the constable and we can meet up again in say half an hour on the corner of Meade Street. I still owe you that fish meal.'
Alkmene was happy he remembered and wanted to treat her, but she wasn't so happy with having to deceive a member of the official police force with lies about a stolen umbrella. She cast Dubois a doubtful look.
âIf you can't do itâ¦' he said slowly.
She exhaled and made for the coffee house entrance, calling at him, âYour fish had better be excellent.'
Inside it smelled of a strong mocha, mixed with sweet baked wares. The constable was sitting with a mug in his hands, the red moustache with him biting into some large cinnamon-strewn bread-like slice. He looked up at her as she approached, appraising her with his sharp blue eyes. She forced a wide smile. âExcuse meâ¦'
She made sure only to look at him, not the other man. âMy dog ran down some steps and disappeared into somebody's basement. I called out for it, but it won't come back to me. I also tried attracting the attention of the inhabitants of the house, but I got no response either. I don't dare go in myself, as I would be trespassing. Would you mind getting the dog for me?'
The moustache looked at the other man. Before he could delegate this small job to his subordinate, Alkmene added with a smile, âI am sure that my father, Lord Horatius Callender, would be most happy to recompense you for any inconvenience this might cause.'
The moustache was on his feet already. âI am at your service, Lady Callender.' He looked down on the other man, snapping, âDon't stare like an idiot, Gordon. Wait here for me. I will be right back.'
He followed her outside, pulling his uniform jacket straight. âNow where would this have happened, Lady Callender?'
Ignoring the wrong address â after all, the poor man probably didn't deal with members of the peerage every day â Alkmene took him down the street, in the same direction Dubois and she had come from.
She knew for certain that there was an open basement door there. She had seen nobody at it and suspected that the servants were in the back of the house having lunch and had left the door open by accident.
Moustache could have a look inside without disturbing anybody and when the dog wasn't found â obviously as there had never been one â she would excuse herself and say it had probably found its own way out and would be home by now. Moustache might be chagrined, but he'd never show it to her, for her father's sake. Under the cover of her title she was cut out for jobs like this, and if Dubois realized that well, he'd need her to complete the case.
Moustache, however, did not look into the basement door. He immediately marched up the stone steps of the house in question and rang the doorbell.
Cringing, Alkmene waited at the foot of the steps, clenching her hands at this potentially disastrous turn of events.
Nobody came to answer the door.
Moustache rang once more and then came back down to her. He cast a suspicious look at the basement door, then went down the steps to study it up close. âThere are footprints here,' he called out. âIn coal.'
Alkmene smiled nervously. âMy dog's?'
âNo, of a man.' Moustache reached for the short stick attached to his belt and with this assault weapon in hand, he disappeared into the darkness.
Alkmene waited a moment for an anguished cry of pain as the determined sergeant hit an innocent coal delivery man over the head with his stick only to find he had business there and the allegedly missing dog was nowhere in sight.
But there was no sound of grunting, or a struggle, coming from the basement door.
Alkmene paced up and down the pavement, smiling innocently at the passers-by who slowed their steps to stare at her. She wished Moustache wouldn't take for ever searching that basement. Judging by the time he took, it had to run all the way under the house to the other side, where there might be a backyard. If there was an open door there as well, Moustache might conclude the dog had run out and continue searching on the other side.
Not bad maybe. After all, Dubois needed his time with the constable, to get the information he needed about the murder case. She was curious what the latest might be.
For a moment Alkmene's thoughts swerved to India where her father would be yelling at his native servants to hold the parasol over his head while he scoured some jungle patch for poisonous plants, having absolutely no idea of the antics of his only daughter whom he believed to be writing some letters or visiting with an innocent female friend.