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Authors: Andrew Taylor

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16

Y
OU LIKE TO THINK
that in those days Philippa Penhow had moments of happiness.

Saturday, 5 April 1930

Here I am, sitting at my desk in the window of my own morning room looking out at my own garden! For the first time in my life, I am the mistress of my own establishment. How strange and delightful--I have always lived in other people's houses--the first with Mother and Father, then with Aunt, and then at the Rushmere.

We moved in only yesterday, in a great rush, and my heart sinks when I think of everything there is to do. This room and our bedroom are reasonably habitable, but everywhere else needs redecorating. I have two maids to keep in order--Rebecca, a nice sensible sort of woman who once worked at Rawling Hall and knows how things ought to be done, and Amy, a rather flighty young thing--I can see already that she will need a good deal of instruction and supervision. When I was giving my orders to Rebecca after breakfast, Amy came running into the kitchen like an excited child. She was holding a dripping skull in her hand! A goat's skull! One of the farm workers had been clearing a ditch and he had found it in the water. He left it on a tree stump in the orchard. These simple country folk have a very strange sense of humor, I must say.

The sun is out, I'm in my new home, my spirits are high. But I must confess that yesterday evening I felt a little low. Joseph was very preoccupied. He spent much of the day driving our new car up and down the drive, practicing the gears, etc.

I had expected that he would share my excitement at being here. I must sound very foolish but I had hoped for a loving word or a gentle touch. I'm sure my Joseph is as happy as I am, but men find it hard to show their feelings. And of course he has a lot to worry about. I thought he drank rather a lot of brandy after supper. I went up to bed, expecting him to join me. He did not, however. This morning, at breakfast, he said he had not wanted to disturb me, as he had stayed up late with the accounts, and so he dozed on the sofa in front of the fire. He said that old soldiers can sleep anywhere.

He may have to go up to London on Monday on business. I thought perhaps he might invite me to come with him but as yet he has not. I expect it has not occurred to him that I might like to come. Perhaps I shall mention it.

On Saturday Lydia caught a tram down from Theobald's Road to the Embankment and walked along the river. It was a fine, cold afternoon and the water swayed and sparkled like shot silk.

Here at least was a sense of space. Lately, as the city became increasingly oppressive, closing round her like one of its own fogs, she had begun to dream about the countryside. She wanted trees, rivers, muddy fields and broad, empty skies. Rory Wentwood had gone down to Hereford for the weekend, and she envied him.

The walk took longer than she had expected, and she was footsore by the time she turned up from the river toward Sloane Square. Alvanley Mansions was a large block of flats perhaps thirty years old. It was a solid, dull place of red brick, with gleaming brass letter boxes and scrubbed steps. She enquired for the Alfordes at the desk, and the porter directed her to the lift.

A middle-aged maid showed her into a drawing room at the front of the flat. The room was so full of things that for a moment Lydia failed to notice the people. You could hardly see the wallpaper because there were so many pictures, hung seemingly at random in order to squeeze as many as possible onto the wall. Then Mrs. Alforde rose from a desk tucked into the corner beside an immense glass-fronted display cabinet crammed with china. And Colonel Alforde tottered out from the shelter of a high-backed sofa, his left arm outstretched, and his right arm hanging awkwardly by his side.

"My dear Lydia. Very glad you could come." His left hand shook her right.

Mrs. Alforde was short and plump, whereas her husband was long and thin. She shook hands vigorously, as though operating a pump handle. "You've got quite a color in your cheeks, dear," she said in a tone which made it hard to distinguish whether it was intended as a compliment or a criticism.

"I walked up from the Embankment."

"A nice afternoon for it." Colonel Alforde settled her in a chair. "Hermione tells me you're staying at Bleeding Heart Square. Can't say I can place it. Where is it precisely?"

"Near Holborn."

"I don't think I've ever known anybody who actually lives in that part of the world." Alforde chewed the ends of his long, gray moustache. "Still, it must be very...very central. And your father? How's he keeping?"

"Very well, thank you," Lydia said, and added another lie: "He sends his regards, of course."

Both Alfordes looked disconcerted by this news. "Not seen him for a while," the Colonel said at last. "Used to run into each other a good deal before the war." The muscles around his mouth trembled. "Things were different then. Everything was very different."

The maid brought the tea. Alforde's good hand trembled so much that he spilled his over his waistcoat. Mrs. Alforde dabbed at him with a napkin; her passionless efficiency suggested that this was a regular occurrence. He ate nothing, but pressed cake on Lydia as though she were a hungry child.

"And how's that husband of yours?" he asked. "Nice young fellow."

"He's very well, I believe."

"I hear he's joined the Fascists. They seem a pretty sound outfit. A lot of ex-servicemen so they understand discipline. And they realize the importance of avoiding another war and the importance of the Empire. This Mosley chap has the right idea. Of course he knows first hand what war was like. I met him once in France, you know. Quite a young firebrand in those days, a little too reckless, but he's settled down since then. No more war, that's the important thing. No more war." He began to speak more slowly, like a clockwork motor running down. "No more war."

Mrs. Alforde patted his shoulder. "There, there, dear. It's all right. Nobody is going to be silly enough to have another war."

He looked at his wife with wide, panic-stricken eyes. "You can't be sure of that. And the next time nowhere will be safe. They'll bomb all our cities."

"Of course they won't, dear. Now, isn't it time you had your medicine and a little lie-down? I'm sure Lydia will excuse you."

Mrs. Alforde rang the bell. She and the maid helped the old man out of the room. When Mrs. Alforde came back alone, Lydia was on her feet.

"I think perhaps I ought to be going. Thank you so much for asking me."

"Do sit down, and in a moment we'll ring for more tea. I'm sorry you had to see Gerry like that."

"Is he all right?"

"Not really. He was too long in France. They kept sending him back to the front, and he felt so responsible for his men. He can keep up appearances for a little but you can never quite tell what's going to set him off. Sometimes it's a motorbike backfiring on the street. Or seeing a soldier in uniform. Or a headline in the paper. Even the mention of war can do it."

"I'm so sorry."

"Yes, well we have to make the best of it." Mrs. Alforde folded her hands on her lap and looked at Lydia with bright little eyes. "We all have our crosses to bear." She went on, without any change of tone: "I had lunch with your mother on Tuesday."

Lydia said nothing.

"She is very worried about you, you know. I gather you and Marcus have been having a difficult time."

"That's one way of describing it."

"You mustn't mind my talking about it, dear," Mrs. Alforde said. "After all, Gerry's your godfather, and if his health permitted, I'm sure he would be saying exactly the same things as I am."

"My mother asked you to talk to me, I suppose."

"Yes."

"I don't want to go back to Marcus."

"That's as may be, dear. But it doesn't follow that it's suitable for you to be with your father."

Lydia frowned. "I don't understand. I know he's not well off but at least he is my father."

"I'm not disputing that. But I don't think you fully understand about his little weaknesses. Your mother has always tried to spare you. She thinks now however that you ought to know. And she asked me to talk to you because she wasn't sure you'd believe her." Mrs. Alforde looked sternly at Lydia over the top of her glasses. "Which is in itself a very sad state of affairs."

Lydia looked around the overcrowded room. She heard movement elsewhere in the flat, a door closing, raised voices. Was the maid some sort of nurse as well? She wondered what it was like to live with someone poised on the brink of a mental breakdown, someone who occasionally fell over the brink. She said, "If you want to tell me something about him, you'd better go ahead and get it over with."

Mrs. Alforde nodded. "Very wise. It's always more sensible to know these things. Now, let me see: you were born in 1905, weren't you? It all came to a head the previous winter. Gerry and I had been married in July and it was our first Christmas together. We were down at his uncle's place. Rawling Hall, near Saffron Walden. Your father was there too. He was Aunt Connie's nephew. Gerry knew him quite well--he'd met him out in India once or twice when his battalion was there. But your father had resigned his commission since then. It had all been rather sudden, I'm afraid, and in the circumstances Gerry was quite surprised to see him at Rawling." Mrs. Alforde paused. "To be perfectly frank, my dear, he left the army under a cloud. In fact, if his CO hadn't wanted to avoid the scandal, he would have been cashiered."

"What had he done?"

"Forged several checks, falsified the accounts and embezzled the mess funds," Mrs. Alforde said crisply, abandoning finesse. "No doubt about it. One of the NCOs was involved as well, a mess sergeant. I believe the sergeant went to jail. And there was your father, as bold as brass, at Rawling Hall. But Aunt Connie always had a soft spot for him. She'd given him a little job to do--he was making pen-and-ink sketches of the chimney pieces that Gerry's uncle had put in the drawing room and the library. Can't think why--horrible pseudo-Jacobean things; best forgotten. The maids hated dusting them."

"I'm glad someone had a soft spot for him."

Mrs. Alforde glanced at her. "I'm sorry to have to say that he was cold-shouldered by the men down there and by most of the women too. And then he seduced your mother under our very noses. Do you know, she was only just sixteen? She wasn't even out. He was after her money, of course. Not that she wasn't very lovely too. And the very final straw was that he didn't even trouble to take precautions. He made the poor girl pregnant. With you, in fact. Of course she had no choice but to marry him. We all rallied round, for your mother's sake. But no one was surprised that the marriage didn't last."

"You make him sound very ruthless," Lydia said quietly. "Very calculating."

"My dear, he was. Of course he ran through the money in a year or two. I gather he's a sad case now. Even so, he's not to be trusted. So that's why I think you're better off without him."

Lydia sat staring straight ahead and said nothing.

"All marriages have their ups and downs," Mrs. Alforde went on. "Gerry and I--well, I won't go into details but it hasn't always been easy. But one soldiers on. I'm sure you and Marcus will soon be rubbing along together perfectly well again. And it would make your mother so happy."

Lydia looked at her hostess. Mrs. Alforde was a nice woman, she thought, and doing her best. It wasn't her fault that her best had nothing to do with what Lydia wanted, and nothing to do with what was actually happening.

"Now promise me, dear--you will at least think about it."

Lydia shook her head. "I'm sorry, I'm not going back to Marcus. I wasn't before and I'm certainly not now, when I've seen him and my mother behaving like farmyard animals together."

She sat back and watched the blood leave Mrs. Alforde's face. All the vitality drained out of the older woman. She looked small, pale and frightened.

By the middle of Tuesday morning Rory had already smoked the third of the three cigarettes which were, in theory, his ration for that day. He was typing yet another letter of application on the Royal Portable and trying to resist the temptation to light a fourth.

He had spent the weekend in Hereford with his parents and his sisters. Here the familiar rituals of his childhood continued to be observed, except all the participants were older than they had been. Despite the comforts of home--despite the freshly laundered sheets, the excellent leg of lamb for Sunday lunch, his father's Navy Cut cigarettes--there had been something unreal, even stultifying, about the weekend. He had been glad to get away, even though it was only to return to the uncertainties of an independent life with a failed engagement, dwindling savings and no prospect of ever earning a decent income.

He heard the muffled sound of the postman's knock, and movement in the house below. Then came footsteps on his own stairs and a tap on his door. When he opened it, Lydia Langstone was waiting outside on the landing. She was carrying a parcel and her face was slightly flushed from the exertion of climbing the stairs.

She held out the parcel. "It was for you. I thought I might as well bring it up."

"Thank you."

She turned to go, and then looked back at him. "Do you remember when you showed me that cufflink the other day? When we had lunch."

He nodded. "Of course."

"I happened to hear at the weekend that the Fascists have hired the chapel undercroft for another meeting."

"Really? When?"

"Saturday week. The first of December, I think. Apparently it's part of a big push to attract businessmen to the movement."

"By telling them the Fascists will shoot all the reds under the beds and make sure there will always be a market for British goods?"

"Something like that. Do you think it was Fascists who attacked you?"

He shrugged. "I don't know. I couldn't find anything else that supported the idea. The most likely explanation is that somebody just happened to lose a cufflink there and it had nothing to do with me whatsoever."

He thanked her again and said goodbye. He stood for a moment watching her as she clattered down the stairs. A strange, nervy woman, he thought, all bones and breeding like a racehorse. He went back into his sitting room, pushed the typewriter aside and put the parcel on the table. It was addressed to him at Bleeding Heart Square but he didn't recognize the writing. He cut the string with his penknife and pulled the brown paper apart. The paper was creased and with jagged edges, part of a larger sheet that had been used before.

There was another layer of darker brown paper underneath. The second layer wasn't secured in any way. He saw material inside, some sort of tweed. He pulled it from its wrapping and held it up.

It was a skirt made of blue-green Irish tweed, rather worn in places. Part of the hem had come down. A sheet of lined paper fluttered from the folds of the skirt and down to the floor. He picked it up. The enclosure looked as if it had been torn from an exercise book. It was a letter, without date or address at the head, written in round, unformed writing.

Dear Sir,

This was in Narton's cupboard. I reckon it belongs to Miss Penhow. I don't know how to find her or the lady it's addressed to, so maybe her niece had better have it for her. It's no good to me. I don't want it.

Yours faithfully,
M. Narton

Rory dropped the note on the table and picked up the inner packaging. Nothing was written on it apart from Mrs. Renton's name in neat, familiar handwriting.

Mrs. Renton?

Something blue protruded from the waistband of the skirt, an un-sealed envelope also with Mrs. Renton's name on it in the same handwriting. Rory removed the single sheet of notepaper it contained.

Morthams Farm
Rawling
Saffron Walden
Essex

April 22nd 1930

Dear Mrs. Renton,

As we arranged, I enclose my winter skirt for alteration. I think it has at least another year in it, perhaps two. Please take in the waist by three quarters of an inch. Would you redo the hem as well--as you will see, it is coming down. If the blouses are ready, please put them in with the skirt and give them to my husband when you see him.

Yours sincerely,
P. M. Serridge (Mrs.)

Rory took out his writing case and compared the letter with the sample of Miss Penhow's handwriting that he had found in the chest of drawers. There was no reason to doubt that they had been written by the same person.

He sat down at the table and lit a fourth and unlicensed cigarette. Mrs. Renton--what on earth had she to do with this? Leaving that aside, nothing in the letter suggested that Miss Penhow was planning to leave Morthams Farm and Serridge. Nothing suggested that there was any strain between the two of them, either. On the other hand, if Miss Penhow had been devious, the letter might have been designed to throw Serridge off the scent. Rory's mind followed the tortuous logic of this: but perhaps that implied that Miss Penhow expected Serridge to read the letter, and the further implication of that was that she had reason to believe that Serridge no longer trusted her. And then there was the question of how Narton had come to have the parcel. Rory could only assume that it had been taken as evidence when the police were investigating the disappearance of Miss Penhow, and that Narton had removed it for his own purposes after he had lost his job.

He smoked the rest of the cigarette. He folded the skirt and its accompanying letter in the brown paper and carried it downstairs to the first floor, where he knocked on the door of Ingleby-Lewis's sitting room. Lydia opened the door.

"Sorry to disturb you, but I wonder if you could advise me about this parcel." He shifted his position in order to get a better view, trying to establish whether or not Ingleby-Lewis was inside. "That is, if you've got a moment."

"Yes, of course." She stood back, holding the door open.

To Rory's relief, there was no one else in the room. It looked as if Lydia had been writing a letter. "Are you busy?"

"Nothing that can't wait." She moved swiftly past him, slipped her letter under the blotter and capped her fountain pen.

"What is it?" she said, looking at the parcel.

"It's a skirt. It's all rather odd." At that moment it occurred to him that he and Lydia had not talked properly for days and even then, at their lunch at the Blue Dahlia, he had said nothing about Narton. Lydia was looking at him with close attention, as if she found what she saw very interesting. He went on in a rush, "When we had lunch the other week, I told you something about Miss Penhow."

"I remember."

Still standing, they faced each other across the table.

"I didn't tell you everything." He paused, and wished that she would say something. "In particular, I didn't mention that I had been approached by a man called Narton, who's been watching this house for some time. He said he was a plain-clothes police officer and he wanted my help. Like me, he was interested in the Penhow case. He said the police hadn't been able to find any evidence that Serridge had done away with her, but they weren't satisfied."

"A little man, middle-aged, in an old tweed coat and a hard collar?"

"How did you know that?"

"I saw you together once in the Blue Dahlia."

"You're observant. You think there's any chance that Serridge might have seen us too?"

Lydia shrugged. "Not that I know of. Anyway, what happened?"

"He persuaded me to go to Rawling and talk to the Vicar. He said he couldn't go himself, or one of his colleagues, because the Vicar was a chum of Serridge's, and he didn't want to run the risk of Serridge finding out that the police were still interested. But then I happened to discover that Narton himself lived in Rawling, which was something he hadn't seen fit to tell me. The next thing was that I found a copy of the local newspaper in the dustbin downstairs when I was throwing out my rubbish." He wondered whether to mention the goat's skull but decided to leave that until later. "It must have been Serridge's. There was a stop-press item about a man who had died at a cottage in Rawling at the beginning of the week. It was Narton."

The silence in the big, cold room lay heavily over everything. He watched Lydia swallow. He wished he hadn't been such a fool as to mention this. She would blurt it all out to her father, who would tell Serridge. Or she would even tell Serridge herself, Serridge who might well be sweet on her.

"I think we'd better sit down," Lydia said. "Don't you?"

She sat down and waved him to the seat opposite hers. He laid the parcel on the table, dislodging the blotter in the process. Rory felt the muscles in his shoulders relax. He had been tense for a long time, he realized, though he had not been aware of it. The reason for the slackening of tension arrived in his mind a split second afterward: it was a relief to have told someone about Narton at last, even Lydia Langstone, a woman whom he didn't really know.

Shifting the blotter had exposed part of the letter that Lydia had been writing. Rory had just time to read the address, the date and the salutation of the letter:
Dear Mrs. Alforde
. Lydia pushed the blotter to the other side of the table, covering the letter as she did so.

Once again his muscles tensed. He hadn't been open with her, so why should he expect her to be open with him?

She was looking at him, her lips slightly parted. "How did he die?"

"While cleaning a shotgun."

"Which means it was probably suicide?"

"Yes. And there was something else," Rory went on. "Mrs. Narton said that her husband had been forced to leave the police force three years ago."

"Then why was he still so interested in Serridge?"

"I'm coming to that. I thought I'd go and see the Vicar again, see if he could help. It was lunchtime so I had to kick my heels for a time. I was in the churchyard and I saw a gravestone for Amy Narton, who died in 1931. She was the daughter. Then I talked to the Vicar, who more or less came out and said that Narton had been unbalanced by his daughter's death. She died in childbirth and nobody knew who the baby's father was. She had worked at Morthams Farm, but the Vicar saw no reason to believe that it was Serridge. But later I talked to the maid, and she told a rather different story. She had no doubt Serridge was responsible." He hesitated and then plunged on. "She'd found a photograph of Amy in the nude on a bicycle. Apparently that was part of his courting technique."

Lydia snorted with laughter. "Surely that's a joke? Please tell me it is."

"I don't think so. Serridge persuaded the village maidens that it was how smart ladies up in London learned to ride their bikes."

"Imagine it. Hyde Park on a Sunday afternoon."

He smiled at her. "Rebecca thought he was keeping Miss Penhow a virtual prisoner at the farm, and that he had another mistress in London as well. A strange girl was seen at the farm just before Miss Penhow disappeared. And there were two other things which were even stranger. The first was that Serridge used to come to Rawling Hall--that's the big house near the village--before the war. So he knew the place already. And the second thing was even stranger, and I don't pretend to understand it. There were--some skulls, the skulls of animals, in the place where the maid was talking to me. Her nephew was with us, and they were his pride and joy. And it seemed one of them had gone missing. The skull of a billy goat."

Lydia stiffened. "With very long horns? Sort of swept back?"

"So you saw it too?"

"Yes. Or something very like it. It came in the post for Mr. Serridge. He opened it in here." She caught up with the implication of the word
too
. "But when did you see it? And where?"

"Last week. It was in one of the dustbins downstairs. Along with the Mavering newspaper that mentioned Narton's death."

"None of it makes sense, does it? Not if you try to put it all together. What will you do?"

Rory ran his fingers through his hair. "I don't know."

"And now Mrs. Renton? How does she come into it?"

"No idea. Have a look at the parcel. I suppose I should give it to Miss Kensley."

He watched Lydia reading the letters and examining the skirt. She looked at him.

"Why don't you show this to Mrs. Renton first? After all, it's addressed to her. See what she says--it can't do any harm. So when you give it to Miss Kensley, you can say you've done everything that you possibly could."

"All right. I'll ask her now. Thanks awfully. You've been very helpful."

She glanced sideways at him. "Not at all."

He picked up the skirt and the letters and went downstairs, leaving her folding the wrapping paper at the table. He knocked on the door of Mrs. Renton's room. There was no answer. He knocked again with the same result. He went back upstairs. As he reached the first-floor landing, Lydia came out from the little kitchen.

"No luck?" she said.

"She's not in." Rory's mind ran ahead to the rest of the day: he himself would have to go out, back to combing through the Situations Vacant boards in the public library. "It will have to wait. I need to go out."

"Would you like me to ask her about it?" Lydia said. "As it happens, I'll be in for most of the day."

"Would you? That's very decent. If you're sure it's no trouble?"

"Not at all. I want to see Mrs. Renton about some mending."

Rory handed over the parcel and Miss Penhow's letter. He continued upstairs, with Mrs. Narton's note in his hand. Lydia Langstone was really quite a good sort, he thought, despite the airs and graces and the cut-glass accent. Almost pretty too. She had, he thought, a trustworthy face. But perhaps that was wishful thinking, and what the devil was her connection with Mrs. Alforde?

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