Death and the Princess (22 page)

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Authors: Robert Barnard

BOOK: Death and the Princess
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‘Yes. That fits all right, doesn’t it?’

‘No, it
doesn’t.
Not as it stands. The murderer — try to visualize it — reaches over, takes Brudenell’s gun from the drawer, stands close beside him and shoots him, while Brudenell has apparently gone on typing. We know he was bent over the machine from the angle of the bullet. Can you imagine it?’

Obviously Garry couldn’t, but he made the attempt.

‘Perhaps he used some trick. Covered up with conversation.’

‘Like “What a pretty little gun you have here. Do you mind if I play with it?” No, Garry. If the murderer was apparently any innocent visitor that might wash, but it won’t work for someone Brudenell has just had an argument with over an important matter of principle.’

‘What’s your solution?’

‘I haven’t got one . . . Another gun? One similar or identical to Brudenell’s?’

‘Where the hell would you get one like that in this country?’

‘I know, I know. Nothing I come up with works out any better than the solution we’ve got already.’

In my dissatisfaction at myself I was fiddling with the papers I had found on my desk that morning. I had been so eager to toss the thing about with Garry that I hadn’t looked at them, but now, frustrated by the feeling that something was staring me in the face that I was failing to
recognize, I took up one of the reports idly and began to read it.

‘Good God!’ I said.

‘What?’

‘The Shrewsbury police have actually come up with something. The matter of the two glasses and the bottle of wine. They finally went to the top. I suppose I should have told them to do that at the beginning, remembering the class we’re dealing with. The Carlton — the most exclusive hotel in Shrewsbury. A waiter in the dining-room there remembers a customer, alone, ordering wine and dinner for two. When he came with the meal, the two glasses, the bottle and the customer had disappeared. Three ten pound notes had been left on the table. Doesn’t remember the date, of course, but it would be some time before Christmas.’

‘Good Lord. I suppose he remembers nothing at all about the customer?’

‘Not in detail. I’d distrust him if he did. But he remembers one whoppingly important fact.’

‘What?’

‘The customer was a lady.’

• • •

It took a moment or two to rearrange my ideas. That son. of thing always stuns you for a moment. Then, when the mist cleared, I felt that at long last I was no longer clutching at straws, that a coherent pattern was forming in my head.

‘Garry, Garry, it could just work out. I could be on the right lines at last. Those guns — ’

‘What guns?’

‘The identical guns — come
on,
lad, we were talking about them a minute ago. Those two identical guns, bought
at the same time
in America, by two people, strange to the country, nervous at being out on the streets, nervous in their hotel rooms — ’

‘Good God-’

‘Garry. Hand me the Burke’s.’ And I riffled through the pages until I found it. ‘There. The ninth Earl Reresby, who married Pamela Dorothy Frere, the sister of the present Earl of Leamington. Both killed in an air crash in Southern Spain in 1955.’

‘Well?’

‘The family name is Lowndes-Gore.’

‘Christ! I thought you were talking about the Princess.’

‘And Lady Dorothy is their only daughter.’

‘I don’t believe it. Not Lady Plum-in-the-throat.’

‘It must be. It fits. Lady Glencoe talked about them being all around her. This was what she was talking about. I bet Lady Dorothy was brought up by her uncle. Jimmy Hopgood talked about some kind of step-sister to Edwin. I bet that’s her. Go back to what we were just talking about. Brudenell finds out that he’s been used. Asks her to visit him to talk it over. She puts it in the best light possible, but he’s still full of self-important rage. He proclaims his intention of writing to the Earl, and while he types the first words, she pulled out her
own
gun from her handbag, shoots him, puts his prints on it, and then takes his gun from his desk. She’d visited him before. Perhaps they’d talked about where they both kept their souvenirs of the States.’

‘You’ve no sort of case.’

‘None at all. But I’ve got more than enough excuse for talking to her. What’s the Princess doing today?’

‘Visit to a repertory theatre in East Grinstead. The new lady-in-waiting in attendance.’

‘The
what?’

‘The new lady-in-waiting. They swap regularly, you know, two of them doing three months or so at a time. Ordinary mortals can only stand so much of the boredom. I heard from Kensington Pal that the new one took over today.’

‘Right. Then I’m going over there, case or no case.’

And leaving Garry behind, because I thought the lady would talk more freely to me alone, I drove through the silvery February sunshine till I turned into Palace Avenue, drove past the check-point and up to the back entrance of the Palace. As luck would have it, a flunkey was loading a leather suitcase into the back of a limousine, and as I got out of my police car Lady Dorothy emerged from the Palace and walked purposefully towards the Rolls. I cleared my throat.

‘Oh, Lady Dorothy — ’

‘Ye-e-es?’ She looked down her long Roman nose as she forced the word through, and I could imagine icicles forming from it, making her into a weird surrealist portrait. But then I looked into her eyes, and the tasteful make-up could not disguise the pinkness of them.

‘I wonder if I might have a word with you?’

‘I’m afraid no-ot,’ she drawled, in her characteristic dying fall. ‘I have a train to catch in three-quarters of an hour.’

The flunkey by the car was three or four yards away, and I murmured:

‘Lady Dorothy, I don’t know if you know that your cousin is at present being questioned by the Birmingham Police.’

She cast me a frozen look.

‘Yes. My uncle rang. Some dreadful little man has been helping himself to charitable funds. Nuneaton is helping them look into it. Such a bore for him, but he is Honorary Secretary. I’m sure it will be cleared up in no time.’

‘Hardly,’ I said. ‘The dreadful little man taped all his conversations with your cousin, and one or two with your uncle. Not to mention the Cumberlands. I think you had better let me drive you to the station.’

She hesitated for a moment. It was the first crack I had ever seen in her massive composure. Then she walked
over to the flunkey.

‘Will you put my luggage in Superintendent Trethowan’s car? He’ll drive me to King’s Cross.’

Without an ill-bred flicker the flunkey began to transfer her luggage, and we stood there in the sunshine talking as if this were the most casual of encounters. I said: ‘Are you going far?’

‘To Scotland. We have a little place there.’

‘Very nice,’ I said.

Then she got in and we drove off.

‘We haven’t much time, Lady Dorothy, and I don’t intend to go about things in a polite way, because that takes hours. I want to tell you what I think has been happening. I believe that you have been using your position, through James Brudenell, to ensure that the Princess can be of financial benefit to your family. I take it for granted this has been without her knowledge. I think Brudenell, in spite of the fact that your family was probably instrumental in getting him the job, was also quite unaware of the use you were putting him to. I think you and your uncle and your cousins used him in a very subtle, indirect way, and he was quite happy to be of service. Your family were also, remotely, his, and the present Earl’s father was a sort of benefactor. I don’t know how this state of things came to an end. I do know that the way your family were crowding in on the Princess became general gossip among people of your class.’

So far she had sat in the front seat gazing stonily ahead of her, but now she blinked at my impertinence.

‘However, he came to realize what had been happening — whether by this gossip, or my investigation, or however. When he did begin to suspect, he started thinking about things, he consulted his scrapbook and saw how lop-sided the Princess’s engagements had become. He made discreet enquiries. Eventually he asked you to call at his flat, and he told you it had to stop. To
prove his determination, he began to write a letter to your uncle. You shot him with a gun you had bought in America, bought when you were in the Princess’s entourage together with him. Then you substituted it for his own identical or near-identical gun. It may not have been difficult for you. You had killed before. You had learnt from the Princess that Bill Tredgold had been asking inconvenient questions. You heard from your family that he had requested an interview with the so-called Henry Tucker. You made sure that he never got to that interview.’

She still gazed stonily ahead at the early tourists in Shaftesbury Avenue, as if the story were a fiction, told to while away the journey.

‘I have no evidence of this,’ I said. ‘I shall do my damnedest in the weeks ahead to get evidence. I only hope I can do that without harming the reputation of the Princess. You know how some people are willing to seize on anything . . .’

Her eyes went sideways to my face, and then fixed themselves again on the road ahead. Then suddenly she started to speak, in that low, nasal, squeezed-out voice, quite drained of all obvious emotion.

‘My father and mother were killed when I was six. I was a very lonely child, even before that. They were social people, very gay. When they were killed, I went to live with my Uncle John. My nanny was pensioned off, so I had nobody I knew left. My Uncle John had married again, a young wife. They were often in London, or on the Continent. The other children were nearly grown up. The servants looked after me. I was not an attractive child. Then Uncle John and Aunt Elizabeth had a child. A son. He was a lovely baby. I nursed him — more than his own nanny. I taught him, brought him up, loved him. I had never had anyone to love before, but now I could love him more than anything in the world. Edwin grew up
such a handsome boy. When he went away to school, I just lived from day to day, waiting for the holidays. When he asked for something, I fetched it for him. When he called me, I ran to him. When he kissed me goodbye and went back to school I cried for days. People are always telling me now that Edwin is no good. I don’t believe them. And even if I did, it would make no difference. For me he is everything good — the supreme good.’

She paused, as we were arriving at King’s Cross. I looked at my watch, and then drove on, around the station.

‘When my cousin Nuneaton told me they had a plan, he said it was to make some kind of independence for Edwin. I never asked for details. I just did what they told me. I’m sure —
quite
sure — Edwin himself knew nothing about it. I don’t myself believe any great harm has been done. I expect most people they got money out of knew perfectly well what was going on . . . I don’t know how I should bear it, if members of my family went to prison . . .’

‘And the other matter? The murders?’

Her mouth set itself in an obstinate line. ‘I won’t say anything about those . . . As you say, the Princess must not be harmed.’

‘I shall try to see that she isn’t. If it can be avoided.’

‘Mr Trethowan.’ Suddenly there was a real urgency in her voice for the first time. ‘May I ask you not to make your investigations too quickly? Too energetically? . . . The cottage to which I am going is very old . . . we cook by gas . . . It’s old and defective.’

‘As at Knightley?’

‘Yes. As at Knightley. But I shall need
time
 . . . to summon up . . . courage. Will you promise me that?’

I drove on, silent.

‘Mr Trethowan, we are coming to the station again. The train leaves in ten minutes. Mr Trethowan, I ask you
to give me a few days. I ask you . . . as a gentleman.’

Oh God! What a word to choose. She could hardly have hit on a worse appeal, hardly have flung at me a word less likely to ingratiate itself. What had gentlemanliness been, from beginning to end of this affair, but self-seeking and shoddy pretension? But I had no case. I did not know that I ever would have a case. And I wondered what she would have to live for if her family, one by one, was put up in dock, on trial for shabby thefts.

‘You have my word,’ I said, pulling up. ‘As a policeman.’

I stopped by the station entrance, and got out to get her luggage. She summoned a porter by raising a finger, and stood there, rigid, angular, waiting.

‘One thing puzzles me,’ I said, knowing this was the last time I would see her. ‘That evening at Knightley. At the Wrekin. I just can’t somehow see you acting the part of a hotel maid.’

She looked at me, as if making a decision, and then suddenly, screwing up her mouth, she let fly in the broadest cockney, in tones of almost cheerful vulgarity: ‘Can’t yer, then? But yer don’t know me at all, do yer? Family charades. Every Christmas. I always did the skivvies.’

And resuming her frozen posture, she walked off into the dark of the station, leaving me to reflect that from the beginning I had totally misjudged her, that really she was a most astonishing woman.

Five days later I heard that she was dead.

CHAPTER 18

Endings

I talked a bit to the Princess about the whole business. She told me about Bill Tredgold, and how he had been interested in her public engagements, and what charities she patronized, and who was on their committees. She seemed not at all affected by the fact that this interest had led to his death. She was more interested in Lady Dorothy, but hardly at all worried by the idea she might have committed murder. She kept saying over and over: ‘Golly, think of poor old Dot having a great passion in her life. You can’t imagine it, can you?’

And she giggled. I think the Princess finds the idea of anyone over thirty having a great passion in their lives frightfully absurd and amusing. I imagine she is going to sail through life, gaily leaving behind and around her the wreckage of other people’s lives. The rich are different from us. They take more for granted. Especially they take people for granted. But perhaps when she comes to be thirty, and then forty, she will find that other people are less willing than before to cover up, to pick up the pieces.

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