Read Lord Foxbridge Butts In Online
Authors: Robert Manners
Lord Foxbridge
Butts In
Robert Manners
Contents
The Mystery of the Prancing Pole
The Adventure of the Walls That Talked
The Affair of the Diplomat’s Darling
The Episode of the Monstrous Marquis
There are several places in these stories where amounts of money are mentioned; British money before the Decimalisation of 1971 could be a bit confusing, and the value of monetary units were quite different from today.
The basic rule of thumb is that a 1927 pound sterling was worth about $80. A pound was made up of twenty shillings (1s = $4), and a shilling was made of twelve pence (1d = 33¢). A ‘sovereign’ is slang for a pound coin, while a ‘quid’ is a pound note (paper money).
For the obsolete denominations: a guinea was worth a pound plus a shilling ($84), and was used to price luxury goods, racing purses, and special commodities; a crown was five shillings ($20); a half-crown two shillings and sixpence ($10); and a florin was two shillings ($8).
There are also places in these stories where real places and real people are mentioned; however, all of the events portrayed are completely fictional, and no disrespect is intended to any of the historical persons, businesses, or institutions depicted here.
The Viscount Takes Rooms
I suppose it all started — this amateur detective business, I mean — when in the summer of 1927 I decided to take rooms at Hyacinth House instead of the usual bachelor flat in Park Lane or Berkeley Square. There is something about living in an hotel that opens up innumerable opportunities to exercise my naturally inquisitive nature, opportunities that would never have opened if I’d followed others of my rank and pedigree into more conventional lodgings.
But perhaps the inquisitive nature was the true start of the business: at home, I was always pestering the servants with questions, catching them out in petty lies and unraveling their belowstairs intrigues; at Eton I built quite a reputation for finding lost and stolen articles for my fellows (I had another reputation, as well, but more on that later); and at Oxford I nosed my way into the society of the local constabulary by helping solve one or two problems in the colleges that puzzled them, having first come to their notice over the affair of the Marchioness of Steyne’s missing tiara.
But an hotel, with its ever-changing cast of characters coming and going all the time from all over the world — especially an hotel just off the busiest thoroughfare in the beating heart of a teeming metropolis — is a very different proposition from a country-house, a public school, and a university, all of which are essentially closed systems filled with familiar characters. Hyacinth House, from the first day I arrived, provided me no end of fascinating strangers.
I ended up there after a week of writhing indecision on where I was to make my abode when I came down from Oxford. My father, the tenth Earl of Vere, had let the family showplace in Whitehall to one of the newest Balkan states for use as an embassy, and I did not fancy sitting out the Season at Foxbridge Castle under the eye of my Aunt Emily: I wanted to sow my oats, and you can’t do much of that sort of thing in the depths of Gloucestershire (unless, I suppose, you are an oat-farmer). And taking a flat required so much effort in the way of talking to estate agents and looking at rooms, trekking through shops for furniture and appointments, and lots of boring talk about leaseholds and rents and service fees.
Money was not an issue, fortunately, as I had recently come into Uncle George’s pile, left to me instead of Pater purely for spite: I’d never actually met the man, he’d lived in Singapore since before I was born. The typical embarrassing scapegrace younger son sent East, he’d amassed over a million pounds in the tea and coffee trade (supplemented, no doubt, by opium and guns, which pay better) before dropping dead in a house of ill repute the previous Christmas. And then there was my late mother’s substantial private fortune, paired with her father’s lucrative patent-medicines empire, held in trust for me until I married — though I had enjoyment of the proceeds until that blessed (and I assumed
remote
) day. I was in the unique position of being a good deal wealthier than my own father, whose estates were ancient and vast but mostly consisting of ill-managed land.
No, the issue was
boring responsibilities
, with which I would one day be saddled when Pater dropped off his perch and burdened me with the ermine and coronet, the houses and land, and the inevitable seat in the Lords. I was not going to take on responsibilities of
any
kind before that, if I could help it.
So though an hotel was rather an unconventional residence for a peer’s son, learning of the existence of the Hyacinth presented the perfect solution to my problem: clean furnished rooms in a desirable location with all necessary service laid on, and a management that would not look askance at my friends. And so, while my new valet packed my things and closed up my rooms in Magdalen College, I phoned ahead to secure a bedroom and sitting room with bath
en suite
, hopped on the morning train, and rolled up in a taxicab to an imposing Georgian facade in St. James’s Street exactly halfway between White’s and Boodle’s — not the
heart
of Clubland, but certainly the oldest and finest leg of it.
Once a nobleman’s mansion and then a gentlemen’s club, Hyacinth House had but recently been converted into a small private hotel that catered to men “of a certain stripe.” It was not a brothel by any means, though overnight visitors were not frowned on, and the staff were intensely discreet; it was something new in the world, an exclusive establishment for housing Confirmed Bachelors of Means whose amorous activities might cause raised eyebrows or worse in other, more conventional hotels.
“Good morning, I’m Viscount Foxbridge,” I introduced myself to a spry, morning-coated gent standing behind a high mahogany desk, sporting an old-fashioned Cavalier mustache, flashing silver pince-nez, and a large white peony in his buttonhole; a small brass plaque on the desk informed me that I was addressing Mr. P. Delagardie, Manager, “I have a reservation, I believe?”
“Ah, Lord Foxbridge, what a pleasure,” the man bowed grandly without taking his eyes off my face, “We have two very pleasant rooms for you, and a separate accommodation for your valet. Have you any luggage, my lord?”
“My man is bringing it up by a later train,” I explained, leaning over to sign my name in the register. I noted that I was not the only titled creature in residence: there was a Dutch baron, a Polish count, and a French marquis further up the page, a couple of Honourables and a baronet, not to mention various military officers both foreign and domestic.
“And for how long may we expect the honour of your lordship’s company?” the man asked with charming formality, coming out from behind his desk and gesturing toward an archway and a grand marble stair soaring up to a skylit gallery.
“Indefinitely, I should think,” I replied, following him into the stair-hall and examining the paintings that lined the walls, almost all of which were chaste male nudes, mostly of the Victorian neoclassical school with a few Old Master copies thrown in, “assuming the accommodations are adequate.”
“I am certain your lordship will be pleased,” the manager assured me, pausing halfway up the steps to point out the public rooms located on the ground and first floors, all of which retained the fusty but substantial tobacco-coloured aspect of a nineteenth-century gentlemen’s club, “Downstairs we have a library and two dining-rooms, public and private, as well as a winter-garden; on the first floor are the lounge, the card-room, and the billiard-room. Your lordship’s suite is on the second floor, separated from the main part of the building by a gallery, two rooms overlooking the courtyard. Very quiet and very convenient. If you’ll step this way, my lord.”
Preceding me down a windowed mezzanine at the half-landing of a second staircase (the back rooms were a bit lower than the corresponding floors in the main block), Mr. Delagardie stopped and produced a key with an immense silk tassel on it, unlocking a door marked with a brass number six. The door led through a tiny lobby into a large square chamber with a beautiful caramel-marble fireplace flanked by recessed book-cases, rich walnut paneling, and stylish new maplewood furnishings covered in buff leather and camel-hair. Beyond a pair of sliding doors was a cozy bedroom furnished in the same style and lined with built-in wardrobes, and beyond that was a modern bathroom done in gleaming chromium and
eau-de-Nil
tile.
“I think this will do
very
nicely,” I admitted, peering through a tall window at the uninspiring view: three rows of windows across the courtyard, three rows in the gallery I’d just passed through on my left, a blank brick wall on my right, the domed glass winter-garden roof below, and a small square of gray London sky above.
Sudden movement across the way caught my eye, however, and the view became rather more inspiring: a lithe young man clad only in his own skin executed a
grand jeté
in a room opposite, flashing across the window like a bird in flight; my curiosity sparking like a flint, I asked the manager, “Who is that in the room across the way?”
“That is Count Gryzynsky, my lord,” the manager smiled knowingly, “He is a dancer, recently with the Ballets Russes, but now touring alone. A very agreeable young gentleman, for a foreigner.”
“How interesting,” I said, making a note to explore that avenue of interest at a later date, and continued examining the sitting room, poking around in the bookshelves beside the fireplace, “What’s on the other side of this wall?”
“That is the back wall of the house, my lord, there is nothing on the other side,” the man looked at me oddly.
“But what building backs on to it?” I persisted.
“I do not know, my lord,” the man admitted, but hastened to cover his ignorance, “That wall is quite thick, no noise penetrates at all.”
“Good, good,” I mumbled; my curiosity momentarily thwarted, I turned my attention to the empty fireplace and peered up the flue, which appeared to be quite clean but did not rise straight to the sky, “I’ll let you know when I find out.”
“Will there be anything else, my lord?” the manager started backing out of the room as if I were royalty — or a dangerous lunatic.
“No, thank you. When my man turns up with the luggage, have him come to me directly. His name is Pond.”
“Very good, my lord. Thank you, my lord,” Delagardie bowed again while completing his backward exodus, and pulled the door shut with a gentle click.
After a thorough examination of the rooms, I found myself at a loose end. It was too early for luncheon, and certainly too early for a drink; and I couldn’t very well go out anywhere as I was, in the Norfolk suit and cloth cap I’d worn for the train — fine for the University, but too rustic for Town, besides being somewhat rumpled from travel; I had nothing else to wear until Pond brought the luggage, not even a bath-robe.
With nothing better to do, I pulled a book off the shelves at random, fell into a comfortable armchair, and lit a cigarette, preparing for a long wait. The book was a collection of Restoration sermons, and I opened it at random to a surprisingly sprightly treatment on Saint Paul’s first letter to the Corinthians. I was fully engrossed in the thing when Pond finally turned up.
“I brought your toilet things first, my lord,” he gasped, veritably running through the room with a small case clutched to his chest, “I’ll draw the bath so your lordship can wash while I air and lay out our clothes.”
Though Pond was new to my employ, I’d known him for ages, as he was a frequent visitor to a pub just outside of Oxford on the Banbury Road called the Lionheart, where men of our sort were wont to meet. He had been valet to a very grand baronet whose estate lay along the Cherwell, and had fortuitously got himself sacked for immoral conduct with an undergardener, just weeks before I would need a valet of my own at the end of term.
He was young as valets go, perhaps ten years older than myself, small and dark and extremely neat, nice-looking but
slightly
ferret-faced. He was the perfect valet for me, experienced in the care and disposition of a gentleman’s wardrobe, and of the same inclinations as myself — but preferring a vastly different type. He had no desire towards gilded youths of my kind, being instead a devotee of “a bit of rough,” working-class men with burly shoulders and callused hands; I was more enamored of the hearty sportsmen of my own class, rowing and rugger men with the same big shoulders and callused hands, but with handsome faces and names in Debrett. We could be the best of friends with neither attraction nor competition coming between us.