The Stately Home Murder (12 page)

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Authors: Catherine Aird

BOOK: The Stately Home Murder
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“Twice,” said Charles Purvis.

“You mean he was christened Cremond as well as having it as a surname.”

“That's right.”

“Cremond,” Crosby looked incredulous, “and Cremond?”

The steward coughed. “That dates back to the middle of the eighteenth century when …”

Crosby wasn't listening. “William Edward Crosby Crosby,” he said under his breath, for size.

“I beg your pardon, Constable?”

Crosby turned back to his notebook, and read aloud, “Henry Augustus Rudolfo Cremond Cremond?”

Name of a name of a name, that was …

“That's right,” agreed the steward and comptroller. “Thirteenth Earl Ornum of Ornum in the County of Calleshire, Baron Cremond of Petering …”

“There isn't,” said Detective Constable William Edward Crosby of 24 Hillview Terrace, Berebury, with tremendous dignity, “any room on the form for that.”

Sloan methodically sealed the door of the muniments room and went back next door to the library. This was a very fine room.

It was divided into six small bays all lined with books—three bays on either side of the center. The right-hand three each ended in a window and a window seat with a view over the park. The left-hand three consisted entirely of bookshelves with a sliver of table down the middle. At the far end was a bust of Lord Henry.

“My great-great-grandfather,” murmured Lord Henry.

Sloan shot a swift glance from the bust of Lord Henry and back again. There was no discernible difference between the two.

“Army,” said Lord Henry by way of explanation. “Too young for Waterloo. Too old for the Crimea.”

Sloan advanced. Apart from the neckwear, the bust might just as well have been Lord Henry. It was as near a replica as he'd seen.

“Mr. Meredith worked here, too, I take it,” he said generally.

Lord Henry nodded. “Spent nearly all his time between the library and the muniments, though he was always popping down to have a look at the pictures, too.”

“As to Friday,” said Sloan, “if he'd been working here then, what sort of traces would you have expected to find?”

“None,” said his Lordship promptly. “He wasn't that sort of scholar. When he'd finished with a book, he'd put it back in its right place.”

Sloan wasn't surprised. From what little he'd seen of the body that had emerged pupa-like from the chrysalis of the armor, he'd have said Meredith was a neat, dapper little man.

Lord Henry carried on, “He was quite mild about everything else, but it was as much as your life was worth to spoil the order on the bookshelves.”

This wasn't perhaps the happiest of comparisons, and Lord Henry's voice trailed away.

“I see,” said Sloan, moving down the three bays.

Everything was utterly neat and tidy. At the end by the door a small stack of papers on the table there was the only testimony that the room had ever been used at all. The first two bays seemed normal enough. Sloan paused at the third.

The casual observer—the untrained eye—would probably have seen nothing.

Sloan did.

What he saw was on the spine of Volume XXIV of
The Transactions of the Calleshire Society
.

Blood.

This, then, was in all probability where the librarian and archivist to the Ornum family had met his death.

Sloan stepped carefully round the thin table and measured a few distances with his eye. The photographers would have to come back and bring the lab boys with them. In the meantime …

At a quick guess the deceased could have been sitting at the inside end of the table, which ran the length of the bay. He had been hit from behind—the pathologist had told him that much—and from above. The height of the book with the blood on it confirmed that.

Lord Henry cleared his throat. “This the spot, then?”

“I think so,” said Sloan. There was nothing much else to point to it. The table might have had blood on it and been wiped clean. There might be drops on the floor. The library carpet was Turkey red, which didn't help … and any derangement of chair and table had long ago been made good. And marks of scuffed heels on the pile of the carpet would have …

“The cleaning arrangements in here …” began Sloan.

But he had asked the wrong man.

“Not really my department,” said his young Lordship frankly. “Dillow will know.”

“I see,” said Sloan. He wouldn't mind another word with the butler. “Where would I find him now?”

“It's easier than that.” Lord Henry drifted across the library and tugged at a green silk sash. “He'll find us.”

It was, in fact, simplicity itself.

“Thank you.” Sloan wasn't sure about the paths of righteousness, but those of some people could be made very smooth indeed. He cleared his throat. “By the way, my lord, your injury …”

“Silly thing to do.” Lord Henry's bandaged hand was still drooping down like a limping dog's paw. “I cut it on Friday morning fiddling about with my car.”

“Were you alone at the time?” enquired Sloan pertinently.

“Oh yes, Inspector. Nobody else here really cares about cars. I caught it between the fan blade and the engine.”

“I see.”

“Trying to tune her up a bit and all that …”

The library door opened. “You rang, my lord?”

“Ah, Dillow, the inspector wants another word with you.”

The butler, professionally expressionless, turned expectantly to Sloan.

“Friday,” said Sloan. “Friday afternoon. You said you brought Mr. Meredith his tea here.”

“That is correct, sir. At four o'clock. I collected the empty tray a few minutes before five.”

“Did you see Mr. Meredith then?”

“Not the second time, sir. The tray was on the table by the door and I just collected it …” The man hesitated. “In fact, sir, I'm afraid I assumed Mr. Meredith had gone home because the vicar called about half an hour later, asking for him, and he said he'd tried the muniments room and he wasn't there. I took the liberty of telling him that Mr. Meredith must have gone home then, though of course I realize now that …”

“Quite so,” said Sloan. “And after that?”

“After, sir?”

“When did you next come in here?”

Dillow frowned. “Yesterday morning sometime, sir, it would have been. Just to see that the room had been put to rights. Though Mr. Meredith was such a tidy gentleman that I knew nothing would need doing.”

“And did it?”

“No, sir, not that I recollect.”

“Whose job is it to see that the room had been tidied?”

“Mine, sir, to see it had been done. Edith's to … er … do it.”

“Edith's?” The nuances of the division of labor among domestic staff were lost on Sloan. Now if it had been police work …

“She's the housemaid, sir, but …”

“Yes?”

“On open days, sir, we all tend to devote ourselves to the rooms which are shown.”

“I see. And the muniments room?”

“I didn't go in there, sir, at all. Mr. Meredith liked to deal with that himself. It's a small room and when any cleaning was done in there Mr. Meredith always arranged to be present himself so that nothing was disturbed.”

“The muniments room? Turned upside down? Look out, Dillow, you're spilling that soup.”

“I beg your pardon, my lord.”

“I should think so. Henry, who the devil would want to play about in the muniments room of all places? Nobody ever goes in there.”

“Couldn't say,” said the son and heir. “But somebody has … er … did. And you can't go and see because the inspector has sealed it up. And the library.”

The dining room at Ornum House that evening was scarcely more festive than the armory. The Earl of Ornum sat at one end of the table, the Countess at the other. Ranged round the table were the rest of the family.

Dillow hovered.

William Murton, whose summons to Ornum House had, in fact, gone on to include a meal, took an immediate interest. “That means something, doesn't it? I mean, you wouldn't go to the bother of stirring up the papers without a reason, would you?”

“I wouldn't,” responded Henry.

“But,” asked Laura Cremond, “what was there in there that mattered anyway?”

“Search me,” said Lord Henry frankly. “Never could make head or tail of those papers myself. All that cramped writing. In Latin, too, most of it. Still, I expect it meant something …”

“Your inheritance,” said his father drily.

“It must have meant something to somebody else, too,” pointed out Miles Cremond, who always followed his wife's conversational leads. “Else they wouldn't have messed it about.”

Cousin Gertrude, who was a considerable trencherwoman, looked up from a bit of steady eating and said, “Does that mean that now no one can prove that Harry here isn't Earl of Ornum?”

There was a small silence.

The Earl of Ornum crumbled some bread and wondered why it was that plain women so often went in for plain speaking.

“Well,” demanded Gertrude Cremond, “can they or can't they?”

Millicent, Countess of Ornum, was always equal to a straight question.

“Poor Mr. Meredith,” she said tangently, “to be killed
and
to have his work spoilt like that …”

“Ossa on Pelion,” murmured Lord Henry, upon whose education a great deal of money had been expended.

“Too terrible,” said the Countess.

“To be killed by someone he knew,” observed her daughter quietly.

“Eleanor! Surely not.”

“Unless some total stranger happened to walk in, take a dislike to his face, and kill him.”

“But,” protested Millicent Ornum, “he had a nice face. Crinkled but pleasant. Not the sort of face you'd take a sudden dislike to at all.”

Eleanor sighed. “Exactly, Mother.”

“So it wasn't his face,” drawled William Murton.

“It must have been something else then, what?” said Miles Cremond with the air of one reaching a studied conclusion.

“Yes, Miles,” said Lord Henry kindly. “We think it was.”

“So if Ossy's dead and the papers are all messed up then no one can prove anything?”

“A veritable nutshell, old chap. There's just the one small point …”

“What's that?”

“Who did for Ossy.”

A baffled look came over Miles Cremond's face. “Yes, of course.”

“It's no use our pretending,” said Cousin Gertrude bluntly, “that it doesn't make any difference to any of us whether Harry here is Earl of Ornum because it does.” She looked round the table. “To every single one of us.”

There was a chorus of protest.

“Yes, it does,” insisted Gertrude. “Henry here'll kill himself one day in that sports car of his. Always trying to make it go faster and faster.”

“I say, Cousin Gertrude, steady on.”

“That means Miles would come in to the title and you can't tell me that wouldn't please Laura.”

Laura Cremond's thin face went a sudden pink. “Really, Gertrude, I don't think that remark is in the best of taste.”

“Neither is murder.”

“Are you suggesting that Miles and I killed Mr. Meredith?”

Gertrude Cremond was equal to a frontal attack. Not for nothing had she stood foursquare against the opposing center forward on the hockey field. “No,” she said, “but you were both late for dinner on Friday evening, weren't you?”

“Well, I must say that sounds remarkably like an insinuation to me.”

“Merely an observation,” remarked Cousin Gertrude, unperturbed. “Why were you both so late?”

“Miles went for a walk and I waited for him to get back before I came down. That's why.”

“Did you go for a walk, Miles?”

“What? Oh, me? Yes, rather.”

“Where?”

“Where? Oh—in the park, you know. Actually I went round the ha ha. To get in training for the match, what? No exercise to speak of in town, don't you know.”

“Never touch it myself,” said William Murton, looking with close interest from one flushed face to the next.

“Touch what?” said Miles.

“Exercise.” William patted his tummy. “Went to seed early myself. Less trouble.”

Cousin Gertrude rounded on him as if he'd been a wing half coming up fast on the outside. “There's no need for you to talk, William. You'd miss your uncle Harry here more than anyone.”

“True.”

“You may not touch exercise,” she went on tartly, “but you're certainly not above touching him for money when you need it.”

“Granted.” He made a mock bow in her direction. “But you will be pleased to hear I've turned over a new leaf. My … er … touching days are gone.”

This produced total silence. The Earl and his son exchanged a quick glance.

“Truly,” said William. “I haven't asked you for a loan this trip, Uncle Harry, now have I?”

“Not yet,” said that peer cautiously.

Cousin Gertrude was inexorable. “Moreover,” she went on, “there's the Judge taking to walking about again. I hear that Aunt Alice saw him on Friday evening. You all know what that means.”

There was an immediate chorus from Eleanor, Henry, Miles, and William. “Someone's going to go!”

Laura Cremond turned on her husband. “Really, Miles …”

“Sorry, dear, learned the responses as a child.”

“You are now a grown-up.”

“Yes, dear.”

“I don't think,” said Gertrude astringently, “that Laura quite appreciates that the Judge being seen always means that someone is going to die.”

“He's dead,” insisted Laura. “You've all been saying so.”

“Not Ossy. He doesn't count. It's got to be a member of the family,” declared Gertrude.

“It's a family legend,” said William Murton, adding ironically, “You needn't worry, Laura. It only applies to blood relations.”

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