Trouble Brewing (18 page)

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Authors: Dolores Gordon-Smith

BOOK: Trouble Brewing
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‘It might be difficult, Greg.'

He grinned suddenly. ‘Do your best.' He stood up, raised her hand to his lips and, before she had a chance to protest, kissed it. ‘I love you.'

She watched him leave in bewilderment. Thank God Larry hadn't seen him. Why was he so insistent that she should come to the race? She always had watched him, but there was more to it than that. She glanced up as Tyrell walked across the room. That had been a close-run thing. She felt a sudden loathing of deception. Why on earth shouldn't Greg come and talk to her? After all, she had been married to him.

Larry sat down beside her with an annoyed expression. ‘Whoever was on the phone had rung off before I got there.' He motioned to the waiter. ‘More champagne, please. Mind you, I got held up on the way. That silly girl your cousin's with barged into me in the lobby and scattered the things from her handbag everywhere. I could have sworn she did it on purpose. I had to stop and help her pick them up.'

She brought her chin up in determination. ‘Greg spoke to me while you were away.'

His eyebrows rose. ‘Did he, by jingo?' He gave a humourless laugh. ‘At least I know who the telephone call was from. What did he want?'

‘He wants me to watch his race on Saturday.'

Tyrell's eyebrows crawled upwards. ‘Are you going?'

‘I'm not sure. Would you mind?' She was relieved when he shrugged.

‘Go if you want to, my dear. I'm your husband, not your keeper. You'll excuse me from attending, won't you? I don't think I'd get an awful lot out of it.'

She felt irrationally grateful to him. ‘I thought you'd object.'

He shrugged again. ‘Not in the least.' He gave a sudden, attractive smile. ‘I can't put you in a box and I don't want to. I know how hard this is for you, Pat. When I woke up in that Mission Station it was as if the years since Passchendaele had been wiped out. It took me ages to realize how much time had passed. At first I thought we could simply take up where we left off. Perhaps that was stupid of me.'

Her hand tightened round his, but she said nothing.

‘You go, my dear. D'you know the one thing I envy Jaggard? The fact he has an occupation. I need a job. I want something to do. I've talked to your Uncle Frederick about working for Hunt Coffee.'

‘Have you?' she asked, startled.

He broke off as the waiter arrived with the champagne. When he had gone, Tyrell raised his glass. ‘Here's to us. And to work, and all sorts of other worthy notions I never thought I'd espouse. But, most especially, to you.'

‘I can't drink my own toast,' said Pat, laughing.

‘Oh yes, you can. And then, Mrs Tyrell, you're going to dance the night away and then, long, long after your bedtime, I'm going to take you home.'

He was as good as his word and, thankfully and unusually, there was no further mention of the room he'd booked.

For the first time since his return, the tacit pressure on her to declare openly she was his wife and his wife only had been lifted. She responded by enjoying his company more than ever before. There was a tense excitement about him that she'd never known before. If he asked me now, she thought . . . but he didn't and it was with real regret she said goodbye to him on the doorstep of 14, Neville Square, long after the first dawn greyed the sky.

There were roses on her dressing table next morning. The maid, bringing in her morning tea, nodded towards them.

‘Mr Tyrell left those for you, ma'am. He had breakfast with Mr Frederick, but he said not to disturb you.'

‘Thank goodness for that, anyway.' She read the card with a smile and a slight blush.

Breakfast with Uncle Frederick? Larry must be serious about having a job. Maybe he had changed.

She was startled by the ferocity of hope the thought brought with it. She'd been scared. Scared at the thought of being landed with his debts once more while she struggled and pinched and faced real, actual want . . .

That was all over. She was a rich woman. She would never again face that awful blank despair of days with not quite enough to eat, rent to pay and appearances to keep up. Greg had saved her from all that biting worry. She would always be grateful to Greg for that.

But if Larry was sincere about work, that put a whole new complexion on things. He was going to call for her that evening. She was looking forward to it.

‘Who was buying the biscuits this week?' demanded Rosie O'Connor of her fellow labourers over morning tea in the typists' room of Hunt Coffee, Limited, Southwark. ‘All the custard creams have gone
again
.' She looked up as Sheila Mandeville came in. ‘I'm sorry, Sheila, but there's only Rich Tea left now. There always is on a Friday if you're not here first thing.'

‘Never mind about biscuits,' said Sheila, helping herself to the teapot. She was brimming with news. ‘I had a letter this morning from
The Daily Messenger.
I've won the Spot The Stars competition!'

There was a chorus of awed congratulation. ‘What have you won?' demanded Cynthia Cullen raptly.

‘Twenty pounds and free tickets for two for a month to the Shaftesbury Pavilion,' said Sheila with shining eyes. ‘It's not bad, is it? I had to match ten film stars with their films. There's a reporter coming to see me this evening. They like to publish details of the winner.'

‘That's to show it's a genuine competition,' said Margaret Ross from Dispatch knowingly.

‘I wonder what the reporter will be like,' said Eileen Wilks, whose favourite reading was the weekly romance in
Peg's Paper.
‘He might be ever so good-looking. You never know your luck,' she added enviously.

‘He might be all right,' said Sheila absently. With Wednesday at the Ritz still golden in her memory, she wasn't interested in reporters. She hadn't told the girls about dinner at the Ritz. That sort of gossip would go round like wildfire. It was a pity in a way. The girls would simply
adore
hearing about her encounter with Mr Jaggard, to say nothing of Mr Tyrell. It was the oddest thing about Mr Tyrell. She was sure she'd seen him somewhere before. Meredith (
Meredith! She had better think of him as Captain Smith in the office!)
said she was imagining things, but she wasn't.

‘What will you spend the money on?' asked Rosie O'Connor, interrupting her thoughts.

‘A new dress,' said Sheila Mandeville dreamily. ‘And a bag and shoes and gloves. Something really special.'

Standing beside the Brooklands track, Joe Hawley watched the great maroon and silver car come round the banking, throttle back and coast gently to a standstill. Jaggard revved the engine once more, then let it idle into silence.

Hawley ran to the car as Jaggard climbed wearily out. ‘I've got the lap times, Jag. They're damn good. One-oh-three point six on that final stretch.'

Jaggard pushed up his goggles, unbuckled his helmet and tossed them into the car. He passed a hand over his face, leaving streaks of burnt castor oil. ‘One-oh-three? It's not nearly enough, Joe. That chain-driven monster of Miller's can go like the clappers.'

He buried his head in his hands. Hawley had never seen him look so exhausted.

‘We've got to
win,
' Jaggard muttered fiercely. ‘We've
got
to get more speed.'

‘You're all in, old man,' said Hawley, practically. ‘Why don't we go and get something to eat?' He broke off as a boy approached. ‘Yes?'

‘I've got a message for Mr Jaggard, sir. There was a telephone call for you.'

Jaggard took the note, read it, then looked up, grinning broadly. ‘It's from Pat. She wants to meet me this evening at Miss Mandeville's flat. I'd rather go there than Neville Square, that's for sure.'

He fumbled inside his overalls and, bringing out a shilling, tossed it to the boy. ‘Here you are, sonny.'

‘Thanks, guv,' said the boy, catching the coin with alacrity.

‘Now, about this car,' said Jaggard, turning to Hawley. He looked suddenly refreshed and the deep lines on his forehead had disappeared. ‘The rear wheels are locking as I brake and she's shifting under the weight, which means I brake down too soon and lose speed on the curves. If we saw about two inches off the rear brake shoes, that just might do it. Help me get her into the sheds, Joe. We'll get to work, then I can take her out again this afternoon.'

In the kitchen of 42, Dunthorpe Mansions, Mrs Chard put down the potato peeler, sighed ominously and went into the attack. She disapproved heartily of her next-door neighbour, Miss Mandeville – Mrs Chard disapproved of most of her neighbours – and she most certainly disapproved of the noise in the hall.

She sallied forth to see a solid, well-dressed, fair-haired man, who was certainly old enough to
know better
raise the knocker on Miss Mandeville's door yet again. ‘Young man! Must you make all that racket? If Miss Mandeville was at home she would have surely answered the door by now.'

Gregory Jaggard turned. A woman with repressive spectacles, a repressive hairstyle and an alarmingly repressive expression was looking at him from the open door of the neighbouring flat.

Jaggard forced himself to smile. ‘I'm sorry if I disturbed you. I haven't been able to get an answer.'

‘I'm not surprised,' said Mrs Chard with a sniff. ‘She's been out till all hours the past couple of nights. She knows I'm a
martyr
to insomnia and yet I heard her giggling in the hallway.
And
she had a man with her. If it occurs again I shall have to speak to the management.'

Jaggard ignored her. To the accompaniment of a sharp intake of breath from Mrs Chard, he knocked vigorously on the door once more and rattled the handle. Much to his surprise, the door swung open.

He looked into the empty hallway of the flat. ‘Pat? Pat? Are you there?'

‘Miss Mandeville's Christian name is Sheila, I believe,' said his unwelcome companion.

Jaggard turned his head impatiently. ‘I'm not looking for Miss Mandeville, I'm looking for my wife.' He stepped cautiously into the flat. ‘It's all right,' he said as the woman made to follow him. ‘You needn't come in as well.'

Mrs Chard drew herself up. ‘Indeed I must. I consider it my responsibility – my duty even – to see that Miss Mandeville's flat is not ransacked. You say you are looking for your wife. How do I know that story is not a complete fabrication?'

‘Look,' said Jaggard testily. ‘If I wanted to break in, I'd hardly come hammering on the door, would I?'

The woman sniffed. ‘That's as may be.' She was darting glances around her, obviously enjoying this chance to explore. ‘The sitting room is directly ahead.'

The room, which also did duty as a dining room, was empty, but a handbag lay on the sofa.

‘She's been in, then,' said Jaggard, pointing to the bag.

‘Oh yes,' agreed Mrs Chard. ‘She's always in at this hour. She usually switches on the wireless. I have frequently had occasion to speak to her about the noise, but my views, I am sorry to say, apparently count for nothing.'

Jaggard glanced back into the hall. A coat was hanging up on the pegs beside the door and a hat was on the shelf by the mirror. ‘This is damned strange,' he said. He paid no attention to Mrs Chard's intake of breath and scandalized protest of ‘
Language!
'

He quickly looked into the tiny kitchen before pausing self-consciously at the bedroom door. ‘Er . . . d'you think you could?'

‘Certainly.'

Mrs Chard pushed open the door. The bed stood empty against the wall. A chest of drawers, a ponderous wardrobe and a chair were the only other furnishings. There was no one in the room.

‘This is ridiculous,' muttered Jaggard. ‘Where the devil is she?'

He strode back into the hall, pausing before the only door they hadn't opened. ‘What's in here?'

Mrs Chard hesitated. ‘The . . . er . . . facilities,' she said, primly.

He rapped on the door before pushing it open. The bathroom was as empty as the rest of the flat.

‘I've had enough of this,' declared Jaggard. He threw back his head and shouted. ‘Pat! Miss Mandeville! Pat!'

The only sound was the quiet ticking of the sitting-room clock.

‘I trust,' said Mrs Chard, gazing at him in fascinated horror, ‘you will not do that again.'

‘Don't worry,' said Jaggard, restraining his temper with difficulty. ‘I won't.' He looked at his watch impatiently. ‘It's nearly half past six. She should have been here twenty minutes ago.' He went back into the sitting room and, scribbling a note, left it propped up against the clock.

Meredith Smith raised the knocker of 43, Dunthorpe Mansions, once more, but, before he could bring it down, the door of the neighbouring flat flew open and an alarming woman, her face suffused with fury, issued forth.

‘Will you . . .' she began, then stopped. ‘I beg your pardon,' she said in a tone which made it clear she thought Meredith Smith should be begging hers. ‘I assumed you were the
other
young man.' She looked at him with distaste. Clearly the change was no improvement.

Meredith Smith raised his hat. ‘I'm sorry if I disturbed you. I was looking for Miss Mandeville.'

‘Well, that's something,' said the woman with a sniff. ‘Miss Mandeville is clearly not at home. As I told the other young man . . .'

‘
What
other young man?' demanded Meredith.

‘The one who was here earlier. I didn't care for his manner
at all
, although I'm sure I went out of my way to be helpful. I even went so far as to look round Miss Mandeville's flat with him, otherwise I am convinced he would still be hammering at the door. I am a
martyr
to neuralgic headaches and find this constant disturbance
most trying
.'

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