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Murder On A Summer's Day Part 13

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'He left a letter for me with the wife.'

'When was that?'

'Tuesday.'

'Do you mind telling me what was in the letter? It could be important.'

'It was of no importance to me. I chucked it on fireback.'



A cow made a lowing sound. Mr Metcalfe adjusted his cap.

'Did he send anyone to intercede for him?'

'I reckon he knew better than that.' Mr Metcalfe nodded a goodbye.

As he moved away, I looked back and saw the cows waiting patiently by the gate.

If Mr Metcalfe were telling the truth, then the maharajah's old school chum, who was meant to 'disburse' money to Mr Metcalfe, was better off by ten thousand pounds. No mean sum.

Mr Sergeant had given me the address of Thurston Presthope's house at Halton East, but it was Lydia's description of its neglect that drew me to it. It was the type of house that might once have housed a local squire. Constructed of stone, it stood no-nonsense square, with more than its fair share of sash windows, although two of them had been bricked up, possibly to avoid a long-ago window tax. In the evening sunlight, the windows looked dirty, one with a drooping curtain.

A drainpipe had come away from the wall. There were slates missing from the roof.

I stepped out of the Rolls.

It was a long time since the gate or the house had enjoyed a lick of paint. The gate took a bit of pus.h.i.+ng as it was missing a hinge. Weeds grew through cracks in the path that led through an overgrown front garden to the porch. I raised and dropped the bra.s.s knocker.

After a long wait, during which I considered knocking again, someone called through the letter box to me about mislaying the key and saying I would have to wait. Eventually, after much shuffling about, the door opened. An elderly housekeeper looked from mud-spattered me to the mud-spattered white Rolls-Royce.

'I don't know if the master's in.'

I produced my card.

She squinted at it. 'I'll ask.'

She left me waiting in the porch, with the door open, while she climbed the stairs slowly, leaning heavily on the banister.

The grandfather clock ticked fitfully and failed to chime on the hour of six. It was slow.

'Who the devil is she and what does she want?'

'She's one of them rich eccentrics,' I heard the housekeeper say, 'covered top to toe in mud but driving a big car.'

An interested sound issued from the man's throat.

A moment later, Presthope appeared on the staircase. From the corner of his mouth, he hissed, 'Why didn't you show her into the parlour?'

He then composed himself for what I took to be his version of a grand entrance, pulling in his belly, throwing back his shoulders, and probably although I could not see tucking in his b.u.t.tocks and spreading his toes. He wore a silk smoking jacket, shabby dark trousers, and from the stench last week's hair lotion. Cast in a melodrama as a younger man, he would have been the romantic lead. Now he was seedy and down at heel.

'Come in, dear lady. Excuse my housekeeper's rudeness.'

I smiled. 'She was not at all rude, Mr Presthope. I am the intruder. Mrs Shackleton.'

'I have heard all about you from Upton. You found my good friend's body.' His voice oozed charm, confidence and deep regret. No doubt the money the maharajah had entrusted to him would see him right in the spruce up and style department.

He hesitated in the hall before leading me into a dining room. 'I'm sorry we haven't lit fires. It's so warm.'

We stood by the dining room table. I noticed that a side table held a photograph of a school cricket team. A young Prince Narayan and Presthope stood side by side.

He pulled out a chair for me. 'I've asked for tea to be brought, unless you would like something stronger, after such a shock.'

'Tea will be grand.'

'I apologise for the scratchiness of my situation here, but my wife is in town, staying with her mother.'

From the look of the room, his wife had been staying with her mother for a very long time.

He sat in the carver at the head of the table. 'I can't believe that Narayan is dead. We were such good chums at school. Of course, as a sportsman, he excelled cricket, polo, rugby. Such a loss, such a great loss. I am so glad to have seen him just once more.'

'That is what I want to ask you about, Mr Presthope. You see, the Indian royal family will be arriving shortly, along with the duke and d.u.c.h.ess. I want to be able to give his lords.h.i.+p a clear account of events so that he will be able to answer Maharajah s.h.i.+vram Halkwaer's questions.'

'Of course. And if Maharajah s.h.i.+vram wishes to speak to me, I should be glad to attend his highness.'

I bet you would. Here was a man with an eye for any opportunity.

'When did you last see your friend?'

'He stayed here four days ago, for one night. We had arranged the visit by letter. He was motoring from Derbys.h.i.+re and unsure of his precise day of arrival, but he wired me the day before.'

'You must have had a lot to talk about.'

'Oh we did. He was in excellent spirits. We reminisced about schooldays, horses, motor cars. My wife being away it was not so awkward with Miss Metcalfe. She has turned into a fine looking woman.'

I played the simpleton. 'I would have thought if your wife were here, it would be less not more awkward to entertain Miss Metcalfe.'

'You jest, Mrs Shackleton. If my wife were here there would have been an extreme difficulty in receiving Lydia Metcalfe. Her family farm nearby and she is... well, being a gentleman, I shall be kind. She never did fit in, from being small. Country life did not suit her. She was sent to live with an aunt in London.'

'Is that why your guests spent only one night here, because of the possible scandal?'

'No! I would have accepted her, for his sake. But she objected to the lack of comfort. We plan some changes here, you see. The bathroom was not to her liking. And I dare say his highness is used to a great deal better.'

That surely must qualify for the understatement of all time, yet he did not blink an eye. I waited.

'The Metcalfe farm was their first port of call, and then they came here. Respectable folk, the Metcalfes. It tells one something that Lydia did not get on with her own parents.'

'So you did not approve of their engagement?'

He hesitated just a little too long before shaking his head in what he must hope would appear a wise and telling manner. 'He would not have married her.'

'Oh? I thought perhaps a wedding was planned and you were to be best man.'

He gave me an oily smile. I could see a compliment forming as he looked at me.

'My dear lady, if you were to be maid of honour, I would be best man at any wedding. But I can a.s.sure you there was no such plan.'

I ignored his clumsy attempt to flirt. 'She wore an engagement ring.'

'A bull wears a ring through its nose but expects no nuptials, pardon my bluntness. He met her at the Folies Bergere. His other lady friends were immediately banished to the outer darkness, suitably recompensed, of course.'

If they had been suitably recompensed, I guessed that no previous mistress of the prince would trouble herself to risk a noose by shooting him. But a liar and a rogue who stood to gain a great deal of hard cash, and probably thought it his due, would have no such scruples.

'Where were you on Friday afternoon and evening?'

He stared at me. 'What? You don't imagine...'

There was a kick at the door.

Presthope pushed back his chair. 'You can't get the staff these days.'

He walked to the door and flung it open. Keeping his voice low, he said, 'I've told you. Put the tray down, and then open the door. Don't just boot it.'

'What? Pardon?' The housekeeper did not lower her voice. 'You want me to bend down and spin meself dizzy? Well I can't do it, and I can't hold a tray and turn a k.n.o.b, not with my rheumatics.'

So spoke a woman who had not been paid her wages, and remained loyal to her absent mistress.

The door closed.

Presthope came to the table with the tray that had been thrust at him.

'Excuse my housekeeper. I keep her on out of pity.' He pushed the tray in my direction. 'I was here on Friday afternoon, with my accountant.'

I hate those moments when it is left to me to pour tea, especially tea so weak it is not worth the trouble. But I did it, not wis.h.i.+ng to interrupt my line of questioning by a debate about who should play mother.

'You say you saw the prince just that one night?'

'Yes. The constable asked me did Narayan ride across here to see me on Friday. Unfortunately he did not.'

'What about Thursday?' This was the date of the note when the prince had handed money to Presthope.

He shook his head as he took a careful sip of tea and only just refrained from pulling a face. It was stewed, and cold.

'You were at the hotel on Thursday I believe, connected with an exchange of money?'

'I did call at the hotel, but on another matter, to meet an a.s.sociate in the bar, not to see Narayan. I did b.u.mp into him though. Has Miss Metcalfe been making accusations against me?'

'Why should she?'

'Because I know her. In Narayan's imagination she was some sort of G.o.ddess but I know her to be a jumped up money-grubbing farm girl. Her father and brothers cannot make light of her way of life as I do, being a man of the world. As long as she confined her activities to London and foreign parts, they were not compelled to reckon with her immorality. But for her to wave her doings under their noses must have been hard for them to stomach.'

'Are you suggesting they are capable of murder?'

'I am suggesting nothing, and casting no aspersions. It simply occurs to me that if you are making enquiries into Narayan's death which I sincerely hope will turn out to be a tragic accident then you should be apprised of the local situation.'

'Thank you.' The man was not above throwing mud in every direction to divert attention from himself. 'You say you b.u.mped into the prince at the hotel.'

When he saw I would not let go, he relented. His eyes narrowed. 'I don't wish what I am going to say to be widely known, Mrs Shackleton.'

'I am sure if it has no bearing on the prince's death, then I would have no reason to divulge whatever you have to say to me. But I am trying to establish as full a picture as possible.'

He nodded. 'Very well. I shall be candid.'

That would be the day.

'I have had some financial difficulties lately, death duties and so on. Last Thursday, Narayan pressed two hundred pounds on me, and insisted I regard it as a gift.'

'I see.'

What a liar, and yet so persuasively spoken. If I had not seen the receipt for ten thousand pounds with my own eyes I may have believed him.

If he were right about the men of the Metcalfe family, hatred of Narayan would give them a motive for murder. But ten thousand pounds was no paltry sum. And an old school friend could come close enough to press a trigger.

How could he lie so confidently after having signed that he had taken possession of the money?

Fourteen.

The hotel room that until yesterday had been occupied by Prince Narayan now looked very different. The silk throws and cus.h.i.+ons had gone. Clothing that had been set out for him to change into after his ride no longer lay on the bed. Yet there remained a heady whiff of something like jasmine, and a sharp scent of sandalwood from the writing case on the Elizabethan table by the window.

The hotel manager, Mr Sergeant, came to join me. At my request, he opened the writing case. 'What am I looking for?'

'A receipt recording a monetary transaction between the prince and a third party.'

He picked up the stationery and the blue bond paper bearing the poem in a strange language, decorated with tiny flowers. I was glad we could not read the script. I guessed it to be from Narayan's wife.

'Nothing like that here.'

He closed the case and locked it.

I went to the fireplace. A small fire had been laid, but not lit. Sc.r.a.ps of charred paper lay between the logs.

Small wonder Presthope was so confident and had lied to me in such a bare-faced way, saying only that his friend had 'given' him two hundred pounds. Somehow, when Ijahar was in and out, back and forth from Bolton Hall, taking incense and cloths of gold, Presthope or some emissary had, they thought, destroyed the note. He was not to know that I had kept the original. My forgery had fooled him. I felt a frisson of pride at having copied his signature so well.

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