Cora followed her into a large bedroom. Dark wooden paneling lined the walls, and Oriental carpets covered the floor.
“It’s rather grand, isn’t it?” Veronica asked.
Cora nodded, still taking in the damask curtains that seemed to have been made with gold thread, and the elaborate mirrors with frames that appeared gold-plated.
Veronica took out a thin cigarette and placed it onto her cigarette holder. “Goodness. I don’t know whether to be eager for the police to arrive or not.”
Her hand wobbled, and Cora narrowed her eyes.
Nervousness had never been one of Veronica’s traits. Not when she had such an abundance of self-confidence.
“They’re going to think I did it,” Veronica said.
“Nonsense.”
“You heard them at breakfast. Even Rhys thinks so, and I always got along well with him.” Tension didn’t ease from Veronica’s features, and her jaw seemed to stiffen in a manner one might associate more with the eponymous character from Tchaikovsky’s most famous ballet than with Hollywood actresses.
“I’ve never known you to worry about things,” Cora said.
“This isn’t a small thing.”
“But you don’t have a motive.”
Veronica gave her a strained smile. “I would have hated for any of my horrid past to come out. Just the thought of it now being released makes me nearly swoon.”
“You didn’t know he was looking for reasons to annul the marriage.”
“You’re too sweet, Cora. But I did know. I did worry about it. I didn’t kill him, but I could have. I was there in that hallway. Maybe people will believe that I entered his room—nobody ever locks them, lest they decide to call for a servant—and unhooked that chandelier and killed him.”
“And exited from the balcony? That’s nonsense.”
“I could have exited from the duchess’s room. I heard her laughing and cavorting with that Italian fellow. I knew she was in that room.”
Oh.
“If you heard, other people did,” Cora speculated.
“Perhaps it was Lady Audrey. Perhaps the duke insulted her painting.”
“Perhaps,” Cora said, though they both knew that Lady Audrey and the duke had seemed to get on well, and that Lady Audrey stood to make no financial gain from the man’s death.
“It’s hopeless,” Veronica said. “The village would be happy to have me be the chief suspect. They’d hardly want to imagine that someone they knew had done it. And who wants to have one’s relative arrested? Something like that would cast a shadow over future birthdays and holiday gatherings. One moment one is reminiscing about someone, and the next moment one’s remembering that the person in question spent his last moments on earth dangling from a noose.” She sighed. “The servants were all eating when the murder took place. None of them left the kitchen then. Somebody can attest to it for all of them. Not that any of them would have left. The cook’s food is delicious, especially around the holidays, and leftovers are not a concept that I imagine the servants are aware of.”
“We don’t get leftovers either,” Cora said.
“No, not with these formal dinners.” Veronica giggled. “We could always sneak into the larder if we get too hungry. I just wish the tabloids hadn’t delighted so much in smearing my reputation. The wedding was supposed to make me more respectable, and instead the journalists seem to delight in contrasting me in the most negative way to my so very proper husband.”
Cora didn’t mention that Veronica’s past was rather more scandalous than even the most determined journalists had discovered. “Police officers don’t read tabloids.”
“I wouldn’t be too sure,” Veronica said. “And they definitely watch movies. Honey, they’ve probably seen me be arrested half a dozen times by tough coppers or gumshoes on the silver screen.”
“At least Constable Kirby is unaware of your repertoire.”
Veronica’s lips twitched.
For a moment, all seemed well, and Veronica settled against the window seat. “I think I should have gone outside with Edmund and you. This house is giving me the creeps.” She peered through the window. “Honey, is that that funny Italian? Why is he carrying such a huge knapsack?”
“What do you mean?” Cora followed Veronica’s glance.
And swallowed hard.
Signor Palombi was skiing away from the manor house.
He’s fleeing.
Chapter Seventeen
Cora rushed from the room.
“Where are you going?” Veronica called after her.
“I’ll explain later,” Cora said over her shoulder.
She raced down the stairs, sliding a hand along the polished banister.
It all made sense.
Mr. Palombi had come to kill the duke.
Or perhaps he’d intended to steal some documents, something from his library, and the duke had found out.
She threw her coat on and slid on her other winter garments.
If only it weren’t winter and going outside didn’t involve such complexity. She sprinted from the house and gazed into the distance at Signor Palombi’s receding form.
“Signore!” she shouted. “Signor Palombi!”
If he heard her, he didn’t answer.
But then it was unlikely his last name was even Palombi. No true Italian would make so many mistakes with the Italian language.
Skis.
If she skied, she could reach him.
Or at least, she’d have a better chance of reaching him.
Her feet crunched against the snow as she raced to the barn where Edmund had shown her the skis.The bitter wind slammed against her face, but she didn’t hesitate. This was her chance. Her one chance.
Would anyone believe her if she expressed her doubts about Palombi’s authenticity? Would he go off to murder other people?
She wasn’t going to take that chance.
Cora stormed into the barn and grabbed the skis. They seemed long and unwieldy.
Never mind.
She had the basic idea.
Even children skied.
Surely she could too.
Cora changed into some ski shoes, carried the skis onto the snow, and put them on.
She slid her right ski, and then her left ski on the snow.
Her movements were nowhere near as quick as Signor Palombi’s, but she was moving.
She was skiing.
She was doing it.
Just as if she’d done it all her life.
Well, perhaps not exactly the same, because then she was quite sure she would be going much more quickly, and she definitely would not be looking at the approaching downward slope with terror.
Still, there was something pleasant about the breeze against her face, and she quickened her pace.
Signor Palombi was still visible before her, and she was thankful he was lumbered with a heavy backpack. Archibald’s furry white face peeked out; what did he make of Signor Palombi speeding over the snow?
Signor Palombi moved each leg outward, as if he were ice skating, and his skis crossed in a perfect pattern over each other.
Cora attempted the same move, but despite the abundance of dance classes she’d taken, it only resulted in her right ski firmly keeping her left ski in place.
She almost toppled.
She should have toppled.
But Signor Palombi turned around, and Cora managed to stay upright, even though every inch of her body seemed to desire to swerve toward the ground.
For a moment, she thought she saw him smile.
She decided to just keep her skis straight.
That should work better.
Hopefully.
She hurried toward Signor Palombi, focusing on his ever-diminishing figure when—
She skied over the incline of the hill.
She’d done so before of course.
But the slope of this hill was steeper, and she moved downward at an utterly unwelcome speed.
Thi
s was dreadful.
She’d never moved so quickly.
She was flying down the hill, and she realized that pointing her skis straight downward was perhaps not helpful in slowing the speed.
She tried to think.
Had she seen skiers before on the newsreels?
Had they done something else?
She seemed to remember that they’d moved from side to side, and she veered toward her left and—
She fell.
On her bottom.
Not that that prevented her from keeping sliding down the hill, unfortunately.
Her left ski came undone and toppled downward, and her right ski decided to stay firmly in place so as to best humiliate her when she tried to scramble after the other one.
Cora grasped hold of her poles and coaxed them into the snow, as if they were the only thing to keep her steady.
She supposed they were.
“What on earth are you doing?” A voice bellowed behind her.
Randolph.
She jerked her head to the side and toppled farther into the icy white powder.
“Cora!” He rushed over the snow, not sinking into it, as if he were some Biblical persona.
Not that Yorkshire could be the least bit confused with the desert settings of those stories.
“Are you hurt?” Randolph kneeled beside her and stroked her hair.
Cora pulled herself up. “You’re wearing snowshoes!”
“Er—yes. But my question remains—”
“I’m fine. It’s Signor Palombi,” Cora stammered. “He’s getting away. He’s the murderer!”
“How do you know?”
“He’s escaping! He’s guilty. And I saw him sneak into the duke’s library last night. I followed him there.”
Randolph turned to her sharply. “You shouldn’t have done that. You could have hurt yourself. You could have injured yourself now.”
“Snow is soft,” Cora grumbled.
“The slopes are steep, and frankly, you don’t know what you’re doing.” Randolph’s face darkened.
“He’s not even Italian.”
“What?” Randolph widened his eyes.
“He’s just pretending. I think he figured out that I knew—and I told him I knew he’d broken into the duke’s library, and now he’s getting away and now he’s going, and my best friend in the entire world might hang and—”
Randolph’s gaze softened.
“Don’t worry.” Randolph stood up and offered Cora his hand. “I won’t let him get away. Give me your skis. Now.”
“But—”
Randolph scrambled to the ground and undid his show shoes. “Wear these.”
Cora nodded and bent to remove her remaining ski. Randolph sighed and picked up the one that had fallen off. At last, she stepped onto the snow, unconstrained by those odd Nordic contraptions.
“I need your boots too,” he said.
“What?”
“To wear with the skis.”
“Oh.” Cora undid them.
Randolph tore off his scarf and placed it on the ground. “Step onto this.”
“You won’t fit into my shoes.”
Randolph grinned, and his green eyes sparkled, like grass on a dewy day. They seemed so lively, and it seemed impossible that he might fail.
He pulled out a knife, and the blade gleamed under the sun.
Who carries a knife with them?
“Former scout,” he said. “Important to keep it sharpened.”
Randolph sliced through the heel of the boots, shoved his feet through them, and then wrapped string around them.
“You always carry that?” she asked.
“The scouts trained us well.” Randolph grabbed hold of the poles, and then he was off, pushing himself forcefully down the slope.
Golly.
Cora stared at his receding figure. He seemed a paragon of strength, unfazed by the ever-increasing rapidity of his speed down the hill. On the contrary, he bent his knees and tucked his poles up, so the metal ends pointed into the air, to increase his pace even more.
The man seemed oblivious to the fact he might be headed into danger.
Cora wouldn’t let him do it alone.
Not when she was the one who’d sent him there.
She slipped her feet into his boots.
They were far too large.
She frowned, but then shoved her mittens into the space behind her ankle.
Better.
She tied the boots and then put on the snowshoes.
They seemed absurd. Utterly unwieldy, but when she began walking, she appreciated that she didn’t sink into the drifts. She forced her bare hands into her pockets and quickened her pace, watching as Randolph pursued Signor Palombi.
Randolph’s athleticism should not have been surprising.
His broad chest and shirt sleeves that barely disguised the rippled curves of musculature should have been warnings, as were the confident strides he took that highlighted his powerful form.
Still, his speed was incredible. He scurried down the incline, and for a moment, she didn’t see him, but she soon saw first his hat, and then the dark curls underneath, and finally his coat and legs as he tackled the next hill. He ascended it quickly, as if unconstrained by the skis, seeming to go every bit as fast as he would if there were no snow here and he were merely running. He moved each ski diagonally to the side and evidently, the manner in which his skis crisscrossed, which unlike hers never actually touched, seemed sufficient to keep him from sliding down the hill.
“Signor Palombi!” Randolph hollered. “Stop!”
Signor Palombi was not stopping.
The man must hear Randolph. Cora had no difficulty hearing him, even though she was much farther away.
Finally Randolph closed in and—
He grabbed the man.
Relief coursed through Cora.
Randolph was strong, and Signor Palombi was burdened with an awkwardly sized bag. Perhaps, just perhaps, everything would be fine.
Cora padded over the snow in the snowshoes. She tried to emulate perfect confidence and calm as best as she could when her coat was splattered with very cold and very wet material.
A scarf covered nearly Signor Palombi’s entire face, but it was him.
“Let me see you,” Randolph said.
His voice was all triumphant, and Cora beamed.
They’d caught the murderer.
Once the police arrived, they could haul him away.
Safety was once again restored.
Signor Palombi unwound his scarf and lowered his hood.
Randolph stared at him. “It’s you.”
“Yes,” Signor Palombi said.
“What are you doing here?”
Signor Palombi’s eyes drifted to Cora. “Holiday. An—er—important one.”
Randolph frowned. “This man is not the murderer.”
“But—” Cora blinked. “He snuck into the man’s library and—”
“It appears suspicious,” Signor Palombi said amiably.
“Most suspicious,” she said.
She’d thought Randolph would help her.
She’d thought she’d found the murderer.
“I don’t understand,” she said.
Randolph’s eyes softened. “I’m sorry.”
“Let me just say that certain people were interested in the late duke’s business dealings,” Signor Palombi said. “War is in the air, whether the British government desires appeasement or not. Some people think it is useful to know what the Germans might have planned.”
“You wanted plans for weapons? Designs?” Cora asked. “You’re a spy?”
“He’s not going to confirm that,” Randolph said quickly.
“I didn’t murder the duke,” Signor Palombi said.
Cora frowned. “I think that’s for the police to determine. You should still come back.” She turned to Randolph. “Are you a spy too?”
“Nonsense,” Randolph said breezily.<
br />
“But then who else would have murdered the duke?”
The two men looked at each other.
“I think I should inspect the body,” Randolph said finally. “It may not be murder, and Mr.—”
“You can go on calling me Palombi,” the fake Italian said.
“Mr. Palombi,” Randolph continued, “will just become the scapegoat if he leaves now.”
“I can stay a bit longer,” Mr. Palombi said after a pause. “I have grown fond of the manor house and its inhabitants.”
They turned back toward the manor house, as confusion continued to course through Cora.
Chapter Eighteen
Randolph and Signor Palombi skied slowly beside her. The gray stone of the manor house rose forebodingly over the crisp white snow, casting shadows over the icy moat. The leaves had been stripped from the trees, and gnarly branches stretched outside the manor house, as if to offer further protection.
“I’ll go inside,” Signor Palombi said.
“Good idea,” Randolph replied.
Cora gazed at the duke’s window. Just as the dowager had admitted, the balcony outside extended to her room. But it was also connected to a third room. Siignor Palombi could have accessed the duke’s room via the balcony.
“When did you visit your bedroom?”
“After dinner. At—er—ten o’clock.”
“After you had a chance to look through the duke’s things?”
He nodded. “I heard somebody outside the door and decided not to stay for long.”
“You heard me,” Cora said.
He nodded gravely. “After that I went straight to my room.”
“When did the duchess arrive?”
He flushed. “She was already there.”
Randolph raised his eyebrows. Evidently, he did not know Signor Palombi as much as he claimed.
“Did you hear anything?” Cora asked.
He shook his head. “No.”
“Did you leave your chamber at all?”
“No! Not until I heard the duke scream.” He looked at Randolph. “It was a terrifying noise. It was of someone who truly feared death. And now I will go inside. If I am to stay here, I will at least make certain that dear Archibald is fed.”
He marched into the house.
“It was brave of you to go after him,” Randolph said. “But also incredibly foolish.”
The Sleuthing Starlet Mysteries Page 11