by Clara Benson
Copyright
© 2015 Clara Benson
All rights reserved
The right of Clara Benson to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988
The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author
This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed upon the subsequent purchaser
clarabenson.com
Cover design by Yang Liu waterpaperink.com
Cover typography and ebook formatting and design by Colleen Sheehan
wdrbookdesign.com
The Shadow at Greystone Chase
After her bruising encounter with the law, Angela Marchmont has vowed to give up detecting, and is doing her best to forget the events of last winter and the terrible lie she told to save herself. So when a letter arrives from beyond the grave requesting her help and reminding her of the past, she is anything but pleased. Drawn reluctantly into one final case and spurred on by her guilty conscience, Angela soon discovers a viper’s nest of family betrayals and hidden enmities which have lain undisturbed for years, and which may have led to the deaths of more than one person. Despite her unwillingness to reopen old wounds, Angela knows she must put aside her own feelings and solve the mystery if she is ever to find peace. Can she get to the heart of the matter, right the wrong she has done and be happy at last?
MRS. ANGELA MARCHMONT was not a woman who liked to admit weakness. Having worked hard and overcome numerous obstacles—not least the inconvenient fact of her sex—to achieve material success, she had, over the years, found it politic to adopt a serene and cheery demeanour which was intended to convey the impression of a person who was not easily daunted, and who could be relied upon to undertake any task with little fuss and a reasonable degree of competence. As time went on, this outward appearance became so natural to her that it grew to be quite a habit, and she had found it so useful on various occasions that she saw no reason to abandon it. So convincing was she that many people—including some of her closest friends—assumed that she really was as permanently sanguine and untroubled as she seemed, and Angela never bothered to disabuse them of the notion, for she had discovered that there were decided benefits to be had from the ability to present an unruffled façade to the world at large. True, there were some who considered her a little cool—unfeeling, even—but since Angela was also happily possessed of a great deal of personal charm, those people tended to be in the minority. The majority, meanwhile, took her smiles at face value, and it never occurred to them to wonder whether there might be anything more below the surface than that which she chose to display above it.
Following her trial for the murder of her husband, Angela, true to character, resolved to put the events of the past winter behind her as soon as she could, and was determined never to reveal to a soul how bruised and battered she had been by the whole experience. To that end, she immediately accepted every invitation she received from her many concerned friends, who were in unanimous agreement that she ought to leave London for a while—at least until the days grew longer and memories began to fade. Angela was more touched by their kindness than she could say, for she had been uncertain of how they would react to the revelations which had come out in court about her past. It is not everyone who is prepared to take with equanimity the discovery that a friend has been concealing the existence of an illegitimate child for fourteen years, and Angela was not entirely surprised to discover that there were some whose affection for her cooled markedly after the event. Still, she was by no means a pariah, and so she put on a brave face and affected not to notice the defection of those who had decided they wanted nothing more to do with her. This was partly for her daughter’s sake, for now that Barbara knew the truth Angela was determined to do right by her, and therefore firmly refused to give any indication that she might be at all ashamed of the girl. Barbara had already lost quite enough because of her mother’s mistakes, and the last thing she needed was to feel as though Angela did not want her now that there was no longer any good reason for them to be apart.
Between social engagements, therefore, Angela took care to visit Barbara at school as often as she could without causing embarrassment, and to write at least twice a week, and as far as she could tell (although who knew what went on in the mind of a fourteen-year-old girl?) Barbara was happy with the new arrangement. Angela knew her daughter well enough to be fairly certain that if there were anything to complain about, she would hear about it soon enough, and so after a few months her anxiety began to lessen and she started to believe that perhaps she was not quite the worst mother in the world, which had been her firmest conviction up to then. A little to her surprise, she found herself enjoying Barbara’s company more and more, and had some ado to suppress her self-reproach at having left things so long. Barbara was kind enough not to mention it, however, and Angela hoped that the guilt would wear off in time.
So the months passed, and spring came and went. Since February Angela had spent two weeks in the South of France, a week in Bournemouth, and various weekends in Hampshire, Somerset and Leicestershire. She had attended the races three times and been hunting once. In April she went sailing and in May attended a flower show. She also visited her brother and his wife in Surrey—an uncomfortable experience in which they all did their best not to mention the trial, and Humphrey went into agonies over whether or not he ought to acknowledge the existence of his hitherto unsuspected niece. Angela had already departed before he made his decision, and in a fever of guilt he sent a letter after her in which he meant to indicate his support (although not his approval), but which was full of such tortuous language and flowery expression that it would have conveyed nothing to anyone who did not know him as well as his sister did. Angela smiled when she received it, and appreciated his intentions, but decided not to visit again for a long while.
Thus was she kept busy. She was not tactless enough to throw herself into the usual round of gaiety, evening-parties and night-clubs, for although she was not at all sorry at her husband’s death, Angela was fully aware of the hypocrisy which was required of her, and so she was careful to accept only invitations to the more muted sorts of engagement, at which she put on a brisk manner that was intended to discourage anyone from asking too many questions. Of course, it would have been unnatural to refuse to talk about the thing at all, and so whenever the conversation floated in that direction (as it invariably did sooner or later), and someone asked a hesitant question as to how she was, Angela replied with a smile, and agreed that yes, it had all been dreadful, but that she was doing her best to forget it now. Something about the way she replied tended to discourage further inquiry, but occasionally someone of little perception would venture further and say how fortunate it was that they had caught the real murderer in the end, and at that moment Angela would nod and change the subject abruptly, and nothing more would be said about it.
Hardly anyone knew the real truth about what had happened that day in court, and Angela had no intention of enlightening them. It was an uncomfortable feeling, to say the least, to owe one’s life to a man for whom one had harboured a guilty—infatuation, she supposed it must be called (for she would not dignify it with a higher nam
e), and who had turned out to have done something unspeakable. Angela was disgusted at herself for her own stupidity in having been drawn in by Edgar Valencourt, who had killed his wife, but she hated herself even more for the terrible lie she had told in court, which had allowed him to take the blame for her husband’s murder onto his own shoulders. Even though it had been the only way out for her, and he had fully meant her to do it, she knew she had done him a great wrong, and she struggled daily with her conscience, for it did not do to pin a crime on an innocent man, however bad he was in other respects. Still, it was all too late now; he was dead and the thing was over and done with, and Angela was determined that nobody should ever know of her broken heart, for she felt she did not deserve pity.
She therefore put on her usual cheerful face and went about her business, and no-one could have guessed that she was anything other than tremendously relieved at her acquittal and keen to return to normal life as far as possible. True, she was thinner than she had been, and perhaps she laughed a little less, but not so much as to be especially obvious. She slept badly these days, too, but the dark circles under her eyes were easy enough to conceal with a touch of make-up. Only Marthe, her faithful maid, observed the hours Angela spent staring out of the window apparently unseeing; noticed, too, her mistress’s increased absent-mindedness, which meant a question often had to be repeated two or three times before it would be answered. She also knew that Angela had taken to rising early and going for restless walks, although on her return she often could not say where she had been. Marthe saw all this and worried for her mistress’s health, but Angela dismissed her concerns and said she was perfectly well.
It was towards the end of May when Angela returned to her flat in Mount Street one evening, after having spent several days with some friends in Oxfordshire. These days the flat had the tidy, empty appearance of someone who lived in it little, and the post tended to pile up. Angela glanced through the heap of correspondence which awaited her attention.
‘I seem to be running up rather a lot of bills lately,’ she remarked, as Marthe busied herself with the luggage. ‘Now, if I were as respectable as I ought to be, I should have a nice, stuffy, middle-aged husband, who would regard me sorrowfully over his spectacles as I prostrated myself at his feet and confessed my profligacy, and then pay them all for me with a sigh.’
Marthe’s wrinkled nose indicated quite clearly what she thought of that.
‘Oh, an invitation from the Atchisons,’ said Angela, reading. ‘They want me to go to Edinburgh on Thursday. Do we want to go to Scotland? It’s a long way and he’s rather a bore. Perhaps I’ll say no this time. What else? A postcard from Barbara to say that she almost passed the French exam, whatever that means. Now, what’s this?’ she went on, opening another letter, whose postmark and appearance indicated it as being of a legal nature. ‘Don’t tell me Mr. Addison has found something else to charge me for. It’s quite extraordinary how they manage to bill one for things that one might have supposed were included in the service—’
Here she broke off, for the letter was not from Mr. Addison at all. Marthe glanced up in curiosity at Angela’s sudden silence, and raised her eyebrows at the sight of her mistress’s face, which had assumed a blank, closed expression.
‘What is it?’ she asked.
Angela did not reply, but continued to stare at the single sheet of paper in her hand. Its letterhead declared it to be from a firm of solicitors by the name of Gilverson and Gilverson, and it read simply:
Friday, 17th May
Dear Mrs. Marchmont,
I write in respect of my late client, Edgar Valencourt de Lisle, about whom I have a communication to make that would be better discussed in private. I should therefore be very grateful if you would come to my office at your earliest convenience. Might I suggest next Friday, 24th May, at 2 p.m? If not, I shall be more than happy to accommodate any other day you prefer.
Yours sincerely,
Charles Gilverson
P.S: Please be assured that all discussions will remain absolutely confidential.
Angela gazed at the wall for a few moments, looked back at the letter to remind herself of the date suggested for the appointment with Charles Gilverson, thought for an instant and reached a sudden decision.
‘Go and send a telegram to the Atchisons and tell them we’ll be there on Thursday,’ she said to Marthe. ‘And you’d better start looking up the train times.’
‘But I thought you did not wish to go,’ said Marthe.
‘I’ve changed my mind,’ said Angela, in a tone that brooked no argument.
Marthe went off to do as she was bid. When she had gone, Angela drummed her fingers vigorously on the mantelpiece for some two minutes. She then took up the letter, read it once more, crumpled it up and threw it in the waste-paper basket. After another minute she fished it out and tore it into pieces for good measure. She had no idea what this Charles Gilverson wanted to say to her, but it could not possibly be anything she wanted to hear. Perhaps there had been a mistake. At any rate, she had no intention of going to his office, and of course he would not have the temerity to try again. She would ignore the summons and go to Scotland instead, and then he would go away and leave her alone.
BUT IF ANGELA thought she could escape the inevitable, she was wrong. She spent a very dull week in Scotland and returned to London, secure in the knowledge that she had missed her appointment with Mr. Gilverson and thus had nothing to fear. To her dismay, therefore, the first thing she saw when Marthe presented her with her post was a familiar-looking envelope, addressed to her in the same hand as the first letter, but bigger and bulkier this time. Evidently this one contained more than just a single sheet of paper.
‘That will be all,’ said Angela pointedly to Marthe, who was hovering about with an expression of the strongest curiosity. Marthe stuck out her chin and reluctantly withdrew, and Angela opened the envelope with some trepidation. Inside was a letter and another, smaller envelope addressed to her. She turned her attention to the letter first. It was from Mr. Gilverson, and it read:
Wednesday, 29th May
Dear Mrs. Marchmont,
It has occurred to me that my earlier letter may have come as something of an unwelcome surprise to you in view of the unfortunate events that occurred last winter, about which I imagine you hardly want to be reminded. If it did, then I beg your pardon. My intention was never to upset or alarm you in any way, and I hope you will forgive me if I have inadvertently done so. I wrote to you originally in fulfilment of instructions left to me by my late client, who asked me to communicate with you a certain number of months after his death. He did not specify how many months, but he was clear in his wish that you be given time to recover from your ordeal before I wrote to you.
Having reflected upon the situation, and since I understand the enclosed letter is somewhat personal in nature, I have now decided to send it to you directly, in order to allow you to read it in private and consider the course of action you wish to take, if any. My client referred to your generosity of spirit several times during our conversation, and was hopeful that you would be prevailed upon to lend your assistance in resolving his problem. However, since it is by rights his own concern and none of yours, please be assured that no recrimination of any kind will be due to you should you decide to decline; on the contrary, I am aware of the demands I am placing upon you even by writing to you now, and you therefore have my word that if I do not hear from you, this is the last communication you will receive from me regarding this matter.
If there is anything further you wish to know, I can be communicated with at any time at the above address.
I remain,
Yours sincerely,
Charles Gilverson
Angela hardly knew what she had been expecting—a blackmail demand had been her immediate assumption on receiving the first letter—but this was a surprise indeed. What could it mean? She now turned to the smaller envelope and regarded it warily. It bore only her name, writte
n in a clear, masculine hand; presumably that of the man she had known as Edgar Valencourt. Her first thought on looking at it was that his handwriting was wholly unfamiliar to her, for he had never written to her nor she to him. How little she had known him! And what had she known of him, after all, but what he had told her? It was not until that fateful day in court that she had found out his terrible secret and felt her world collapse about her ears. Now she hesitated for some time before opening the letter, since it seemed that no good could possibly come of it. After all, what could it be except an explanation for his conduct and a demand for her gratitude in return for his having taken the blame upon himself? He was dead now, and nothing he could say would change what had happened, so why read the letter and reopen the wounds that had begun slowly to heal over? For a few moments, indeed, she had half a mind to tear it up unread, but something stopped her and she could not bring herself to do it. She bit her lip, then at last opened the envelope reluctantly and took out the letter it contained. It was written on cheap paper she recognized well from her own time in prison, and was dated mid-January, before his escape and subsequent death at the hands of a criminal gang.
My darling Angela (it read),
I expect by now you’re sick and tired of the very sound of my name, and would be quite happy never to hear it again—and believe me, I thought long and hard before putting pen to paper today, since the last thing I want is to remind you of this whole sorry business. In fact, I shouldn’t blame you if you wanted to throw this letter into the fire and refuse to read it, but I know your generosity and I hope you’ll be kind enough to give me your attention for just a few minutes, even if I don’t deserve it.