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The Late Scholar

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by Jill Paton Walsh




  By Jill Paton Walsh

  The Attenbury Emeralds

  By Jill Paton Walsh and Dorothy L. Sayers

  A Presumption of Death

  By Dorothy L. Sayers and Jill Paton Walsh

  Thrones, Dominations

  Imogen Quy detective stories by Jill Paton Walsh

  The Wyndham Case

  A Piece of Justice

  Debts of Dishonour

  The Bad Quarto

  Detective stories by Dorothy L. Sayers

  Busman’s Honeymoon

  Clouds of Witness

  The Documents in the Case (with Robert Eustace)

  Five Red Herrings

  Gaudy Night

  Hangman’s Holiday

  Have His Carcase

  In the Teeth of the Evidence

  Lord Peter Views the Body

  Murder Must Advertise

  The Nine Tailors

  Striding Folly

  Strong Poison

  Unnatural Death

  The Unpleasantness at the Bellona Club

  Whose Body?

  Jill Paton Walsh, born in 1937, is also the author of many non-crime novels for adults: the fourth of these, Knowledge of Angels, was shortlisted for the Booker Prize. Before writing for adults she made a career as a writer of children's books and has won many literary prizes.

  www.greenbay.co.uk

  The Late Scholar

  Based on the Characters of Dorothy L Sayers

  Jill Paton Walsh

  www.hodder.co.uk

  First published in Great Britain in 2013 by Hodder & Stoughton

  An Hachette UK company

  Copyright © 2013 by Jill Paton Walsh

  and the Trustees of Anthony Fleming, deceased

  The right of Jill Paton Walsh to be identified as the Author of the

  Work has been asserted by her in accordance with

  the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced,

  stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any

  means without the prior written permission of the publisher, nor be

  otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that

  in which it is published and without a similar condition being

  imposed on the subsequent purchaser.

  All characters in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance

  to real persons, living or dead is purely coincidental.

  A CIP catalogue record for this title is available from the British Library

  Ebook ISBN 9781444760880

  Hardback ISBN 9781444760866

  Hodder & Stoughton Ltd

  338 Euston Road

  London NW1 3BH

  www.hodder.co.uk

  In memory of

  CHRISTOPHER DEAN

  1932–2012

  Tireless and imaginative promoter

  of the work of Dorothy L. Sayers

  in all its varieties

  Contents

  Acknowledgements

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Acknowledgements

  Tony and Nancy Kenny generously gave time to reading this book in manuscript and removing errors about Oxford ways and nomenclature, as well as assisting in more general ways. I am indebted also to conversations with John De’Ath, and to the forbearance of Carolyn Caughey, my editor at Hodder & Stoughton. My husband, John Rowe Townsend, has given indispensable support and encouragement, and I thank him and all the above-mentioned friends. Elaine Griffiths was a real person, who taught me to read and admire Alfred the Great; I salute her memory.

  I have been working with the consent of the Trustees of Dorothy L. Sayers.

  Chapter 1

  ‘Great snakes alive!’ said the Duke of Denver, sometime Lord Peter Wimsey, famous amateur sleuth.

  ‘What is it, Peter?’ asked his Duchess, sitting across from him at the breakfast table.

  The Duchess was sometime Lady Peter Wimsey, and before that had been Harriet Vane, detective-story writer, a person that she still was as often as life allowed her.

  Peter was holding a sheet of deckle-edged writing paper, which had emerged from a crested envelope brought to him by Bunter, manservant and friend, who was standing back, but within earshot, evidently having appreciated the possibly explosive nature of the letter.

  ‘I seem,’ said Peter, ‘to be the Visitor for St Severin’s College, and in that capacity to be urgently required in Oxford.’

  ‘How can one seem to be a Visitor?’ asked Harriet calmly. ‘If you are such, don’t you know about it?’

  ‘Well, no, as it happens, I know nothing about it,’ said Peter. ‘I have heard of college Visitors, but I thought they were usually the King – well, it would be the Queen now – or a bishop or a judge or least the Chancellor. I really don’t see how a college can have the Duke of Denver as a Visitor, unless there is such a person as a hereditary Visitor.’

  Bunter discreetly cleared his throat.

  ‘Yes, Bunter?’ said Peter.

  ‘Perhaps the Dowager Duchess might remember if the late Duke had ever had such a role, Your Grace,’ said Bunter.

  ‘She might indeed,’ said Peter.

  ‘She will not yet be up,’ said Harriet. ‘Bunter, would you be so kind as to ask Franklin to let us know when it would be convenient for Peter to call on her? Your mother sleeps in late these days,’ she added to Peter, ‘and at her age, who could blame her?’

  The Dowager Duchess was now approaching eighty-five, and both Peter and Harriet were concerned about her, day by day.

  That morning, however, she was propped up on her bed-pillows, bright-eyed and as eagerly talkative as in the old days.

  ‘Oh, Peter, how nice!’ she said. ‘Come in, dears, sit down. Now Harriet, when I first saw what you had put in my bedroom, I thought – I didn’t say anything, of course, you had taken all that trouble while I was in New York with poor Cornelia; thank heavens I stayed all that time with her, since it was the last chance for us, if only we had known, though we did know in a way of course, but we thought it would be me that death came for before her, she was nearly ten years younger than I am . . . now what was I saying? Oh yes, when you did up this place for me while I was away I thought why would I want two armchairs in a bedroom? And now here you are both of you quite comfortable, and so you were perfectly right all the time, and honestly, Peter, if I didn’t love Harriet so much I would think she is quite right too often for her own good . . . what is it you want to talk to me about, dears?’

  ‘Do you recall, Mama,’ said Peter, ‘Gerald holding some sort of position in Oxford? St Severin’s College, to be exact.’

  ‘Yes, he did,’ said the Dowager Duchess, ‘and your father before him. It was explained to me once. Something about the college statues having put in the name of Duke of Denver, instead of the role that Duke happened to have at the time, so they were stuck with Dukes of Denver for ever and a day.’

  ‘What did Gerald have to do for them?’ Peter asked. ‘I don’t recall him mentioning it to me.’

  ‘He had to go to Oxford when they elected a new Warden,’
said the Dowager. ‘He thought it was an awful bore. Luckily it didn’t happen very often. Only once for Gerald, I think. He had to be there to help them install the new Warden – such an odd idea I always thought, installing someone, as though they were a new boiler, or an electric light system. Has it happened again? That would be nice for you, wouldn’t it? Aren’t you two rather fond of Oxford?’

  ‘Something has happened,’ said Peter darkly, ‘but we don’t know exactly what.’

  Franklin coughed discreetly from the bedroom door.

  ‘We must leave you to get up and dressed,’ said Harriet, taking the hint. ‘We’ll see you at lunch.’

  As they went together down the stairs Harriet said, ‘Do you think Cousin Matthew might be able to dig up something about all this?’

  ‘Ancient though he is?’ asked Peter. ‘Yes, he might. I’ll ask him. He’s always pathetically anxious to be useful.’

  At the foot of the stairs they parted, he to go to find Cousin Matthew, lodged in a flat converted from the nearest of the old Home Farm barns; she to her study.

  Less than an hour later Peter was standing in the library, contemplating a copy of the statutes – or statues, as his mother had called them – of St Severin’s College that Cousin Matthew had found for him in a trice. Cousin Matthew, the only son of a poor collateral line on the family tree, had been wholly dependent on the ducal family at Denver for most of his life, and had occupied himself on cataloguing books and pictures and antiques, and working on the genealogy of the family.

  His pleasure at finding at once what was wanted was visible in satisfied smiles.

  The statutes thus discovered did indeed declare that the Visitor of St Severin’s was the Duke of Denver. Cousin Matthew supplied the information that a seventeenth-century Duke had been a generous benefactor of the college – had indeed effectively re-founded it. Perhaps that was the true explanation for the hereditary oddity, rather than a simple mistake. Matthew didn’t think a Duke of Denver had ever been the Chancellor, or held any other office that would have made him an appropriate person to be the Visitor.

  ‘In the fell grip of circumstance,’ murmured Peter, ‘My head is bloody but unbowed. What are my unwelcome obligations, Matthew?’

  ‘There are ceremonial ones,’ said Cousin Matthew, ‘to do with appointing a new Warden, and appointing fellows. You are allowed to delegate those.’

  ‘The devil I am!’ said Peter. ‘To whom have we been in the habit of delegating these delights?’

  ‘Mr Murbles, I believe,’ said Cousin Matthew.

  Murbles was the family solicitor, an excellent and reliable fellow, now very elderly, who had retired to Oxford to live with his daughter.

  ‘Well, he is on the spot,’ said Peter.

  ‘However,’ said Cousin Matthew, ‘this is much more likely to be about your function as a referee of last resort if there is irreconcilable conflict among the fellows. See here . . .’ He turned a page or two, and pointed.

  If any question arise on which the Warden and Fellows are unable to agree, the Warden and Fellows, or the Warden, or any two of the Fellows, may submit the same to the Visitor, and the Visitor may thereupon declare the true construction of the Statutes with reference to the case submitted to him.

  ‘Ho hum’, said Peter. ‘And in all these years they have managed without needing a referee. I am wondering what might have happened now . . .’

  ‘There is also this . . .’ Cousin Matthew pointed again.

  It shall be lawful for the Visitor, whenever he shall think fit, to visit the College in person, and to exercise, at any such visitation, all powers lawfully belonging to his Office.

  ‘That might be very jolly,’ said Peter. ‘I’ll show it to Harriet . . . hullo!’

  He had looked up and seen a car arriving.

  Bredon Hall had a long driveway, between an avenue of fine old plane trees, now just coming into full leaf, their branches sprinkled with the bright fresh green of late May, offering a dappled screening to the drive itself. The drive approached what would have been the centre of the great façade before the dramatic fire, which three years earlier had gutted two-thirds of the house. The drive now curved round to approach the remaining wing of the house, giving Peter and Cousin Matthew, standing at the library window, a sideways-on view of a Sunbeam Talbot, crunching its way along the gravel towards the front door.

  ‘Who goes there?’ said Peter. The two men watched as the unexpected driver got out of the car, and, taking a briefcase from the front passenger seat, approached the door with unmistakably urgent steps. ‘Be thou a spirit of health, or goblin damned, bring with thee airs from heaven, or blasts from hell—’

  At which point Bunter appeared at the library door, saying, ‘There is a Mr Troutbeck to see you, Your Grace. He says his business is urgent.’ He offered Peter Mr Troutbeck’s card.

  Michael Troutbeck, MA Oxon, D.Phil, Fellow of St Severin’s . . .

  ‘What would you say, Bunter, such a visitor portends?’ asked Peter.

  ‘He wishes, I surmise, Your Grace, to have your ear before anyone else gets a word in,’ said Bunter. ‘You could possibly decline to hear him on his own.’

  ‘He comes in such a questionable shape, that I will speak to him,’ said Peter, leaving the library with a light step, and skipping down the stairs like an elderly Fred Astaire.

  Troutbeck was a handsome man in early middle age, smartly dressed in a conventional three-piece suit, with a gold watch-chain, and a college tie. Peter led him into the morning room, and offered coffee or perhaps a little light breakfast. Troutbeck was visibly tempted. The fellow really had got up in the middle of the night and driven himself from Oxford . . . But the breakfast, once served to him, was clearly hard for him to deal with, so eager was he to have his say. He gulped his coffee, and took only a few mouthfuls of the excellent bacon and eggs Mrs Farley had provided before pushing his plate aside with a determined expression on his face.

  Peter, sitting opposite him, said pleasantly, ‘Now, how may I help you?’

  ‘Ah . . . it’s rather, Your Grace, that I might be able to help you,’ was the reply. ‘I thought it might be useful if some impartial person gave you a coherent account of the college’s troubles, before you found yourself deafened by the clamour that will meet you when you come to the college.’

  ‘And you are that impartial person?’ said Peter.

  ‘I certainly am,’ said Troutbeck.

  ‘I am willing to listen to you,’ said Peter.

  ‘I suppose you cannot have any idea what this is about?’ said Troutbeck. ‘And to put you in the picture I must begin some months ago – last year in fact. At that time the college was offered a spectacular opportunity: a chance to acquire a large tract of land near Oxford. There was immediately conflict among us.’

  ‘What was the trouble?’ asked Peter.

  ‘Money. The college’s finances have been in a very precarious state for some years; we are deeply in the red. Something would have to be sold to raise the money to buy the land. But the eventual value of a large tract of land on the eastern margins of the city could transform the situation for us. And we were in a position to raise the money – we could sell a manuscript book supposed to be invaluable, but in practice a burden, since it needs to be kept very secure and we have it expensively insured. A white elephant, as the saying goes. And there was very deeply felt disagreement; the book had been a gift from a former scholar of the college and some of the fellows thought it could not decently be sold.’

  ‘And you, I take it,’ said Peter, ‘were not of that persuasion.’

  Troutbeck looked wary. ‘Well, no, I was not. I am not – for matters are not settled. Our statutes provide that any two fellows may raise any matter to be put to a vote at college meetings, and unfortunately they do not prohibit the raising again and again of a matter that has already been voted upon; they merely specify that a vote cannot be taken on a matter already voted on sooner than during the term next following the prev
ious vote. The division was so close that the Warden had to use his casting vote, which makes it all too likely that the decision could be overthrown if voted upon again.’

  ‘But the Warden could use his casting vote again. Which way did he vote?’

  ‘He voted against selling the codex. He said that he thought the casting vote should always be used in favour of the status quo.’

  ‘So the matter is effectively settled however often it is put to the vote,’ said Peter. ‘Where does the Visitor come in?’

  ‘The Warden has taken leave of absence. The fellowship is divided exactly fifty-fifty. And the necessary two fellows to have the matter discussed again have already tabled the question on the agenda for the next meeting.’

  ‘Who, currently, is the Warden?’ asked Peter.

  ‘One Dr Thomas Ludgvan,’ said Troutbeck. ‘He has been the Warden for years; for an absolute age.’

  Peter got up and wandered across to the window, as if to contemplate Troutbeck’s car, standing in the drive.

  ‘I think I would expect a body of reasonable people to be able to talk such a matter to an agreement, even if there were some left unhappy by the decision arrived at,’ said Peter.

  ‘Non-intellectual people overestimate the power of reason among intellectuals, I find,’ said Troutbeck. ‘Feelings have become so inflamed over this matter that I fear rational discussion is no longer on the cards. That is why we have taken the unusual step of invoking the powers of the Visitor.’

  ‘You have taken a great deal of trouble, Troutbeck, to come this far to talk to me. I think you must hope to persuade me to take your view of which is the right decision.’

  ‘I think any reasonable person would take the view I take,’ said Troutbeck. ‘The land we are offered is off the Watlington Road; it is mediocre farmland, and obviously open to development as the city expands. Acquiring it would put the college finances on the right path for a generation.’

 

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