It was a raw, cold afternoon and Lydia spent most of it huddled in front of the fire with A Room of One’s Own, waiting for her father to come back. A little after five o’clock, she heard his slow, dragging footsteps on the stairs. He came into the sitting room and grunted when he saw her. He wasn’t drunk, she thought, but he looked pale and ill. Still in his overcoat, he sat down at the table and patted his pockets for cigarettes.
‘What are you giving us for supper?’ he asked.
‘I hadn’t thought. I ate quite well at lunchtime. There’s bread and margarine if you’re hungry.’
‘Damn it,’ he muttered. ‘A chap can’t live on bread and margarine.’
‘I expect they’ll do you a sandwich at the Crozier.’
He looked up, alerted by her tone. ‘What’s biting you?’
‘I heard something today. That you sold a farm a few years ago to Mr Serridge and the lady who used to own this house.’
‘What do you know about her?’ he barked. ‘Sorry – didn’t mean to shout – you rather took me by surprise, that’s all. Who told you that?’
She ignored the question. ‘Is it true?’
He stared at her, frowning, and said, ‘Anyway, I sold it to Serridge.’
‘Not Miss Penhow?’
He found his cigarettes and lit one. ‘I told you – I sold Morthams Farm to Serridge just before I went to America. My aunt left it me in her will. Nice old girl, Aunt Connie. She was my godmother too. But I didn’t make a great deal of money out of the sale, because the farm was mortgaged up to the hilt and the damned tenant had let it go to pot. Still, it was a nice thought.’
‘But you knew Miss Penhow?’
‘I met her. Must have been years ago. Serridge introduced us. Shy little thing.’ Ingleby-Lewis opened his bloodshot eyes very wide, the picture of slightly debauched innocence. ‘Someone said she moved out and married some fellow she used to know.’ He consulted his watch. ‘Good God, I hadn’t realized it was so late. There’s a chap I’ve got to see.’
He struggled out of the chair. Lydia followed him onto the landing.
‘Did you ever go to Morthams?’
‘As a matter of fact, yes.’ He was halfway down the stairs now. He glanced back over his shoulder. ‘Not much of a place.’
‘What was it like?’
‘There was a house. And a bit of land.’
The front door slammed behind him. Lydia was about to go back to the flat when she heard footsteps in the part of the hall below that was out of sight. Mrs Renton appeared at the foot of the stairs.
‘Hello,’ Lydia said.
‘You were asking about Morthams Farm?’
‘Yes.’ Lydia stared at the wrinkled face upturned to hers. ‘Why?’
Mrs Renton frowned as though trying to work something out. Then she said, ‘It’s Mr Serridge’s other house.’
‘Yes, I know.’
Mrs Renton stared at Lydia with cloudy brown eyes. She seemed on the verge of saying something but then a car drew up outside and she rubbed her forearms, first one and then the other. The door opened and Serridge came in, his bulk blocking the light from the doorway and making the hall seem crowded. He was carrying a large cardboard suitcase and had a tweed overcoat over his arm.
‘Evening,’ he said, advancing towards them. ‘That parcel for me?’
‘Yes, sir,’ Mrs Renton said, and her body twitched in a vestigial curtsy.
This time they met in a tea shop opposite the forecourt of the British Museum. Its window was crowded with aspidistras, a barrier of green spikes separating the interior from the vulgarity of the outside world.
The proprietress swooped on Narton as soon as he pushed open the door, setting a bell jingling above his head. With a wave of a be-ringed hand, she tried to herd him towards a table in the gloom at the back of the tea shop. He was having none of that – you couldn’t be a police officer for as long as he had and allow people to push you around willy-nilly – and took up a position at the table by the aspidistras, which gave him a good view of the street outside.
The woman clucked her disapproval but recognized superior force when she encountered it. He suffered a further dose of her disapproval when he insisted he only wanted a cup of tea. Then Rory Wentwood came in, and the proprietress mellowed because he was a nicer class of customer and besides he wanted poached eggs on toast.
‘You’ve been in the wars,’ Narton said.
Wentwood brushed a crumb from the tablecloth. ‘A couple of men attacked me yesterday evening.’
‘Where?’
‘Bleeding Heart Square. It was about nine o’clock – I was coming back to the flat.’
‘After your wallet?’
Wentwood fell silent as the proprietress brought his tea. She fussed over him, making sure his knife and fork were straight, showing him unnecessarily where to find the sugar, which in any case he didn’t want. After she had left, he said, ‘I don’t think they were after money. They wanted to hurt me. To frighten me.’
‘Serridge,’ Narton said. ‘Ten to one he heard about you going to Rawling.’
‘He watched me crawling upstairs afterwards. Didn’t say anything. Didn’t help. Just watched.’
‘There you are then.’
Wentwood hooked a finger into his waistcoat pocket, took out something that glittered and tossed it on the tablecloth beside the cruet. ‘It’s possible one of them left that behind.’
Narton picked it up and held it to the light.
‘Wearing cufflinks, you see,’ Wentwood went on in a voice not perfectly steady. ‘A nice class of footpad, eh?’
‘You recognize the design?’
‘Mrs Langstone did.’
Narton grunted. ‘So where do you stand when it comes to politics? Bit of a Bolshevik?’
‘I haven’t got any politics. All I want’s a quiet life.’
‘That’s what we all need, Mr Wentwood. Maybe not what we all want.’ Narton tapped the cufflink with his fingernail. ‘What about the folk you mix with?’
‘No, they’re—’ Wentwood broke off. ‘Well, actually, Miss Kensley’s interested in that sort of thing. She has a – a friend who’s some sort of communist, I believe.’
‘So someone who’d seen you together might just think you thought the same way?’
‘It’s possible. But it doesn’t seem much of a motive for a gang of Fascist thugs to follow me home and beat me up.’
Narton rubbed his eyes. He felt very weary. ‘It’s surprising what people will do where politics is concerned. Did you hear about the big British Union rally at Earls Court in June? Things got very nasty.’
They fell silent as Rory’s eggs arrived.
When they were alone again, Narton lowered his voice. ‘Have you reported this to the local boys?’
‘No. I thought I’d better have a word with you first.’
Under the table, Narton wiped damp palms on his trousers. ‘Quite right. The last thing we want is for Serridge to get the wind up.’
‘If it was Serridge.’
‘The point is, he’s not going to feel comfortable with coppers around. We wouldn’t want that.’ Narton sipped his tea. ‘Trust me.’ He watched the other man over the rim of his cup.
‘I don’t know what would have happened if Ingleby-Lewis and Mrs Langstone hadn’t turned up.’ Wentwood jabbed an egg with his fork. ‘I might not have been in a fit state to talk to you.’
Narton thought it very likely. ‘No real harm done, that’s the main thing, eh?’
‘I’m having second thoughts. Miss Kensley thinks I’m wasting my time. I’m beginning to think she’s right.’
‘You’re not wasting your time, I promise you that,’ Narton said sharply. ‘Not while Serridge is around. If he asks you about the attack, tell him you think you fell foul of a couple of drunks.’
Wentwood pushed aside his plate, wasting perfectly good food. You could tell he’d never been poor, Narton thought, not really poor.
‘Have a word wi
th Miss Kensley at least.’ Narton touched the cufflink. ‘Ask if she has had any problems with these chaps. No harm in that, is there?’
‘All right.’
‘Good man.’
‘But there is something queer going on in that house,’ Wentwood burst out. ‘Have you heard about the heart?’
Narton looked blankly at him and waited.
‘Or rather the hearts. Mrs Langstone told me about them today. It seems that somebody’s been sending Mr Serridge a parcel every now and then. Each one contains a heart, a lamb’s, or a ewe’s.’ Wentwood licked his lips. ‘An uncooked heart. No letter. No nothing. Just the heart.’
‘I know,’ Narton said.
‘How?’
‘Because I went through the dustbins.’
When Rory reached Cornwallis Grove, Julian Dawlish answered the door.
‘Ah, Wentwood,’ he said. ‘Splendid. We need a strong pair of arms. I say, you look a bit the worse for wear, if you don’t mind my saying so.’
‘I had a bit of an argument with a couple of drunks last night.’
‘My dear chap, are you—’
Rory cut in, ‘It looks worse than it is. I’m fine.’
Dawlish shot him a swift, intelligent glance. ‘Come and sit down. I’ll call Miss Kensley.’ He shouted upstairs, ‘It’s Mr Wentwood.’
Rory followed Dawlish into the drawing room. ‘What’s happening?’
‘Miss Kensley wanted to clear out her father’s room, and I promised to give her a hand.’
For the first time Rory could remember since his return from India, the drawing room felt warm. The curtains were drawn and a substantial fire was burning in the grate.
‘Is she all right?’ he asked.
‘Absolutely.’
Dawlish attacked the fire with a poker and the flames licked up the chimney. The door opened and Fenella came in. Her face was flushed and her eyes were bright. Her hair was covered with a scarf, and she was wearing slacks.
‘Hello, Rory.’ She stopped. ‘What have you been doing to yourself.’
He repeated what he had told Dawlish.
‘I was just saying to Julian we could do with your help,’ she went on, once she had established that he wasn’t seriously hurt.
Julian? He was Mr Dawlish yesterday evening.
‘We’re clearing out Daddy’s room – his workshop upstairs. There’s an awful lot of rubbish, and some of it’s quite heavy.’
‘Unfinished oil paintings?’ Rory said. ‘Broken armchairs? Disembowelled clocks?’
‘And a half-built wardrobe,’ Fenella replied. ‘A case of so-called geological specimens. Lots of stuffed birds. Three crystal receivers – wireless was the big thing just before his last illness. He used to listen to the Savoy Orpheans on his headphones, tapping his feet and whistling along. It drove Mother mad. Before that it was going to be reupholstering antique armchairs and selling them to any American millionaires who happened to be passing.’ She smiled at Dawlish. ‘Daddy changed his hobby about once every three months. They were all going to make him rich. He spent a fortune on them. Some of it must be worth a few bob still.’
She sat down on the sofa and the men followed suit in the chairs on either side of her. She held out her hands to the blaze.
‘I hope you don’t mind,’ Dawlish said. ‘I put a bit more coal on. It felt a bit chilly.’
‘Of course I don’t mind.’
Rory looked at the fire, which had probably consumed an evening’s supply of fuel in the last half-hour. ‘Why are you clearing the room now? Will you use it for another lodger? Or can you sell some of the stuff?’
‘We should find buyers for some of it, and the rag-and-bone man will take what’s left. But no more lodgers, I hope. Julian’s had an idea.’
‘Some friends and I are setting up a small organization,’ Dawlish explained. ‘Fenella has very kindly agreed to act as our secretary.’
‘What sort of organization?’
Dawlish gave no sign that he had heard the rudeness in Rory’s voice. ‘The Alliance of Socialists Against Fascism. That’s our provisional title. ASAF for short.’
‘Sounds a worthy cause,’ Rory said bitterly.
‘We think there’s room for it,’ Dawlish said. ‘A need, even. We want to provide a place where left-wingers of various persuasions can meet and discuss things. Joint action is the key, you see. United we stand and divided we fall. I know someone who’s just inherited a house in Mecklenburgh Square, and we can have it for a peppercorn rent as the headquarters. The members will help with the running expenses. And one of those, of course, will be the salary of the secretary.’
‘You must be very pleased,’ Rory said to Fenella.
‘I am.’
‘I thought of Fenella right away,’ Dawlish went on. ‘She has shorthand and typing. And running a little organization like ours will be peanuts compared with running this place and dealing with lodgers.’
Rory said nothing.
‘It’s early days yet of course.’ Apparently oblivious of any awkwardness, Dawlish beamed like Father bloody Christmas. ‘We’ll have to see how things work out.’
Rory turned to Fenella. ‘But what will you do when the lease runs out here? You’ll have to find somewhere to live.’
Dawlish cleared his throat. ‘It might be useful to have the secretary living on the premises. There’s an old house-keeper’s flat. All it needs is a lick of paint and a few sticks of furniture. So there’s no reason why Fenella shouldn’t let this place and move in whenever she wants.’
How ripping, Rory thought, how absolutely bloody topping with knobs on.
12
The woman’s stupidity makes you scream. But you put your hands over your mouth so no one but you will hear.
Monday, 3 March 1930
If all goes well, Joseph says there’s no reason why we shouldn’t move within a few weeks. He has sent off for some seed catalogues. He is planning to set up a market garden. Spring in the country! I can hardly believe it. And Jacko will love it too. I saw him today on our way to Mr Shires’ office. I’m sure Mr Howlett is a kind man and looks after him very well but I can’t help feeling that there was a very sad look in Jacko’s eyes when I left him.
Mr Shires is the lawyer, and his office is in Rosington Place, almost opposite the chapel which will always be so very special to us. He seems a very pleasant man, rather plump and shy. Joseph tells me he is very good at his job and not expensive.
We transacted a great deal of business in about half an hour. It’s such a relief to have Joseph looking after my interests. He and Mr Shires went through my papers and explained which shares I needed to sell and which to keep. I seem to have been poorly advised before – some of the shares are losing value, and the best thing to do is sell them while we can. I was a little worried, I must admit – I thought that if I sell some of my shares I shall have less income to live on. But Joseph pointed out I should have his income too, and anyway everything is much cheaper in the country. Between us we shall live very comfortably even before the market garden begins making a profit.
Mr Shires had also prepared a letter for me to send to Mr Orburn, withdrawing my legal business from him and asking him to send my file to Mr Shires. I felt a little unhappy about this but Joseph said it was purely a matter of professional etiquette, and Mr Orburn would not be offended. In any case he and his father have earned a handsome amount from us over the years.
Joseph and I had a long chat about how we should purchase the farm. The problem is that, even though it will be my farm (or rather ours), if we put it legally in my name then everyone will know that Joseph and I are not yet married – in the eyes of the law, that is. Joseph said there would be all sorts of difficulties if I call myself Mrs Serridge in a legal document before I am entitled to do so. (He squeezed my hands and said that as far as he was concerned the time couldn’t come too soon.) So I suggested that the best thing might be to put the farm in his name at least for the moment. The dear man obj
ected, saying that it might not be fair to me, but in the end I managed to persuade him. That way our little deception need never come to light.
Afterwards we had lunch with Joseph’s friend, Captain Ingleby-Lewis, who seems rather fond of his wine. Nevertheless anyone with half an eye can see that he’s a gentleman. The Captain told me confidentially that all the fellows in his Regiment thought very highly of Major Serridge. He said that he (Joseph) is the salt of the earth. He didn’t need to tell me!
Five minutes after persuading her to buy the farm, he’s got her selling her shares to pay for it, cutting herself off from the one person she can trust and practically begging him to put the farm in his name.
The cufflink lingered like a bad smell in Lydia Langstone’s mind. It was there when she went to bed on Saturday evening, and it was still there when she woke up on Sunday morning. It was part of the reason she decided to go to Frogmore Place.
Not to move back in, not to return to the life she had left behind less than a fortnight earlier. One couldn’t go backwards, she was beginning to learn, however much one thought one could. Life was like a motor car with only forward gears, rushing faster and faster into the future.
This would be a flying visit. She had not realized how cold a place like Bleeding Heart Square could be. She needed more clothes, and much warmer ones. She had also remembered the pearl necklace, once her grandmother’s and now hers. It was kept in the safe behind the boring painting of a horse that hung above the fireplace in Marcus’s study. There was a sporting chance that Marcus had forgotten to take it to the bank. It was insured for over a thousand pounds. She had already been obliged to pay a second call on Mr Goldman in Hatton Garden in order to dispose of a gold charm bracelet.
As for the cufflink, she knew that probably hundreds of men were wearing identical BUF cufflinks in London alone. Nor was there reason to believe that the attack on Rory Wentwood on Friday night had anything to do with herself. But the fact remained that Marcus had recently joined the British Union of Fascists, and he was the sort of man who takes a childish pleasure in proclaiming his membership of masculine associations; his wardrobe was full of striped ties, coded sartorial statements to those in the know.
Bleeding Heart Square Page 17