by Clara Benson
The Murder At Sissingham Hall
Clara Benson
Copyright
© 2012 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
ISBN: 978-1-300-84121-0
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The Murder at Sissingham Hall
On his return from South Africa, Charles Knox is invited to spend the weekend at the country home of Sir Neville Strickland, whose beautiful wife Rosamund was once Knox's fiancée. But in the dead of night Sir Neville is murdered. Who did it? As suspicion falls on each of the house guests in turn, Knox finds himself faced with deception and betrayal on all sides, and only the enigmatic Angela Marchmont seems to offer a solution to the mystery. This 1920s whodunit in the vein of Agatha Christie will delight all fans of traditional country house murder stories.
ONE
It is always a very odd feeling, returning to one’s home country after a long period abroad. The countryside, the towns, the cities, people going about their daily business, even the weather, look familiar and yet at the same time strange. It reminds me of the feeling I once experienced on accidentally observing myself in a looking-glass which had been placed at right-angles to another—it was quite a shock to see a reflection of my reflection and suddenly realize that my true face was all lop-sided. When I got my first glimpse of the quayside from the deck of the Ruthin Castle, a welcome sight after the long voyage, a jolt of joy went through me, yet at the same time I felt oddly shy, like a small boy made to stand up in the drawing-room and recite poetry before a gathering of stern aunts.
‘No-one will be here to welcome me,’ I thought to myself, as the vessel drew ponderously into Southampton dock. ‘I am like a stranger in my own country. Shall I be able to settle down, I wonder?’
The gang-plank went down and I disembarked with the rest of the passengers, alone in the midst of a teeming mass of humanity. For a moment I stood on the quayside, my feet on English soil for the first time in eight years, discomposed by the bustling crowd of passengers, sailors and porters and momentarily uncertain as to which way to go. But just as I was heartily beginning to wish that I had remained in South Africa, I heard a piercing whistle through the din and, turning my head, saw two figures weaving with difficulty towards me. My heart leapt. I was not a stranger after all.
‘Bobs!’ I cried. It was indeed my oldest friend, ‘Bobs’ Buckley, accompanied by a rather good-looking girl I didn’t recognize. I had written to Bobs, informing him of my impending return but I had been far from expecting him to come and meet me. I started forward.
‘Bobs! How marvellous to see you,’ I said, beaming, as I wrung his hand. ‘I had no idea you intended to come and meet me. I thought I should have to slink up to town all alone like a disgraced relative.’
‘Think nothing of it, old chap,’ said Bobs, with a grin. ‘Couldn’t let an old friend down. Thought we’d give you a surprise. As a matter of fact, your return has come at just the right time. I’ve been wanting to try out the Lagonda on a straight run, just to see what she can do. My word, you should have seen her fly!’
‘Oh! I know I shall never recover from the fright. I’m certain my hair has turned completely white,’ cried the girl. ‘Bobs, I’m sure you ran over that cat in Winchester.’
‘A mere bump in the road, I assure you,’ said Bobs airily. ‘In any case, it would serve it right if I had run over it. A cat has no business getting in my way when I am in a hurry.’
‘Silly!’ said the girl, exasperatedly. ‘How was your trip, Charles? Was it too terribly ghastly? Where are your things? Bring the bags along please,’ (to the porter). ‘By the way, you are coming back to Bucklands with us, aren’t you? I mean, I suppose you don’t have any immediate business in town? Mother and Father are very much looking forward to seeing you.’
‘I—I—’ I said, confused by this torrent of speech and puzzled as to which question to answer first. Before I could answer any of them, it dawned upon me suddenly who she was and I started in surprise.
‘Sylvia!’ I exclaimed. ‘I hardly recognized you. Good heavens! I had no idea you had grown up. Have I really been away that long?’
When I had last seen Bobs’s sister, she had been an ungainly schoolgirl with a grubby face and a reckless disregard for the state of her clothes; quite different from the smart, fashionable young woman standing in front of me now. I could not help staring at her, astonished at how much she had changed. She flushed slightly and pulled a face, which immediately brought to memory the tom-boy she had once been and I laughed.
We all stood there for a few moments, grinning foolishly at each other as the crowd flowed around us, then Bobs said:
‘Better get going then, if we’re going to make it back to Bucklands at any time today.’
‘Oh, yes,’ sighed Sylvia. ‘I suppose I shall have to risk life and limb once again. I simply insist that you come back with us,’ she said, linking her arm through mine and turning towards a monstrous, dark-green contraption that could only be Bobs’s latest motor-car, ‘Otherwise I shall have to listen to Bobs’s piffle all the way back to Bucklands.’
‘Rot. You know perfectly well that I speak only words of the utmost wisdom. I say, isn’t she a beauty, Charles?’ said Bobs, eagerly. ‘I’ve never had a car like her. On a clear stretch of road she can easily do eighty miles per hour.’
Having duly expressed my admiration, I was permitted to climb in. Once the baggage was safely installed and the porter suitably remunerated, we set off at breakneck speed, narrowly missing an elderly gentleman and a nurse pushing a pram. It was clear that Sylvia had not been exaggerating when she had spoken of Bobs’s driving skills.
‘I see that you are still seeking out danger wheresoever it may lurk, Bobs,’ I remarked, as we reached the London road and the powerful motor-car began to eat up the miles. Bobs shrugged.
‘You know how it is. I never could seem to settle back into things after the War. I should have liked to join the Air Force but Father wouldn’t hear of it. Not after Ralph died, you know.’ Ralph was Bobs’s elder brother, who had been killed at Arras. ‘So I confine myself to more sedate activities.’ He looked as though he were about to say something more but then thought better of it.
I made some reply and tactfully changed the subject.
Sylvia had, understandably, preferred to sit in the back seat. I turned round and complimented her on her new-found elegance.
‘It seems only yesterday that you were putting frog-spawn in my pockets,’ I said. ‘But how you’ve changed! You are quite the chic lady. I hardly know what to say.’
Sylvia accepted my compliments with great composure.
‘Oh, Sylvia still puts frog-spawn in people’s pockets,’ Bobs assured me. ‘Only last week there was very nearly an embarrassing incident with the American Ambassador during cocktails. Luckily, Rankin came to the rescue just in time. I really don’t know what we’d do without Rankin. In fact, I shouldn’t be at all surprised if Father disinherits me and adopts Rankin as his heir. There’s n
o doubt he deserves it more than I.’
‘Well, I’m sure he doesn’t go around running over people’s cats,’ said Sylvia.
‘Of course not! He’s far too solemn and lugubrious for that. I say, isn’t “lugubrious” a marvellous word? And it fits Rankin to a nicety. No, I can’t see him running over cats but I can imagine him wringing their necks as a hobby,’ he continued darkly. ‘Perhaps if we went into his room we should see them hanging around the walls like bunting.’
‘How absurd you are, Bobs! As you can see, Charles, he hasn’t changed a bit. Neither have I, really. I’m just a little more polished these days, now that Rosamund has taken me in hand.’
Too late, Bobs shot her a warning look, as a thrill ran through me.
‘Rosamund?’ I inquired. ‘Rosamund Hamilton?’
‘Rosamund Strickland now,’ corrected Sylvia.
‘Yes, of course, I forgot. Has she been giving you lessons in dress and deportment? Picking up handkerchiefs and all that, what?’
‘Not exactly. A couple of years ago when she was down at Bucklands, I happened to admire her clothes and she insisted on introducing me to her dressmaker. You know Mother—she is rather vague and much happier grubbing about in the garden in tweeds, so it was quite a relief to find someone who really takes an interest. One receives so many invitations these days and I was quite floundering, as it was no use begging Mother to take me up to town. Luckily, Rosamund came to the rescue. She knows all the best places to go and Mother was quite happy to relinquish the responsibility. Look out!’ she said, suddenly, as Bobs swerved to avoid a pheasant.
As she and Bobs argued, I was silent, deep in thought. It had come as a shock to hear Rosamund’s name mentioned so soon after arriving back in England and now I examined my feelings closely, not wholly able to make them out. Certainly, I admitted to myself, I should not have been surprised to hear about her—she had always been part of our ‘set’ in the old days and there was no reason why she should not have remained so, especially since I had left England shortly after our engagement came to an end. It was hardly reasonable to expect her to stop seeing my friends once I was out of the picture; in fact it sounded pretty much as though she and Sylvia had become bosom pals in the meantime. Rosamund was not the reason for my leaving the country—so I had always told myself, but was that true? At any rate, there was no use in regretting how things had turned out, as she had married at almost the same time as I left and I—well, I had found myself with other things to worry about in that harsh, unforgiving heat.
So I reflected, then smiled to myself as I decided that the romantic feelings I had once had for Rosamund had long since disappeared. In fact, it would be rather nice to see her again. After all, she had always been a most charming woman, with the ability to make a chap feel like the wittiest and most attractive man in the room. Tired and jaded though I was, I was looking forward to getting back into things and showing the world that while experience might have battered me a little, it had certainly not beaten me and that I was ever the man I had been.
The rest of the journey was uneventful and as we turned in at the lodge gates of Bucklands, Bobs threw me a sideways glance.
‘All right, old man?’ he asked. I knew what he meant.
‘All right,’ I replied, smiling.
‘Here we are. It’s not much but it’s home,’ he said, as we drew up in front of the stately pile that had been the seat of the Buckleys since the Restoration or thereabouts, so it was claimed. The Buckleys were an old, old family that throughout the ages had survived and prospered by shrewdly backing the right side during times of strife, marrying into the right families and sending its sons into Parliament to pursue long, worthy careers. The present generation was no exception.
I received a quiet yet sincere welcome from Lord and Lady Haverford, whom I had always considered as a second family, my own having been so unhappy in so many ways. I was shown to a warm, comfortable room and urged in the friendliest manner to remain at Bucklands for as long as I liked.
We were a gay party that evening, talking nineteen to the dozen, recalling old times. My sun-tan was remarked upon and I was begged most flatteringly to recount some of my adventures abroad which, I must admit, were not as thrilling as I should have liked. Not for me the daring, dangerous life of a true pioneer or a big game hunter. I had left England to take up a respectable post running a farm; subsequently, finding farming a disappointment, I had tried mining and as luck would have it, had struck gold—literally—almost immediately. Much of my time abroad had therefore been taken up with the day-to-day running of my business. Fortunately, my adventures were enough to entertain my audience and Lord Haverford in particular intimated that he would like to pursue talks further at a later date, on a more business-like footing.
Despite my tiredness after the long journey, we talked late into the night, until, one by one, the various members of the family were overcome by sleep and went up to bed. At last, only Bobs and I remained, sitting in companionable silence in two easy-chairs set one each side of the fire. I watched Bobs as he stared at the flames. He had not changed a bit: still the same knowing smile and easy laugh, always with a ready joke to enliven and lift the spirits of any party. In his earlier youth, he had ever been a source of worry to his family, given his unfortunate liking for tearing about town with a succession of unsuitable young women. I wondered if he had mellowed at all.
Bobs looked up and caught me smiling.
‘I was just thinking of the old days and wondering whether you are still causing your parents’ hair to turn grey,’ I explained.
He laughed.
‘Yes, I was rather a rapscallion, wasn’t I? Mother lived in constant terror that I would run away to Paris and marry an opera singer. Mind, it was a close thing sometimes. Do you remember Lili Le Sueur?’
I remembered her only too well. Bobs had met her when she was dancing in the chorus of one of the lesser productions. For professional purposes she claimed to be French, although in reality she was an American with laughing eyes and an enormous sense of fun.
‘I should say so. But I seem to recall that it was all over between you by the time I left England. Didn’t she return to America?’
‘Yes. She wanted to star in pictures, she said, but I heard that she married a dentist back home in Wisconsin. I suppose she has got fat and lost her looks by now,’ said Bobs regretfully. ‘That’s the worst of these married women. They settle down and get caught up in domestic cares and then they are not worth looking at any more.’
I found myself wondering whether Rosamund had lost her looks and was vexed with myself. Why should it matter? I must be tired after the journey, I thought, or I would not be giving in to such weakness. Rosamund was part of my past and I was keen to embrace the future.
‘So have you given up consorting with unsuitable young ladies?’ I asked, half-jokingly.
Bobs did not answer immediately. He seemed absorbed by the fire, or possibly by thoughts of the enchanting Miss Le Sueur. I repeated my question and he started.
‘Eh—what’s that? Oh, yes, I have done with all that kind of thing. I am older now and get into a different kind of scrape.’
There was a strange look in his eye. I glanced questioningly at him but he did not elaborate. Instead, he continued to stare wistfully into the glow.
Nothing remained of the fire but smouldering embers and I was starting to feel the chill of an English October after my years in the sun.
‘I think I had better go to bed,’ I said, standing up and stretching. ‘It is simply splendid to see you again, Bobs. I can’t tell you how grateful I am that you came to meet me at Southampton. I was looking forward to a night in a dreary hotel in London but how much pleasanter it is to spend my first evening among friends!’
Bobs waved my thanks away airily.
‘Go and get a good night’s sleep, old chap, and dream of the veld.’
I bade him goodnight and climbed wearily up the stairs to my room, where I fou
nd my things neatly unpacked and laid out for me. Undressing quickly, I fell into bed and soon drifted off into a deep sleep untroubled by any dreams at all.
TWO
I spent several days with the Buckleys, joining them in the usual country pursuits and round of social events that are generally attached to a great house such as Bucklands. After such a long time away, I was surprised to find how easily I fell back into the old way of things. The heat and dust, the sounds and the smells of Africa began to seem like part of a previous life and after only a few days, I ceased to feel like a foreigner in my own land. Bobs and I spent several enjoyable days fishing in the stream that ran through Bucklands Park. In the evenings there were cocktails and parties, while on the rare occasions on which there were no visitors, we all talked and laughed together late into the night.
During that week, I also spent some time getting re-acquainted with Sylvia—or rather, getting acquainted with the lively young woman she now was, instead of the mischievous child she had once been. We passed endless hours walking around the grounds; she asking me intelligent questions about the life of a gold-miner and making me laugh with amusing tales of her friends in London, who seemed rather a wild crowd. I found her very good company and I sensed that she liked me too. My mind wandered into idle speculations of a most pleasant nature. I supposed I ought to be thinking of settling down before I became too set in my ways and Sylvia was the sort of girl I had always been attracted to: pretty, clever and sympathetic. Furthermore, I was sure that I would encounter no opposition from Lord and Lady Haverford. Despite misfortune, my family background was considered almost impeccable and now that I had become a successful man in my own right, their minds would certainly be relieved of any lingering doubts. I drew back from making any firm commitment, however, reflecting that I had only just returned to England and that I had no wish to act precipitately or take an irrevocable step that I might regret.