The Last Kashmiri Rose

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The Last Kashmiri Rose Page 28

by Barbara Cleverly


  He knew he was going too far. His stewardship was officially at an end; he had to recognise the superior authority of the noble lady to whom he was daring to dish out advice and demands. But Captain Swinburne was not a man to retreat from a position he’d taken up, whether his feet were on the deck of a gunboat or on a silken rug in a douce London drawing room.

  She looked up at him sharply, scanning his weather-beaten features and standing firm before the challenge in his very English blue eyes.

  He steeled himself to receive the set-down he’d merited.

  But the princess’s response when it came was thoughtful: ‘Captain, it occurs to me that losing your support could constitute yet another blow to Anna’s well-being.’

  ‘I did what I could. Believe me, ma’am, it was her choice to break the bond we have established.’ The words stretched between them, vibrating with a resentment he had not intended. He hurried to add: ‘But an encouraging sign, I’m sure you’ll agree. She’s ready to move forward. She recognises now that she has a future and I do believe she is making plans for it.’ He broke off, unwilling to say more and indicated that he was ready to bring her in.

  As he passed the grand piano, Swinburne’s attention was caught by a photograph, the one at the forefront of a cluster of silver-framed portraits arranged on the shining surface. He exclaimed and went to examine more closely a group of five or six earnest-looking young women dressed in nurse’s uniform, a flutter of angels gathered in a semiformal pose around a bed in a hospital ward. The wounded soldier at the centre of their attention looked suitably overawed.

  ‘There she is! That’s Anna! Good Lord! She actually was a nurse! So much she didn’t tell me…’

  Responding to the invitation in the Russian’s expression, he smiled, eyes on the photograph. ‘One of my crew was careless enough to cut his leg to the bone on a day when our doctor was ashore in Trondheim. They brought him to me, dripping blood and swooning and Anna, who was with me on deck, snapped out of her torpid state and had the chap sedated, stitched up and bandaged with all the skill of a medic in no time. Saved the leg, I reckon.’

  The lady chuckled. ‘She was always a fine needlewoman! But none of these girls was truly a nurse, you know. Amateurs all, some more capable than others. Some with decorative merit only. You’re looking, Captain, at the contents of the topmost drawer of the Russian aristocracy doing their bit in wartime for their country. The Empress Alexandra herself led by example and floated through the wards in cape and wimple dispensing comfort. Though I ought not to disparage their efforts – they meant well and, in Anna’s case, acquired a genuine skill they say. But, Captain… you do well to pick her out amongst so many beauties and all wearing an unflattering starched head-dress…?’

  The question was lightly put but Swinburne was a man sensitive to the slightest change in wind and current. He picked up an underlying tension. Was he being quizzed in some way? Had the photograph, prominently placed as it was, been set there deliberately as some kind of test? He didn’t doubt it. The captain was straightforward. He couldn’t be doing with traps and subtleties. And he could understand the lady’s deeper concerns. His reply came at once.

  ‘Be assured, Ma’am. I’d know her face anywhere. It’s the line of the nose – like a Greek statue… and the dark eyebrows – they have the sweep of a gull’s wing. She’s the one on the far left. I’d no idea this was her world.’

  The Russian who had been tugging at the pearls at her throat in some suspense, sighed with relief at his identification and stopped her fidgeting. She came to stand at his side, looking at the photograph with him, relaxed now and companionable. Whatever test she’d just administered – he seemed to have passed it and, puzzled, he listened as she made further confidences. ‘Yes, Captain. That is indeed our Anna. My poor dead cousin Peter’s daughter. I held her in my arms the day she was born.’

  He was pleased to note in her voice the tremble of an emotion she could no longer hold back, the tears gathering in her eyes, the furtive hunting in her sleeve for a handkerchief. She accepted the crisp square of linen he had instantly to hand and put it to use with grace and murmured thanks. After a moment, she spoke again more brightly. ‘As a child, Anna spent many a summer with us in the Crimea… she will feel at home here with me now. But I share your dismay and wonder at a world so abruptly and tragically torn from us. Well connected as she was, Anna would have made a good marriage. She could have had her pick of the finest young men of Europe. Probably not royalty but a count at the very least… a duke perhaps? Sadly now all dead or dispersed and she herself ruined beyond any hope of…’

  She suppressed the alarming thought and her tone became crisp. ‘But then… that is all past and we must look, as you say, to her future. You may leave her with us in total confidence. I have heard your words and understood the deeper concerns on which you are tactfully silent. I say again – I will provide the care she needs.’

  Swinburne had heard the same tone from admirals and generals. There was only one acceptable answer: ‘Yes, sir. Of course, sir.’ This tiny, decisive woman he had no knowledge of and no reason to trust, had, unaccountably, got under his defences. He nodded his superfluous agreement. ‘Yes, ma’am. Of course, ma’am,’ he said and he smiled as he spoke.

  Swinburne bowed and made to leave.

  ‘Wait, Captain!’ She hesitated for a moment then picked up the photograph and handed it to him. ‘If you will keep it for your eyes alone you may have this – some slight reward for your care. But be discreet! We aristocrats all have a price on our heads still and are pursued. London is full of ruthless men. Not a few of them, our enemies.’

  As he took it from her, mumbling his thanks, he caught a flash of indulgence and pity in her eyes. She’d guessed his secret in minutes. Time he was gone.

  The two women ran into each other’s arms exclaiming softly in delighted recognition. Swinburne skirted silently around them in the hallway, glad enough to hear:

  ‘Aunt Tizzi!’…

  ‘Anna! My dear girl! At last! We have you safe!’

  In the outburst of tears and sobs that followed, they didn’t hear him leaving.

  He was blameless. As innocent as the obliging bird that gobbles down the inky, sweet berry of the deadly nightshade then flies off unwittingly to disperse the seed, Captain Swinburne had just dropped off a deadly cargo in a fertile corner of London.

  He prepared to move on.

  ‘We’re finished here, cabby. Back to Piccadilly while you can still see the road.’

  He shouldn’t have looked back.

  A last glance through the window showed him Anna. She’d come outside again and was standing motionless, neither waving away nor beckoning back, watching him leave. The fog was coming down and he couldn’t make out her face but, in his imagination, he saw her dark otter’s eyes following him as the taxi drew away.

  OTHER TITLES IN THE SOHO CRIME SERIES

  Quentin Bates

  (Iceland)

  Frozen Assets

  Cold Comfort

  Cheryl Benard

  (Pakistan)

  Moghul Buffet

  James R. Benn

  (World War II Europe)

  Billy Boyle

  The First Wave

  Blood Alone

  Evil for Evil

  Rag & Bone

  A Mortal Terror

  Cara Black

  (Paris, France)

  Murder in the Marais

  Murder in Belleville

  Murder in the Sentier

  Murder in the Bastille

  Murder in Clichy

  Murder in Montmarte

  Murder on the Ile Saint-Louis

  Murder in the Rue de Paradis

  Murder in the Latin Quarter

  Murder in the Palais Royale

  Murder in Passy

  Murder at the Lanterne Rouge

  Grace Brophy

  (Italy)

  The Last Enemy

  A Deadly Paradise

  Henr
y Chang

  (Chinatown)

  Chinatown Beat

  Year of the Dog

  Red Jade

  Colin Cotterill

  (Laos)

  The Coroner’s Lunch

  Thirty-Three Teeth

  Disco for the Departed

  Anarchy and Old Dogs

  Curse of the Pogo Stick

  The Merry Misogynist

  Love Songs from a Shallow Grave

  Slash and Burn

  Garry Disher

  (Australia)

  The Dragon Man

  Kittyhawk Down

  Snapshot

  Chain of Evidence

  Blood Moon

  Wyatt

  David Downing

  (World War II Germany)

  Zoo Station

  Silesian Station

  Stettin Station

  Potsdam Station

  Lehrter Station

  Leighton Gage

  (Brazil)

  Blood of the Wicked

  Buried Strangers

  Dying Gasp

  Every Bitter Thing

  A Vine in the Blood

  Michael Genelin

  (Slovakia)

  Siren of the Waters

  Dark Dreams

  The Magician’s Accomplice

  Requiem for a Gypsy

  Adrian Hyland

  (Australia)

  Moonlight Downs

  Gunshot Road

  Stan Jones

  (Alaska)

  White Sky, Black Ice

  Shaman Pass

  Village of the Ghost Bears

  Lene Kaaberbøl & Agnete Friis

  (Denmark)

  The Boy in the Suitcase

  Graeme Kent

  (Solomon Islands)

  Devil-Devil

  One Blood

  Martin Limón

  (South Korea)

  Jade Lady Burning

  Slicky Boys

  Buddha’s Money

  The Door to Bitterness

  The Wandering Ghost

  G.I. Bones

  Mr. Kill

  Peter Lovesey

  (Bath, England)

  The Last Detective

  The Vault

  On the Edge

  The Reaper

  Rough Cider

  The False Inspector Dew

  Peter Lovesey (cont.)

  Diamond Dust

  Diamond Solitaire

  The House Sitter

  The Summons

  Bloodhounds

  Upon a Dark Night

  The Circle

  The Secret Hangman

  The Headhunters

  Skeleton Hill

  Stagestruck

  Cop to Corpse

  Jassy Mackenzie

  (South Africa)

  Random Violence

  Stolen Lives

  The Fallen

  Seich Matsumoto

  (Japan)

  Inspector Imanishi Investigates

  James McClure

  (South Africa)

  The Steam Pig

  The Caterpillar Cop

  The Gooseberry Fool

  Snake

  The Sunday Hangman

  The Blood of an Englishman

  Jan Merete Weiss

  (Italy)

  These Dark Things

  Magdalen Nabb

  (Italy)

  Death of an Englishman

  Death of a Dutchman

  Death in Springtime

  Death in Autumn

  The Marshal and the Madwoman

  The Marshal and the Murderer

  The Marshal’s Own Case

  The Marshal Makes His Report

  The Marshal at the Villa Torrini

  Property of Blood

  Some Bitter Taste

  The Innocent

  Vita Nuova

  Stuart Neville

  (Northern Ireland)

  The Ghosts of Belfast

  Collusion

  Stolen Souls

  Eliot Pattison

  (Tibet)

  Prayer of the Dragon

  The Lord of Death

  Rebecca Pawel

  (1930s Spain)

  Death of a Nationalist

  Law of Return

  The Watcher in the Pine

  The Summer Snow

  Qiu Xiaolong

  (China)

  Death of a Red Heroine

  A Loyal Character Dancer

  When Red is Black

  Matt Beynon Rees

  (Palestine)

  The Collaborator of Bethlehem

  A Grave in Gaza

  The Samaritan’s Secret

  The Fourth Assassin

  John Straley

  (Alaska)

  The Woman Who Married a Bear

  The Curious Eat Themselves

  Akimitsu Takagi

  (Japan)

  The Tattoo Murder Case

  Honeymoon to Nowhere

  The Informer

  Helene Tursten

  (Sweden)

  Detective Inspector Huss

  Night Rounds

  The Torso

  The Glass Devil

  Janwillem van de Wetering

  (Holland)

  Outsider in Amsterdam

  Tumbleweed

  The Corpse on the Dike

  Death of a Hawker

  The Japanese Corpse

  The Blond Baboon

  The Maine Massacre

  The Mind-Murders

  The Streetbird

  The Rattle-Rat

  Hard Rain

  Just a Corpse at Twilight

  Hollow-Eyed Angel

  The Perfidious Parrot

  Amsterdam Cops: Collected Stories

 

 

 


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