Behold a Fair Woman

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Behold a Fair Woman Page 1

by Francis Duncan




  CONTENTS

  Cover

  About the Book

  About the Author

  Also by Francis Duncan

  Title Page

  Dedication

  1. The Man in the Dark

  2. Disappointment for the Major

  3. Confidential Business

  4. Plan for Easy Living

  5. Uneasy Encounter

  6. The Woman in the Background

  7. Interlude in an Old Mill

  8. Problem for Two Lovers

  9. Up in the Morning Early

  10. The Night is Fatal

  11. Interview with the Chief Officer

  12. Lady in Distress

  13. The Suspects Form Pairs

  14. Examination of a Doubtful Character

  15. A Change in the Evidence

  16. The Frightened Man

  17. The Lady Walks at Night

  18. Death Offers a Solution

  19. The Truth is Plain

  20. Memory Provides the Answer

  21. Background Picture

  22. The Clue in the Church

  23. Thunder in the Air

  24. The Pattern Looks Neat and Tidy

  Copyright

  ABOUT THE BOOK

  Mordecai Tremaine’s hobby of choice – crime detection – has left him in need of a holiday. A break away from that gruesome business of murder will be just the ticket, and the picturesque island of Moulin d’Or seems to be just the destination.

  Amid the sunshine and the sea air, Mordecai falls in with a band of fellow holidaymakers and tries to forget that such a thing as foul play exists. He should have been wiser, of course, because before too long villainy rears its head and a dead body is discovered.

  With a killer stalking the sand dunes, it falls to Mordecai to piece together the truth about just who has smuggled murder on to the island idyll …

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Francis Duncan is the pseudonym for William Underhill, who was born in 1918. He lived virtually all his life in Bristol and was a ‘scholarship boy’ boarder at Queen Elizabeth’s Hospital school. Due to family circumstances he was unable to go to university and started work in the Housing Department of Bristol City Council. Writing was always important to him and very early on he published articles in newspapers and magazines. His first detective story was published in 1936.

  In 1938 he married Sylvia Henly. Although a conscientious objector, he served in the Royal Army Medical Corps in World War II, landing in France shortly after D-Day. After the war he trained as a teacher and spent the rest of his life in education, first as a primary school teacher and then as a lecturer in a college of further education. In the 1950s he studied for an external economics degree from London University. No mean feat with a family to support; his daughter, Kathryn, was born in 1943 and his son, Derek, in 1949.

  Throughout much of this time he continued to write detective fiction from ‘sheer inner necessity’, but also to supplement a modest income. He enjoyed foreign travel, particularly to France, and took up golf on retirement. He died of a heart attack shortly after celebrating his fiftieth wedding anniversary in 1988.

  ALSO BY FRANCIS DUNCAN IN THE MORDECAI TREMAINE SERIES

  Murder Has a Motive

  Murder for Christmas

  So Pretty a Problem

  In at the Death

  This is a

  MORDECAI TREMAINE

  Story

  1

  THE MAN IN THE DARK

  THE SHIP’S PASSAGE through the water had transformed a light breeze into a chilling wind. By the time they were running between the buoys towards the entrance to St. Julian Harbour Mordecai Tremaine was wishing he had changed his mind about enjoying the sea trip and had made the quicker journey by air.

  As the vessel brushed gently against the fenders of the jetty he picked up his suitcase and made his way somewhat forlornly along the crowded deck towards the gangway, feeling that it had not been the wisest of voyages for an elderly gentleman to make.

  The passengers began to file ashore. Edging his way along he looked up to see Janet smiling and waving at him frantically, her red dress a vivid splash of colour against the blue sky behind her. Mark was with her, a more sober figure in grey flannels but smiling and nodding a welcome no less warm.

  He felt a little better. He had met the Belmores in London during the previous winter. When he had accepted their invitation to spend a few weeks with them later in the year at their island home he had been sure that they would do their best to make his stay a pleasant one.

  Mark Belmore reached out to take his case as he set foot on the jetty.

  ‘Glad to see you, old man. Good journey?’

  Relieved of his burden, Tremaine pushed his pince-nez back into a safer position on the bridge of his nose.

  ‘Chilly towards the end, but the water was calm enough.’

  ‘A cup of tea will soon thaw you out,’ Janet said with a smile.

  ‘Car’s over here,’ Mark put in. ‘I couldn’t get any closer to the boat. It’s always a job finding a place to park in the season when the mail boats are in.’

  Here on shore the wind was no more than a breeze again and the sun was beating down warmly upon them. As they walked along the crowded quayside Tremaine’s spirits rose with his increasing physical comfort.

  He was looking forward to his holiday. Recently he had been jaded and stale, oppressed by thoughts of a world given over to evil. He had deliberately chosen crime detection for his hobby; he knew that the thrill of the pursuit of the murderer would never lose its fascination for him. But it meant, inevitably, facing sometimes a black reaction, when he was overwhelmed by despair for humanity.

  It was the penalty he was called upon to pay for his dual personality; for being both the crime investigator, even if an amateur, and the sentimental reader of Romantic Stories.

  Now, perhaps, he could forget that there were such things as fear, and greed, and a judge putting on a square of black silk in a hushed courtroom.

  He looked eagerly about him as Mark Belmore drove the big car from the jetty, past the piled-up tomato baskets outside the packing sheds, and into the narrow streets of the port.

  The main street straggled its way from the neighbourhood of the jetty up the slope of the hill against which the town was built. Imposing branches of familiar multiple stores stood on neighbourly terms with more modest but colourful establishments bearing names which would have aroused no comment across the water in Normandy.

  There was a continental flavour over its cobbled, winding length; it impressed itself excitingly upon the mind despite the obviously English holiday-makers forming the greater part of the human tide which was creating an ebb and flow of movement on the pavements and between the vehicles attempting the arduous passage from one end to the other.

  When they reached the wide road running along the edge of the bay Tremaine transferred his attention to the smaller islands forming the far side of the shipping lane. The tide was full.

  ‘Admiring the view?’ Mark commented. ‘I’m afraid it isn’t so good at low tide. Nothing but rocks and desolation. Most visitors prefer the south and west coasts.’

  A hundred yards on they left the bay road and turned inland. Instead of blue water, broken by ships and islands, they looked upon a sea of glass from which the sun was reflected in a shimmering brilliance that dazzled the eyes.

  ‘Tomato houses?’ Tremaine asked, and Belmore nodded.

  ‘Yes. Most of the glass on the island is around here. Makes it look a bit untidy but it provides a living for a good many people.’

  Open country was confined to an occasional small field; the remaining ground was occupied by houses, some of grey stone, refaced and
neatly painted but evidently belonging to the period before the island’s prosperity; and some of more modern construction. Nearly all of them, however, possessed an adjoining building of glass in which tomato plants flourished in hundreds.

  ‘It seems to be very much the small man’s business,’ Tremaine observed.

  ‘In the main that’s the case,’ Belmore agreed. ‘There are one or two companies owning several thousand feet of glass apiece, but most of the growing is done on a moderate scale.’

  The bungalow in which the Belmores lived was situated in the north-western part of the island, in the district of Moulin d’Or. The land was generally flat, and apart from one restricted area of cliff the small bays into which the coast was broken were flanked by low sand dunes. The bungalow was built upon a stretch of ground slightly higher than the surrounding area; it had an uninterrupted view of the sea.

  ‘You’ve an ideal spot here,’ Tremaine remarked, as the car turned in through the entrance.

  ‘Well, I wouldn’t describe it as ideal,’ Belmore said practically. ‘The scenery is much better at the other end of the island. But it has its advantages. We’re pretty quiet out here and the bathings’s good.’

  Half an hour later Tremaine had settled himself in his room, pleasantly located on the seaward side of the bungalow, and had cleaned up after his journey. The promised cup of tea had removed the last lingering chill from his bones.

  ‘Janet’s getting a meal,’ Mark told him. ‘Like a stroll while we’re waiting?’

  They took the road leading to the beach. There was still warmth in the sun’s rays and as they neared the dunes Tremaine saw two figures coming from the water, now on the ebb.

  ‘Somebody seems to have taken a late dip.’

  ‘They’re regulars, I think,’ Belmore said. One of the two figures approaching them raised a hand in recognition and he returned the gesture. ‘Yes, it’s Valerie and Alan Creed.’

  He led the way to the sand. Tremaine, following close at his heels, saw that the two people now slipping into their bathing wraps were not as young as he had at first imagined.

  The man, tall and gaunt of frame, his hair short and grizzled, was middle-aged; the woman was a little younger but no longer to be described as a girl. Nor was she good-looking. Her features were pleasant, but her figure was heavy; it was thick at the hips so that what grace she might have possessed was dulled by a hampering sluggishness of movement.

  ‘Still keeping up the habit, I see!’ Belmore called.

  ‘Haven’t missed a day yet,’ the man returned.

  He eyed Tremaine curiously. Belmore made the introductions and the four of them walked up the beach together.

  ‘You’ll find the island’s a grand place for a holiday,’ Alan Creed remarked. ‘How long are you staying?’

  ‘I haven’t decided. It depends upon how long Mark and his wife are prepared to put up with me!’ Mark Belmore and the Creeds appeared to be on first-name terms. ‘What about you?’ Tremaine added. ‘Are you a bird of passage too, or have you settled here?’

  ‘Valerie and I are somewhere in between,’ Creed returned. ‘We’ve taken a cottage indefinitely, so I suppose we can be classed as semi-permanent.’

  Tremaine glanced at Valerie Creed with a frown of concentration. It was true that the name seemed vaguely incongruous; it didn’t seem to match her heavy, middle-aged build. But there was something else about her that was eluding him.

  She became aware of his scrutiny and he met her glance of enquiry with an apologetic smile.

  ‘I’m sorry, Mrs. Creed. I didn’t mean to be rude. I’ve a feeling I ought to know you. Could we have met somewhere before?’

  He thought that briefly her face became taut and somehow watchful.

  ‘No, I don’t think so,’ she said quickly. ‘At least, your name isn’t familiar to me.’ She turned to her husband. ‘We haven’t met Mr. Tremaine before, have we, Alan?’

  There was no tension in Alan Creed’s manner. He shook his head unruffled.

  ‘No, my dear. I’m sure I would have remembered him.’ He raised his eyebrows in Tremaine’s direction. ‘Any idea where it might have been?’ he asked.

  Tremaine shook his head.

  ‘Probably my memory playing tricks with me. You know how it is. You meet people and they seem to be familiar to you, but it’s really because they remind you of somebody else.’

  ‘I dare say that’s it. The trouble is that we human beings can be divided too easily into types.’

  Something stirred protestingly in Mordecai Tremaine’s incurably sentimental soul, but before he could challenge what Creed had said the other had raised his hand to point to a narrow lane running away from the road a few yards ahead.

  ‘Our place is just along here. Dare say we’ll be seeing something of you since you’re staying with Mark. We’re often down on the beach.’

  Tremaine watched them until they turned a bend in the lane. Belmore said:

  ‘Nice couple. We rather suspect that they’re newly-weds.’

  Tremaine looked at him in surprise.

  ‘Newly-weds?’

  ‘I thought that would draw you out.’ Belmore chuckled. ‘Didn’t you notice the looks they gave each other?’

  ‘It did strike me that each of them seemed to be very much wrapped up in the other. But I didn’t think of them as recently married. They seem, well, rather too old.’

  ‘Orange blossom doesn’t always belong to youth, you know. Anyway, that’s what Janet says about them and when it comes to matters of that kind I’m prepared to allow her intuition a clear field.’

  ‘What does Creed do?’

  ‘His job? He seems to be some kind of free-lance artist. I’ve seen him do a few bits of sketching now and again and he has an artist’s drawing-board and various odds and ends that go with that sort of thing in his cottage. I don’t think they’re particularly well-off. They certainly don’t throw money around.’

  ‘Artists seldom can,’ Tremaine commented. ‘It’s little enough of it most of them have.’

  They followed the road towards the headland that marked the bay’s extremity. Tremaine studied the bizarre agglomeration of grey stone and concrete that straddled the headland itself. It was an architectural hybrid. Originally it had been pseudo-Gothic; now a yellow-painted convexity with tall windows bulged flamboyantly in concrete curves from the grey stone on the seaward side.

  ‘What went wrong?’ he asked.

  ‘That’s the Rohane hotel,’ Belmore explained. ‘Bit of an eyesore. Place was derelict for years and then somebody had all those futuristic extras stuck on in the belief that he was modernizing it. I believe he did make quite a respectable job of the inside—put in bathrooms and decent plumbing and so on—but it doesn’t do much to help the view stuck up there on the headland like that.’

  ‘Did the alterations attract the guests?’

  ‘No, they didn’t. In the end the people who’d taken it gave up the business and left the island. There’s a new man running it now. Chap named Latinam. He and his sister have taken it over.’

  ‘It’s still a hotel?’

  ‘Oh yes. There are a few people staying there, but not as many as the place can hold. Latinam doesn’t seem to be worried, though. I believe he took it over more as a hobby than anything else. He doesn’t appear to be concerned about making it pay, so I imagine he isn’t in need of money.’

  ‘Quite a rare bird in these days,’ Tremaine remarked. ‘Do you know him?’

  ‘We nod to each other. But we’re really like a village on our own out here. It doesn’t take long for everybody to get to know everybody else.’

  He seemed reluctant to discuss Latinam further. Tremaine was aware of a sudden restraint in his manner.

  ‘I think we’d better be turning back,’ his companion said, looking at his watch, ‘or Janet will be waiting for us.’

  They reached the bungalow just as Janet was beginning to look anxiously out of the window in search of them.

>   When the meal was over Tremaine’s offer of help in clearing away was firmly turned down.

  ‘If you’re sure there isn’t anything I can do,’ he remarked, ‘I think I’ll take a stroll along by the beach.’

  ‘Keep the old windmill as a landmark,’ Belmore told him, ‘and you won’t be in any danger of missing your way. We’re in a direct line between the windmill and the Rohane hotel.’

  They had lingered over the meal and it was growing dark, but it was still possible to see the ruined windmill that had given its name to the district. Tremaine made a mental note of its position relative to the house and strolled towards the beach.

  There was very little wind and the sea was sighing gently against the sand somewhere in the gathering darkness beyond the dunes. No other human figure was in sight.

  Occasionally a car went past, and once a bus with no more than a handful of passengers caused him to step hastily up to the dunes, but otherwise it was a silent, lonely world.

  The darkness intensified. He realized that if he was not to lose his way, or at least have his host and hostess worrying about him, it was time to retrace his footsteps.

  He shivered as he turned to face in the opposite direction. There was a chill in the air now that the sun had gone down.

  Ahead of him he could see two or three lights. They were close together and seemingly poised in the darkness. They puzzled him for a few moments and then he realized that they must belong to the Rohane hotel.

  They appeared to be aloof, having no contact with the world; they were unfriendly to an extent that was almost sinister. The fancy was plainly absurd and he dismissed it from his mind.

  He almost went past the road that led to the bungalow. Becoming suddenly aware of it he turned abruptly, and as he did so a man’s figure loomed up unexpectedly in front of him so that he was only just able to avoid a collision.

  ‘I beg your pardon!’ he ejaculated, startled.

  With a growl in reply the other brushed roughly past him, a vague indistinct shape against the shadow of the wall that bordered the road at this point. The sound of his footsteps moved towards the beach and then stopped, as though he had stepped on to the grass verge.

 

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