Peter came briskly out to her, almost running. ‘Mrs DuBerris has made a clean breast of it,’ he said.
‘Good lord!’ said Harriet. ‘She seemed determined that she wouldn’t do that, when she was talking to me. To what has she confessed?’
‘The whole charge sheet except for Mr Handley. Denies all knowledge of that.’
‘Well, accidents do, after all, happen,’ said Harriet.
‘Yes. Maybe. Anyway she has admitted killing Rannerson and Patel and Pevenor. And malicious hanky-panky with the jewel. Case closed.’
‘Will she hang?’ asked Harriet.
‘Maybe not. It’s getting controversial to hang people. Her lawyer will try his best. I think they won’t charge her with Patel.’
‘Peter, why not? I liked the sound of that woman. A really useful life was taken there.’
‘Tactics, Harriet. The woman fell down through a broken manhole cover, in the blackout, late at night. No witnesses. Sort of thing that happened every night in the Blitz. The only evidence that she might have been pushed is our old friend coincidence and that confession. Any defence lawyer worth his salt can demolish a confession. We think it’s an odd coincidence, but as you just said about Mr Handley, coincidences do happen, let Aristotle say what he will. A defence lawyer will make a huge meal of it: groundless charge, cock-and-bull story about an exotic jewel, pure coincidence, charge brought against his client out of malice . . . Nobody suspected foul play at the time, no police file was opened, no post-mortem considered necessary . . . I could write the brief myself. You could do it even better.’
‘You mean, they couldn’t make it stick?’
‘I don’t see that they could, no. And they will then be thinking about the effect on a jury of bringing a charge that won’t stick alongside others that should. The motive for the other murders is also associated with that jewel. Weakens the whole case.’
‘But she has confessed.’
‘She could, and indeed should, change her plea.’
‘Why should she change it, if it is true?’
‘It’s always better to have the evidence spelled out in court, especially if someone is to hang on the basis of it. Bono publico, and all that.’
‘So what do you think will happen?’
‘Touch and go. A jury won’t like the sound of those jewels and inscriptions that nobody can read. If she withdraws her confession it might be that none of it could be made to stick.’
‘I can’t read her mind,’ said Harriet. ‘She is very disturbed. Mad, I think. So we may never know whether poor Rita Patel was pushed, or just coincidentally fell?’
‘It’s the nature of coincidence, isn’t it?’ said Peter. ‘It doesn’t amount to certainty. And it won’t make any difference to DuBerris. One hangs just as decisively for a single death as for three.’
Harriet wondered how severe Peter’s solved-case depression would be this time. But this time he had other matters on his mind.
A discussion with the insurers, for example. At first the assessor declared that although his firm would have to pay every penny entailed in the total reconstruction of Bredon Hall as it was the night before the fire, they would not pay a penny towards any lesser plan.
‘He thinks we are deliberately planning to do very little, and pocket the difference in cash,’ Peter reported to Harriet.
‘Well, aren’t we?’ she asked him.
‘Another way of looking at it would be to say that what we propose will save the insurers money; and then discuss the division of the spoils. The fellow today acknowledges that a full restoration would risk bankrupting his firm, but nevertheless is adamant that whatever we do we shall not pocket a penny piece above what we spend on repairs. I sent him off declaring that in that case we would demand a restoration of the whole lot. He has gone back to London to think about it. My brother must be turning in his grave.’
‘So perhaps no cash?’ said Harriet. She felt on uncertain ground, never having discussed his family finances in this way before, only their own resources. ‘How badly do we need cash?’
‘We have to find the death duty,’ Peter said.
‘And we can’t find it?’
‘I am about ten thousand short,’ Peter said. ‘After I have thrown most of our personal wealth at it, as well as selling a lot of land.’
‘We should sell Talboys,’ Harriet said.
Peter looked at her hard. ‘I promised you once no one other than us would ever set foot in it as the owner as long as I lived,’ he said. ‘Had you forgotten?’
‘I was only thinking that it would be hard to live in three houses,’ she said. ‘There aren’t enough days in the year.’
‘Are you actually asking me to break a promise to you?’ he said ruefully.
‘Well, no . . .’
‘We could let it if we haven’t time to live in it, and save my battered honour in that way.’
‘What could we get for it?’ she asked. ‘How many gardeners’ wages here would the rent cover?’
‘You never fail to amaze me, Harriet,’ he said. ‘Age has not withered you nor custom staled your infinite variety.’
‘Idiot!’ she protested. ‘I get your drift. Be aware there will no asps at the breast for me; you’re stuck with me.’
‘I thought that was the other way round,’ he said.
Peter and Harriet stayed at Denver for nearly a month. Helen assigned them a room in the Dower House, so they were not at the Denver Arms for very long. There seemed to be an endless list of chores, decisions, negotiations. The insurers had agreed their plans, but the Ministry of Works was taking an interest in what would become of a half-burned-down important house; an architect was needed to plan the alterations required, an engineer to assure them of the stability of the walls that had been licked by fire. Harriet had taken a fancy to opening up the stone arches that had once supported the upper storey of the stone house. She thought they would look splendid filled with large windows, giving on to the new garden. And the new garden was what she was putting her mind to, leaving the more immediate problems to Peter. It was in a garden book that she found a shrub called Osmanthus Nandina. Smiling, she carried the book through to Peter, who had set up an office in the stable block.
‘If all those years ago you had been a gardener, Peter . . .’ she began, but then she saw that Charles was with him. She had not heard the car come up the drive.
‘What’s up?’ she asked.
‘Mrs DuBerris has hanged herself in Holloway Gaol,’ Peter said.
‘Those idiots let her have bed sheets,’ said Charles. ‘They seemed to think that if a prisoner has confessed he or she will be perfectly happy to be hanged by the powers that be. And I understand you warned them at her arrest, Peter, that you thought she was a risk.’
‘Yes, I did. But I thought she would do it sooner.’
‘So she escapes justice,’ said Charles, clearly still angry.
‘Well, she hasn’t exactly escaped justice,’ said Harriet. ‘Just administered it herself. I suppose it might be easier to be the actor rather than the acted upon.’ She was remembering the fierce pride and rage of Mrs DuBerris.
‘Believe me, Harriet,’ said Charles with sudden ferocity, ‘some things are best done professionally.’
That evening Peter said, ‘I’ve had as much of this as I can bear. Let’s go back to London.’
‘Tomorrow?’
‘I thought perhaps tonight,’ he said, looking at her hopefully.
‘As Your Grace pleases,’ she said, causing him to shake a fist at her. He drove even faster at night, making Harriet ride in terror of an unlit cow on the road; but they reached home safely, yet again.
London, however, was no longer a kingdom apart. Peter was still largely occupied with Denver affairs. An enquiry from Black Rod was received, asking him when he intended to take his seat in the Lords. Peter at first said that he would not take up his seat; but when Charles learned of that he pointed out that there was no voice in the Lords with
any knowledge of crime except from the judiciary viewpoint. They were talking over dinner, with the Bunters present. Charles spoke warmly of how good it might be to have someone with practical experience of the nature of forensic evidence, of the nature of ordinary police work, to speak when laws were being drafted. ‘A morsel of common sense, Peter,’ he said, ‘and, of course, expressed with wit and elegance.’
Peter sighed. ‘Oh, very well then,’ he said, ‘Gilbert and Sullivan without the music for me, too.’
And Hope offered to take a portrait of him in his robes of state.
By and by Ada DuBerris presented herself. ‘I didn’t make an appointment,’ she said. ‘I thought you might not see me if you knew I was coming.’
‘You had no reason to think that,’ Peter said.
‘Well, you wouldn’t be the only one,’ she said. ‘Most of my friends somehow don’t want to see me right now.’ She was pale, and had lost weight.
‘What can I do for you?’ Peter asked. ‘Other than to suggest to you that fairweather friends are good riddance.’
‘I want to sell this,’ she said, taking a twist of tissue paper out of her handbag, and putting in down on the sofa table. She flicked the tissue paper open to reveal the emerald. ‘And I don’t know how. I’m afraid of being cheated.’
‘That’s a not unjustified fear,’ said Peter. ‘But I can help you. You must go to see Lord Attenbury at once. He is certain to be selling his, and there is a reward available if both stones are offered together.’
‘He won’t see me,’ Ada said.
‘Have you tried?’
‘Yes.’
‘Although you are his second cousin once removed or something,’ said Peter.
‘What a ghastly thought!’ said Ada.
‘I rather agree with you,’ said Peter. ‘That young man takes after his father, I’m afraid. Shouldn’t speak ill of the dead, of course. Look, I think you need an intermediary. Someone to negotiate a deal with the Maharaja for both of you. And I know just the person, as it happens. I think you should go to see Freddy Arbuthnot. Tell him I sent you and all that.’
‘Thank you, Lord Peter,’ said Ada. ‘Can I still call you that?’
‘Certainly you can. Or just Peter. Cuts the fuss a bit. And I did, after all, first meet you when you were a tiny little thing in nursery frills.’
‘You’re nothing like as horrible as my mother said you were,’ observed Ada. ‘You’re being very helpful.’
‘Well, do me a favour in return,’ he said. ‘Leave that jewel on the table while I see if Harriet is free. She has heard so much about it, or them, that I’m sure she’d like to see one of them.’
Harriet was indeed free. She looked with great curiosity at the dark stone lying on the table.
‘Pick it up if you want to,’ said Ada.
Harriet picked it up very gingerly, and held it to the light. The intaglio carving gave it a differential density, the thinner parts gleaming with river-green translucence. She could even see the faintest shadow of fragments of the inscription on the back showing through. She was struck with a sudden wave of emotion; of longing to possess this stone, to stare at it and lose herself in its depths, as though the heartbroken yearning of the Persian poet whose words it carried had been twisted into desire for the stone itself.
She put it down abruptly. ‘I should sell it as soon as you can,’ she said to Ada.
‘I don’t exactly want the money,’ Ada said. ‘Or at least I don’t want much of it myself. I want to make a fund to give bursaries to train musicians. Poor young people who can’t afford the teaching they need. And I don’t know how to do that, either,’ she added.
‘I can’t help you with a trust fund,’ Peter said, ‘but I know a man who can. I’ll post you off in the right direction as soon as you’ve got the money.’
‘So what did you think of it?’ Peter asked Harriet when Ada had left them.
‘What a perilous thing, Peter!’ she said. ‘I found an intense admiration for the man who long ago dispossessed himself of it to feed the poor.’
‘It got to you, too?’ he said. ‘I thought you might have been immune to it.’
She shivered slightly. ‘I am gladder than I can tell you that it isn’t ours,’ she said.
A week later Freddy Arbuthnot showed up, dropping by at the cocktail hour, and accepting gin and It.
‘I’ve come to talk to you about the reward that Maharaja fellow is offering,’ Freddy said. ‘He’s putting up a handsome price for both the jewels, and an even more handsome reward of some kind, and he thinks the reward is due to you.’
‘The emeralds aren’t mine,’ said Peter. ‘Nothing to do with me. The reward was for anyone offering them both together, wasn’t it? The two owners should share it.’
‘Point of view, certainly,’ said Freddy. ‘Just thought you might be glad of a few thousand at the moment.’
‘What makes you think that, Freddy?’ Peter asked.
‘Oh, it’s got about that you are selling some shares; that’s all.’
‘Buy some, sell some.’
‘Oh, come on, Wimsey, I can work out the position you are in, and so can a lot of people.’
‘The emeralds are not mine,’ Peter repeated. ‘Harriet said just the other day that she was glad of that. I rather agree with her.’
‘You’re a silly fellow, Wimsey,’ said Freddy. ‘And I’m dashed fond of you. All right, have it your own way; I’ll see the Maharaja off. Just let me know if I can help, won’t you?’
Bunter appeared with the breakfast tray the following morning, bringing with him not The Times, but Country Life.
‘I thought you would like to see this, Your Grace,’ he said. He handed Peter the magazine open at a full-page announcement of the sale of Fennybrook Hall.
Ancestral home of the Attenbury family, never before on the market . . . main house by Sir John Soane . . . extensive park-land, stables, home farm, offered for sale furnished or unfurnished . . .
‘Well, well,’ said Peter. ‘Take this to show to Harriet at once, Bunter. I expect a visit from Lord Attenbury before the day is out, and we should be prepared.’
It was actually the following day that Lord Attenbury appeared, having the grace to be rather embarrassed, and full of exculpation and explanation.
‘You see,’ he offered, ‘it seemed for such a long time that we couldn’t possibly keep the house, that we should simply have to sell it, and we rather got used to the idea. Well, my mother and my aunts did, that is . . . I myself, of course . . . well, as I was saying, then when the emerald business was all sorted out – eternally grateful, of course – it occurred to us that now we had the money we didn’t necessarily want to blow it all on keeping the family pile. White elephant, really. The women thought it would be fun to have a little place on the Riviera for the winter, and to go to New York now and then; they let me off the hook, you see. And in the modern world we don’t have to live like fuddy-duddy old landowners. Nobody respects that any more, after all. You should do the same, Peter. It’s quite liberating really.’
‘Thank you for your advice, Attenbury,’ said Peter. ‘I shall not take it.’
At Denver again. The house now habitable, beginning to show its lopsided charm. Even the new formal garden taking shape. Harriet in gum-boots with planting lists in her hands.
Peter came towards her, emerging through one of the new garden windows with a telegram in his hands. ‘My mother is coming home at last,’ he told her. ‘Arriving in five days.’
‘Hurrah,’ said Harriet. ‘And her part of the house is all ready for her, Peter. I saw to that.’
‘Thank you,’ he said. ‘Harriet, I . . .’
‘What, Peter?’ she asked, when he paused.
‘I wish I had found a way of not dragging you into all this. You didn’t bargain for this.’
‘For better, for worse, for richer, for poorer, Peter? I think I did. Considering that you told me quite recently that there’s no such thing as a forget
ful sleuth, you seem a remarkably forgetful husband.’
‘You found it hard enough to stomach my position as it was,’ he said sadly. ‘And when you married me my nephew was alive, and I was safe from the succession.’
‘It was the glamour and privilege I bucked away from,’ she said. ‘If I had realised all the burdens and responsibilities that went with them I would have accepted you much sooner. And, Peter, since I am now the Duchess of Denver whether we would or no, I intend to be a good Duchess.’
‘Don’t you want to be Harriet Vane?’ he asked her.
‘Yes; but I am large. I contain multitudes.’
‘Have you reckoned a thousand acres much?’ he asked. ‘If every atom belonging to me as good as belongs to you . . .’
‘You see?’ she said, smiling at him. ‘I shall still be Harriet Vane, and you shall be the only duke in England who can play ping-pong with quotations.’
‘Oh, yes,’ he said, ‘I can still do that! Do you think I can still detect?’
‘I’m sure you can, if the need arises,’ she said. ‘I haven’t noticed dukedom softening your brain.’
‘There is something intrinsically absurd,’ he said sadly, ‘about a ducal detective.’
‘You have been too much in Helen’s company,’ said Harriet. ‘If I can be a duchess, and Harriet-Vane-the-writer, then you can be the Duke of Denver, and Lord-Peter-the-detective.’
‘Can I still be Peter, naked and unadorned, and your friend and lover?’ he said.
‘Well, evidently,’ she said. They caught each other’s eyes, and stood smiling for a moment. Then they walked on a little. ‘Peter?’ she said, sliding her arm through his, and walking him along the newly laid gravel path. ‘There is a consolation in all this, you know.’
‘I’d like to know what it is,’ he said.
‘I’ve been so happy with you, all these years,’ she said, ‘but in a way what I was afraid of did happen. Except while the war was on everything I was doing was voluntary. I didn’t have to write unless I wanted to; I didn’t even have to look after my own children unless I wanted to. Or lift a hand to any domestic task. There were no constraints about anything at all. And now I once again have things to do that are needful, and are my duty. Don’t try to protect me from it, let’s just get on with it. Let’s do our best. Content, Your Grace?’
The Attenbury Emeralds Page 27