A Proposal to Die For

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A Proposal to Die For Page 13

by Vivian Conroy


  ‘The man returned from the dead,’ Alkmene said satisfied. ‘The countess was so right. He did appear like he had risen from those marshes in which the woman and her baby were supposed to have drowned.’

  ‘We have no idea if he even knew about Cunningham.’

  ‘Yes, he said so. Why else would Silas Norwhich have been so mad at his attorney? He believed Pemboldt had spread the word and provoked these fake claims.’

  ‘So if the man at the theatre knew about Cunningham, but not from the lawyer, his claim could have been real.’

  ‘That depends.’ Alkmene touched his arm. ‘Consider. Norwhich was obsessed with Cunningham, asking around for information. That must have led to talk. Maybe somebody there thought up the same plan as the lawyers had. Produce a fake heir and cash in.’

  Jake nodded. ‘So we have to go and visit Cunningham to find out who was in the know about this summer romance of old and the baby that was supposed to have been born of it. How soon can you pack for a trip?’

  Alkmene stared at him. ‘Soon enough. Why?’

  ‘I will rent a car, and we are going to Dartmoor.’

  ‘Not again!’ Jake Dubois hit the brake as a whole herd of sheep poured into the narrow road. A sleek black and white dog followed, yapping at them. Then a shepherd, with a green felt hat with a feather on his curly hair and a long stick in his hand.

  He lifted his free hand at them, as he watched the sheep squeeze themselves one by one through a narrow opening in the stone wall on the other side of the road. This kind of natural wall – stones held together by their own weight – had run along their road for miles now, closing in meadows and fields, or orchards with gnarled trees, their trunks covered with moss.

  Jake drummed on the wheel. ‘At this pace we will never get to Cunningham.’

  ‘Don’t be so negative,’ Alkmene said. ‘The last sign said five more miles. We must have done four already. Look around you. Sweet little cottages with chimneys that are about to collapse, authentic characters like this shepherd.’

  Alkmene waved at him with her gloved hand as he crossed, whistling to his dog that had strayed a few yards to sniff against the wall. It came running with its tail up, making a weird leap like a lamb outdoors for the first time in spring.

  Alkmene sighed in satisfaction. ‘It is so peaceful here. No people in a hurry, bustling about, shouting at each other. I’d love to spend summers in the countryside like they did in the old days.’

  ‘You’d die of boredom,’ Jake said cynically as he hit the gas and let the engine rev.

  Alkmene rolled her eyes at him.

  ‘Really,’ he said. ‘No shops to go to, to spend money on costumes and hats, no countesses to meet up with at fancy tea parlours.’

  ‘I’d go out into the fields to paint.’ Alkmene nodded firmly. ‘I’d sit down by a brook and try to capture the essence of the flowing water or I’d do a view of the moor with threatening storm clouds over it. Then just before the weather broke, I’d carry my easel to some rustic inn and order their stew.’

  She could just see herself leaning back in a nice leather chair at the fire, rubbing her chilly hands and breathing the delicious scents from the kitchen.

  ‘You do know they put sheep’s eyes into it?’

  ‘In Scotland maybe. Not here.’ Alkmene settled better in the car seat and folded her hands in her lap. ‘I would have the innkeeper’s wife make me a lunch to carry along as I took my car for a spin to visit some old ruin of a castle or a settlement on the moor. I am fascinated by excavations. You?’

  ‘Not particularly,’ Jake said in a sour tone.

  ‘Oh, come on. Any adventurous heart must beat faster at the prospect of finding a gold treasure.’

  Jake held his head back and laughed. ‘I don’t think a settlement on the moor would yield a gold treasure. Just shards of used pottery and dry bones. Animal but very possibly also human.’

  Alkmene sobered. ‘I do wonder if that poor woman died in the marshes. She must have been desperate that her husband’s brother wanted to force her into setting him free. While she was with child. I guess she had no family who could stand up for her. Maybe they had even warned her when she started the relationship that it might not last.’

  ‘They could not have stood up for her either way,’ Jake said with a dark look. ‘They were probably common folk, like that authentic shepherd of yours. People you don’t have to take seriously, when you have money and power.’

  Alkmene sighed. ‘Are you going to give me that again?’

  ‘Well, do you ever see yourself ending up in that position? Pregnant and forced to relinquish your claim on the man you love, forced by some family member who doesn’t think you good enough for his brother. Let’s be honest. That was it. They did not care for the question whether those two loved each other or not. They just wanted a wife for their son and brother who was in their league.’

  Alkmene studied his profile. ‘Probably, but their opinion does make sense.’

  ‘Oh, come on,’ Jake said, giving some more gas.

  ‘Really. Consider. If you are raised a certain way, you have certain expectations hanging upon you. This brother of Silas Norwhich had friends, acquaintances back home who would expect him to present a certain type of wife to them. If the woman was not…in their league, as you put it, she would have been treated with disdain, perhaps not invited to parties, or if she was invited, people would stare at her and whisper. She’d feel outcast, unaccepted, unworthy perhaps.’

  ‘And what nonsense that would be.’

  ‘Perhaps, but she would sense it and suffer from it. Could her husband’s love compensate for what she would be missing? Her family at home, her simple life, the lack of pressure on her to be a certain way.’

  Alkmene held her hands tightly together, staring ahead where a group of houses appeared with a church tower rising over them. ‘You keep saying my position is easy and privileged. But I have never failed to remember what people expect of me. You can never just do what you want, or your father will hear of it, or the people will talk about it.’

  ‘Tough,’ Jake said with a ridiculing click of his tongue.

  Alkmene gave up for the moment. He obviously didn’t understand what she was trying to explain to him, but dug his teeth, like a terrier, into his prejudice against her class.

  The road declined now and dragged them by a sharp angle into a narrow passage between the stone walls of neat little gardens of modest homes, ending in a village square, with a post office dead ahead, beside the church, and the inn with the sign ‘The Hunted Boar’.

  The animal in question was pictured pursued by two dogs that snapped at it with large yellowish teeth.

  Jake parked the car and got out, stretching his long limbs. Alkmene had to agree the ride had made her as stiff as an ironing board. She was happy they were there at last, even if they seemed to have ended up in a deserted town. Nothing was stirring behind the windows, no lace curtains moving as hands lifted them and curious eyes peeked out at the visitors.

  The square itself lay empty, just some dead leaves rustling as the wind from the moors came to move them. It carried a hint of damp earth like a cemetery.

  Thinking of the woman who had run in despair and vanished, Alkmene shivered. Jake had rounded the car to stand beside her. ‘What is wrong?’ he asked.

  ‘I am not quite sure. There is a bit of a…sinister feel to this place.’

  He laughed. ‘Just a few minutes ago it was all so idyllic and authentic and you’d go out to paint and see excavation sites.’ He leaned over closer to her. ‘I bet that if you did and some animal stuck its head out of a ditch, you’d think it was some dead body coming back to life and you’d run screaming.’

  Alkmene sighed. ‘Don’t be ridiculous. Shall we go in to see if they have rooms?’

  Still, she pulled her coat closer around her and didn’t look at the one oak again that was just a dead stump with a few branches clawing at the skies. Why had nobody bothered to cut it down?
It had to be ill or something to die like that. It ruined the look of the entire square with its other healthy green oaks.

  Jake opened the door into The Hunted Boar for her and she went in.

  The place was crammed with people standing closely together, shouting and raising beer glasses. Alkmene barely managed to squeeze past the last of them to reach a reception desk where a woman with reddish hair and large coarse hands was leafing through the ledger.

  In front of the room a man with a leather apron stood holding up something that looked suspiciously like…

  Bleeding meat.

  Chapter Sixteen

  Alkmene stared, willing her eyes to adjust the scene. Her uncomfortable thoughts must have influenced her vision and changed something perfectly innocent into something grisly.

  But no, it actually seemed to stay bleeding meat, which the man slapped onto a table in front of him, wrapped into paper and handed to someone who cheered like some Norse warrior carrying off loot.

  ‘Meat division,’ Jake Dubois said as if it were self-evident.

  ‘What?’ she asked, leaning over to him to hear him above the roar.

  ‘Well, these villagers apparently have a communal herd they tend. Once in a while they slaughter a beast or a few and then everybody comes in and according to their share in the herd or the amount of time they put into it or the pasture the beasts grazed on they all get some share in it. They do the same with cheese in the Swiss Alps.’

  Alkmene pulled a face. ‘I think cheese would make it look less disgusting.’

  Jake grinned. ‘Still thinking it’s sinister here?’

  She straightened up under his tone and approached the woman with the ledger. ‘Good day. We have just come down from London and we’d like some rooms, if they are available.’

  The woman looked up. ‘Married are you? Single room, double bed?’

  Alkmene leaned back on her heels. ‘I thought I said rooms plural.’

  The woman held her gaze unperturbed. ‘Married or not? We don’t encourage liberal behaviour here at our inn. If you are not married, you have to take separate rooms.’

  ‘We actually want separate rooms,’ Alkmene said.

  Jake smiled as he leaned on the counter. ‘We are not married, fortunately.’

  The woman looked him over, then shrugged and turned away to study the board that held the keys to several rooms.

  ‘How do you mean fortunately?’ Alkmene asked Jake close to his ear.

  ‘You would not want to be married to me, would you?’ he retorted.

  ‘That is not the point. You make it sound like the idea I could be your wife is insulting to you or something.’

  She realized as she said it that it might look like she was fishing for a compliment and waved her hand. ‘Never mind. It was a long drive.’

  The woman had turned back to them with two keys, labels on them reading 12 and 18.

  ‘Can we also eat here?’ Alkmene asked. ‘We are famished.’

  ‘They finished it all before the division started,’ the woman said with a shrug. ‘I can find you some bread and cheese maybe, but it will cost you.’

  Alkmene glanced at Jake, who nodded.

  ‘And everything must be paid in advance,’ the woman said.

  Alkmene wanted to reach into her purse, but Jake stalled her and pulled out his wallet. ‘Please take the food up to our rooms if you will. Lady Alkmene will also want some hot water I suppose.’

  Alkmene could have kicked him for using her title. She expected the woman’s jaw to drop and a flood of apologies to break loose. Even worse, if she called it out loud, the whole room might turn and start having more interest in her than in the dead cow being divided.

  But the woman just gave her a dirty look from squinted eyes, grabbed up the money Jake had put on the counter and shuffled off, leaving them to find their own way up the stairs, to their rooms.

  Jake unlocked Nr. 12 first and peeked in. It was not large but had a fine double bed and a big window with a view of the moors. The sun was just sinking, putting everything in a golden glow. ‘You have this one,’ he said. ‘I’ll go get your bags from the car.’

  Leaving the door open, he walked off. His footfalls pounded down the steps.

  Alkmene pulled the key from the lock and held it in her palm as she walked to the window. It looked out over the village square with the sad dead oak among the live ones, down the road they had followed coming here, and then across an unending stretch of moor.

  The sunshine over the moor made the greys and greens look more cheerful, almost warm. Still something lingered in her system, a hint of malice conjured up by the empty square, the bleeding beef, the look of hatred in the woman’s eyes. These people lived in their own world, not welcoming strangers into it.

  Certainly not fancy strangers who had come down from London.

  She leaned on the windowsill as she stared out, scanning the land for as far as she could see it from left to right. Where was the infamous marshland where the woman whom Silas Norwhich’s unfortunate brother had loved had found her death? Maybe it was further away from here, or it was at the back of the inn? There was a bustle behind her and the woman came in, clanking a tin plate on the table with a chunk of bread and cheese on it. She held a knife in her hand. Pointing it at Alkmene, she asked, ‘What you be wanting here?’

  ‘Just sightseeing,’ Alkmene said with an innocent smile. ‘Birdwatching. And rare plants on the moor, you know.’ Her befuddled brain searched for some species her father was always raving about.

  The woman shook her head. ‘No, you come from London. If you are here about that old business again, asking questions and opening up old hurt, you’d better leave again at first light. We don’t want to hear no more about it.’

  Alkmene opened her mouth to say she was not here to hurt anyone, even to set old injustices straight, but the woman was not waiting for a response. Waving the knife, she continued, ‘You’d better leave again, at first light, unless you want something to happen to you.’

  ‘Anything wrong here?’ Jake stood in the door opening with her bags in his hands.

  The woman spun to him. She hissed a moment like an angry tiger, then tossed the knife on the table beside the plate and brushed past Jake, who moved sideways to let her through.

  Hitching a brow at Alkmene, he asked, ‘Did she mention something happening to somebody?’

  ‘Yes, me,’ Alkmene retorted, ‘or rather us unless we are smart and leave again at first light. They don’t welcome strangers who are digging into old hurt or something. I tried to say birdwatching and rare plants, but she didn’t buy into it for a moment. It is all your fault. You should not have mentioned my title.’

  Jake dropped her bags on the floorboards beside the bed. ‘You had already said we were from London. Birdwatchers carry field glasses and cameras. Botanists wave the local “What grows where?” in the air.’

  ‘My father never waves “What grows where?” in the air,’ Alkmene protested. ‘He goes to places where he writes the “What grows where?” because before he came out, there was none.’

  But Jake already said, ‘Besides, if you had wanted to travel incognito, you should have chosen less conspicuous clothes to wear.’

  Alkmene glanced down. ‘These are my less conspicuous clothes.’

  Jake rolled his eyes. ‘You still have a lot to learn. If you go undercover, you must look the part.’

  ‘You have not told me anything about going undercover.’

  ‘Well, what do you expect me to do? Go downstairs, stand next to the guy handing out the cow bits and say: By the by, we think somebody died here, say twenty-five years ago, or maybe she was murdered, or maybe it was just an accident, but in any case we’d like to know more about her and the baby she might or might not have borne.’

  Alkmene saw his point. ‘That would probably get you lynched.’

  Jake lifted a shoulder. ‘Maybe not that bad, but I would be taking a bath in that horse trough outside this inn. O
ne authentic detail of Cunningham that I am not eager to get closely acquainted with if I can help it.’

  Alkmene frowned. ‘That woman was hostile enough, but we can’t be sure all people here are the same. It seemed those folks downstairs had eaten their fill, had some beer and were happy with their meat. Maybe if you mingled and started up some conversation, you’d be getting somewhere.’

  Jake nodded. ‘Maybe.’ He picked up the knife and skilfully sliced off a chunk of bread, covering it with two slices of cheese. ‘You can feed yourself without cutting off a finger?’ he asked.

  Alkmene made a hitting gesture at him. ‘Will you go now?’

  Laughing, he trotted off, carrying his meagre dinner with him.

  Chapter Seventeen

  While Alkmene was chewing on some of the very heavy bread, the woman brought her hot water. It was in a low porcelain basin with a crack in the edge. She put it on the table, still carrying that hateful look.

  Alkmene said round the bread, ‘I’m sorry if you take offence to questions being asked about things that happened here that were not…right. But not everybody has the same opinion about everything. And not everybody is after a sensationalist tale, you know. Maybe we are here in the interest of someone who was treated unfairly and who should, after all those years, be vindicated.’

  The woman stared at her as if she didn’t understand what Alkmene was talking about. ‘Just remember what I said,’ she snapped and left the room, dragging the door to a resounding close.

  ‘It was too obtuse,’ Alkmene said out loud in the empty room. She felt again like she had felt when in school, where the girls had all been well-bred but none had the extensive vocabulary – full of outdated words – that Alkmene had, being raised by her widowed father with his love of ancient textbooks and botany volumes from ages of old. The girls had laughed at her and avoided her.

  This situation was just like it. The people downstairs had studied her like she had come from another era. Jake had said she knew nothing about being undercover.

 

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