by M. C. Beaton
Giles read an account of Susie’s forthcoming trial, swore, and ordered his man to pack his bags.
To Susie’s eyes the court was refreshingly drab. She had to wait through a long series of charges for shoplifting and vagrancy before her name was called. The ladies, Belinda and Jessica, had elected to appear in court. So had the whole of London’s press.
Now, Basil was not an experienced lawyer. In fact, his manner was downright irritating. He babbled sentimentally about nature’s four-footed friends and the cruelty of stuffing birds and wearing them as ornaments, failing to notice that at least four ladies in the court were adorned with dead birds.
Mr. Williams, the prosecutor, on the other hand, described the case very simply. A horse belonging to and ridden by the Countess of Blackhall had assaulted Lady Jessica. If he had left matters there, Susie would have been found guilty.
But he went on to say that, in his noble client’s opinion, the incident had arisen because of the Countess of Blackhall’s lower-class background. “Persons from Camber-well,” hinted the prosecutor with a sneer, “cannot expect to be versed in the ways of the beau monde.”
The magistrate, Sir John Smith, put up his hand to his thin mouth to hide a nasty little smile. For Sir John not only hailed from the middle class, but from Camberwell as well.
He cast a cold eye at the press benches to make sure every one of the ink-stained wretches was listening, and cleared his throat.
“The courts of London,” he began in his dry, precise voice, “have more to do with their time than to waste public money settling the squabbles of certain society ladies. I myself have long deplored the use of dead birds as hat ornaments and consider that the horse…heh, heh, heh…showed remarkable taste. (Laughter in court and frantic and delighted scribbling from the press bench.) ‘Persons from Camberwell,’ I think you said, Mr. Williams? Dear me, Mr. Williams. The day when I uphold sneers against the middle classes, the backbone of English society, will be a sorry day for British justice.
“Pray, what has Mr. Williams got against Camberwell, that noble borough, that he should state that its people do not know the ways of the beau monde? The ladies and gentlemen of Camberwell, like the ladies and gentlemen of any other borough from Hampstead to Kentish Town, are more concerned these days with the state of the nation and the Empire than with the trivial squabbles of a certain section of society who should know better what to do with their position and wealth than to take up the time of this court over such a matter.
“Case dismissed!”
Lady Jessica squawked with rage. Susie looked dizzily around. She had not been asked to say anything. The next case was already being called.
“Don’t let the bleeders get yer down,” advised a plump and dirty prostitute, giving Susie’s arm a squeeze as Susie was led from the court by a triumphant Basil Bryant. “They ain’t worth getting your knickers in a knot over.”
“Very true,” murmured Susie, ever polite.
Susie would very much have liked to leave Basil and go home alone, but Basil jumped into her carriage after her.
“By Jove, Susie!” he cried, patting her knee in a familiar way. “Wasn’t I marvelous?”
“Yes,” said Susie gratefully, because she really believed it was thanks to Basil’s legal talents that she was a free woman. “Thank you very much. How can I ever repay you?”
“Wait till you get my bill,” said Basil with a jolly laugh. Then he leaned forward, gazed intently into Susie’s eyes, and said thickly, “Not that I mean to charge you anything. ’Pon my soul, no, not a penny!”
“Really, Basil,” protested Susie, feeling decidedly uncomfortable under the gaze of his protruding eves, “you must send me your bill.”
Basil tipped his silk hat to one side in what he hoped was a rakish manner and hitched his thumbs into his waistcoat. “We can talk about it later. We’re going to be seeing a lot of each other.”
“We are?” queried Susie faintly, but Basil was already dreaming of the next day’s headlines and then of those future headlines, which would announce, BRILLIANT LAWYER MARRIES LOVELY COUNTESS.
“Oh, dear,” said Susie in a whisper.
Giles had arrived too late for the court proceedings. He told himself he was glad. He told himself he didn’t really want to see Susie again and turned in the direction of his club. He was walking along Bond Street when the glitter of a brooch in a jeweler’s window caught his eye. He stopped and bent down to look. The brooch was in the shape of a small ptarmigan, an exquisite little thing in gold and rubies. He decided on impulse to send it to Susie as a present.
When he had bought the brooch and given Susie’s address for delivery, he began to feel strangely comfortable. It was a very expensive brooch, but he felt obscurely that the price went a little on the way to making amends to the girl.
A red sun was burning down behind the houses into a bank of fog. The lamplighters were already out with their long brass poles to turn the lights of London on.
Smells of food, smells of wine, smells of spices, rose into the smoky air, which already held the exhilarating bite of winter. Carriage lamps bobbed and swayed along the streets. People hurried home from work, packing onto buses, plunging down below to the underground trains, or simply walking, their heels beating out an overture to the London evening.
What a splendid evening to go to the theater, thought Giles. Nothing too clever and nothing too silly. He had it! He would go and see Gilbert and Sullivan’s The Pirates of Penzance and have dinner at the Troc afterward. He thought perhaps he might call on Susie first—but she might not yet have received the brooch. She might look at him with those large hurt eyes and make him feel like a cad. But he could not help wondering what she was doing.
Susie was trying to cope with Basil Bryant and failing miserably. Lady Matilda had chosen that day of all days to visit an old school friend in Hertfordshire and had said she might stay overnight. Basil was going over and over his success while his eyes roamed a little too freely over Susie’s slender body.
They should celebrate, he said. He had it! He would take Susie to see The Pirates of Penzance.
Susie had never been to a theater before. She realized that if she said yes, she could take quite a bit of time changing, and that would get her away from Basil, and then after the theater she would firmly shake his hand on the doorstep and send him home. Accordingly she told him she would be delighted.
When she had left the room, Basil put his thumbs in his waistcoat and gazed around him with smug pleasure. It was a pretty room, with its white furniture, long mirrors, and pale-green walls. He liked something a bit more robust himself. He unhitched a thumb and rang the bell.
“Hey, fellow,” he said to the liveried footman. “Nip out and buy two tickets for The Pirates of Penzance. Money’s no object.
“And jump to it!” Basil called gleefully after him, feeling a heady sense of power. It was only a matter of time before he would be master here.
He poured himself a glass of 1830 brandy with a liberal hand and settled back to wait. He suddenly realized that he was not wearing evening dress. He did not want to go all the way to Camberwell. Ah, that magic bell! Another footman appeared, and Basil stared at him with all the amazed pleasure of Aladdin finding out that the lamp really worked.
He pulled out his wallet. “Here, nip round to Henry Brothers in Covent Garden and hire me an evening suit and a set of studs. I’ll scribble down my measurements. Hurry back, fellow.”
Meanwhile Susie had received the brooch from Giles. She was wearing a severe black opera gown with a high neck and long tight sleeves, a relic of her mourning wardrobe. She hoped it would calm Basil down. She picked up the card and read it again. It simply said, “Best regards, Giles.”
She sighed a little. Better not to think of Giles. All he ever did was kiss her and then shout at her and think horrible things about her. Nonetheless she pinned the brooch at the neck of her dress and went slowly and reluctantly downstairs.
Susie di
d not see Giles at the theater, although he was in an adjoining box. She had eyes only for the stage. She had never enjoyed anything so much in all her life. The colors, the music, the dresses, the sheer delightful nonsense of it all, held her spellbound, while Basil tried to get her attention. And from the shadows of the adjoining box, Giles watched Susie’s face instead of the stage.
Giles suddenly felt savagely that he should have been the one to give Susie such a treat, not that masher fellow, wherever the hell she had dug him up from! He had forgotten, until he saw her again, the stunning allure of her half-childish beauty, her vulnerable femininity, which made her attract him in a way no other woman had ever been able to come near.
There were many women in the theater that night who were much more beautiful, more striking than Susie, but none with that delicate, dreamy charm. He wondered if Helen of Troy had in fact been a quiet, dreamy sort of girl that every man wanted to awaken.
He walked up and down outside his box at the interval, waiting for the couple to come out. He did not want to visit Susie in her box and maybe find out that she was engaged to that horrible fellow. He had hoped for a casual encounter.
But Susie, with glimmerings of social awareness, did not want to be seen in company with Basil in the foyer. She was uncomfortably ashamed of his leers and loud voice and perpetually stabbing finger. She did not know what was up with his suit, but his shirt-front snapped and popped every time he leaned forward, and his shoulders seemed to reach down to his elbows.
Giles, patiently waiting for them downstairs after the show, was foiled by a group of giggling debutantes and their predatory parents. By the time he had extricated himself, Susie was gone.
A thickening fog hung over the streets of London as Susie arrived on her doorstep. She firmly shook hands with Basil, thanked him for the evening, and wished him good night, walking past her butler into the drawing room with a sigh of relief.
She then turned around and found that Basil had trotted in after her.
Susie plucked up her courage. “I must ask you to leave, Basil,” she said firmly. “Lady Matilda is not yet back from the country, and I have no chaperon.”
“Oh, I’ll just stay for a minute,” said Basil breezily. “I say, you don’t happen to have any more of that brandy?”
Susie rang the bell and ordered the brandy. She decided to have a large one herself, not knowing that the sight of the large measure in her glass sent Basil’s evil thoughts soaring. He fortified himself with several large ones and then moved over onto the sofa next to Susie.
“You know, Susie,” he said, beginning to breathe heavily, “I’d never have guessed you’d turn into such a seductive woman.”
Susie stared down at her glass and said nothing.
Basil edged closer until his thigh was pressed against hers.
“What are you thinking…darling?” he breathed.
“I am thinking that I would like to go to bed,” said Susie in a small, chilly voice.
“So would I!” leered Basil. He put down his glass and took hers from her and placed it on the low table in front of them.
“Susie!” he cried, and lunged.
Now, Basil was a virgin, and there is nothing more octopuslike than the mad graspings of the virginal man in a state of high passion. No sooner did Susie manage to claw his hands off one part of her anatomy, when they emerged somewhere else to prod and cling. His mouth was wetly clamped over her own with such vigor that he had managed to cover most of her chin as well. His breath smelled of onions, brandy, and bacon grease from his morning’s breakfast, since the cavities of his teeth had retained all the fodder of the day in different stages of decomposition.
Susie finally managed to get in one frantic push. She darted over to the bell and rang it and rang it with such force that the butler and two footmen nearly got jammed in the doorway in their concerted rush.
“Mr. Bryant is just leaving,” said Susie.
“Can’t blame you,” said Basil, winking, his vanity supremely intact. “Phew! Hot stuff, eh? Got a bit carried away myself.”
“Please go,” said Susie, trying to mask her feelings of disgust.
“Right-ho!” said Basil cockily. “But I’ll be seeing you tomorrow, little girl. It’s been a marvelous day. Super evening. Give me something to remember you by, Susie. I know, that brooch.”
Susie raised a protective hand to the little brooch and then, with a resigned sigh, unpinned it. She would have given Basil the whole of the crown jewels to take himself off.
Basil cheekily pinned the brooch on the hard front of his rented evening shirt and went off whistling.
Outside, Giles watched him go. Despite the fog, the streetlamp flickered on the brooch on Basil’s shirtfront, and Giles felt himself beginning to shake with rage. He had hung around outside for a few minutes before Basil’s departure, plucking up his courage to call.
Now he was determined to call.
The butler, knowing his mistress was crying her eyes out in the drawing room, tried to bar his way, but Giles simply pushed him aside.
He hurtled into the drawing room, and Susie raised a pair of tear-drenched eyes to his.
“Oh, Giles!” she sobbed. “Your lovely brooch. He asked for it, and I was so sick and tired of him that I simply gave it to him to get rid of him.” She began to cry again, and Giles sat down beside her and took her hands in his.
His anger had evaporated. She was sick of that fellow, had wanted to be rid of him. That was all that mattered.
“Who on earth was that masher?” he asked.
Susie told him between sobs of Basil and the court case and Basil’s grasping, wet love-making. “It’s always like that,” she wailed.
“No, it isn’t,” said Giles crossly. “I never slobbered over you. Look here, my girl. You’d better marry me.”
“Marry you?”
“Yes, why not? You’re only going to get yourself into trouble. Marry me and come back to the castle.”
“I don’t know,” said Susie wretchedly. “I just want to be left alone.”
“That’s a fine way to receive a proposal,” said Giles huffily. “I don’t know if I really want to marry you. I was only thinking of a way to keep you out of mischief.”
“Oh!” said Susie in a small voice.
“Mind you,” continued Giles, who was in fact beginning to wonder why he had proposed to Susie, “if you prefer to let yourself be mauled about by chappies like Basil Bryant…”
“No! I couldn’t stand another!” wailed Susie. “I hate Basil. I wish he were dead!”
“I say, steady on,” said Giles. “I feel a bit cold when you say that. Here, let me have some of that brandy, and I’ll call on you tomorrow, and you can give me your decision.”
Basil Bryant walked gaily along the foggy reaches of the Vauxhall Bridge Road. It was the happiest night of his life.
It was also his last.
He had been too exhilarated to climb into a stuffy cab and had decided to walk all the way home to Camberwell. It was in the bag, he decided—fame, fortune, happiness.
He would marry Susie and live happily ever after. What Susie did ever after did not concern him in the least. The fog thinned slightly, and above him a gas lamp sputtered and flared. He stopped to light a cigar, the tiny flame of the match sparking prisms of light from the brooch on his shirtfront.
He tucked his cane under his arm and strolled toward Vauxhall Bridge.
He never knew what hit him. He never felt the grimy fingers tearing at the brooch at his throat, or the harsh breathing of his assailant on his white upturned face.
The shabby villain who had stunned Basil with a convenient beer bottle took the brooch, Basil’s wallet, and his watch and chain. Then he felt inside Basil’s waistcoat for his heart.
Basil’s vanity was indeed the death of him. He had donned a corset for his famous appearance in court. The villain was not used to his young gentlemen victims wearing corsets and therefore could not feel any heartbeat and assu
med Basil was dead.
He hitched Basil over his shoulders in a fireman’s lift and carried him to the edge of the bridge. Basil slightly regained consciousness in this strange embrace and whispered, “Susie.”
It was the last thing he ever said. The next minute, his body hit the cold, filthy waters of the Thames with an almighty splash, and he sank like a stone.
Chapter 9
Susie woke up the next morning to find herself a celebrity. Pictures of her covered the front page of every newspaper. She was “The Beautiful Countess.” It was just like her dreams, except for one little item in the later editions. The body of Basil Bryant had been dragged from the Thames.
It was as well Basil hadn’t lived to read the newspapers. The press called his defense “gauche and amateur.” All the photographs were of Susie leaving the court, and Basil was only a shadow in the background. One paper had gone so far as to paint him out.
Lady Jessica was not popular. Society roared with laughter over the exploits of Dobbin and sent cards and invitations to Susie’s home. Hostesses vied with each other to see who would be the first to have the mysterious countess as a guest. Gloomily Susie ordered a wreath to be sent to Basil’s parents and waited for Giles to call.
But Giles was suffering from a fit of nerves. When Susie was not actually present, a little of her attraction vanished for him. Then he read of Basil’s death in the late editions and felt an almost superstitious qualm.
No sooner did that girl wish someone dead than—bingo!—off they up and died.
He decided to remove himself to the country. Having avoided a second marriage for so long, it would be silly to plunge into one now. And just think of her parents! Ten minutes in their company was enough to drive him to a frenzy of boredom.
Susie resolutely refused all invitations and went to Basil’s funeral, heavily veiled. Her mother was inclined to be tearful and to promote the late Basil to the right hand of God, until Susie confided to her mama of Basil’s amorous assault, at which point Basil fell like Lucifer, cast down into the darkest reaches of the worst hell that Mrs. Burke’s fertile mind could devise for him.