Read Death with Blue Ribbon Online
Authors: Leo Bruce
âIf it's necessary.'
âIt is necessary. She's been hysterical all day. We've had this
before, doctor, when she doesn't get her own way. Her own doctor injected Dormodina. She was all right next morning.'
âVery well. Let me see her,' said Dr Jyves.
They went out, leaving the door open, and Carolus heard them going upstairs.
It was a quarter of an hour at least before Grace Marvell returned and spoke to Carolus.
âOut like a light,' she said cheerfully. âIt's the only way when she's like that. We had a terrible job to persuade her to take the injection. I nearly told her it was that or a strait-jacket. But in the end we persuaded her.'
âAnd you think she will have recovered by the morning?'
âOh, yes. The next act will be a wistful one. Alone in the world. No one cares whether I live or die. Then she'll pack up and return to London and give hell to her staff and if he's anywhere about to her husband.'
âMr Smithers seems quite unperturbed by it all,' observed Carolus.
Grace did not seem to find this an impertinent remark from a stranger.
âHe's a funny little man. No one knows what he does think. He came down of his own accord after he had read in the papers about her collapse. They haven't lived together for ten years, you know.'
She rang the bell and, when one of the two Moroccans appeared, ordered coffee. She seemed ready to go on chatting with Carolus.
âA funny thing happened upstairs just now,' she said. âYou noticed that rather beefy looking man who dined alone this evening, at the table next to ours? He's staying in the hotel, I think.'
âYes?' said Carolus encouragingly.
âHe seemed to be waiting on the landing when I came out of Imogen's room with the doctor. He stopped us and asked how she was. I told him she had just had an injection and was sleeping soundly. He said, “That's good. We shall all get some sleep now.” I thought it was rather cheek but I suppose she
has
been making rather a noise.'
âIs his room near hers?'
âHe didn't say. I suppose he's on the same floor. I think the top floor is only for the staff.'
âThere are some staff quarters across the yard, though,' said Carolus.
âOh, are there? I really don't know. I shall be glad to get back to my own flat, anyway. I hope my sister's better tomorrow.'
At twenty past ten Miss Trudge appeared.
âI sat with her for a time,' she said, âbut she is sleeping so peacefully now that I felt I could leave her.'
She spoke as much to Carolus as to Grace. He gathered that the two women communicated only when it was necessary.
Miss Trudge sighed.
âIt's been
such
a day,' she said.
âWhat you need, what we all need, is a drink,' said Carolus confidently. âLet meâ¦'
He rang the bell.
âOh no,' said Miss Trudge. âYou are really
too
kind ⦠I don't feel I should ⦠Perhaps the weeniest ⦠I do feel a little exhausted.'
âYou, Miss Marvell?'
âCointreau,' said Grace briefly.
Carolus ordered three doubles. He had stayed in the Residents' Lounge too long.
âI wonder where Mr Smithers is,' said Miss Trudge. âI think I ought to warn him that she is sleeping in case he should look in.'
âDon't bother,' said Grace. âNothing would wake her.'
âI think I really ought ⦠Perhaps he is in the bar. I'll just run and see. In case.'
She was gone for about ten minutes.
âYes, he did happen to be in the bar. Talking to another gentleman. The one who is staying here. I told him Imogen was fast asleep.'
âWhat did he say?'
âYou know him. He scarcely seemed to notice what I said at first. Then he asked me if I was going to sit up with her.'
âWhat nonsense!' said Grace. âSit up with her? Whatever for? She'll sleep like a log all night. You go to bed. You've got tomorrow to face.'
âBut I think I should be near her,' said Miss Trudge. âSuppose she wakes up and wants something.'
âYou're in the next room.'
âI scarcely know what to do for the best. I really am rather exhausted, but she might not like it if I left her on her own.'
âShe won't know. You can go in in the morning. For goodness' sake stop being tragic about it. She's got a constitution like a horse.'
âBut if she were to wake ⦠alone ⦠However, I shall be next door, after all. Perhaps I might take advantage ⦠a sleep certainly will be welcome.'
Grace gave an exasperated sigh but said no more.
When Carolus reached his room at something past eleven he
found Rolland waiting for him there. The proprietor made desperate signals for silence then spoke in a voice scarcely above a whisper.
âI had to see you. Daren't ask you to the office.'
âThat's all right. What is it now?'
âRivers was on the phone again. Offering me yet another chance. I said they had done all they could and the business was ruined. He laughed, of course. “AD we can?” he said. “We're only just starting.” '
âWhat was the particular threat this time?'
âHe didn't say at first. He said they were making it easy for me. They had their representative on the spot.'
âThe man who made the fuss the other night?'
âYes. His name's Mandeville, apparently. If I decide to “employ” them, as Rivers calls it, I must see him. Only he has had to put the price up, he says. Expenses and delay. They now want £1250.'
âYou mean he admitted that he was part of their organisation?'
âYes. It seems a most extraordinary thing that they should work in this blatant way. They threaten quite openly. They must be very sure of themselves.'
âSo long as you don't go to the law obviously
they
won't. They wanted you to hand £1250 to the man they call Mandeville. When?'
âThis evening, presumably. I don't know whether they think I keep that sort of money in the till.'
âI expect they thought you had it ready. And if not?'
âIf not Rivers found this very funnyâdisasters never come at once. Only this time it would be more serious. I asked what he meant and he said,
really
serious. “Life and death sort of
thing,” he said. Then added, “Yes, death. You know what death is?” I asked him whose death but he only laughed again.'
âSo once again you refused?'
âYes. £1250 is a lot of money. And how could I account for it in income tax returns? I refused but I don't know how long I can hold out. It's bad enough to have Imogen Marvell in hysterics. Saying I was a cook in the army.'
âAnd were you?'
âOfficers' Mess,' said Rolland briefly. âShe's a dreadful woman. I wish she was dead.'
âShe may be,' said Carolus quietly.
Rolland jumped up.
âWhat?' he said, forgetting to keep his voice down.
âShe has enemies enough,' explained Carolus.
Rolland very cautiously began to move towards the door.
âWhich room is Mandeville in?'
âSix. On this floor.'
âWhat about the floor above?'
âAll single rooms.'
âAny of the staff sleep there?'
âOnly the bar manageress. The men have quarters across the yard.'
He began to open the door very cautiously peering out. Suddenly he drew back like a tortoise and shut the door. The two men waited without speaking while footsteps went by.
âBridger,' explained Rolland. âComing down from the floor above. I don't think he saw me.'
He seemed unduly agitated. âThere's only Gloria up there. He must have been with her.' The officious hotel proprietor of other days seemed to awaken in him. âI
won't
have that. It's
forbidden for any of the male staff to go up there. I shall deal with this in the morning.'
âHaven't you got other things to think about?'
âI won't have it,' he said but with less resolution, then again opened the door and with great caution slipped out.
But Carolus did not go to bed. He sat motionless in an armchair, not even smoking. The house was centrally heated and it was a fad of his to detest this. But it was not only the stuffy atmosphere which troubled him. Something was very much amiss here, something more than the blackmailing of Rolland. He went over scraps of talk he had heard that day, trying to find pieces of the jigsaw which puzzled him. Perhaps it was an instinctive sense of apprehension. He was supposed to have instincts which warned him of violence, cruelty, horror, death before any of them were evident to others.
Then, at some time after one o'clock, he suddenly grew alert and strained to listen. Yes, footsteps again and this time cautious ones.
He crossed to the door and did as Rolland had done, opened it silently and no more than a crack. He heard the footsteps going towards the head of the wide stairway which went down to the hall. Only at the moment when whoever had passed was descending the first stairs did he open his door enough to recognise him by the dim landing light. It was the man known as Mandeville and he carried a small suitcase.
Carolus closed his door, switched off the light and went to the window. As he expected, after a few moments he heard the front door being opened and though he could see almost nothing in the darkness he felt sure that the man had gone out.
He waited. There was no moon and the night was black and
still but once he heard footsteps on the gravel and gathered that Mandeville was making for the road.
Nothing was moving. No sound came from the hotel or from the night about him. Traffic had ceased and there was not even the bark of a dog.
Then a car approached. He could see its headlights at some distance. He waited expectantly and sure enough it stopped, not within his range of vision but a few yards from the front of the hotel. Its door slammed and it drove on, past the hotel, on the road to London.
âNice timing,' thought Carolus. Looking at his watch he saw it was one thirty-one.
Carolus was awakened by Mrs Boot.
âShe's dead,' she announced.
Carolus sat up abruptly.
âWho's dead?' he asked obligingly though there was little need for the question.
âUr, in number four, the cookery book woman.'
âHow do you know?'
âHow do I know? With the doctor examining her and the secretary in hysterics and her sister sending for the police â¦'
âWhy the police?'
âShe'd been murdered, hadn't she?' asked Mrs Boot, âAt least that's what it looks like to me. Suffocation, they call it, while she was sleeping off that injection the doctor gave her, but I'd call it something else. Well, I told them. You can't go on speaking evil about people without something happening. And look at her husband! Creeping round like a cat. A lot he cared when she was taken bad. Nor her sister either. It wasn't natural. Not when anyone might be dying for all they knew.
âThere isn't one of them that may not have done it,' went on Mrs Boot rapturously. âI wouldn't put it past a single one. All they had to do was strangle her while she was asleep.'
âThat would leave evidence,' pointed out Carolus.
âWho's to say there isn't? And proof too, if it comes to that.
What about those Arabians? They could have slinked up, slipped in and squeezed the life out of her in next to no time, couldn't they? And you can't tell me they're not the right ones for the job. You've only got to see the way they pick up a knife to know what they are.'
âBut what motive would they have?' asked Carolus patiently.
âWho's to say with foreigners like that? It's a good job we haven't all been strangled. Then what about her sister? Or her secretary, if it comes to that? They say she'd got plenty of money and there's no telling what people will do for that. What's more there was a man staying in number six last night who's gone off without paying his bill. Must have got up before it was light and crept off without anyone seeing him. What d'you say to that?'
âNothing,' Carolus replied meekly.
âThe boss caught that Bridger over here last night. What was he doing, I should like to know!'
âI could tell you,' said Carolus.
âNow. Now. I didn't ask for any vulgarity. He had only to nip into her room on the way out and suffocate her without a soul being the wiser. Or that Stefan hadn't done it. There isn't one of them you can trust. As for Antoine, what was to stop him? The apprentice is a little fiend, too. But it's not to say it was a man. A woman could have done it just as easily and that Gloria was on the spot, as you might say.'
âWhat about me?' asked Carolus, seeing she was running out of possibilities.
âWell,' considered Mrs Boot. âI'm not saying anything. I hope you'd be too much of a gentleman for anything like that, but who's to say what might come over anyone when you think of the way she behaved. Well, she's gone now, whoever it was,
and the whole place upside down. I suppose we shall have a inquest.'
When Carolus came downstairs he found things a good deal more calm than Mrs Boot had led him to expect. Imogen was dead but there was no reason to suppose that she had not died by the unfortunate accident of turning on her face while unconscious and being suffocatedâan outcome of the very heavy sleep induced by the injection of Dormodina. Such at least was the opinion of Dr Jyves, Carolus was told.
It was true that Miss Trudge had behaved somewhat melodramatically when she made the discovery in the early morning and had seemed almost as convinced as Mrs Boot that someone was responsible, if only herself for leaving her or the doctor for giving her an injection. But she had locked herself in her room now, and could be heard weeping.
Grace Marvell, predictably, was calmer about it but it seemed that she too was deeply affected. The staff, for the most part, behaved with discretion and the routine of the hotel continued. At first, at any rate, Imogen caused less sensation dead than alive.