Slaying is Such Sweet Sorrow (8 page)

Read Slaying is Such Sweet Sorrow Online

Authors: Patricia Harwin

BOOK: Slaying is Such Sweet Sorrow
12.22Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“They say Perdita swears to it, and Geoffrey said they’ve asked him and Cyril to listen to it while they’re here and give their opinions too. I certainly had no doubt it was him when I got that call asking me to come to his house.”

“Tell me about that. Tell me everything that happened.”

“Emily and I went home, Quin came with us, as it was still early and he wanted to spend time with her. Janet was tired and went back to the hotel.”

I sighed, remembering what a rush it had been, thinking that in one fell swoop I was both going to save Peter and give that woman what she deserved.

“About an hour and a half later I answered the telephone and heard Stone asking me, almost ordering me, to come to his house immediately. He said he had received news that would be of great benefit to both of us, and to us alone. He sounded quite excited. It was certainly out of character for him, as I said he’d never showed interest in anything that might benefit me before. I must come alone, he said, and immediately. He would be waiting for me.”

“What on earth could it have been? Do you have any idea?”

“No, not one. At any rate, I went, and when I got there I found the doors standing open, both the front door and the entrance to his study. I stood in the hall for a minute and called his name. Then I went into the study and saw him. The shock froze me in place. I couldn’t take my eyes from him. I heard screaming, I’ve been told it was Perdita when she came down and saw us, but I don’t remember her. I only remember your face suddenly appearing at the door, and then the police were dragging me away.”

He had broken out in a sweat, remembering it. My indignation had grown as I’d watched and listened to him—it was outrageous to think of this gentle scholar, dedicated to his poetry, his wife and child, on the way to trial for a violent killing. I had never even seen him lose his temper—well, only once, last night when Edgar Stone had bragged about trying to force himself on Emily. I stood up quickly, pushing that memory away.

“Peter,” I said, holding his gaze with mine, “one way or another, we’re going to get you out of here, and I mean without going through a trial. When somebody is innocent there’s evidence of it somewhere, and all that’s needed is somebody who cares enough to find it.”

He gave me a melancholy smile. “I hope you’re right, my dear. It’s some consolation, at least, to know I shan’t be broken on the rack like Thomas Kyd, or thrown into water to prove my innocence by floating. I’ve good friends, and sufficient money, and I live in a relatively civilized period of history. It’s possible I’ll sleep in my own bed again.”

But he didn’t look as if he believed it.

 

Later I walked up Magdalen Street to the point where it changes from a typical narrow, medieval Oxford street to a broad, tree-lined boulevard in the continental style, called St. Giles. If not for the Gothic shapes and gold Cotswold stone of the buildings lining it, you might think you were in Paris or Rome. A few yards along, I ducked out of the rain into my favorite pub, The Eagle and Child, for lunch.

Even in my preoccupied state I felt the thrill I always got at sitting in the pub where C. S. Lewis and his pals the “Inklings” used to meet, where Tolkien first read
The Lord of the Rings
aloud to them. I always ate in the big, open room where they had met every morning, rather than one of the two small, more private rooms off the entrance hall, or the addition built on behind in recent years, all glass and pale wood. Old photographs of the Inklings hung above the dark wainscoting, one of them including Lewis’s doomed American wife leaning on her cane. Despite the success of the filmed versions of Tolkien’s epic, the “Bird and Baby,” as the regulars call it, has never been turned into a tourist trap. I did hear the accents of a few American pilgrims, but basically it is still an unassuming little “local” for those who want a warm, cozy place to eat classic pub food and drink good ale.

I was lingering over my cheese and chutney sandwich and half pint of “Old Hooky” when a couple stopped beside my table and a familiar voice said, “I say, what’s happening to Peter? Have you seen him?”

It was Tom Ivey, with the pretty dark-haired girl who had snubbed him at the gathering last night. She looked as if she had been crying for hours, with washed-out eyes and a red nose.

“This is Gemma, my fiancée,” he told me. I thought I detected a certain detemined emphasis on the last word. I invited them to sit with me.

“Peter’s pretty glum, but he’s hanging in there,” I told them.

“How could Peter have hurt Edgar?” Gemma burst out bitterly. “He could upset people sometimes, but it was just his way, he didn’t mean anything by it, underneath he was—” Tears welled in her eyes, and she choked off, biting her lip.

“Underneath he was a bastard!” Tom finished, going pink with anger. She turned to him indignantly, and he backed right down. “Please don’t be angry, darling. I know you can’t see it the way I do—not yet. Edgar could be very charming. I understand why you left me for him, really I do. And I’m sorry you’re grieving. I can wait until it gets easier for you, however long it takes.”

“I’m sorry,” she said to me, mopping her cheeks with his handkerchief. “Edgar and I were—I just can’t understand how Peter could do that to him!”

“He didn’t,” I said firmly. “You worked with him, didn’t you? How can you believe he could do such a thing?”

“But the police have arrested him.” She stared at me in surprise. Her eyes were really beautiful, an unusual gray-green shade with long, luxuriant lashes.

“It’s all a big mistake. We think he may have committed suicide and staged it so Peter would be blamed.”

Swept away by incredulity, she actually laughed through her tears. “What do you mean, suicide? Edgar would never have done that! He had too much to live for. He and I were going to—Well, it doesn’t matter anymore, does it?” She sniffed back more tears. “I’ve heard him ridicule people who’d killed themselves—cowards, he called them. He always said that was the way his wife would choose one day, and he had nothing but contempt for his wife.” She leaned back, shaking her head scornfully. “No, Edgar was far too brave to go that way.”

“And Peter is far too good a person to have killed him,” Tom put in, “which leaves us with the famous person or persons unknown, whose voice somehow sounds enough like Stone’s to fool his own wife.” He looked over at me and shook his head. “I don’t see how
that
could be.”

He got up to give their order at the bar. She insisted she could not eat, he begged her to take just a little something to keep her strength up, and I got ready to leave. I liked Tom, but somebody needed to tell him a girl who had been so infatuated with a bully like Edgar Stone was not going to be won by servile adoration.

I went back home for the afternoon and busied myself with household chores. When Muzzle began his plaintive serenade, I opened the back door and awaited his decision. He looked out at the steady rain for a few minutes, then shook his paw as if it were wet, glared up at me, and stalked back to the hearth rug. He always blamed me for bad weather.

At about five o’clock I rang Emily. “Hi, is the coast clear?” I said.

“Oh yes, they’re going out for the evening, to some posh French restaurant and then to a nightclub called Midtown Manhattan. I guess that’s as close as she can get to going home.”

“A nightclub! He never liked that sort of thing, any more than I did.”

“Well, it wasn’t
his
idea. But it will give us a chance to talk, if you want to come over.”

“Right, I’m on my way. I’m going to make us some Cincinnati chili, and we’ll have a nice evening together with no interference from them.”

She was sure she couldn’t eat anything, but I gathered up a box of spaghetti, cans of beans and tomatoes, some chocolate, cinnamon, cloves, cardamom, turmeric, and cumin, an onion, and a block of cheddar cheese, the bizarre ingredients of a type of chili made only in my Ohio hometown. I stopped by Enid Cobb’s shop for half a pound of fresh ground sirloin on my way out of the village.

“Don’t look good for Emily’s man,” she said gloomily as she made change. “Seemed a nice young chap too, who’d of thought he’d break out like that?” I didn’t let myself be drawn into an argument about it.

The first sound I heard when I came into the apartment was that sugary voice singing about how she loved sixpence, jolly jolly sixpence. Archie didn’t even notice me for a minute, he was so absorbed in finding the right buttons to interrupt that song and rewind into the middle of “Oranges and Lemons.” When I called to him he looked up in surprise, threw his new treasure to the floor, and ran to hug me. He whooped, “Taypay, Nana!” and ran back to fast-forward into “Bobby Shafto.” “See?” he said to me, beaming.

“Rose!” Emily called raggedly from the kitchen. She came into the living room as Rose emerged timidly from her bedroom. “Archie, why don’t you go to the nursery and show
Rose
how the tape player works?” Emily said. She had obviously had all the interrupted nursery rhymes she could take.

He shook his head. “No. See, Nana?” And off went the singer into the middle of another song.

“Archie,” I said, “if you take the tape player in the other room for a while, I’ll give you candy.” I pulled out a little bag of what the English call boiled sweets, left in my jacket pocket from the last babysitting day. He grabbed for it, but I held it out to Rose, over his head.

“Mother!” Emily exclaimed. “You can’t
bribe
children!”

“Sure you can,” I said as he trotted eagerly after Rose to the nursery. “Works every time. Now,” I went on quickly while she continued to sputter, “come back in the kitchen and let’s visit while I fix us some comfort food. Remember how I used to make the chili for you when things were going wrong—when Charley the Dog died, when you lost the part in the school play? It was one dish you never turned down, however upset you were.”

“This is a lot worse than those times,” she said sadly as we adjourned to their small kitchen. “This is the worst thing that’s ever happened to me. It’s even worse than when you and Dad split up.”

“I know, darling.” I got out a big pot and started crumbling the meat into it. “I’m so glad I get to spend an evening with you, but I’m surprised your father would want to go out dancing at a time like this!”

“I told you, he didn’t,” she said, jumping to his defense. “
She
did. She went along with us to see Mr. Billingsley, and she just—”

“Oh, yes, the solicitor,” I interrupted eagerly. “How did that go?”

“He seems very knowledgeable,” she said, frowning briefly at the interruption. “And I was relieved Dad was with me. He knew just how to talk about technical points of law, and he could evaluate Mr. Billingsley much better than I could have done.”

“So is he going to defend Peter?”

“Well, we engaged him, but he’s a solicitor, Mom, he only handles the out-of-court work. He’ll provide Peter with a barrister who’ll represent him at—at the trial.”

“There doesn’t need to be a trial,” I said firmly. “This Mr. Billingsley should be able to find evidence that Peter’s innocent, before it comes to that.”

“Oh, Mom, he doesn’t do that sort of thing,” she said wearily. “He’s a lawyer, not a detective.”

“Then maybe we need a detective too!”

“Let’s just wait and see what the police uncover. They want to find the real murderer, you know, not just prosecute Peter.” As I started to argue she went on doggedly, “What I was about to say was, Barbie just sat there pouting while we talked to him. It’s so obvious she wants Dad all to herself, she resents it when he pays attention to me instead of her. So when we got back here, she drew him off in a corner and they started having a pretty intense conversation. I took Archie into the nursery and spent a little time with him, and when I came out they were standing there kissing, looking as if they were glued together. He actually had his hands on her bum. I’m sorry, Mom—you’d probably rather not hear about that.”

“Well, I didn’t think they confined themselves to handshakes,” I answered, attacking the onion with a butcher knife.

“I went back into the nursery, and cleared my throat and made some other noises so they’d know I was coming out, and when I did they were sitting on the sofa, holding hands like high school steadies. Mom, I thought the onion was supposed to be diced, not totally shredded like that.”

“You’re right.” I shoved it into the pan. “Plays him like a violin, doesn’t she?”

“Poor Dad.” I was proud of the way I kept my mouth shut at that. “So he told me they were going to have this evening out, and they left soon after. He was so apologetic about it. But I’ve been frustrated at not being able to talk with you about Peter, so I was going to grab the opportunity and ask you to come over, if you hadn’t rung me first.”

“This is so unfair to you!” I said. “It would be better if they did go home, then you wouldn’t have to play this musical-chairs game with us on top of everything else.”

She shook her head sadly. “I don’t want him to go home yet. I’ve missed him, you know, and I believe him when he says he’s missed me—and you too.”

“Oh, please!” I erupted. “Missed me! That’s unforgivable—to try to get your sympathy with a lie like
that
! I thought I detested him before, but—”

Other books

Payback by Melinda Metz - Fingerprints - 7
The Monarch by Jack Soren
Wolf Island by Cheryl Gorman
Field Study by Rachel Seiffert
Gone Bamboo by Bourdain, Anthony
After The Virus by Meghan Ciana Doidge