The Death of Lucy Kyte

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Authors: Nicola Upson

BOOK: The Death of Lucy Kyte
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Dedication

This story is dedicated to three
remarkable women: my godmother Pearl,
Elizabeth MacKintosh, and Maria Marten.

Epigraph

“I suppose you are more or less living at the cottage these days. That is an experience I must try just once, I feel—making a new home.”

Josephine Tey in a letter to Marda Vanne, December 1934

Contents

Dedication

Epigraph

 

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Author's Note

Acknowledgements

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About the Author

Books by Nicola Upson

Credits

Copyright

About the Publisher

1

Josephine looked at her watch and sighed. Outside, the rain continued to pour down into Church Street, forcing the stream of Friday afternoon shoppers into circuitous routes along the pavement to avoid the puddles. Even through the shifting façade of black umbrellas and raised collars, she was alarmed at how many of the passers-by she recognised, and suddenly she craved the anonymity of the city she had just left.

The walls of the solicitor's office were lined with photographs. Prize-winning catches from Ness Castle Pool vied with shooting parties and other events that marked the town's sporting year, more reassuring to most of the firm's clients than any proudly framed legal qualifications would have been. These faces, too, were familiar to her and, if she looked closely, she could probably have identified most of them from among her father's circle of friends – but she was far more interested in the papers that lay on the desk in front of her, tantalisingly undisturbed for the last ten minutes. Impatiently, she glanced over to the small outer lobby that functioned as reception and waiting room; still there was no sign of any purposeful life beyond the frosted glass, so she half-stood and pulled the blotter towards her until the top sheet was close enough to read. She had got no further than the initial formalities when the door opened behind her and she was forced to turn her attention unconvincingly towards a nearby paperweight.

‘Janet Mackenzie, died peacefully in her sleep, September 1926. The way we'd all like to go.'

‘I'm sorry?'

John MacDonald smiled and nodded at the heavy glass object by

Josephine's hand. ‘She left it to me as a thank you for all the changes to her will. Bloody ugly, I know, but I liked the old girl so I feel obliged to keep it. There's a drawer full of them at home. Why is it always a paperweight?' He smiled and gestured for her to sit down again. ‘Sorry to keep you waiting, Josephine. Tea
is
on its way, I promise.'

The making of tea at Stewart, Rule & Co. was such a lengthy process that Josephine had often considered leaving a new kettle to the firm as part of her own final instructions, but such a gift would have carried with it a Greek quality and she had never had the heart. ‘From the date on your letter, I've kept
you
waiting,' she said. ‘I've been south for a bit, and I never have my post forwarded when I'm away. It would completely defeat the object of going.'

‘England – ah, yes.' He said it with a wistfulness that most people reserved for Persia, or at least somewhere that required travel by sea. ‘Business or pleasure?'

Josephine would have found it hard to categorise the events of the last two weeks, even if she had been inclined to. ‘Both,' she said noncommittally. ‘It makes sense to fit as much in as possible when I'm there.'

‘Quite, quite. Who knows what your father would get up to if you turned your back for too long? Is he keeping well?'

‘Very well, thank you.' She was saved from further small talk by the arrival of the tea tray. ‘You wanted to see me about my godmother's will, Mr MacDonald,' she prompted gently, aware that if anything was to be achieved efficiently this afternoon, the impetus would have to come from her. ‘I was sorry to hear that she had died. My mother always spoke very fondly of her.'

‘Indeed she did. They were great friends.' MacDonald nodded emphatically. He searched among his papers and removed a photograph from the pile. ‘Let's get down to business, then. This was Hester Larkspur's home for many years. It's in a little village in Suffolk and she loved it there. Now it's yours.'

His directness was completely out of character and Josephine looked at him in astonishment, convinced she had misheard. Beaming, MacDonald placed the image in front of her with all the flourish of a sideshow conjuror. She imagined that moments like this were few and far between in the life of a small-town solicitor and, because she liked him and because he had always been kind to her family, she tried not to let her sense of anticlimax show. The house was ordinary, a modest thatched cottage on the edge of a wood, and even the soft shades of sepia could not flatter it into being anything other than run-down and badly in need of repair.

‘I don't understand,' Josephine said. ‘To my knowledge, with the exception of the christening, I never even met my godmother. Mercifully, she seemed to place as little importance on the role as I do, so I can't imagine what I might have done to deserve this.'

Her irony was more pronounced than she had intended, and the solicitor smiled. ‘I know what you mean, but it's an old photograph and I gather it doesn't do the place justice. And you did meet her again, at least once. She was at your mother's funeral.' Josephine thought back over the years but the day was a blur to her, filled entirely with grief and with a selfish fear of how her mother's early death would change her own life. She had been in no mood to welcome strangers. ‘You were upset,' MacDonald said gently. ‘Too upset to remember or even to notice who else was there.'

His kindness made her suddenly vulnerable, and took her back to a moment she had not prepared herself to revisit. ‘My mother often talked about her, though,' she said, trying to keep the sadness out of her voice. ‘I remember how pleased she always was to get a letter. Etta, she called her. My youngest sister took the nickname from her, but we never actually knew her.'

‘She'd moved south by the time you were born, but she and your mother kept in touch, as you say. They'd been friends from childhood – lived next door to each other, went to the same school. When Miss Larkspur's husband died, your mother became the main beneficiary. Now that responsibility has passed to you.'

His choice of words was interesting, Josephine thought, and appropriate. ‘Isn't there anyone else?'

‘No family, no, and very few close friends. There are a couple of smaller bequests, but nothing very substantial. Miss Larkspur lived a solitary life on the whole, more so as she got older.'

‘A childhood friendship once removed still seems a very distant hand to entrust your life to.'

‘Perhaps, but nothing would surprise me after all these years.' He shrugged, and poured her more tea. ‘And what do you do if you die alone, without a next generation to look to and with no one close who cares about you or really needs your money? There's charity, of course, but it takes a particular strength of mind not to make at least some concessions to sentimentality. A will really
is
the last word, you know,' he added, tapping the papers in front of him. ‘It's your chance to say what you think without any fear or pretensions or niceties. Some people use it to settle a score or underline a grudge, but it's more often the reverse. Lots of people force an emotional obligation in death that never existed in life, and it's only human to lay claim to a love that will still be there when you're gone – anything else smacks of failure.' He smiled. ‘But I don't think that's the case here.'

‘Why not?'

‘Originally, in the event of your mother predeceasing her, whatever Miss Larkspur left was to be divided equally between any surviving children. She changed that relatively recently, because she knew by then that you were making a success of your life in a way that would have made your mother very proud – and, most importantly, doing what you wanted to do. I only knew her as a client, not as a friend, but I knew her for a long time and she would have admired that.' Touched, Josephine looked again at the photograph, trying not to let her growing excitement blind her to the gift's problems. There was a word in her head that was strong enough to transform the cottage, removing its flaws and imperfections before her very eyes, and the word was freedom. MacDonald reached for his glasses and glanced through the first couple of pages. ‘Shall we get the formalities over? Then I'll try to answer any questions you have.'

Josephine nodded and listened as he began to read, hoping that the formal language of law would not obscure a personality that was beginning to intrigue her. ‘Let's see, now. Here we are. “I, Hester Larkspur, residing at Red Barn Cottage, Polstead, Suffolk, desire that everything of which I die possessed, whether money, goods, property, personal possessions, or any other belongings whatsoever, shall, except as hereinafter provided, be given to my goddaughter, Josephine Tey, of Crown Cottage, Inverness, as a tribute to my long friendship with her mother and an acknowledgment of her own achievements.

‘“The following personal gifts are those provided for in the first paragraph: To Dilys Nichols, of Wren's View, St Paul's Churchyard, I leave all my clothes, including theatrical costumes and furs (in storage at Debenham and Freebody's). If Dilys Nichols does not survive me, the said clothes to be given to any deserving London charity. No clothes of mine are to be disposed of locally. To Moyse's Hall Museum, Bury St Edmunds, I give outright the collection of artefacts and theatrical memorabilia at present lent to them by me. To Josephine's sisters, Jane Ellis and Etta (Mary Henrietta), I leave the gold ring of half-pearls and a brooch made of the same pearls, given to me by their mother.

‘“I appoint as my executors Messrs. Stewart, Rule & Co., Inverness, who will know as much about my affairs as anyone has a right to. I leave instructions, separately, to Stewart, Rule & Co. about the disposal of my body, and I charge them to see that my instructions are carried out.”'

MacDonald leaned back in his chair. ‘There you are. All fairly straightforward so far.'

‘Was Hester an actress?' Josephine asked, intrigued by the personal gifts.

‘Yes. Didn't you know?'

‘No, I had no idea. I don't really remember much of what my mother said to us about her, but the things I can recall are all to do with the town and their childhood.'

‘Miss Larkspur left here to go on the stage. That's how she met her husband. They acted together until his death, and then she gave it all up. She once told me that she didn't have the heart to go on without him.'

‘What was his name?'

‘Walter Paget.'

Josephine shook her head. ‘Strange that I've never come across either of them in the theatre.'

‘Not really. Neither of them were ever top-tier, you understand. It was melodrama mostly, real populist stuff.'

‘East End rather than West?'

‘If you say so. I'm not sure I'd know the difference. It was the acting that took Miss Larkspur to Suffolk, though, I know that much. There's a connection between the village and one of the roles she played. I suppose I should remember which one, but I'm afraid I don't. It's not really my cup of tea, the stage.' His embarrassment at the admission amused Josephine. ‘I have dug out a photograph for you, though.'

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