The Lady Vanished (18 page)

Read The Lady Vanished Online

Authors: Gretta Mulrooney

BOOK: The Lady Vanished
4Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

‘I will see to all that. First, I wish to go home. Shall we wait outside?’

It was an order which he ignored. ‘Why has Mrs Farley kept you here like this? Who does this house belong to?’

She looked inside her bag, closed it again. ‘I really do want to go outside. I need fresh air.’

‘Mrs Langborne . . .’

She held up a hand. ‘I have had quite enough of being here.’

She spoke quietly but he could hear the tension in her voice. He understood her desire to escape the confines of the house.

‘Very well. Do you want your knitting and books?’

‘No.’

‘I would like to come with you in the cab, make sure you’re okay.’

‘No, thank you. I will be perfectly all right on my own.’

She showed no curiosity as he led her through the house, picking up the keys from the hallway. He opened the locks on the front door and she stepped out into the sunshine, wincing. She glanced back once, then moved onto the pavement; bending, she rubbed a speck from her black court shoe. As the cab approached he stepped beside her.

‘Mrs Langborne, you are a courageous woman but you might well feel badly shocked once you arrive home. I would like to accompany you.’

‘Absolutely not. Thank you anyway.’

She stepped into the cab without another word. He watched as it drove away, feeling amazed, annoyed and stunned. He rang Florence’s number and got her answerphone so left a message, informing her only that Carmen was on her way home. He started to call Nora Morrow but then hesitated and phoned for a cab instead; he wanted a chance to speak to Ronnie before the Met got hold of her. Despite what she had done, he had a soft spot for her and wanted to hear her story.

Ronnie’s curtains were closed again, shutting out the late afternoon sun. Swift rang her bell several times with no response. He looked through the letterbox and called her name. There was no sign of her and he could hear no movement. He tried her phone but she didn’t pick up and he couldn’t hear it ringing from within the flat. He left a message, saying he needed to speak to her urgently.

He caught a bus near the tube station and headed towards Holland Park. Heat had been gathering during the day and the air was humid. Carmen’s house was glowing in the sun, much as it had been the first day he had visited and Ronnie welcomed him in. As he approached, Swift saw Florence parking and waited outside the house as she locked her car and hurried towards him.

‘Has your stepmother called you?’

‘Yes, about half an hour ago. She wouldn’t tell me anything on the phone, just that she’s fine. I’ve been trying to get hold of Rupe but he’s in a meeting. What’s going on? What are you doing here?’

‘I think we should go in first.’

Florence opened her mouth then shook her head and pressed the doorbell. After a few moments Carmen Langborne opened it.

‘Carmen!’ Florence shrieked, swooping forward and kissing her on the cheek. ‘Where on earth have you been?’

‘Do come in, Florence. Why is this gentleman with you?’

‘Oh, his name is Mr Swift; I asked him to look for you. Let’s get inside and I’ll explain.’

Carmen gave Swift a sidelong glance, then led the way in, leaving him to close the door. They went into the living room, where there was a tray with tea and biscuits and a half-full cup. Florence rattled on about how worried she had been. Swift noted that Carmen looked showered and fresh, her hair now rolled into a pleat. She was wearing a blue jersey dress, navy blue pumps and pearls and her face was carefully made up. Swift gauged that she had been home for just over an hour and had made full use of the time. He could only admire her sangfroid.

‘Engaging a private detective must have been expensive,’ she said to Florence. Her voice was reedy, her diction slow after months of little conversation.

‘Carmen, we were so worried about you! We thought . . . well, we thought the worst.’ Florence’s eyes brimmed; Swift thought it was probably relief at the restoration of the status quo and family finances. ‘Where have you been, why didn’t you contact us?’

‘Where are my darling cats, who is looking after them? When can I bring them home?’

Florence looked at Swift, who shrugged. Ronnie hadn’t told her, then, about Langborne’s disposal of them.

Florence twisted her hands together. ‘Rupert had them rehomed through some charity. I don’t know the details. He had to sack Mrs Farley and then there was no one to come in and look after them.’

Carmen closed her eyes, a spasm of distress crossing her face. ‘I will never forgive him,’ she said flatly.

‘I suppose he didn’t know what else to do,’ Florence said.

Carmen looked at her. ‘He couldn’t have taken them in, or even you, perhaps? You could have come here and fed them. You don’t mind asking me for money but you wouldn’t even do that for me.’ She put a hand to her mouth.

Swift thought she had aged ten years in a few moments. The loss of her cats had disturbed her equilibrium more than several months of confinement. She was holding herself carefully, containing her emotions.

‘Have you phoned the police?’ he asked.

She ignored him. ‘Florence, I want you to contact Rupert and find out where my darlings are, then let me know. I don’t want Rupert to speak to me. Do you understand?’

Florence nodded.

‘You can go away now,’ she said, ‘both of you. I’m here and well. I have things to do.’

Swift moved his chair forward. ‘Mrs Langborne, it isn’t as simple as that. The police will be here sometime soon and they will want to know where you have been.’

She looked sideways, apparently studying the garden through the back window. After a few minutes she spoke, still gazing outwards.

‘I was very troubled about something, a personal matter. I went to stay in a friend’s house in the countryside so that I could think and have peace. My friend is abroad for some time. That is all I am prepared to say.’

‘But you must have known we would be looking for you!’ Florence protested.

Carmen poured some tea into her cup and snapped a biscuit in two. Swift gazed at her; she had clearly decided that lies and silence would be her best policy, but why?

‘Mrs Langborne,’ Swift said, repeating her name softly until she looked at him. ‘Mrs Farley kidnapped you. The police will question her. I know what happened, I broke into a house and let you out of a utility room just a short while ago and I will be telling the police the details. I’m afraid you are going to have to be truthful. You can’t really believe that you can maintain a fiction.’

She put the teacup down and sank back, her face blank.

‘Mrs Farley?’ Florence asked, her voice cracking. ‘What’s any of this to do with her? What house did you break into?’ She had gone pale and was gaping, looking from Swift to her stepmother.

‘Florence, why don’t you go and try your brother again?’ Swift urged. ‘I think it would be good for your stepmother to have some information about the cats.’ She was going to need whatever comfort she could get to shore her up.

Florence shook her head, then took her phone from her bag and left the room, glancing back as if to check she wasn’t imagining Carmen’s return.

Swift spoke slowly. ‘You have had a terrible and traumatic experience. I don’t understand why you are lying about it and I won’t collude in the lie. If it helps to know, William Pennington died this week.’

Carmen laughed and shuddered. ‘Mr Pennington! How odd; Rupert will probably want to claim him as a father now, rather than the one he thought he had. Such irony!’

‘I’m sorry, I don’t understand.’

She shot him a look and spoke glacially. ‘Why should you? You don’t know me.’

‘No, but I know about William Pennington and I met him before his death. You saw Rupert that day you went missing, on the thirty-first, didn’t you? You were giving him a final ultimatum about acknowledging his natural father.’

She curled her arms around her skinny chest. ‘I took the train to Maidenhead and Rupert met me there. He insisted on discussing the matter somewhere neither of us would be known. We lunched in a not very pleasant restaurant. He was twisting and turning, wanting to buy more time. I pointed out that time was one thing he didn’t have. I informed him as I left that I would have to advise Daphne; I thought she might be able to make him see sense. He will regret now that he didn’t meet William Pennington.’

‘Why did Mrs Farley do this to you? Had you harmed her in some way or was imprisoning you related in some way to her son’s suicide?’

‘Don’t be impertinent,’ she said, sitting up straight. ‘I don’t need your concern or your questions and I resent your intrusion. Please go away now.’ She rose and walked to the window, retying the curtain holdback.

‘I will go, but the police will make my impertinence seem like the height of good manners.’

Swift walked into the hallway as Florence was ending a phone call.

‘I can’t reach Rupe, he’s not going to be available until later. What’s going on in there? Where has Carmen been these past months?’ She clutched at his arm.

‘It’s not for me to tell you.’

‘Oh, if it’s because I terminated your contract, if you’re being petty . . .’

He was hot and tired and had had enough of the Langbornes and their incivility.

‘Mrs Davenport, it isn’t for me to tell you the details now. Your stepmother was kidnapped by Mrs Farley and is in a bad way, despite appearances. I have no idea why she is spinning a story about staying at a friend’s place. It may be partly because of shock. You need to look after her and probably you should call Doctor Forsyth. There are difficult times ahead and the police will not accept her lady-of-the-manor behaviour. You should call the police now, especially as a crime has been committed; I think I’ll give you that responsibility. I’ll speak to them myself in a while to give them details about how I found her.’

She had been chewing at her lower lip while he was speaking. She reached into her bag and pulled out a bottle of water, gulping it. ‘But it’s all so bizarre!’

‘Yes; but what your stepmother has just said is even more peculiar.’ He opened the front door. ‘By the way, no need to thank me for finding her, despite the fact you’d ended my contract. It would be acceptable if you add a few more days of payment to the final bill.’

Swift left her to it and stepped out of the house, seating himself for a few moments on the wall. He should be feeling sympathy for the woman who had been imprisoned, but he could only think of the woman who had lied while feeding him her home baking. He tried Ronnie’s phone again but got no response. A sense of unease nudged at him. He decided to return home to check if there were any messages.

CHAPTER 13

Cedric had left Swift’s post by his front door. He put the bundle on the kitchen counter and made coffee. While it brewed, he checked for any messages on his landline but found none. Although it was now six thirty, he had no appetite; his brain was too busy trying to puzzle out Carmen’s reasons for lying about her captivity. He sat at the table and checked his emails, opening one from Mark Gill:

 

Hi mate, heard you had a run in with a hard man so hope you’re okay. I thought of ringing you but reckoned this would be easier by mail. I was passing through Victoria station the other day and saw you with Ruth. I know you were gutted when she left, so I just wanted to say be careful. I didn’t know whether or not to tell you this but you know, you always had my back so I decided to go for it. See you, Mark.

 

Swift sighed. You’d think London would be big enough not to be spotted but Mark was sound and could be relied on not to mention his sighting to anyone else. It had started to rain after the moist heat of the day; a light, desultory misting. He watched it drift in the trees through the back window, then replied:

 

Hi Mark. Thanks for the good wishes. I’ll take care. Catch up soon.

 

He turned to the post, opened a couple of bills and flyers, then a brown padded envelope with no stamp or postmark and just his name in blue biro and capitals. Inside was a brass key attached to a fob in the shape of a St Brigid’s cross and a note in tiny, carefully formed handwriting:

 

Dear Tyrone. This is the key to my place. I don’t want the ambulance or police to have to break down the door and all the neighbours gawping. As I said, you’re a braw min and I’m sorry to do this to you but on the other hand I trust you.

You never looked down on me.

God bless, Ronnie.

 

He threw his jacket on as he called a cab. It was now almost five hours since he had last seen her and several more since he had tried without success to visit her; she must have travelled to his door to deliver the letter but even so, enough time had elapsed for harm to be done. He phoned for an ambulance, emphasising that he was on his way to Ronnie’s with a key and waited outside in the rain for the cab, telling the driver it was an emergency. Traffic was easy until they approached Ladbroke Grove and the usual snarl-up appeared. He told the driver to stop, threw him the fare and ran, weaving through the pedestrians. The rain, now more intent, was slicking his hair and dripping down his collar. There was no sign of an ambulance as he raced up the steps and opened Ronnie’s door. He left it open, heading up the stairs. The four doors off the hallway were closed. He took a breath and opened the one on his right, looking into the empty bathroom. He wiped his damp hands on his jeans and opened the door to the living room.

She was lying on the floor by the dining table, on her side, her right arm thrown outwards. Her feet were bare, her eyes open and dull. He stepped closer and saw a deep gaping wound, running from the middle of her forehead to the side of her head. The bleeding had stopped and blood had congealed darkly underneath her cheek. He knew immediately that she was dead. He felt a momentary confusion because this was no suicide, then crouched beside her and checked that there was no pulse. There was a smear of blood on the table edge and a mug of coffee had fallen from the top; the mug had broken into three jagged pieces, the coffee staining the curtains of the balcony door and the lower wall. Something caught his eye below her right knee. Leaning carefully over her, he saw two flattened strands of pale purple heather. He took out his LED pocket torch and shone it on them. Then he phoned 999 again, this time for the police.

He stood, looking down on her, noting with a pang of anguish that she had painted her toenails a frosted pink. He went through to the kitchen where all the surfaces sparkled. By the sink were half a dozen packets and bottles of tranquilisers, enough to ensure several deaths. She had planned to end her own life and being Ronnie, had made thorough preparations, but someone had pre-empted her. There was another St Brigid’s cross on the wall by the gleaming cooker, this one woven in a frame.

He went back through to the hallway and found her bedroom. It was small, allowing only a single bed, a melamine wardrobe and chest of drawers. There wasn’t a speck of dust. On her bedside table was an envelope saying TYRONE. It was heavy and he could feel the shape of more keys inside. He tucked it in his pocket as he heard an ambulance siren whining, then running footsteps. He told the two paramedics her name, that she had planned to commit suicide but had been killed first and that he had called the police. He left them with the body and went back into her bedroom where he sat on the bed and opened the envelope she had left him, taking out three brass keys. The letter was one page, double-sided.

 

Ty, I’m writing this early in the morning so I’m sober and only a bit heavy headed. I’m going to my morning job when I’ve finished this. That might seem odd to some when I’m planning to take a heap of tablets later but I don’t like letting people down. Sorry for giving you the run around. I have Mrs L locked in a house near High Street Ken. These are the keys to the front door; 41 Tavistock Avenue. She’s in a room off the kitchen. Mr Sydney Bailey owns the place and he’s been away since January, due back in June. I’ve been caretaking for him. His details are in my address book, by the phone.

You’re a smart one so I know you’ll have discovered by now that my son killed himself. When Liam was in his late teens and on tablets for depression he told me that Neville Langborne sexually abused him for about a year when he was fourteen and took him to houses where other men did too. Liam helped out on Saturdays at a car valeting place in Notting Hill where Langborne used to take his car. Langborne got talking to him and that’s how it started. I won’t go into details, you’ll know the picture. Liam told me that once, Langborne took him back to the house in Holland Park. Carmen came home early, as Liam was leaving. Liam said that Langborne made up some story about losing his wallet at the car place and Liam returning it. Liam reckoned she suspected what was going on.

Liam went to the police but was told there wasn’t any evidence – this was around 1986. Toffs get away with murder even now and they certainly did back then. He was a shy boy and didn’t have the confidence to press his case. I rang social services but nobody ever came back to me.

Liam was never right afterwards. He said to me once that he always felt as if the sky above him was made of ice. Then he hanged himself. I always felt that I should have done more to help him. When my friend Kate told me who she was working for and that Langborne had died, I decided to try and get a job there. I didn’t know what I was going to do. I just wanted to see how Mrs L lived and be in a place where my Liam was harmed and suffered. Maybe I was doing some kind of penance.

I had no plan to harm Mrs L. I stole a few things from her, odd bits of money she left around but mainly drink. She had so much there she never noticed and anyway I was her reliable Farley. I’ve never taken anything from any of my other clients, I want you to know that. And by the way, Florence removed a couple of expensive bits from her house a week ago; I told Rupert that when he accused me, but of course he wouldn’t listen. The more I got to know Mrs L, the more I hated her snobbery and her banging on about what was wrong with the world. She used to talk about her husband sometimes, saying what an honest, straightforward man he’d been, that everyone looked up to him because with the Lord Justice, as many people used to remark, ‘what you see is what you get.’ I nearly laughed in her face when she said that.

I hope this is making sense. One day in January, I heard her talking to Rupert on the phone and got the gist of her having found out something that she was going to tell Daphne and Florence about if he didn’t. I could tell that Rupert was arguing with her but she was being high and mighty. That same morning, she was looking at the newspaper, something about Rolf Harris and those other men who’d been raping and molesting and she said they should all be locked up and the key thrown away.

After that I couldn’t stop thinking about what her husband had done and the cushioned life she was living and the way she thought she could preach about what other people should do and have done to them when she maybe knew what her own husband had been doing. I mean, they say that the wives usually know, don’t they? I brooded on it and I felt a terrible anger. I had this idea to teach her a lesson. She was so big on her animal charities and all. I spun her a story about this lady I worked for in Kensington. I said she was the widow of an Earl – I knew that would appeal to Mrs L. I told her this Lady Hargreave wanted to start a new animal charity and she was thinking of calling it Haven. She was looking for someone to help her with it but wanted to keep it all top secret until it was properly planned. Anyway, I got Mrs L interested and we agreed that I’d go with her to Kensington at five o’clock on the 31 and introduce her so that she could spend an hour with Lady Hargreave before going to her bridge. She was loving the hush bit, agreed not to breathe a word to anyone.

So as you know, I was round there at half past four that evening. We went down to the main road and hailed a taxi. (Mrs L was going to call one to the house but of course I didn’t want that because it would be logged so I told her I needed to get something from the chemist on the way.) I took her to Mr Bailey’s and once we were in I led her to a utility room off the kitchen and locked her in. It’s easy to manipulate someone when they trust you, as her husband had found. I’d put a bolt on the door so her little prison was all ready for her. It’s small but has a wee window so she’s had light and there’s a washbasin and toilet off it. I’d put a mattress, bedding and food and water in there. I told her what her husband had done to my Liam. She said she knew nothing about it but I could tell she was lying. I said she’d have to stay there until she apologised to me for what her husband had done, told the police and agreed to set up a charity in Liam’s name.

I’ve no idea how long I was going to keep it up. I think I’ve been half mad for a long time. Mrs L never buckled. I went in every day, took her a few clothes, kept her fed. I took her some wool and knitting needles too and books of crossword puzzles. I could see I was going to get nowhere but in the end I just wanted her to know what it was like to feel alone and helpless and hurt by someone, just like my Liam did.

I was a bit surprised that the police and then you accepted my word about everything; the cats were never left unfed of course but I made a big fuss about that because it added to the confusion and made me sound like reliable, caring Farley.

I’ve been collecting the pills for a while. When you work for wealthy people, you always find sleeping stuff in their bedrooms and bathrooms. I knew once you came to see me yesterday that it was over. I’m glad it is. I wanted to stop it but I couldn’t think of a way. When you turned up, I was hoping that you’d find me out so that it could all end and now it has it’s a relief.

I did lead you up the garden path and I told you porkies but I hope you can understand. I think maybe you will.

When I knew last night that this all had to end, I rang Rupert and told him about what his father had done to my Liam and other boys. I said it would all come out. It gave me some small satisfaction, doing that; he’s been horrible to me and I could hear the panic in his voice. I didn’t tell him anything about Mrs L or where she was, I wasn’t going to show all my cards.

I don’t care what anyone says about me. I’ve cared about nothing and nobody since Liam died.

Ronnie

 

When the police arrived, he gave them his details and said they could ring Nora Morrow to check him out. A duty inspector called Waring turned up soon after and Swift gave him both the notes Ronnie had written. He read them standing in her bedroom and was told by a constable that DI Morrow had confirmed who Swift was.

‘So who’s this Mrs L?’ Waring asked.

‘Carmen Langborne. She went missing in January. Nora Morrow’s in charge of the case. The stepdaughter employed me. I found Mrs Langborne earlier today; she’s at home now and I asked her stepdaughter to let the police know. You’d better check that Nora Morrow is up to speed about her. I can make a statement about Ronnie Farley later. Rupert Langborne is mentioned in the long letter; underneath Ronnie’s head you’ll see some pieces of heather. Langborne wears a buttonhole of thistles and heather. He had a strong motive to silence Ronnie.’

Waring nodded, said he would look into it, and went into the living room to speak to forensics. Swift didn’t look through as he left. Some neighbours were clustering outside, asking each other for information. Ronnie might have known that they would end up gawping anyway. Swift sat on the wall he had used that morning and emailed Nora Morrow, telling her what had happened. He sat, looking up at the drawn curtains; she had been dead, then, when he had called there in the late afternoon. He could hear the melody Ronnie had sung to him, see her strained eyes and that final image of her lying with her son’s photo just a few feet away.

A police car pulled up and Nora Morrow got out, accompanied by a uniformed woman constable. She looked around, saw Swift, crossed over and stood in front of him, hands in her jacket pockets, her expression hard to read.

‘Mrs Langborne is home, then?’

‘Yes. Florence is with her. She’s explaining away the last months by saying that she was troubled and staying at a friend’s house.’

Other books

Tides of Honour by Genevieve Graham
Tea Leafing: A Novel by Macdonald, Weezie
Fluency by Jennifer Foehner Wells
For Duty's Sake by Lucy Monroe
If the Dress Fits by Daisy James
Lemon by Cordelia Strube
Kiss Me Hello by L. K. Rigel