The Silver Castle (20 page)

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Authors: Nancy Buckingham

Tags: #Gothic Romance

BOOK: The Silver Castle
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I shouted to her above the clatter, “Which is Herr Lemmer?”

Whether or not she understood English, she caught the name and jerked her head towards the far end of the long room, where I could see an elderly man in a white coat bending over his work.

I lifted my hand to her.
“Danke schon.”

Franz Lemmer was deeply absorbed and didn’t notice my approach. He was small and thin, with sparse iron-grey hair. I coughed and he looked up, peering enquiringly over the half-lenses of his spectacles.

“Herr Lemmer?”

“Ja, Fraulein. Was kann Ich fur Sie tun, bitte?”

I introduced myself in English, and thanked heaven that he understood. “Herr Kreuder was telling me about an ancient Persian design that you’re copying for an oil sheikh,” I said.

His faded eyes quickened with pleasure. “You are interested in the weaving of silk?”

“I’m afraid I know nothing much about it, but this particular cloth sounded fabulous. I’m an artist, you see ... an illustrator.”

“Ach so.
Then come, and I will show you.”

He led the way through a pair of fire doors into another, smaller room that thankfully was quieter. On a long bench a woman was minutely examining a bolt of cloth for imperfections. It was a most glorious fabric, a rich crimson ground with the formalised design picked out in gold thread ... warriors mounted on elephants, framed within elaborate roundels of birds and lions and crossed spears on shields.

“It is very, very beautiful,” I said, gazing in awe.

The little man smiled his delight and pride. “We are pleased with it.”

“I’m sure you are. How did you ever work out such a complicated pattern?”

“That is our craft,
nicht wahr?”
He lifted an edge of the fabric and fingered it lovingly.

“It must cost a fortune,” I said.

“To one whose kingdom floats upon an ocean of oil, it does not seem so expensive. And the money will be well spent if it serves to keep alive old skills that might otherwise die out.”

I recalled what I’d come here for. “I gather you had problems with this fabric when it was on the loom, Herr Lemmer.”

“Silk is not always an easy lady to handle. She can be ... temperamental.”

“Herr Kreuder said you were having a great deal of difficulty with the gold thread.”

He looked frankly puzzled. “We had to experiment a little with the tension, Ja. But when we had mastered that, all went well.”

My heart was thudding with a fast, unsteady beat, and my throat was dry and tight.

“But surely ... didn’t Herr Kreuder have to return specially from Geneva the other day because things were going wrong? That’s true, isn’t it?” I cried with rash intensity.

There was a sudden, embarrassed silence. Franz Lemmer and the woman checker were looking at someone behind me. When I turned around I was dismayed to find myself face to face with Anton.

“Hello, Gail. I didn’t expect to see you here.” His expression was stern and he was clearly displeased, and puzzled.

“I ... I thought I’d just drop in,” I stammered. “You’d mentioned this special fabric to me, and I was interested to see what it looked like.”

Anton spoke a few words to Franz Lemmer in an undertone, then turned back to me.

“Perhaps you’d like to come along to my office.”

I wished I could think of a plausible excuse to refuse. In nervous silence I followed him into a corridor, up a flight of stairs, then through another corridor until we reached the office block. As Anton opened a door into a small room a secretary looked up from her typewriter and smiled at me pleasantly. He didn’t introduce us, but led the way straight into his own office, a larger room that overlooked the mill’s yard.

“You’re back earlier than I expected,” I began nervously. “Did things go all right in Zurich with your lawyer?”

He didn’t answer that, but said in a brittle voice, “I would be interested to know, Gail, why you decided to come hurrying here to the mill this morning, when you believed that both Raimund and I would be conveniently out of the way.”

“I told you,” I floundered. “I
wanted to see that special Persian cloth.”

His eyes were dark with suspicion. “Why today? Why didn’t you just tell me that you wanted to see it?”

I shook my head helplessly. There was nothing I could say to account for my behaviour, which had been discourteous to say the least. I watched Anton turn and walk to the window, wishing that I could feel hate for this man, or even plain uncomplicated fear. Instead, I felt torn in two by this other, unwanted emotion. By some strange alchemy I loved him—
still
loved him—and I wanted to run to him. I longed to convince Anton that I was here because, absurdly and against all reason, I sought evidence ... not of his guilt, but of his innocence.

Anton spun around to face me again. “I’ll answer the question I heard you put to Franz Lemmer downstairs just now. You wanted to know—and I don’t begin to understand why—whether my return from Geneva the other day was necessary. The answer is yes, or so I thought at the time. But as things turned out, Franz was able to cure the trouble on his own before I got here. Well ... does that satisfy you?”

I caught at the back of a chair for support and closed my eyes against a sudden swirl of dizziness.

Anton went on in a different voice, a voice that was gentle and coaxing. “Gail, what’s this all about? These last few days you’ve been acting very strangely. For heaven’s sake tell me what’s wrong. What have I done to upset you?”

I had to fight the impulse to scream out accusations against him, dredging up every last fragment of self-control. Already Anton was suspicious of me. If he knew that I had guessed the truth about him, my own life would be in jeopardy.

“It... it’s not you, Anton. It’s poor Willi that has upset me. I know you think I’m being silly, because I hardly knew the boy, but somehow I can’t help myself.”

He nodded slowly. “I heard that Josef was rude to you at the funeral yesterday. I intend to speak to him about it.”

“No, please don’t. It’s better forgotten.”

“As you wish.” His voice was steady as he looked at me. “You can’t help Willi now, Gail. The police will try to trace the driver, of course, but ...”

“There’s no real evidence, is there?”

“It seems not. But perhaps, you know, what’s happened is for the best. Willi hadn’t much of a life to look forward to.”

“Are you trying to justify his killing?” I exploded, swept by a sense of outrage.

“Of course not.” He looked startled by my ferocity. “I’m sorry if I sounded unfeeling.”

“You did—very.”

“I was merely trying to put things in perspective for you. It’s no use making yourself miserable, Gail. Look, why not let us take that boat trip this evening? Dinner and dancing on the lake.”

“No, I don’t want to.”

“Just dinner then. Somewhere quiet.”

I wished I could turn and walk out through the door, but something held me trapped. I just stood there limply, shaking my head in a slow, lost movement. A buzzer sounded and Anton picked up the phone on his desk, speaking in impatient dismissal. When he replaced it he looked at me again with frightening intensity.

“Gail, please....”

“I said no.”

“Why not, for God’s sake?”

In three swift strides he came around the desk and caught me roughly in his arms. While common sense warned me to wrench free, my longing for him won a shameful victory ... only for a few brief seconds, but long enough to show me how fragile were my defences against him.

“Please let me go.”

But I hadn’t needed to protest aloud. Already he’d felt my resistance, felt my rejection of him. Almost violently he pushed me away, his face tight with anger.

“Go then, damn you.”

“Anton, I ...”

“Yes?”

I let the silence hang. What could I say to him?

“Please try to understand,” I began at last. “I ...”

“But I do understand.” There was savage bite in his voice. “I’ve made an utter fool of myself. It is not the first time that has happened, but I hope to God it’s the last.”

I hurried from the room, my heart hammering against my ribs. In the outer office Anton’s secretary glanced up and gave me a curious look. Somehow I summoned up a faint smile for her before passing through into the corridor and finding my way out of the building.

I was crossing the yard to where I’d left my car when Anton caught up with me. He had been running, and his voice was breathless.

“Gail, please forgive me. I behaved abominably.”

He reached for my hand, then dropped it at once. Because he was afraid I would snatch it away from him? Or because interested eyes would be watching from the windows?

“Come back and let’s talk,” he pleaded.

“No. There’s nothing to be said.”

He stood hesitating, running his fingers through his thick, dark hair.

“Then at least promise me that you won’t allow my rudeness to drive you away. I beg you, Gail.”

“Very well.”

I would stay for one reason only ... to find a way of exposing him as a murderer. So why, as I drove out through the gates and along the lakeside road, did I feel a singing in my heart?

 

Chapter Fifteen

 

That afternoon, in her upstairs sitting room, Sigrid was showing me some of her designs for textile printing. Through my work as an illustrator I knew about colour printing on paper, and the altogether different techniques of working with fabric caught my interest. I was particularly attracted by a chrysanthemum pattern in quiet shades of green and blue and fawn, rather like a William Morris print.

Breaking in upon my admiring comments, Sigrid began tentatively, “Gail, I wonder if you have guessed what I would so dearly like to happen?”

“What’s that?” I turned my head to look at her.

She didn’t answer me, but asked another question. “I am right, am I not, in thinking that you are fond of Raimund?”

Warned now, but incredulous, I replied cautiously, “Yes, I like Raimund. He’s very pleasant.”

“He thinks most highly of you. As his mother, I can tell.”

Last night, at dinner, Sigrid had been doing her best to push us together ... until that mysterious phone call from New York. Now she was returning to the theme. Instinctively, I bristled at such pairing tactics, but I had no wish to offend my hostess.

“Raimund has been very kind to me,” I said. “You all have.”

She made an impatient, dismissive gesture. “Please, Gail, do accept if ... when Raimund asks you out again.”

“I’d rather not,” I said awkwardly.

“Yet you told me how much you enjoyed that piano recital he took you to. Tomorrow evening there is to be a Russian ensemble at the Tonhalle. Do you care for Shostakovitch?”

“Yes, but ...”

“I’ll tell Raimund to get two tickets.”

I said coolly, “I think you should leave it to your son to issue his own invitations, Frau Kreuder.”

“Oh, but he
will
be inviting you, I’ll see to that.” Her expression was all at once apologetic. “I know what you must be thinking, Gail... that I’m the typical interfering mother. And I suppose I am, in a way. But although Raimund is a charming young man, he does require a little pushing in the right direction. I don’t mean that to sound tactless, my dear ... as if he needs pushing where you are concerned. I mean, rather that he needs a guiding hand. And that’s the very reason why I should feel so happy if only you and he could ...”

“No please, it isn’t possible.”

Hoping to end the conversation, I went to the window and stood looking out across the lake. A steamer was passing close by and the passengers lined the rails, pointing with admiration at the Schloss Rietswil. It must indeed have looked a splendid sight, perched upon a promontory with its silver-grey stone walls gilded by the afternoon sun, its well-tended gardens sloping gently to the water’s edge. I could imagine them thinking what peaceful, contented lives must be lived by the occupants of this beautiful old castle. Yet the reality was so different,

Sigrid wheeled her chair beside me and laid a hand upon my arm. Once again I was reminded of the surprising strength in those slender fingers of hers.

“You are so intelligent, so levelheaded,” she said. In this respect you are not in the least bit like your father. Dear Benedict ... I’m afraid he was completely unworldly and he sometimes acted in ways that might be considered irresponsible. I suppose your mother must have thought so, for one.”

“And Willi’s mother?” The words were jerked out of me against all discretion.

I felt Sigrid’s fingers tense. “You know about that?
Ach so!
Who told you?”

“Willi’s aunt. After the funeral. I insisted on her explaining why Josef was so hostile towards me.”

Sigrid’s expression was sombre as she met my eyes.

“I was hoping you wouldn’t have to know, Gail. I guessed that you’d somehow feel obliged to make yourself responsible for the boy. And I honestly believed—for Willi’s sake as much as for yours
—that it was better to
leave things as they were. Better to let him continue in the only sort of life he knew.”

“And instead we let him die.” Sharp needles of pain pricked behind my eyes. “All along I felt such a strange sense of affinity with Willi, but I could never understand it. If only I’d known that he was my brother.”

She sighed. “Poor boy. But he was happy in his simple way, Gail, you must believe that. The aunt is a good woman, and she loved Willi devotedly. Benedict used to give her money sometimes, when he had any. He never turned his back on the lad. He always took an interest in him, encouraged him.”

“Yes, I know he did. Willi loved my father ...
our
father.”

“And he was right to do so. Benedict’s faults were unimportant beside his work as an artist. I shall always be grateful, and humble too, that he accepted my help and guidance.” She paused, then added on a sighing breath, “That is what you could offer Raimund, my dear ... help and guidance. Because he too is unworldly—though in quite a different way, of course.”

So already she was back to that. I said despairingly, “Please, don’t let’s talk about it any more.”

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