Buckingham Palace Gardens tp-25 Read online

Page 11


  “I did not kill her, and I have no idea who did,” he repeated.

  Pitt smiled. “I had not been hopeful that you could tell me, Mr.

  Marquand. But you could describe the party of that evening.”

  “It was just a. .” Marquand began, then stopped. “Yes, I imagine you have never attended such a. . an evening?”

  “No,” Pitt agreed soberly. The sarcastic observation was on his tongue, and he refrained from making it only because he had to. “Presumably the ladies retired to bed early, and then the. . women were conducted in?”

  Marquand’s lips tightened and a very slight color stained his cheeks. “You make it sound vulgar,” he said critically.

  Pitt leaned back. He could not get Olga Marquand’s dark, sad face out of his mind. And yet that was foolish. She was probably quite used to these arrangements and would surely know that accommodating the Prince of Wales was largely what her husband was here to achieve.

  “Then explain it to me,” he invited.

  Marquand’s eyes opened wide. “For God’s sake, man, are you envious?” he said in amazement. “I can assure you, you could have had as much fun at a singsong at your local public house! More at a good evening in the music halls, pleasures which are not open to His Royal Highness, for obvious reasons. The ladies retired, not that they wouldn’t have stayed, if society permitted such liberty. We drank, probably too much, sang a few songs, told some very bawdy jokes, and laughed too loudly.”

  Pitt imagined it. “Are you telling me that you all went to bed separately?” he inquired, not bothering to keep the disbelief out of his voice.

  “No, of course not,” Marquand snapped. “The Prince took the woman who was later found dead. Sarah, or Sally, or whatever her name was. .”

  “Sadie,” Pitt supplied.

  “All right, Sadie. I took Molly and Dunkeld took Bella. I never saw the others again. Are you sure that one of the other women could not have killed Sadie? In a jealous rage, or some other kind of quarrel, possibly over money? That seems quite likely.”

  Pitt decided to play the game. “Is that what you think could have happened?” he asked.

  Marquand stared at him. “Why not? It makes more sense than any of us having killed her! Do you think one of us took leave of our senses-for half an hour, hacked the poor creature to bits-then returned to bed, and woke up in the morning back in perfect control, ate breakfast, and resumed discussions on the Cape-to-Cairo railway?” He did not bother to keep the sarcasm from his voice.

  “I would certainly prefer it to be one of the other women,” Pitt conceded. “Let us say, for the sake of the story, that it was Bella. She left Mr. Dunkeld’s bed, crept along the passage awakening no one, happened to run into Sadie, who had chanced to have left the Prince’s bed, stark naked. They found the linen cupboard and decided to go into it, perhaps for privacy. Then they had a furious quarrel, which fortunately no one else heard, and Bella, who happened to have had the forethought to take with her one of the knives from the butler’s pantry, cut Sadie’s throat and disemboweled her. Fortunately she kept from getting any blood on her dress or her hands or arms.

  Then she quietly left again, with Molly, whom she had found, and was conducted out of the Palace and went home. Something like that?”

  Marquand’s face was scarlet, his eyes blazing. Twice he started to speak, then realized that what he was going to say was absurd, and stopped again.

  “Perhaps you would tell me a little more of the temper, the mood of the evening, Mr. Marquand?” Pitt asked, aware that his tone was now supremely condescending. “Was there any ill-feeling between any of the men, or they and one of the women?”

  Marquand was about to deny it, then changed his mind. “You place me in an invidious position,” he complained. “It would be preposterous to imagine that the Prince of Wales could do such a thing.

  I know that I did not, but I cannot prove it. Dunkeld was presumably with the other woman, Bella, except when he went to unpack his damned box of books, and it seems he can prove it.” The inflection in his voice changed slightly, a razor edge of strain. “My brother, Julius, retired early and alone. He did not wish to stay with us, and did not give his reasons. The Prince of Wales was not pleased, but it fell something short of actual unpleasantness.”

  “Mrs. Sorokine is very handsome,” Pitt remarked as casually as he could. “Probably he preferred her company to that of a street woman.”

  The tide of color washed up Marquand’s face again. “You are extremely offensive, sir! I can only assume in your excuse that you know no better!”

  “How would you prefer me to phrase it, sir?” Pitt asked.

  “Julius went to bed in a self-righteous temper,” Marquand said harshly, hatred flaring momentarily in his eyes. “His wife did not see him until luncheon the following day.”

  Pitt was disconcerted by the strength of emotion, and embarrassed to have witnessed it.

  “Did he tell you this, or did she?” he asked.

  “What?” The color in Marquand’s face did not subside. “She did.

  And before you ask me, I have nothing further to say on the subject.

  Julius is my brother. I tell you only so much truth as honor obliges me to. I will not lie, even for him.”

  “I understand. And of course Mrs. Sorokine is your sister-in-law,”

  Pitt conceded. Actually he did not understand. Was Marquand’s anger against his brother because he had placed him in a situation where he was forced to lie or betray him? Or was it against circumstances, the Prince and his expectations, even Dunkeld for engineering this whole situation? Or his own wife for making him feel guilty because he attended the party, and perhaps enjoyed it?

  Pitt elicited a few more details of fact, and then excused him. He then asked to see Julius Sorokine, even though he had left early and would apparently know far less than the other men.

  Julius came in casually, but there was an unmistakable anxiety in him. He was taller than his brother, and moved with the kind of grace that could not be learned. His ease was a gift of nature. He sat down opposite Pitt and waited to be questioned.

  “Why did you leave the party earlier than everyone else, Mr.

  Sorokine?” Pitt asked bluntly.

  The question seemed to embarrass Sorokine, and it flashed suddenly into Pitt’s mind that perhaps rather than spend at least some of the time with one of the prostitutes his father-in-law had provided, he had been with another woman altogether, of his own choosing.

  Perhaps that was why the handsome Minnie Sorokine had been confiding in her brother-in-law.

  “Did you have an assignation with someone else?” Pitt asked abruptly. “If so, they can account for your time, and it need not be repeated to your wife.”

  Julius laughed outright, in spite of his discomfort. It was a warm, uncompromising sound. “I wish it were so, but I’m afraid not. I was totally alone. Even my manservant cannot account for more than the first half hour or so, which cannot be the relevant time, since the women were all still at the party.”

  “Why did you leave early?” Pitt asked. “Were you ill? You seem well enough today.”

  “I was perfectly well,” Sorokine replied. He looked self-conscious.

  “I simply preferred not to indulge in that kind of pleasure.”

  Pitt’s eyes widened a little, not certain if he was leaping to unwar-ranted conclusions.

  Sorokine understood him instantly and blushed. “I have a certain regard for a woman who is not my wife,” he said a little huskily. It obviously embarrassed him. “I would prefer that she did not see me drinking and fornicating with prostitutes. I care for her opinion of me.” He lifted his eyes and stared at Pitt with surprising candor.

  “I apologize,” Pitt said, then felt foolish. He was doing no more than his job, and the thought had been a brief idea discarded. But he would remember that about Julius Sorokine. It was another layer of the complicated emotions that lay between these people. Was he referring to th
e gorgeous Mrs. Quase, whose husband drank too much and spoke so disparagingly of himself?

  It would be easy enough to understand. Or the unhappy Olga Marquand, elegant, stiff, and withdrawn, his brother’s wife? Or was it Elsa Dunkeld, as remote as an undiscovered country, where everything there was still to be found? He would be a brave man who would abandon Cahoon Dunkeld’s daughter and try to take his wife!

  He looked carefully at Sorokine’s face and did not see that kind of courage in it. The strength was there, but not the fire, nor the re-solve.

  Pitt asked him a few more questions, but learned nothing that seemed to be of value. Finally he excused him and sent for Dunkeld again.

  “Well?” Dunkeld asked as he closed the door. “Have you achieved anything, apart from insulting the Prince of Wales and disturbing everyone else?” He did not sit down but remained standing, towering over Pitt, who had not had time to rise to his feet.

  Pitt remained seated, deliberately trying to appear relaxed. “The large box that arrived for you shortly before Sadie was murdered,”

  he said calmly, crossing his legs comfortably. “What was in it, and where is it now?”

  “What?” Dunkeld’s voice rose angrily. “You called me away from my meeting to ask me that? Have you discussed anything at all as to who killed the wretched woman?” He leaned forward. “Have you completely lost your grasp, man? Have you any idea what has happened? Someone has murdered a prostitute in the Queen’s residence!

  What does it require to spark you into some action? One of these men, God help us, is a maniac.”

  Pitt leaned back slowly and looked up at him. “I assume you mean one of the other three: Marquand, Sorokine, or Quase?”

  Dunkeld looked a little paler. “Yes, regrettably, of course I do. Do you know of any alternative?”

  “What was in the box?” Pitt asked again. “You were apparently expecting it? Why did it come at that hour of night? Carters don’t usually deliver at midnight.”

  Dunkeld sat down at last, leaning forward with his elbows on his knees. “Books,” he said gratingly. “Mostly maps of the regions of Africa with which we are concerned. Yes, I was expecting them. They are extremely important to the work we plan to do.”

  “Then why did you not bring them with you?” Pitt asked.

  “I sent for them from a dealer!” Dunkeld snapped back. “If I had had them in my possession when I came, then of course I would have brought them with me! Are you a complete fool?”

  “And whoever sent them to you delivered them at midnight?”

  “Obviously! I don’t know why it took him so long. What the devil has that got to do with the woman’s death?”

  “I don’t know what anything has to do with it yet. Do you?”

  Dunkeld controlled his temper with clear difficulty. “No, of course I don’t, or I would tell you. You obviously need every scrap of help you can find.”

  “As I remember it, Mr. Dunkeld, it was you who called us,” Pitt replied.

  Dunkeld’s face darkened dangerously. “Why you arrogant, jumped-up oaf! You are a servant. You are here to clean up other people’s detritus and keep the streets safe for your betters. You are the ferret that decent men send into holes in the ground to hunt out rabbits.”

  “Then if you want your rabbit hunted and you are incapable of getting it out yourself,” Pitt said icily, “you had better employ the best ferret you can find, and give it its head. Otherwise the rabbit will escape and you will be left standing over an empty hole.”

  Dunkeld stood up slowly. “I shall not forget you, Pitt.” It was bla-tantly a threat.

  Pitt rose to his feet also. They were of equal height, and standing too close to each other for civility or comfort. But neither would move. “I shall probably forget you, sir,” he replied. “I meet many like you, in my field of work.” He smiled very slightly. “Thank you for answering my questions. I don’t think I need to ask you about the. .

  party. . you organized for the Prince of Wales. I have several rather good accounts of it already.”

  Dunkeld spun round on his heel and slammed the door on his way out.

  It was after six o’clock and Pitt was sitting in the same room again, mulling over the impressions he had gained from the four men.

  He was wondering if he should ring the bell and ask whoever answered it if he could have a cup of tea, when there was a tap on the door.

  “Come in,” he said with surprise. Gracie was not supposed to contact him so openly, and he could think of no one else who would approach him.

  But when the door opened it was not Gracie who stood there, but an elegant woman in her middle years. She was beautifully dressed in the height of fashion in very dark silk, tiered from the waist down and with a slight train. There was expensive lace at her bosom and a cameo at her throat, which Pitt estimated would have cost as much as a good carriage.

  He rose to his feet, certain she must have mistaken the room.

  “Good afternoon,” she said courteously. “Are you Inspector Pitt?”

  “Yes, ma’am.” It seemed ridiculous to offer to help her. She was obviously very much more composed than he.

  She smiled slightly. “I am lady-in-waiting to the Princess of Wales. Her Royal Highness would be greatly obliged if you would attend her. I can accompany you now.” It was phrased as if it were a request, but quite clearly he could not refuse.

  “Of. . of course.” His mouth was dry. His mind raced as to why she would want to see him, and what he could say to her. The first thought was that Dunkeld had reported him for rudeness. But why would the Princess of Wales summon him rather than the Prince?

  What kind of lie could he possibly think of to avoid telling her of the situation he was investigating? How much did she know anyway? He had heard that she was severely deaf. Perhaps she knew nothing and wanted to ask why he was here. What should he say?

  He followed the lady-in-waiting obediently. She led him a considerable distance through wide, high-ceilinged corridors until they came to what was apparently their destination. She knocked and then went in without waiting for an answer, signaling Pitt to follow her.

  The room in which he found himself was richly overfurnished like the others he had seen, high-ceilinged and crusted with plaster-work gilded and painted, but he did not even glance at it. His total attention was focused on the woman who sat in the tall chair by the window, a tea tray on the carved table in front of her. It was set for three. There were tiny sandwiches on a plate and very small cakes cut to look as if they had wings poised above the whipped cream. There were also fresh scones he could actually smell, a dish of butter, one of jam, and one of clotted cream. He swallowed as if tasting them. He had not realized before how hungry he was.

  “How kind of you to come, Mr. Pitt,” the woman at the window said graciously. Pitt had heard that Princess Alexandra was beautiful, but he was still unprepared for the perfect skin, the flawless features in spite of her being now well into her middle years.

  What did one say to a deaf princess who would one day be queen?

  Did it matter? Would the lady-in-waiting help him? Should he raise his voice, or was that inexcusable, regardless of her hearing?

  He gulped. “It is my honor, Your Royal Highness.” Was that too loud?

  She was watching him closely. What was she going to ask?

  “Please sit down,” she invited, indicating the chair opposite her.

  “Would you care for tea?”

  Should he accept, or was the invitation merely a form of politeness? He had no idea. Did she know how rude he had been to the Prince?

  “Please accept,” the lady-in-waiting said quietly, from a step or two behind him. “Her Royal Highness wishes to speak with you. The tea will be very agreeable.”

  “Thank you,” Pitt said more gently. “Thank you, ma’am.” He sat down, aware of being clumsy, as if he were all arms and legs, as unco-ordinated as if he were still an adolescent.

  The lady-in-waiting poured the te
a. It was very hot, obviously only just brought in, and the fragrance of it was delicate but unmistakable.

  “You have a very difficult task, Mr. Pitt,” the Princess observed, taking a small cucumber sandwich and indicating that he should do the same.

  “Yes, ma’am,” he agreed. He took a sandwich carefully, wondering if he could possibly stretch it to three mouthfuls.

  “Have you met all His Royal Highness’s guests?” she inquired. She had fine eyes, intelligent and very direct.

  “Yes, ma’am.” He must add something more. He was sounding stupid. “I have spoken more to the gentlemen this afternoon. I am not sure if the ladies can tell me much.” How much did she know? He must be desperately careful not to tell her anything she had not already heard. That would be appalling.

  “You may be surprised,” she said with a very slight smile, amusement fleeting and then gone. “We observe more than you think.”

  He had no idea how to answer her, and he did not think it polite to take another bite of the sandwich.

  She sipped her tea. “You may find that they also have been quite aware of tensions, likes and dislikes, and of rivalries.”

  “I will ask them, ma’am,” he promised, although he thought it a useless exercise.

  “You are thinking that they will be too loyal to their husbands to tell you anything that could be of use in this unpleasant matter,” she went on.

  The last piece of the sandwich went down his throat the wrong way, probably because he drew in his breath at the same time. He found himself coughing and the tears coming to his eyes. He was making a complete fool of himself. It was a kind of nightmare.

  “Take a sip of tea, Mr. Pitt,” she suggested gently. “It will no doubt be better in a moment. Do not try to speak and make it worse, please.

  I quite understand. I have noticed a few small nuances of character myself, which you may find of help.”

  He thought that so unlikely as to be impossible. What could she conceivably know of the ways of prostitutes, or the more violent elements in men’s nature? He could not say so because courtesy forbade it, and he was still afraid of choking if he tried to speak.

 

    The face of a stranger Read onlineThe face of a strangerTriple Jeopardy Read onlineTriple JeopardyA Question of Betrayal Read onlineA Question of BetrayalA Christmas Gathering Read onlineA Christmas GatheringDeath in Focus Read onlineDeath in FocusA Christmas Resolution Read onlineA Christmas ResolutionA Christmas Journey Read onlineA Christmas JourneyA Christmas Garland: A Novel Read onlineA Christmas Garland: A NovelAnne Perry's Christmas Vigil Read onlineAnne Perry's Christmas VigilA Sunless Sea wm-18 Read onlineA Sunless Sea wm-18The Whitechapel Conspiracy Read onlineThe Whitechapel ConspiracyLong Spoon Lane: A Charlotte and Thomas Pitt Novel Read onlineLong Spoon Lane: A Charlotte and Thomas Pitt NovelA Christmas Hope Read onlineA Christmas HopeThe Hyde Park Headsman Read onlineThe Hyde Park HeadsmanAnne Perry's Silent Nights Read onlineAnne Perry's Silent NightsA Christmas Message Read onlineA Christmas MessageA Christmas Hope: A Novel Read onlineA Christmas Hope: A NovelHyde Park Headsman Read onlineHyde Park HeadsmanNo Graves As Yet wwi-1 Read onlineNo Graves As Yet wwi-1The Sins of the Wolf Read onlineThe Sins of the WolfBlood on the Water Read onlineBlood on the WaterHighgate Rise Read onlineHighgate RiseA Christmas Revelation Read onlineA Christmas RevelationCater Street Hangman tp-1 Read onlineCater Street Hangman tp-1Cain His Brother Read onlineCain His BrotherA Breach of Promise Read onlineA Breach of PromiseRevenge in a Cold River Read onlineRevenge in a Cold RiverMidnight at Marble Arch tp-28 Read onlineMidnight at Marble Arch tp-28Shoulder the Sky wwi-2 Read onlineShoulder the Sky wwi-2The Shifting Tide Read onlineThe Shifting TideSilence in Hanover Close tp-9 Read onlineSilence in Hanover Close tp-9Long Spoon Lane Read onlineLong Spoon LaneThe Silent Cry Read onlineThe Silent CryWeighed in the Balance Read onlineWeighed in the BalanceSilence in Hanover Close Read onlineSilence in Hanover CloseDark Assassin Read onlineDark AssassinAshworth Hall Read onlineAshworth HallA Sudden, Fearful Death Read onlineA Sudden, Fearful DeathTwenty-One Days Read onlineTwenty-One DaysBethlehem Road Read onlineBethlehem RoadBuckingham Palace Gardens Read onlineBuckingham Palace GardensA Christmas Promise Read onlineA Christmas PromiseExecution Dock Read onlineExecution DockThe William Monk Mysteries Read onlineThe William Monk MysteriesAt Some Disputed Barricade wwi-4 Read onlineAt Some Disputed Barricade wwi-4Angels in the Gloom wwi-3 Read onlineAngels in the Gloom wwi-3Cardington Crescent tp-8 Read onlineCardington Crescent tp-8Dark Tide Rising Read onlineDark Tide RisingCallander Square Read onlineCallander SquareA Christmas Beginning c-5 Read onlineA Christmas Beginning c-5One Thing More Read onlineOne Thing MoreAn Anne Perry Christmas: Two Holiday Novels Read onlineAn Anne Perry Christmas: Two Holiday NovelsA Christmas Journey c-1 Read onlineA Christmas Journey c-1Treason at Lisson Grove: A Charlotte and Thomas Pitt Novel Read onlineTreason at Lisson Grove: A Charlotte and Thomas Pitt NovelResurrection Row Read onlineResurrection RowA Christmas Beginning Read onlineA Christmas BeginningTreason at Lisson Grove Read onlineTreason at Lisson GroveMurder on the Serpentine Read onlineMurder on the SerpentineResurrection Row tp-4 Read onlineResurrection Row tp-4We Shall Not Sleep Read onlineWe Shall Not SleepBedford Square tp-19 Read onlineBedford Square tp-19The Angel Court Affair Read onlineThe Angel Court AffairBlind Justice wm-19 Read onlineBlind Justice wm-19Farriers' Lane Read onlineFarriers' LaneA Christmas Return Read onlineA Christmas ReturnA Christmas Guest Read onlineA Christmas GuestWhitechapel Conspiracy Read onlineWhitechapel ConspiracyThe Twisted Root Read onlineThe Twisted RootA Dangerous Mourning Read onlineA Dangerous MourningBelgrave Square Read onlineBelgrave SquareFuneral in Blue wm-12 Read onlineFuneral in Blue wm-12Slaves of Obsession wm-11 Read onlineSlaves of Obsession wm-11Tathea Read onlineTatheaShoulder the Sky Read onlineShoulder the SkyA Christmas Secret cn-4 Read onlineA Christmas Secret cn-4The Shifting Tide wm-14 Read onlineThe Shifting Tide wm-14Death On Blackheath (Thomas Pitt 29) Read onlineDeath On Blackheath (Thomas Pitt 29)Defend and Betray Read onlineDefend and BetrayMidnight at Marble Arch Read onlineMidnight at Marble ArchRutland Place tp-5 Read onlineRutland Place tp-5Dorchester Terrace Read onlineDorchester TerraceBlind Justice Read onlineBlind JusticeA Christmas Visitor Read onlineA Christmas VisitorAngels in the Gloom Read onlineAngels in the GloomThe Scroll b-1 Read onlineThe Scroll b-1Dorchester Terrace tp-27 Read onlineDorchester Terrace tp-27Paragon Walk tp-3 Read onlineParagon Walk tp-3A Christmas Secret Read onlineA Christmas SecretA Christmas Garland Read onlineA Christmas GarlandA Christmas Grace Read onlineA Christmas GraceDeath in the Devil's Acre Read onlineDeath in the Devil's AcreBetrayal at Lisson Grove Read onlineBetrayal at Lisson GroveCome Armageddon Read onlineCome ArmageddonTraitors Gate tp-15 Read onlineTraitors Gate tp-15Cater Street Hangman Read onlineCater Street HangmanAcceptable Loss wm-17 Read onlineAcceptable Loss wm-17A Christmas Homecoming Read onlineA Christmas HomecomingDeath in the Devil's Acre tp-7 Read onlineDeath in the Devil's Acre tp-7A Christmas Grace c-6 Read onlineA Christmas Grace c-6Scroll Read onlineScrollCardington Crescent Read onlineCardington CrescentSlaves of Obsession Read onlineSlaves of ObsessionAnne Perry's Silent Nights: Two Victorian Christmas Mysteries Read onlineAnne Perry's Silent Nights: Two Victorian Christmas MysteriesThe One Thing More Read onlineThe One Thing MoreNo Graves As Yet Read onlineNo Graves As YetPentecost Alley Read onlinePentecost AlleyThe Sheen on the Silk Read onlineThe Sheen on the SilkSeven Dials Read onlineSeven DialsBrunswick Gardens Read onlineBrunswick GardensParagon Walk Read onlineParagon WalkBedford Square Read onlineBedford SquarePentecost Alley tp-16 Read onlinePentecost Alley tp-16A Christmas Odyssey cn-8 Read onlineA Christmas Odyssey cn-8Highgate Rise tp-11 Read onlineHighgate Rise tp-11Anne Perry's Christmas Mysteries Read onlineAnne Perry's Christmas MysteriesA Christmas Odyssey Read onlineA Christmas OdysseyAcceptable Loss: A William Monk Novel Read onlineAcceptable Loss: A William Monk NovelDeath On Blackheath tp-29 Read onlineDeath On Blackheath tp-29Betrayal at Lisson Grove tp-26 Read onlineBetrayal at Lisson Grove tp-26Half Moon Street Read onlineHalf Moon StreetA New York Christmas (Christmas Novellas 12) Read onlineA New York Christmas (Christmas Novellas 12)The Twisted Root wm-10 Read onlineThe Twisted Root wm-10Half Moon Street tp-20 Read onlineHalf Moon Street tp-20Traitors Gate Read onlineTraitors GateCallander Square tp-2 Read onlineCallander Square tp-2The Sheen of the Silk Read onlineThe Sheen of the SilkSouthampton Row Read onlineSouthampton RowA Christmas Guest c-3 Read onlineA Christmas Guest c-3Death on Blackheath Read onlineDeath on BlackheathBlind Justice: A William Monk Novel Read onlineBlind Justice: A William Monk NovelThe Scroll Read onlineThe ScrollA Sunless Sea Read onlineA Sunless SeaBuckingham Palace Gardens tp-25 Read onlineBuckingham Palace Gardens tp-25Funeral in Blue Read onlineFuneral in BlueAcceptable Loss Read onlineAcceptable LossAnne Perry's Christmas Mysteries: Two Holiday Novels Read onlineAnne Perry's Christmas Mysteries: Two Holiday Novels