The Unpleasantness at the Bellona Club

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The Unpleasantness at the Bellona Club Page 18

by Dorothy L. Sayers


  Happily, Miss Dorland soon wearied, even of her paintings, and flung them all back into the corner.

  ‘D’you want anything else?’ she demanded abruptly. ‘Here’s that address.’

  Parker took it.

  ‘Just one more question,’ he said, looking her hard in the eyes. ‘Before Lady Dormer died – before General Fentiman came to see her – did you know what provision she had made for him in her will?’

  The girl stared back at him, and he saw panic come into her eyes. It seemed to flow all over her like a wave. She clenched her hands at her sides, and her miserable eyes dropped beneath his gaze, shifting as though looking for a way out.

  ‘Well?’ said Parker.

  ‘No!’ she said. ‘No! of course not. Why should I?’ Then, surprisingly, a dull crimson flush flooded her sallow cheeks and ebbed away, leaving her looking like death.

  ‘Go away,’ she said furiously; ‘you make me sick!’

  18

  PICTURE-CARDS

  ‘So I’ve put a man in and had all the things in that cupboard taken away for examination,’ said Parker.

  Lord Peter shook his head.

  ‘I wish I had been there,’ he said; ‘I should have liked to see those paintings. However—’

  ‘They might have conveyed something to you,’ said Parker; ‘you’re artistic. You can come along and look at them any time, of course. But it’s the time factor that’s worrying me, you know. Supposing she gave the old boy digitalin in his B. and S., why should it wait all that time before working? According to the books, it ought to have pooped off in about an hour’s time. It was a biggish dose, according to Lubbock.’

  ‘I know. I think you’re up against a snag there. That’s why I should have liked to see the pictures.’

  Parker considered this apparent non sequitur for a few moments, and gave it up.

  ‘George Fentiman—’ he began.

  ‘Yes,’ said Wimsey, ‘George Fentiman. I must be getting emotional in my old age, Charles, for I have an unconquerable dislike to examining the question of George Fentiman’s opportunities.’

  ‘Bar Robert,’ pursued Parker ruthlessly, ‘he was the last interested person to see General Fentiman.’

  ‘Yes – by the way, we have only Robert’s unsupported word for what happened in that last interview between him and the old man.’

  ‘Come, Wimsey – you’re not going to pretend that Robert had any interest in his grandfather’s dying before Lady Dormer. On the contrary.’

  ‘No – but he might have had some interest in his dying before he made a will. Those notes on that bit of paper. The larger share was to go to George. That doesn’t entirely agree with what Robert said. And if there was no will, Robert stood to get everything.’

  ‘So he did. But by killing the General then, he made sure of getting nothing at all.’

  ‘That’s the awkwardness. Unless he thought Lady Dormer was already dead. But I don’t see how he could have thought that. Or unless—’

  ‘Well?’

  ‘Unless he gave his grandfather a pill or something to be taken at some future time, and the old boy took it too soon by mistake.’

  ‘That idea of a delayed-action pill is the most tiresome thing about this case. It makes almost anything possible.’

  ‘Including, of course, the theory of its being given to him by Miss Dorland.’

  ‘That’s what I’m going to interview the nurse about, the minute I can get hold of her. But we’ve got away from George.’

  ‘You’re right. Let’s face George. I don’t want to, though. Like the lady in Maeterlinck who’s running round the table while her husband tries to polish her off with a hatchet, I am not gay. George is the nearest in point of time. In fact he fits very well in point of time. He parted from General Fentiman at about half-past six, and Robert found Fentiman dead at about eight o’clock. So, allowing that the stuff was given in a pill—’

  ‘Which it would have to be, in a taxi,’ interjected Parker.

  ‘As you say – in a pill, which would take a bit longer to get working than the same stuff taken in solution – why, then the General might quite well have been able to get to the Bellona and see Robert before collapsing.’

  ‘Very nice. But how did George get the drug?’

  ‘I know, that’s the first difficulty.’

  ‘And how did he happen to have it on him just at that time? He couldn’t possibly have known that General Fentiman would run across him just at that moment. Even if he’d known of his being at Lady Dormer’s, he could be expecting him to go from there to Harley Street.’

  ‘He might have been carrying the stuff about with him, waiting for a good opportunity to use it. And when the old man called him up and started jawing him about his conduct and all that, he thought he’d better do the job quick, before he was cut out of the will.’

  ‘Um! – but why should George be such a fool, then, as to admit he’d never heard about Lady Dormer’s will? If he had heard of it, we couldn’t possibly suspect him. He’d only to say the General told him about it in the taxi.’

  ‘I suppose it hadn’t struck him in that light.’

  ‘Then George is a bigger ass than I took him for.’

  ‘Possibly he is,’ said Parker dryly. ‘At any rate, I have put a man on to make inquiries at his home.’

  ‘Oh, have you? I say, do you know, I wish I’d left this case alone. What the deuce did it matter if old Fentiman was pushed painlessly off a bit before his time? He was simply indecently ancient.’

  ‘We’ll see if you say that in sixty years’ time,’ said Parker.

  ‘By that time we shall, I hope, be moving in different circles. I shall be in the one devoted to murderers, and you in the much lower and hotter one devoted to those who tempt others to murder them. I wash my hands of this case, Charles. There’s nothing for me to do now you have come into it. It bores and annoys me. Let’s talk about something else.’

  Wimsey might wash his hands, but, like Pontius Pilate, he found society irrationally determined to connect him with an irritating and unsatisfactory case.

  At midnight the telephone bell rang.

  He had just gone to bed, and cursed it.

  ‘Tell them I’m out,’ he shouted to Bunter, and cursed again on hearing the man assure the unknown caller that he would see whether his lordship had returned. Disobedience in Bunter spelt urgent necessity.

  ‘Well?’

  ‘It is Mrs George Fentiman, my lord; she appears to be in great distress. If your lordship wasn’t in I was to beg you to communicate with her as soon as you arrived.’

  ‘Punk! they’re not on the phone.’

  ‘No, my lord.’

  ‘Did she say what the matter was?’

  ‘She began by asking if Mr George Fentiman was here, my lord.’

  ‘Oh, Hades!’

  Bunter advanced gently with his master’s dressing-gown and slippers. Wimsey thrust himself into them savagely and padded away to the telephone.

  ‘Hallo!’

  ‘Is that Lord Peter? Oh, good!’ The line sighed with relief – a harsh sound, like a death-rattle. ‘Do you know where George is?’

  ‘No idea. Hasn’t he come home?’

  ‘No – and I’m – frightened. Some people were here this morning . . .’

  ‘The police.’

  ‘Yes . . . George . . . they found something . . . I can’t say it all over the phone . . . but George went off to Walmisley-Hubbard’s with the car . . . and they say he never came back there . . . and . . . you remember that time he was so funny before . . . and got lost . . .’

  ‘Your six minutes are up,’ boomed the voice of the Exchange; ‘will you have another call?’

  ‘Yes, please . . . oh, don’t cut us off . . . wait . . . oh! I haven’t any more pennies . . . Lord Peter . . .’

  ‘I’ll come round at once,’ said Wimsey, with a groan.

  ‘Oh, thank you – thank you so much!’

  ‘I say – wher
e’s Robert?’

  ‘Your six minutes are up,’ said the voice finally, and the line went dead with a metallic crash.

  ‘Get me my clothes,’ said Wimsey bitterly; ‘give me those loathsome and despicable rags which I hoped to have put off for ever. Get me a taxi. Get me a drink. Macbeth has murdered sleep. Oh! and get me Robert Fentiman, first.’

  Major Fentiman was not in town, said Woodward. He had gone back to Richmond again. Wimsey tried to get through to Richmond. After a long time, a female voice, choked with sleep and fury, replied. Major Fentiman had not come home. Major Fentiman kept very late hours. Would she give Major Fentiman a message when he did come in? Indeed she would not. She had other things to do than to stay up all night answering telephone calls and giving messages to Major Fentiman. This was the second time that night, and she had told the other party that she could not be responsible for telling Major Fentiman this, that and the other. Would she leave a note for Major Fentiman, asking him to go round to his brother’s house at once? Well, now, was it reasonable to expect her to sit up on a bitter cold night writing letters? Of course not; but this was a case of urgent illness. It would be a very great kindness. Just that – to go round to his brother’s house and say the call came from Lord Peter Wimsey.

  ‘Who?’

  ‘Lord Peter Wimsey.’

  ‘Very well, sir. I beg your pardon if I was a bit short, but really—’

  ‘You weren’t, you snobby old cat, you were infernally long,’ breathed his lordship inaudibly. He thanked her, and rang off.

  Sheila Fentiman was anxiously waiting for him on the doorstep, so that he was saved the embarrassment of trying to remember which was the right number of rings to give. She clasped his hand eagerly as she drew him in.

  ‘Oh, it is good of you! I’m so worried. I say, don’t make a noise, will you? They complain, you know.’ She spoke in a harassed whisper.

  ‘Blast them, let them complain,’ said Wimsey cheerfully. ‘Why shouldn’t you make a row when George is upset? Besides, if we whisper, they’ll think we’re no better than we ought to be. Now, my child, what’s all this? You’re as cold as a pêche Melba. That won’t do. Fire half out – where’s the whisky?’

  ‘Hush! I’m all right, really. George—’

  ‘You’re not all right. Nor am I. As George Robey says, this getting up from my warm bed and going into the cold night air doesn’t suit me.’ He flung a generous shovelful of coals on the fire and thrust the poker between the bars. ‘And you’ve had no grub. No wonder you’re feeling awful.’

  Two places were set at the table – untouched – waiting for George. Wimsey plunged into the kitchen premises, followed by Sheila uttering agitated remonstrances. He found some disagreeable remnants – a watery stew, cold and sodden; a basin half-full of some kind of tinned soup; a chill suet pudding put away on a shelf.

  ‘Does your woman cook for you? I suppose she does, as you’re both out all day. Well, she can’t cook, my child. No matter, here’s some Bovril – she can’t have hurt that. You go and sit down and I’ll make you some.’

  ‘Mrs Munns—’

  ‘Blow Mrs Munns!’

  ‘But I must tell you about George.’

  He looked at her, and decided that she really must tell him about George.

  ‘I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to bully. One has an ancestral idea that women must be treated like imbeciles in a crisis. Centuries of the “women-and-children-first” idea, I suppose. Poor devils!’

  ‘Who – the women?’

  ‘Yes. No wonder they sometimes lose their heads. Pushed into corners, told nothing of what’s happening, and made to sit quiet and do nothing. Strong men would go dotty in the circs. I suppose that’s why we’ve always grabbed the privilege of rushing about and doing the heroic bits.’

  ‘That’s quite true. Give me the kettle.’

  ‘No, no, I’ll do that. You sit down and – I mean, sorry, take the kettle. Fill it, light the gas, put it on. And tell me about George.’

  The trouble, it seemed, had begun at breakfast. Ever since the story of the murder had come out, George had been very nervy and jumpy, and, to Shella’s horror, had ‘started muttering again.’ ‘Muttering’, Wimsey remembered, had formerly been the prelude to one of George’s ‘queer fits’. These had been a form of shell-shock, and they had generally ended in his going off and wandering about in a distraught manner for several days, sometimes with partial and occasionally with complete temporary loss of memory. There was the time when he had been found dancing naked in a field among a flock of sheep, and singing to them. It had been the more ludicrously painful in that George was altogether tone-deaf, so that his singing, though loud, was like a hoarse and rumbling wind in the chimney. Then there was a dreadful time when George had deliberately walked into a bonfire. That was when they had been staying down in the country. George had been badly burnt, and the shock of the pain had brought him round. He never remembered afterwards why he had tried to do these things, and had only the faintest recollection of having done them at all. The next vagary might be even more disconcerting.

  At any rate, George had been ‘muttering’.

  They were at breakfast that morning, when they saw two men coming up the path. Sheila, who sat opposite the window, saw them first, and said carelessly: ‘Hallo! who are these? They look like plain-clothes policemen.’ George took one look, jumped up and rushed out of the room. She called to him to know what was the matter, but he did not answer, and she heard him ‘rummaging’ in the back room, which was the bedroom. She was going to him, when she heard Mr Munns open the door to the policemen and then heard them inquiring for George. Mr Munns ushered them into the front room with a grim face on which ‘police’ seemed written in capital letters. George—

  At this point the kettle boiled. Sheila was taking it off the stove to make the Bovril, when Wimsey became aware of a hand on his coat-collar. He looked round into the face of a gentleman who appeared not to have shaved for several days.

  ‘Now then,’ said this apparition, ‘what’s the meaning of this?’

  ‘Which,’ added an indignant voice from the door, ‘I thought as there was something behind all this talk of the Captain being missing. You didn’t expect him to be missing, I suppose, ma’am. Oh, dear no! Nor your gentleman friend, neither, sneaking up in a taxi and you waiting at the door so’s Munns and me shouldn’t hear. But I’ll have you know this is a respectable house, Lord Knows Who or whatever you call yourself – more likely one of these low-down confidence fellers, I expect, if the truth was known. With a monocle, too, like that man we was reading about in the News of the World. And in my kitchen, too, and drinking my Bovril in the middle of the night – the impudence! Not to speak of the goings-in-and-out all day, banging the front door, and that the police come here this morning – you think I didn’t know? Up to something, that’s what they’ve been, the pair of them, and the Captain as he says he is – but that’s as may be. I dare say he had his reasons for clearing off, and the sooner you goes after him, my fine madam, the better I’ll be pleased, I can tell you.’

  ‘That’s right,’ said Mr Munns – ‘Ow!’

  Lord Peter had removed the intrusive hand from his collar with a sharp jerk which happened to cause anguish out of all proportion to the force used.

  ‘I’m glad you’ve come along,’ he said. ‘In fact, I was just going to give you a call. Have you anything to drink in the house, by the way?’

  ‘Drink?’ cried Mrs Munns on a high note; ‘the impudence! And if I see you, Joe, giving drinks to thieves and worse in the middle of the night in my kitchen, you’ll get a piece of my mind. Coming in here as bold as brass, and the Captain run away, and asking for drink—’

  ‘Because,’ said Wimsey, fingering his note-case, ‘the public-houses in this law-abiding neighbourhood are, of course, closed. Otherwise a bottle of Scotch—’

  Mr Munns appeared to hesitate.

  ‘Call yourself a man!’ said Mrs Munns.

  �
�Of course,’ said Mr Munns, ‘if I was to go in a friendly manner to Jimmy Rowe at the “Dragon”, and ask him to give me a bottle of Johnnie Walker as a friend to a friend, and provided no money was to pass between him and me, that is—’

  ‘A good idea,’ said Wimsey cordially.

  Mrs Munns gave a loud shriek.

  ‘The ladies,’ said Mr Munns, ‘gets nervous at times.’ He shrugged his shoulders.

  ‘I dare say a drop of Scotch wouldn’t do Mrs Munns’s nerves any harm,’ said Wimsey.

  ‘If you dare, Joe Munns,’ said the landlady, ‘if you dare go out at this time of night, hob-nobbing with Jimmy Rowe and making a fool yourself with burglars and such—’

  Mr Munns executed a sudden volte-face.

  ‘You shut up!’ he shouted. ‘Always sticking your face in where you aren’t wanted.’

  ‘Are you speaking to me?’

  ‘Yes. Shut up!’

  Mrs Munns sat down suddenly on a kitchen chair and began to sniff.

  ‘I’ll just hop round to the “Dragon” now, sir,’ said Mr Munns, ‘before old Jimmy goes to bed. And then we’ll go into this here.’

  He departed. Possibly he forgot what he had said about no money passing, for he certainly took the note which Wimsey absent-mindedly held out to him.

  ‘Your drink’s getting cold,’ said Wimsey to Sheila.

  She came across to him.

  ‘Can’t we get rid of these people?’

  ‘In half a jiff. It’s no good having a row with them. I’d do it like a shot, only, you see, you’ve got to stay on here for a bit, in case George comes back.’

  ‘Of course. I’m sorry for all this upset, Mrs Munns,’ she added, a little stiffly, ‘but I’m so worried about my husband.’

  ‘Husband?’ snorted Mrs Munns. ‘A lot husbands are to worry about. Look at that Joe. Off he goes to the “Dragon”, never mind what I say to him. They’re dirt, that’s what husbands are, the whole pack of them. And I don’t care what anybody says.’

 

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