I'll See You in Paris (13 page)

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Authors: Michelle Gable

BOOK: I'll See You in Paris
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“You don't like wars? What do you even know of wars? Pretty girl locked safely in a house? Miss Valentine, right before me.” Mrs. Spencer tightened her jaw. She aggressively wiped away tears that were not even there. “Right before me four people were blown to atoms. For ten days I was constantly seasick from the memory of the sight.”

“Blown to atoms.” Pru cringed. “Wonderful. Many thanks for such a detailed description.”

“You are so weak-livered! My only point is that in a kitchen much smaller than ours and with bombs exploding around me, I devised a gourmet spread for a group of twelve.”

“I'm sure you impressed everyone with your talents,” Pru said as the dog hurtled down from her lap and took to relieving himself on a nearby rug. “But we're not in Paris and there's no war. At least not here. We have other options for a holiday feast. Plus you hate Christmas. What did you tell me? It is more…”

“More a day of sad recording of changes come than of satisfied banter. But no matter. I'm doing this! We're doing this!”

The old woman sprang to her feet, dogs and eyedroppers flying. Without putting away the supplies or even changing out of her bedclothes, Mrs. Spencer grabbed a pair of boots and her old straw hat, and set out to town in her little black Austin.

“Dare I eat the feast?” Pru griped as she lifted herself from the ground. “Four medium cats, cooked in a red wine reduction sauce. Ouch! Damn it!”

She nearly tripped over a dog.

“So … many … animals…,” she said wearily and paused at the window.

Gazing out across the orchard, Pru placed both hands at her back, which ached from hunching over dogs. As she stretched, Pru noted how beautiful the property was that time of day. The sky was flat, the light draping across the frosted vines and branches. It hadn't snowed but they promised it soon would. Moments like these, the Grange was not so bad.

As Pru turned away from the window, something caught her eye: a flash of white. A chill shot through her body. The white was from a man's shirt.

After fumbling about for a pair of moccasins, Pru slipped on her shoes and tramped out across the yard, a coat wrapped tightly around her nightclothes. Pajamas in public were apparently de rigueur at the Grange.
Birds of a feather,
she thought with a smirk.

Suddenly, across the yard, the white flashed a second time.

Only the boy hoodlums, Pru told herself as her heart drummed. But not even she could buy her own lies.

To start, this person was inside the property, undeterred by the stone wall and its blanket of thorns. The figure was also taller and far better dressed than the neighborhood scallywags. Plus it was clearly a man, a grown adult. And he was walking straight toward her, his mouth stretched into a determined scowl.

 

Nineteen

THE GEORGE & DRAGON

BANBURY, OXFORDSHIRE, ENGLAND

NOVEMBER 2001

 

Because of her mother's transgressions, Gladys's first taste of being the subject of gossips worldwide came at the tender age of eleven. One could speculate that this early introduction to the vagaries of public life made her the woman she became. Dramatic. Attention-seeking. Forever paranoid she was being watched.

—J. Casper Augustine Seton,

The Missing Duchess: A Biography

“So that was Tom, right?” Annie asked. “That Pru saw in the garden?”

“You're under the assumption Tom was a real person, then.”

“I don't think Mrs. Spencer was nearly as crazy as she pretended to be. It was all part of her act.”

Gus smiled.

“That's a bold theory,” he said, rising to his feet. “This early into the story. Well, Miss Annie. As always, it's been a pleasure.”

He reached out a hand.

“Where do you think you're going? We're not done!”

“Sorry, my captivating new friend. As engaging as I find your company, I have an appointment to keep.”

“An appointment? What appointment? I don't believe you.”

“You might find this astounding but old men have obligations too, even ones that do not involve the swapping out of bandages and colostomy bags.”

“Sorry, Gus,” she said. “But I call BS.”

He chuckled and wound a plaid scarf around his neck.

“I'm sure it seems preposterous that another person would voluntarily meet with an old plonker like me,” he said. “Truly, what else do I need to accomplish other than to sit in a bar all day getting semipissed?”

“I didn't say that…”

“Oh, but it's true! Most of the time. But every once in a great long while I have a specific engagement to keep. You think I can hurtle this gracefully toward the grave on my own? No, there are doctors, dentists, and financial planners involved.”

Gus reached out his hand again. This time Annie reluctantly took it, but not before letting out a few grumbles.

“I've enjoyed our conversation,” he said. “I do hope to run into you again.”

Annie shook his hand, deliberating how she might manufacture another meet-up. She wanted more of his tale, something beyond the pages of transcript she had in her bag.

“Yeah, it's been swell,” she muttered. “But before you leave, tell me who Pru saw in the garden.”

“You've decided it's Tom. Let's leave it at that. It's probably better than the real story.”

“But the real story is what I want!”

“Tell me, Annie. Why do you care so much about the duchess? Or Pru? They're just a bunch of unknowns, most of them dead.”

“I told you. I'm a researcher.”

The lie was now so thoroughly absorbed Annie might as well have been taking it intravenously. She believed it with every part of her.

“Right,” Gus said. “But researching what, exactly?”

“Er, um, literature!”

“Literature,” he said with a small grunt. “As in all the literature?” He made a sweeping motion with his hands. “The full canon of written works? That seems like an awfully big theme from which to bite.”

“No, no. Ha, ha, ha.” God, her forced laughter sounded way too much like a donkey braying. “It's, er, um…” She thought of Eric. “War. The effect of war on cultures as revealed through prose.”

Annie smiled, feeling mildly pleased with herself. It sounded reasonable. She didn't know much about thesis statements but probably would've accepted the story if someone tried to hawk it to her.

“War through prose, huh?” he said.

“Yup.” Annie bobbed her head.

“And how does
The Missing Duchess
fit in?”

“Well, you see, it's an interesting study as it was written at the tail end of the Vietnam War.”

“By a Brit. And it wasn't published until several years after the war ended.”

“But its protagonist lived through two world wars. Also, the shooting of her mother's lover by her father. Love is war, right?”

“Hmm,” Gus said. “Interesting. Very interesting topic. Especially when one considers the background of Pru, who is not in the book but part of the story all the same.”

“Yes! Exactly! A happy accident.”

“You know, I did wonder if you were making it up, the research bit. I thought perhaps you had another reason for nosing around.”

“Ha!” Annie yapped again. “I can see where you might've thought that!”

She laughed some more because what else could she do?

“All right,” he said. “I'll tell you who Pru met in the garden. But not now. I really must go. Can you meet me tomorrow?”

“Sure! Yes! Of course! Tomorrow would be perfect.”

Gus eyed her warily, his brows cocked and crooked. He'd likely never encountered a literary researcher with such a spastic level of interest.

“Meet me in the morning,” he said. “Is eight o'clock too early for you?”

“Too early for a bar?” Annie said and glanced around. “Uh, yeah.”

“Give me some credit. I do go other places. Tomorrow we change locations. Eight o'clock. Meet me at the Grange.”

 

Twenty

 

GD: Of course my father shot Coco.

WS: Why do you say “of course”?

GD: The man was with my mother, when she was four days postpartum, having just birthed a child that was probably the visitor's and not the husband's! Coco was unbothered by Father's anger and so Father had to make a show. He shot Coco right through the couch.

WS: Do you mean “through the crotch”?

GD: Did you not hear me say “couch”?

WS: Is that a euphemism?

GD: No it's not a euphemism! I'd say pecker or nads or twigs and berries if that's what I meant.

WS: Yes, I suppose you would.

GD: It went like this. Coco hid behind the couch. My father shot him, three times. He died. There was a trial.

WS: Of worldwide fame.

GD: I'm not sure about “worldwide” but Henry James wanted to pen a book with Father as the primary character. After the trial, Daddy spent some time in prison. He was released and everyone eventually moved on. Everyone except dear old Dad. He died in a lunatic asylum, driven mad by remembering what he'd done. And as for me, mais en fin je suis la fille de l'assassin. That, dear writer, is how my story goes.

 

Twenty-one

THE GRANGE

CHACOMBE-AT-BANBURY, OXFORDSHIRE, ENGLAND

NOVEMBER 2001

 

“Mais en fin je suis la fille de l'assassin.”

Was this a stab at humor by Gladys Deacon? Or an excuse for her boorish behavior? One could hardly condemn the woman for her wild capers and socially devastating blunders. Poor thing, it was part of her destiny.

Mais en fin je suis la fille de l'assassin.

But in the end I am the daughter of the murderer.

—J. Casper Augustine Seton,

The Missing Duchess: A Biography

Annie stood near the gate, heaving as sweat trickled down the backs of her thighs. She was hot right then but the running shorts and windbreaker weren't going to cut it if she stopped moving. Her legs and arms were already goose-pimpled from the chill in the air.

Hopping in place, Annie checked her watch. Suddenly a voice shouted her name. Annie looked down Banbury Road and spotted Gus waving from around the bend.

“Over here!” he called. “I've gone round back!”

“I can see that,” she said, running toward him. When she reached his side she grabbed a tree to catch her breath.

“Hello,” he said, smiling dryly.

“Hi.”

“I didn't take you for a casual runner.”

“I'm not. I'm a most formal runner.”

What Annie was, was somebody in need of a reason to leave the hotel when Laurel wanted to sit around and sip tea. And wasn't that just her luck? The one time Annie had plans her mother did not. Laurel was too confused to question Annie's unexpected spurt of activity. Like Gus, she didn't take Annie for a casual runner, or a runner at all.

“Why are we all the way back here?” Annie asked, sides cramping as she suffered the consequences of her lack of exercise regimen. She really should've visited the college rec center at least once. “Is this a secret entrance or something?”

Without a reply, Gus turned and marched down the alley. Annie followed dutifully, like a puppy, her sneakers rolling over the gravel and rocks.

“You're awfully out of breath,” he noted. “For a ‘most formal' runner.”

“It's the backpack's fault,” she said, pointing behind her. “Brought it for, you know, snacks. Water. Provisions.”

“Provisions?” Gus cranked his head to look at her. “Where exactly did you jog from?”

“The Banbury Inn?”

“That's not a kilometer away!”

“But it's up a slight incline.”

She raised her forearm in a much steeper pitch than the road ever dared be.

“Yes,” Gus said. “Slight.
Very
slight. Ah. Here we are.”

He paused next to a narrow limestone building the color of toast.

“The rumored former abode of Tom himself,” he said.

Annie peered into the windows, which were broken through, just like at the main house. Inside, the cottage was bare save the various spider colonies camped out in the corners of the room.

“Well.” She stepped back. “Looks empty.”

“Yes. That's what happens when a property changes hands. I'd assume the main house is empty, too.”

It was, mostly, and she badly wanted to tell Gus what she'd found. Annie wanted to tell him about the revolver, the manuscript pages, and the books stacked inside a broken bed. And she wanted to ask what happened to the rest of it.

“When did Mrs. Spencer sell it?” Annie asked. “The house?”

“Well,
she
didn't,” he told her. “Mrs. Spencer died in the late seventies. The family auctioned off most of her things the year after. They raised a tidy sum. I recall such goodies as a Chaucer manuscript, a 1526 Erasmus, and a book of sexually explicit drawings by D. H. Lawrence.”


Lady Chatterley's Lover,
indeed.”

“The drawings fetched more than the Chaucer. Damned shame, because I wanted to get my hands on them but lacked the requisite funds.”

“You ol' perv,” Annie said and rolled her eyes. “So who bought the home?”

“A trust owns the building, according to public records. No one's done anything with it, as you can see.”

“Her family didn't want it?” she asked.

“S'pose not. Most of them were here, during the auction, to inspect the home and its contents. She had quite a few nieces and nephews.”

“Like Edith Junior?”

“She was her niece, yes, but Edith predeceased Mrs. Spencer. Edith Junior had three daughters herself,” Gus said. “All of them wealthy as the devil. They probably preferred the money over an old dump of an estate.”

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