Mum's the Word (18 page)

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Authors: Dorothy Cannell

Tags: #Mystery, #Humour

BOOK: Mum's the Word
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Were there no depths to which he would not sink? Over by the window was our luggage, rescued from the boat house. How did I know he, and not Pepys, was responsible? Easy. The traitor had left me a note on the dressing table. I read it quickly, then ripped it into confetti. He hoped I had a
happy day! And signed off with kisses. Ha! Did he already suspect that his fling with that woman would soon burn out in a blaze of passion? Was I to be kept around like a hot water bottle in case the central heating went out? The man must be made to pay.

Looking out the window at the water surrounding the island, I toyed with the idea of dying—from some rare river fungus, exacerbated by marital neglect. Let him put that kind of remorse in his pipe and smoke it. No! I mustn't indulge in these fantasies. Nothing must disrupt the even tenor of my misery. I had my child to consider. And truth be told, I felt wretchedly fit. Which left me no choice but to have a bath and get myself dressed in preparation for a flagrant affair with the first man to cross my path. My hopes weren't high because my skirt wouldn't button and I had taken no more than a couple of steps when I heard a rip. Oh, well! The sexy slit from knee to thigh went with my new image. I had stopped tearing my hair out and let it hang loose.

Fate handed Mr. Brown to me at the head of the staircase. His handsome face was a thoroughfare of emotions. None of them happy.

“Good morning,” I said, batting my eyes at him.

“Yes, but
is
it a good morning?” Shoulders slumped, he made a half-hearted attempt at pulling my name out of the hat.

“Ellie Haskell,” I helped out. “Also married to a candidate.”

“Right—you're not the French one, or the one in orange trousers, but the pregnant one. Tell me, aren't you up to here”—he thumped a fist under his chin—“with this un-American, godless bunch of mumbo-jumbos?”

I reached up through my own misery to assuage his. “Mr. Brown, The Mangé Society is not a religious cult.”

“We don't know what it is, do we? The Frenchwoman told me when I was downstairs trying to force down some breakfast as how the latest candidate is a witch.”

Et tu, Solange?

“Mrs. Haskell, have you no fear? Don't you wonder what your husband will be turned into behind closed doors? Will you even know him when you get him back? Think of your child!” Mr. Brown's voice petered out. Accidentally, or
on purpose, he had brought my face into focus, causing his to pucker in revulsion. He was looking at the slit up my skirt and my wanton hair as though I were a disease his Lois might catch. I wanted to shout, You're unhappy because your wife is in love with the idea of being a Mangé! Big deal! My husband is in love with a Mangé. And you, sir, have blown your chances! I'd sooner take a fast-acting depressant than have an affair with you!

I scraped up a smile. “If you'll excuse me …”

“Don't expect to see your husband downstairs,” he said glumly. “Today's meetings are already in progress.”

Perfect. I would rather walk the plank than descend those stairs to collide with Ben … and his Valicia. I wasn't ready to see anyone or to rub shoulders with them in the dining room. I needed time. Time for a face lift, time to learn to play the piano, time to acquire fluency in six languages. A witty, charming, accomplished woman can smile in the face of betrayal.

I abandoned Mr. Henderson Brown. Two doors down from the bathroom, tucked into an alcove, I found … a lift. Well, why not pamper yourself, Ellie dear? After all, you're pregnant. Opening the narrow wooden door I found another door—the brass accordion type, which separated me from a wooden platform suspended in the dark shaft. Careful. Sometimes the morning sickness had included a dash of vertigo. Ellie, you don't have to do this. Take the stairs for exercise! Nonsense! This was an adventure! Entering the elevator cage with its six-foot-high, iron mesh sides, I refused to believe I was about to become a prisoner of my own making. A light came on. The floor buttons were conveniently at hand. An electrical hum glided up my arm, a groan of ropes being churned over a rusty caster. Three, two, one: rocket descent. My insides lurched up as the floor dropped down. I gripped the sides of the cage, then dragged my hands inside; the walls of the shaft pressed closer with every downward jolt.

A half century later I reached the main hall. Amazing how all was the same as last night—the oppressive opulence of mahogany, the pawnbroker candelabra, the breathless air. Melancholy Mansion. Home of the Black Cloud. Might anything have been different if I had visited the Tramwells and
spoken with Chantal? What was it she had said about my having to find the answer within myself?


Bonjour
, Ellee! You travel in style.” Solange might have been clipped from the glossy page of a fashion magazine, circa 1789. She glided toward me, the cape collar of her cloak gown falling to her elbows; a wide black belt cinched in her waist. She wore bold black earrings and her hair was plaited into a knot low on her neck. “Why, what hurts you,
ma cherie
?” She touched a flame-coloured nail to my cheek. “You look fit to cry.”

I very nearly threw my arms around her neck and sobbed out the whole dreary tale. Saved by the fear that my skirt would split further up my leg, also that, being French, Solange might think it not only acceptable, but
tres bien
for a man to have a mistress. The last thing I needed was to be called a spoil sport.

“These shadows under your eyes, you too find sleep hard to catch after the big scream. But I theenk we not have to be jolted up in our beds again. Mr. Grogg and Mademoiselle Divonne are gone. Never the word of good-bye. Never the word of good-bye, unless …” She fidgeted my collar straight. “… I count what I find on my pillow last night as the bon voyage.”

“Escargot?” I asked.


Non! That
would be the good party favour. Someone take my Vincent's prize recipe for
La Potage Grandmère
and stab to zee pillow. My Victor is afraid to say ‘boo!' because he think it some Mangé exam of will.”

“Oh, dear.” For no good reason I was remembering Ben's mentioning that Bingo had asked “to be excused” several times during the evening.

We went into the dining room together. Having thought I never wanted to eat again, I discovered I was not immune to the enticing aroma drifting up from the sideboard buffet. “Did Pepys take the Groggs over to Mud Creek in a boat?” I asked Solange.

“What? Allow in my boat those who smuggled baking powder into this house! Over their dead bodies!” Laughter crackled. Sunlight was less kind to Pepys than the comtesse. Ice blue eyes peeped through lids resembling button holes frayed at the edges. His wrinkled face and bald head could
have been a rubber mask—a couple of sizes too big. The rest of him was a sackful of loose bones shaken into a dark suit.

“How did Jim Grogg and Divonne leave?” I asked. I hadn't imagined the missing knives. Only four now hung in the elaborate display on the wall. Two brackets were empty.

“Don't know, neither care a tin nickel!” Pepys' eyes rolled upward until I could see only their sallow whites. “Have enough on my plate wondering what my sterling new employer, Miss Mary
Faith
, is doing in her room all day.”

“Making of you the immortal?” Solange poured herself coffee.

Pepys shuddered. “Her mother now, what a difference! Never a moment's sitdown when Miss Theola's in residence! Through the house like a tornado, tripping on her feathery fripperies. Knocking ornaments off the piano. Shouting for Jeffries and me to join her in a sing song.” His calloused hands adjusted some grapes on a platter of smoked salmon. “Enough! You ladies will excuse me if I shuffle off.” Fists clenched, arms bent at the elbows, he did a slow jog out the door.

“Worry not.” The comtesse set down her coffee cup, lips curving into a three-quarter smile. “We have not seen the last of him. My Vincent tells me Pepys is instructed by Valicia X to take any who wish to the mainland. No skin off his knees. He has to collect Mees Rumpson's luggage anyway. I go now to put on a new face. Mrs. Hoffman comes with; so you also, Ellee, please!”

I promised and she left. Well, why not? Mud Creek did number among its attraction the black rental car. The keys were in my bag along with the infamous traveller's cheques. Wouldn't it be best for everyone concerned if I slid behind the wheel and drove off into the sunset?

“Nobility does not become you, Ellie!” Aunt Astrid was so fond of saying. My mother had put it a different way: “Darling, with your nose up in the air you can't see where you're going.” A tear dribbled down that nose and plopped onto my lips. Curses! My eyelashes would shrink to nothing. What was that about starve a fever, feed a broken heart?

I was hovering indecisively between two chafing dishes set out on the black oak sideboard, when in came Jeffries.
Luckily the room was shadowy. Jeffries wouldn't notice I had been crying.

“What you blubbering about?”

“I'm allergic to dust,” I flared back.

She was the spitting image of Crosspatch the fairy. Her maid's uniform did as much for her as my tutu had done for me when I was eight years old and about her height—in both directions. Those horsehair curls and a face like a doorknocker! She was to be congratulated for not taking one look in the mirror and going to bed for life. Without flexing a bicep she had driven me back from the sideboard and was standing guard over the assembly line of silver chafing dishes and domed platters. Did I need a ticket to be served? Oh, crumbs! She lifted the lid and the most marvelous aroma of tomato and herbs, fortified with bacon, steamed forth. She stirred with a massive spoon and moved on to raise another lid. This time the aroma caramelized on my tongue. Brandied fruit baked into a sticky sponge.

My stomach rumbled.

“You say som'at?” Jeffries wielded a spoon that had to be taller than she in a pan of scrambled eggs, rich with cheese and cream and chives. “Someone standing on your tongue?”

“I'll take a lit—make that a
lot
of everything.”

Fixing me with her walnut eyes, she jabbed a finger at the three plates I held out. “Collecting for your bottom drawer?”

“Eggs is eggs and tomato is tomato and never the twain shall meet.”

“Ain't you the oddball!” Surprisingly, she made it sound like a compliment. “And I don't suppose you go for paper plates either.”

“No, I don't.”

She spooned eggs onto one of my plates, white china with a blue rim. “I tell Pepys that paper plates has done more to bring down the good old U.S.A. than anything else. Back in the days when I was a dresser to Theola Faith and His Nuttyness was doorman at the Palace Theatre, people
knew
how to party.”

I handed over another plate. “What is she like—Miss Faith? I got the impression from something someone said” (best not to mention Mary) “that you don't see a lot of her.”

In the manner of a revolving door, Jeffries went back the other way—into unpleasantness. “She's a boss—that's what she's like! Any more I won't say. Not while that woman who calls herself a
daughter
is in this house. Here the walls don't just have ears, they got mouths too!” Her vehemence had me backing away from her. “We're in that book of hers you know, me and Pepys. Calls us by different names—to protect the innocent. Don't that beat all? Think I wouldn't know myself anywhere? Bouncing curls and a pixie smile. You tell me you ain't looking at it?”

Quick! Grab for a change of topic. “This must be a busy time for you, but at least you are down two with the Groggs gone. Who took them to Mud Creek?”

“Wasn't me. So what's your guess?”

“I …” Backing away from her serving spoon.

“And don't hold your breath for any of the candidates to own up that they stuck their oar in the river. You heard the rules about none of them being allowed to leave the island. All you auxilliary folk have played dumb, so the only one left would be
her
.”

“Valicia X?”

“Not likely! She's afraid of water.”

“I see … Mary …” Dragging out one of the throne chairs, I sat in solitary splendour at the table. Some habits are hard to break. I was worrying about Ben. Would he have been so rash as to row the Groggs to freedom had he spotted them standing forlorn on the shore when he went down to the boathouse for our luggage? Acts of derring do appeal to him.

“Food not good enough for you?” Jeffries was at my shoulder with the coffee pot.

“Delicious!”

“Always stare at the wall, do you?”

“No.” I removed my elbow from something soggy. “Last night I happened to glance in here and there were six swashbuckler knives on that wall. Now there are only three.”

A bloodcurdling scream ripped from Jeffries' lips. I caught the coffee pot just in time. She was hopping from foot to foot, face twisted into the rage of a gnome who comes home to find all his spells stolen. “First someone tampering with the rules and now this! Those knives were used in
Melancholy Mansion
!”

“Really!” I gripped the seat of my chair. “Do you mind my asking if you often give that scream?”

“Primal yell. Psychiatrist's orders. Sometimes I can go days without giving vent but I was overcome twice by the healthy impulse last night and—”

Her next words were lost. The room did not possess an electric ceiling fan, but suddenly it was as though one were turned on full blast. Two of my plates leaped in the air and the coffee pot went into another skid. We had been invaded by the ubiquitous pigeon. Our feathered friend must have been hiding behind the curtains, eavesdropping on our conversation. But what was this …? I was seeing double! There were two of them. Around they went in a power play, beating me into the submission position, arms over my head.

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