Also by R. T. Raichev
The Hunt for Sonya Dufrette
The Death of Corinne
Assassins at Ospreys
The Little Victim
Constable & Robinson Ltd
3 The Lanchesters
162 Fulham Palace Road
London W6 9ER
First published in the UK by Constable,
an imprint of Constable & Robinson, 2010
First US edition published by SohoConstable,
an imprint of Soho Press, 2010
Soho Press, Inc.
853 Broadway
New York, NY 10003
Copyright © R. T. Raichev, 2010
The right of R. T. Raichev to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs & Patents Act 1988.
All rights reserved. This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out or otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
A copy of the British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data is available from the British Library
UK ISBN: 978-1-84901-122-8
US ISBN: 978-1-56947-633-8
eISBN: 978-1-56947-898-1
US Library of Congress number: 2009044017
Printed and bound in the EU
1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2
To Kirstinâthe very best of literary devotees
Author's Note
This is a work of fiction. All the characters are imaginary and bear no relation to any living person.
R. T. R.
Contents
4 The House of the Lurking Death
10 From the Life of the Detectives
12 The Bafflement of the Elusive Baronet
24 The Adventure of the Audacious Eavesdroppers
âGentlemenâthe Queen.' Major-General Hailsham held up his glass.
âThe Queen!' They all raised their glasses.
âHis Royal Highness, the Duke of Edinburgh.'
âThe Duke of Edinburgh!' They drank again. They had already toasted the regiment, twice.
âShame HRH couldn't be with us today.'
âTerrible shame. No question of him
not
wanting to be with us.'
âOf course not. Circumstances beyond his control.'
âHRH sent a message, saying he'll be with us in spirit.'
âHow frightfully thoughtful. Couldn't have wished for a better patron, what?'
âAbsolutely. Sound on every topic. The Army, the Navy, women, the Chinese, what's to be done about blacks, the
Cutty Sark
, the French, the global whatsitâam I missing something?'
âRain forests, the General Dental Council, the Mussulman menace, horses?'
âThank you, Savil. Yes. List as long as my arm. Practically endless. Horses? Horses
are
important, dammit. Can be a bit radical on occasion, true, but they
listen
to him, that's the bloody marvellous thing. They're not supposed to, they wouldn't admit to it, but they listen to him. HRH has ideas. Knows exactly what's to be done about things.'
âThey listened to him about Dianaâ'
âOf course they did. And a good thing too, Ormsby. They said they didn't, but of course they did. MI5, MI6, the Ministry of Defence, the old HO, the old FOâthey all listened to him.'
âConfounded incompetents, but he's got them all eating out of his hand.'
âThank God for that.'
âThank God for that. There'd have been no end of trouble if they'd let things take their course. “Lady Diana Al Fayed”
,
that's what she would have insisted on styling herself, some such nonsense.'
âDoesn't bear thinking about. The mother of the future King of England!'
âCouldn't allow that sort of thing.'
âOf course not. Pretty girl, good colour, but quite mad. Completely bonkers. Mixing with the wrong crowd and so on. Well, HRH saw to it. Knew where to draw the line.'
âHe is often misunderstood, mind, the liberal press tries poking fun at him, calls him gaffe-prone, a Nazi and I don't know what else, but he doesn't let that bother him one little bit. Well, there's nothing wrong with being radical, dammit.
Au contraire
. Somebody's
got
to be radical these days, wouldn't you say? Somebody's got to save us from tipping over the edge.'
âQuite.'
âAbsolutely.'
âThere's one subject HRH never broaches.' Colonel Speke cleared his throat. âSometimes a fellow asks an oblique kind of question, drops a heavy hint, but d'you know what?
He never gets an answer
.'
âYou mean â¦?'
â
Yes
.'
âOf course not. Out of bounds. Not the done thing.'
There was a pause as they all once more regarded the portrait on the wall.
âDidâwhat was the chappie's name now?âdo that one?' Brigadier Fielding asked. âNamby-pamby sort of chap. Never cared for him much, to tell you the truth, but they thought the world of him. Kept asking him over to Buck House. The sort of chap the Queen Mum favoured. You know. Beaton, that's it. He did them all, didn't he?'
âIt's an Annigoni, actually.'
âIs it? Is there anything you don't know, Payne?' Colonel Weldon glowered boozily at him.
âPayne knows all the answers.'
âNo, not really.' Major Payne made a self-deprecating grimace. âWish I did.' He was sitting at the distinguished âtop table'.
âHow he manages at his age I have no idea.' Colonel Speke shook his head. âNo, not Payne. Payne's a young man. I mean HRH. How he manages to do
so much
. Where does he find the
energy
? He's two years older than me, you know.'
âThey give him
something.
Regular course, I am told.' General Savil lowered his voice. âGerman medico practically lives at Buck House now. No one's supposed to know. Top secret. Reliable sourceâlady-in-waitingâfriend of m'wife'sâplay bridge togetherâsensible womanâgot a head on her shouldersâtalks in her cupsâonly way to get her going. They put him on a drip for two days, she says. He doesn't like it, grumbles a bit, but he submits, then he gets up and marches out, head held high, as good as new. As bright as a button. Roses in his cheeks and so on. Would create a stir, if it got round, so mum's the word. Regular as clockwork, I am told. On the highest authority.'
âThe last time he was here you could hear a pin drop the moment he opened his mouth. He hates it, absolutely hates it, terribly unassuming, wants things to carry on as per normal. Expects no credit. Wants everybody to have a good time What was it he said last time, d'you remember, Somerville? Ha-ha. It made us laugh. Remember? What
was
it?'
â
What d'you take me for? Some bloody oracle
?'
âThat's it, Denham. Ha-ha. How we roared. We weren't here then, actually, were we? Completely different place. The Savoy, I think. How we roared. It
was
the Savoy, wasn't it?'
âThe good old Savoy. Building like a 1930s radio set, you almost expect Lord Reith to toddle along in his dinner jacket and give you a lecture.
Some bloody oracle.
That was damned funny. Can't quite say why but it's damned funny. For some reason. What's this place called? I mean
this
place. Sorryâmy memory's completely gone. Total blackout. Memory's gone AWOL. Place has a name, hasn't it? All decent places have names.'
âClaridge's.'
âClaridge's, to be sure. Thank you, Payne. Good to have a young man around. Young Payne knows all the answers. You are such a clever fellow, Payne. The right man to have in a crisis.'
âNot at all.' Major Payne stole a look at his watch. He did not feel particularly flattered to be referred to as âyoung Payne', given the average age of everybody was about eighty-five. The amount of drinking that went on around him was quite astonishing, if not alarming.
âJesty's also a young man, but he's always busy, aren't you, Jesty? Always on the run. Oh, he's gone,' Colonel Speke glanced round in a puzzled manner. âWhere's Jesty gone?'
âGone AWOL, ha-ha.'
âWhat's become of Jesty, since he gave us all the slip,' murmured Payne.
âJesty always disappears without warning, have you noticed? Quite a trick he has. Quite a habit.' Savil cleared his throat. âThe usual, would you say?'
âMost likely. That's the kind of thing he likes to do. Styles himself “Beau”, apparently.'
âBeau Jesty, eh?'
â
Chacun à son gout
. I am inordinately fond of clay pigeon shooting myself. Well, Claridge's is as good a place as any other for that sort of thing.'
âOne of these days Jesty'll come a cropper, mark my word,' said Livingston-Gore.
âInteresting place, Claridge's. The King of Yugoslavia was born on the premises. Back in 1940-something. After Tito did his thing. The Communist takeover. Damned good wine, this. Why d'you keep looking at your watch, Payne? Haven't got a train to catch, have you? Don't tell us your lady wife keeps you on a short leash. Writes murders, doesn't she? Dangerous sort of woman to have round the house.'
âI was here, you know, when the King of Yugoslavia was born. I was chief of security. Had the whole floor cordoned off and declared Yugoslav territory. One of those emergency measures. Real crisis. Checked every bloody waiterâin case one or more of the champagne buckets contained a bomb. Every damned bell-boy too. Ha-ha.'
âWhy couldn't HRH be with us today?'
âBad back, poor fellowâpain more than a human being could bear, I was toldâon the highest authorityâpractically doubled up.'
âPoor fellow. Worried about Harry, that's what's got him down. First they drag the boy back from the Khyberâthen they ban him from Knightsbridge!'
âDon't be dramatic, Ormsby. They banned him from some club or other, that's all. Couldn't matter less. Bijou or Beaujolais, some such name. It's a
night
club, or so I understand. In Knightsbridge, that's correct. Good address.'
âBoujis, actually.'
âIs that so? The kind of thing you know, Payne!'
âI glance at the rags sometimes,' Payne said apologetically.
âMy niece met Harry once. In Knightsbridge, that's correct. Charming young fellow, she tells me. A little on the boisterous side, pinched her apparently. Full of beans, as we used to say. Enjoys a drink better than anything else, perhaps, but oodles of charm.'
âOodles of charm. Ahem. That thing they suggested about Hewitt â¦?'
âTittle-tattle, Livingston-Gore. Rank nonsense. Complete rot. Nothing in it whatsoever. What d'you say, Knatchbull?'
âFearful piffle. Hewitt deserves to be shot.'
âCharming young rascal, eh? Eye for the girls, like HRH. I mean Harry.'
âThat's why HRH has taken it so badly. Damned fond of the boy.'
âDamned fond.'
âNothing namby-pamby about Harry.'
âNothing namby-pamby about Harry.'
âThat's what we want to hear.' Major-General Hailsham nodded. âLet's drink to it, shall we? I'd like to propose a very special kind of toast.' He picked up his glass.
âGentlemenâPrince Harry.'
âPrince Harry. Hurrah.'
âHurrah!'
âCry God for Harry, England and St George.'
âJolly well put, Payne. Has a familiar ring to it ⦠Your own?'
The regimental reunion luncheon was exactly what Major Payne had expected it to beâglorious grub, the best of wines, incredibly inconsequential talkâeverybody sounded as though they had sat at the feet of Ionesco or Beckett. Virtually interchangeable, if one shut one's eyes and just listened. It didn't matter who said what. Age and the demon drink had something to do with it. Payne didn't exactly
revel
in the company of his brother officers, though regimental dinners were something he was apt to attend, out of habit rather than loyalty or any particular affection. His accounts of past regimental dinners had made Antonia laugh, so now he tried to keep mental notes of what was being said. Was the superannuated army officer an intrinsically British phenomenon? He rather thought it was. They didn't have
quite
the same thing in France or in Germany. Why did they have to shout so? Enough to burst one's eardrums. Well, some of them were quite deaf â¦
Major Payne cleared his throat. âWould you allow me an observation? At our last reunion most of the fellows had moustaches. Now there are only two chaps with moustaches. Jesty and the Brigadier.'
âBy Jove, you are right. You are always right, I can't help noticing.' Colonel Speke squinted around. â
Yes
. How perfectly extraordinary. Damned curious, in fact. No moustaches!'
âThe mystery of the ⦠diminishing moustaches, eh, Payne?' Brigadier Fielding cocked a knowing eyebrow. âPerhaps you should investigate what's behind it? That's what you like doing best, someone said. Investigating. Finding out about things. You and your lady wife. That's what a little bird told me.'
âNot true. Nothing but silly rumours. People like to make up all kinds of stories.'
âI say, Payne, would you like one of my cigars? You strike me as the kind of fellow who would appreciate an authentic Montecristo.'
âThank you, Fielding, I think I would. If you'll excuse me â¦' Major Payne rose.
âNo moustaches,' Denham said thoughtfully. âPayne's absolutely right. Payne's hit the nail on the head, as usual. That's what I've been thinking.
Standards are slipping
. Where are you off to, Payne? No problems with the waterworks, I trust? A young man like youâ'
âNo, nothing of the sort. Got to clear my head,' Major Payne explained.