Read The Governor's Lady Online
Authors: Norman Collins
âI put it to you that you
did
want to run into someone, Mr. Henley,' he said. âWho was it that you went to meet?'
The A.D.C. was sweating again. He had gone damp and sticky all over. There was a signet ring on his left hand, and he kept twisting it nervously round between his thumb and forefinger.
Mr. Das took that for another good sign.
âI didn't go to meet anyone.'
Mr. Das paused.
âWas the kitchen boy a friend of yours, Mr. Henley?' he asked.
âHe was about the camp. I'd spoken to him.'
âAnd was that as far as the friendship went?'
The A.D.C. drew down the corners of his mouth. He was staring straight at Mr. Das, looking him full in the eyes, and not answering. It was obvious that he did not intend to answer.
But this did not matter in the slightest. Mr. Das had been waiting, preparing for this moment, all the way along. And, now that it had come, he was ready for it.
Still with the same fixed smile upon his face, he started to address the A.D.C. again.
âMr. Henley,' he said, âI put it to you that everything that you have said in this Court has been lies. All lies, and nothing but lies. It wasn't an attack of dysentery that drove you from the tent, because you never had dysentery, did you? You left the tent because you wished to see
someone. That someone was the kitchen boy. It was by prior arrangement that you met him, wasn't it? And you chose the African latrine because it was so close to his quarters, so convenient for him. All that is correct, is it not, Mr. Henley?'
The sweat that had been forming on the A.D.C.'s face had begun to trickle. Even from where Mr. Ngono was sitting, he could see little rivulets running down. While Mr. Ngono watched, he saw the A.D.C. pass the back of his hand across his forehead: it came away glistening.
âIt is not correct.'
Mr. Das looked perfectly cool: he wasn't even sweating.
âI put it to you, Mr. Henley, that you were there to meet your accomplice. The accomplice was the kitchen boy. You had got it all worked out, hadn't you?'
âWe'd got nothing worked out.'
The A.D.C. had interrupted at last. It did not, however, sound in the least like his own voice. Usually he was rather quietly spoken.
Mr. Das was not disconcerted. Eyes shut, he was reconstructing the whole affair.
âSir Gardnor had dropped you, hadn't he?' he went on, in the same musical voice that had annoyed the Chief Justice when he first heard it. âHe was going to leave you behind, wasn't he? And I put it to you that you had decided to get your own revenge. You had decided to kill him, hadn't you?'
The Chief Justice raised his forefinger.
âDo what to him, Mr. Das?' he asked.
âKill him, m'lud.'
The Chief Justice lowered his hand again.
âThank you,' he said. âI did not hear you. You may proceed.'
Mr. Das's eyes were open by now.
âAnd when you had killed him, stabbed him with his own paper-knife, you put the rest of your plan into operation. You had already bribed the kitchen boy, paid him money, hadn't you, Mr. Henley? And for one reason and for one reason onlyâto put suspicion on himself by running away. You knew that he'd never be found again, not out there in all that jungle. That was why you met him in the latrine that night, wasn't it? To tell him that you'd done your bit.'
The A.D.C. had gone very pale.
âNo' was all he said.
âThen why did you meet him there?' Mr. Das demanded.
At that moment, the centre fan gave a shudder that set the blades vibrating. The rattle made everyone look upwards. But there was nothing to see. The fan had started to revolve quite normally again.
Dinner was now over, and Mr. Frith sat facing Mr. Drawbridge across the width of the small table at the end of the long dining-room.
It had been a short, simple sort of meal: in Sir Gardnor's day there would have been two, possibly three, more courses. Also, the small table would never have been used at all. Whenever Mr. Frith had dined alone with Sir Gardnor, they had always been separated by an immense distance of mahogany, with the candlesticks and the silver pheasants and the big rose bowl cutting them off almost entirely from each other.
As it was, the smoke from the pipe that Mr. Drawbridge was lighting kept drifting into Mr. Frith's face. It was an old pipe, charred round the rim, and burnt down on one side where the match always went. Lighting a pipe in the dining-room was another thing that would never have happened in Sir Gardnor's day.
âDid the right thing, of course,' Mr. Drawbridge remarked. âSent a note down asking us to excuse him. Said he would be staying in his room this evening.'
Mr. Frith roused himself. The day had been an exhausting one, just sitting there in Court listening. Now that it was finished, moments of sleepiness kept coming over him.
âDon't wonder,' he replied. âCan't see how he can live it down. Not after all that native latrine stuff.'
Mr. Drawbridge nodded.
âToo bad really,' he said. âI'm told everyone knew he was that way. But you don't have to make a thing of it. Very dirty of Counsel to play it up like that.'
âDirty sort of Counsel,' Mr. Frith observed. âThat's why they got him out here.'
âAll Talefwa's doing, I suppose.'
Mr. Frith leant forward as though he were afraid of eavesdroppers.
âHand in glove,' he replied. âAnyhow, the C.J. spotted it. Cuts him down to size, doesn't it, just being interpreter?'
âHow did the jury take itâthe bit about the A.D.C., I mean?'
âOh, they got the message all right. Probably all new to some of them. Weren't all regular Residency types, you know.'
âAnd did they resent itâcoming from an Indian, I mean?'
âSlit his throat tomorrow if they got the chance. All twelve of them. All eleven, I should say. Don't know about young Ngono. He's like a kid at his first circus.'
Mr. Drawbridge had passed the port bottle back in Mr. Frith's direction. He filled up his glass again. It wasn't really his drink, port. But it would do for now; do, until they got round to the whisky later. Whisky, he knew, was the only thing that would really revive him, put him back on his form again.
âThink they'll fall for the idea of the kitchen boy being mixed up in the murder?' Mr. Drawbridge asked. âClever of Das to bring it up in that way. Bound to leave a doubt in their minds.'
âOh, he's clever all right. Grant you that much.'
Mr. Frith had spilt some of the port down his shirt-front, and had to start mopping at it with his napkin. Mr. Drawbridge sat watching him.
âThen how d'you think it's all going?'
âDifficult to say. Very difficult. Getting it all their own way at the moment.' He paused. âWish our A.-G. had got a bit more guts in him,' he added. âTaking it all too quietly for my liking. Noâ
whoosh!'
Mr. Frith still had his port glass in his hand as he pronounced the word. It was careless. And too emphatic. Mr. Drawbridge had to begin dabbing at the tablecloth as well.
âReally? Only seen the transcript, myself,' he told him. âRead all right to me.'
But Mr. Frith had become despondent.
âDon't like to think of Lady Anne in the box,' he said. âNot with the other fellow firing the questions. Might say anything, you know.'
Mr. Drawbridge only smiled.
âI don't think there'll be any trouble with her,' he replied. âNever does to go for a woman. He wouldn't want to put the jury's backs
His pipe had gone out, and he was at work lighting it again.
âIt's Stebbs tomorrow, isn't it?' he asked. âHe ought to be all right. Seems steady enough to me.'
âOh, yes. I'm not worried about him. Damn it all, he
saw
it.'
Tomorrow had come; and, so far, things in the courtroom were moving quite smoothly.
âAnd what did you do, Mr. Stebbs, when you heard Lady Anne scream?'
The Attorney-General asked the question in that quiet, conversational tone of his that Mr. Frith found so unconvincing.
âI jumped out of bed and ran over.'
âImmediately?'
âImmediately.'
âNo hanging about to get some clothes on?'
âNo.'
âHow were you dressed then?'
âI was in my pyjamas.'
âAnd how far was your tent from Sir Gardnor's?'
âAbout twenty yards.'
âWas it a clear run, or were there any obstructions?'
âPerfectly clear.'
âAnd could you see where you were going?'
âNo difficulty at all.'
âThen it can't have taken you very long, can it? How long, in fact, did elapse between hearing the scream and reaching Sir Gardnor's tent? A minute?'
âMuch less.'
âHalf-a-minute, then?'
âLess.'
âLess? A quarter-of-a-minute, perhaps?'
âNot more. I got there as quickly as I could.'
âSo in a quarter-of-a-minute you had reached the doorway. Was the flap open?'
âNo. It was closed.'
âHow was it closed?'
âOnly loosely. The cords had been looped together on the outside.'
âYou did say on the
outside?
'
âI did.'
âAnd “looped” you said. Do you mean “looped” or “knotted”?'
âYou could call it a sort of knot, I suppose. But it wasn't tied tight, or anything like that.'
âThen you had no difficulty in undoing it?'
âNone whatever. The ends just came apart.'
âSo it didn't hold you up in any way?'
âNot at all. I went straight in.'
âHow far did you, in fact, go?'
âThere was a sort of little passage-way inside the tent. I had to get to the end of it before I could see what was going on.'
âAnd what was going on?'
âSir Gardnor was at his desk, sir. Dead.'
âWas he alone at the time?'
âNo, sir.'
âWho was with him?'
Harold shifted his position slightly. Where he was standing he could just see the white corner of the Mimbo blanket over the edge of the dock-rail.
âOld Moses,' he said.
âWhat exactly was Old Moses doing? Tell the Court in your own words, please.'
It was the same low, almost casual, voice that the Attorney-General was using. But it was not without its effect. The Court was suddenly as silent as it had been when Mr. Das had so dramatically thrown his papers down.
âHe was bent over the back of Sir Gardnor's chair. He was stabbing him. There was blood everywhere.'
In the quiet of the court room, Harold became uncomfortably aware of the sound of his own voice: he seemed to be listening to himself,
âCould you see clearly?'
âAbsolutely clearly.'
âNo possibility of your being mistaken?'
âNone whatever.'
âAnd where was the wound that was being inflicted?'
âRight up on the shoulder. Where it joins the neck.'
He raised his hand instinctively and touched the spot with his finger.
âAnd could you actually see the weapon?'
âOnly the handle. The blade was inside.'
âYou mean it was just sticking there? Was no one touching it?'
Harold lowered his eyes for a moment: he found this bit distasteful.
âOld Moses was.'
âAnd was his hand merely resting on it?'
âNo, sir. He was grasping it.'
Harold raised his arm as he was speaking and involuntarily clenched his fist.
The Attorney-General looked at him closely.
âWould you turn, please, so that his Lordship and the jury can both see.'
Harold turned: the same uncomfortable feeling had come over him. He seemed to be watching himself as well as listening, now.
But already the A.-G. was speaking again: in the same, curiously detached voice, he was ambling on.
â “Grasping”, I think you said. Was it a good firm grip?'
âIt was.'
âConsiderable muscular power behind it?'
âConsiderable.'
âHow do you know?'
âBecause I tried to pull his hand away.'
âAnd what did Old Moses do?'
âHe struggled. He wouldn't let go of it.'
The Attorney-General pursed up his lips and nodded as though he were savouring the reply.
âHe wouldn't let go of it,' he repeated slowly. Then, just when Mr. Ngono thought that the Attorney-General had finished, he apparently remembered something.
âWere you alone all this time?' he asked.
âNo, sir.'
âWho else was there?'
âLady Anne.'
âAnd was Lady Anne anywhere near Sir Gardnor?'
âNo, sir. She was right over on the other side.'
âOn the other side of the desk?'
âNo, sir. On the other side of the marquee. Where the ladies' quarters joined on.'
The Attorney-General bent down and picked up a large folded sheet.
âI have here a scale plan of the marquee,' he said. âIt shows the position
of the desk and of the ladies' quarters. That would mean that Lady Anne was some thirty feet away, would it not?'
âAbout that, sir.'
âAnd was Lady Anne simply standing there?'
âYes, sir.'
âShe didn't come forward to help you in any way?'
âShe didn't move, sir. She had her hands up to her face. She was covering up her eyes.'
âAnd it was Lady Anne you heard scream?'
âYes, sir.'
âYou are certain about that?'
âPositive.'
âThank you. I have no more questions.'
He looked across at the jury as he said it. Then, with a little shrug, he hitched up his trousers and sat down. Once seated, he closed his eyes as if he had lost all interest in the case.