Authors: Mark Timlin
âDo what you can.'
âI will. So what's the plan for today?'
âI'm going into the office and Catherine wants to do some shopping. Stick to her like glue.'
âEven in the changing room.'
âDon't be funny.'
âDoes she pay, by the way? Or busk it, like you?' I couldn't resist it.
Elizabeth blushed again, a real cherry. âI'd rather you didn't mention that, if you don't mind. That was before Daddy died. Things have changed. I don't do that now.'
âI'll keep that our little secret,' I said.
âGood.' She abandoned the toast, pushed back her chair and made for the door. She looked at her watch. It was eight fifty.
âWill you wait here for Catherine, and then go along with what she wants to do for the rest of the day?'
I nodded and lit a cigarette. After another cup of coffee my hangover slowly started to subside but I still wasn't ready for food.
The next half-hour was an interesting lesson in how the other half lives. I was offered breakfast at least three times by Miranda and Courtneidge who popped in and out with trays of food that no one was there to eat. I asked Miranda what was up, and she told me that it was the custom of the household to lay out a huge breakfast however many of the family were at home. I asked what happened to the leftovers and she told me they went into the bin. Jesus, I though, conspicuous consumption.
The next time she came in with more coffee I asked her where the rest of the family was. She told me that Mr David had gone to the office and his wife never ate breakfast and Mr Simon took his in bed.
Catherine came down at nine thirty. She was wearing very baggy blue jeans rolled high above the ankle, a short red T-shirt that exposed an inch or two of smooth skin above the waistband of the trousers, and black spike-heeled shoes over red socks. She apologised nicely for her lateness. She seemed fully recovered from the previous evening and piled a plate high with enough fry-up to satisfy a navvy. âHungry?' I asked.
âRavenous. You?'
âNo, I've got a bit of a hangover.'
âNever get them myself,' she said. âI've always thought they were overrated.'
âIf you never get them, how do you know?' I asked as I looked at the food.
She shrugged and bit into a piece of kidney. I shuddered and poured more coffee.
âI don't know how to say this,' she said after she chewed and swallowed the food. âBut I owe you one for last night.'
âDon't mention it.'
âBut someone tried to run me down.'
âNot necessarily.'
âBut that car nearly hit me, you saw it.'
âI also saw a bloke holding a gun on the way in, except it wasn't a gun, was it? It was a Nikon 35mm with a pistol grip and I could have killed the poor bastard on the strength of it.'
âI'm sorry. I'm being a bit of a nuisance, aren't I?'
âI'm getting well paid,' I said.
âMoney isn't everything.' Only fuckers with loads ever say that.
I changed the subject. âElizabeth is very worried about you.'
âI know.'
âShe wants me to guard your body from here on in. I told her what you told me last night about the telephone calls you've been getting.'
âI wish you hadn't.'
âI had to. We both want to know who's threatening you.'
âI have no idea.'
âAre you sure?'
âOf course.'
âThink about it.'
âDid you agree to be my bodyguard?' she asked, evading the question.
âI'm here, aren't I?'
âThank God, I'm so pleased. Have you got a gun?'
âYes.'
âCan I see it?'
âWhy?'
âBecause I want to.'
âYou're the boss.' I took the Baby B from its ankle holster and held it up to show her. She got up to get a better view. She ran her fingers along the short blue barrel and looked at me through hooded eyelids. I swear to God it turned me on, hangover or no hangover.
When she spoke her voice was husky. âWould you use it?' For a minute I didn't know if she was referring to the gun or what.
âAs a last resort,' I said.
We stood there in silence for a moment. âI thought we were going shopping.' I put the gun away.
She snapped out of it. âYes, we are,' she said and the moment had gone.
I hate shopping. My spree the previous day had been done on my toes and took forty minutes max. I just knew that Catherine was a serious shopper.
And so she was, a real pro. We shopped all the way from Covent Garden to Knightsbridge, touching base in Bond Street and St Christopher's Place. She shopped with manic intensity and pretty soon the boot of the Rolls was full and parcels were intruding onto the back seat.
I trailed after her like a pet poodle. Yes, I carried some bags but I kept an eye out to see if we were followed and I saw no one.
âI haven't been shopping since my father died,' she said as we stopped for Bloody Marys at the Connaught. âYou must be good for me.' And she touched my cheek with her fingertip.
I won't say that I didn't like it, because I did.
We lunched in Beauchamp Place and had tea at the Savoy. We got back to Curzon Street around five and I went off to soak my weary feet in the bath.
âDinner's at eight,' she told me as we parted at her door. âBe there or be square.'
âI'll be there,' I said.
Dinner was an unforgettable experience, as were most of the meals I took at Curzon Street. But this one was the worst. I crawled out of the bath about six fifteen and wandered about the room in clean boxers for a while, smoking and sipping at a beer. I was sitting on the bed and running the previous two days' events through my mind when the telephone on the bedside table rang. It was Elizabeth on the internal line inviting me to meet the family in the drawing room at seven for drinks. Another bloody room with a title of its own, I thought.
I changed into a new, navy blue suit, pale shirt and patterned tie. It took me some time to find the drawing room but I eventually heard the sound of conversation from behind a closed door on the ground floor. I pushed the door open and rolled in feeling as sharp as a new razor blade. The three people on the other side were togged up like they were off to a night at the opera. I felt as under-dressed as a lettuce leaf that had missed the oil and vinegar boat.
The three, two men and a woman, were all strangers to me; neither Elizabeth nor Catherine were anywhere to be seen.
âSorry,' I said, standing at the doorway. âBut the invitation said “come as you are”.'
Three pairs of eyes swung towards me and I gave the owners the benefit of my teeth in a big, disarming grin.
âHow fortunate you weren't in the shower when it arrived,' said a tall, willowy fellow in a white tux and black tie, who was half folded up against the mantelpiece of the dead fireplace. He held a cigarette languidly in one hand; a half-full cocktail glass was tilted in the other. His hair was dirty blond and a fringe flopped in an untidy comma over one eye. I knew at once we were going to be bosom pals before the night was out.
âI almost was,' I said.
âThat might have made life a little more interesting,' remarked the woman in a low-cut black evening gown, who was sitting in an over-stuffed armchair. Her bodice was a little over-stuffed too and looked in danger of surrendering to gravity at any moment. Her expression was bored and miserable and although she wasn't bad looking, her face had already begun to set into middle-aged crossness that I guessed would be her expression for the rest of her life.
I kept the grin on until it felt as if it might turn round and bite me.
Elizabeth saved the day by walking through the open french doors and coming to my rescue. âMr Sharman,' she said, âforgive me for not being here to greet you, and most of all for not telling you about our habit of dressing for dinner. It completely slipped my mind that you might not have a dinner jacket with you.'
I made a mental note always to carry one with me in future, possibly in a holster strapped to my other ankle.
âIf you give Courtneidge your size,' she continued, âI'll have one sent around tomorrow.' She made it sound as casual as ordering an extra pint of milk. âI think Mr Sharman is wearing a very nice suit,' said the blond man holding up the chimney breast. âAlthough possibly his tie is just a little chi-chi for evening wear.'
I felt like hooking him onto the picture rail. Elizabeth stopped me with a cool hand. âPay no attention to Simon,' she said. âHe always has had leanings towards comedy, but his attempts don't always come off.'
I said nothing, just let her keep her hand where it was on mine. I liked it.
âNow let me introduce you to everyone. Simon Pike is my late father's nephew. He's staying here until his own house is ready for occupation.'
I nodded to the comic but made no attempt to shake hands. For his part, he didn't even nod in response.
âUnfortunately it's taking rather longer than he expected,' said the woman in the chair. âAnd a brief visit is slowly turning into a marathon stay.'
Simon shot the woman a withering look.
âThis is Claire,' said Elizabeth. âMy brother David's wife.'
Claire raised her hand and I walked over and took it. It was chubby, with fat little fingers made even thicker by jewelled rings. I squeezed it gently and gave it back intact. âHow do you do?' I said like a good little boy at his first grown-up party, which is just about how I felt.
Claire gave me an impersonation of a smile and told me how delighted she was to meet me, which is not at all how she looked.
The other man in the room stepped between us and stuck out his hand. âDavid Pike,' he said. âHow do you do, Mr Sharman?'
âI'm fine. How was the US trip?' I asked.
âExhausting, but it accomplished what was necessary. At this moment I'd rather talk about why Lizzy thinks we need an in-house private detective.'
âI have my reasons,' said Elizabeth. âPrivate reasons, and it's as much my house as yours.'
âAt the moment,' said David.
I was left holding his hand while this short altercation took place. It was dry and strong and its grip was more than firm.
After he released my aching fingers the whole family stood back and gave me the once-over. I felt like shuffling my feet and saying something like âGee shucks'. I was suffering from aristocracy awe and I didn't like it one bit. I thought back to my days in the job and tried to get my mind right.
âMiss Pike feels that a little security on the premises at this time wouldn't go amiss,' I said. âThe arrangement is between us and â '
Simon didn't let me finish. âFor however much you can screw out of her for a wild goose chase.'
Elizabeth butted in before I could speak. âMr Sharman is charging his usual rate,' she said. âNot a penny more.'
âThen he must be more stupid than he looks, or else it's your body he's after,' said Simon.
That one went closer to the target than I liked and I was halfway to the fireplace and ready to give Simon a right-hander when Elizabeth caught my arm again. âNo,' she said.
Simon hadn't even flinched. He must have been tougher than he looked or else someone had always been around to fight his battles for him. I suspected the latter.
I stopped and felt like a berk. âI think you should apologise to Miss Pike,' I said. It sounded a bit weak, even to me.
Simon sniggered.
âSimon,' David intervened. âYou are in my father's house, behave yourself.'
Simon shrugged. âSorry, love,' he said sarcastically to Elizabeth.
I felt as if he'd got the better of me and I didn't like that one bit.
Elizabeth defused the situation by offering me a drink. She poured me a vodka rocks from the side table that groaned under its load of bottles of booze. The drink was freezing cold and tasted good on my parched lips. âIf that chump makes any more cracks like that I'm going to punch his lights out,' I said quietly.
âIgnore him,' she replied.
At that point Catherine blew into the room wearing a black lace creation that left so little to the imagination that it almost made an imagination redundant. In her hair was plaited a fresh gardenia.
âGood evening,' she said, as we all stood pop-eyed at her entrance. âDo you like my new frock?'
âI'm sure it will be splendid when it's finished,' said Claire.
Catherine went to the drinks table and poured three inches of vodka over an iceberg of cubes and a small slice of lemon, and showed it the tonic bottle. She'd told me her mother was a piss artist. Like mother, like daughter obviously. âOh Claire,' she said. âYou've always got your finger on the pulse of chic. How I wish I'd taken you shopping with me today.'
I could see the old claws were coming out with a vengeance.
Catherine picked up her drink and made directly for me. She crooked her arm into mine. âFat old bitch,' she said, just loud enough for me to hear. âShe gets all her outfits from C & A.'
âCatherine,' said Simon, âif you will insist in fraternising with the staff, at least be kind enough to let us all in on the conversation. It's so rude to whisper.'
I stiffened but Catherine just smiled. âSimon,' she said smoothly, âI didn't see you lurking there in the corner. You really should have taken those self-assertion classes I was telling you about.'
He flushed slightly and was just about to make another snide remark, which I'm sure would have left me no option but to deck him, when a maid who wasn't Miranda so who must have been Constance appeared at the door and informed us that dinner was served.
We de-camped and strolled to the dining room. It was the size of a rugby pitch and looked out over Curzon Street. The dining table was a desert of white linen set with gleaming silver cutlery.