Score! (58 page)

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Authors: Jilly Cooper

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No doubt tucked up in some bar, or worse, with Brian Chambers, thought Gablecross savagely. He ignored the lasagne, making do with a pickled onion, a slice of ancient pork pie and the
Rutminster Echo
, whose first four pages were given over to the murder and, infuriatingly, included excellent photographs of Gerald Portland and fucking Fanshawe, grinning beside Gloria Prescott.
Tomorrow, he must go and see Tabitha, and try to pin down Tristan. He put aside the paper, and tried seriously to work out who might have killed Rannaldini, but he couldn’t concentrate with Margaret still out. It was only when he went into the lounge half an hour later for a large Scotch to calm his rage that he found his wife fast asleep on the sofa, the
Independent
open at the murder.
Fetching the duvet from their bed, he laid it over her. He mustn’t forget their wedding anniversary on Sunday.

 

58

 

The great excitements of Thursday’s Inner Cabinet meeting were, first, that Bob Harefield had been in the air flying to Adelaide on Sunday night when both Hermione and Meredith claimed to have been telephoning him and, second, Mikhail’s two-litre Smirnoff bottle contained traces of H20 but absolutely no alcohol.
‘So the bugger was pretending to be drunk the whole time,’ chuntered Gerald Portland.
Mikhail had also pretended to pass out under the weeping ash for four hours until an
Evening Standard
reporter tripped over him but, in the meanwhile, could have been quite sober enough to nip into the wood and strangle Rannaldini and, although his English wasn’t good enough to understand the memoirs, he could have burnt down the watch-tower after making off with the Montigny and the Picasso.
Mikhail, who also flatly refused to admit he had nicked Gablecross’s initialled Parker pen, even when he was caught signing autographs with it in Paradise on Thursday morning, was without contrition.
‘I ’ate Rannaldini,’ he said, dragging Karen and Gablecross into the Heavenly Host for a late breakfast. ‘Whoever kill heem is an ’ero. Eef people think me drunk they leave me alone. After Rannaldini take my Lara, I do not sleep for twice nights. Of course I drop off under whipping ash.’
‘Why was your vodka bottle lying near Rannaldini?’ said Gablecross sternly. ‘I suppose it sleepwalked.’
Karen, who was deboning Mikhail’s kipper, got the giggles.
‘You realize you have no alibi.’
‘I have no vife either. Vot is life without her? She says I am piss artist, next day I go on vagon.’
‘So why was your bottle…?’ began Gablecross.
‘I go to votch-tower to kill Rannaldini for making me cockhold, but forest fire stop me getting hands on heem. I hope fire does my vork. And now, perhaps, someone will believe I only spend five minutes with screeching beetch Chloe on Sunday night and that I saw Tristan in Valhalla around nine thirty.’
Suspicion, in fact, was hardening on Tristan, who was flatly refusing to have a DNA test.
To stop Rupert throwing his weight around and demoralizing Tristan even further, Sexton had arranged for him to see a rough cut of the film so far, which Rupert had reluctantly adored. He loved Sharon eating Alpheus’s slippers, he loved the hunting and all Tab’s horses. He cried buckets when Posa died and, after a long silence at the end, said in a disappointed voice, ‘Isn’t there any more? Montigny’s a shit,’ he added, as an afterthought, ‘but an extremely clever one. I even forgot they were singing and he’s made Valhalla look almost as good as Penscombe.’
Being tone-deaf, however, and unable to appreciate Alpheus’s heavenly deep voice, Rupert thought he was the weak link:
‘More like the chairman of the local Rotary Club than a king.’
In fact, poor Alpheus had just arrived back from a masterly Boris in Vienna, where he had taken twelve curtain calls. Why wasn’t he treated with more reverence at Valhalla? He’d only popped back, anyway, for a tiny scene praying in the chapel before his coronation, and intended to push off and sing in New York on Friday and Saturday, returning in time for the polo shoot on Monday. But Sexton, on Rupert’s orders, refused to let him go.
‘You’ve been overpaid for these extra days, Alphie, so stay ’ere in case we need you.’
Alpheus was hopping, particularly as he’d just read Hermione’s interview in the
Daily Telegraph
: ‘Now Rannaldini has passed away, it is my duty to shine more brightly as the only star in
Don Carlos
.’
Alpheus was also brooding over the loss of his Jaguar, which a newly steely Sexton was refusing to replace.
At ten thirty on Thursday morning, therefore, Alpheus drew Fanshawe and Debbie into his caravan and confessed he had been withholding information because he wanted to protect his colleagues. After wrestling with his conscience since Monday, he felt he must reveal that, on his jog through the dusk to Jasmine Cottage on Sunday night around ten thirty, he had seen Sexton’s maroon Roller parked under Dame Hermione’s Judas tree.
Having taken a statement, trying not to betray their glee that they were about to rush in where Gablecrosspatch had failed to dent, Fanshawe and Debbie also, at long last, found a chink in Simone’s frantic schedule.
As she stuck Polaroids of Mikhail, Baby and Chloe into a huge scrapbook, she said how furious she was with Chloe.
‘How dare she tell
flics
I had said my uncle Tristan never went to Aunt Hortense’s birthday party. She eaves-drip my private conversation with Lucy. No-one appreciate pressure in making this movie. Tristan’s head was too much in it to go to a party. Can you imagine Beethoven stopping composing Ninth symphony to go to aunt’s bunfight?’
Furiously Simone drew a black Pentel moustache on Chloe’s Polaroid.
She was very young, Fanshawe told Simone, to have such a responsible job.
‘I am Tristan’s niece. Everyone theenk
favori du roi
so I must be better than everyone.’
‘You notice things?’
‘It is my job.’
‘Bet you didn’t notice ten things out of the ordinary on Sunday night,’ said Debbie Miller.
‘Bet I did.’ Simone covered Chloe’s dimpled chin with a black beard. ‘Mikhail change his shoes and put on loafers before he finally come into house. And I notice lots about Chloe. For first time she come in without lipstick — always she wears bright crimson colour and she look much better without it. She had also changed her clothes. She still wore tennis skirt… but… folds?’
‘Pleats?’ suggested Debbie.

Oui, oui
, but the pleats were bigger, and on her T-shirt the blue stripes were paler and wider, but look same.’
‘Why?’
‘She must have change for a man,’ said Simone darkly, ‘but didn’t want to show it.’
‘Well done. Who d’you think it was?’
‘Probably Alpheus — they leave at same time.’
‘That’s six things,’ said a counting Fanshawe.
‘And Sexton,’ Simone giggled, ‘he had
reine de pré
in his hair and steeking out of the back of his trousers, and
gaillet
in the buckle of his Guccis and in his medallion.’
Debbie Miller was writing frantically. ‘What’s
reine de pré
and
gaillet
?’
‘Wild flowers.’
‘Should have been London Pride,’ giggled Debbie. ‘He claimed he was in town.’
‘Perhaps it was Sexton rolled in the grass with Mees Chloe Super-bitch, that’s eight things. And Bernard ’ave ash in his hair, and Helen come in wearing false eyelashes and black pencilled eyebrows as eef she cover up singeing.’

Very
good,’ said Fanshawe delightedly.
‘So Bernard and Helen could have been in the wood,’ squeaked Debbie.
‘And Sexton up to no good,’ shrugged Simone. ‘Chloe could also have been with Mikhail or Alpheus, although I think now they both hate her.’
‘Who around here wears signet rings or rings on their left hand little finger?’ asked Fanshawe.
‘Rupert Campbell-Black.’ Simone glanced up at the telephone list. ‘Granny. Tristan, although he hasn’t worn it recently. Now, Sexton is interesting. He used to wear a signet ring on wedding-ring finger, but since ’Ermione thinks he go to Eton, he move it to leetle finger, and it is too loose, so he ’old it on like Prince Charles.
‘Valentin, Oscar and Bernard all wear wedding rings,’ she continued. ‘Griselda wear bloodstone on little finger, ’Ermione often wear big diamond Rannaldini gave her, Gloria like flaunting big sapphire, probably a fake, Rannaldini also give her that too. Wolfie’s signet ring keeps falling off because he lose so much weight too, so in the finals he gave it to Lucy to wear for him.’
‘Was Lucy there all the time?’
‘No, she take James away for queek run. He was whining but she was back before we finish and she give ring back to Wolfgang.’
So both Lucy and Wolfgang could have nipped into the wood and done the business, thought Fanshawe.
‘Why d’you want to know?’ Simone gave Chloe’s Polaroid a squint.
‘We have reason to believe the murderer was wearing a big ring when he strangled Rannaldini.’
‘Then, it could have been me,’ laughed Simone. On the little finger of her tiny left hand glinted an amber in a gold setting.
‘That’s beautiful,’ gasped Debbie. ‘Who gave you that?’
‘A secret admirer — too precious to tell anyone.’
‘You had no motive to kill Rannaldini,’ teased Fanshawe.
‘Only for putting artistic consideration before continuity,’ said Simone, with unconcealed venom.
After all this evidence, Sexton’s alibi of speeding in his maroon Roller down the M4, after a weekend of heroically raising money, and Hermione’s, of watching
Pride and Prejudice
, ringing her husband Bobby, and spending quality time with Little Cosmo, were looking thin.
Fanshawe and Debbie found Hermione alone and just managing to polish off a large tub of pistachio and ginger ice cream. She had lost a stone and a half, received six and a half thousand letters, she told them, and was ready to return to the set tomorrow because she couldn’t let down Rupert Campbell-Black.
Hermione rather liked Fanshawe’s sleek dark hair and flat stomach until he accused her of not watching
Pride and Prejudice
.
‘Don’t be ridiculous, it’s my favourite novel. Why isn’t Timothy conducting this interview?’
‘Nor did you ring your husband.’
‘Oh, well, it must have been the day before. When one is jet-lagged and wrestling with artistic problems, time ceases to have any meaning.’
‘Evidently. How d’you explain the fact that Mr Kemp’s Rolls-Royce was parked under your Judas tree at around ten twenty, and Mr Kemp’s clothes, when he finally rolled up at Valhalla some time after two o’clock in the morning, were covered in lady’s bedstraw and meadowsweet? In fact, Mr Kemp lied to us about being on the M4 at the time of the murder, Dame Hermione. He was at River House with you.’
If Sergeant Fanshawe had expected a battle of wits he was disappointed.
‘Indeed,’ Dame Hermione bowed her head, ‘I must tell you the truth, Officer. Are you married?’
‘I have a partner.’
‘I am a married woman, but Sexton and I found we cared deeply for each other, and our love tryst occurred in the summerhouse on Sunday evening. Sexton laid down a carpet of lady’s bedstraw and meadowsweet, which was what Elisabetta would have lain on in the sixteenth century.’
‘Didn’t you notice the fire engines and the police sirens and the watch-tower going up in flames?’ asked Fanshawe in amazement.
‘The summerhouse is behind River House, so one cannot see the watch-tower — and frankly, Officer, we were too busy setting each other aflame.’
Debbie Miller had contracted Karen’s complaint, and was laughing so much she had to gaze out of the window.
‘Why did you lie about this, Dame Hermione?’
‘I couldn’t humiliate my husband, Bobby.’
‘You and Rannaldini managed to humiliate him for the last few years,’ snapped Fanshawe, ‘presumably your husband knew which side his bread was buttered when the royalties came in.’
‘Unkind, Officer.’ Hermione bowed reproachfully.
‘Did you know that Rannaldini was planning to have his vasectomy reversed so he could have children?’
‘I am not past childbearing age. Cosmo would have adored a little sibling.’
‘Numerous independent witnesses heard you singing in the wood on Sunday night, Dame Hermione. I suggest Rannaldini had humiliated you and Mr Kemp intolerably on Friday night. He was about to pull the plug on the sham of your marriage and replace you as Elisabetta with Gloria Prescott. Your career was on the slide, and Rannaldini had plans to marry again and make a total fool of you in his memoirs.’
‘Nonsense,’ squawked Hermione. ‘I insist on talking only to Timothy.’
Fanshawe, however, had the bit between his teeth. ‘I think you went into the wood, distracted Rannaldini with your lovely voice, and Mr Kemp did the business, getting his clothes and shoes covered with wild flowers in the struggle.’
‘Nonsense, nonsense! You have no proof. It was
my
Bentley you saw in the bushes. Sexton arrived with armfuls and armfuls of lady’s bedstraw and meadowsweet… the most tender and cherishing lover… I shall ring my friend Chief Constable Swallow at once.’
‘Where was Little Cosmo while this was going on?’
‘Tucked up in bed, of course, where all good boys should be.’
Unfortunately for Sexton, a complaint had just been logged by the incident room from a couple driving towards the M4 around one a.m. last Monday morning.
They had been pushed into the hogweed on the verge by a lunatic overtaking in a maroon Roller, number plate SK 1. To their apoplexy, twenty minutes later, the road-hog had hurtled past in the same Roller but in the other direction going towards Rutminster, and shoving them into the hogweed again.

 

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