Part 8 (1/2)
She led the way to a drawing-room. It had n.o.ble proportions which were lost in over-furnis.h.i.+ng. The light was dim because of three sets of curtains on the long windows-net, linen and then brocade.
Mrs. Tremaine pulled the bell-rope and when the maid answered the summons asked for tea to be brought in. ”My poor Dolly was so honoured by your friends.h.i.+p, Lady Rose,” she said. ”She was meant for great things and struck down in her prime.”
”Have you any idea who might have murdered her?” asked Harry.
”I have already answered that,” said Dr. Tremaine.
”There was one person,” said Mrs. Tremaine, dabbing at her eyes with a lace handkerchief, although Rose noticed her eyes were quite dry.
”Who?” asked Rose eagerly.
”The Honourable Cyril Banks, that's who. He asked Mr. Tremaine for permission to pay his addresses and was told the answer was firmly no. 'You'll regret this,' he shouted. 'I'll ruin that girl of yours. I'll get even with you.' Ah, here is tea.”
Ludicrously, Mrs. Tremaine began to brag about the great people she had met in London, and about what a d.u.c.h.ess had said to her and what a countess had confided in her, and Rose could practically hear all these dropped names pattering like rain among the china cups.
She played her part, flattering Mrs. Tremaine and listening intently to her. Then, as they rose to take their leave, Rose said, ”May I perhaps see my old friend's bedchamber? An odd request, but it would help me to say goodbye.”
The rector muttered, ”Pah!” But Mrs. Tremaine could not refuse a t.i.tle anything. ”Follow me, my lady.”
Upstairs, Rose stood on the threshold of what had been Dolly's bedchamber and looked in. It was a bleak room furnished with a narrow bed, a desk, a hard chair and a wardrobe. Above the fireplace was a badly executed oil painting of a blond and blue-eyed Jesus suffering a group of remarkably British-looking children to come unto Him. The only other piece of furniture was a bedside table with a large Bible placed on top of it.
”Miss Tremaine did not have a diary or anything like that?” she asked.
”No, nothing like that.”
”Thank you,” said Rose.
”May I visit you when I am in London?” asked Mrs. Tremaine eagerly.
”By all means,” said Rose, confident that the rector would make sure his wife would not.
Rose and Harry told Daisy and Becket the little they had learned. ”Perhaps when everyone returns to London, I might encourage the attentions of Cyril and see what I can find out,” suggested Rose.
”You are engaged to me,” snapped Harry. ”It would be regarded as most unseemly behaviour.”
”Pooh,” said Rose. Daisy and Becket exchanged looks. Their hopes of Rose and Harry's marrying seemed farther away than ever.
Harry received a message from Kerridge the following morning, bringing him up to date on the latest development.
He rushed round to Scotland Yard.
”Who is he?” he demanded, after entering Kerridge's office. All the way to Scotland Yard he had been praying that it would turn out to be someone Dolly had known, that the murderer had drowned himself in a fit of remorse, and that Rose would now be safe.
”Sit down,” said Kerridge. ”I've just interviewed a retired prison officer from Wormwood Scrubs. He says he recognized our man from his photograph in the newspapers this morning. His name is Reg Bolton. He was doing time for stealing a reticule up the West End from a lady who had left it lying beside her on a chair in a coffee shop. He had a record of violence as well. His wife was found dead with her head bashed in but this Reg had various people to alibi him for the night she was killed, so he got off with that one. Reg had five hundred pounds in his wallet when we found him. And no, he didn't drown. He was murdered.”
Harry sat down in the chair opposite Kerridge. ”So it looks as if someone hired him to kill Lady Rose?”
”That's just the way it looks to me,” said Kerridge gloomily. ”This gets worse and worse. He had a lady's purse pistol on him. I'm sure it'll turn out to be the one that was used. Blast!
”Did this Reg have any visitors when he was in prison?”
”Wasn't allowed any. If his wife had still been alive or if he'd had any children, then the authorities would have allowed them to visit, but no one else got in.”
”May I talk to this screw myself?” In Pentonville Prison in 1840, prisoners were supposed to turn a crank on a machine. If the prisoner was to be punished further, the screw was tightened, and so that was how prison warders came to be known as screws.
”I'll give you a note. His name is Henry Barker.”
Giving Becket the rare treat of taking the wheel of his new motor, Harry went to Wormwood Scrubs. He saw the governor and gave him Kerridge's note and Henry Barker was summoned.
”I have Detective Superintendent Kerridge's permission to interview you,” said Harry. ”I am Captain Cathcart.”
”I've heard about you,” said Barker. ”Private detective, ain't you?”
”That is correct. Now what sort of character was this Reg Bolton?”
”Brutal. He terrified a lot of the prisoners.”
”Did he say anything to you, anything that might give us a hint that someone might be paying him?”
”Well, these hardened criminals always like to brag, Captain. The day afore he was leaving, he was grinning all over his face.
” 'One more day to go,' I says. He says, 'I ain't coming back here no more,' he says. 'Good,' says I. 'Mending your ways?' He grins and says to me, 'I'm going to be a gent. I got connections. Got a good job waiting for me.' ”
”And what did you gather from that?”
”Villains never change. I thought maybe one of the other villains had put him in touch with a gang.”
”Did he have a particular friend?”
The warder shook his head. ”The others detested him, even the real hard ones. He was a nasty bit of work. I mean, I'm only guessing one of them offered him a job. But I never saw him talking much to anyone all the time he was here.”
”How long he in here for?”
”Two years.”
”And no one visited him during all that time?”
”No, sir. Not a one.”
Harry turned to the governor. ”Would it be possible to find me his home address?”