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Death of a Peer ra-10 Page 9


  He broke off abruptly. The doctor had come into the room.

  Dr. Kantripp was stocky and dark, with a pleasingly ugly face. He looked profoundly unhappy.

  “They’re coming,” he said, “immediately.”

  “Good,” said Lord Charles.

  “Dr. Kantripp,” said Charlot, “will he live?”

  “He may — survive for a little, Lady Charles.”

  “Will he be able to speak?”

  “I think it most unlikely.”

  “Pray God he does!”

  He looked sharply at her and it would have been impossible to say whether he felt doubt or relief at her exclamation.

  “We shall have a second opinion, of course,” he said. “I’ve telephoned Sir Matthew Cairnstock. He’s a brain man. I’ve sent for a nurse.”

  “Yes. Will you look at Violet — my sister-in-law? She’s in my room.”

  “Yes, certainly.”

  “I’ll come if you want me. She asked to be alone with the maid.”

  “I see.” Dr. Kantripp hesitated and then said: “They’ll want to talk to the servants, you know.”

  “Why the servants, particularly?” asked Lord Charles quickly.

  “Well — the instrument. You see it looks as if it came from their part of the world. The kitchen.”

  Frid spoke abruptly on a hard, shrill note. “It was a skewer, wasn’t it?”

  “Yes.”

  “Then it wasn’t in the kitchen. It was left on the hall table.”

  “Dinner is served, m’lady,” said Baskett from the door.

  III

  Roberta would never have believed that dinner with the Lampreys could be a complete nightmare. It seemed incredible that they should be there, sitting in silence round the long table, solemnly helping themselves to dishes that repelled them. Charlot left the room twice, the first time to take another look at Lady Wutherwood, the second time to see the nurse and to ask if there was anything she needed for her patient. The specialist arrived at the same time as the men from Scotland Yard. Lord Charles went out to meet them but returned in a few minutes to say Dr. Kantripp was still there and that he, with one of the police, had gone into the room where Lord Wutherwood lay. Only two of the police were in the flat now. They were plain-clothes men, Lord Charles said, and seemed to be very inoffensive fellows. The others had gone but he did not know for how long. Robert wondered if the Lampreys shared her feeling that the flat no longer belonged to them. When they had chopped their savouries into small pieces and pushed them about their plates for a minute or two, Charlot said suddenly: “This is too much. Let’s go into the drawing-room.”

  Before they could move, however, Baskett came in and murmured something to Lord Charles.

  “Yes, of course,” said Lord Charles. “It had better be in here.” He looked at his wife. “They want to see us all in turn. I suggest they use the dining-room and we go to the drawing-room. In the meantime they want me, Immy. There’s a change in Gabriel’s condition and the doctors think I should be there.”

  “Of course, Charlie. Shall I tell Violet?”

  “Will you? Bring her to the room. You don’t mind bringing her in?”

  “Of course not,” said Charlot, “if — if she’ll come.”

  “Do you think—”

  “I’ll see. Come along, children.”

  Lord Charles moved quickly to the door and held it open. For as long as Roberta had known the Lampreys he had made the same movement each night after dinner, always reaching the door before his sons and holding it open with a little bow to his wife as she passed him. To-night they looked into each other’s faces for a moment and then Roberta saw Lord Charles walk by on his way to his brother. That one glance gave her a vivid, indelible impression of him. The light from the hall shone on his head, making a halo of his thin hair and a bright-rimmed silhouette of his face. He wore that familiar air of punctiliousness. The placidity and the detachment to which she was accustomed still appeared in that mild profile, but she afterwards thought she had seen a glint of something else, a kind of sharpness so foreign to her idea of Lord Charles that she attributed the impression to a trick of lighting or of her overstimulated imagination. The hall door slammed. Roberta was left with the others to sit in silence and to wait.

  CHAPTER VII

  DEATH OF A PEER

  Inspector Fox sat in a corner of the dressing-room, his notebook on his knee, his pencil held in a large, clean hand. He was perfectly still and quite unobtrusive but his presence made itself felt. The two doctors and the nurse were much aware of him and from time to time glanced towards the corner of the room where he sat waiting. A bedside lamp cast a strong light en the patient and a reflected glow on the faces that bent over him. The only sound in the room, a disgusting sound, was made by the patient. On a table close to Fox was a bag. It contained, among a good deal of curious paraphernalia, a silver-plated skewer, carefully packed.

  At thirty-five minutes past eight by Fox’s watch there was a slight disturbance. The doctors moved; the nurse’s uniform crackled. The taller of the doctors glanced over his shoulder into a corner of the room.

  “It’s coming, I think. Better send for Lord Charles.” He pressed the hanging bell-push. The nurse went to the door and in a moment spoke in a low voice to someone outside. Fox left his chair and moved a little nearer the bed.

  The patient’s left eye was hidden by a dressing. The right eye was open and stared straight up at the ceiling. From somewhere inside him, mingled with the hollow sound of his breathing, came a curious noise. His complicated mechanism of speech was trying unsuccessfully to function. The bedclothes were distrubed and very slowly one of his hands crept out. The nurse made a movment which was checked by Fox.

  “Excuse me,” said Fox, “I’d be obliged if you’d let his lordship—”

  “Yes, yes,” said the tall doctor. “Let him be, nurse.”

  The hand crept on laboriously out of shadow into light. The finger tips, clinging to the surface of the neck, crawling with infinite pains, seemed to have a separate life of their own. The single eye no longer stared at the ceiling but turned anxiously in its deep socket as though questing for some attentive face.

  “Is he trying to show us something, Sir Matthew?” asked Fox.

  “No, no. Quite impossible. The movement has no meaning. He doesn’t know—”

  “I’d be obliged if you’d ask him, just the same.”

  The doctor gave the slightest possible shrug, leant forward, slid his hand under the sheet, and spoke distinctly.

  “Do you want to tell us something?”

  The eyelid flickered.

  “Do you want to tell us how you were hurt?”

  The door opened. Lord Charles Lamprey came into the half light. He stood motionless at the foot of the bed and watched his brother’s hand move, lagging inch by inch, up the sharp angle of his jaw.

  “There’s no significance in this,” said the doctor.

  “I’d like to ask him, though,” said Fox, “if it’s all the same to you, Sir Matthew.”

  The doctor moved aside. Fox bent forward and stared at Lord Wutherwood.

  A deep frown had drawn the eyebrows together. Some sort of sound came from the open mouth. “You want to show us something, my lord, don’t you?” said Fox. The fingers crawled across the cheek and upwards. “Your eyes? You want to show us your eyes?” The one eye closed slowly, and opened again, and a voice oddly definite, almost articulate, made a short sound.

  “Is he going?” asked Lord Charles clearly.

  “I think so,” said the doctor. “Is Lady Wutherwood—”

  “She is very much distressed. She feels that she cannot face the ordeal.”

  “She realizes,” said Dr. Kantripp, who had not spoken before, “that there is probably very little time?”

  “Yes. My wife says she made it quite clear.”

  The doctors turned again to the bed and seemed by this movement to dismiss Lady Wutherwood. The patient’s hand s
lipped away from his face. His gaze seemed to be fixed on the shadows at the foot of his bed.

  “Perhaps,” said Fox, “if he could see you, my lord, he might make a greater effort to speak.”

  “He can see me.”

  Fox reached out a massive arm and tilted the lamp. The figure at the foot of the bed was thrown into strong relief. Lord Charles blinked in the sudden glare but did not move.

  “Will you speak to him, my lord?”

  “Gabriel, do you know me?”

  “Will you ask him who attacked him, my lord?”

  “It is horrible — now — when he—”

  “He might manage to answer you,” said Fox.

  “Gabriel, do you know who hurt you?”

  The frown deepened and the one eye and mouth opened so widely that Lord Wutherwood’s face looked like a mask in a nightmare. There was a sharp violence of sound and then silence. Fox turned away tactfully and the nurse’s hands went out to the hem of the sheet.

  II

  “I am very sorry, my lord,” said Fox, “to have to trouble you at such a time.”

  “That can’t be helped.”

  “That is so, my lord. Under the circumstances we’ve got to make one or two inquiries.”

  “One or two!” said Lord Charles unevenly. “Do sit down, won’t you? I’m afraid I don’t know your name.”

  “Fox, my lord. Inspector Fox.”

  “Oh, yes. Do sit down.”

  “Thank you, my lord.”

  Fox sat down and with an air of composure drew out his spectacle case. Lord Charles took a chair near the fire and held out his hands to the blaze. They were unsteady and with an impatient movement he drew them back and thrust them into his pockets. He turned to Fox and found the Inspector regarding him blandly through steel-rimmed glasses.

  “Before I trouble you with any questions, my lord,” said Fox, “I think it would be advisable for me to ring up my superior officer and report this occurrence. If I may use the telephone, my lord.”

  “There is one on that desk. But of course you’d rather be alone.”

  “No, thank you, my lord. This will be very convenient. If you will excuse me.”

  He moved to the desk, dialled a number, and almost immediately spoke in a very subdued voice into the receiver. “Fox here, Mr. Alleyn’s room.” He waited, looking thoughtfully at the base of the telephone. “Mr. Alleyn? Fox, speaking from Flats 25–26 Pleasaunce Court Mansions, Cadogan Square. Residence of Lord Charles Lamprey. The case reported at seven-thirty-five is a fatality…Circumstances point that way, sir…Well, I was going to suggest it, sir, if it’s convenient. Yes, sir.” Here there was a longish pause during which Fox looked remarkably bland. “That’s so, Mr. Alleyn,” he said finally. “Thank you, sir.”

  He hung up the receiver and returned to his chair.

  “Chief Detective-Inspector Alleyn, my lord,” said Fox, “will take over the case. He will be here in half an hour. In the meantime he has instructed me to carry on. So if I may trouble you, my lord…” He took out his note-book and adjusted his glasses. Lord Charles shivered, hunched up a shoulder, put his glass in his eye and waited.

  “I have here,” said Fox, “the statement taken by the officer who was called in from the local station. I’d just like to check that over, my lord, if I may.”

  “Yes. It’s my own statement, I imagine, but check it by all means if you will.”

  “Yes. Thank you. Times. I understand Lord Wutherwood arrived here shortly after six and left at approximately seven-fifteen?”

  “About then. I heard seven strike some little time before he left.”

  “Yes, my lord. Your butler gets a little closer than that. He noticed it was seven-fifteen before his lordship rang for his man.”

  “I see.”

  “His lordship was alone in the lift for some minutes before anyone went out to the landing,” read Fox.

  “Yes.”

  “Thank you, my lord. After he had been there for some minutes he was joined by her ladyship — Lady Wutherwood — that is — and by Lady Charles Lamprey and by Mr. Lamprey. Which Mr. Lamprey would that be, my lord?”

  “Let me think. You must forgive me but my thoughts are intolerably confused.”

  Fox waited politely.

  “My brother,” said Lord Charles at last, “left me in the drawing-room. Soon after that the boys, I mean my three sons, joined me there. Then I think my wife opened the door and asked if one of the boys would take my brother and sister-in-law down in the lift. They never take themselves down. One of the boys went out. That will be the one you mean?”

  “Yes. That is so, my lord.”

  “I don’t know which it was.”

  “You don’t remember?”

  “Not that exactly. It was one of the twins. I didn’t notice which. Shall I ask them?”

  “Not just yet thank you, my lord. Do I understand you to say that the two young gentlemen are so much alike that you couldn’t say which of them left the room?”

  “Oh, I should have been able to tell you if I had looked at all closely but you see I didn’t. I just saw one of the twins had gone. I — was thinking of something else.”

  “The other two remained in the drawing-room with you? Mr. Henry Lamprey and the other twin?”

  “Yes.”

  “Yes, my lord. Thank you. Then you will have noticed the remaining twin if I may put it that way?”

  “No. No, I didn’t. He didn’t speak. I didn’t look at the boys. I was sitting by the fire. Henry, my eldest son, said something, but otherwise none of us spoke. They’ll tell you themselves which it was.”

  “Yes, my lord, so they will. It would be correct to say that while the lift went down you remained in the drawing-room with Mr. Lamprey and his brother until when, my lord?”

  “Until…” Lord Charles took out his glass and put it in his waistcoat pocket. It was an automatic gesture. Without the glass the myopic look in his weak eye was extremely noticeable. His lips trembled slightly. He paused and began afresh. “Until I heard there was — until I heard my sister-in-law scream.”

  “And did you realize, my lord—”

  “I realized nothing,” interrupted Lord Charles swiftly. “How could I? I know now, of course, that they had gone down in the lift and that she had made that — that terrible discovery, and that it was while the lift returned that she screamed. But at the time I was quite in the dark. I simply became aware of the sound.”

  “Thank you,” said Fox again, and wrote in his notebook. He looked over the top of his spectacles at Lord Charles.

  “And then, my lord? What would you say happened next?”

  “What happened next was that I went out to the landing followed by the two boys. My wife and my girls — my daughters — came out of 26 at the same time. I think my youngest boy, Michael, appeared from somewhere but he wasn’t there for long. The lift was returning and was almost up to our landing.”

  “Up to the landing,” repeated Fox to his notes. “And who was in the lift, my lord?”

  “Surely that’s clear enough,” said Lord Charles. “I thought you understood that my brother and his wife and my son were in the lift.”

  “Yes, my lord, that is how I understand the case at present. I’m afraid this will seem very annoying to you but you see we usually take statements separately for purposes of comparison.”

  “I’m sorry, Mr. Fox. Of course you do. I’m afraid I’m—”

  “Very natural, my lord, that you should be, I’m sure. Then I take it that Lady Wutherwood must have begun to scream while the lift was near the bottom of the shaft?”

  Lord Charles twisted his mouth wryly and said yes.

  “And continued as it returned to your landing?”

  “Yes.”

  “Yes. Would you mind telling me what happened when the lift stopped at the top landing?”

  “We were bewildered. We couldn’t think what had happened, why she was — was making such an appalling scene. She — she —
I should explain that she is rather highly-strung. A little hysterical, perhaps. The lift stopped and Henry opened the doors. She rushed out, almost fell out, into my wife’s arms. My son, the twin — I — it’s too stupid that I can’t tell you which it was — came out without speaking, or if he did speak I didn’t hear him. You see I was looking in the lift.”

  “That must have been a great shock to you, my lord,” said Fox simply.

  “Yes: A great shock.”

  “I saw my brother,” said Lord Charles loudly and rapidly. “He was sitting at the end of the seat. The injury — it was there — I saw it — I–I didn’t understand then, that they — my sister-in-law and my son — had gone down in the lift without at first realizing there was anything the matter.”

  “When did you realize this, my lord?”

  “As soon as my wife had calmed her down a little she began to speak about it. She was very wild and incoherent, but I made out as much as that.”

  “You did not question your son, my lord? Whichever son it was,” inquired Fox, as if the confusion of one’s children’s identities was the most natural thing in the world.

  “No. There doesn’t seem to have been any time to talk to anybody.”

  “And of course if you had questioned him you would have known which he was?”

  “Yes,” rejoined Lord Charles evenly, “of course.”

  “Did any of the others talk to him, my lord?”

  “I really don’t know. How could I? If I had heard that, I would—” He stopped short. “I really can’t tell you more than that.”

  “I understand, my lord. I must thank you for your courtesy and apologize again for causing you so much pain. There are only one or two other points. Did you touch your brother?”

  “No!” said Lord Charles violently. “No! No! They carried him out and took him to my room. That is all.”