Authors: Catherine Aird
âThe mechanism behind the device is really quite simple â¦'
âSimple! Oh, sorry â¦'
âThe testator would leave an appropriate sum of money to his best friend or someone else whom he could trust â¦'
âBest friends don't always have a good track record for trustworthiness.'
âTrue. Nevertheless the testator would select a friend or member of his family â¦'
âNot always one and the same either.'
âIn whom he felt he could repose his trust and make them legatees â often residuary legatees as this was more flexible and then â¦' James Puckle paused.
âAnd then â¦?' prompted Amelia, leaning forward in her chair now.
âAnd then arrange for them to be handed a sealed envelope with the Will in which the testator would explain that the money that they had been left was not actually for them at all but for the secret upkeep of the mistress.'
Amelia sat back and said: âI really don't see what this has got to do with me.'
âQuite a lot, Miss Kennerley. You must appreciate that Mrs Garamond has made you her sole executrix and her residuary legatee on the understanding â the unwritten and discreet understanding as far as the Will is concerned, mind you â that you first find this woman â¦'
âAnd then?' said Amelia tautly.
âMrs Garamond's instructions require that, once found, a judgement must be made before the bulk of her estate is handed over to her.'
âBut â¦'
âA very subjective judgement about her worthiness to inherit.'
Amelia took a deep breath. âSo I'm to be both judge and jury, am I? Always supposing that we can find her in the first place â¦'
âThe precatory trust gives you total discretion.' James Puckle rustled his papers. âHowever, should your actions be challenged at any time â although I can't imagine by whom â then, of course, we would be very happy to act for you.'
Amelia wrinkled her brow in puzzlement. âAnd if I don't â if I can't â find her, or even if she's dead â then what?'
âThe residue of your great-aunt's estate remains yours.'
Amelia said wryly: âKeeping it in the family, I suppose?'
âJust so, Miss Kennerley,' said the solicitor. âThe connection is there. Your late mother and the testator's daughter, Perpetua, were first cousins after all.'
Amelia nodded her concurrence with this statement. Puckle, Puckle, and Nunnery had really done their homework on her background.
James Puckle was still going on. âThe precatory words, I must remind you, are merely a private wish, hope, desire â¦'
âAnd entreaty,' she finished for him.
âExpressed in writing in private.' He coughed. âI must remind you that no Trust within the legal meaning of the term is actually established although under more recent legislation it is possible that she might have a separate claim in her own right â¦'
Amelia was scarcely listening now. Her mind had wandered back to the odd disturbance at the Grange: it might be even more important now.
âAnd that the provisions of neither the various Trust Acts nor those of the precatory words are legally enforceable.' He looked at her and asked, âDo I make myself quite clear?'
âLike Charles II saying, “Let not poor Nellie starve”?' said Amelia.
âJust like King Charles, Miss Kennerley, except,' he said drily, âthat you may wish to take more note of what your great-aunt wanted than the King's friends and relations did. I understand that, in fact, King Charles' poor Nellie did starve.'
âAnd if I don't?' asked Amelia curiously.
âThat,' said the solicitor, âis a matter entirely between you and your conscience.'
âI see.'
âI must also advise you that you can, of course, decline to act at all if you so wish.'
âIt being a free country.' Amelia looked James Puckle straight in the eye and said: âDo we know why Great-Aunt Octavia left her money in this way to a woman whose name she didn't know and I mustn't mention?'
âOh, yes, Miss Kennerley,' responded the solicitor. âThat's no problem. You see, she was her daughter.'
âBut her daughter Perpetua died â¦'
âNot Perpetua,' James Puckle said. âShe had had another baby before she married your mother's uncle â¦'
EIGHT
Weaving her tail like a plume in the air
âAnd Phoebe,' Amelia gulped, laying a copy of the birth certificate which James Puckle had given her on the kitchen table for her stepmother to see, âdo you know, Great-Aunt Octavia's left a pathetic message for me to give to her daughter when â if â I find her. And in her Will she's left a candle â that's all â for someone called Kate. Isn't it all so sad?'
Dr Plantin nodded.
âTo think she's wanted to see her so badly all those years â¦' said Amelia.
Phoebe Plantin plonked her large lady doctor's handbag firmly on the kitchen floor, pulled up a chair to the table, and examined the document. âA female child,' she read aloud, âborn December 15th, 1940. Mother's surname Harquil-Grasset â¦'
âGo on,' urged Amelia.
âFather unknown,' said Phoebe.
âWhen I find her,' said Amelia a little unsteadily, âI'm to tell her how sorry she was to have inflicted the tache â James Puckle says that's an old Scots word meaning mark â the tache of bastardy on her but she only did what she thought was right at the time.'
âNobody can do more,' commented Phoebe Plantin sagely. âI don't know about her surname but she gave her enough Christian names, didn't she?'
âErica Hester Goudy,' quoted Amelia. âI know, but James Puckle says she might not have kept them when she was adopted She's just as likely to be called something like Mary Smith now.'
âBorn in a nursing home in London,' observed Dr Plantin, still regarding the birth certificate minutely, âand while there was a war on.'
âShe probably told them she was a war widow,' said Amelia.
âShouldn't be surprised,' said Phoebe Plantin, who had ceased to be surprised long ago. âAnd arranged for flowers to be sent to herself, I expect. It's been done before. Not that that sort of nursing home would ask questions, anyway.'
âBut, look,' Amelia pointed at a line on the birth certificate, âshe did put her own occupation down.'
âBiological chemist â¦' said the older woman thoughtfully. âShe must have been pretty bright to go in for that before the last war.'
âShe's left some money to her old college,' said Amelia. âIt's in the Will.'
âThought of everything, hasn't she?'
âAnyway,' said Amelia, turning to give something on the stove her attention, âit's all different now â having a baby adopted, I mean. Wasn't there an Act of Parliament or something whereby an adopted child can now find out about its real mother?'
âIndeed there was,' Phoebe Plantin said warmly, âexcept that they never use the term real mother nowadays. You have to call her the birth mother instead â¦'
âBut what about the new law?' Amelia wished she'd paid more attention in her civics class at school â law seemed a very remote subject when viewed from the perspective of the sixth form. âWhat was that about, then?'
âThe Children's Act of 1975 is the one you mean, but,' Phoebe shook her head â âit isn't going to help you find Octavia Garamond's daughter, I'm afraid.'
Amelia turned away from the stove. âWhy not?'
âBecause while the Act gave children who had been adopted the right to find out about their birth mothers when they reached the age of eighteen,' said her stepmother, âit didn't give their birth mothers any right to find out what had become of their natural children who had been adopted â¦'
âBut â¦'
âWhat you might call sauce for the goslings but not for the goose.'
âOr gander?'
âOr gander,' said Phoebe Plantin, tapping the birth certificate. âWhen Erica Hester Goudy Harquil-Grasset was adopted, which is presumably what happened to her since her birth mother couldn't trace her later â¦'
âIf she tried,' said Amelia. âWe don't even know that.'
âShe would have been given a new birth certificate.'
âI can see that,' said Amelia, âbut â¦'
âThe Registrar General keeps a confidential record of adoptions and the connection between the old and the new names to which only the child has access,' said Dr Plantin, adding authoritatively: âand then only after he or she has reached the age of eighteen and has been professionally counselled.'
âNot the real â sorry â birth mother?'
âNot the birth mother,' said Dr Plantin.
âBut there's nothing, surely, to stop her trying to find out, is there?' asked Amelia, stirring the while. âIt's a free country â¦'
âNothing.' Phoebe Plantin pushed the birth certificate to one side and took up her table napkin. âBut there are only two things that she can do which are really helpful.'
âWhich are?'
âOne is to deposit her name and address with the Registrar saying that she is willing for it to be given to her child should he or she ever try to seek to find out its mother's identity, and indicating that she wishes to make contact with the child so that if the child wishes it can go straight ahead.'
âAnd the other?' asked Amelia.
âAdvertise. You've probably seen advertisements asking for an adopted child born on such and such a date to write to someone who may be its mother,' said Dr Plantin. âIt's open to abuse on both sides of course, but you might have to do something like that.'
âOr,' said Amelia, âfollow up every female child born on December 15th, 1940.'
âDifficult,' said Phoebe Plantin placidly. âEven Herod had his problems in that direction for all that he was King.'
âKing Herod?'
âHe tried, didn't he? And if that's soup on the stove, it's burning.'
âAh, Sloan â¦' Superintendent Leeyes could usually be found sitting in his office very much as a spider saves her strength and keeps watch on her web. The only real difference was that while the spider has to wait for her victim to get entangled in her net, the superintendent sent for his.
âSir?'
âThere you are, at last â¦' The superintendent had long ago raised the wrong-footing of his subordinates to a fine art. âThis Garamond business ⦠you're making progress, I hope?'
âWe've established that whoever did the damage at Great Primer Grange got in through a pantry window at the back of the house' â Sloan wasn't sure if this was exactly progress or not and pressed on â âat some time as yet unknown after Mortons', the undertakers, removed the body during Friday morning, and before Miss Kennerley and Dr Plantin went in on Saturday afternoon.'
âYou wouldn't care to narrow that down at all, would you, Sloan?' asked Leeyes with mock solicitude. âSay to Friday or Saturday or when there's an “R” in the month?'
âNot at the moment, sir, thank you.' He consulted his notebook and went on: âWe have also established that the intruder or intruders wore gloves â¦'
âSo what's new?' shrugged Leeyes.
âThe fact,' replied Sloan literally, âthat they also wore some sort of overshoe â presumably to blur any footprints that might have been left. The carpets at the Grange are very good ones.'
Leeyes grunted.
âWhether the young woman who was seen by the local rector leaving the premises at half-past four on Friday afternoon had a hand in the break-in we have yet to find out,' went on Sloan. âThe name she gave and a rough description have been circulated ⦠and DC Crosby is out interviewing the woman who was on duty as a care assistant at the Grange the night Mrs Garamond died.'
Leeyes grunted again.
âAnd then we're going over to Luston, sir. Both the Garamonds used to work at Chernwoods' Dyestuffs and the old firm â¦'
âOld firm nothing,' said Leeyes briskly. âThey were up in court last month for breaking the health and safety regulations and endangering the wellbeing of their work force. Didn't you notice?'
âEven so,' said Sloan, âthey seem to be taking quite an interest in the break-in at the Grange.'
âDo they?' growled Leeyes. âThen make sure it's a healthy interest. Wait a minute, though, wait a minute, Sloan ⦠there's someone else already taking an interest in Chernwoods' Dyestuffs, isn't there? It was in
The Chronicle
, surely, last week â¦'
âHarris and Marsh's Chemicals, sir,' supplied Sloan, who read the local newspaper too. âI had a word with “G” Division over at Luston about that this morning. Apparently Harris and Marsh've been trying for a takeover of Chernwoods' for quite a while now.'
âI always thought that dog doesn't eat dog,' objected Leeyes, âbut I suppose I'm old-fashioned.'
âIf it's business, it does,' said Sloan without hesitation. âThat's not all, sir. The word in Luston is that rather than be â er â eaten by Harris and Marsh's Chemicals some of the senior people over at Chernwoods' Dyestuffs would go for a management buy-out.'
âWould they?' sniffed Leeyes. âI suppose they know what they're doing, putting all their eggs in one basket like that.'
âIt did occur to me, sir, to wonder if the deceased could have had a significant holding in Chernwoods', seeing as she and her husband both worked there once.'
âIt wouldn't do any harm to find out,' conceded Leeyes.
âThe deceased,' said Sloan, glancing down at his notebook again, âwould appear also to have had some profound disagreements in the past with the rector of Great Primer.'
âI do hope, Sloan,' said Leeyes irritably, âthat religion isn't going to come into all this. There'll be no holds barred then â¦'