Day of Vengeance: Dorothy Martin investigates murder in the cathedral (A Dorothy Martin Mystery) (16 page)

BOOK: Day of Vengeance: Dorothy Martin investigates murder in the cathedral (A Dorothy Martin Mystery)
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FOURTEEN

T
here are more difficult jobs than finding a large country house. The hunt might have taken a very long time indeed before the days of the Internet and Google, but after we left the Museum Tavern, Jane and I set out in search of a library, since neither of us has a smart phone or any other Internet gadget. We had actually eaten very little. I’d thought I was hungry, but with food in front of me, my throat had seemed to close up. I kept wondering when Walter had eaten last.

We found a library, did the search, and lo! Ashhurst was about halfway in between Tunbridge Wells and Wadhurst. It was owned by a titled family named Everidge. Built circa 1625. Open to the public Sunday afternoons only, June through August, admission three pounds. No children or dogs.

The accompanying map showed a maze of country lanes. There was no railway station nearby, and Jane’s car and mine were back in Sherebury.

‘Phone,’ said Jane.

‘But if he’s hiding, the Everidges may not even know he’s there. And if they do, they’d hardly tell some unknown woman on the phone. And they don’t sound like very friendly people.’

Jane’s reply was to pull her phone from her handbag and punch in the number showing on the computer screen. Her face was grim. It grew even more so as she held the phone to her ear and finally punched it off.

‘House closed until June. Ring then for opening hours.’

‘Drat! That’s just the number to book a house tour, then. The family must have a private number. Let’s search some more.’

There were a good many Everidge families, it turned out. We searched through pages and pages of websites, but at last had to concede defeat. If the Everidges of Kent had a phone number, it wasn’t readily available online.

‘I’m sorry, madam, but your time is up. This computer is needed by another patron,’ said the librarian. ‘And the use of mobile phones is prohibited in the library,’ she added, pointing to the sign on the wall.

We retired, defeated, to the reading room.

I wished Alan weren’t tied up in that tiresome meeting. I wanted to consult him, ask him what we should do. I wondered if they were accomplishing anything in the meeting, while I sat here needing him. I felt useless and helpless without him, but he was as far out of reach as if he’d been on the moon.

But – ‘Jonathan!’ Jane and I said at the same moment. We were glared at by the librarian, who had put us on her list of Suspicious Persons and was keeping a close eye on us. I meekly approached her desk. ‘Do you have a London telephone directory?’ I asked in properly muted tones.

She handed it to me from under the desk, saying firmly, ‘You will need to copy down the number. You may not—’

‘Use my mobile in the library. Yes, I know.’ Then I bit my lip. Snippy would get me nowhere. And it wasn’t very nice, no matter how irritated I was. ‘I’m sorry if I was rude,’ I said with a placatory smile. ‘My friend and I are rather upset. Her grandson is missing, and we have reason to think he may be in danger. We’re trying to figure out where he might be.’

‘Oh, dear! You’ve gone to the police?’

‘Yes, but they’ve not come up with anything yet. I’m looking up a private enquiry agent I happen to know in London.’

‘Dear, dear. Well, now, you just take the directory into the staff room –’ she pointed – ‘and you can use your mobile as much as you like in there. And I do wish you luck!’

But I had no luck. My call to Jonathan went to voicemail, which probably meant that he had silenced his phone. That, in turn, probably meant he was actively searching for Walter, but it was frustrating, all the same. I left a message saying only that I thought I knew of an avenue worth his exploring, and he should call me.

I told Jane I couldn’t reach Jonathan, and watched her shoulders sag. ‘I’m afraid I’m out of ideas. We could go back to the BM and get the names of Walter’s other friends, I suppose.’

‘Ahmed said they’d gone. Go back to Sue.’

I hated to go back to her with no news at all. The longer Walter was missing, the less likely it seemed that we would find him easily. And if Jane was worried and frightened, Sue must be nearly out of her mind by now.

Jane was right. We had to go and talk to Sue.

She had been sitting by the front window, watching, waiting, hoping. I was glad. If we had rung the bell unseen, she would have flown down the stairs in hope, only to have it dashed when she opened the door.

One look at our faces told her all she needed to know. ‘Nothing?’

‘Nothing. I’m sorry.’

‘I’ll make us some tea.’

I started to follow her into the tiny kitchen, but Jane caught my arm. ‘Better for her. Needs to keep busy.’

I made a wry face. ‘Of course you’re right. Stupid of me.’

The tea tray shook only slightly as Sue brought it in from the kitchen. Along with the pot and mugs and appurtenances, there was a plate of freshly made scones. I knew she had made them for Walter’s return, and I was hard put not to let my tears show as she handed them around.

We sat and drank in silence, crumbling the scones none of us had the appetite to eat. Sue, I could tell, was afraid to speak lest she start to cry, and I would have bet money Jane was feeling the same way. As for me, I was trying to find a way to give Sue the one sliver of information we’d gained, without raising false hopes.

‘Sue, have you ever heard of a place, a manor house, called Ashhurst?’

‘I don’t think so.’ She looked up from the pile of crumbs on her plate. ‘Sounds Kentish. There’s Penshurst, I know. I’ve been there. Penshurst Place is brilliant.’

‘No, this is Ashhurst. It is in Kent, though. I thought Walter might have mentioned it.’

‘I don’t think so. Why?’

She couldn’t dredge up any interest, but she was trying hard to be polite.

‘Well, you see, the thing is, Jane and I went to the BM this morning to try to talk to Walter’s friends. We found a man named Ahmed something-or-other who was very kind to us, but didn’t have much to tell us.’

‘Oh, Ahmed is a darling! He’s going to be our best … that is …’ Her chin started to tremble, and she looked away.

‘Yes, well, the thing is, we were trying to think of any place where Walter might have gone if he had to lie low for a little while. He wouldn’t have wanted to come here if there was any danger to you, nor to Jane for the same reason, so we asked Ahmed if he could think of a place. And he mentioned this house. Apparently one of Walter’s … er … acquaintances invited the two of them to come for the weekend. The house belongs to this man’s parents, a wealthy, titled family named Everidge. Ring any bells?’

Sue tried to pull herself together. ‘I think I remember Walter and Ahmed talking once about someone named Everidge. It’s a posh name, that’s why I remembered. They didn’t seem to be terribly keen on him. I can’t imagine why Ahmed would think Walter might go there.’

‘Grasping at straws.’ Jane’s voice was raspy. She drank some of her tea.

‘I’m sorry we—’ My phone rang. Alan! I pulled it out of my pocket and looked at the display. Not Alan. A number I didn’t know. I excused myself and moved to a corner of the room. ‘Hello?’

‘Dorothy, Jonathan. You phoned.’

‘Oh, yes, thank you for calling back. I’m with Sue right now.’

‘Is there something you’d rather not talk about in front of her?’

I didn’t want to enlarge on the Ashhurst theory, tenuous as it was. ‘Yes, that’s right.’

‘Then let me tell you something. I’m at the church, and something very strange is going on. I haven’t quite put my finger on it yet, but the reverend gentleman isn’t here, and hasn’t been here since Friday. I need to talk to you and Alan.’

‘Alan’s in a commission meeting, and I don’t know when he’ll be done. He doesn’t even know I’m in London. I was told to phone him only in case of emergency.’

‘I believe this constitutes an emergency – for the commission, at least. Please phone and ask if he can meet us at the pub nearest the church, as soon as possible.’

‘Oh, my! Yes, I’ll do that right away.’ I fussed with my phone, dropped it, retrieved it, put it back in my pocket, trying to give myself time to think, time to figure out how much to tell Jane and Sue. Especially Sue.

I decided on part of the truth. ‘That was Jonathan. He’s come across something that may be very important to the Appointments Commission. I don’t know what, but he wants Alan and me to meet him right away. So I’m going to head over to Lambeth Palace and see if they’ll let me wrest Alan away. You two hold the fort.’

‘But what about Walter?’ cried Sue, not bothering this time to hide her tears.

I gave her a quick hug. ‘We’ve not forgotten him, my dear. It’s all going to tie together, I’m sure of it. And I’ll report back as soon as I know anything at all.’

I hailed a cab, wondering as I did so if it would be quicker to take the Tube. But I’d walked quite enough for the day and my feet were hurting me. Anyway, I couldn’t use my phone underground.

Answer, Alan. Answer!
I pleaded as his phone rang and rang. At the very last moment, when I’d given up hope, he picked up. ‘Dorothy,’ he hissed. ‘What is it?’ He sounded both irritated and worried.

I didn’t waste time with apologies. ‘Jonathan told me to tell you this is an emergency. He wants to meet both of us right away. It has to do with Lovelace, and it isn’t good.’

There was such a long pause I wondered if my phone had died, or his had. But finally he said, ‘I’ll do my best. Where?’

I told him, and knocked on the panel separating me from the cab driver. ‘Sorry. Change of destination, please. St Barnabas’ Church.’ I gave him the street name. He seemed annoyed, as best I could tell from the back of his head.

‘Not the best area, madam,’ he said. ‘Being American, you might not know.’

I despair of ever losing my accent. If it still clings after so many years in England, there’s no hope. But I thought I knew what was really bothering him. ‘I know it’s not a good place to pick up another fare, but I’ll pay you double if you get me there as fast as you can.’

‘Right, madam.’ He sounded much more cheerful, and made a sharp left at the next corner.

There was a small crowd of people, perhaps ten or fifteen of them, gathered around the iron gates in front of the courtyard at St Barnabas’. The gates were shut and, apparently, locked, and the crowd’s voices were verging on angry.

‘Sure you want to stop here, madam?’

‘Actually, no. It doesn’t appear I could get in. No, I’ll settle for that pub on the corner.’ It was The Lion, the one where Alan and I had stopped after our first visit to St Barnabas’.

I gave the driver, as promised, double the fare, which left me with exactly fifty-seven pence. He saw me searching in my purse for more, and handed me back a five-pound note with a chuckle. ‘Don’t you worry about me, madam! Can’t leave a lady penniless, now can I? Hope somebody’s meetin’ you in there.’

‘I hope so, too.’

I hurried inside. I had tarried too long as it was. A cab in that neighbourhood attracted attention, and the people gathered outside the church were already beginning to turn and look.

I looked around, but couldn’t spot Jonathan. Oh, dear! It had been years since I’d been in a pub on my own, and then it was in Sherebury where they knew me. A tiny panic was beginning to stir inside, when Jonathan moved out of a shadowy corner and beckoned to me.

‘My, I’m glad to see you! I was beginning to think … well, anyway, I’m glad you’re here.’

‘Any word from Alan?’

‘He said he’d do his best to get here. It might take a little while, though. Jonathan, what’s happening at the church?’

‘I wish I knew. What I know for certain,’ he said quietly, ‘is that no one has seen Mr Lovelace since early yesterday morning. Mrs Steele is being typically obstructive. She says he’s away at a church event of some sort and has left orders not to be disturbed, but my friend Jed says he’s done a bunk. He missed Evensong yesterday, even though he was supposed to take the service. And Whitsun’s coming soon, with preparations to be made. They make a great to-do about Whitsunday in this parish, it seems, and he’s done nothing about any of it.
And
–’ he lowered his voice still further – ‘the parish account books are missing. Jed says he saw Mrs Steele hunting frantically for them for hours. When he asked her what she was looking for, she bit his head off, but the cabinet door was open, and he could see that they weren’t where they should have been.’

‘How did Jed know where they should have been? A sexton wouldn’t have anything to do with them, surely.’

‘No. But he’s been working at this church even longer than Mrs Steele, and she’s been here since the Ark. He knows where everything is. He knows a lot of secrets, too. I think he knows – ah! Here’s Alan at last.’

‘This had better be good, Jonathan. They’re very displeased with me at Lambeth.’

‘Lovelace and the account books are missing.’

FIFTEEN

A
lan was very still. Then he shook himself, rather like Watson when he’s been out in the rain. ‘That is absolutely all I needed to put a cap on this day. Dorothy, my dear, Jonathan, what would you like to drink?’

We all settled for beer. I would have liked a Jack Daniel’s, but this didn’t seem the sort of pub to stock it, and I know Alan was panting for a good tot of whisky, but, there again, what was available at The Lion was probably not the best single malt.

The beer was quite acceptable, though, darkly amber, clear, and quite refreshing. We each took a long quaff, and then Alan said, ‘All right. Who’ll go first?’

‘I know Jonathan’s story, and I haven’t a lot to report. You start.’

‘Well.’ He took another pull at his beer. ‘The commission members are a bit rattled, as one can imagine. Never before in the history of episcopal appointments has a candidate been murdered. Not in recent history, at any rate. God knows what Henry the Eighth and his crowd got up to.’

‘I don’t think they bothered with commissions and all that. They just named people bishops and then expected them to do their bidding. The king’s bidding, I mean. Look at Becket. He wasn’t even in holy orders when Henry made him Archbishop of Canterbury.’

‘Different Henry, quite a few centuries earlier. All right, all right, don’t chuck your crisps about. I bought all they had. At any rate, the meeting was pretty well divided. I can speak only in generalities, you understand, but some of the members said that since there was no chance Brading would have been chosen anyway, there was no point in not continuing with the process. They didn’t put it quite that way, and they hedged it round with expressions of horror and regret, but it was apparent that was what they meant.

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