Authors: John Boyne
âHeâ¦?' Stella stared at her, her mind swimming, as if the whole thing was an enormous puzzle that she couldn't understand. âOwen identifiedâ¦?' She stopped and considered it. âIt's not Owen then whoâ'
âApparently Raymond came around to visit Owen,' continued Margaret. âBut he wasn't in. He'd gone out for the evening with some friends and a colleague of his from the gallery was staying overnight in his flat. The fellow was drunk, it seems, and Raymond showed up andâ'
âRaymond,' said Stella with a sigh, closing her eyes and keeping them sealed for the best part of a minute as she tried to shift her emotions from where they had been a moment before to where they had to rest now. âRaymond's dead,' she said quietly.
âI'm so sorry, Stella,' said Margaret.
The story had come together in the days in between. Owen Montignac had hired a young man named Gareth Bentley to work with him in the gallery. He'd been doing a good job so they went out one evening for dinner and, according to Montignac, Gareth got so inebriated and so quickly that he gave him the keys to his flat on Bedford Place and sent him there in a taxicab to sleep it off. In the meantime Montignac met up with some other friends and was in their company for the entire rest of the night, leaving their home at eight o'clock the following morning and heading straight for the gallery, which he opened up and where he stayed until the police called on him later in the day.
Montignac went with them to examine the body and identified it as Raymond Davis, a young horticulturalist engaged to marry his cousin. He must have come around to see Montignac in the night, the police deduced, and when the drunken Bentley found him there a fight ensued, leading to the vicious death. Bentley, of course, was claiming his innocence but also maintaining that he could remember nothing of the night before due to the amount of alcohol he had taken. In the circumstances it wasn't a very satisfying alibi, particularly since not only did it not seem to be an accident, but the fellow's brains had been smashed in by a candlestick in a particularly brutal way.
Stella had taken to her bed then but, Margaret noted, she had cried very little. Instead a great sadness seemed to descend on her and she just lay there. She had managed to keep herself composed during the funeral but had come straight back to Leyville afterwards, not even attending the wake, a formality which she said she hated.
âThere we are,' said Annie, serving up the breakfast on to a plate. âI put in a couple of extra eggs for her too. See if she can't build her strength up. Wait there till I fetch the tea.'
âThank you, Annie,' said Margaret standing up. âI think I'll encourage her to get up after breakfast.'
âQuite right too. All this lazing around is no good for anyone.'
âNo.'
âI don't suppose you know,' began Annie after a polite hesitation. âWhether Miss Stella will be staying full-time at Leyville from now on?'
Margaret frowned. âI expect so,' she said. âWhy? Where else would she go?'
âWell no, I didn't mean that,' said Annie. âJust with her not getting married after all. She's not going to up sticks and head off to London to Mr Owen's, is she?'
âI think that's the last place she'd want to be right now, don't you? After everything that's happened.'
âI just need to know for my own situation,' explained Annie. âIf there's not going to be the workâ'
âOh please, Annie,' said Margaret in frustration, reaching down for the tray as Annie placed the tea on it. âCan we not have this conversation just now? All I can think about is Stella for the moment, I can't be expected to worry about everyone else's rotas. You'll get paid if that's what you're worried about.'
âThat's not what I'm worried about,' said Annie angrily. âAnd there's no need to be so rude.'
âI wasn't being rude,' said Margaret in an exhausted tone. She sighed. âLook, if you're really all that concerned I can have a word with Stella when the moment's right and find out exactly what her plans are.'
âIf it wouldn't be putting you to too much trouble,' said Annie archly.
âFine then,' she said, leaving the room. âI'll speak to her about it as soon as possible.'
She left with the tray and made for the staircase. The atmosphere was so gloomy that it threatened to overpower her but she understood only too well the worry that Annie was feeling. They had had so much death in this house, she considered, and even now, when there was the chance of a marriage and children, of a happy event, it had been stolen away. As she left, she clutched the tray so tightly in her hands that she could feel a painful sensation in her bones.
3
MONTIGNAC TOOK THE KEYS
and wallet from his pockets and laid them in the tray, moved against the wall and stretched his arms out wide while the warder patted him down for any contraband materials that he might be smuggling in. Passing inspection, he followed the other visitors down the long, cold corridor and shivered slightly with the uncomfortable sensation that comes from being in a prison. Of all the places in the world where he would not have wanted to go by his own choice, this was at the top of the list.
He glanced at the other visitors and couldn't help but feel superior and out of place among them. They were, for the most part, a lower class of person, dressed in cheap clothes, the women with stringy hair, the men who hadn't even bothered to shave or put on a tie; those who had looked like they wore the same suit every day of their lives, from morning till night. The corridor itself smelled of disinfectant and the stone floor, walls and ceilings could scarcely have made the place seem less welcoming.
At the end of the corridor they turned left and were escorted into a large room where small tables and plastic chairs stood at regular distances from each other and his fellow visitors started to scatter hesitantly in different directions as they spotted their loved ones. Montignac looked around the room slowly and finally found his prey sitting in a corner, at the most distant table, and walked towards him.
âHello, Gareth,' he said, sitting down.
âOwen,' he replied, his voice betraying enormous amounts of relief. âI'm so grateful that you came. I didn't know whether you would or not.'
âOf course I would come if you wanted me to,' he said with some concern. âHow are you anyway?' Gareth laughed and shrugged his shoulders as if to suggest that the answer was obvious. âI must admit I was surprised that you wanted to see me,' continued Montignac after a moment. âBut I was intrigued.'
He looked across the table and tried not to give away the fact that his appearance was harrowing. Although he had hardly been overweight before, he had lost a good ten pounds since being incarcerated and his skin was a pale, waxy colour. His hair had been cut quite short and he hadn't shaved for a couple of days; the stubble was irregular, thick around the chin but straggly and inconsistent about the cheeks and throat. The youthful good looks that he had sported were starting to fade at an incredible rate, the effect, Montignac believed, of an altogether too comfortable life having been suddenly destroyed. To his surprise, Gareth was smoking a cigarette, something he couldn't remember him ever doing before.
âThis whole thingâ¦' began Gareth nervously, looking around to make sure that he wasn't being overheard. âThis whole thing is a tremendous mistake.'
âIs it indeed?'
âOf course it is,' he said, faltering. âI don't know how it happened. It ⦠it must have been a terrible accident.'
Montignac sighed and sat back in his chair. He noticed that there was the faintest hint of trembling in Gareth's fingers as he put the cigarette between his lips and drew on it inexpertly, like a schoolboy having his first drag. He sucked in the nicotine too deeply and held it in his mouth too long but somehow managed to control his coughing.
âWhy don't you tell me what you remember?' asked Montignac. âFrom the beginning.'
âWell that's just it,' said Gareth. âI don't remember anything much from that night so I don't know what to say. Everyone keeps asking me but what can I tell them? I remember going to the Threadbare to meet you, and I remember you suggesting that we go and have some dinner and we went to the pub at the end of the roadâ'
âYou drank an awful lot there, Gareth,' he said, interrupting him. âI couldn't get you to stop. I've never seen someone get through so much alcohol in so short a time.'
âI've done that before,' said Gareth sadly. âI should have learned my lesson. Alcohol and me ⦠well we don't mix. I black out, I get violentâ'
âApparently.'
âBut I've never done anything like this before. Nothing even approaching this. You have to believe me, Owen.'
âI tried to stop you,' protested Montignac. âI said you should either slow down or stick to water but you got quite aggressive then.'
âI did?'
âWell, yes,' he replied apologetically. âYou said you weren't a child, you told me that I wasn't your father and if you couldn't celebrate earning a thousand pounds, well what was the fun of life anyway?'
Gareth shook his head and then placed it in his hands, bereft now. âI'm so sorry,' he said. âI should have listened to you. But once I start, it seems that there's no stopping me.'
Montignac sighed and looked around. He noticed the way that all the guards who were either standing by the walls or parading between the tables looked directly ahead of themselves all the time, as if they didn't want anyone to think that they were eavesdropping on conversations, but something about the way they held themselves implied to him that they could hear every word that was being said and were ready to interject if any trouble broke out.
âYou have to understand,' said Montignac, leaning forwards a little and lowering his voice. âThis is very difficult for me. Being here, I mean. After all, Raymond ⦠well he was engaged to my cousin. And Stella's like a sister to me.'
âI know that, Owen, and I'm so sorry. Did you know him well?'
âI knew him a little. He was a sterling chap.'
Gareth bowed his head, biting his lip in regret. âI don't even remember him coming round. For that matter I don't even remember arriving at your flat.'
âI gave the taxi driver my address,' said Montignac. âHe's since spoken to the police to confirm that,' he added quickly.
âBut why didn't you come with me? Why did you leave me on my own?'
âFor heaven's sake, man, it was barely half past nine and you were on another planet of drunkenness. I hadn't been drinking very much at all and I wanted to celebrate too. That was the plan, for both of us. I didn't want to call it a night yet. I never suspected that ⦠well, anything like this might happen. Do you think I'd have left you alone if I had? In fact I was trying to do you a favour. I knew that if you went home to Tavistock Square in that condition, there'd be hell to pay. I figured I'd never see you again, that you'd be locked up in your father's chambers until your retirement party forty years from now. So I sent you off to Bedford Place and met up with some friends myself. I was with them all night. In fact it got so late that I stayed with one of them and then went straight from there into work the next morning. It was only that afternoon that the police came to see me.'
âThe whole thing has been an absolute nightmare,' said Gareth. âI woke up ⦠I didn't know where I wasâ¦'
âWell it's not exactly been a barrel of laughs for me either,' hissed Montignac, looking around to check the position of the guards. âFor pity's sake, Gareth, how could you just throw your life away like that? You know people are saying you're going to swing for this?'
Gareth let out a low groan, a sound of such pain and agony that it might have come from an animal that needed to be put down.
âAre you sure you didn't know Raymond Davis?' he asked after a moment.
âOf course I'm sure,' said Gareth. âHow could I have known him? I'm not a horticulturalist and that's what he was, right? I've never even been to the RHS or Kew Gardens or any of those places. They don't interest me. And why would I want to kill him anyway? I have no motive.'
âWell I don't know, but that's what the police are trying to find out. And the newspapers.'
âThe newspapers are on to the story?' he asked, looking up with tears in his eyes; he had had no access to the papers in jail, despite the fact that he asked for them on a daily basis.
âOf course they are,' said Montignac with a gentle laugh, as if the whole thing was entirely obvious. âRemember who your father is, after all. Remember how he sentenced that fellow to die earlier in the year when everyone said that his connections would get him off, but your father said no, the law's the law. Well that's coming back to haunt him now. Now they're all using his words and throwing them right back in his face. They're saying that just because it'll be his son in the dock he can't turn around and sayâ'
âBut I didn't do it!' protested Gareth.
âOh for heaven's sake. You were found alone with Raymond's dead body, covered in his blood, alone in the flat, and your fingerprints were all over the candlestick. The evidence is damning.'
âWell if I did do it,' said Gareth, looking lost and shaking his head from side to side even as he verbally accepted the possibility of guilt. âThen I certainly didn't mean to.'
âWell that's not much use to Raymond Davis,' said Montignac. âNow is it?'
âNo, of course not, butâ'
âNor is it of any comfort to my cousin, who's been devastated by this. You know she lost her father earlier in the year?'
Gareth looked around in despair and as he did so, he caught the eye of one of his fellow inmates who gave him a salacious, gap-toothed grin.