Authors: Winston Graham
At the root of it perhaps was his long-held dislike of interfering with another person's life. He had always felt that children should grow up to learn from their own mistakes ⦠Well and good, but what if an early mistake proved fatal?
He was almost in Thame. It was the next turning to the left; he'd forgotten the name of the village, but anyway you didn't go there. Henry's house came first on the side road.
Then he saw a garage entrance and on impulse drew in to a space beyond it and came to a stop while the traffic swished past. He sat and thought it out. When he left Oxford he had intended to talk over all these new developments with Henry. But after only these few minutes on the road he had come to the conclusion that this was not between him and Henry at all.
He drove on.
Partridge Manor had begun life as a square and compact house; but long before Errol bought it someone had added a wing and stables and a clock-tower so that it had an impressive appearance of no architectural merit. You approached it down a long gravel drive overgrown with laurels and larches. In his time Errol had developed the back of the house, with a tennis court and croquet lawn, but had been content to leave the front untended except for the most ordinary maintenance.
When James drove up that cold May evening a few birds were singing, and the last of the sun was striking fire from the tops of the larches. There was an early light in an upstairs room. Someone was in. Perhaps everybody was in and had not yet bothered to switch on. He pulled the bell. Even after so few steps he already wanted to sit down.
A long wait. The garages attached to the house were not visible from here, so he could not see if the cars were out. He pulled the bell again.
No reply. His ankles were like fire, he hadn't stood on them so much for a couple of years. The doctor told him he should lose weight; but surely he would need to lose a couple of stone before it had any significant effect on his walking.
And in fact what else was there to lose weight for if it meant depriving oneself of one of the few pleasures left in life? It was not in any case that he overate, only that he was forced to underexercise.
There was definitely a hght on upstairs, though he could not now see it from the porch. He was getting more than physically tired of waiting outside front doors.
He tried the door. It opened onto the wide hall. He took two clumsy steps in. The light was visible on the landing above. He thought to call out and then decided he would not. The house was very quiet. He shut the door behind him.
Someone must be in. An unlocked front door was a commonplace in an occupied house; but people like the Coltons would never all go out and leave it unlocked.
He tried the handle of the door leading to the small sitting room where he had seen Errol before. The room was unlit and empty.
Up the stairs? He had climbed enough stairs for one day. This was like a retake of his visit to Caxton Street. To save his legs and to make less noise he sat on every second stair and levered himself up with his hands. But with two sticks it was impossible not to make the occasional noise, and someone would surely have heard if anyone was there. At the end of a short passage a door was ajar, and the light came from there. He pulled himself up by the banister, turned the corner and hobbled to the room.
This was a big room overlooking the front of the house, and the walls were even more full of photographs than the room downstairs. In addition to the normal lights, two Anglepoise spotlights focused on a work table which was spread with loose photographs. There was also a half-full glass of a pale brown liquid that looked like whisky, and a cigarette end smouldered in an ashtray. But no one there.
James stood by the table and looked at the photographs. Two more of Stephanie, one standing bareheaded in slacks and a jersey against some Gothic arch, the other walking across a quadrangle with books under her arm. Her happy carefree expression stabbed him like a poisoned knife. Others were of churches, Christian but foreign, he was inclined to think Indian. A number of a primitive fishing vessel on a palm-fringed beach. Another of an attractive bungalow with a frangipani tree flowering in the garden. At the end of the table was a big black folder about two feet square. On the outside was written in white paint:
Exhibition of Photographs by Errol Colton, Megson's Gallery, 1â25 June 1984
.
James raised his head and listened. House totally quiet. No one might ever have lived in it. The servants, he presumed, were day servants or hired for special occasions.
He opened the folder and began to look through it. No doubt that Errol was a first-rate photographer. Subtle gradations of light and shade illuminated every picture. James went through the seventy photographs rather quickly to see if the man would have had the cold tactlessness to include any of Stephanie. He did not see one, but as he turned the pages a slip of paper fell out on the desk. It was brief and typewritten.
The Boss says scrap numbers 22 and 49. At this time he wants no more links than need be.
It was signed C.
James put the paper back. Then he turned to number 22.
It was of a house, surrounded by tall pencil trees. Stone-built, large, with a portico and big windows. Certainly not a new place, might be eighty or ninety years old, not English though the style was English; just possibly Scottish, but more probably Mediterranean, especially because of the trees. He looked up 49. It was of the same house.
What had clearly attracted Errol Colton were the wonderful storm clouds that provided a backdrop for the house and its trees. They were angry and rent, and a halo of sun lit the ragged edges like a vision of judgment â a photographer's dream. They were among the most effective pictures in the portfolio.
James cleared his throat and looked round the empty room. A lavatory flushed. So there was someone in after all.
The pictures were loosely attached to the dark brown pages by strips of sellotape. Gently James detached the two photographs. They were too big to go flat in a pocket so he folded them and slid them into his inside breast pocket.
âWhat the hell are you doing here?'
It was Errol Colton, in a conventional blue suit and tie. His eccentric eyebrows were contracted with annoyance, his face flushed, as if he had been drinking.
There had been antagonism between the two men â natural in the circumstances â at the first meeting, but it had been contained within the confines of a formal conversation with other people close by. It was not so in this case.
âI called to see you,' James said. âNo one answered the door.'
âTrespassing. I'm sorry my wife isn't here to greet you. She's gone to Stratford to see
Lear.
It's not my favourite play so I let her take her cousin.'
âI came in,' said James.
âI never really enjoy seeing Gloucester having his eyes gouged out, do you?'
âI prefer it off stage.' James drew a chair forward and sat in it. One of his sticks clattered to the floor.
âSo you can get upstairs if you want to,' Errol said.
James said: â I suppose you know that Arun Jiva has left the country.'
âWho? Dr Jiva? No, why? What is it to you?'
âHe appears to have gone back to India. I wondered what it was to you?'
âHe's a casual friend, as you know.'
âAnd Nari Prasad?'
Errol took up his whisky. âNever heard of him.'
âHe seems to have heard of you. Jiva gave him your name today, and a bogus ambulance came to take him away. I happened to be there â¦'
âJust as you happen to be here, eh?'
âNo, here I came with intent.'
âTo do what?'
âTo ask you a few more questions about my daughter's death.'
âFor Christ's sake!'
âAlso I would like to know about the bogus ambulance, whether you really wanted to help this young Indian or whether you wanted to put him away.'
Errol's face continued to stay flushed. He was on some sort of high. He put his whisky down and went to the door, took a whistle from his pocket and blew it. He came back into the room. There was silence.
James said: âYou're a good photographer.'
âThank you.'
âEven this one is good in its own way.' James pulled out the photograph taken on the balcony at Goa.
Enrol smiled at it. âAh, that. I sent it to her. Not a picture, I agree, to gladden a father's heart.'
âI didn't find it in her flat. It was in Dr Jiva's house.'
A flicker of genuine surprise crossed Errol's face. He drained his whisky. â She was evidently even more of a little tart than I thought she was.'
James gripped one of his sticks and Errol backed away. âWell you asked for it,' he said, âyou asked for the truth, coming here like a thief, breaking into my house! I'm sorry your daughter died but there's nothing more to be done about it â' He stopped.
The door had opened behind him and a short dark-skinned man came into the room.
âAngelo,' Errol snapped. âWhere the hell were you? This man came clattering into the house. I heard him even when I was on the lavatory and thought it was you. What sort of a minder are you supposed to be?'
âI hear the noise and think it is you,' Angelo Smith said. âAnyway, he is an old man and can do no harm. Do you wish him put out?'
âI wish him put out.'
âI'll go when I've finished what I have to say.' James found himself shaking with anger. âI believe my daughter was murdered and you had some hand in it. I believe you are involved in drug trafficking in some way. And I believe you have a boss, for you haven't the guts to run an organisation such as this. Who is “the Boss”? That's what I want to know. Who is â'
Errol had made a sharp jerk of the head to Angelo Smith. â Take this old cripple and throw him out. Don't break his legs; that would be a pity; just put him out a little roughly and make sure he drives away in his car. Make sure he remembers not to come here again.'
Smith came up quickly behind James and grasped him by his collar. Smith was a strong man and was able to yank James to his feet so that his coat was almost pulled off his shoulders. Then he took a professional grip of James's right arm, pulled it behind his back. The sticks clattered to the floor. He was frogmarched, choking, to the door and out on to the landing.
âDo you wish to go downstairs easy or hard?' Smith asked, breathing between his teeth, for James was a heavy man to handle.
âEasy,' said James. He went limp, and Smith relaxed his grip to get a firmer one. James hit him side handed across the upper lip. Smith staggered back with a hand to his face, recovered himself, but turned at the wrong moment. James hit him with a rabbit punch behind the ear. As he reeled against the banisters James helped him over. There was a monumental crash in the dark hall and no more sound at all.
After waiting a few seconds to listen, James turned back towards the room. The door was half-ajar. His legs almost giving way, he staggered back.
âFor Christ's sake, Angelo, what in the name of hell have you done! â¦'
Errol had come towards the door, and saw there not Angelo Smith but James Locke.
âYour friend â has had a fall â¦'
They stared at each other.
James said: â It has gone very dark â out there â he must have missed his footing â¦'
Errol took a step back. âBy Christ, the police will hear of this!'
James said: âWhat was it you said about Stephanie?'
Two more steps and Errol had the table between them.
âLittle tart. That was the expression. Even more of a little tart than I realised.'
Errol turned and pulled open a drawer in the chest behind. Leaning on the table James picked up one of his sticks, shakily raised it.
âLittle tart? You set her up in some way and are responsible for her death!'
Errol came up with a small black pistol. âNow, you bastard, keep your distance while I ring for the police. You'll rot in prison for what you've done tonight!'
James threw his stick. It struck Errol a harmless glancing blow on the shoulder. Errol fired. There was no possible way in which James could have avoided the bullet had it been accurate. But Errol was no gunman. The bullet winged past and struck the pilaster of the wall between two photographs.
James was still coming. The table, only really a trestle, collapsed under his weight, and Errol, raising the gun again, was grasped by an iron hand which pulled him across the fallen table, among the photographs and the albums and the sketch books. Errol kicked and struggled to get to his feet. As he came up, James chopped him across the throat.
Henry Gaveston was writing to his wife when the telephone rang.
And so, my dear Evelyn, this awful tragedy refuses to go away. She was a popular girl who seemed to attract attention wherever she went, and her death continues to cast a shadow over the college, and I believe to some extent over the whole university â¦
He put his pen down, brushed some tobacco ash off the table, and lifted the phone.
âGaveston.'
âHenry. This is James.'
âMy dear fellow, I was thinking of you.'
âPerhaps with reason. I have just killed two men.'
â⦠What? What d'you mean? What are you talking about?'
âJust that.'
âMy dear chap, don't make that sort of joke. Where are you â at home?'
âNo, at Partridge Manor. Errol Colton's house.'
A brief silence. Gaveston took the telephone away from his ear, considered it, then said: â You can't be serious.'
âWhat?'
âI said, you can't be serious.'
âOh, but I am. And Colton is one of the two.'
It had been in Henry's mind to continue his letter to Evelyn telling her of how hardly James had taken his loss and expressing the hope that he wouldn't pursue too obstinately and to his own detriment his almost paranoid belief that Stephanie had not taken her own life. But in his most pessimistic moments he had not imagined anything like this.