Read The Numbered Account Online
Authors: Ann Bridge
Tags: #Thriller, #Crime, #Historical, #Detective, #Women Sleuth, #Mystery, #British
âNo,' he said, looking her full in the face. âI was simply idlingâFatima!'
The name that in Geneva she had looked forward to hearing from him came, now, like a blow. Wounded, Julia blushedâher apricot blush that was so beautiful under her lion-coloured hair. She was also at once angry and suspiciousâwas he lying, and trying to embarrass her because he was lying? She mastered her temper, and thought very fast; well before Wright and his burden had reached the bottom of the zigzags she had taken a decisionânot to conceal her acquaintance with that pair. Two buses, already half-full of passengers, were drawn up in the lay-by across the road, one for Interlaken, one for the Beatenbucht funicularâas Wright reached the level she went straight up to him and June.
âLet me help you, Mr. Monro. The left-hand bus is the
one for Interlaken.' Breathing rather heavily, the young man set June down; Julia took her arm. âMiss Armitage, how do you feel now? Come on, we'll get you a seat close to the door.'
All this was well within earshot of Antrobus; in fact Julia spoke rather loudly, on purpose. She and Wright together supported the girl across the road to the lay-by, where Julia spoke in German to the flirtatious blond bus-driver. âThe Fräulein has had a
Fuss-Brechen
on the Niederhorn; she should have a seat by the door.' The driver hopped out, heaved June in, and placed her on the front seat. The little thing leaned forward from the door to speak to Julia.
âOh Miss Probyn, you have been so kind! I'll never forget itânever! If there's ever anything I can do for you, just let me know, and I'll do it!'
âI'll remember,'Julia said. âGoodbye, dear. Take care of yourself.' Impulsively, she mounted the step of the bus, leaned in, and gave the nice, silly little thing a kiss. Then she turned to Wright, who stood by with an open air of concentrated ill-temper not commonly seen outside Athens and the Middle East.
âMr. Monro, do get a doctor to look at that ankle. I'm sure it ought to be seen to at once.'
âO.K.' Wright said sulkily. âMind you, it's all her own fault.'
âOh don't be an
ass!'
Julia exclaimed angrily. âIt's entirely
your
fault for going off to amuse yourself, and leaving her alone. And is that the way to talk about your fiancée, anyhow?'
Wright crumbled at once.
âSorry,' he said apologetically. âYes, I did go farther than I meant, andâand it's all been a bit upsetting. Of course I'll get a doctor to her the moment we get down. Goodbyeâthanks for looking after her.' He got into the bus and sat beside June; the blond driver gave out tickets and collected cash in a leather wallet, and the huge vehicle pulled out into the road and rolled away.
Antrobus too had strolled across the road, and presumably
overheard the whole interchangeâhis question as the bus rolled off suggested this.
âFriends of yours?' he asked expressionlessly.
âWhich, the idiotic little girl or the revolting young man?' Julia asked rather sharply.
âWell really I meant both. They seemed rather a unit as they came down that path.'
Julia could not help laughing.
âI ran into the girl up on the mountain today, and succoured her when she sprained her ankle,' she said; for once the truth was completely non-committal. âBut I never met her beforeâBluebeard!'
He laughed loudly.
âVery
good! Only you see you kissed her just now, and then you addressed her rather dreadful escort as Mr. Monro. Your so infinitely more attractive cousin said his name was Monro, too.'
Julia was worried by all this, but tried not to show it.
âMonro is a fairly common name in Scotland, isn't it?' she said. âLike Antrobus.'
He laughed again.
âQuite true. But that young man doesn't look enormously Scotch, would you say?'
Julia also laughed.
âNo. But don't Jews often take Scotch names? They seem to have a penchant for them.'
âThat young man isn't a Jew,' Antrobus said positively. âA lot of other probables, but not that.'
âWhat are your probables?' she asked.
âLevantine; or English father and Syrian mother, or English mother and Greek fatherâalmost any Middle-East permutation and combination. But definitely not a Jew.'
Odd that he should speculate like this to her, if he really was in with them, Julia thoughtâbut perhaps it was just a blind. Anyhow two could ask questions.
âAnd have you never seen them before?' she said, remembering with almost passionate vividness the passage of three people down the platform at Victoria, under his very nose.
Before Antrobus could answer Colin came hurrying up to them, a flowered-paper parcel in his hand.
âThere you are!' he said, thrusting it at Julia. âIt wasn't just up the road, it was at least half a kilometre!' He saw that the Interlaken bus had gone, and looked at her enquiringly.
âOh thank you, darling. Well look, we'd better hurry, or we shall miss our bus. Goodbye,' she said coolly to Antrobus.
Colin also made his farewell to the detective.
âGoodbye,' he said, much more warmly than Julia, and holding out his hand. âYou might do worse than come up here, if you want flowers and walksâI don't know about the birds yet. Let us know if you doâwe're at the Silberhorn.'
âRightâI certainly will, if I do come up. And don't forget to take your old friend who's so keen on flowers up to see the Alpine Garden at the Schynige Platteâshe would love it. I'm probably going there tomorrow myself.'
âDamn, there's our machine moving!' Julia exclaimed. âCome on!'âand she and Colin, running, leapt aboard their bus.
âWhy did you push me off?' Colin began at once. âDid you see them up on the top?'
âYesâand learned a whole bagful. Tell you when we get inâno, it must wait till after lunch; we're fearfully late. But I pushed you off because I didn't want them to see youâhim, rather; she's just a little cipher.' She glanced round the bus. âWhat's all this about the Schynige Platte?' she askedâan English couple were sitting close behind them.
âOh, it's some place above Interlaken where they've made a rock-garden and naturalised the wild-flowers and put labels on them, so that you can see what everything is; and there are little paths to walk about, and seats. He's mad on wild-flowersâand birdsâand when I mentioned that Mrs. H. was keen on flowers too he said we ought to take her up. I think she could go; there's a railway right up to it, and a restaurant at the top.'
âA good idea,' Julia said. But both she and Colin found it rather a trial to have to sit through lunch talking on indifferent matters, when she was bursting with her news, and he was impatient to hear it. The Schynige Platte seemed a useful topic with which to entertain Mrs. Hathaway, since neither of them could tell her much about the Niederhorn; that lady was charmed with the idea, and when she went to rest declared that she should read it up in Baedeker while she was lying down. Colin and Julia repaired to a field below the hotel garden and sat in the shade of a mountain ashâthe walls of the Silberhorn bedrooms, like those of many Swiss mountain hotels, were about as sound-proof as paper.
âWell now, what?' Colin asked.
Julia recounted her rescue of June Phillips, and the silly child's revelations. âObviously Mr. Borovali, or whoever
employs him, went round all these advertising agencies and flipped through their photographs of girls with Pekes or outside banks, till they had the luck to find one who was passably like Aglaia. Then they engaged her for a month, and fitted her out, and brought her along as a sort of corroborative dummy.'
âWouldn't she have had to speak a part at the bank?'
âNot much, would she? Aglaia's a minor still. I expect they just coached her up a bit. Heiresses don't have to be clever!'
âAnd why do you suppose they picked on this Wright person? Is he like me?'
âNot in the least, except that he's tall and has black hair. I imagine,' Julia said, remembering June's words about Wright not being âlike anyone', and her vexation at his larger salary, âthat they routed round till they found someone with a knowledge of these oil countries; and as he's been fired from a job out there and has a chip on his shoulder, what could be better? I think June said something about his knowing these parties who are coming here to collect the blue-printsâthat alone would be ample recommendation, wouldn't it? And he's just the sort of creature to be ready for any crookery, I should say; I feel sure he'd sell his mother's corpse before it was cold for her eyes, for that new operation.'
Colin laughed.
âBut anyhow, now we know where they are,' Julia said. âSo what next?'
Colin considered.
âCould he have had the papers on him today?'
âDefinitely not, coming down. Pale corduroy slacks, silk shirt, and a silk wind-cheaterâwith no bulges! But where could he put them up there, and why?'
âOnly that he went off alone like that.'
âShe says he always doesâanyhow they've had a week to find a much better place to stow them in than the Niederhorn Ridge! How big would the papers be, by the way?'
âI've no idea, I should imagine a fair thickness, though.'
âAnd foolscap size.'
âJulia, I don't know.'
âWell do find out. You and your department and your imaginings!âI never heard of anything so amateurish. I expect Mister de Ritter-Borovali has them in a briefcase in the safe at the Fluss, along with Jewesses' better diamonds.'
Colin grinned, wryly. âHow could we have seen them? They've been locked up in this damned bank.'
âOh well. Anyhow, hadn't you better ring up your firm in Berne, so that they can cause the appropriate department to pounce?'
âM'm. Yesâyes, I had. They may know more now about how long the delay is likely to be.'
âBut why delay at all? Why not pounce tonight, or at least tomorrow?'
âIt's not as simple as all that, in a foreign jurisdiction,' Colin said soberly, rather impressing Julia. âHowever, I will get onto them.'
âWell when you do, do ask if they know anything about this Antrobus man. Have you ever met him before?'
âNoâwe just got talking.'
âHe doesn't belong to your outfit?'
âNot to my knowledge. Why should he?'
âOnly because he keeps on turning up whenever your sham fiancée is about.' She recounted the episode at Victoria; seeing him entrain at Berne for Geneva, âon the very day, mark you, before these stooges went to the bank'; his presence at the Bergues, and also at Nethersole's luncheon. âAnd now he turns up here, again on the very day that June and the emetic Wright go up to the Niederhorn. You'd think he was watching them; if he isn't, he must be watching out for themâkeeping
cave,
as one used to say at school. Anyhow, I'd like to know where he stands.'
âIt is all a bit odd,' Colin said thoughtfully. âBut he struck me as a very decent sort of man. He's a member of the Alpine Club.'
âDid he tell you that?'
âWell it emerged.'
âYou could have that checked.'
âYes, of courseâI will.' He brooded. âHow well do you
know this party who asked him to meet you in Geneva?'
âNot well at allâI met him a few times with Geoffrey. He's an archaeologist, when he isn't with UNO. And I remember that Antrobus said he was a tremendous Arabic scholar,' Julia said, trying to bring out all her few facts about Nethersole.
âIsn't he permanently with UNO?'
âI don't think soâno. They lay him on when they want him, I gathered, and he goes if he isn't too busy digging up Jericho, or deciphering Qumran scrolls.'
âThe Qumran scrolls aren't in Arabic,' Colin objected.
âNot? Oh well, anyhow he's in those parts a lot of the time.'
âMiddle East again,' Colin said gloomily. âAnd of course a UNO part-timer could really be anything. Yes, I expect we ought to keep an eye on Antrobus.'
âThat shouldn't be difficult, as he seems to be keeping an eye on us,' Julia said briskly. âBut
ask,
Colin.'
âI will. I'll go and ring up now, and see what I get on himâand give them this Interlaken address. They ought to be pretty pleased, J. dear.' He strolled off up the steep field.
Julia remained under the mountain ash, looking across at the white peaks of the Blümlisalp range, glowing like praising souls under the sun; she felt relaxed and happy. Colin's âthey' certainly ought to be pleased at this windfall. Of course it was not due to any skill of hers, merely to Wright's lack of conscientiousnessâwell what could you expect, with that face?âand poor little June's incredibly low I.Q. (She hoped that bloody youth really had got a doctor to look at the sprained ankle.) But it was a scoop, all rightâquite a major scoop.