Read The Numbered Account Online
Authors: Ann Bridge
Tags: #Thriller, #Crime, #Historical, #Detective, #Women Sleuth, #Mystery, #British
âHe had no business to tell you,' the young man said. âAfter all, he knows nothing about you.'
âDear child, he knows everything about meâMorocco, Portugal, and all.'
âHow?' he asked sharply.
âQuite simpleârang up London to ask, and was put onto Hugh.' She reddened a little at that name. âAnyhow he was more or less compromised into telling me, because I caught him red-handed in the Golden Bear, going through Borovali's effects.'
âThat's where they've shifted to, is it? In Interlaken?' She nodded. âHow did you find that out?'
Still in a low voice Julia recounted the events of the morning, beginning with June's telephone call; Colin listened attentively.
âHow I wish all international crooks and thugs employed such morons!' he muttered fervently at the end. âThis June girl is a piece of cake. Of course they had to use her for her face, but she's God's gift to us.'
Julia proceeded to tell him that God's gift must be got away promptlyââbefore you start clamping down on
those unsavoury characters, B. and W.'
âWhere can she go?'
âOh, they'll take her in at La Cure, at any time.'
âGood Lord! Does that delightful Pastor know what she's been up to?'
âOf course. He and I went to the bank together, you remember, and he heard the whole story there. He doesn't mind a bitâhe calls her his “god-daughter at one remove”.'
âGood Lord!' Colin said again.
âMore tea?' As she refilled the toothglassââWhy the fancy dress?' Julia enquired.
âAhâwellâperhaps slightly less obviously English. You see we think that Borovali and Wright almost certainly won't hand over the papers to their principals in Interlaken itself; much more likely on a sight-seeing tour of some sort. So when I tag along I want to look as Swiss as possible.'
âOh I see. Very crafty! But how did you get hold of this idea of the excursion meeting?'
To her surprise Colin's dead-white face, a face as utterly white as his sister Edina's, suddenly reddened like a girl's.
âWellâin factâlook here, J., I apologise for ticking you off last night about your goings-on at Merligen. My superiors took a different view, and they were quite right; we got some “bugging” arranged for that chemist's telephone in Berne, and that produced this information about the meeting.'
âAnd their coming by train?'
âYes.' Colin's face got redder still.
âOh ho!' Julia said cheerfully. âSo the chemist, all innocent, rang Mr. Kaufmann at the Villa Victoria, and he, if he's back from Luganoâand if not sour-puss Mrs. K.â rang up Mr. B. at the Bear, I suppose. Did you get any date for this
Ausflug?'
âNot hard, no. But not before tomorrow, and more likely the day after.'
âAhâthat's why Antrobus felt safe to come to supper
tonight.' She felt that Antrobus might have told her some of this himself.
âIs he coming to supper?' Colin asked, looking pleased.
âYesâMrs. H. invited him. She rather fell for him, and then fell away again!' Julia said laughing. âBut look, Colin'âshe paused.
âYes?'
âWell, he and I might have something to discuss, rather privately, after Mrs. H. has gone to bed.' Julia as she spoke reddened as deeply as Colin had done a few moments before. âSo if you could contrive not to be too much in evidence, darlingâ'
He studied her face, more beautiful than ever scorched by the blush, with affectionate curiosity.
âVery well. Is this
it
, Julia my sweet?'
âOh, how do I know? Clear out now, there's a lamb. I must have a bath.'
Dinner that night was rather a success. Julia, who bought clothes so skilfullyâand so expensivelyâthat they lasted almost for ever put on the green brocade dress which she had worn at a royal wedding in Lisbon nearly two years before; Antrobus startled everyone, and delighted Mrs. Hathaway, by appearing in a dinner-jacket. He bowed over her hand, apologised for not telephoning, but felt confident that she had received the verbal message he sent by Miss Probyn that he was coming, and expressed his great pleasure at being able to do soâMrs. Hathaway was mollified. Fräulein Hanna had done wonders with the
Waldmeister
, and the May-cup was delicious; so was the soup, the tiny local trout, and the tender steaks. Small the Silberhorn rooms might be, but the food was admirable, and so was the viewâbeyond the window the snows of the Blümlisalp turned a tea-rose pink, faded to pale gold, and then to a cold lavender-grey. Within the brightly-lit room the curiosity of the English party was aroused by a table close by, evidently prepared for some celebration: broad mauve-and-white ribbons were stretched across it from corner to corner, mauve-and-white bows were pinned here and there, and posies of mauve flowers lay at each place.
âWhat can it be?' Antrobus speculated. âWhat does one celebrate by half-mourning?' Julia enquired of Fräulein Hanna, who stumped over intermittently to supervise the service of their meal, and learned that it was a Swiss silver-wedding party.
âOh well, I suppose half-mourning is quite appropriate for that,' Antrobus said. âThe onset of middle age, and so on. After all, what colour could they have? White is bridal; redâwell presumably all passion is
nearly
spent; greenâ oh, perish the thought! And blue is too dismalâso far as
I know no one has composed “Silver Wedding Blues”. No, I think mauve is very well chosen.'
Mrs. Hathaway, laughing, agreed. She was pleased with Antrobus for taking the trouble to make this sort of civilised conversation; her former approval of him returned. Colin as usual sat rather silent; Julia put in a slightly
cassant
drawled observation from time to timeâso as not, as she said later to Antrobus, to have two death's-heads at the feast.
For she got her stroll. After coffee in the
Kleine Saal
âMrs. Hathaway was still too cautious about evening chills to risk having it on the balconyâColin offered to escort the older lady to her room; when he came down he asked Antrobus to excuse him, as he had some letters to write.
âYou two don't want a little chat about unfinished business?' Julia asked helpfully. Colin scowled at her; Antrobus grinned.
âWe can have that tomorrow morning, can't we?' he said to the young man. âWhat about 10 a.m. in the Englischer Garten?âyou know, by the river, with the superb silver poplars and the monument to the man who built the railway up to the Jungfrau-Joch? I shall be sitting on a bench, reading
The Times
and listening to the blackbirds.'
âI don't know, but I will find it, and be there,' Colin said, not very graciously. âGood-night. âNight, Julia.' He took himself off.
âWhat's upsetting him?' Antrobus asked.
âJust what I'm wondering myself.' She glanced round the small room, where two other parties were sitting, the men smoking cheroots. âIt's stifling in hereâlet's go into the garden for a minute,' she said.
The garden was empty; the gravelled paths and the now cloth-less tables were clearly illuminated by the big arc-light across the street. Julia went over and leant on the parapet above the hayfield.
âColin worries,' she said to Antrobus, as he came and leant besides her. âI expect you've heard about the line-tapping,
and that the principals are expected to come by train now, from Germany.'
âYes, I heard that this afternoon.'
âPersonally I fancy those through sleepers from Dortmund to Interlaken,' she said. â
Wagons-Lits
passengers give their tickets and passports to the attendant in order not to be woken up at the frontier; so even if the passport officials were alerted, they'd have a frightful job rousing up all the women with their hair in nets in the upper berths.'
He laughed out loud.
âWhat a splendid scene! No. I don't think the Swiss would go as far as thatâtoo bad for tourism. But all passengers, even in sleepers, have to tumble out and pass their luggage through the Customs at Berne; and there someone, I hope, will be keeping an open eye tomorrowâimprobableâand the day after, and the day after that.'
âAnd then give you a ring about people booked through to Interlaken?'
âThat, roughly, is the idea.'
âAnd you loiter with intent at one of the Bahnhofs, and tip off Colin, in his incredible hiker's outfit, who to follow?'
âSome arrangement of the sort, if we are lucky.'
âWell can't you tip me off, so that I can go and snatch June while B. and W. are going up to Mürren or the Jungfrau-Joch on Ferien-Billets to hand over the doings?'
He laughed rather grimly.
âJulia, I've told you already that I will if I can. You are so persistentâone would think nothing mattered but your little criminal and her ankle!'
âI'm not sure that anything else does matter quite so much. Certainly not beastly Sheiks and Emirs and their revolting oil for revolting aeroplanes.'
âYou're incorrigible!' he said, with an unwilling laugh. âAnyhow, I think I have a better ideaâfor onceâthan yours. How would it be if I could arrange to have B. and K.âwell whatever they are; it all comes to the same thing âsummoned to the police-station on some excuse about passports or what have you, tomorrow? And meanwhile
you nip in and carry off your meretricious little protégée?'
âHow long could they be kept at the police-station?' Julia asked, thinking of all June's clothes and make-up, and how slow the limping child was. âAnyhow she isn't meretricious; that's the last adjective to apply to her.'
He ignored this.
âSay half an hour.'
âCould you make it three-quarters? If you can do that I could work it.'
âProbablyâyes.'
âIs this a hard offer? Because if so I ought to ring up the Pastor and lay him on. He's frightfully busy always, and it's quite a drive from Bellardon to Interlaken.'
âOh do for goodness' sake leave that till later!' the man said impatiently. âYou can't talk from that hopeless box now, with those people sitting just outside. All this is so boring, really, and it's such a divine night. Come for a stroll. Do you want a scarf or something?'
His impatient urgency delighted Julia. It was indeed a divine night; too warm for her to want any sort of wrap, she said. They crossed the street and took the narrow little path up towards the Parallel-Weg, passing the cow-stable where the enormous Emmenthalers, chewing the cud gently but audibly in the darkness, exhaled the sane and sweet smell of cows' breath, delightful to the country-bred âAntrobus paused and looked in through the open half-door, which a shaft of moonlight penetrated, touching some of the huge peaceful hind-quarters. âSweet beasts,' he murmured. The moon was near the full, and its light strong; out to their right it illuminated the white-and-yellow hotel cat, sitting watchfully on the verge of the high uncut grass waiting for field-mice. âI love that cat,' Julia said, pointing it out.
When they reached the Parallel-Weg they turned right along it, in the direction of the Sessel-Bahn; the forest proper was some distance above them, but isolated trees studded the fields here and there, the moonlight throwing their shadows sharply onto the silvery sheen of the high meadow-grass.
âWhat is this tremendously strong scent?' Antrobus asked suddenly, stopping short.
âRowan.'
âWhat?'
âMountain-ash I suppose to you. It's just coming into flowerâthe whole place smells of it.'
âDelicious,' he said, walking on. âClever of you to know what it is.'
âI think it so odd that you don't know it,' Julia said. âAfter all, aren't you supposed to be Scotch? It's such an amusing treeâthe great antidote to fairies.'
âWhat do you mean?'
âOh yesâin the West Highlands in old days practically every garden had a pair of rowan-trees planted at the gate, with their boughs twisted together to form an arch; the fairies can't go through that, you see.'
âCan't they fly over the hedge, or wall, or whatever?'
âApparently notâthe entrance is the entrance, and if you protect that, you protect all.'
âHow charming. Yes, of course it's the same idea as the Chinese putting those short isolated walls at the entrance to their court-yardsâthe devil-dodgers. Demons can't fly or climb either, it seems; or even make right-angled turns.'
âWhat fun! You've been in China, then?'
âFor a short timeâbefore all this Communist beastliness really got going, thank goodness. I'd sooner have positive swarms of demons than Mao Tse-tung.' He stopped again beside one of the wooden seats which the Swiss so thoughtfully place along their paths. âLet's sit,' he said, and taking her elbow drew her down beside him.
Julia's heart began to throb a little. She felt shy and nervous, though this was exactly what she had hoped for all dayâto walk and sit in the moonlight with John Antrobus. He had chosen their seat well. The meadows sloped away below them, broken to the left by the irregular bends of a small stream which tinkled musically between flowery banks; from other cow-stables down by the village came an occasional note, deeper and even more musicalâSwiss cows wear their bells all night, and any movement of the
great animals gives off this soothing sound. Away across the darkling lake the Blümlisalp stood up, white in the moonlight, above the dark silvery-velvet shimmer of the forest slopes in front of it. The air was full of smells: a resinous whiff from the pines up the hill-side, the sweet breath of summer in the meadow, and, sharper and more intense, the almost savagely penetrating scent of rowan-blossom. Antrobus looked round; a mountain-ash stood a little way behind the seat.