âThat would be 1882, would it?'
âDarling, I have no idea. I don't have a head for dates. All I remember is that the lectures were a dreadful bore, but the company was a revelation. The place swarmed with velvet coats and feather boasâanother world! For half an hour or so at the end there was coffee and homemade cakes and everyone left their seats and mingled. It's laughable now, but to me at twenty that little hall buzzing with conversation was the Café Royal. I had never experienced anything so exotic. I am certain Miriam and Judith were no less enchanted. We would stay till the last possible minute we could without seeming too desperate to be noticed. Then we would catch the bus home and talk all the way of the exciting people we had met. After that it was just a question of wishing away the days to the next meeting.'
âHow did the business of the photographs arise?' Cribb asked, mindful that the dresser was expected soon.
âExactly as Miriam described it. We must have been members for six or seven months when we had a talk from someone from the Royal Academy, on Florentine Art. Fearfully boring. Afterwards over the coffee-cups everyone said how stimulating it had been, as we were bound to, and that we couldn't wait to visit the National Gallery to see the paintings he had described, just as the previous week we had gone away vowing to read every one of Milton's poems. Nobody ever asked if we did, thank God. Well, as usual on the way home I started telling the other two of the encounters I had made, when Miriam stopped me, saying she had something unbelievably exciting to tell us. I remember being dubious, having noticed she had spent most of the coffee-time with Mrs Rousby, one of the Society's founders, an over-rouged person with a domineering manner, but I gave way gracefully. I am bound to admit that Miriam's news was more sensational than any I could supply. Mrs Rousby had said she was delighted to hear that Miriam had enjoyed the lecture, because it showed she had an affinity for art. Painting, Mrs Rousby said, was her passion. She was a personal friend of Sir Frederick Leighton, and she happened to know that the great artist was interested in finding a number of elegantly proportioned young ladies with artistic sensibilities to pose for a vast canvas he was painting on a classical theme.' Lottie Piper gave a small shrug. âYou know the rest, of course.'
Cribb wanted to hear it from her, but he was willing to provide cues. âIt appealed to you as an adventure, and you felt safe, going together.'
She nodded. âAt the next meeting of the Society, the three of us engaged to pose. We were given an address in West Hampstead, which I questioned, since I happened to know that Sir Frederick's house was in Kensington, but Mrs Rousby explained that a preliminary study was to be made by one of the artist's assistants. Left to myself, I should not have gone, but by this time not one of us would have spoiled the adventure for the others. The following afternoon we presented ourselves in West Hampstead and learned that the assistant was not a painter at all, but a photographer.'
âMay I ask,' Cribb put in quickly, âwhether he was also a member of the Society?'
âHe was.'
This was no time to hesitate. âNamed Julian Ducane?”
âYesâuntil the name became inconvenient. You must know about that.'
âBroadly, miss. First, would you be so kind as to tell me about the pictures he took?'
She twisted a curl round her finger. âYou are a very dogged detective. Aren't you going to spare my blushes?'
He shook his head. âIf I understood you just now, there isn't much to blush about.'
âI blush for my
naïveté
, Sergeant, not for shame. Have you met Julian?'
âHe is known to me as Mr Howard Cromer, miss.'
âOf course. “Julian” was right for Hampstead, but “Howard” is assuredly Kew Green. He would know. He is extremely sensitive in matters of taste. Do not underestimate him. He is silver-tongued, Sergeant. We three girls were on our guard when we arrived at his studio that summer afternoon. In a matter of minutes he had given us a sherry and a homily on the vital contribution photography was making to the perfection of fine art. Spell-binding names were tossed so casually into the conversation that we were convinced he was on intimate terms with themâBill Frith, Eddy Landseer, Lawrie Alma Tadema. And, of course, Freddy Leighton. Freddy, we were told, was preparing to paint his masterpiece, a canvas ten feet high and fifteen feet in length encompassing all the principal figures of Greek mythology. Some thirty gods, goddesses and nymphs were to be depicted, and Julian had been asked to take a series of photographs as preliminary studies. He showed us a selection he had already taken, and we were reassured to see that the models were without exception decently robed. In short, Sergeant, we consented to pose. The pictures he took that afternoon were unexceptionable and Julian's behaviour was exemplary. We put up our hair in the Greek fashion and wrapped ourselves in linen sheets for three or four short poses and got half a sovereign apiece for our pains. It needed little persuasion to induce us to return the following week. Do I need to go into that?'
Cribb lifted his shoulders slightly. âYou were given an extra glass or two of sherry, I imagine, and told that Sir Frederick was delighted by the previous week's results.'
âEnraptured was the word,' said Lottie. âSo enraptured, in fact, that he had asked if we would model not as anonymous nymphs, but principals. I was to be Sappho, Judith was Helen and Miriam Aphrodite. In each case, our costume amounted to a strip of muslin and a comb. The postures, I repeat, were not offensive. As Julian very reasonably pointed out at the time, how could you possibly depict a Greek goddess in stays? We got a guinea each and giggled all the way home. Quite soon, I had forgotten about it. I remember mixed feelings of disappointment and relief when the picture was not listed in next summer's Royal Academy show, but it had not crossed my mind that the photographs had been put to any other purpose. That is really all I am able to tell you, darling.'
âThere is another matter,' said Cribb as casually as he could. âYour friend Judith died in tragic circumstances two years after this incident. You appeared as a witness at the inquest.'
Her manner changed abruptly. There was ice in her voice as she said, âIf you know about that, then you know what I told the coroner. There is nothing more to be said.'
âTouching on Miss Honeycutt's death? Oh, I'm sure you told the coroner all you were obliged to, miss.' Cribb looked down at the hat on his knees and rotated it half a turn. âBut the coroner would not have asked you the things I need to know, such as how Miss Honeycutt came to be in Ducane's employment at the time of her death.' He looked up quickly. âYou can tell me, Lottie.'
She gave him a guarded look that made him regret the impulse to use her name. âThis is a free country. She went to work for him.'
âCome now, that's no help,' said Cribb without changing his voice a semitone. âJudith is dead. Miriam is locked in a death-cell. You are the only one who can tell me how it was that those photographic sittings led to one girl working for the man and the other marrying him. Did he blackmail them?'
âBlackmail?' Her face rippled into laughter. âThat's delicious! Darling, I'm sure you do a marvellous job in the police, but it's a terrible mistake to account for everything in criminal terms. You evidently need a few elementary lessons in feminine psychology. For a well brought-up girl to take off her clothes, however tastefully, for the first time in the presence of one of the other sex is an experience that is frightening, but not without a measure of excitement. It can stir up unsuspected emotions. Not one of us confessed it to the others, but we were deeply interested in the impression our bodies made on Julian Ducane. When he took our photographs he was scrupulously careful to treat us with equal charm, but we knew, you see, that we should meet him again at the Society. Each one of us in her private thoughts imagined him when he developed the prints becoming intoxicated with her charms. He was almost twenty years our senior and had shown no partiality to any of us, but in our girlish imaginations he was a privileged being. At the meetings we pursued him unashamedlyâwith what purpose it is difficult to say, because not one of us would have been allowed to walk out with a man our parents had not met. Soon there was an obvious rivalry between us. For convention's sake we rode to and from Highgate together, but once we entered that hall we were sworn enemies. Julian, poor man, was at a loss. Well, can you imagine being hounded by three starry-eyed females scarcely out of school? He tried to solve the problem by introducing us to his friends. One was his solicitor.'
âAllingham.'
âSimon, yes. There is no doubt Simon was smitten with Miriam, but Julian was the prize she aspired to. Her self-esteem demanded it. I know, because I was similarly afflicted until I came to my senses. We were the three graces in a modern Judgment of Paris. To win was everything. Little by little, Miriam ousted us. She is one of those enviable females who can cast a spell over men. Not one of you is capable of seeing her as she really is. It takes another woman to do that.'
âSpeaking for myself, I have never met her.'
âThen she has not made a fool of you, but she would. When I understood this power she had, I saw the futility of competing with her. It was only when I relinquished the contest, so to speak, that I realised how absurd it was to be chasing Julian. He was tolerably successful in his work and dapper in his dress, but a dreadful bore really. And so old! Imagine!'
âA little over forty, I believe,' Cribb said.
âGrotesque! Well, as I mentioned, I turned my attention elsewhere. Judith, too, soon after appeared to retire from the contest. She started talking to me again, telling me about young men who had tried to flirt with her across the counter in the umbrella shop. It was her way of telling me she was no longer interested in Julian, or so I understood at the time. Judith and I confided in each other a lot; it helped to heal the wounds. She was dark-haired, like me, and vivacious. She had a sense of humour, too. We had a secret joke that Julian must have sold Miriam's photograph to Burne-Jones, whose women are so solemn and underfed. Cattish, weren't we? All this went on over many months. The meetings were fortnightly, did I tell you?
âThen one day, to my intense surprise, Judith coolly announced that she had changed her job. She had been taken on by Julian as his assistant. This on the top of a bus to Highgate on the way to a Society meeting. Miriam was speechless. If you could have seen the look in her eyes, darling! It was naughty of Judith to trot it out so casually, yet I suppose she didn't want to make an issue of it. I remember Miriam sitting through that meeting stony-faced, and when the coffee came she didn't even look in Julian's direction. He came over to make conversation and she just bit her lip and walked away. It was Simon who went after her to find out what was wrong. Julian was utterly at a loss.'
âFeminine psychology isn't his strong point, either,' said Cribb.
She smiled at that.
âSo Judith had cut in on Miriam's game,' he said. âHow had she managed that?'
âBy sheer resourcefulness. She used the advantage she had over Miriam and me: she was in employment. She noticed in the
Express
that Julian was advertising for an assistant. She put it to her father that it was time she learned a more creative occupation than selling umbrellas. After that it only remained to convince Julian of the advantages of employing female labour.'
âWhat are thoseâapart from things she couldn't go into?'
Lottie gave him a level look. âAs well as being his assistant, she would act as receptionist. And she would bring a woman's delicacy to the retouching and tinting processes.'
âSmart,' said Cribb. âYou have to hand it to her. There she was, installed in the studio with all day to work her charms on Julian, while Miriam sat at home fretting.'
She shook her head. âNo, Sergeant. Give Miriam credit for more gumption than that. If Julian was taking on an assistant, he would be free to delegate much of the humdrum work making negatives, or whatever they do, and devote more time to photography. Fashionable photographers, as you know, like to put notices in their windows to proclaim the prizes they have won. Julian's business was expanding, and it was time he started entering for photographic competitions. Of course he would require a model.'
âAh.' Cribb understood. âWhile Judith was in the darkroom, Miriam and Julian would be out with a camera and a picnic basket.'
âThat's it. He was always saying she was photogenic, so she offered to pose for him, all very decently, I hasten to add. His Greek art phase was a thing of the past now that he was becoming respectable. Miriam persuaded him to buy her new hats and parasols and strings of beads to assist the photography. She was triumphantâand she had the relish of knowing poor Judith would be developing the pictures. Personally, I would have poured acid on them. Miriam convinced Julian that she was his inspiration. He stopped everything he was doing whenever she visited the studio. I don't know what excuses she made at home, but she was there two or three times a week.'
Cribb listened, remembering Howard Cromer had given the impression Miriam had not entered his life before he came to Kew.
âYou would think Judith had been eclipsed,' Lottie went on, âbut not yet. I saw her one Thursday morning in Hampstead High Street. Feeling for the poor girl, I tried to pretend I hadn't seen her, but she crossed the road and, to my amazement, her face was pink with excitement. She took me into a teashop and told me she was engaged to be married to Julian! It took my breath away. The whole thing, she said, was secret until they had bought the ring. I was the first to know, because she was bursting to tell someone how happy she was. She had not told her father yet, but she was sure he would not object. Yes, they intended to break the news to Miriam that evening. Judith was certain she would share in their joy. I told her frankly not to be so sanguine about that. Miriam would be incensed. I warned her not to make it a long engagement because I was sure Miriam was too single-minded to give up. She laughed and said she had no fear of losing Julian.'