Tags:
Fiction,
General,
Suspense,
Mystery & Detective,
Women Sleuths,
Mystery Fiction,
England,
Political,
Women Private Investigators,
Traditional British,
Women Private Investigators - England,
Gray; Cordelia (Fictitious Character)
written a better book had he chosen, it was hard to say. But the sexual interludes, cunningly spaced, all written with undertones of irony and self-disgust, and the detailed description of the dissection of a female body certainly had a salacious power. Here at least the writer had been himself.
Miss Maudsley was anxious to disclaim any implied criticism in her question.
“It’s not surprising that you didn’t know. I wouldn’t have known myself, only one of the members on the summer outing had a husband who keeps a bookshop and she told us. Mr. Ambrose doesn’t really like it to be known. It’s the only book he’s written I believe.”
Cordelia began to feel a lively curiosity to see the egregiously talented Ambrose Gorringe and his offshore island. She sat musing on the oddities of this new assignment while Bevis collected the coffee cups, it being his turn to wash up. Miss Maudsley had fallen into a pensive silence, hands folded in her lap. Suddenly she looked up and said: “I do hope you won’t be in any danger, Miss Gray. There’s something wicked, one might say evil, about poison-pen letters. We had a spate of them once in the parish and it ended very tragically. They’re so frighteningly malevolent.”
Cordelia said: “Malevolent, but not dangerous. I’m more likely to be bored by the case than frightened. And I can’t imagine anything very terrible happening on Courcy Island.”
Bevis, precariously balancing the three mugs, turned around at the door.
“But terrible things have happened there! I don’t know what exactly. The article I read didn’t say. But the present castle is built on the site of an old medieval castle which used to guard that part of the Channel, so it’s probably inherited a ghost or two. And the writer did mention the island’s violent and bloodstained history.”
Cordelia said: “That’s just a journalistic platitude. All the past is bloodstained. That doesn’t mean that its ghosts still walk.”
She spoke entirely without premonition, glad of the chance of a real job at last, happy at the thought of getting out of London while the warm autumnal weather still lasted, seeing already in her mind the soaring turrets, the gull-loud marshes, the gentle uplands and woods of this miniature England, so mysterious and beautiful, lying waiting for her in the sun.
3
Ambrose Gorringe now visited London so rarely that he was beginning to wonder whether the subscription to his town club was really justified. There were parts of the capital in which he still felt at home, but too many others in which he had previously walked with pleasure now seemed to him grubby, despoiled and alien. When business with his stockbroker, agent or publisher made a visit desirable, he would plan a programme of what he described to himself as treats, an adult re-enactment of school holidays, leaving no portion of a day so unprovided for that he had time to ponder on his stupidity in being where he was. A visit to Saul Gaskin’s small antique shop near Notting Hill Gate was invariably in his programme. He bought most of his Victorian pictures and furniture at the London auction houses, but Gaskin knew and partially shared his passion for Victoriana and he could be confident that there would be, awaiting his inspection, a small collection of the trivia which was often so much more redolent of the spirit of the age than his more important acquisitions.
In the unseasonable September heat the cluttered andill-ventilated office at the back of the shop smelt like a lair in which Gaskin, with his white, pinched face, precise little hands and grubby moleskin waistcoat scurried around like a tenacious rodent. Now he unlocked his desk drawer and reverently laid before this favoured customer the scavengings of the last four months. The Bristol blue decanter engraved with a design of grapes and vineleaves was attractive, but there were only five glasses and he liked his sets complete, while one of a pair of