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‘All right, all right. Can you go down by yourself and order it? I really feel I must have a rest, and then I’ll just unpack the things we’ll need for tonight. It’s too bad your father couldn’t have met us. Why he had to have an important directors’ meeting in Newcastle-on-Tyne today I simply cannot imagine. You’d think his wife and daughter would come first. Especially as he hasn’t seen us for three months. Are you sure you can manage by yourself?’
‘Good gracious, Mummy,’ said Jennifer, ‘what age do you think I am? Can I have some money, please? I haven’t got any English money.’
She accepted the ten shilling note her mother handed to her, and went out scornfully.
The telephone rang by the bed. Mrs Sutcliffe went to it and picked up the receiver.
‘Hallo…Yes…Yes, Mrs Sutcliffe speaking…’
There was a knock at the door. Mrs Sutcliffe said, ‘Just one moment’ to the receiver, laid it down and went over to the door. A young man in dark blue overalls was standing there with a small kit of tools.
‘Electrician,’ he said briskly. ‘The lights in this suite aren’t satisfactory. I’ve been sent up to see to them.’
‘Oh—all right…’
She drew back. The electrician entered.
‘Bathroom?’
‘Through there—beyond the other bedroom.’
She went back to the telephone.
‘I’m so sorry…What were you saying?’
‘My name is Derek O’Connor. Perhaps I might come up to your suite, Mrs Sutcliffe. It’s about your brother.’
‘Bob? Is there—news of him?’
‘I’m afraid so—yes.’
‘Oh…Oh, I see…Yes, come up. It’s on the third floor, 310.’
She sat down on the bed. She already knew what the news must be.
Presently there was a knock on the door and she opened it to admit a young man who shook hands in a suitably subdued manner.
‘Are you from the Foreign Office?’
‘My name’s Derek O’Connor. My chief sent me round as there didn’t seem to be anybody else who could break it to you.’
‘Please tell me,’ said Mrs Sutcliffe. ‘He’s been killed. Is that it?’
‘Yes, that’s it, Mrs Sutcliffe. He was flying Prince Ali Yusuf out from Ramat and they crashed in the mountains.’
‘Why haven’t I heard—why didn’t someone wireless it to the boat?’
‘There was no definite news until a few days ago. It was known that the plane was missing, that was all. But under the circumstances there might still have been hope. But now the wreck of the plane has been found…I am sure you will be glad to know that death was instantaneous.’
‘The Prince was killed as well?’
‘Yes.’
‘I’m not at all surprised,’ said Mrs Sutcliffe. Her voice shook a little but she was in full command of herself. ‘I knew Bob would die young. He was always reckless, you know—always flying new planes, trying new stunts. I’ve hardly seen anything of him for the last four years. Oh well, one can’t change people, can one?’
‘No,’ said her visitor, ‘I’m afraid not.’
‘Henry always said he’d smash himself up sooner or later,’ said Mrs Sutcliffe. She seemed to derive a kind of melancholy satisfaction from the accuracy of her husband’s prophecy. A tear rolled down her cheek and she looked for her handkerchief. ‘It’s been a shock,’ she said.
‘I know—I’m awfully sorry.’
‘Bob couldn’t run away, of course,’ said Mrs Sutcliffe. ‘I mean, he’d taken on the job of being the Prince’s pilot. I wouldn’t have wanted him to throw in his hand. And he was a good flier too. I’m sure if he ran into a mountain it wasn’t his fault.’
‘No,’ said O’Connor, ‘it certainly wasn’t his fault. The only hope of getting the Prince out was to fly in no matter what conditions. It was a dangerous flight to undertake and it went wrong.’
Mrs Sutcliffe nodded.
‘I quite understand,’ she said. ‘Thank you for coming to tell me.’
‘There’s something more,’ said O’Connor, ‘something I’ve got to ask you. Did your brother entrust anything to you to take back to England?’
‘Entrust something to me?’ said Mrs Sutcliffe. ‘What do you mean?’
‘Did he give you any—package—any small parcel to bring back and deliver to anyone in England?’
She shook her head wonderingly. ‘No. Why should you think he did?’
‘There was a rather important package which we think your brother may have given to someone to bring home. He called on you at your hotel that day—the day of the Revolution, I mean.’
‘I know. He left a note. But there was nothing in that—just some silly thing about playing tennis or golf the next day. I suppose when he wrote that note, he couldn’t have known that he’d have to fly the Prince out that very afternoon.’
‘That was all it said?’
‘The note? Yes.’
‘Have you kept it, Mrs Sutcliffe?’
‘Kept the note he left? No, of course I haven’t. It was quite trivial. I tore it up and threw it away. Why should I keep it?’
‘No reason,’ said O’Connor. ‘I just wondered.’
‘Wondered what?’ said Mrs Sutcliffe crossly.
‘Whether there might have been some—other message concealed in it. After all—’ he smiled, ‘—There is such a thing as invisible ink, you know.’
‘Invisible ink!’ said Mrs Sutcliffe, with a great deal of distaste, ‘do you mean the sort of thing they use in spy stories?’
‘Well, I’m afraid I do mean just that,’ said O’Connor, rather apologetically.
‘How idiotic,’ said Mrs Sutcliffe. ‘I’m sure Bob would never use anything like invisible ink. Why should he? He was a dear matter-of-fact sensible person.’ A tear dripped down her cheek again. ‘Oh dear, where is my bag? I must have a handkerchief. Perhaps I left it in the other room.’
‘I’ll get it for you,’ said O’Connor.
He went through the communicating door and stopped as a young man in overalls who was bending over a suitcase straightened up to face him, looking rather startled.
‘Electrician,’ said the young man hurriedly. ‘Something wrong with the lights here.’
O’Connor flicked a switch.
‘They seem all right to me,’ he said pleasantly.
‘Must have given me the wrong room number,’ said the electrician.
He gathered up his tool bag and slipped out quickly through the door to the corridor.
O’Connor frowned, picked up Mrs Sutcliffe’s bag from the dressing-table and took it back to her.
‘Excuse me,’ he said, and picked up the telephone receiver. ‘Room 310 here. Have you just sent up an electrician to see to the light in this suite? Yes…Yes, I’ll hang on.’
He waited.
‘No? No, I thought you hadn’t. No, there’s nothing wrong.’
He replaced the receiver and turned to Mrs Sutcliffe.
‘There’s nothing wrong with any of the lights here,’ he said. ‘And the office didn’t send up an electrician.’
‘Then what was that man doing? Was he a thief?’
‘He may have been.’
Mrs Sutcliffe looked hurriedly in her bag. ‘He hasn’t taken anything out of my bag. The money is all right.’
‘Are you sure, Mrs Sutcliffe, absolutely sure that your brother didn’t give you anything to take home, to pack among your belongings?’
‘I’m absolutely sure,’ said Mrs Sutcliffe.
‘Or your daughter—you have a daughter, haven’t you?’
‘Yes. She’s downstairs having tea.’
‘Could your brother have given anything to her?’
‘No, I’m sure he couldn’t.’
‘There’s another possibility,’ said O’Connor. ‘He might have hidden something in your baggage among your belongings that day when he was waiting for you in your room.’
‘But why should Bob do such a thing? It sounds absolutely absurd.’
‘It’s not quite so absurd as it sounds. It seems possible that Prince Ali Yusuf gave your brother something to keep for him and that your brother thought it would be safer among your possessions than if he kept it himself.’
‘Sounds very unlikely to me,’ said Mrs Sutcliffe.
‘I wonder now, would you mind if we searched?’
‘Searched through my luggage, do you mean? Unpack?’ Mrs Sutcliffe’s voice rose with a wail on that word.
‘I know,’ said O’Connor. ‘It’s a terrible thing to ask you. But it might be very important. I could help you, you know,’ he said persuasively. ‘I often used to pack for my mother. She said I was quite a good packer.’
He exerted all the charm which was one of his assets to Colonel Pikeaway.
‘Oh well,’ said Mrs Sutcliffe, yielding, ‘I suppose—If you say so—if, I mean, it’s really important—’
‘It might be very important,’ said Derek O’Connor.
‘Well, now,’ he smiled at her. ‘Suppose we begin.’
II
Three quarters of an hour later Jennifer returned from her tea. She looked round the room and gave a gasp of surprise.
‘Mummy, what have you been doing?’
‘We’ve been unpacking,’ said Mrs Sutcliffe crossly. ‘Now we’re packing things up again. This is Mr O’Connor. My daughter Jennifer.’
‘But why are you packing and unpacking?’
‘Don’t ask me why,’ snapped her mother. ‘There seems to be some idea that your Uncle Bob put something in my luggage to bring home. He didn’t give you anything, I suppose, Jennifer?’
‘Uncle Bob give me anything to bring back? No. Have you been unpacking my things too?’
‘We’ve unpacked everything,’ said Derek O’Connor cheerfully, ‘and we haven’t found a thing and now we’re packing them up again. I think you ought to have a drink of tea or something, Mrs Sutcliffe. Can I order you something? A brandy and soda perhaps?’ He went to the telephone.
‘I wouldn’t mind a good cup of tea,’ said Mrs Sutcliffe.
‘I had a smashing tea,’ said Jennifer. ‘Bread and butter and sandwiches and cake and then the waiter brought me more sandwiches because I asked him if he’d mind and he said he didn’t. It was lovely.’
O’Connor ordered the tea, then he finished packing up Mrs Sutcliffe’s belongings again with a neatness and a dexterity which forced her unwilling admiration.
‘Your mother seems to have trained you to pack very well,’ she said.
‘Oh, I’ve all sorts of handy accomplishments,’ said O’Connor smiling.
His mother was long since dead, and his skill in packing and unpacking had been acquired solely in the service of Colonel Pikeaway.
‘There’s just one thing more, Mrs Sutcliffe. I’d like you to be very careful of yourself.’
‘Careful of myself? In what way?’