A CHARMING WIDOW WITH A TROUBLING HISTORY As if by magic, Annette Berowne seems capable of dazzling men from the moment she meets them. But when Annette becomes the primary suspect in her husband's poisoning death, she arouses entirely different feelings. Now some men feel sorry for her while others are convinced she's guilty.
PROVIDES TWO DETECTIVES WITH A MYSTERY OF SEDUCTION AND MURDER. Jack Gibbons is a by-the-book, rising star at Scotland Yard. His friend Phillip Bethancourt is a smart, devil-may-care type with a good heart and a razor-sharp sense of people. When they reach the Berowne manor in Surrey, with its colorful coterie of staff and family, Bethancourt is strangely immune to Annette's charms. As the two men delve into the case, Gibbons is sure Annette is an innocent damsel in distress. But Bethancourt is only certain of this: his earnest friend is falling in love-with a woman whose lovers keep finding ways to die.
In The Young Widow, Cassandra Chan has crafted a delightful English mystery.
Release date:
October 3, 2006
Publisher:
St. Martin's Publishing Group
Print pages:
304
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CHAPTER 1
Annette Berowne had a sweet, heart-shaped face. She had honey-blond hair and wide brown eyes. She was not beautiful, and certainly not glamorous, but only Phillip Bethancourt noticed that. Everyone else was blinded by the charm of her manner, by a certain ethereal quality mixed with an earthy femininity.
On the evening of the day that Scotland Yard was consulted in the matter of her husband's death, Phillip Bethancourt lay in bed listening to the steady beat of the rain on the windowpanes and admiring the white, lissome form beside him. Marla Tate, one of England's top fashion models, was dozing, passion sated, her coppery hair like a halo on the pillow, her jade-green eyes hidden behind closed lids. Her long legs were entangled with Bethancourt's but her torso had twisted away from him, giving an excellent view of her small, perfectly shaped breasts.
A hush lay over the large bedroom, and with the waning daylight the room had grown dim, letting shadows pool in the corners. In one of them, Cerberus, Bethancourt's large Borzoi hound, lay on his side, fast asleep, adding to the drowsy atmosphere.
Bethancourt was just reaching out a finger to touch one copper curl when he was interrupted by the faint but unmistakable chimes of the ship's clock in the living room. It was striking the hour. It was striking six o'clock.
"Hell," said Bethancourt softly, and his hand descended not on Marla's hair but on her shoulder, shaking her awake.
The languid serenity of the bedroom was shattered as Marla came to full consciousness with a jerk and demanded the time while Bethancourt groped on the nightstand for his glasses, and Cerberus shot to his feet, ears pricked.
"Six o'clock," Bethancourt answered, rolling out of bed and donning a heavy silk dressing gown. "We're supposed to be meeting Jack at this very moment."
"Bloody hell," said Marla.
Detective Sergeant Jack Gibbons was ready to leave his office on time—an unusual occurrence. He sat behind his desk with his Burberry over his arm and his briefcase close to hand, waiting rather anxiously while he wondered if Bethancourt or more work would come to occupy him first.
He had changed his shirt in the men's room and substituted a tweed jacket past its best years for the sweater he had been wearing. Still, he looked all right, he thought, examining himself in the small shaving mirror he kept in his desk for those times when he seemed hardly able to go home at all and needed some sprucing up before interviewing a witness. Reflected back at him was a man of medium height, a little stocky in build, with reddish-brown hair cut short and fierce blue eyes. He looked exactly like what he was: a young, off-duty policeman, but he managed to convince himself otherwise.
The contest between Bethancourt and work was won resoundingly when the phone rang. Gibbons glared at it, but ignoring it never entered his mind. With a sigh, he picked up the receiver.
"Stop by my office on your way out, Sergeant," said Detective Chief Inspector Carmichael's gravelly voice.
"Yes, sir," replied Gibbons respectfully, masking entirely the irritation he felt. "I was just going now, sir."
"Fine, fine. I won't keep you long."
Gibbons sincerely hoped not. It was not often that he left the Yard at anything approaching a reasonable hour and normally he did not begrudge it. His promotion from constable to sergeant had come swiftly, inspiring some to refer to his meteoric rise in the CID, and he wanted to make inspector in as short an order. To that end, he worked long and hard, but with nothing much on his plate at the moment, he felt he deserved a night on the town.
Detective Chief Inspector Wallace Carmichael was looking over a case file spread out across his desk when Gibbons arrived. He had lit an inferior cigar and removed his jacket and he raised bushy white eyebrows as he looked up at his sergeant, noting the change of clothes.
"Got something on tonight, then, Sergeant?" he asked.
"Yes, sir," returned Gibbons. He liked Carmichael, who gave a man every chance to shine, and who was always fair. "Phillip Bethancourt's giving a party tonight at the Oxford and Cambridge Club. A friend of ours has just made partner at Lincoln's Inn."
"Well, I won't keep you," said Carmichael, digging out a second file from beneath the papers scattered over his desk. "We're starting a new case tomorrow down in Surrey. Here's a copy of the case file for you to look over. I'm going down tomorrow morning for a briefing with the chief constable and you can meet me afterward. Say about ten-thirty."
"Yes, sir," said Gibbons, taking the file and stuffing it under his arm. "I'll read it over tonight."
"Go on, then. Enjoy your party."
"Thank you, sir."
When Gibbons returned to his office, he found it occupied by a tall, fair young man with horn-rimmed glasses, immaculately dressed in a silk Arman suit. He was accompanied and utterly eclipsed by a slender woman of undeniable beauty and elegance. She was perched on the edge of Gibbons's desk in a pose reminiscent of one she had lately displayed in a well-known fashion magazine. They were both perfectly composed, neither displaying the slightest hint of the frantic half-hour of preparation that had preceded their appearance.
"There you are," growled Gibbons. "Hello, Marla. I thought you were meeting us there."
"Last minute change in plans," responded Bethancourt, who was leaning comfortably back in Gibbons's desk chair with his long legs crossed at the ankle. "Marla wanted to make sure you were coming."
Gibbons was considerably surprised at this statement. Marla loathed her boyfriend's detective hobby and held the view, not unreasonably, that Gibbons was largely to blame for Bethancourt's involvement in the investigations of various violent deaths. As a result, she was usually less than eager to include Gibbons in their plans.
But she seemed perfectly happy to see him now. The false and brilliant smile that had decorated so many magazine pages flashed across her face and she leaned forward to kiss his cheek, leaving a waft of spicy perfume in her wake.
"I wanted to be sure you'd be there to meet Carol," she said.
"Carol?"
Bethancourt looked amused. "Marla," he said, "has formed the idea that if you could be interested in something other than your work, she might be privy to fewer conversations about murder. I have to admit that if anything is likely to distract you from your career, Carol is certainly a good candidate."
Marla scowled at him. "Don't be silly. I just thought they would like each other, is all. And this seemed the perfect opportunity," she added, turning back to Gibbons. "A party, where the two of you can get on or not as you please."
"Well, that's awfully kind of you," said Gibbons, reflecting that most of the women Marla knew were models, certainly an attractive group. He picked up his briefcase and shoved the file into it. "And I'm ready to go whenever you like—I've just got back from saying good night to the D.C.I."
"Then let's be off," said Bethancourt, rising. "The taxi is waiting downstairs."