Ambitious Scotland Yard detective Sergeant Jack Gibbons hears about his latest case---the death of a middle-aged widower in Chipping Chedding, a small town in the English Cotswolds---and can't believe his good luck. His best friend, wealthy man-about-town Phillip Bethancourt, just so happens to be in Chipping Chedding already, accompanying his model girlfriend on a fashion shoot on a country estate. Since Phillip has helped Jack on numerous occasions, indulging his interest in a good mystery by aiding Jack in his investigations, it's natural for him to help them figure out what happened to Charlie Bingham.
Though at first Bingham's death appears to have been accident, tracing his movements on the evening of his death proves to be more difficult for Jack and Phillip than they expected, and they begin to suspect foul play. It seems Bingham was going to visit his girlfriend—but no one in the village, from the vicar to Charlie's chess partner (and Phillip's distant cousin) to Charlie's neighbors, knows who she is. And when it turns out that Bingham was in fact a very wealthy businessman who hid his enormous wealth from everyone around him, suspects begin to pop up, including his estranged daughter, who was in London on the evening in question, and an unhappy business partner who has no alibi.
Cassandra Chan shows her mastery of the traditional English mystery in this second charming novel to feature the investigative duo of Gibbons and Bethancourt, a modern-day Peter Wimsey.
Release date:
October 30, 2007
Publisher:
St. Martin's Publishing Group
Print pages:
352
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CHAPTER 1
It was Marla's idea. Phillip Bethancourt himself was not entirely convinced that the best cure for a broken heart was to surround the afflicted with attractive members of the opposite sex. But Marla Tate, one of England's most in-demand fashion models, was not a woman known for her generous impulses and she was likely to turn sulky if this one was rebuffed. Or so Bethancourt judged.
"Just the thing," he said, putting as much enthusiasm into the words as he could. He succeeded so well that the large Borzoi hound at his feet pricked his ears and lifted his noble head. Bethancourt bent to stroke his pet. "It ought to cheer Jack right up," he continued. "I don't know why I didn't think of it myself."
Marla tossed her head, shaking a loose lock of copper hair off her forehead. "I don't know why you didn't, either," she agreed. "You've certainly been thinking of little else lately."
This was true. It was now more than a month since Bethancourt had returned home from a polo match to find his friend Jack Gibbons sitting on the front steps of his Chelsea flat, bearing the news that Annette Berowne had left him. It helped not at all that Bethancourt had seen it coming; he had been suspicious of Annette's feelings from the beginning and had at first tried to put Gibbons on his guard. But since Gibbons had spent the summer plotting the most romantic way to propose, his friend had stifled the alarm bells that rang in his mind and hoped that his own bleak outlook of the suit owed more to his distaste of Annette than to the true state of affairs. He was very sorry to have been proved right in the end.
Bethancourt had done all he could to see his friend through those first miserable days, but what now concerned him was the fact that Gibbons did not seem to have improved much. It would have been inaccurate to say he was developing a drinking problem since he was usually sober; still, the pint after work was now usually two or three, and on the occasions when he visited Bethancourt, the level in the malt whisky bottle seemed to drop more rapidly than it once had.
"So are you going to ring him up?" asked Marla impatiently.
"Yes, of course," answered Bethancourt.
But he paused in reaching for the phone, having caught a gleam in Marla's jade-green eyes. It occurred to him that there was more to this than a simple desire to dispel Gibbons's gloom. Marla had never liked Gibbons, mostly due to the fact that it was he who enabled Bethancourt to indulge in his hobby of amateur sleuthing, an activity that Marla abhorred. And it was undeniably true that during the summer of Gibbons's affair, Bethancourt had seen much less of him. He wondered who among Marla's friends she had earmarked for Gibbons.
"Right then," he said, capturing the phone. "Let's ring Scotland Yard."
Detective Sergeant Jack Gibbons sat at his desk, buried in paperwork. He did not much like the clerical side of his job, but one had to take the bad with the good in any job, and if he could just keep his mind on it all, he thought he could clear his desk by six, providing he was not sidetracked by chatting about other people's cases. That was far more distracting than paperwork, and he badly needed distraction. There had been no truly interesting cases since the summer, and these days, when time hung heavy on his hands, he found himself continually contemplating the wreck of his hopes.
He brightened when the telephone rang, but the gloom returned when he heard the light, clipped tones of his friend Bethancourt, and not the deep, raspy ones of the chief inspector summoning him to a case.
"I'm ringing to see if you fancied a day or two in the country," said Bethancourt. "Marla's got a fashion shoot in the Cotswolds and it turns out that the house they're using belongs to an old friend of my family. Quite a showplace it's supposed to be. So I'm going along and I thought you could come and keep me company while Marla's working."
Gibbons tried to rouse himself. "It sounds very nice," he said. "When is it to be?"
"Tuesday," answered Bethancourt.
"Tuesday?" repeated Gibbons incredulously. This, he thought to himself, was what came of having independently wealthy friends. "I work on Tuesdays," he said with exaggerated patience. "It's considered part of the working week, Tuesday is. Along with Mondays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, and Fridays. I think you'll find that the vast majority of people with jobs work on weekdays."
"I know that," said Bethancourt, unperturbed. "I thought perhaps you could get it off, if you weren't on a case. God knows you end up working enough weekends—they must give you some time off."
"I expect they must," said Gibbons. "But I'm due in court on Tuesday afternoon, so I am not destined to revel in the autumn countryside."
"What a pity," said Bethancourt, who was secretly rather relieved. "Well, I'll be back at the end of the week—Marla and I are staying on for a day or two after the shoot. I'll ring you then and we'll see a matinee of something or go to dinner."
"That will be lovely," said Gibbons. "I've got to get back to work now, Phillip. I'll talk to you over the weekend."
He rang off and returned to the contemplation of his paperwork. He was, as it turned out, destined to see the autumn countryside, if not to revel in it. It was rather a pity that all the models were gone by the time he got there.