Read The Riviera Connection Online

Authors: John Creasey

Tags: #Crime

The Riviera Connection (5 page)

5
Mannering Advises

 

The woman's eyes burned and her cheeks were flushed; she gripped Mannering's arm so tightly that her fingers hurt.

“Will you try to find out?” she repeated hoarsely.

“I'd like to think about it,” Mannering said quietly. He freed his arm and moved further away, poured her out another drink and mixed one for himself.

“It's very hard to believe that if your uncle—”

“He's not
my
uncle, I detest the sight of him!”

“All right, if your husband's uncle had these particular stones,” Mannering amended, “he would talk about them so carelessly.”

“It wasn't careless. He and Philippe didn't know I was near. I crept away.”

“I see. Did Bernard know that this Count who wanted the Gramercys was Raoul's uncle?”

“I don't think so. I didn't know myself until after I'd left Bernard.”

Mannering said gently: “Why
did
you leave Bernard?”

“Don't ask me that!” she cried. “Don't ask me to explain why I was such a fool.” She turned her tortured eyes to Lorna. “He seemed so dull, so prosaic. There was never any excitement, it was all work by day and quiet evenings, the radio, slippers, his pipe – oh, I revolted against it! Raoul was everything Bernard wasn't. The Riviera fascinated me, I hadn't been there before. It was a different world.”

“How long was it before you started to regret it?” asked Mannering gently.

He ignored the glance which Lorna shot at him; the ‘don't make it worse for her' appeal.

Dale's ex-wife said: “Not very long. Three or four months. It isn't that Raoul turned against me, either, as soon as—as Bernard divorced me, we were married. I think he's still in love with me. It's just that I—I'm so hopelessly mixed up. Perhaps I'm dreaming that the Count has these jewels. But it's in my mind, like a constant nightmare. If I don't find out the truth I think I'll go mad! I can't help it!” she cried. “I can't sleep for thinking about it, I just can't rest. Raoul will soon know that something's wrong, and—”

“Hide it from him,” Mannering broke in sharply. “Understand? If you want to find out the truth, hide your suspicions from him.”

“That's easy to say, but—”

Mannering took her hands, and held them tightly.

“Listen to me,” he said very quietly. “If you want me to help, you must hide your suspicions from your husband and his uncle. You must explain your nervousness away, feign illness, do anything you like but don't let either of them suspect that you think like this.”

She didn't speak, but as she looked into his eyes, he thought that she realised what he really meant.

“I—I'll try.”

“You must do it. How long is de Chalon going to stay in London?”

“Another few days. My husband is coming tomorrow, for two days. They want to see some jewels at Christie's,” she added hoarsely.

“I see. How did you get here tonight?” Mannering wanted to know.

“By taxi. The Count took me to the hotel, and as soon as he'd gone to his room, I came here. I just felt that I had to. I knew I shouldn't have the courage to see you in the morning.
Will you help?”

“I will if I can find a way,” Mannering promised. “What will happen if the Count discovers that you're not in your room?”

“Why should he find out?” Stella Bidot shrugged her shoulders. “I should tell him I went out for a walk, because I couldn't sleep. He—” her eyes filmed with tears. “I wish I could explain it all clearly. Until—until I began to suspect this, I quite liked him. He's fond of me, too. Now I hate the very sight of him. Whenever I see him I feel like shouting out about the jewels. It's almost the same with Raoul. If you can find out, tell me soon. I can't stand living like this, I just can't stand it.”

Mannering said roundly: “I'm going to find out, but I can't tell you how long it will take. If you let them guess what's in your mind, I might never be able to do it.” He gripped her hands again. “If they did kill Bernard, they might kill again. Do you understand, Stella? They might kill
you.”

She breathed: “Yes, yes. I understand.”

 

Her taxi was still downstairs. Mannering paid it off, walked with her to his garage, and took the Jaguar out again. There was a chance, no matter how remote, that she had been followed.

He saw no sign of it as he drove her back to the Hotel Grand. He dropped her twenty yards from the entrance, so as not to be seen with her, and watched her go in.

No one appeared to take any interest in her.

He drove back swiftly through the dark streets. At the flat, Lorna was in the bedroom, in a dressing-gown.

“Sorry I'm late,” he said lightly.

“I thought you might go with her,” Lorna said. “What happened?”

“No further incidents!” Mannering lit a cigarette and sat on the edge of the bed, looking up at her. “What do you make of the story and the lady?”

“She won't stand the strain for a week.”

“No. It doesn't give me much time,” Mannering said. “I'd better nip over to Chalon and see what I can find out.” He sounded almost flippant.

Lorna said: “I suppose there's no point in saying ‘Must you?'” She hung up her dress. “All right, darling, I know you must. But what do you really think?”

“That if she's right she's in a lot of danger,” Mannering said, “and if she's wrong she's probably heading for a mental breakdown. She believes it against her inclinations, against her will. She doesn't want to believe the Count and her husband or this Philippe are bad. It could be a form of self-deception, of course. Neurosis. Remorse at having deserted Bernard might have put the idea into her mind. Once it got there—” he broke off.

“We'll see.”

“You mean—”

“I mean,” said Mannering carefully, “that I have suddenly discovered urgent business reasons why I should go to the Riviera! Face it, darling. Bristow couldn't do a thing about this even if Chalon lived in England. Getting help from the French police on the strength of a hysterical woman's story is out. But we've friends with francs in France!” He stood up, stubbed out the cigarette, and began to undress. “Coming?”

“Who are you going to tell?” asked Lorna slowly.

“Chiefly my wife,” said Mannering. “Shall we fly or go by car?”

“We'll fly, and hire a car while we're there,” Lorna said, “the Jaguar will be too noticeable.” She moved across to him; quite suddenly they were in each other's arms. “But be careful, darling, be desperately careful.”

He could feel the beating of her heart as she pressed against him.

 

Mannering felt more light-hearted, next morning, than he had for weeks. He could laugh at the idea of telling Bristow he was going, but he decided to tell Dick Britten.

Obviously there was nothing to tell Tony yet, and it would be cruelty itself to suggest to Hilda Bennett that there might after all be cause for hope.

He rang Britten, at his office, early next morning.

“Hallo, John,” Britten said briskly. “How are you?”

“I'm fine. Dick, I think I've a line on the Gramercys. I'm going to try to follow it. Can you stand a shock?”

Britten didn't answer.

“You still there?” Mannering asked sharply.

“I—I—yes,” Britten said, and there was a harsh note in his voice. “John, find those jewels. Find the swine who killed Bernard. If you can—if you can help Hilda—” he broke off, seemed to swallow his words, and then added with a brittle laugh: “That's the devil of it! It's not Tony I'm sorry for, it's Hilda. Tony's only thought is for her, too.”

“Help the one, help the other,” Mannering said tritely. “About Stella—”

“She doesn't come into this,” Britten said abruptly.

“Good lord, no! But her new husband is a dealer on the Riviera, and he has an uncle who possesses – or who might possess – the Gramercy jewels. That's who I'm going to see. I'm prepared to take a lot of chances to make sure.”

“Good! But John, I must see you first. I'll come round—”

“I haven't ten minutes to squeeze in,” Mannering said. “I've got to make emergency arrangements about French currency, tidy a lot of things up and be generally at pressure.”

“But I must talk to you about this! The very thought that there might be a chance—”

“Why don't you behave more like a solicitor?” Mannering chided. “Be dispassionate, unemotional!”

Britten said abruptly: “Damn it, you ought to know why.”

“That's a much better tone of voice,” Mannering said. “I don't want Hilda or Tony to know, of course, but I'm telling you because I might get myself into a jam with the French police. If I do, tell Bristow what I've done and why, will you?”

“Yes. John, you know you don't have to take risks—”

Britten's voice trailed off.

“Of course not,” Mannering said dryly. “What is one more silken rope to me? I'd rather like that Bennett baby to have a father when it grows up, too. Not a word to anyone, but be ready for emergencies. I'll telephone or wire you as soon as I've settled a hotel at Chalon.'

“Try the Mirage,” Britten said. “There'll be room at this time of the year. If I don't hear from you, I'll assume that's where you are.”

“All right, the Mirage,” Mannering agreed. “There's another thing. I don't know anything about French law, but I may want French legal aid. Do you know anything about it?”

“I've some clients with property on the Riviera, and I'm often dealing with lawyers in Nice and Cannes and along the coast,” said Britten. “I'll put you right. Wouldn't it be a good idea if I were to come over, too?”

“Not yet,” Mannering said.

“I could easily drop things here for a few days.”

“Maybe later.”

“Oh, all right,” Britten said.

Mannering rang off, then called his bank and was told that it was impossible to get a business allowance of francs at such short notice. The manager also promised to try to do the impossible.

Meanwhile Larraby, Mannering's cherub-like manager, had obtained tickets for the afternoon plane to Nice. With Larraby and Carmichael, Mannering went into work for the next week; discussed sales which had to be visited, offers which should be made. But he was clear by the time Lorna arrived, with their bags packed, in time to get to London airport.

The weather was perfect. The flight was so calm that there was hardly a quiver. The channel was a blue mirror. They crossed the deep heart of rural France, and after four hours, were within sight of the Mediterranean. In a little over four, they landed at Nice. It didn't take them long to find a Renault taxi with a fierce-looking driver.

He appeared to take the hairpin bends in the beautiful corniche road to Chalon as a personal insult. He wrenched the wheel round, kept a finger on his horn, and tore along at fifty miles an hour when half the speed would have been too fast.

Lorna clutched Mannering's arm.

They caught glimpses of beauty. Below them, the blue of the Mediterranean, clear in the late evening air, the beach fringed with gay umbrellas, the white villas built into the hillside, but there were only glimpses. The stone wall, built to prevent the rock and rubble from falling across the road, was colourful with geraniums and bougainvillea, bright in the evening sun.

There was little traffic.

The driver turned a corner, and for a moment slowed down to show them the full magnificence of the sweeping bay, the white fringe against the beach, the hotels, the stately palms. Then he swooped downwards, as if he couldn't reach the promenade fast enough. When he reached it, there seemed no way in which he could avoid driving into the sea.

Instead, he pulled up outside a large hotel with a magnificent terrace. It was the Hotel Mirage.

“M'sieu,” he declared, “zis is ze best ‘otel in all of France!”

A porter and two waiters were at the imposing entrance, looking as if they were anxious to vindicate the taxi driver's claim. The Mannerings went in, and two boys and an old porter took their luggage from the boot of the taxi. Soon, they had a fourth floor room at the front corner of the hotel. A balcony overlooked the bay on one side, and on the other, the headland which they had just driven down. From here, it looked peaceful.

Tips were distributed, everything signed and settled, and Lorna and Mannering stepped on to the balcony and looked towards the headland.

“I wonder which is Chalon's villa,” Lorna said, without enthusiasm.

“It's that large white one high up on the headland – Stella pointed it out to me when I was over here before. It's floodlit at night.”

“You haven't any second thoughts, or anything like that?” Lorna asked.

Mannering said with forced lightness: “Not yet, my sweet, but you never know.”

He knew what was in her mind, knew that she almost certainly repented her mood of the night before. She would soon be asking herself why he should take wild and dangerous steps for people whom he knew only slightly.

If she had asked him, he could not have answered or explained the driving force which compelled him.

“John,” Lorna said, after a pause.

“Hm-hm?”

“You could have found out a lot about the villa if you'd asked Stella Dale.”

“And told her that I was coming here.”

“She'll guess, anyway.”

“She won't have the faintest idea that I propose to burgle the place,” Mannering said calmly. “Her husband is due to join her in London tonight, remember, and with the Count they're planning to stay there for two or three days. There are only servants and Raoul's brother Philippe at the house. I wouldn't rate it the biggest risk I've taken.”

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