‘And do you know whether he actually made it to the dinner?’ asked Carole.
‘Yes, I called a friend who’s a member of the same livery company. Reggie had definitely been there at the dinner – and apparently in raucous good form, as only he can be – could be.’ She made the correction automatically, not wishing to give way again to emotion.
‘Would there have been anyone at your flat, who might have seen when he left there – or indeed if he arrived there?’
Oenone Playfair shook her head. ‘No, there’s no concierge or anyone there. And we hardly know the owners of the other flats. I suppose it’s possible that someone might have seen Reggie arrive or leave, but it’s unlikely.’
‘What about the clothes he was wearing? Had he changed after the dinner?’
‘No, he hadn’t. I . . .’ Again the slightest of tremors. ‘I saw him at the hospital yesterday. And they . . . gave me his clothes. The shirt he was wearing was the one he’d worn to the dinner. Reggie always insists on wearing a clean shirt every day. And clean boxer shorts.’
‘So the implication,’ said Carole, ‘is that he perhaps didn’t go to your London flat.’
‘He may have gone there. But he certainly didn’t sleep there.’
‘So he could have gone down to the court any time after the dinner ended,’ suggested Jude.
‘Well, just a minute, no,’ Carole objected. ‘Remember he’d left his car at Pulborough Station. Assuming the livery dinner ended too late for him to have got the last train back from Victoria . . .’
‘Which it certainly would have done,’ Oenone confirmed. ‘I’ve been to those dinners when they have ladies’ nights and, God, do they go on? Also, the friend I spoke to said that when he left, round eleven thirty, Reggie was very much still there, in his customary role as the life and soul of the party.’ Some slight nuance in her voice suggested that that was one aspect of her late husband’s character she wouldn’t miss too much.
‘So . . .’ Carole pieced things together slowly, ‘unless for some reason your husband got a taxi or a lift from someone down to Pulborough, he couldn’t have picked up his car until the first train of the morning had got there. If I had my laptop here, I could check what time that is.’
Except of course, thought Jude, you never move the laptop out of the spare room at High Tor, do you?
Oenone Playfair, however, had the relevant information locked into her memory. ‘There’s a five fifteen train from Victoria – I’ve had to catch it on a few occasions. Gets into Pulborough at six thirty-four.’
‘And how long would it have taken your husband to get from the station to the tennis court?’ asked Carole.
‘A quarter of an hour, if that.’
‘So he could have been there round ten to seven,’ said Jude, ‘which would be about three-quarters of an hour before Piers and I got there.’
‘Did Piers and you arrive together?’ asked Carole with some sharpness.
‘No, he was there when the taxi dropped me.’
‘And how long had he been there?’
‘I assumed he’d just arrived.’
‘But you don’t know that?’
‘No, I don’t.’ Jude looked at her neighbour with slight puzzlement. She knew that Carole resented the appearance of Piers Targett in her life, but surely she wouldn’t be crass enough deliberately to build up suspicion of him?
Carole seemed to read her thoughts and said, ‘I’m sorry, but these are the kind of questions we’d be asking if there was nobody we knew involved.’
Jude nodded, accepting the point. ‘Yes, all right, I don’t know how long Piers had been there.’
‘But you can ask him,’ said Oenone.
‘Of course.’ But Jude wondered if that was another subject on which she might find her lover evasive.
‘Presumably,’ said Carole, ‘if your husband had caught the train from Victoria, there’d be CCTV footage of him at the station. That could be checked.’
‘I don’t think that’s very likely,’ said Oenone.
‘Why not?’
‘Well, who would check it?’
‘The police, presumably.’
The older woman sat back in astonishment. ‘The police? Why on earth should it have anything to do with the police?’
‘Well, they—’
‘There’s no crime involved here. Reggie died of a heart attack, there’s not much doubt about that, after a dinner where he, typically, over-indulged himself. God knows he’d had enough warnings. Saw the quack only last week and had another lecture about changing his lifestyle.’
‘So if he’s seen the doctor that recently,’ said Carole, ‘there won’t have to be an inquest.’ She was good at details like that.
‘Won’t there? Thank God for small mercies. Anyway, for heaven’s sake, don’t get me wrong. I’m not trying to involve you two in a criminal investigation. I’m just – as any widow would be – curious about how my husband spent his last hours. And I thought maybe you could help me out on that.’
‘Yes, of course,’ said Jude, as she and Carole exchanged covert looks, realizing how much they had let their instincts to see any suspicious death as a potential murder run away with them.
Carole moved into practical mode. ‘I suppose an obvious starting question might be whether your husband had any tennis-related reason to be on the court at that time in the morning.’
‘How do you mean – tennis-related?’
‘I know nothing about real tennis – even less than Jude does, but I imagine, because it’s a competitive sport, people do train for it. So is it possible that your husband was there so early to do some kind of training session?’
‘Reggie? Training?’ Oenone Playfair’s grief was not so deep that she couldn’t still see the incongruity of the idea. ‘For a start there’s very little training you can do on a real tennis court on your own. You could practise a few serves, I suppose, that’s about it. But the idea of Reggie doing any kind of training is just too incongruous for words. There was a time when he was younger, maybe, when he used to do a bit of running and what-have-you, but back then most of his training just came from playing the game. He’d be up at the court three, four times a week.’
‘With Piers?’ asked Jude, remembering what her lover had said about a similar period of intense real tennis.
‘With Piers, yes. There was a whole bunch of them, all incredibly keen, all incredibly fit. Wally Edgington-Bewley, though a decade or so older than the others, was part of the group. They lived for real tennis, used to go off on jaunts to foreign courts . . . Bordeaux, New York, a couple in Australia. But that’s a long time ago. So no, Carole, there is absolutely no chance that Reggie was on the court for training purposes. Apart from anything else, his kit had been in the wash since Sunday and our help doesn’t do the ironing till Friday.’
‘Right. I see,’ said Carole, who couldn’t help feeling that she had received something of a put-down.
Jude picked up the investigation. ‘Well, if we can also rule out the possibility that Reggie had simply gone back to the court because there was something he had left there on Sunday . . .’
‘Which we can,’ asserted Oenone. ‘You may remember I helped him get his stuff together on Sunday. I made sure he’d got everything.’
‘That being the case, the only other reason I can think of for Reggie to be there was because he had arranged to meet someone.’