39
Arriving at the beach they parked the Audi. Paula rushed out and ran through the open door into Marshal's cottage. She was only inside a short time and ran out to where Tweed was standing about ten feet away from the ramp. `Lavinia's not in the cottage,' she said breathlessly. `The crazy Marshal has taken her aboard.' `Not completely crazy,' Tweed assured her. 'He's coming back in. Didn't like the look of what he saw.'
No wonder, Paula thought as she stared out at Oyster Bay and what lay outside. A fresh storm was churning the sea into mountainous waves which collided with each other, hurling up massive clouds of spray.
The yacht was racing towards the shore as oceanic waves came into the bay as though pursuing the craft. Paula watched its progress, praying the vessel would make it to the ramp. `It does look very like a miniature cruise liner,' she remarked. Her voice changed, she gripped Tweed's arm. 'Oh my Lord – he's going off course, must have been gripped by that underwater current.'
Tweed stared. For a few minutes it was very quiet. Paula had the impression she'd heard another engine, then realized that Marshal had adjusted the throttle in a desperate attempt to change course. He failed to do so. The yacht was heading at speed for Pindle Rock. They stood close together in silence as the forward part of the vessel smashed into Pindle with a breaking sound they clearly heard. The forward section seemed to climb up the craggy rocks, then slowly sink back. They were stunned by the next development.
The rear section split away, became a separate craft as doors opened at what became the prow. At the rear an emergency wheelhouse, enclosed with glass, stood above the forward deck with a rudder projecting from the new stern. `My God!' Paula exclaimed. 'It works.' `Never thought it would,' Tweed agreed.
He focused his binoculars on the elevated wheelhouse. He saw Marshal with his flamboyant blue peaked cap operating the wheel. He saw the amateur skipper slip into a yellow oilskin, pulling the hood down. To see clearly, the skipper had lowered his front window and was being splashed by the wild sea. `He might just make the ramp,' Paula shouted now the wind had risen. `It's possible.' `Be more optimistic,' she snapped. `There's a giant of a wave coming up behind him.' `It might just help him to make the shore. Do be positive,' Paula chided. `There's blood on Pindle Rock,' Tweed warned. `He must have been injured. It was one hell of a crash when the ship hit.' `Possibly.' `You have to be so downbeat?' `I have to be so realistic,' he shot back at her. `I don't see any blood,' she argued, scanning the rock with her binoculars. `Not now A burst of spray just washed it clean.' `You imagined it,' she snapped. `You're tense,' he told her. 'Take a deep breath, slow down.' `I'm never tense,' she snapped again. `I'm ordering you to take a really deep breath. Now!'
She was almost leaning against him. She took a really deep breath, held it, let it go. Salty air filled her lungs. She felt the tension ease out of her. Tweed had been right. `Here it comes,' Tweed said cheerfully.
The strange vessel was being hurled in on the crest of a huge wave, skilfully steered to reach the ramp. The engine was switched off to slow it down. It cruised up the ramp close to them, stopped opposite to where they stood. Paula heaved a sigh of relief.
The skipper climbed down steps from the wheelhouse, stomped stiff-legged across the deck, within ten feet of where they stood, staying on the other side of the hull. With a swift movement of oilskin hood and coat were removed, thrown on the deck. Long black hair draped down to the neck. From under the cast-off oilskin coat the Winchester shotgun appeared, pointed point blank at both of them. `Stay close. Any move and I'll send you both to hell with one blast,' said Lavinia.
40
`Lavinia! What are you doing?'
Paula's voice was full of shock and disbelief. She stared at the hard chin, the white face, the shotgun held so steady in her strong hands. `Having already murdered Bella, Mrs Carlyle and Leo,' Tweed said in the calm voice he always used in a crisis, 'she now proposes to murder both of us. How, Lavinia, if I may ask, how do you propose to get rid of our bodies?' `Good question, Mr Tweed. Dump you aboard the deck behind me. Then send the ship out across the bay into the Atlantic. OK with you?' she asked with a sneering smile.
Paula was appalled by the sheer callousness of Lavinia's reply. Her brain was spinning with shock. Lavinia's next words didn't help. `You've lost count, Mr Tweed. Look at the far side of the deck. Recognize the corpse curled against the hull?' `Marshal,' he replied promptly. 'With a necklace which has ripped out his throat. Patricide, the murder of one's father, is regarded as the most contemptible of all crimes.'
' My father?' Lavinia's voice was venomous. 'I hated him, my pseudo-father. I was conceived when he played with Mrs Mandy Carlyle, the tramp who charged so much a night. She was my pseudo-mother. May she rot in hell. My own mother couldn't have a child, desperately wanted one. Marshal had the idea when Mandy Carlyle became pregnant by him to admit what had happened to my real mother. She agreed to go with the Carlyle bag to a dubious expensive nursing home well away from Hengistbury. My real mother had pretended to be pregnant. When I was born my real mother took me back to Hengistbury as her own child. The clinic where it happened faked papers to cover up the impersonation.' Her voice became grimmer. 'Can you visualize how I came to hate my pseudo-father?' `Yes, I can,' Tweed said quietly. 'How did you find out?' `You know that.'
Keep her talking, he said to himself. He had seen the safety catch on the shotgun was released. Lavinia had only to press the trigger and both of them would be dead. `I'd like you to tell me, please.' `I found Marshal's secret chequebook. Large sums paid out to the Carlyle bitch. Blackmail. I guessed why.' `Why did you murder Bella?' `Obvious. She stood in my way for my ultimate succession as the bank's owner.' Lavinia's lip curled in the same sneering smile. 'She was eighty-four. She'd had her time.'
Paula was again appalled at the same sheer callousness. `Logical,' Tweed agreed, his face devoid of expression. 'So why murder Mrs Carlyle?' `Obvious again. I loathed the woman. And she could become dangerous, resuming the blackmailing of Marshal.' `What happened when you arrived at Dodd's End?' `I told her who I was. She sneered, said it was pleasant to meet her only daughter. She was drunk, and hardly got out of her chair.' `So what happened next?' `Her remark incensed me. I had a collar inside a carrier. I said I needed a drink, went behind her towards the drinks cupboard. It was so easy. I slid the collar down over her filthy head.' She grinned. 'I've never used more strength than when I tightened the collar. I nearly took her head off her shoulders.' `Understandable,' said Tweed, forcing himself to play up to her. 'But how did you know her address?' `Marshal, the idiot, had scribbled it down at the end of one of the secret cheque-books' `Why had Leo to be removed?' `Oh, Leo.' She grinned, a sadistic grin. 'He overheard a call I made to Calouste warning him you'd all left the manor. I knew he'd gabble so he had to go.' `Again logical,' Tweed agreed in the same quiet voice. 'And now Marshal?' `Again obvious. He inherited the bank. He was standing in the way of my taking it over. Bella has left a final will naming me as owner if Marshal and Warner are no longer alive.' `You know that because you took the will Bella handed to you, sealed when I first visited her.' `Really?' She tossed her head. 'Solicitors are not allowed to reveal such documents. So how do you know that?' she asked, her curiosity aroused. `You pretended to have a long lunch at the Pike's Peak Hotel in Gladworth. Actually, you were busy seducing the solicitor so he'd show you the will and then put it in a legal envelope and re-seal it. How do I know that? I took the trouble to phone the hotel proprietor and ask him if you had lunch there that day. He told me no one had had lunch there that day. I began to. wonder what you had been up to. `Clever Mr Tweed.' `And Calouste Doubenkian is dead. Drowned when his chateau was flooded.' `Really?' She raised her eyebrows. "Then I can sell to the Sultan. They crave gold in the Far East.' `Gold?' He gazed into the deep-blue pools of her eyes. He could read her now. A hint of pure evil in the blank eyes. `You'd have made a very first-rate detective, Mr Tweed,' she observed as she levelled the shotgun.