Cecelia and I make a plan
…
Ceceilia had the need for a decent cup of coffee, not the wishy-washy stuff they had in the canteen. I got tea, and very nearly ordered toast and marmalade. It was a nostalgia thing, it was where Violetta and I had our first date, according to her.
“You’re looking a little distracted?” Cecilia said, sitting down after going over to the cake display and picking out a French pastry.
“I just had an old memory pop up. Now it’s gone. How did you get roped into this caper?”
“We’re both in Rodby’s bad books. He wasn’t pleased with the way the Larry thing ended. Did you ever get to see Juliet?”
“Once. It might have been a thing, if she wasn’t aiding and abetting the man trying to kill me.”
“That does put a bit of downer on things. I thought you had retired again.”
“So did I? Seems Mrs Rodby was trying to do a bit of match making with an old school chum and didn’t know she’d end up in the middle of a family brawl. I thought I was going to the opera as a plus one.”
“Well, I didn’t get to punish that producer, so you might get a call, after this gig. What’s first?”
“Tea, and coffee. Read the files, see what they tell us.”
It was clear she was like me, she hated reading papers. It rarely matched the reality.
My understanding, an hour later, was that the brother the inheritance would go to if the countess went missing, was too obvious a choice for the guilty party.
What also piqued my interest was Juliet. Again. Yes, she was the daughter of Vittoria, the wronged and vengeful mistress, but she and her mother had been parted not long after that photo was taken and neither had seen the other since.
There was also the international lawyer’s assessment that the brother did not have the first claim on the inheritance, that went to either the spouse, or the first child of the count, whether it was by his legitimate wife, or not. It was the first time I had seen a ruling where an illegitimate child could get anything, given how tightly some countries worded their inheritance rules.
But Vittoria was a nasty piece of work and probably was guided by some fortune-hunting half lawyer who had told her she had rights and interpreted it as meaning if the countess was no longer in the running.
The brother, on the other hand, was most likely oblivious to the fact his older brother didn’t have children, based on the fact that his brother’s marriage did not produce any heirs. It was probably mentioned in the will that if there were no heirs …
A report from the surveillance team of Vittoria advised that she was spending a lot of time schmoosing Alessandro, possibly believing that he would, in the end, inherit a fortune, and if she landed that fish, well, there was going to be flow-on effects.
She didn’t seem to think that her long-lost daughter was a viable means of getting the fortune. Yet.
“I think I’ll dress up and apply for a loan.”
“I don’t think it’s that type of bank.”
“They have branches. It says so in the brief.”
“Merchant bank. They handle much larger clients than mums and dads and small business.”
“Well, it was a good idea. Perhaps I’ll just crash their circle of friends and ingratiate myself into their society. I did an audition for a society bitch who was wronged and was going to kill the whole family. It was an interesting role, but unfortunately, I didn’t look deranged enough.”
“A posh hotel, expensive clothes, an aloof manner, and, just a thought, you could set your cap for Alessandro. If Vittoria is chasing him, maybe you could cut across her bow.”
“Do you always speak in idioms?”
“When I can. Violetta never understood them and frowned at me all the time. Sorry. Bad habits never go away.”
“But a good idea. I’ll insert myself into the surveillance team for a few days and them make a play. You going to see your girlfriend?”
I can see she was not going to let go of that relationship, even if there wasn’t one.
“It might be interesting to see if she remembers her mother, or if she has seen her recently.”
“She’s going to think it a bit suspicious if you just turn up on her doorstep. You’re going to need an angle.”
“Or just bump into her. I said I was going to be in London.”
‘Right. Do you know how big London is? Running accidentally into her in Stowe-on-Wold would work, but not here.”
“Stowe-on-Wold? What’s there? Where is it?”
“Cotswolds. I shot a few scenes there. Memorable only for swimming naked in the stream. Not my finest hour, but it paid well.”
I shook my head, trying to get that image of her out of my mind.
“We’ll talk tomorrow,” I said.
© Charles Heath 2023