‘You keep saying “try”. Why? As even you must realise, in this lonely colonnade of trees there’s nothing – nothing and no one – to prevent me from succeeding.’
‘I might be armed.’
‘I know you’re not.’
‘How so?’
‘You wouldn’t have got through security at Heathrow with a pair of nail-clippers, let alone a pearl-handed pistol, and you’ve certainly had no opportunity of obtaining a gun in Meiringen. Switzerland isn’t some banana republic of despots and sexpots, you know, where a moustachioed moocher in a soiled white suit will happily exchange a second-hand revolver for a few greasy greenbacks.’
She ejaculated again.
‘Despots and sexpots! Greasy greenbacks! God, that’s just so typical of you! There’s not a single reader out there who needs to be told that Switzerland isn’t a banana republic. But you – you don’t think twice about breaking the rhythm of your narrative if it means taking time off to admire one of your own irrelevant metaphors. Who do you think you are? Vladimir Nabokov? A Scotch McNabokov?
That stung. ‘They weren’t metaphors, they were alliterations,’ was all I was able lamely to answer.
‘Same difference. They stuck out like a pair of sore thumbs.’
‘Stuck out like a pair of sore thumbs, did they?’ I jeered at her. ‘Poor Evie, no one’s ever going to compliment you on the originality of
‘The point, Gilbert, is that you’ve always been such a narcissistic writer. Which is why you’ve never had the popular touch, not even when writing whodunits. No one but himself loves a narcissist, or even likes a narcissist – and, I must tell you, Jane and Joe Public know in advance that, because of your overbearing egotism, there’s going to be precious little room left in your books for them.’
‘Oh, the banter! The banter!’ I cried, like Conrad’s Kurtz.
‘Yes, you’re right,’ she remarked with, in the circumstances, such amazing coolness I set to wondering whether she knew something I didn’t. ‘We’re wasting time. Are you going to tell me why you murdered Slavorigin? And don’t bother pretending you didn’t. We’ve come too far along the road, and we’re too close to the end of the plot, for that.’
‘You who know everything,’ I replied, ‘why don’t you tell me?’
She took a last puff on the Dunhill, then flicked the half-smoked cigarette over into the ravine with the sort of effortlessness that comes only with practice.
‘Since you ask, I’m rather inclined to believe it was a
‘Explain.’
‘Naturally,’ she opined – said! said! said! – ‘naturally, when I understood that you and only you could have been the murderer, I started sniffing around for a motive. I immediately ruled out money. I could observe, from the queasy way you circled each other when you were introduced, that you and Slavorigin were more than merely professional literary acquaintances. But no matter how sketchy a picture I had of your shared past – if any – I simply couldn’t conceive of a relationship which would involve your gaining financially from his death. There was of course his prestige as a writer, a prestige you most certainly envied – ah, envy, Gilbert, envy! – although not enough, surely, to provoke you to murder. Which seemed to leave just one motive – sexual jealousy. You had both been at Edinburgh University and at much the same time. Notwithstanding his night at the Carlyle with Meredith, he was homosexual, which it’s obvious you are as well, obvious even if you hadn’t written that disgusting
‘What a witch you are!’ I cried.
‘So I
‘For pity’s sake, no clichés. This isn’t one of your whodunits.’
‘I have, haven’t I?’
She was right. It was too late to lie. Almost forgetting why we were there, although in reality not at all, I decided to tell her about Gustav and me.
Yes, it was in Edinburgh that we first met – at, of all improbable settings, an orgy.
He was sitting alone, in profile from my point of view, curled up on the carpet, his back resting against an unoccupied divan, in uncannily the pose of Flandrin’s