Sunday, 23 September 2012

A House Of Scandal...

I cannot take full credit for this story as the idea was originally thought up by my father. A little over three years later and I have taken it upon myself to expand upon his suggestion.

Oxfordshire, 1929.

“That’s Augustus House, sir.” The chauffeur intoned politely with a nod towards the sprawling residence that had finally come into view. Fleets Lane shifted slightly in his seat in order to gain a better look and then let out a small breath of surprise. The house was imposing in its ugliness. Its stone was weathered to a grim grey and the effect was left unsoftened by a lack of surrounding foliage. Lane was reminded of Shelley’s Frankenstein for as the motor-car drew closer it became clear that the house had been cobbled together from different parts over the centuries. A medieval great hall was sandwiched between neoclassical columns, whilst this was all flanked by great curvilinear wings that were currently the height of fashion.
“It’s not hard to believe that the family will soon be suffering financial woes looking at that heap of bricks.” Lane’s companion remarked quietly. Tyler Hill was a bit of a mathematics genius and Lane had little doubt that his mind had already calculated the cost of each of those bricks and subtracted it from the annual income of the estate. It was perhaps as a result of this analytical approach that Lane could detect none of his own admiration on the young man’s face. Hill saw only the decaying edifice that would slowly bleed away profit margins, whilst Lane was old enough to appreciate the family heritage preserved within each cracked stone.
“How bad have they been affected?” Lane kept his voice low so that their probing of the family’s private affairs was kept from the liveried chauffeur. Lord Bowles, the owner of Augustus House, was an American and only a month before the American stock market at Wall Street had crashed. Hill had calculated that in a worst case scenario the effects would be felt by economies all over the world for at least a decade. For Augustus House and its inhabitants, however, the effect would likely be far worse.
“It’s serious. They’ll probably need to sell the house and estate to recoup their losses.” Lane shook his head, his dark eyes solemn.
“Yet another old family who will be forced to sell their ancestral home. The world is changing.” He murmured more to himself than Hill. He could remember a time before the war, before the world had been turned upside down. Lane had grown up on an estate like Augustus House. On his return from the Front he had gone back, but the farm where his family had lived and worked was gone, along with the family and servants up at the big house. The war had of course changed everything, including the direction of his own life. The injury he had sustained for King and Country ultimately forced him to retire from the police force and to set up his own practice as a private investigator.
“It’s only tenuously an ancestral home now though, sir.” Hill’s logic drew Lane’s attention back to the present. “The current Lord Bowles was a very distant cousin of the late Lord Bowles, and it was the marriage between the cousin and the daughter which meant that the title and the estate could remain intact.” Hill was too young to remember the war and the unreserved respect that had previously been thought owing to the aristocratic class. Despite any youthful inexperience, Hill’s precise reasoning and talent for detecting patterns and connections made him an invaluable assistant to Lane’s investigations.
“The Bowles’ are a relation of Lady Granchester, I believe. We recovered her diamonds last year, which is presumably why Lord Bowles contacted us particularly.” Lane mused as he thought of the terse telegram that had requested their immediate presence in Oxfordshire. Yet there had been no mention of the matter which actually required their professional services. There was, however, little time for any further speculation by the pair for the chauffeur was pulling around the large turning circle.
Lane and Hill had arrived.

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