Belchester Box Set
Belchester Box Set
Andrea Frazer
Strangeways to Oldham #1
White Christmas with a Wobbly Knee #2
Snowballs and Scotch Mist #3
From the author of the Falconer Files, a series featuring a pair of amateur sleuths and a delightful outpouring of English upper-class eccentricities – with the odd murder thrown in.
Strangeways to Oldham – Book One of the Belchester Chronicles
Lady Amanda Golightly of Belchester Towers is a person in complete contrast to the stereotypical image of one of her breeding. She is short, portly, and embarrassingly forthright. If she wasn’t calling a spade a shovel, it was only because she was calling it 'trumps'!
On a visit to a local nursing home where an old business partner of her father's is residing, she unexpectedly discovers a long-lost friend, Hugo Cholmondley-Crichton-Crump – and stumbles upon a murder as well.
Installing Hugo in the more civilised and comfortable surroundings of Belchester Towers, the pair turn to sleuthing after Lady Amanda reports her appalling discovery to the local police inspector and is incensed when he treats her as a silly old biddy with an over-active imagination. Her outrage prompts her to teach the impertinent young whipper-snapper a lesson, and she and Hugo (Zimmer frame in tow) embark upon their first investigation, only for murder to become a distressingly frequent occurrence…
White Christmas with a Wobbly Knee – Book Two in the Belchester Chronicles
Lady Amanda Golightly, eccentric resident of a sprawling faux castle in the town of Belchester, has recently taken it upon herself to act as a veritable super-sleuth, aided by her friend Hugo Cholmondley-Crichton Crump.
In this Chronicle she faces a family crisis while planning a new business venture for Belchester Towers: guided tours. To celebrate (and road-test) her new venture, Lady Amanda invites a horde of old chums to a trial run at Christmas time, complete with tasty nibbles. However, things don’t go to plan – a dead guest is discovered found slumped on the library table, having been dispatched in a variety of unusual ways!
Lady Amanda and Hugo are off again, but can they beat the morose Inspector Moody to the unmasking of the culprit?
Snowballs and a Scotch Mist – Book Three in the Belchester Chronicles
In this third 'cocktail' mystery, Lady Amanda Golightly receives an invitation to spend Burns' Night in Castle Rumdrummond in Scotland.
Although she is dismissive of the idea, her old chum Hugo is thrilled at the thought and, beguiled by the idea of wearing tartan, he uses his own brand of childish pleading to win her agreement to the trip.
Along with Beauchamp, her long-suffering manservant, and her friend, Enid Tweedie, acting as personal servants, the four head north of the border for a 'wee break'.
It is not too long, however, before murder enters their lives once more, and they begin to suspect some very dirty dealing under the social veneer of castle life. Bagpipes, haggis, tartan and kilts all make their appearance, as dastardly deeds continue through the snowy landscape. But Death has not yet finished with the houseparty…
For the Campbell family in New Zealand.
They know why!
DRAMATIS PERSONAE
Anstruther, Dr – elderly GP
Beauchamp – butler and general factotum at Belchester Towers
Campbell, Dr Andrew – new, young GP
Cholmondley-Crichton-Crump, Hugo – a permanent house guest at Belchester Towers
Edwards, Malcolm – head of a private nursing service
Foster, Derek – a care worker
Golightly, Lady Amanda – owner of Belchester Towers
Matron – head of the Birdlings Serenade Nursing Home, whose name is known to no one
Myers, Richard – an elderly local resident
Pagnell, Reginald – a resident of the Birdlings Serenade Nursing Home
Plunkett, Nurse Sarah – an employee at the Birdlings Serenade Nursing Home
Tweedie, Enid – cleaner, friend, and co-conspirator of Lady Amanda
Updyke, Dr Cedric – an orthopaedic consultant at Belchester City Hospital
Williams, Young Mr – an elderly partner of Freeman Hardy, Williams and Williams
Police Personnel
Inspector Moody
PC Adrian Glenister
A NOTE ON PRONUNCIATION
Beauchamp’s name is usually pronounced Beecham in England, but Lady Amanda insists on the French pronunciation, Bo-sham.
Hugo’s surnames are pronounced Chumley-Cryten-Crump.
Strangeways to Oldham #1
PROLOGUE
Belchester was a small cathedral city, about fifteen miles from the south coast; the largest dwelling in its environs Belchester Towers. Belchester Towers had been built in the early nineteenth century by one Godfrey Golightly, nouveau riche, and out to display his newly found wealth.
That the man had no taste or breeding mattered not a jot to him, and he celebrated his recently acquired title with a heap of a red-brick building, ugly, four-square, with a huge crenellated tower at each corner and a faux moat surrounding the whole – a raspberry to all the other fine houses that had a wealth of history behind them.
Godfrey Golightly would build his own dynasty, and his house would mature into its surroundings over time, of this he had had no doubt.
In the last almost two hundred years, the fortunes of the Golightly family had fluctuated, down to the present day, and last member of the direct line of descent, Lady Amanda, who was now of a certain age – i.e. wouldn’t tell anyone that she had recently become the recipient of a state pension. She lived there with only the company of a general factotum called Beauchamp, and an army of casual cleaners and gardeners, whom the aforementioned Beauchamp summoned at intervals, as and when they were needed, to turn the dwelling back into a decent place in which to live.
Lady Amanda’s parents had been killed in an accident on the London to Brighton Rally some years before, after driving straight into a tree. They had been drunk to the wide due to frequent nips from their hip-flasks of cocktails, and Lady Amanda considered that there could not have been a better way for them to go.
The car behind had said they were laughing their heads off at the time of the accident, after ‘Daddy’, as she always thought of her father, had lost control of the steering. It was considered not to be speed that had been the main cause of their death, because the old car didn’t have it in her to go very fast, more the sheer bad luck that they had both broken their necks and fractured their skulls when they had been thrown from the body of the vehicle, face first, into said venerable and unmovable tree.
Lady Amanda was an aficionado of cocktails; in fact, she had been since she was a teenager, having been brought up with them, one could say, and she hoped that she had a suitably bizarre and fun ending – if death can ever be fun! – to her own life, when the time eventually arrived.
A formidable character, she conducted her life openly and honestly, and would have no truck with slyness, prevarication, untruths, or any hole-in-the-corner, or cloak-and-dagger behaviour. She was hardest of all on bad manners, and would not tolerate them from anyone, no matter what their station in life. Being a blunt woman, however, Lady Amanda called a spade ‘a bloody shovel’ if she didn’t call it ‘trumps’, although she very rarely used coarse language and frowned upon it in others.
Physically, she bore no relationship to the figure that most imagined, having only heard her name. She was not tall and willowy, a waif – a go-lightly, in fact, whom a gust of wind would bowl over. Instead, she was short and squat – what she liked to refer to as portly, where others said she was just fat – with piercing green eyes, and blond curls.
Her hair was her only vanity, but more of th
at later …
Chapter One
‘Beauchamp!’
The name was shouted in a glass-shattering screech, which echoed round the vast entrance hall of Belchester Towers. ‘Beauchamp! Where the dickens are you! Come here, at once! Beauchamp!’
Thus, she summoned the one and only other occupier of her vast house. She was standing now, in the entrance hall, holding a piece of paper in her hands; holding it at arm’s length and squinting furiously at it.
‘How may I be of assistance, my lady?’ Beauchamp had appeared at her side as if by magic, his footsteps silent as always on the stone-flagged floor. Lady Amanda didn’t know how he did it, but he had often caused her to jump nearly out of her skin, with this inexplicable trick of his, to move around like a shade, with no intimation at all that he was near her. He was just, suddenly, there.
‘What, in heaven’s name, is this?’ she demanded, thrusting the piece of paper in his face, without preamble.
Beauchamp took the proffered document, and scrutinised it in detail. ‘It would appear to be a fine for speeding, my lady,’ he informed his enraged mistress.
‘Just what I thought, but how the devil can it be? I haven’t had the Rolls out for ages. The thing’s covered in dust and cobwebs, out there in the stables.’ She followed this with a noise that it is only possible to write thus: ‘Hrmph!’
‘It does not concern the Rolls, my lady – it is, in fact, a notice for speeding on your tricycle.’
‘My tricycle? Absolute rot! How could I possibly have been speeding on my trike? Don’t know what the world’s coming to, when a respectable woman can’t even ride her own trike without breaking the law. It’s a load of absolute rot, Beauchamp, and I shall phone the Chief Constable about it. His father used to be a good friend of Daddy’s, you know.’
‘I fear that would do little good, my lady. It states here that you were travelling along the entrance road to the hospital, where the speed limit is only five miles an hour, and you nearly ‘had’ the senior orthopaedic consultant with your conveyance.’
Ignoring him completely, she continued, ‘I mean, what sort of damage can one do, with a tricycle?’
Beauchamp eyed Lady Amanda’s generous figure up and down, considered the weight of the ancient machine she had been propelling, and decided not to voice his conclusion, which was ‘a considerable amount’. ‘And the gentleman mentioned, my lady?’ he prompted her to further explanation.
‘He got out of the way in time, didn’t he? I didn’t exactly hit him!’
‘No, but he only escaped being hit by your trike, by jumping off the entrance way into a rose bush, thus sustaining considerable damage to the material of his shirt and trousers, and a number of small scratches and abrasions.’
‘Piffle!’ retorted Lady Amanda, her face bearing a mutinous expression with which Beauchamp was only too familiar.
‘The accompanying letter says that you didn’t even stop to see how the poor man was.’
‘I was late for visiting. Old Enid Tweedie, you know. How ridiculous, having to have her tonsils out at her age. Absolutely shaming, if you ask me. It’s the sort of thing that children have done, then get a week of ice-cream and jelly until the pain goes away. Had it done myself, as a matter of fact, when I was about seven. And then, a couple of weeks later, she had to go back in to have her gall bladder removed. There’ll be nothing left of her, if she keeps having bits taken out at this rate.’
‘It also says here, that you are lucky not to be charged with what is referred to in common parlance as “hit-and-run”.’
‘With a tricycle?’ she shrilled, her voice rising with indignation. ‘I shall dispute it, of course!’
‘There were witnesses, my lady. I think they’ve got you by the proverbial “short and curlies”,’, Beauchamp informed her calmly. He was used to her moods by now, and didn’t let it disturb him, even when she threw a first-class tantrum.
‘Don’t be coarse, Beauchamp!’
‘Sorry, my lady.’
‘So, what do I have to do now?’ she asked him, her colour subsiding a little, as she realised she could probably leave this to Beauchamp to deal with, as he did with most things that arose in the household which required thought.
‘I suggest that you just pay your fine like a model citizen, my lady, and bear in mind the speed limit in future. Mrs Tweedie wouldn’t have been the worse for you arriving just a minute or two later, and you wouldn’t have found yourself in this situation if you had observed the roadside speed limit signs.’
‘Very well, Beauchamp. Get on with it.’
‘There’s just one more thing, my lady,’ he asked.
‘And what’s that?’
‘My name is pronounced Beecham, not that French variation you have used for some years now.’
‘I’m sorry, Beauchamp, but your name is an ancient one that came over with the Conquest, and I cannot find it in myself to use its Anglicisation. Take it or leave it! You should be proud to bear such an ancient name!’
It was a long-running battle between them, and Beauchamp gave in with a good grace, the way he always did, but one day – one day, he might just persuade her. And pigs would fly across a blue moon, when that happened, was his last thought on the matter.
‘I’m going out this afternoon, on the trike, but I shall take what you’ve said into consideration. Enid Tweedie informed me, as best as she could, of course, with her throat being so sore, that old Reggie Pagnell has gone into a nursing home.
‘Poor old thing! I haven’t seen him in absolutely yonks! I expect he was before your time, but he and Daddy used to be business partners when I was a wee one.’
The thought of Lady Amanda ever being a ‘wee one’ made Beauchamp wince, but he managed to make it a mental wince that didn’t appear on his features, lest his employer decided to take offence.
‘Anyway, I thought I’d tricycle over there this afternoon, and see how he is; cheer him up; you know, that sort of thing?’
Beauchamp knew that some people were only too delighted to have the pleasure of Lady Amanda’s company, and would gladly have run up a flag if they knew she were coming to visit. Others were not quite so fond of her, and were more likely to run up a side street at the rumour of a visit from her, but he maintained a respectful silence, knowing which side his bank account was buttered.
‘Perhaps you would be good enough to get the old steed out for me, Beauchamp. Just leave it round the front, as usual, and check the horn, to make sure its bulb hasn’t dozed.’ Attached to the handlebars of the tricycle that used to be her mother’s was a small version of an old-fashioned car horn, brass with a rubber bulb, and she was always worried that the rubber might have deteriorated to the point where she couldn’t use it any more.
In fact, she had used it, she remembered, when that chappie at the hospital had got in her way, and it had been in fine fettle then. Remembering this, she went to prepare for her visit with a smile on her face, hoping it would be a long time yet before she had to resort to one of those horrible little bell thingummyjigs.
Belchester was less than a mile away, now, as the little city’s suburbs crept ever-increasingly outwards, towards Belchester Towers, and it was a relatively short ride for Lady Amanda to the Birdlings Serenade Nursing Home, (Nursing & Convalescence Our Speciality. Enquire about respite care), next to St Anselm’s Church, and on the city’s old northern border, just south of the cathedral.
She had never visited the place before, but surveyed in dismay its surroundings. To the west of the nursing home lay St Anselm’s, and its beckoning graveyard. To its north was the city hospital, and, to the east, a doctor’s and a dentist’s surgery. The poor residents were surrounded on all sides by decay, illness and death, and it must be very depressing for them, she thought, as she propelled her tricycle, at a snail’s pace, given what had occurred previously, up its drive to the main entrance.
The reception area that greeted her reminded her of how lucky she was not to be reduced by health
and finances to live in a place like this. Despite the scents of polish and disinfectant, there lingered the odour of boiling greens and, underneath everything, a decided tang of urine, which made her wrinkle her nose in distaste. To think of poor Reggie Pagnell, ending up here.
At the desk, she announced in a booming voice that she had come to visit an old family friend, but when she announced that friend’s name, the receptionist turned a little pale, and asked her if she’d wait, so that she could check with Matron, whether that would be all right or not.
‘Stuff and nonsense!’ declared Lady Amanda, watching the woman walk off down a corridor to her right, and then, consulting a handy list of residents, which had been pinned to the wall to the side of the desk, she spotted her target’s room number, and toddled off down the left-hand corridor, in search of her father’s old partner. Her eyesight was still good enough to read things at a distance, and she had learned all she needed to know. What did the woman want to involve Matron for?
Room number five was only a few steps away, and she gave a brisk knock on the door, and entered it hurriedly before that interfering receptionist woman came back with some excuse or other about why she couldn’t pop in on poor old Reggie. Closing the door carefully behind her, she turned, ready to greet a familiar face, and was staggered to note that he wasn’t tucked up in bed, as she had expected, but rather was laid out; the whole length of him, including his face, covered with a white sheet.
Startled into silence, she approached the shrouded figure almost on tiptoes, noticing as she did so that his bedside table bore two cocktail glasses, both of them empty. That was odd! She wouldn’t have expected cocktails to have been served in a place like this. Almost instinctively, she bent her nose to the nearest glass, and gave a very unladylike sniff, then moved on to the other glass.