- Home
- Rohan O'Grady; Rohan O’Grady
Let's Kill Uncle
Let's Kill Uncle Read online
THE BLOOMSBURY GROUP
Henrietta’s War by Joyce Dennys
Henrietta Sees It Through by Joyce Dennys
The Brontës Went to Woolworths by Rachel Ferguson
Miss Hargreaves by Frank Baker
Love’s Shadow by Ada Leverson
A Kid for Two Farthings by Wolf Mankowitz
Mrs Tim of the Regiment by D.E. Stevenson
Mrs Ames by E.F. Benson
Mrs Harris Goes to Paris and Mrs Harris Goes to New York
by Paul Gallico
A NOTE ON THE AUTHOR
ROHAN O’GRADY is the pseudonym for June Margaret O’Grady, who was born in Vancouver in 1922. O’Grady began writing poetry and stories as a young child and ventured into full length fiction in her late thirties after her marriage to newspaper editor Frederick Skinner. By 1963, O’Grady had published three novels in three years, O’Houlihan’s Jest in 1961, Pippin’s Journal in 1962, and Let’s Kill Uncle in 1963. The latter two books were illustrated by Edward Gorey. In 1966, William Castle directed the Hollywood horror movie Let’s Kill Uncle starring Nigel Green and Mary Badham (the young star of To Kill a Mockingbird). Several unproduced screenplays and two novels followed: Bleak November in 1970 and The Mayspoon in 1981. June Skinner has resided in West Vancouver since 1959.
First published in Great Britain by Longmans, Green and Co., 1964
This electronic edition published in 2010 by Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Copyright © June Skinner 1963
The moral right of the author has been asserted
Ex libris illustration © Penelope Beech 2010
Illustration on p.v © Edward Gorey
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 36 Soho Square, London W1D 3QY
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
All rights reserved
You may not copy, distribute, transmit, reproduce or otherwise make available this publication (or any part of it) in any form, or by any means (including without limitation electronic, digital, optical, mechanical, photocopying, printing, recording or otherwise), without the prior written permission of the publisher. Any person who does any unauthorised act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages
ISBN 9 781 4088 1380 5 (ebook)
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Visit www.bloomsbury.com to find out more about our authors and their books You will find extracts, author interviews, author events and you can sign up for newsletters to be the first to hear about our latest releases and special offers
‘LIAR! LIAR! LIAR!’
Even the pounding of the engines couldn’t drown out the sound.
The first mate, leaning against the deck rail of the S.S. Haida Prince, winced. That shrill little voice had been bouncing on his eardrums for three hours.
‘Cheer up, this is their stop.’
The purser joined him, and they stood watching a sea gull waddle along the deck rail.
‘It’s a beautiful place,’ the first mate pointed to the Island. ‘Well, it won’t be for long. Not after they land. This is your first trip on this run, isn’t it?’
The purser nodded.
‘It isn’t always this bad, you know.’
The seagull gave a hoarse shriek of delight, cocked a reptilian-bright eye past his feathered shoulder, then rose to the air, skimming over the choppy waters to the Island.
‘I’ve shipped all over the world,’ said the first mate, ‘and this is my favorite. Someday I’m going to retire to one of these islands. I’ll get myself a cottage on the beach, and a nice little sloop. Maybe on Benares - it has a beer parlour. The best salmon fishing on the coast is here.’
The deck steward, an ex–fighter with sloping, powerful shoulders, approached them.
‘Excuse me, sir,’ he said. ‘Do you know anything that will dissolve chewing gum? Something that won’t dissolve a dog?’
The first mate and the purser exchanged glances.
‘Them?’ asked the first mate.
‘Yes, sir. One of the border collies in the hold. Its muzzle is glued together. They just thought he’d like a wad of gum, the little bastards.’
‘Try rubbing alcohol,’ suggested the purser.
‘And keep them off the bridge!’ said the first mate, his ears still burning from the captain’s salty expletives.
He turned to the purser.
‘When I’ve got my master’s papers and run my own line, there’ll be an iron-clad rule: no kids on board unless accompanied by their jailers, and even then they’ll be confined to the hold.’
They stood gazing at the Island as the ship plowed nearer the dock.
‘You can’t beat these islands,’ he continued. ‘Get yourself a couple of acres, keep a small vegetable garden, with maybe a dozen fruit trees. A man can live well on next to nothing. Driftwood for fuel, fish in the water, crabs, clams, oysters on the beach, and venison when the Mountie’s back is turned.’
‘Are you really going to settle on one?’
‘Yes, but not this one.’
‘Why not?’ The purser laughed. ‘Oh, those kids.’
‘No,’ said the first mate, ‘not because of them. This island is the most beautiful of the lot, but it’s cursed.’
‘Who are you kidding?’
‘I mean it,’ said the first mate. ‘It’s hexed. Any of the others, but not this one. And I’m not kidding. You can check the records if you want. In two world wars thirty-three men have left it to fight for their country. Only one has come back alive. See that Mountie on the dock? He’s the fellow. All the rest killed, down to the last man. If there’s such a thing as a dead island, this is it.’
They turned their eyes to the curly arbutus trees crowning the sloping, moss-covered rocks, down to the white sand, with the ocean wind fanning softly and smelling like perfume to an old sailor.
‘I don’t care how beautiful it is. I’ve been at sea too long not to be superstitious, and you couldn’t pay me to live on this island. Well, I’d better check the cargo.’
As the first mate went down the companionway, he stopped to remove a fire axe which had been lifted from its wall bracket and left temptingly, blade up, on the stairs. He replaced it and continued, only to glance to the upper deck where a lifeboat was swinging crazily on its davit.
‘Good God!’ he said, and bumped into the dining steward.
‘They left a piece of blueberry pie on a sofa in the lounge!’ said the steward. ‘Admiral Featherstonehaugh, Retired, Royal Navy, sat on it. He was wearing white flannels. He says he’s going to sue the company.’
‘I know, I know,’ said the first mate. ‘They have also spilled ink on the captain’s charts.’
‘Forty-two years at sea, I signed on as a boy of twelve,’ said the steward, ‘and never, never an afternoon like this. I wish you could see the dining saloon. Why, I’ve been through typhoons in the Orient with less damage. Then the girl threw a salt cellar at the boy and hit him on the head, so he threw a plate of salad at her and hit that lady missionary. You remember the one, she gave us tracts and said we were all going to die on the fields of Armageddon.’
‘If we live through this afternoon,’ said the first mate. ‘Well, don’t tell me your troubles. I’ve got enough of my own. I’m not a nursemaid. Kids shouldn’t be allowed on board alone!’
Sergeant Coulter of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police watched the S.S. Haida Prince docking. Like a tourist’s snapshot brought to life, he was a shining symbol of impassive and impartial justice. His shoulders bulged through his immaculate shirt, his Sam Browne belt hugged his narrow waist, the leather polished to the same gleaming russet as his riding boots. His steel spurs flashed in the su
n, as hard and cold as his blue eyes, and his broad-brimmed hat was set squarely and stubbornly on his head.
Others might wilt in the summer heat, but not Sergeant Albert Edward George Coulter. He stood as though guarding the Khyber Pass, his back as solid as his royal names and his brick-red neck immovable in his tight collar.
Mr Brooks, the elderly keeper of the post office and general store, approached the police officer, the top of his silvery head barely reaching the august shoulders of Sergeant Coulter.
‘Good afternoon, Sergeant.’
Mr Brooks was waving an open letter in his hand.
The Mountie’s face relaxed and he nodded.
‘I’ve just received some rather upsetting news, Sergeant.’ Mr Brooks looked up at the policeman. ‘Our cottage was leased for the summer by a Major Gaunt, no, let me see, Major Murchison-Gaunt. His lawyers wrote he would be here to open the place on July 2nd.’
He paused and gazed up at Sergeant Coulter again.
‘It is now July 4th, Sergeant, and Major Murchison-Gaunt has not yet arrived,’ he announced.
The officer stared down at him.
‘Well?’
‘Well,’ said Mr Brooks, ‘I’ve just received another letter from Major Murchison-Gaunt’s lawyer saying he has been unavoidably detained and he may not be able to get here for several weeks.’
‘Yes, Mr Brooks?’
‘Oh, I forgot to tell you. Major Murchison-Gaunt’s young nephew is being sent here from his private school, to join his uncle for the summer. The boy is an orphan. He’s on the Haida Prince now.’
‘I suppose he’ll have to be sent back to Vancouver,’ said the Mountie. ‘If that’s where he’s from, of course.’
‘But that’s impossible! The school is closed and the child has no relatives except his uncle, who is in Europe now.’
Mr Brooks’s nose twitched nervously, but Sergeant Coulter, who quelled riots single-handed, was not upset by the untimely arrival of a small boy.
‘I imagine Major Murchison’s lawyer will look after the situation.’
Mr Brooks nibbled the edge of the letter as though it were a piece of lettuce.
‘But that’s just it! Murchison-Gaunt, by the way. The lawyer writes that Major Murchison-Gaunt is the boy’s legal guardian, and that he, the lawyer, wants no part of the boy whatsoever. As a matter of fact, he seems very explicit on that point.’
‘I’ll file a report with the child welfare department.’
Sergeant Coulter stared over Mr Brooks’s head, to the Haida Prince, as the ship neared the dock.
Mr Brooks cleared his throat meekly.
‘The lawyer suggests – he – he almost implores, that Mrs Brooks and I see to the lad until his uncle arrives.’
‘Is that agreeable with you and Mrs Brooks?’
There was a pause.
‘Mrs Brooks and I have talked it over, Albert. We hate to think of the little fellow being knocked about from pillar to post, and now that— ’ a look of self-pity came to Mr Brooks’s eyes, ‘and now, of course, our own boy being gone, well, we’d be only too glad to do what we can for this little fellow. It may be lonely for him here, with no children left on the Island, but – but – Mrs Brooks and I would like to do what we can for him.’
As the expression on Mr Brooks’s face softened, the expression on Sergeant Coulter’s hardened.
‘Very well, Mr Brooks. If you’ll give me the address, I’ll see that the lawyer is notified.’
Sergeant Coulter stared at the ship without seeing it. Was he to be always silently reproached for being the only one to return? He came back, the son of the poor addled old Sergeant-Major Coulter. The sons of admirals were coral in the briny deep, the sons of generals had little white crosses over them in all the graveyards of Europe, and the young eagles, like old Brooks’s son, Dickie, hardly through school, they had flown back to the motherland. Like glorious phoenixes, they had plunged flaming to earth and burned, young and pure and untouched. Only the son of the old Sergeant-Major had returned.
He glanced up at the war monument in the center of the village square. A tall, plain granite shaft. ‘To the Memory of our Island Boys’ and then the long list of names, his own the only one absent.
No, there were no children left on the Island. The widows and their young broods had moved away, to the cities, and it was no wonder. There was no electricity on the Island, no doctor, no dentist. There was a church but services were held only a few times a year, when the minister came over from the neighbouring island of Benares.
Two world wars had bled the Island white. Now only a few farmers and the old people were left. The old people, remittance men, aged pensioners, ancient exiled aristocrats, living in sweet and poor gentility.
On rare occasions American tourists and summer visitors came. Sometimes commercial fishermen and Indians tied their seiners and gas boats at the wharf, but apart from them, the Island was as silent as a tomb.
‘Ah, there’s the goat-lady.’
A middle-aged woman came heavily down the wharf and scanned the decks of the Haida Prince.
‘Good afternoon, Mrs Nielsen. Are you expecting someone on the Prince too?’ Mr Brooks was at her side.
She nodded and craned her neck at the sightseers hanging over the rails of the boat.
‘Yes, a little girl. Her mother worked in the ward of the hospital when I was in two years ago.’
Her eyes flitted over the passengers.
‘She’s coming for the summer. It’s the first time I’ve had anyone to board with me, but I thought I’d try it. It’s lonely now Per’s away fishing.’
She turned to Mr Brooks.
‘I don’t see any little girl. I hope she isn’t lost. She had to get on the boat by herself because her mother was working.’
‘She’s probably inside,’ said Mr Brooks, and then his face brightened. ‘A little girl? How nice! Mrs Brooks and I are having a young lad with us for a few weeks. They’ll be company for each other.’
He paused. ‘It’ll seem strange, children on the Island again.’
The goat-lady nodded, but said nothing.
Sweating deckhands heaved lines to the wharf and the ship, like a big horse backing into a stall, shuddered against the pilings. Finally the gangplank was shoved across and freight was hoisted to the dock, swinging dizzily. Winches groaned, commands were shouted, Mr Brooks and Mrs Nielsen strained their eyes and Sergeant Coulter stood lordly and impassive.
A bent old gentleman, carrying a knobby stick and followed by two border collies, came slowly down the gangplank.
‘Oh, Mr Allen,’ shouted Mr Brooks, ‘how did you do in the sheep trials?’
The old man fumbled in his shabby overcoat and brought out a blue satin ribbon.
‘Good! Very good indeed.’ Mr Brooks gave him a friendly wave. ‘Oh, Mr Allen, you didn’t see a young boy on board, did you? Or a little girl?’
One of the border collies cringed. Mr Allen gave Mr Brooks a horrified look, and motioning to his two collies, he sprinted up the wharf, pausing only once to stop and shake a crotchety fist.
Mr Brooks and Mrs Nielsen approached the first mate.
‘Did you see— ’
‘Yes! Yes!’ he said irritably. ‘Thank God somebody’s claiming them.’
Sergeant Coulter moved to the foot of the gangplank. The first mate turned to him, shook his head and wiped his brow.
‘Whew!’ he said.
‘What’s the trouble?’ asked the Mountie.
The mate gave a sigh of relief, realising his watch was over.
‘Oh,’ he said wearily, ‘I guess the girl isn’t too bad. But that boy!’
The burly steward in his wilted white jacket arrived panting at the top of the gangplank, a squirming child under each arm.
‘Time, ladies and gentlemen!’ he shouted with a harsh Cockney accent. ‘The end of the line for you two!’
He set the two children on their feet and gave a comic salute to the Mountie.
‘You’ll wish you was back on the quiet beaches of Dunkirk!’ he called as he beat a hasty retreat.
A smaller steward, carrying a leather suitcase and a paper shopping bag, dashed between the children, down to the wharf, dropped the bags, raced up the gangplank and fled into the bowels of the ship.
The children stood spitting at each other and refused to come down the gangplank.
‘You did!’
‘I didn’t!’
‘You did too!’
‘I did not!’
‘You’re a liar!’
‘I am not! So are you!’
‘I saw you! ’
Mr Brooks and Mrs Nielsen, with empty waiting arms, stood ignored, and the big Mountie watched with hard eyes.
‘You went in the captain’s cabin!’
‘How do you know? I did not! You must of been up there too!’
‘You dumped ink on his charts!’
‘Liar! I bumped it with my elbow!’
‘Liar! Liar! Liar!’ The girl drew back and faced the boy triumphantly. Then, as a final insult she turned and hissed: ‘And I don’t care if you are going to get ten million dollars. You haven’t got a mother!’
With this parting shot, she stalked down the gangplank.
Sergeant Coulter thought he had never seen such an unprepossessing child, not that he cared much for children in any form. They were miniature grown-ups, and as such bore careful watching.
The child, her lank, straw-colored hair hanging lifelessly about her pinched white face, looked straight ahead, and marched down like a small royal personage.
Sergeant Coulter noticed that, though her clothes were shabby, they were neat and clean, and somehow she already had the air of an indomitable Island spinster.
When she reached the waiting group she looked about, and her eye settled on Mrs Nielsen.
‘Are you Mrs Nielsen, the goat-lady?’
Mrs Nielsen nodded, unsure of how to greet the child.
‘And you are Christie,’ she said finally.
‘My mother told me you had a little house. She said you had a cow and a cat and a dog.’ She paused while she looked the goat-lady up and down. ‘Have you?’
Mrs Nielsen nodded.
The child became aware of the policeman.