Oscar Wilde and the Nest of Vipers

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Book: Read Oscar Wilde and the Nest of Vipers for Free Online
Authors: Gyles Brandreth
Tags: Victorian, Historical Mystery
properly there?
    Is Yarborough to be trusted? Is he to be believed? Why did he not examine the wounds upon her neck? In the gloom of the room, did he not see them? And what caused those wounds? Who caused them? How exactly did the duchess die? And why? Was it some unnatural horror? Was it murder? Was it suicide?
    And which wine shall I take with my zabaglione? The Muscat de Lunel ’87 or the darker Moscato from Sardinia? So many questions. As the divine Sarah [Bernhardt] says of the Ten Commandments: ‘Zay are too many.’

18
From the diary of Rex LaSalle

    To live is the rarest thing in the world. Most people exist, that is all. I live. And I rejoice that I am able to live as I do – freely, without fear and to the full. Tonight, Oscar came to my studio. Yes, I am now on intimate terms with Mr Oscar Wilde! He was alone. It was gone midnight. He had dined with a friend in Rupert Street. He had dined well. His cheeks were full of colour. His eyes sparkled. He sat on the edge of my bed and told me that he trusted me.
    He took me into his confidence. He told me details of the death of the Duchess of Albemarle. He told me everything – so far as he knows it. Minutes before midnight, the duchess was alive and well. We saw her together across her crowded drawing room, entertaining her guests. At midnight, as the Prince of Wales departed, Oscar’s friend, standing in the gallery, overlooking the hallway, caught sight of the duchess for the final time. He glimpsed her through an open doorway – the doorway to the telephone room. The unfortunate lady was already dead, said Oscar. She must have been. She was quite still and Oscar’s friend saw stains of blood on her neck. At the time, he mistook them for ruby earrings.
    It was the duke who discovered the duchess’s body – but exactly when is not yet clear. Oscar’s friend saw the duke at the door to the telephone room at midnight. He saw the duke open the door, remove a key from the inside lock and close the door. He did not see the duke enter the room or look within it. The duke claims to have come upon the body at seven o’clock this morning, when he went to make use of the telephone himself.
    On discovering the tragedy, at once he alerted his butler, Parker, and his friend, Lord Yarborough – no one besides. Together the three men decided to leave the body in place – hidden in the locked telephone room – so as not to alarm the rest of the household. It was Parker’s idea to tell the world that the duchess’s body had been discovered in bed and by her maid. The maid is a simple-minded soul who can neither read nor write.
    It was Lord Yarborough who signed the death certificate. He examined the dead woman as he found her and concluded that she had died of heart failure. Oscar does not believe it. Oscar told me – almost with relish, so it seemed to me – of the deep and bloody wounds in the duchess’s neck.
    ‘Are they the marks of a vampire?’ he asked.
    ‘I do not know,’ I answered. ‘I have not seen them.’
    ‘But you are a vampire, are you not, Rex? You told me that you were.’
    I made no reply. I sat next to him on the bed and turned my head so that he might better admire my profile.
    ‘Who are you, Rex? What are you? What is your story? Will you tell me?’
    As he laid his hand upon my knee, I turned back to him and smiled. As my lips parted to reveal the whiteness of my teeth and the sharpness of my fangs, he laughed and, throwing down his cigarette, made to kiss me.

Vermin in Grosvenor Square

    19
Telegram delivered to Constance Wilde at 16 Tite Street, Chelsea, on Friday, 14 March 1890 at 10 p.m.
CONSISTENCY IS THE LAST REFUGE OF THE UNIMAGINATIVE. MY PLANS HAVE CHANGED. FORGIVE ME DEAREST WIFE. DINING AT SOLFERINO WITH ROBERT AND STAYING IN TOWN AT THE CLUB. LOVE ME FOR MY DEFECTS AS I LOVE YOU FOR YOUR PERFECTION. OSCAR

20
Letter from Arthur Conan Doyle to his wife, Louisa ‘Touie’ Conan Doyle

    Langham Hotel,
    London W.
    14.iii.90
    7

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