Who Killed Sir Harry Oakes?
By James Leasor
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About this ebook
James Leasor cleverly reconstructs events surrounding a brutal and unusual murder. It is 1943 and Sir Harry Oakes lies horrifically murdered at his Bahamian mansion. Although a self-made multi-millionaire, Sir Harry is an unlikely victim there are no suggestions of jealousy or passion. Leasor makes the daring suggestion that Sir Harry Oakes murder, the burning of the liner Normandie in New York Harbour in 1942 and the Allied landings in Sicily are all somehow connected.
'The story has all the right ingredients - rich occupants of a West Indian tax haven, corruption, drugs, the Mafia, and a weak character as governor.'
Daily Mail
James Leasor
James Leasor was one of the bestselling British authors of the second half of the 20th Century. He wrote over 50 books including a rich variety of thrillers, historical novels and biographies. His works included Passport to Oblivion (which sold over 4 million copies around the World and was filmed as Where the Spies Are, starring David Niven), the first of nine novels featuring Dr Jason Love, a Somerset GP called to aid Her Majesty's Secret Service in foreign countries, and another series about the Far Eastern merchant Doctor Robert Gunn in the 19th century. There were also sagas set in Africa and Asia, written under the pseudonym Andrew MacAllan, and tales narrated by an unnamed vintage car dealer in Belgravia. Among non-fiction works were lives of Lord Nuffield, the Morris motor manufacturer, Wheels to Fortune and RSM Brittain, who was said to have the loudest voice in the Army, The Sergeant-Major; The Red Fort, which retold the story of the Indian Mutiny; and Rhodes and Barnato, which brought out the different characters of the great South African diamond millionaires. Who Killed Sir Harry Oakes? was an investigation of the unsolved murder of a Canadian mining entrepreneur in the Bahamas, He wrote a number of books about different events in the Second World War, including Green Beach, which revealed an important new aspect of the Dieppe Raid, when a radar expert landed with a patrol of the South Saskatchewan regiment, which was instructed to protect him, but also to kill him if he was in danger of falling into enemy hands; The One that Got Away (later filmed with Hardy Kruger in the starring role) about fighter pilot, Franz von Werra, the only German prisoner of war to successfully escape from British territory; Singapore – the Battle that Changed the World, on the fall of Singapore to the Japanese in 1941; Boarding Party (later filmed as The Sea Wolves with Gregory Peck, David Niven and Roger Moore) concerned veterans of the Calcutta Light Horse who attacked a German spy ship in neutral Goa in 1943; The Unknown Warrior, the story about a member of a clandestine British commando force consisting largely of Jewish exiles from Germany and eastern Europe, who decieived Hitler into thinking that the D-Day invasion was a diversion for the main assault near Calais; and The Uninvited Envoy, which told the story of Rudolph Hess' solo mission to Britain in 1941. Thomas James Leasor was born at Erith, Kent, on Decembe...
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Who Killed Sir Harry Oakes? - James Leasor
JAMES LEASOR
Who Killed Sir Harry Oakes?
Published by
James Leasor Ltd at Smashwords
81 Dovercourt Road, London SE22 8UW
www.jamesleasor.com
This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.
ISBN 978-1-908291-07-3
First published 1983
This edition published 2011
© James Leasor 1983, 2011
Foreword
The Death of a Prominent Citizen
At seven o'clock on the morning of Thursday, July 8, 1943, in the fourth year of the Second World War, Sir Harry Oakes, the richest baronet in the British Empire, was found dead in bed at Westbourne, his house overlooking the ocean near Nassau.
Harry Oakes, by his own efforts and perseverance, had created a fortune estimated at $300 million. In a colony where a labourer's daily wage was $1.00, his income was around $40,000 a day, tax free. More than this, he was unique among the world's wealthiest men because he had not inherited his fortune nor made it by exploiting any other person, company, or country. Instead, after devoting many years to a concentrated search for gold, he had discovered his own gold mine, Lake Shore, at Kirkland Lake, the largest gold mine in Canada, the second most important in the world.
Harry Oakes was a man of considerable sensitivity and erudition, which, for reasons of his own, he carefully cloaked beneath a gruff, often crude manner. Now, at sixty-nine, he lay dead; brutally and viciously murdered. Whoever had killed him had also deliberately humiliated his corpse in a horrifying way. The body had been drenched with petrol and then set alight, along with his bed and mosquito net, bedroom rugs and curtains, and the staircase leading up to his room. An electric fan had been placed on the floor near his bed, apparently to fan the flames.
The left side of Sir Harry's pyjamas was almost completely burned away and his face blackened by soot. Fearful heat blisters had erupted on his neck, his chest and groin, on his left knee and his right foot.
Someone had ripped open his pillow and scattered the feathers over him. These stuck to his blackened flesh, fluttering faintly and grotesquely in the morning breeze, like the wings of singed and feeding moths. Seemingly, the murderer had hoped to burn the corpse and the house in a gigantic funeral pyre so that crime would never be suspected. It would then be assumed that Sir Harry, a millionaire philanthropist, as likely to give a thousand-dollar bill to a stranger as to order him roughly off his land, had been burned to death in a tragic accident while he slept.
Whoever killed him needed this conclusion to conceal evidence that could point to a totally different way of dying. The left side of Harry Oakes's head was marked by four triangular indentations, each less than half an inch across, set about two inches apart in the form of a square.
Blood had flowed from these wounds, which cracked his skull and presumably caused his death, but although Oakes was discovered lying on his back in bed, the blood had flowed the other way, up towards his nose and face. So, clearly, he had not been hit while he lay on his back — or even where he lay. Only the chance freak of erratic July weather allowed this to be discovered: a heavy rain storm with a very high wind had sprung up and quenched the flames.
The wounds, resembling the claw marks of some giant bird, the burning of the body, its coating with feathers, gave rise to theories of voodoo and obeah, African cults that generations, descended from slaves, still followed in secret. Was this a ritual murder? Certainly, more than one person appeared to be involved, for the walls of the bedroom were smudged with handprints. A half-burned ornate Chinese screen near the bed was splattered with blood and other fingerprints, and its lacquer blistered by heat. Sand and mud and footprints on the stairs showed that several people had used them during that night.
Sir Harry Oakes had no obvious enemies. During his nine years in Nassau, he took Bahamian citizenship — and one of his first charitable acts had been to give £5,000 to the Governor to help the unemployed. Apart from land projects, on which he employed fifteen hundred men to cut roads through his ten-thousand-acre estate on the island and to build two airfields to help the Allied war effort, he gave three Spitfires to the RAF, which flew in the Battle of Britain, and he provided work directly and indirectly to scores of other black Bahamians who would otherwise have been unemployed.
He bought the British Colonial Hotel and started a training school for local coloured staff. He imported a bus from England to take his workers to and from their shanty homes in Grant's Town, the poor area in the centre of the island, and financed a free milk service for their children.
New Providence is surrounded by seven hundred other islands, some larger and some smaller, known as the Out Islands. Since medical care on them was primitive or non-existent, Oakes organised seaplanes and light aircraft to bring patients to Nassau. He also offered to pay half the cost of building a new hospital in Nassau, if the government would come up with the other half. They could not raise the money, so Oakes built a new wing on the existing Bahamas General Hospital.
Some young Bahamians liked polo but could not afford to buy ponies. Oakes imported polo ponies from England for them and all the necessary equipment — and then laid out a first-class polo field.
He had imaginative schemes and ideas to help others to help themselves, like bringing Italian craftsmen to Nassau, on his wife's suggestion, to teach
locals to make cameo necklaces and earrings from conch shells — the conch being the Bahamas' most common shell-fish. He planted thousands of citrus plants, coconut palms, and acres of strawberries, imported sheep to help improve the local breeds, bought a huge old house and converted it to a boarding school for children evacuated from London during the air raids.
Etienne Dupuch, the editor and publisher of the local evening newspaper, The Tribune, voiced the opinion many held when he wrote:
By contrast with the activities of so many wealthy people in the community, Sir Harry's investments were not made with any regard to his personal future. They were made with the sole idea of helping others, and his death is a great loss to the community, and a great loss to anyone who had the privilege and pleasure of knowing him.
Who would wish — or need — to kill such a generous man?
On this particular night, Sir Harry's five children, three sons and two daughters, were in Canada or the United States. His Australian wife, Eunice, was waiting in their home, The Willows, in Bar Harbor, Maine, for Sir Harry to join her on Friday. His exit papers, necessary in wartime, were already stamped, and his ticket booked for the afternoon Pan Am flight to Miami, after a game of golf with the Duke of Windsor, the Governor of the Bahamas.
Sir Harry's local manager had left Nassau and was on a fishing trip to Abaco, about seventy miles north of New Providence. His Bahamian lawyer was on holiday on Harbour Island to the north-east.
Oakes did not lock the outer doors of his house after dark, but he employed two watchmen to patrol the grounds and to keep an eye on his sheep. Although neither of these watchmen was near Westbourne on this particular night, and his three indoor servants had gone home, Sir Harry was not entirely alone. The Honourable Harold Christie, a forty-seven-year-old bachelor and Nassau's most successful real estate agent, who counted Oakes as his best friend — as well as his best customer — was sleeping in the next bedroom, separated from Sir Harry's by a small ante-room and bathroom. Christie's title came with membership of the Governor's Executive Council. Mosquitoes and the storm briefly disturbed his slumber, but the death of his friend did not. He neither heard nor saw anything unusual. At seven o'clock in the morning, Christie opened the doors onto the verandah and walked along to Oakes's bedroom. This was the third night he had stayed at Westbourne, although he had his own house in Nassau, only a couple of miles away. Whenever he slept at Westbourne, the two men usually breakfasted together in the open air.
Hi, Harry,
he called in greeting, and pushed open the doors to his friend's room. Then he saw the body.
Christie ran downstairs and telephoned to his brother Frank to fetch a doctor. He was so distraught that he forgot to say where he was. Frank contacted the police, and by the process of eliminating other houses where Christie sometimes spent a night, set off with them for Westbourne. Hardly had Christie replaced the receiver, when it rang. Etienne Dupuch was on the line. He had an appointment with Oakes that morning and was ringing early to confirm it. Sir Harry had recently imported fifteen hundred sheep from Cuba,- with the intention of breeding more to help with the wartime meat shortage. Unfortunately, the first batch was infected with screw-worm, and Dupuch and a reporter from the rival Nassau Guardian had arranged to interview Sir Harry on the subject.
He's dead!
cried Christie hysterically. He's dead!
Who?
asked Dupuch.
Sir Harry. He's been shot!
Shot? Are you serious?
Of course I'm serious. I've just discovered him. He's dead.
This is a very big news story, Mr. Christie, and I'm a journalist,
replied Dupuch. "I propose to cable it around the world. You are certain?"
I'm positive.
Christie rang off and stood by the front door, still in his pyjamas, waiting for the doctor to arrive.
Not only were the circumstances of Sir Harry's death mystifying, but the search for his murderer proved equally bizarre. The Duke of Windsor announced immediately that he would cancel all other appointments to take what he called a personal hand
in the investigations. His first action was to use his prerogative as Governor to forbid any information about the death to be published. This came too late to stop the brief cabled message that Dupuch had already sent to newspapers and news agencies in Britain and the United States, but it effectively prevented any further reports of the murder from leaving the island for forty-eight hours. As an editorial writer in The Tribune complained later:
What the official mind has never been able to grasp is the fact that this country has daily contact with the U.S. and while officials may censor legitimate press releases they cannot censor the mouths of people who go across to Miami and who most often carry garbled and damaging tales which are naturally believed by the American Press because of the suspicions aroused by censorship.
Everyone by now knows about the way Sir Harry met his death, but local newspaper correspondents will not be allowed to tell a straight, factual story, nor can anything be published in the local Press, but the news will be carried by word of mouth. And the tales that will be told will be largely incorrect and a reflection on the Colony...
Next, the Duke decided that the Bahamas' own Criminal Investigation Department, under experienced British officers, should not be allowed to investigate this particular crime. Instead, he telephoned to the Chief of Police in Miami and asked him to allow two policemen — whose names he gave — to fly south to Nassau to handle enquiries into what he delicately described as the death of a prominent citizen.
Murder and Sir Harry Oakes were not mentioned.
These two officers, Captain James Barker and Captain Edward Melchen, described in the New York Times as a personal friend of the Duke,
possessed peculiar qualifications for their task. Barker was forty years old. He had begun his police career as an ambulance driver, became a motorcycle patrolman, then a clerk in the Bureau of Criminal Identification. He lost this job through insubordination and was returned to uniformed duty, but later became Superintendent of the Bureau.
Melchen was ten years older and had spent many years as a clerk in various police departments, until he was appointed chief of the Homicide Bureau in Miami. For the previous ten years he had been assigned to guard visiting dignitaries and diplomats.
Now described as fingerprint experts of the highest calibre, with several hundred successful cases behind them, they arrived in Nassau that afternoon — but without the basic specialist equipment required to photograph any fingerprints they might find.
They immediately announced that they would postpone the search for prints until the following morning; the atmosphere was too humid for dusting powder to have a proper effect. Neither officer appeared to have any idea what weapon the murderer had used to kill Sir Harry, and no search was made for it. Footprints which showed clearly that several men had walked upstairs, wearing muddy and sandy boots, they claimed led downstairs.
Because of Sir Harry's wealth and social position, numbers of acquaintances and sightseers arrived at the house as news of his death spread around the island. The two Miami detectives readily allowed them to see the room where he had died. No effort was made to prevent these ghoulish visitors from touching objects in the house and so putting their own fingerprints on doors and windows.
From time to time, the Duke of Windsor telephoned to ask impatiently what progress they were making. On Friday afternoon he drove over to Westbourne to discuss what was happening. After this visit, Captain Barker announced (to his colleague's surprise) that they were now in a position to make an arrest.
The British Police Commissioner, Colonel R. A. Erskine Lindop, and his colleagues had been forced to wait idly in the grounds under the Duke's strict orders not to take any part whatever in the investigations. His policemen were now informed that they could scrub the walls of Sir Harry's bedroom to remove hand- and fingerprints, because, as one of them explained, these prints did not match those of the accused.
This was thirty-three-year-old Alfred de Marigny, born in Mauritius, holder of an ancient French title, and married for little over a year to Sir Harry's nineteen-year-old daughter, Nancy.
So, at half-past seven on Friday evening, barely thirty-six hours after Harold Christie had discovered Sir Harry's body, Marigny was charged, cautioned, and incarcerated in the tiny and verminous number 2 cell in the basement of the Nassau jail.
In a statement he gave voluntarily, Marigny declared that he had not spoken to Sir Harry Oakes since March 30, and that the last time he had been inside Westbourne was two years earlier.
It is a ridiculous charge,
he said.
Chapter 1
The Long and the Short of It
Apart from being related to Nancy Oakes, all that Sir Harry Oakes and Count Marie Alfred Fouquereaux de Marigny really had in common were their masculinity, titles — one British and bought, the other French and inherited — and the experience of having been medical students, Oakes in the United States and Marigny in London.
But where Oakes was within months of his seventieth birthday, cleanshaven, and five feet, six inches tall, Marigny was thirty-three and bearded and stood six feet five in his socks. Oakes was heavily built, old-fashioned in his ways, puritanical in his tastes. Get it, whatever it costs,
he would command gruffly if he wanted something; only later would he haggle over the price.
His son-in-law early in life had discovered its many pleasures. He did not greatly mind who picked up the bill — or how much it was for — as long as everyone enjoyed himself before the kissing had to stop.
Sir Harry was born in Sangerville, Maine. He became a Canadian for personal reasons, then a Bahamian, for Bahamians could be ennobled, and once he had made his fortune, he believed that a title would bring him the respect and social acceptance to which he felt his money entitled him. Bahamians also paid a lot less in taxes; in fact, virtually nothing. And when Sir Harry's personal annual tax bill in Canada grew to around $3 million, the alternative was undeniably attractive. So Oakes became a Bahamian citizen, gave £50,000 to St. George's Hospital in London, and in July, 1939, was created a baronet, taking the motto Per Ardua — Through hardship.
Marigny was born to his title on the island of Mauritius, five hundred miles east of Madagascar in the Indian Ocean. Mauritius was originally French, but when it became British, after the Napoleonic Wars, no attempt was made to change the titles or rights of the islanders, so Marigny still held his inherited family title of Count. When he arrived in Nassau shortly before the war, however, he specifically asked that this not be used. He had no wish to capitalise on an inherited distinction earned by a forebear. Like Napoleon, Marigny was content to be his own ancestor.
The family backgrounds and upbringing of the two men were as dissimilar as their individual attitudes and appearance.
Harry Oakes's mother had been active in the temperance movement and in her local church. Marigny's mother had left her husband and eloped with another man when her son was only three, and her husband refused to allow her name ever again to be mentioned in his house.
Oakes's father had trained as a lawyer, but, because of indifferent health, he preferred to work outdoors as a land surveyor. Money was tight, and what he had, he earned. Marigny's father was a Fouquereaux — Marigny was his mother's maiden name — and he had inherited sugar plantations, along with the aristocratic family background.
Harry Oakes had a brother and three sisters. He attended Bowdoin College and then Syracuse University Medical School in the United States.
Freddie Marigny was an only child, and since he provided a constant reminder to his father of his wife's infidelity, the boy was packed off to board at the school of the Freres de St. Joseph when he was only four. His father never visited him at school. While other boys had parents to applaud at prize-givings and sports days, Marigny was on his own. Nor did his father ever give him a present directly on his birthday or at Christmas; any presents were delivered by servants.
Their relationship was totally lacking in warmth or love. As a result, Marigny became introverted, insecure, lonely. When he left school, he studied scientific methods of sugar cultivation at the Royal College of Mauritius, with the intention of working eventually on the family plantations.
Harry Oakes abandoned his medical studies after two years, when he discovered that doctors were relatively poorly paid. Above all else, he wanted to be rich. Even so, he was sufficiently his mother's son not to wish to become rich at anyone else's expense. Newspapers at that time were publishing regular reports about the Klondike Gold Rush, and the prospect of digging wealth from the earth, the basic source of all the world's riches, strongly appealed to him. He decided that, instead of qualifying as a doctor, he would become a gold prospector.
Such was the closeness of the Oakes family that no one thought this ambition unusual or unrealistic, or criticised him for it. Instead, they all helped him. His mother pledged her savings to buy equipment. His brother, Louis, promised him $75 every month from his own small salary until he struck lucky. His sister Gertrude, starting her first job as a bank stenographer in Washington, promised him as much as she could spare for as long as he needed the money.
Marigny never experienced this closeness, or indeed any feeling whatever of belonging to a family, and when he was in his teens an incident occurred that made him decide to leave home precipitately. He was playing tennis with a slightly older but infinitely more sophisticated friend, Georges de Visdelou-Guimbeau, who had a taste for the life of ease and plenty that he felt should accompany his French title of Marquis. A middle-aged couple on the next court congratulated them on their shots. Georges introduced himself, and when Marigny gave his name, the woman's face became so pale that he thought she would faint.
I am your mother,
she explained quietly.
That night, Freddie confronted his father with the situation. Why had he not even been told that his mother had returned to Mauritius?
Because as far as I am concerned, she died the day she left me,
his father replied shortly.
You've always thought of me as a Marigny,
replied his son bitterly, because that's her name and I'm her son. You've quite wrongly blamed her behaviour on me. I've had enough of this treatment. I've decided to leave home, and I will also leave behind me your name, Fouquereaux. From now on, I will be a Marigny.
That night he packed his few belongings, and in the morning left for Paris with Georges. He never saw his father again.
Marigny, having recently inherited a small legacy, could afford this gesture of independence. Harry Oakes, at the same age, was about to inherit years of almost unbelievable hardship, laced with frequent danger and constant disappointment. He almost froze to death in Alaska, and in order to eat, worked as a medical orderly helping frostbite cases. He narrowly escaped sunstroke in Death Valley. One night there, he crawled wearily into a cave to sleep — and woke up next morning to find he had shared it with a nest of rattlesnakes.
He heard rumours of gold strikes in Central Africa and found nothing. He worked his passage to Australia as a deckhand, went on to the Pacific islands, back to New Zealand, took a job briefly as a government surveyor, earned some money on a farm, then moved on to California to continue his life's work: the search for gold. Never did he lose faith in his destiny. One day he would discover the big vein; one day he would be rich, and all previous miseries and privations would be forgotten. One day ...
But where should he try next? Finally, the choice seemed to be between the Yukon, where he had started prospecting years earlier, and Ontario, where gold had been found more recently in small quantities. Harry Oakes hated going back; to him this smacked of retreat. His urge was always to go on, so he chose Ontario and lodged in the mining town of Swastika.
He took a room in a boarding house run by a middle-aged woman, Roza Brown, who had come to Canada as a child from Budapest with her parents. She shrewdly held most prospectors in contempt.
They used their muscles more than their brains and did not approach the quest scientifically. When they could not dig up gold quickly where others had found it, they speedily lost interest and moved on, instead of studying all the surrounding terrain and rock formations in case they concealed more gold. Roza Brown took a liking to Oakes, for he always listened to what she had to say about the sites of possible seams. On her advice, he travelled to Kirkland Lake, where rocks, lava, and the sand on river beds seemed promising.
Others had already laid claim to the area, but while looking through files in the local mines office, Oakes discovered that a number of claims were to fall vacant within hours, simply through default. The prospectors concerned had not maintained them for the basic legal forty days' work a year. Maybe they had lost heart or lacked money. The reasons were unimportant. What Oakes considered very important was the realisation that if he could raise cash, he could buy their options. But who would stake him for such a venture? Every prospector had his own theory about where gold could be found. But if they were all correct, then why weren't they all rich? What made Oakes's theory so different — or more reliable?
The proprietor of the local hardware store, Jimmy Doige, had already refused to let him have even a pair of trousers on credit. It proved pointless to ask him for a loan; but in the back of his shop, Oakes saw four men he had not seen for several years, the Tough brothers. They worked as lumberjacks or in construction gangs for six months of each year to finance their search for gold during the other six. He explained his theory and made them an offer. If they would put up the necessary money, he would show them exactly where the claims were, and they could split the proceeds.
They shook hands on this arrangement and that same night set off through fifty degrees of frost to stake their claims. The cold was so intense that Harry Oakes wore five pairs of trousers. Breath froze in their nostrils. Skin on their faces cracked and bled, and lips split, as they hammered iron marking stakes into freezing rocks.
This Tough-Oakes mine did produce gold, but in small quantities. The partners quarrelled, and Oakes sold out his share to finance another venture nearer the lake, finally under the lake, where no one had previously attempted to dig.
No one believed he would ever find gold there. The local newspaper refused to accept his advertisements for finance; the object seemed far too speculative. Brokers would not sell shares in his project; private investors laughed at him. Charlie Chow, a Chinese immigrant who ran a rooming house in Kirkland Lake, agreed to accept shares instead of cash for money that Oakes owed him, and Harry's mother readily gave him all her remaining savings. So, short of backing but high in hope, Oakes sank his mine at Kirkland Lake.
He struck gold almost immediately, and suddenly he no longer needed to tout his shares: financiers came to him begging to be allowed to buy into his mine. For a start, Oakes sold them half a million shares at 35 US cents each. Within two years, each share was worth nearly $70 — and he kept the majority for himself. Kirkland Lake proved to be the greatest gold mine in Canada, and the second most productive in the world.
Afterwards, all manner of different accounts spread about his good fortune. One of them held that a conductor had thrown him off a train because he had no ticket. Where he landed on the ground became the site of his great strike. Later, Oakes sought out the conductor and gave him a pension. Alternatively a Chinese down-and-out, who did not care for material success, told him to dig — and he found gold.
Oakes never contradicted these stories. Why should be bother? What mattered was that, at forty-seven, after nearly a generation of struggle and gruelling, lonely labour, he was a multi-millionaire. Now he suddenly faced the one question he had never anticipated in all the hungry years as a prospector. What was he going to do with all this money? How was he going to use it?
Freddie Marigny never had any such doubts, for Georges Visdelou's love of pleasure soon infected him. Money was for spending, for enjoying; but first, it had to be acquired. In Paris, Marigny discovered he possessed two assets that could lead to wealth: he was extraordinarily handsome and unusually attractive to women. He had the indefinable yet irresistible appeal that all men seek and so few possess.
Georges moved on to London, where he felt his title would count for more than in Paris. A second, equally unexpected, inheritance of £5,000 enabled Marigny to follow him. The excuse he gave to the older woman who was then his closest companion was that he wanted to use this legacy to pay his fees at a medical school; he wished to qualify as a doctor.
He had no real idea why he chose medicine. Perhaps it was because Georges claimed to be a student of anthropology, or perhaps he just wanted to end an affair with an excuse that would cause his partner the least pain.
He joined Georges, who was already distributing visiting cards that described him as The Marquis de Visdelou-Guimbeau.
I'm sick of titles,
Marigny told him. I want to make my own way.
Georges shrugged. In England,
he replied, you'll find that society loves two things — a title and a good address. The rest is up to us.
Georges found the widow of a diplomat living in Chesham Place. She agreed to rent them a room, and this provided a good address. She also provided another, unexpected bonus, for she received invitations to parties and balls from her late husband's friends, but invariably declined them, because she did not wish to go alone. Now her two handsome lodgers became her escorts, and these invitations led to others. Within months, Freddie de Marigny abandoned his medical studies and, like Georges, devoted himself to the pursuit of pleasure.
At the rate he spent, his legacy soon dwindled, and finally he could not afford even the small rent that the widow charged them. They moved out, and he and Georges were reduced to sleeping on the floor of a friend's office. Marigny's last remaining financial asset was a stamp collection that his grandmother had given him. This he sold to buy a ticket back to Mauritius, returning like the prodigal son, but to a different welcome.
His father refused to see him. His grandmother had died meanwhile and left him a third legacy, and on an impulse he took a boat to Reunion, a French island in the Indian Ocean, about 440 miles south-west of Mauritius, to decide his future. He was in his twenties, totally untrained for any career, and his greatest assets — perhaps his only ones — were good looks and charm.
The inhabitants of Reunion farmed the land but did not fish the ocean, because high cliffs and variable winds made navigation extremely dangerous for the small boats that were all they could afford. The challenge and the size of a potential income from fishing here on a commercial scale appealed to Marigny: like Oakes, he was sure he could succeed where others had failed.
He returned to Mauritius, bought a pirogue, a strongly built boat of teak with shallow hull and wide beam, and sailed back to Reunion to establish a fishing business. This prospered, and soon he bought a second pirogue, then a third, and his business became so profitable that he could afford to go to London for the wedding of Georges Visdelou. Georges's marriage made Marigny feel unexpectedly restless. Perhaps he should also settle down?
Viewed from London, the capital of the British Empire, life in Reunion seemed dull and uneventful and on a very minor scale. He decided he would stay in London and make his career in the City. An older friend advised him never to work for anyone else full time, only for himself, since he could pay himself far more than any employer. Through the help of a cousin he now joined a stockbroking firm on a small salary and the promise of half commission on all business he could bring in.
Marigny possessed the rare gift of making friends easily: one was an international financier, Jaime Weinstein, based in Paris. Weinstein one day advised Marigny to put all the money he could borrow or beg into lead and zinc. Marigny took his advice. Within weeks, every pound he had invested was worth fifty. Suddenly, he was rich.
Harry Oakes, who was infinitely richer, had also made certain decisions. He built himself a chateau near Kirkland Lake, took up golf, and constructed his own course. Since he repeatedly hit the ball into one particular bunker, he had the bunker bulldozed away. When his mother died, he took off on a rather aimless world cruise, expense no object, and yet with no real destination in sight. For the first time in his life he had time to kill, and was not sure he enjoyed its death.
His ship docked at Sydney, and here he met a twenty-four-year-old stenographer in a local bank. Eunice Maclntyre was the antithesis of Harry Oakes: half his age, gentle, and calm where he was mercurial, even volcanic. She was then about to sail to England, stopping on the way in Mozambique to visit a sister, whose husband was, like Marigny, a Mauritian. Oakes volunteered to accompany her. They became engaged and returned to Sydney to marry — exactly twenty years and one week before he was murdered.
Now the wealth of Harry Oakes took on a new purpose and meaning. He endowed a skating rink for local children at Kirkland Lake and bought an even larger house at a cost of half a million dollars. He rebuilt parts of it in the style of a Tudor castle, and to add authenticity, he used panelling imported from Hampton Court. The view was marred by some factory buildings, so he bought the factory and moved the buildings.
But being an American living in Canada had one grave drawback. It meant that Eunice Oakes was technically a stateless person, for she was in the anomalous position of having forfeited her Australian passport when she married Oakes, but could not become an American citizen because he was not living in the States. To change this unsatisfactory situation, Harry Oakes became a Canadian.
Now began a time of immense philanthropy. He gave huge sums to his old school and to charities generally. He donated and built the Oakes Garden Theatre, a superb amphitheatre near Niagara Falls, provided parks for local councils, and land where surveyors wished to run new roads.
He loved trees and personally financed a huge scheme to help the unemployed by planting thousands