A Dead Man Out of Mind (3 page)

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Authors: Kate Charles

BOOK: A Dead Man Out of Mind
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Part 1

CHAPTER 1

    
He shall call upon me, and I will hear him: yea, I am with him in trouble; I will deliver him, and bring him to honour.

Psalm 91.15

Liucy Kingsley frowned thoughtfully at the letter. It seemed a somewhat odd request for her brother to make. Odd, too, that the letter had come from her brother, rather than from his wife. She and her sister-in-law corresponded intermittently, but Lucy couldn't remember ever having received a letter from Andrew.

The letter had come in the post, interrupting her painting. Now she returned to her studio, re-reading as she climbed the stairs the lines written in Andrew's upright, unfamiliar hand.

‘I realise that this is rather short notice, but I hope that it will present no problems. Ruth's year at school has to participate in a work experience project this term, and as it is Ruth's ambition to be a solicitor, it seems sensible that she should spend her three weeks in a solicitor's office. Father tells me that your friend David is a solicitor in London, and I should be very grateful if you could arrange with him for Ruth to “shadow” him for her work experience. It seems an ideal arrangement, as she could stay with you for the three weeks (beginning the first week of March). Although Ruth is very bright, she is in many ways a young fourteen, and I would rest more easily knowing that you were looking after her. And you know how Ruth has always adored her beautiful Aunt Lucy!'

Lucy frowned again, absently twisting a curl of strawberry blonde hair around her finger. Flattery will get you nowhere, my dear brother, she said to herself, knowing in spite of everything that she would have to say yes. But David wasn't going to like it. He wasn't going to like it at all.

David Middleton-Brown, a pleasant-looking man in his early forties, was not having a tranquil morning. A letter had been waiting on his desk from the solicitor who was dealing with an estate in which David had a personal interest: when the estate was settled, he would inherit a very valuable house near Kensington Gardens. The letter was of a routine nature, asking a few questions which needed to be cleared up before matters could proceed.

The trouble was, David didn't want matters to proceed. It wasn't that he didn't want the house, or wasn't grateful for the generous bequest. But when probate was granted, and the house was his, there were issues that would have to be faced which David was not yet ready to confront.

Would he move into the house? And if he did, would Lucy come with him? He couldn't even bring himself to discuss it with her, for fear of what she would say. The last few months, since he'd moved to London, had been the happiest time of his life. Living in Lucy's house, coming home to her every night, was almost as good as being married to her. He longed to marry Lucy, longed for the security that marriage would bring. If they were married, he told himself, the house wouldn't be important. They would be together, whether in Lucy's little mews house in South Kensington or in the grand Georgian mansion that would be his. But Lucy stubbornly refused to marry him.

He still couldn't really understand it, much as he tried. She said that she loved him, and she could be in no doubt by now that he loved her. But Lucy had been married before, years ago, and it had been a brief but painful disaster. According to her, she'd been scarred so deeply by that early failure that she was unwilling to try again; she seemed incapable of realising how different it could be this time. David had by no means given up hope, but his proposals had been offered with decreasing frequency over the past months, as he tried to avoid the hurt that inevitably came with her gentle but firm refusals.

His living at her house was meant to be a temporary measure, just until the estate was sorted out. That had been the understanding when she'd invited him to move in, and they hadn't discussed it since then. One of these days Lucy was bound to ask him, he realised, but until then . . .

With a grimace, David slid the letter under his ‘In' tray. He wouldn't reply to it right away; perhaps that would postpone the evil day for a bit longer. He could always pretend that he hadn't received the letter, or that it had been misplaced by his secretary.

Before he'd had a chance to sort through the rest of his post, his secretary, Mrs Simmons, popped her head around the door to report, with a suitably solemn face, that he was wanted by no less a personage than Sir Crispin Fosdyke himself, senior partner of Fosdyke, Fosdyke & Galloway. ‘Immediately,' she added unnecessarily.

The summons from on high did not come very often, especially to one with as little seniority as David had at the firm, so he approached the heavy oak door of the inner sanctum with more trepidation than anticipation. ‘Come in!' was the response to his diffident knock.

Sir Crispin's office occupied the corner of the firm's suite of offices in Lincoln's Inn, so it was well lit by windows on two sides. Its furnishings were discreet but obviously expensive; the chairs were leather, the chandelier was Georgian, and unless David was very much mistaken, the Monet on the wall was no reproduction. The great man himself, seated behind his massive desk, was every bit as impressive as the room, silver-haired and with his self-assured ruddy face dominated by a pair of truly awesome silver eyebrows.

‘Oh, there you are, Middleton-Brown. Come in, come in.' David edged into the room and perched on the leather chair towards which he was waved. Sir Crispin wasted no time with preliminaries. ‘I have a little matter for you to see to. Do you know Henry Thymme?'

‘Henry Time?' David echoed, puzzled. ‘I don't think so.'

‘Thymme, pronounced Time, spelled T-h-y-double m-e,' explained Sir Crispin. ‘Senior partner at Barrett, Peters and Co in the City. A member of my club. Known him for years.'

‘Oh, yes. I
have
heard of him, but I don't believe we've met.'

Sir Crispin appraised David with ice-cold blue eyes, ‘His son is in a bit of a scrape, and I'd like you to sort it out for him.' Concisely, he outlined the problem. ‘And so you see, Middleton-Brown,' he concluded, ‘there's no time to be lost. I'll be most grateful if you can take care of this with a minimum of fuss. I'm sure you understand me.'

Dismissed, David returned to his office, shaking his head. Young Mr Thymme had been picked up in the early hours of the morning on Hampstead Heath; he was, as official parlance would have it, engaged in an act of public indecency with another man. ‘Caught with his trousers down,' David muttered to himself, bemused. ‘And in the middle of winter!' The young man was now cooling his heels in the local police station, awaiting the arrival of a solicitor: David. Out of consideration for his father – or possibly in fear of his wrath – he had waited until morning to ring him, and Henry Thymme was obviously calling in a favour from his colleague Sir Crispin, thus keeping his own firm well out of it. It was clear to David why Sir Crispin had put him on to it: a case like this was distasteful in the extreme, especially for a respectable firm like Fosdyke, Fosdyke & Galloway. Under ordinary circumstances they wouldn't have touched it with a bargepole, he realised, but as a professional courtesy to a fellow senior partner, and a member of his club to boot, Sir Crispin could not very well have refused. David was the newest member of the firm, so it was only natural that the case should be shunted on to him. And perhaps, he said to himself, it was a sort of test, to see how well he acquitted himself. ‘I'm afraid I've got to go out,' he said to his secretary, fetching his overcoat. ‘I'll be back as soon as I can.'

David found Henry Thymme waiting for him at the police station. A large, bluff man, his thinning fair hair worn long enough to make him look younger than he probably was, he wrung David's hand gratefully. ‘Awfully decent of you to come, dear chap,' he declared with feeling. ‘I'm afraid the lad's got himself into a spot of trouble.'

David's manner was consciously professional. ‘So Sir Crispin tells me.'

‘Ah, well.' Thymme chuckled fondly. ‘Boys will be boys, you know. And Justin's a good lad, really. The apple of his mother's eye.'

For a moment the professional coolness slipped. ‘Justin Thymme?'

The older man laughed. ‘You got it, then. Good, that, isn't it? A bit of fancy on his mother's part, and the lad has to live with it for the rest of his life! He was the last child, you see – after four girls. No more kiddies, she said. This is the end of the line. So the boy came just in time.' He laughed again with immoderate amusement, considering how many times he must have told the story.

David allowed himself a small smile. The scenario was all too clear: the spoiled young tearaway, indulged by his father and petted by his mother, and no doubt by all of those sisters as well. He was not likely to be an ideal client, and David longed to get it over with. ‘I think I'd better see him now.'

‘By all means, my boy, and the sooner the better. We'll have a word with the duty sergeant straightaway.' Thymme gave a wink. ‘Not that it's done the lad any harm to wait – quite the contrary, I should think.'

When at last David was ushered into the interview room, into the presence of the young Mr Thymme, he found him not at all what he'd expected. Far from cutting a dashing figure, his client was small and pale and prim, and not so very young either, come to that: David judged him to be about thirty, with fine fair hair receding from his high forehead. He wore oval steel-rimmed spectacles, one of the lenses of which was cracked, and above which he sported a nasty purple bruise. ‘How soon can I get out of here?' he demanded; his voice was deeper than his size might have indicated, and his accent was true to his public school education.

‘Good morning, Mr Thymme,' said David pleasantly, as if the other man hadn't spoken. He introduced himself, then went on, ‘How did you get the black eye, if you don't mind me asking?'

Justin's hand went to the bruise. ‘The chap who arrested me. He gave me a thump with his truncheon – said I was resisting arrest.'

This seemed highly unlikely to David, but he decided to let it pass. ‘And were you?'

He pursed his thin mouth prissily. ‘No, of course not. I'm not that stupid.'

With a thoughtful nod, David sat down, folding his hands on the table that separated them. ‘You've been in here for quite a few hours now. Have you made a statement, or allowed yourself to be interviewed?'

Justin looked at him with scorn. ‘I told you, I'm not stupid. And my father's a solicitor – I know how these things work. I'm not likely to have said anything to incriminate myself, am I?' He drummed his fingers on the table. ‘So when are you going to get me out of here? I'm hours late for work already!'

David told Lucy about the case over supper that night, deliberately making the story as amusing as possible. ‘I was expecting an eighteen-year-old in skintight jeans, an earring, and a black leather jacket, and I walk into the interview room to find someone who looks like an accountant! And do you want to know the funniest thing about it – apart from his ridiculous name, that is? That's exactly what he is – an accountant!' He shook his head with a self-deprecating grin. ‘That's what I get for making assumptions.'

‘An accountant?' Lucy was making a great effort to concentrate on his story, dreading what she was going to have to ask him.

‘A blooming accountant. With an upper-class twit of a solicitor for a father.'

She pushed a bit of salad around on her plate. ‘Did you get him out?'

David nodded. ‘He's out on police bail – that's the usual thing in these cases.'

‘What will happen to him now?'

‘Oh, I'll be able to get him off, I think. At least if I value my job, I will,' he added wryly. ‘I wouldn't want to face Sir Crispin if his friend's darling son got a fine, and his name in the papers.'

Lucy looked puzzled. ‘But isn't he guilty?'

‘Well, of course he is! They caught him in the act, remember.'

‘I don't understand. How will you get him off, if you know he's guilty, and the police know he's guilty?'

Choosing his words carefully, David tried to explain. ‘It's all in knowing how to play the game. Now in this case, the young man tells me that the police gave him a gratuitous thump with a truncheon. I don't really believe him – these days the police are more careful than that – but that's beside the point. If I let it be known that my client is prepared to take the matter to the Police Complaints Authority . . . well, let's just say that the police don't need that kind of hassle, not to mention the adverse publicity if it were leaked to the press. I think they'll be prepared to drop the charges against him, in return for keeping quiet about what he claims the police did to him. After all, he's a respectable member of society – his word would carry some weight. And don't forget his father's clout.'

Lucy's full attention had been captured at last. ‘But that's dishonest!'

‘Oh, no, Lucy love. It's just using the system.'

‘But you're saying that because he has the right connections, and a good solicitor, he'll get off scot free, whereas if he were some poor bloke who happened to get caught . . .'

David laughed without amusement. ‘You've got it in one, love. It may not be fair, but that's the way it works.' She looked so distressed that he reached across the table and took her hand. ‘I can't pretend to have much stomach for it, myself, but it's my job, and I've got to do what's best for my client, objectionable though he may be. Not to mention that Fosdyke expects me to get the miserable little toerag off.'

‘Would you say,' Lucy asked slowly, ‘that Sir Crispin will owe you one after this?'

‘I don't imagine that he'd put it in quite those terms, but that's the gist of it, certainly.' David's generous mouth curved in a self-deprecating smile. ‘I took an unsavoury case off his hands, and if I manage it well, and get my client off without attracting any unwelcome attention to him or to Fosdyke, Fosdyke and Galloway, I should think that Sir Crispin would be suitably grateful. It won't do me any harm, anyway. But if I don't produce the goods—'

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