Chapter 6
B
rendon had to wait his turn to see his father, like everyone else. He wouldn't have wanted it any other way. However high he climbed, he was going to do it on merit. His opportunity came at the midmorning break.
“How's it going?” Julian Macmillan looked up smilingly from a pile of papers in front of him. He felt pleased to see the son he had been blessed with.
“Fine, Dad,” Brendon said, taking a chair across the desk from his father. “It's not the Goldberg case. I'm on top of that. It's Simon Mansfield.”
“Really?” Julian lifted his glasses off his nose and then rubbed the bridge. “Have you struck up an unlikely friendship?”
“Hardly.”
“A very unpleasant young man, that. He was spoilt rotten by his doting mum, as you've heard any number of times. Conrad, who should have been a steadying influence, did nothing but write his book. Admittedly, it was a darn fine book.”
Brendon decided to let his father in on his and Charlotte's suspicions. He explained all of their reasoning and concluded, “Charlotte and I don't think he wrote it.”
Julian looked away across the spacious room, then back again. “Good God!” he murmured, quietly. “You want coffee?”
“Yes, please.”
“Black, one sugar, just like me?”
“Thanks, Dad.” He watched his father press a button, arranging for another cup to be brought in.
“You'll have to have some pretty convincing evidence,” Julian warned.
“You don't sound all that shocked, Dad?”
“The truth will win out, won't it?” Julian said with a head shake.
“We don't have evidence that would hold up,” Brendon admitted. “Charlotte asked if she could sight the manuscript. Patricia Mansfield told her she had read the opus so far.”
“And?”
“It's like this.” Brendon went on to recount what they had learned, breaking off momentarily as coffee arrived and was served.
“Thank you, Emily.”
Emily smiled at both men and then left the room. “So it's only gut instinct you're going on,” Julian Macmillan picked up on the conversation, not looking impressed.
“Okay, gut instinct,” Brendon agreed, “but Charlotte said the opening page was so dismally bad it could not have been written by the author of
Cries of the Heart
.”
“So on that flimsy basis, she thought her uncle had to have plagiarized what was her
father's
book? Is that it?”
“I'm delighted you hit on that, Dad. Charlotte is clever,” he said, with quiet certainty.
“My God, yes,” Julian breathed. “She's going to make a formidable woman. Not only that, a fascinating woman.”
His father's smile seemed to Brendon to be a sad, knowing one. It prompted him to ask, “
Did
you have an affair with Charlotte's mother, Dad?” He had never doubted his father, unlike his mother, but there was something there. “I know you've always denied it, but I need to hear it again. I'm not standing in judgement, and I wouldn't dream of stirring up trouble, but I need the entire truth of the matter.”
Julian Macmillan had no trouble looking his son in the eye. “There was
no
affair, Brendon,” he said, no force but total honesty in his voice. “Alyssa was a very beautiful woman in all respects. A woman with a lot of power. I won't say I wasn't attracted to her. I
was
, no question about that. I won't lie to you. But then, so was just about every man who knew her, including the Old Man, who so favoured her. It wasn't just Alyssa's beauty, it was her personality, as well, her high intelligence. Christopher worshipped her. Christopher was strong, well able to stand up to his father, but he was also a sensitive man. An artistic man. To believe his wife had been unfaithful to him would have destroyed him.”
“Well, he
was
destroyed, wasn't he? They both were. So who drove the knife home?” Brendon asked, his tone harsher than he intended. “Who tried to convince Christopher Mansfield her affair with you was true?”
“Do you really think I didn't look for the answers?” Julian asked, his straight nose chiselled white with sudden emotion. “It could have been a number of people close to us. It could even have been a member of the family, grown hard on avarice and bitter resentment. I was a very high-profile candidate as Sir Hugo's son. There has always been tension between the two families, I don't have to tell you that. But there was something truly terrible about it all. Something beyond the urge to make trouble, spread rumours. Something that was very personal and terribly malign. As far as I was concerned, Alyssa and Christopher were very much in love. Sometimes a woman's beauty can be a curse,” Julian said. “I do know poor old Pat was very jealous of her.”
“Then why not Patricia?” Brendon asked.
Julian shook his head. “I did consider Patricia, but in the end decided she didn't have enough hate in her. Besides, Pat can be a very silly woman. She would have given herself away. I've no doubt of that.”
“My mother hated Alyssa, didn't she?” Brendon decided to bite the bullet.
“You're surely not suggesting your mother?” Julian asked, his voice a bit too loud.
“You don't have a good marriage, do you, Dad?” Brendon countered, facing an unpleasant truth. “You stay together, but you're not happy and it's getting worse, isn't it?”
The moment stretched out and out between them. Julian shifted his position in his leather chair. “I'm right, aren't I?” Brendon persisted. “Even at Charlotte's birthday party, Mum was so aloof, almost rude. I'm certain she didn't once smile. It's as though she hates Charlotte, as well.”
There was a faint glaze in Julian Macmillan's fine grey eyes. “Charlotte is trouble, Bren,” he said, very sombrely. “My heart aches for her. She's had to endure so much tragedy and neglect from her appalling family. I can't feel good about her inheriting this fortune and all it entails. It puts her, in many ways, in an unenviable position, always in the spotlight, in potential danger, but there was no way Sir Reginald was going to make Conrad his heir. Conrad simply lacked the necessary characteristics that make for success. He wasn't his brother. The boy, Simon, didn't even rate in the Old Man's eyes. The Old Man used to call him, quite cruelly, âthe crybaby.' Charlotte, even as a schoolgirl, showed great promise. Her grandfather made the judgement she could handle power when the time came. I believe that to be the case. I believe you do too, only Charlotte is going to be put through hoopsâheaps of tests that wouldn't be inflicted on a young man. There are going to be years of doubts and uncertainties ahead for her. It's a huge burden, an onerous burden.”
“But we're going to be there for her, aren't we, Dad? We're going to help her every inch of the way. We're going to support her. She needs us.”
“I know,” Julian confirmed, quietly. “You've always been extremely protective of Charlie, haven't you, Bren?”
“Well, I don't think of her as my little sister,” Brendon retorted, dryly. “The little sister I never had, by the way.”
His father's long fingers drummed the top of his desk. “Your mother didn't want any more children. Yours was a difficult birth.”
Brendon shook his head. “Not true, Dad. It wasn't a difficult birth. Granddad told me.”
His father sighed. “He would, probably for the best. I must tell you, your mother was absolutely delighted with you. You were enough. You know you are the son I've always wanted. You're the apple of your grandfather's eye. Your upbringing was far different than Charlotte's. You've always been surrounded by people who love and admire you. By the way, there's already gossip about you and Charlotte floating around Chambers,” Julian said, staring at his son while waiting for a reaction.
“Charlie is just a baby.” Brendon shrugged the gossip off.
“
Your
baby,” his father said pointedly.
“Okay, so how does it look to Mum?” Brendon asked. “Does talk of Charlotte and me bring out her dark side?”
Julian frowned heavily. “
What
dark side?”
“The one you know about, Dad.” Brendon's retort was as sharp as a knife. “To be attracted to a beautiful married woman is no sin. It's what you do about it that matters. Taking into account the harm an affair could cause. We'll never live down that terrible car crash, entirely innocent or not. It was just so heartbreaking. It left Charlie, a twelve-year-old, on her own, except for her grandfather, who was immersed in his many business interests. I believe you when you say there was no affair. Charlotte believes you.”
“Does she? I'm so glad.”
“She's been having flashbacks recently. I know they scare her, and Charlie doesn't scare easily. For some reason she's frightened of her uncle.”
Julian sat straight, looking momentarily shaken. “Conrad has never done his duty by his son or his niece, but we all think he is fairly harmless.”
“I beg to disagree. He's not harmless, Dad. Conrad Mansfield is a born actor. He just keeps the harm buried deep. If it could be proved that Christopher and not Conrad wrote
Cries of the Heart
, what do you think he might do if Charlotte threatened to expose him?”
“Aaah!” Julian gave a deep groan. “He would be desperate to keep it secret. I don't think he could handle the public humiliation. The world at large thinks Conrad Mansfield wrote the book. Now that we're discussing it, I never judged him to be a man of such deep feeling. To us insiders, the book was largely about
our
families. Laura was Alyssa, to my mind.”
Brendon took a deep breath. “Well, you knew her, Dad. So, why did everyone accept that Conrad had pulled off a masterpiece?”
Julian leaned forward. “Because not a one of us knew any different. We were all gutted by the tragedy. It was so recent, so
real.
Christopher was my friend, but he never confided in me or anyone else that he had written a book. Christopher, right up until his death, was kept extremely busy. Sir Reginald saw to that. Both brothers were artistic. Both had a love and a knowledge of literature and beautiful things. They were raised in wealth. That's another problem for Charlotte. She'll never get Conrad out of Clouds.”
“Trust me, Dad, she will. He'll be out in the New Year,” Brendon said. “Charlotte has made up her mind. She's also said she wouldn't expose her uncle until after his death. That's only if we're right, of course.”
Julian Macmillan blew out a breath. “Might be a wise move, if a difficult decision. It would create hell for her. What I don't understand is, why didn't Charlotte ask to read what Conrad has already written?”
Brendon looked up to meet his father's eyes. “Charlotte has
heart
. She pitied him. She wanted time to think. I really came to tell you about that fool Simon, but I got sidetracked.”
“So, fire away.”
“Simon tried a foolhardy stunt with us as we were coming down from the mountain last night.”
“
What?
” Julian reacted strongly.
“He was behind us in his BMW, driving much too fast. He passed us, then a short distance off he hit his brakes. That caused me to stand on mine. It was as close as one could come to the site of the Mansfield tragedy. It shook Charlotte up, as it was meant to. She memorized the rego. I checked it. Simon Mansfield. He had his girlfriend in the car. Oddly enough, she's a nice girl, not what you'd expect at all.”
“She would be largely chosen for her ability to fade into the background,” Julian said with his intimate knowledge of the Mansfield family. “Sir Reginald, wicked old soul that he was, decided on Julia not only because she was the love of your grandfather's life, but because she was the opposite of feisty. Julia was very unhappily married to Sir Reginald, God rest his soul,” he said with great irony.
“Why did Granddad let him do it?” Brendon asked, not a young man to let the love of his life go.
“Julia found Reginald very exciting.” Julian sighed. “She prized his cleverness, his ambition, his undoubted charisma. She wasn't as wise as she imagined herself to be. It didn't take long for cold reality to set in. Though, I'm obligated to say, Julia wanted for nothing outside a close, loving relationship with her husband. She had money to burn. It cost a small fortune getting the garden at Clouds underway. She was given free rein. Chris was her favourite. She loved little Charlotte, and she loved Alyssa, who was so very sweet to her. After they were killed, she simply pined away. It can happen. It did happen. I don't even know if Sir Reginald noticed she was gone.”
“That's a terrible thing to say, Dad.”
“I don't care!” Julian picked up his coffee cup, drank the contents down. “It's true. Sir Reginald had more than a touch of cruelty in him. My father was supposed to be his best friend. They'd been through University together. They founded Mansfield-Macmillan together. Sir Reginald trusted my father all his life, but trust was gone for my father once he lost Julia. Of course, there were many rotten things Sir Reginald did throughout their careers, but it was always about losing Julia. Then she died, much too early. My father was a one-woman man. I can say it now that my mother has passed. Dad loved her and she loved him, but Julia was his
great
love. I guess we all have one.”
“Who's yours, Dad? No point in saying Mum,” Brendon spoke bluntly. Simon and his dangerous antics were temporarily put aside. These were other things he really wanted to know.