Rumpole at Christmas

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by John Mortimer




  By the same author

  Charade

  Rumming Park

  Answer Yes or No

  Like Men Betrayed

  Three Winters

  The Narrowing Stream

  Will Shakespeare (An Entertainment)

  Paradise Postponed

  Summer’s Lease

  Titmuss Regained

  Dunster

  Felix in the Underworld

  The Sound of Trumpets

  Quite Honestly

  Rumpole of the Bailey

  The Trials of Rumpole

  Rumpole for the Defence

  Rumpole’s Return

  Rumpole and the Golden Thread

  Rumpole’s Last Case

  Rumpole and the Age of Miracles

  Rumpole à la Carte

  Rumpole on Trial

  The Best of Rumpole

  Rumpole and the Angel of Death

  Rumpole Rests His Case

  Rumpole and the Primrose Path

  Rumpole and the Penge

  Bungalow Murders

  Rumpole and the Reign of Terror

  The Anti-Social Behaviour of Horace Rumpole

  Under the Hammer

  With Love and Lizards (with Penelope Mortimer)

  Clinging to the Wreckage

  Murderers and Other Friends

  The Summer of a Dormouse

  Where There’s a Will

  In Character

  Character Parts

  PLAYS

  A Voyage Round My Father

  The Dock Brief

  What Shall We Tell Caroline?

  The Wrong Side of the Park

  Two Stars for Comfort

  The Judge

  Collaborators

  Edwin, Bermondsey, Marble

  Arch, Fear of Heaven

  The Prince of Darkness

  Naked Justice

  Hock and Soda Water

  Rumpole at Christmas

  JOHN MORTIMER

  VIKING

  an imprint of

  PENGUIN BOOKS

  VIKING

  Published by the Penguin Group

  Penguin Books Ltd, 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England

  Penguin Group (USA) Inc., 375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014, USA

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  (a division of Pearson Penguin Canada Inc.)

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  (a division of Pearson Australia Group Pty Ltd)

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  (a division of Pearson New Zealand Ltd)

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  Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England

  www.penguin.com

  First published in 2009

  Copyright © Advanpress Limited, 2009

  The acknowledgements on page vii represent an extension of the copyright page

  The moral right of the author has been asserted

  All rights reserved

  Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise), without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book

  ISBN: 978-0-14-195932-0

  Contents

  Acknowledgements

  Rumpole and the Old Familiar Faces

  Rumpole and the Christmas Break

  Rumpole and the Boy

  Rumpole and the Millennium Bug

  Rumpole and the Christmas Party

  Rumpole and Father Christmas

  Rumpole and the Health Farm Murder

  Acknowledgements

  ‘Rumpole and the Old Familiar Faces’ was first published in The Strand Magazine in 2001, and was also broadcast on BBC Radio Four in 2001. ‘Rumpole and the Christmas Break’ appeared in The Strand Magazine in 2004 and in Woman’s Weekly in 2004. ‘Rumpole and the Boy’ appeared in the Daily Mail in 1997. ‘Rumpole and the Millennium Bug’ appeared in the Independent in 1999. ‘Rumpole and the Christmas Party’ appeared in the Daily Express in 2004 under the title ‘Tale of Rumpole of the Bailey’s Christmas Party’. ‘Rumpole and Father Christmas’ appeared in the Sunday Express in 2005 and in The Strand Magazine in 2006. ‘Rumpole and the Health Farm Murder’ appeared in the Daily Mail in 2006, and under the title ‘Rumpole’s Slimmed Down Christmas’ in The Strand Magazine in 2007.

  Rumpole and the Old Familiar Faces

  In the varied ups and downs, the thrills and spills in the life of an Old Bailey hack, one thing stands as stone. Your ex-customers will never want to see you again. Even if you’ve steered them through the rocks of the prosecution case and brought them out to the calm waters of a not guilty verdict, they won’t plan further meetings, host reunion dinners, or even send you a card on your birthday. If they catch a glimpse of you on the Underground, or across a crowded wine bar, they will bury their faces in their newspapers or look studiously in the opposite direction. This is understandable. Days in court probably represent a period of time they’d rather forget and, as a rule, I’m not especially keen to renew an old acquaintance when a face I once saw in the Old Bailey dock reappears at a ‘Scales of Justice’ dinner or at the Inns of Court garden party. Reminiscences of the past are best avoided, and what is required is a quick look and a quiet turn away. There have been times, however, when recognizing a face seen in trouble has greatly assisted me in the solution of some legal problem and carried me to triumph in a difficult case. Such occasions have been rare but, like number thirteen buses, two of them turned up in short order around a Christmas which I remember as being one of the oddest, but certainly the most rewarding, I ever spent.

  *

  ‘A traditional British pantomime. There’s nothing to beat it!’

  ‘You go to the pantomime, Rumpole?’ Claude asked with unexpected interest.

  ‘I did when I was a boy. It made a lasting impression on me.’

  ‘Pantomime?’ The American judge who was our fellow guest around the Erskine-Brown dinner table was clearly a stranger to such delights. ‘Is that some kind of mime show? Lots of feeling imaginary walls and no one saying anything?’

  ‘Not at all. You take some good old story, like Robin Hood…’

  ‘Robin Hood’s the star?’

  ‘Well, yes. He’s played by some strapping girl who slaps her thighs and says lines like, “Cheer up, Babes in the Wood, Robin’s not far away.”’

  ‘You mean there’s cross-dressing?’ The American visitor was puzzled.

  ‘Well, if you want to call it that. And Robin’s mother is played by a red-nosed comic.’

  ‘A female comic?’

  ‘No. A male one.’

  ‘That sounds interesting,’ he said in a tone that suggested he had the wrong idea. ‘We have clubs for that sort of thing in Pittsburgh.’

  ‘It’s not what you’re thinking,’ I assured him. ‘The dame’s a comic character who gets the audience singing.’

  ‘Singing?’

  ‘The words come down on a sort of giant song sheet,’ I explained, ‘and she, who is really a he, gets the audience to sing along.’

  Emboldened by Erskine-Brown’s cla
ret (smoother on the tongue but with less of a kick than Château Thames Embankment), I broke into a stanza of the song I was introduced to by Robin Hood’s masculine mother.

  I may be just a nipper,

  But I’ve always loved a kipper…

  And so does my loving wife.

  If you’ve got a girl, just slip her

  A loving golden kipper

  And she’ll be yours for life.

  ‘Is that all?’ The transatlantic judge still seemed puzzled.

  ‘All I can remember.’

  ‘I think you’re wrong, Mr Rumpole.’

  ‘What?’

  ‘I think you’re wrong and those lines do indeed have some significance along the lines I suggested.’ And the judge fell silent, contemplating the unusual acts suggested.

  ‘I see they’re doing Aladdin at the Tufnell Park Empire. Do you think the twins might enjoy it, Rumpole?’

  The speaker was Mrs Justice Erskine-Brown (Phillida Trant as she was in happier days when I called her the Portia of our chambers), still possessed of a beauty that would break the hearts of the toughest prosecutors and make old lags swoon with lust even as she passed a stiff custodial sentence. The twins she spoke of were Tristan and Isolde, so named by her opera-loving husband Claude, who was now bending Hilda’s ear on the subject of Covent Garden’s latest Ring cycle.

  ‘I think the twins would adore it. Just the thing to cure the Wagnerian death wish and bring them into a world of sanity.’

  ‘Sanity?’ The visiting judge sounded doubtful. ‘With old guys dressed up as mothers?’

  ‘I promise you, they’ll love every minute of it.’ And then I made another promise that sounded rash even as I spoke the words. ‘I know I would. I’ll take them myself.’

  ‘Thank you, Rumpole.’ Phillida spoke in her gentlest judicial voice, but I knew my fate was sealed. ‘We’ll keep you to that.’

  ‘It’ll have to be after Christmas,’ Hilda said. ‘We’ve been invited up to Norfolk for the holiday.’

  As she said the word ‘Norfolk’ a cold, sweeping wind seemed to cut through the central heating of the Erskine-Browns’ Islington dining room and I felt a warning shiver.

  I have no rooted objection to Christmas Day, but I must say it’s an occasion when time tends to hang particularly heavily on the hands. From the early morning alarm call of carols piping on Radio Four to the closing headlines and a restless, liverish sleep, the day can seem as long as a fraud on the Post Office tried before Mr Injustice Graves.

  It takes less than no time for me to unwrap the tie which I will seldom wear, and for Hilda to receive the annual bottle of lavender water which she lays down rather than puts to immediate use. The highlights after that are the Queen’s Speech, when I lay bets with myself as to whether Hilda will stand to attention when the television plays the National Anthem, and the thawed-out Safeway bird followed by port (an annual gift from my faithful solicitor Bonny Bernard) and pudding. I suppose what I have against Christmas Day is that the courts are all shut and no one is being tried for anything.

  That Christmas, Hilda had decided on a complete change of routine. She announced it in a circuitous fashion by saying, one late November evening, ‘I was at school with Poppy Longstaff.’

  ‘What’s that got to do with it?’ I knew the answer to this question, of course. Hilda’s old school has this in common with polar expeditions, natural disasters and the last war; those who have lived through it are bound together for life and can always call on each other for mutual assistance.

  ‘Poppy’s Eric is Rector of Coldsands. And for some reason or other he seems to want to meet you, Rumpole.’

  ‘Meet me?’

  ‘That’s what she said.’

  ‘So does that mean I have to spend Christmas in the Arctic Circle and miss our festivities?’

  ‘It’s not the Arctic Circle. It’s Norfolk, Rumpole. And our festivities aren’t all that festive. So, yes. You have to go.’ It was a judgement for which there was no possible appeal.

  My first impression of Coldsands was a gaunt church tower, presumably of great age, pointing an accusing finger to heaven from a cluster of houses on the edge of a sullen, gunmetal sea. My second was one of intense cold. As soon as we got out of the taxi, we were slapped around the face by a wind which must have started in freezing Siberia and gained nothing in the way of warmth on its journey across the plains of Europe.

  ‘In the bleak midwinter / Frosty wind made moan…’ wrote that sad old darling Christina Rossetti. Frosty winds made considerable moan round the rectory at Coldsands, owing to the doors that stopped about an inch short of the stone floors and the windows which never shut properly, causing the curtains to billow like the sails of a ship at sea.

  We were greeted cheerfully by Poppy. Hilda’s friend had one of those round, childishly pretty faces often seen on seriously fat women. She seemed to keep going on incessant cups of hot, sweet tea and a number of cardigans. If she moved like an enormous tent, her husband Eric was a slender wraith of a man with a high aquiline nose, two flapping wings of grey hair on each side of his face, and a vague air of perpetual anxiety broken, now and then, by high and unexpected laughter. He made cruciform gestures, as though remembering the rubric ‘spectacles, testicles, wallet and watch’ and forgetting where these important articles were kept.

  ‘Eric,’ his wife explained, ‘is having terrible trouble with the church tower.’

  ‘Oh, dear.’ Hilda shot me a look of stern disapproval, which I knew meant that it would be more polite if I abandoned my overcoat while tea was being served. ‘How worrying for you, Eric.’

  The Reverend Eric went into a long, excited and high-pitched speech. The gist of it was that the tower, although of rare beauty, had not been much restored since the Saxons built it and the Normans added the finishing touches. Fifty thousand pounds was needed for essential repairs, and the thermometer, erected outside the church for the appeal, was stuck at one hundred and twenty pounds – the proceeds from an emergency jumble sale.

  ‘You particularly wanted Horace to come this Christmas?’ Hilda asked the Man of God with the air of someone anxious to solve a baffling mystery. ‘I wonder why that was?’

  ‘Yes. I wonder!’ Eric looked startled. ‘I wonder why on earth I wanted to ask Horace. I don’t believe he’s got fifty thousand smackers in his back pocket!’ At this, he shook with laughter.

  ‘There,’ I told him. ‘Your lack of faith is entirely justified.’ I wasn’t exactly enjoying Coldsands Rectory, so I was a little miffed that the Reverend couldn’t remember why he’d asked me there in the first place.

  ‘We had hoped that Donald Compton would help us out,’ Poppy told us. ‘I mean, he wouldn’t notice fifty thousand. But he took exception to what Eric said at the Remembrance Day service.’

  ‘Armistice Day in the village.’ Eric’s grey wings of hair trembled as he nodded in delighted affirmation. ‘And I prayed for dead German soldiers. It seemed only fair.’

  ‘Fair perhaps, darling. But hardly tactful,’ his wife told him. ‘Donald Compton thought it was distinctly unpatriotic. He’s bought the Old Manor House,’ she explained to Hilda. From then on the conversation turned exclusively to this Compton and was carried on in the tones of awe and muted wonder with which people always talk about the very rich. Compton, it seemed, after a difficult start in England, had gone to Canada where, during a ten-year stay, he had laid the foundations of his fortune. His much younger wife was quite charming, probably Canadian, and not in the least standoffish. He had built the village hall, the cricket pavilion, and a tennis court for the school. Only Eric’s unfortunate sympathy for the German dead had caused Compton’s bounty to stop short at the church tower.

  ‘I’ve done hours of hard knee-work,’ the rector told us, ‘begging the Lord to soften Mr Compton’s heart towards our tower. No result so far, I fear.’

  Apart from this one lapse, the charming Donald Compton seemed to be the perfect English squire and country gent. I w
ould see him in church on Christmas morning, and we had also been invited for drinks before lunch at the manor. The Reverend Eric and the smiling Poppy made it sound as though the Pope and the Archbishop of Canterbury would be out with the carol singers and we’d been invited to drop in for high tea at Windsor Castle. I prayed for a yule log blazing at the manor so that I could, in the true spirit of Christmas, thaw out gradually.

  ‘Now, as a sign of Christmas fellowship, will you all stand and shake hands with those in front of and behind you?’ Eric, in full canonicals, standing on the steps in front of the altar, made this suggestion as though he had just thought of the idea. I stood reluctantly. I had found myself a place in the church near a huge, friendly, gently humming, occasionally belching radiator and I was clinging to it and stroking it as though it were a newfound mistress (not that I have much experience of new- or even old-found mistresses). The man who turned to me from the front row seemed to be equally reluctant. He was, as Hilda had pointed out excitedly, the great Donald Compton in person – a man of middle height with silver hair, dressed in a tweed suit, and with a tan which it must have been expensive to preserve during winter. He had soft brown eyes which looked away from me almost at once as, with a touch of dry fingers, he was gone and I was left, for the rest of the service, with no more than a well-tailored back and the sound of an uncertain tenor voice joining in the hymns.

  I turned to the row behind to shake hands with an elderly woman who had madness in her eyes and whispered conspiratorially to me, ‘You cold, dear? Like to borrow my gloves? We’re used to a bit of chill weather round these parts.’ I declined politely and went back to hugging the radiator, and as I did so a sort of happiness stole over me. To start with, the church was beautiful, with a high timbered roof and walls of weathered stone, peppered with marble tributes to dead inhabitants of the manor. It was decorated with holly and mistletoe. A tree glowed and there were candles over a crib. I thought how many generations of Coldsands villagers, their eyes bright and faces flushed with the wind, had belted out these hymns. I also thought how depressed the great Donald Compton – who had put on little gold half-glasses to read the prophecy from Isaiah: ‘For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given: and the government shall be upon his shoulder: and his name shall be called Wonderful’ – would feel if Jesus’ instruction to sell all and give it to the poor should ever be taken literally.

 

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