Table of Contents
Copyright & Information
About the Author
Quotes
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
18
19
20
'Dr. Patrick Grant' Titles
Other Margaret Yorke Novels
Synopses of Titles
Copyright & Information
Devil's Work
First published in 1982
© Margaret Yorke; House of Stratus 1982-2013
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise), without the prior permission of the publisher. Any person who does any unauthorised act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages.
The right of Margaret Yorke to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted.
This edition published in 2013 by House of Stratus, an imprint of
Stratus Books Ltd., Lisandra House, Fore Street, Looe,
Cornwall, PL13 1AD, UK.
Typeset by House of Stratus.
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library and the Library of Congress.
EAN ISBN Edition
0755130545 9780755130542 Print
0755134699 9780755134694 Kindle
075513480X 9780755134809 Epub
This is a fictional work and all characters are drawn from the author's imagination.
Any resemblance or similarities to persons either living or dead are entirely coincidental.
www.houseofstratus.com
About the Author
Born in Surrey, England, to John and Alison Larminie in 1924, Margaret Yorke (Margaret Beda Nicholson) grew up in Dublin before moving back to England in 1937, where the family settled in Hampshire, although she then lived in a small village in Buckinghamshire.
During World War II she saw service in the Women's Royal Naval Service as a driver. In 1945, she married, but it was only to last some ten years, although there were two children; a son and daughter. Her childhood interest in literature was re-enforced by five years living close to Stratford-upon-Avon and she also worked variously as a bookseller and as a librarian in two Oxford Colleges, being the first woman ever to work in that of Christ Church.
She was widely travelled and had a particular interest in both Greece and Russia.
Margaret Yorke's first novel was published in 1957, but it was not until 1970 that she turned her hand to crime writing. There followed a series of five novels featuring Dr. Patrick Grant, an Oxford don and amateur sleuth, who shared her own love of Shakespeare. More crime and mystery was to follow, and she wrote some forty three books in all, but the Grant novels were limited to five as, in her own words, 'authors using a series detective are trapped by their series. It stops some of them from expanding as writers'.
She was proud of the fact that many of her novels are essentially about ordinary people who find themselves in extraordinary situations which may threatening, or simply horrific. It is this facet of her writing that ensures a loyal following amongst readers who inevitably identify with some of the characters and recognise conflicts that may occur in everyday life. Indeed, she stated that characters are far more important to her than intricate plots and that when writing 'I don't manipulate the characters, they manipulate me'.
Critics have noted that Margaret Yorke has a 'marvellous use of language' and she was frequently cited as an equal to P.D. James and Ruth Rendell. She was a past chairman of the Crime Writers' Association and in 1999 was awarded the Cartier Diamond Dagger, having already been honoured with the Martin Beck Award from the Swedish Academy of Detection.
Margaret Yorke died in 2012.
Quotes
Hell is paved with good intentions and roofed with lost opportunities.
Unknown (Portuguese)
It is easy – terribly easy – to shake a man’s faith in himself. To take advantage of that to break a man’s spirit is devil’s work.
Bernard Shaw, Candida
1
The house was empty.
The child stared at the dull brick front, studded with blank, uncurtained windows under a gabled roof; at the closed front door with its familiar dark green paint. She rang the bell again and again, and, when still no one came, thumped the heavy brass knocker, hearing the sound echo through the deserted building. In a frenzy of terror, she pushed open the shining brass letter-box flap and peered through, seeing bare, scratched floorboards which, that morning when she left for school, had been covered with dark brown haircord carpeting stretching the length of the hall to the kitchen door. She could see on the walls the patterned paper she had known all her life, but now, where a watercolour painting of a ship in full sail had hung, there was a large, lighter square patch. A coat rack had stood at the foot of the stairs and on it, each afternoon, she had hung her coat and her round felt hat. Later, her father would hang his herringbone tweed overcoat next to hers, and the hat he wore to the office, placing his rolled umbrella in the tub nearby. He would slick down his hair with a brush kept handy on a shelf at the side of the coat rack, frowning at himself in a small mirror above it as he did so, before going into the living-room with the evening paper.
She could see the stairs rising steeply at the back of the hall. They had been covered with a patterned carpet in greens and browns which, in her solitary games, she had pretended was a jungle path covered with creeper-like growth that hid lizards and menacing beasts. Now the carpet was gone, and the treads climbed nakedly upwards to what must be equal desolation on the upper floors, where at the top was her own small room, with its narrow bed, her dolls, and a few books.
Her mother should be in the kitchen preparing tea: hot dripping toast if her mood was good, or even scones, but at least bread and jam, with the light on and the house warm.
But there was no one, and it was nearly dark.
Standing on the doorstep, she began to scream.
2
On a Monday in February, Alan Parker drove eastwards through Berbridge’s morning rush hour. Slowing for traffic lights, he noticed a blue Ford Fiesta at a side road, its driver waiting for a gap in the passing stream of cars so that it could emerge. Alan, a patient man, tried every day to make some other road user happy by yielding way when it was not mandatory; he stopped and signalled to the Fiesta’s driver, a young woman, to move. The car was full of children, he saw, as she waved her thanks and entered the main road.
Moving up behind the blue car, Alan saw several small heads inside; one child climbed up on the rear seat to look at him through the window, grinning and waving as the traffic lights turned to green. Alan waved back, but then the child’s face disappeared as he was told, no doubt, to turn round and sit still.
They went on in convoy, and after half a mile or so the Fiesta’s driver indicated her intention to turn off. Alan, bound for the city centre, turned too, and followed the Fiesta down a residential street where he had not been for years. On one side were semi-detached houses, fifty or sixty years old, their small front gardens separated from the pavement by low walls backed with iron railings. On the other side the houses were larger, and detached. After some distance, newer houses could be seen; they were built in groups inserted where older dwellings had been demolished, and still further on there was a modern shopping centre with a row of shops set back from the road behind a wid
e pavement.
Alan scarcely recognised the area. There had been a cinema here, he recalled, the Plaza, and some quite different shops. Now that he thought about it, there had been controversy as to how the district should be developed when the cinema was sold.
The Fiesta turned left beyond the shops, continued for a short distance along the road, and then pulled in at the kerb. The nearside door opened and the small passengers clambered out. Other children were getting out of more cars, and there was a stream of mothers, some with prams, approaching from both directions. Alan drove on slowly and was halted by a stout crossing-patrol warden in her flat cap and overall, with her ‘lollipop’ banner, outside the primary school.
He had plenty of time to observe the bright new building with its large playground as he waited while the shoal of children filed across the road. It was all very different from when his own daughter was a child and went to the village school in Lower Holtbury, where all the pupils were taught by one woman in a Victorian building with few amenities, and where Pauline had received an excellent start to a school career that had been continued at Stowburgh grammar school and then a teachers’ training college. The village school in Lower Holtbury was closed now, and the children went by bus to High Holtbury.
Where had the years gone, Alan wondered, sliding the car into gear as the lollipop lady allowed him to move. One minute Pauline had been a little thing, like these mites all trooping in to school. Now she was married to a veterinary surgeon whom she’d met on a walking holiday in the Alps. They lived in York, and Pauline was expecting her first baby.
Alan drove into the town centre and found a slot in the multi-storey municipal car park. He sat there for some minutes in the concrete gloom, staring at the grey wall ahead of him. The whole day stretched ahead to be filled, for Alan was out of work.
One afternoon some weeks ago, the managing director of Biggs and Cooper, a light engineering firm at Stowburgh where Alan had worked for nearly twenty-five years, had summoned him to his own office. Officially, the working day was over; the managing director’s secretary had gone home and the last stragglers were departing from the building. The managing director’s office, though comfortable, with charcoal carpet tiles on the floor and black leather-covered armchairs for informal chats, was by no means ostentatious. When Alan came in, the managing director was seated behind his paperless desk. He bade Alan be seated opposite him, took his half-moon spectacles off, polished them and replaced them, then took them off again, frowning. Gravely, he spoke about rising costs, lower turnover, the need to retrench and cut down. He put his spectacles back on his nose and picked up a paperknife that lay on the desk before him, inspecting it closely. Alan understood the message before it was put into words.
‘But why me?’ he had asked. ‘My experience – the sales figures, taking into account the difficult times, are not so bad—’ His voice had tailed away as the managing director broke in to explain that the sales system was being restructured, slimmed down, jobs dovetailed one with another. Brian Clark would be undertaking work that formerly had been Alan’s responsibility, combining home sales with the export area. The firm was not large enough to carry two such posts under the reorganisation, he said suavely.
The managing director, who was the same age as Alan, did not like what he was doing now; but when weeding out staff, as with the garden, the weaker specimens must go so that the strong might thrive. Alan, though he was painstakingly conscientious, efficient and popular, and certainly very experienced, lacked drive; he was not ruthless, and today ruthlessness was often vital in the business jungle. Besides, he was nearly fifty, while Brian Clark was only thirty-three: a tough, aggressive young man approaching his prime, the better long-term investment.
‘There will be the usual compensation of course—tide you over—after so long’—the managing director pushed back his chair and made as if to rise, indicating the end of their talk. He felt great relief; there would be no scene—’excellent testimonial, of course’—he went on—’wish you luck.’ The disconnected phrases fell softly on Alan’s ears, meaningless platitudes.
Alan did not go straight home. He drove around for a while, then stopped, most unusually for him, at The Grapes in High Holtbury, where he had two large whiskies to help him break the news to his wife.
Daphne was out playing bridge when he reached home. Two years ago she had taken it up, attending evening classes to learn the rudiments after their daughter Pauline got married, and now, apart from some regular sessions every week, she was often in demand to make up a four if someone dropped out. That had happened this evening. She’d left a note for him, and his dinner in the oven where it had got rather dry.
When she came in, quite late, flushed and pleased, having won thirty-five pence, Alan could not bring himself to deflate her by telling her what had happened. It would keep until the next day.
But next day no suitable moment seemed to arrive, and as time passed it grew harder and harder to find the appropriate chance, for Daphne was always so busy.
She still did not know he had lost his job. Alan had left home at the usual time this morning, but instead of driving to Stowburgh he had turned off at the roundabout on the main road and driven to Berbridge, the county town.
He felt deeply humiliated. He had always worked hard and people had trusted him. If he guaranteed a delivery date, the customer knew the promise would be honoured. Young Brian Clark, with his tight, tapered trousers, his bright ties, his cropped hair brushed forward, and his tinted spectacles, was quite different: he was always on the move, was talkative and persuasive, stirring things up. In fairness, Alan had to admit that he had built up the export side of the business, and ahead of the young man lay his best twenty years, whilst Alan’s were in the nature of things, in the past.
God, he was beginning to think like a grandfather! He’d better forget about that while he was job-hunting; it might sound as if he were ready for felt slippers and an armchair by the hearth.
Alan had already registered with the Professional and Executive Recruitment Bureau. There was a private agency in Berbridge, where he intended to put down his name, and he must sign on at the Department of Social Security. He would tell the agency not to telephone him at home about any prospective job and arrange, instead, to ring them daily. He had bought his white Cortina from Biggs and Cooper at an advantageous price; this was something often possible if you became redundant. He’d need the car for driving to interviews.
He made his calls in the town; then, in the public library, he searched through the likely newspapers for possible vacancies, settling at a table near a window to write applications for the few that seemed appropriate. The employment agency had given him two possibilities, though warning him that the respective firms really wanted men in their thirties. He’d had his curriculum vitae typed before he left Biggs and Cooper, and had a stock of photocopies of the short document, the sole contents now of his large, worn briefcase. At the shiny light oak table in the library, Alan looked at it from the viewpoint of a prospective employer. Though he understood every aspect of the management of a small, specialised works, he could not make, with his own hands, any of its products. He had no university degree, nor any sort of diploma. During his national service in the army he had learned no trade, but had made the most of his chance to see a little of the world, had some amorous adventures, and gained confidence in himself as a man. He had risen no higher than the rank of lance-corporal. Alan’s papers attested to his loyalty, application and honesty: that was all. How valuable today were these once prized qualities?
His courage wavered, sitting in the library carefully writing, with his Waterman pen, what was virtually the same letter several times. His handwriting was clear and regular; that, at least, should be an asset. He’d heard that some firms obtained a graphologist’s assessment before awarding a post to an otherwise suitable applicant. At least the wives of aspiring sales and production managers were not yet inspected, as well as their husbands, he refl
ected.
All Alan’s attempts to tell Daphne that he had lost his job had failed. They had few opportunities for conversation, since she seldom sat still, even for meals. In the mornings she was always hurrying off, either to Stowburgh hospital, where twice a week she worked in the occupational therapy department, or to the golf course where she played on most other days. She was rarely at home for long in the evenings as she had regular bridge and badminton appointments.
Daphne had been the games mistress at the girls’ grammar school in the town where, after his national service, Alan had worked in a surveyor’s office. He intended to qualify, and had not planned to marry for years; his salary was too small to support a wife, which in those days most husbands expected to do. When he met Daphne his thinking changed. He took her out in his old Morris and they walked in the country; her vitality and physical energy were what first attracted him to her, and he joined the badminton club of which she was a member so that they might meet more often, though he had no aptitude for that or any game. They held hands in cinemas, and had tea at the Tudor Cafe on Saturdays if there was no match at Daphne’s school. They slid into an engagement, the natural result, both thought, of the increasing warmth of their kisses when he took her home.
Alan had abandoned the surveyor’s office to look for a job with ultimate prospects and, currently, a higher salary. Biggs and Cooper were expanding at the time and had a vacancy for a clerk. Alan got the position and had been with the firm ever since, moving through several departments. Soon after their marriage Daphne became pregnant, which solved the problem of whether or not she should keep on her job, and perhaps their one real disappointment had been that Pauline was their only child.
Devil's Work Page 1