The Red Death is Published Today

Congratulations to Abraham Kawa, whose heart-pounding murder mystery, The Red Death, is published today!

The Red Death is the second police procedural crime novel in the Bates and Briant Investigations series — gritty, hard-boiled thrillers set in 1960s and 1970s London and Europe.

Rome, 1970

After a disturbing murder case left DI Chris Bates’ mental health shattered, he spent time recovering in an asylum before being released to a halfway house.

He receives a photo of police photographer Helen Briant in Rome along with a message to join him there, with a hint she’s in trouble. With nothing tying him to home, Chris decides to go.

In Rome, he discovers Helen in a desperate situation. She is caught in a web of blackmail, threats and violence.

And when some of those threatening her are murdered, Helen is hauled in for questioning.

Keen to clear Helen’s name, Chris is determined to get to the bottom of the mystery. But the further he delves into it, the more complicated it becomes.

And when more victims are found, the stakes become even higher…

Stalked in Real Life by Gaynor Torrance

It seems apt that I am writing this on the day that the A-level results are announced. I finished school many years ago, but can still recall the excitement of finding out that I had been accepted at my university of choice to study psychology. With everything to look forward to, my head spun with expectations of what student life would be like. Little did I know that my entire existence was about to take a sinister turn. Until then, I’d lived a sheltered life and hadn’t heard of people being stalked. But that was about to change as my terrifying ordeal began only a few weeks later. 

It was a steep learning curve. If I were included in a random cohort of people and asked to order them by likeliness of being targeted by a stalker, I would have positioned myself towards the bottom of that list. After all, I was introverted, wasn’t going to turn anyone’s head and certainly didn’t court attention. I was someone people didn’t tend to notice. Though I later discovered that anyone, regardless of age, gender, or perceived physical attractiveness can be stalked, and stalkers are not exclusively male.

Even as I write this, I can feel my stress levels grow. Despite the passage of time, as I dredge up these suppressed memories, the old emotions rise like a tsunami threatening to overwhelm me. There are some things from that time that I refuse to discuss as those memories are far too traumatic. I also have no intention of naming the person who caused me so much mental and emotional anguish. Identifying him serves no purpose and might cause pain or embarrassment to other people, which I have no desire to do. It is enough for me to know that my ordeal is over. Apart from in nightmares, my stalker is no longer a threat to me.

It is essential to understand that this chapter of my life occurred way before the availability of mobile phones or the subsequent rise of social media. It was quite literally another world back then. At the time, there were no stalking laws in the UK. Society was far more misogynistic, and I would probably have been seen as a stupid young woman who had obviously brought it all on herself. It seemed to me that my only viable option was to deal with things alone. 

Before I realised the threat he posed, I had allowed my stalker to enter my room at the hall of residence. Although I didn’t appreciate it at the time, I’d made a big mistake. It gave him access to information, and we’re all familiar will the old adage, ‘Information is power. He took the opportunity to familiarise himself with my lecture and seminar timetable. Naively I had it pinned on my noticeboard. From then on, he was able to predict my movements.

His behaviour quickly became alarmingly claustrophobic. And when I tried to distance myself, things escalated rapidly. For almost a year he followed me, watched me, sent anonymous threatening messages and on a few occasions, succeeded in cornering me. It was a relentless campaign of intimidation, designed to mess with my head. He even managed to convince people that he was a heartbroken innocent, and I felt ostracised when I most needed support.  

I have no intention of giving you a blow-by-blow account of what happened. It would take too long, and I would feel uncomfortable about relaying some of the details. However, there are things I’m willing to share. 

On one occasion, I’d gone home for a weekend visit and was travelling back to the university. I felt physically sick as I stood on the platform waiting for the train to arrive, as I dreaded him turning up. I breathed a sigh of relief as the train pulled in, found a seat, settled down and took out whichever book I was reading. There was plenty of time for me to lose myself in the story as it would take a few hours for me to reach my destination, and I certainly needed the distraction. About forty minutes into the journey, the woman opposite me got up to leave. And as the train pulled away from the station, someone else sat in that seat. As I glanced up, my blood ran cold. It was him.

I did my best to stay calm, but I was quaking inside. He crossed his arms and kept staring at me as I pretended to continue to read my book. Neither of us spoke until he leaned forward and placed his elbows on the table between us. I wanted to run, but there was nowhere to go. 

He appeared calm as he told me that he had a ‘new best friend,’ someone who was helping him see things differently. They’d discussed things, and he now realised that he didn’t want a relationship with me. I had a glimmer of hope, but that light was soon extinguished. As his monologue continued, I deduced that the friend he was referring to was God. But what he went on to tell me was the scariest thing I had ever heard.

He claimed to be having frequent conversations with God, who had made him realise that I was evil and had to be stopped. He said that he had God’s permission to do whatever it took to make this happen. After all, he had right on his side. I could tell that this wasn’t some kind of sick joke. He believed everything he was saying.  

My mind raced as the train approached my destination. I was all too aware of the impending showdown and didn’t want to end up injured or dead. The odds were stacked against me. He was far larger and undoubtedly stronger than me. I knew I was safe whilst I was on the train, as he surely wouldn’t harm me in public. But even when I got off the train, the university campus was still a few miles away. I couldn’t risk waiting for the bus I had planned to take. I had to get a taxi.

As the train pulled into the station, I sat in my seat for as long as I dared. It was a popular destination, and people were already queuing up to get off. Leaving my book on the table, I grabbed my bag, jumped up and pushed my way past people. I was shouting and distressed. It was one of the few occasions in my life when I wanted others to notice me. Thankfully people obliged and let me through, though none of them thought to ask me what was wrong or offer any help. I was banking on the fact that he couldn’t risk making a scene. It gave me the only advantage I was going to get. 

I raced over the footbridge, panting and crying. Reached the taxi rank where a queue hadn’t yet formed. I jumped inside the nearest cab and told the driver to take me to the campus. But as the vehicle was about to pull away, the rear door opened and he calmly got in. ‘Thought you were going to leave without me,’ he said in a non-threatening way.

He grabbed my arm, and we sat in silence. When the cab eventually pulled up outside my hall, I dug the nails of my free hand into the back of his and shouted, ‘He’s paying.’ I ran, all the while fumbling for my keys. I made it inside and sprinted up two flights of stairs. Little did I realise that another student was on her way out of the hall and unhelpfully held the door open for him.

As I entered my corridor, I was dismayed to find it deserted. I’d been banking on there being other people around. My hand was shaking as I attempted to insert the key into the lock. I heard the door open off the stairwell, turned and saw him there striding purposefully towards me. I’d lost my chance. I couldn’t risk going into my room. If he forced his way inside, it would be game over. I knew from past experience what would happen. Instead, I ran to the communal toilets, which were almost opposite my room. All four cubicles were free. I got inside one, locked the door and started shouting for help.

Luckily for me, other students heard the commotion, and people soon arrived. My friend was amongst them and knew a little of what was happening to me. She helped me get back to my room, while some other girls attracted his attention. She came inside with me as she could see how scared I was. She was just closing the door when he realised what we’d done. He completely lost it and kicked the door in. Another student had the foresight to call security, and he was eventually forced to leave. 

On another occasion he drove a car at me, screeching to a halt inches from where I stood. He calmly got out of the vehicle, stepped towards me and said, ‘If I can’t have you, no one will.’ Thankfully a stranger intervened. But nowhere was safe. I was isolated, terrified and didn’t know who I could trust.  

When I returned for my second year at university, my tutor sat me down and informed me that he believed there was a credible threat to my life. My stalker had applied to study numerous courses at the university. He was frequently seen roaming the grounds and buildings despite being banned from entering the campus. Realistically I knew there was no way they could ensure that he was kept out. This guy was focused and had no intention of playing by the rules.

That morning I spent an hour or so in my tutor’s office as he made some phone calls, and just like that, I was transferred to another university. I had to leave without saying goodbye and immediately cut ties with my university friends. My world had become a real-life psychological thriller. 

Throughout this entire ordeal, I was offered no support or counselling. It wasn’t the ‘done thing,’ back then. I was on a downward spiral with no safety net in sight. In public, I did my best to act as though nothing was wrong. It was a role I felt compelled to play. I wanted to move on, put things behind me and try to fit in. But I didn’t succeed. I couldn’t relax and frequently experienced panic attacks. In retrospect, I realise that I was suffering from PTSD. But at least I had walked away. I had survived. Though something had to give, and my studies suffered.

For many years, my children have often joked that I am the most paranoid person on the planet. They don’t appreciate that I spent such a sustained period living in fear. Thankfully I bear no physical scars from that time. Though, I carry mental and emotional wounds which have faded but will never fully heal. 

An example of how messed up I had become is that throughout my twenties, I dreaded entering my own home if I happened to be alone. I’d put the key in the lock, take a deep breath, race to the kitchen and grab a sharp knife. My knuckles would be white and my hand shaking as I systematically walked from room to room, flinging open cupboard doors, looking behind curtains and beneath the furniture. It is a relief that I no longer feel compelled to do that.

Upon reflection, my behaviour was extreme and perhaps ridiculous. But unless you’ve experienced such an insidious long-lasting threat, you can’t begin to imagine how deeply it affects you. I can honestly say that in those days, I had become as obsessed with my stalker as he was with me. 

As time passed with no contact, I still couldn’t get him out of my head. I had no idea where he was, but expected to find him waiting in the shadows. Even sleep failed to offer respite, as I experienced night terrors whenever I’d had a stressful day. 

Then, I had a meltdown at work. It happened out of the blue on an ordinary afternoon. I hadn’t seen or heard from my stalker for years. I walked out of the ladies room just as the lift doors located directly opposite, opened. A man stepped out, we looked at each other, and he smiled. He was my stalker’s doppelganger. The likeness was uncanny. I kept facing him and quickly backed up to the ladies room, where I locked myself inside a cubicle and cried. 

At that moment, I thought it was happening all over again. I couldn’t understand how he had found me after all this time. I knew I’d have to resign and look for another job as it wasn’t safe for me to continue working there. Eventually, I was all cried out, and some other women came in to use the facilities. I waited for them to enter the cubicles and went out to clean myself up, taking my time so that I could leave the room with them.

When I returned to my desk, I contacted reception, gave them my stalker’s name and asked for his extension number and details of which department he worked for. I was informed that no one with that name was employed there. It took a while for me to be convinced that the receptionist was telling me the truth. I later discovered that the man in question was actually someone else. He must have thought I was a lunatic.   

There is no doubt in my mind that living through such a traumatic experience has shaped the person I went on to become. I’m introverted and do my best to avoid group interactions as I find them stressful. It seems that no matter how hard I try, I still feel like an outsider. I’m incapable of ‘fitting in’

Of course, I have friends and family, and I value them highly. I’m comfortable when there’re just a handful of people I know and trust. But in larger groups, even virtual ones, I feel ill at ease. Though, every so often, I pluck up the courage to try again. Hopefully one day I’ll find it’s no longer a problem.  

STALKED, the third book in the Jemima Huxley Thrillers series, is the story I always wanted to write. It is undeniably a work of fiction, but one created with an authentic understanding of what it is like to be in those particular crosshairs. I didn’t have to imagine what it would be like for my character, Violet Watkins — I know what she was going through.

If you have already read the book, you may think that the twist at the end is far-fetched. It was in fact inspired by information passed to me from someone who knew my stalker, and was a chilling indication that perhaps he hadn’t fully moved on. As a writer, I played around with the idea as I thought it would be perfect for this book. Though in my personal life, there was never any suggestion of such a threat.

Thankfully my ordeal is over. I am a very different person to the one I had hoped to be all those years ago. There are occasions when I wonder what path I would have followed if things had been different. But overall I have no regrets as I have so much to be grateful for.

 

Click here to order STALKED

 

If you have been affected by any of the issues raised above, the following organisations may be able to provide help and support:

National Stalking Helpline

Paladin National Stalking Advocacy Service

Supportline

Victim Support

Distract Yourself with these Heart-Pounding Thrillers

To help keep you entertained during quarantine we’ve put together a list of some of our most absorbing thrillers, featuring mysterious disappearances, historical conspiracies, ghostly dreams and more…

Paternoster, Kim Fleet

A compelling timeshift mystery, Paternoster moves between 18th Century and modern-day England. In 1795, kept woman Rachel Lovett is left homeless and destitute when her benefactor loses his money. Forced to steal jewellery to survive, Rachel finds herself constantly on the run from the law and the hangman’s noose. And when she joins a brothel, she is soon introduced into the ruthless Paternoster Club…

In 2013, Private Investigator Eden Grey is called in to examine a pair of skeletons found in the grounds of a prestigious school. It soon becomes obvious that these are not recent murders – the bodies have been buried for centuries. And now Eden must unravel a historic mystery while concealing her own personal demons…

Click here to order Paternoster

The Black and the White, Alis Hawkins

Set in 1349, The Black and the White is a chilling medieval mystery that explores the ravages of the infamous Black Death. Martin Collyer wakes up in his family’s charcoaling hut, having made a miraculous recovery. But his father, who showed no signs of the plague, is dead.

With no home to go to, Martin seizes his second chance at life and goes on a journey to seek salvation for his father’s unconfessed soul. Along the way, he befriends another traveller, the enigmatic Hob Cleve. But when more suspicious deaths occur, Martin begins to wonder whether he is travelling with a killer…

Click here to order The Black and the White

Abduction, Gillian Jackson

Abduction is an emotional psychological thriller that confronts every parent’s worst nightmare. During her third birthday party, little Grace disappears without a trace while playing a game of hide and seek.

As the years go by and the case goes cold, Grace’s parents lose hope of ever finding her and do their best to move on with their lives. But her older sister, Elise, refuses to give up. And a chance encounter leads her to believe that she may have found her…

Click here to order Abduction

Past Imperfect, John Matthews

Spanning three decades, Past Imperfect is a gripping international crime novel with a paranormal twist. In 1963, a boy is kidnapped and murdered in the French countryside. The killer is seemingly caught, but young policeman Dominic Fornier is convinced he is innocent.

In London thirty years later, a boy loses his parents in a car accident and is left comatose. And when he regains consciousness, he is plagued by eerie dreams of a life that isn’t his. When Fornier hears of a possible link between the two boys, he throws himself into a desperate race against time to catch a brutal killer and right the wrongs of the past…

Click here to order Past Imperfect

The Catherine Howard Conspiracy, Alexandra Walsh

The Catherine Howard Conspiracy is an absorbing dual timeline conspiracy thriller with a shocking twist on Tudor history. In 1539, young Catherine Howard is brought to the court of King Henry VIII to be a lady in waiting to the new queen, Ann of Cleves. But when she catches the king’s eye, her uncle begins scheming to secure a Howard heir to the throne. After the fate that befell her cousin, Anne Boleyn, Catherine is terrified of the unpredictable king and begins to fear for her life.

In 2018, Perdita and Piper Rivers inherit Marquess House from their estranged grandmother, renowned Tudor historian Mary Fitzroy. When Perdita sets out to uncover Mary’s reasons for abandoning them, she is drawn into the mysterious archives of Marquess House: a collection of letters and diaries that claim all records of Catherine Howard’s execution were falsified…

Click here to order The Catherine Howard Conspiracy

 

Like the look of these thrilling reads? Sign up to the Sapere Books newsletter for new releases and deals in crime and thriller fiction.

Read the first chapter of The Brief by Simon Michael

The clerks’ room is its usual, frenetic, five o’clock worst: Stanley is holding conversations with two solicitors on different telephones, Sally is fending off questions from two members of Chambers while scanning the Daily Cause List and Robert, the junior, is optimistically trying to tie a brief with one hand while pouring a cup of coffee for the head of Chambers with the other. Sir Geoffrey Duchenne QC returned from the Court of Appeal ten minutes earlier, muttering that Lord Bloody-Justice Bloody-Birkett was to the law of marine insurance what Bambi was to quantum physics, ejected another barrister’s conference already in progress from his room and slammed the door. He can still be heard giving a post-mortem of the day’s defeat to the senior partner of the firm of solicitors that instructed him. Superimposed on all this is the clatter of the two typists generating an apparently endless stream of fee notes to go out in the last post.

Charles Holborne pokes his head into the clerks’ room and wonders if he’ll be able to make himself heard. Dark, curly-haired and described by his criminal clients as “built like a brick shithouse”, Charles is the odd man out in these chambers. Indeed, he is the odd man out in the Temple and the Criminal Bar generally. The only barrister in Chambers to have been state-educated, he got into Cambridge by virtue of a scholarship and, perhaps, the DFC earned as a wartime Spitfire pilot. Charles had what they call a “good war” and it’s been opening doors for him ever since.

He watches with a smile as Sally — pert, cheeky Sally from Romford — politely tells Mr Sebastian Campbell-Smythe, a senior barrister of fifteen years’ call, to return to his room and not to disturb her. If he causes her to miss his case in the List, he’ll not be best pleased, will he? Sally, thinks Charles, not for the first time, is ideally suited to life as a barristers’ clerk. She’s quick-witted and quick-tongued enough to keep in line twenty-six prima donna barristers all her senior in years, supposed social status and intelligence without actually crossing the line into rudeness. Stanley, the senior clerk, has high hopes of her.

She turns towards the door and sees Charles.

‘Going to Mick’s,’ he mouths, making exaggerated saucer and cup-lifting motions with his hands.

She smiles. Notwithstanding Charles’s education and carefully cultured accent, he’s an East Ender like her, and there’s something of an unspoken bond between them.

‘Don’t forget your buggery con…’ she says, as nonchalantly as if the case had been a vicar summonsed for careless driving. She reaches for the diary and runs her finger down it until she finds his initials. ‘Four-thirty.’

Charles nods. He’s already read the case papers and there’s time for a cup of tea and a bite to eat at the café on Fleet Street before his client and the solicitor arrive for the conference.

Pulling his coat around him, Charles steps out from Chancery Court into the rain. A gust of wind bows the bare branches of the plane trees towards him and threatens to dislodge his hat. He jams the hat more firmly on his head and walks swiftly across the shiny cobbles towards the sound of traffic. He still loves the sensation of dislocation he experiences every time he walks through the archway from the Dickensian Temple onto twentieth century Fleet Street. The Temple has barely changed in three hundred years, and the sense that it’s caught in a fold in time is always strongest in the winter, when mist regularly drifts in off the Thames and the gas lamps are still lit at four o’clock each afternoon by a man with what resembles a six-foot matchstick. The Benchers responsible for running the Inn are debating the installation of electric lights and Charles knows it’s only a matter of time, but he’ll miss the hiss of the gas, the fluttering flames and the shifting shadows.

He turns onto Fleet Street and walks in the direction of St Paul’s Cathedral, its dome barely visible in the murky light, past the Black Lubianka, the affectionate name of the Daily Express’s art deco headquarters, and through a small steamy door. He’s greeted by a hot exhalation of bacon fat and cigarette smoke.

“Mick’s” offers cheap meals for fourteen hours a day and is second home to both Fleet Street hacks and Temple barristers. Its all-day breakfast, a heart-stopping pyramid of steaming cholesterol for only 1s 6d, is legendary. Charles loves the feel of the place, the easy conversations and ribald jokes about cases, clients and judges. The tension of a long court day, particularly the miseries of an unexpected conviction or swingeing sentence, can here be assuaged in a fog of smoke and chip fat. It also makes a welcome change from the rarefied atmosphere of 2 Chancery Court, where most of Charles’s colleagues deal in the bills of lading, the judicial review, and the leasehold enfranchisement of civil work.

At this time of day, with courts adjourning for the night and Mick’s being on the route to and from the Old Bailey, the clientele is more barristerial than journalistic, although Charles sees and waves to Percy Farrow, a hack friend who’s covered several of his cases. Charles negotiates his way through the narrow gap between the tables towards the Formica counter and orders tea and toast. He looks for somewhere to sit, but Percy is deeply engrossed with a colleague, so Charles squeezes his way to a stool at the end of the counter, picking up a discarded Daily Mirror from an adjacent table. Then he recognises a tall man sitting two tables away from him, hunched over a cup of tea. Charles goes to the man’s table.

‘Thought it was you, Ozzie,’ says Charles, joining him.

The man starts and looks up sharply. Charles hasn’t seen Ozzie Sinclair, the tall lugubrious thief, for years. ‘I thought you were away,’ says Charles. ‘Weren’t you doing a stretch?’

‘Fuck me,’ says Ozzie, his eyes widening, making the puffy bags under them bulge like half-crescent satchels. ‘Charlie Horowitz, as I live and breathe.’

‘Charles Holborne now,’ corrects Charles. ‘For professional purposes.’

‘Oh yeah, sorry. I ’eard you was doin’ all right for yourself, Charlie.’

‘Can’t complain.’

‘Good on yer.’ Ozzie sighs. ‘Yeah, I was away. That bastard Milford-Stevens gave me six for one measly lorry.’

Charles doesn’t share the thief’s outrage. Now in his late forties, Ozzie has been in and out of prison for offences of dishonesty since he was thirteen; with his record, six years for stealing a lorry full of condemned meat to sell to West End restaurants didn’t seem excessive to him.

‘Yes, I thought it was a bit steep,’ he says diplomatically. ‘But you’re out now. On licence, I assume?’ Ozzie nods. ‘And what brings you to this neck of the woods? You’re not in trouble already?’ Charles hitches a thumb over his shoulder towards the Temple. ‘Seeing a brief?’

Ozzie shakes his head. ‘No, nuffin’ like that. Harry Robeson’s given us some temporary work as an outdoor clerk. It helped with me parole. I’m just dropping papers off at some chambers.’

‘Harry Robeson, eh?’

There isn’t a criminal lawyer in practice who doesn’t know Harry Robeson, a villains’ solicitor with a clientele that includes most of the serious criminals in south London.

‘Interesting case?’ asks Charles. Like every barrister in the Temple, he’s always keen to know where the quality work is going.

‘Can’t tell you. All a bit ’ush-’ush.’ Ozzie drops his voice and leans forward. ‘It’s not a proper case yet, but it’s gonna be big.’

‘What do you mean “not a proper case”?’

Ozzie taps his fleshy nose conspiratorially. ‘Can’t say no more. ’Cept it’ll be a cutthroat.’

A cutthroat defence is one where the prosecution knows that one of the accused did the deed but can’t prove which, and each defendant points the finger at the other. Charles likes them; they’re usually as fun to prosecute as they are tricky to defend.

‘Fair enough.’

They chat for a few minutes about old faces from the East End and how the remaining bombsites are only now being redeveloped, but Charles has little to contribute. After a few minutes he knocks back the dregs of his tea, pops the last bite of margarine-saturated toast into his mouth, and pushes back from the table. ‘Best be off,’ he says. ‘Keep lucky, Ozzie.’

‘An’ you, mate.’

Returning to Chambers, Charles hears an argument in progress through the thick, centuries-old, oak door. A tall barrister in pin-striped trousers, in mid-rant at Stanley, whirls round as Charles enters.

‘There you are! Now look here, Holborne,’ Corbett says, using the formality of Charles’s surname to demonstrate his displeasure, ‘this is positively the last time. I’m going to take it up at the next Chambers’ meeting.’

Charles looks up at the man. Corbett is almost six inches taller than him, lean and fair. ‘Is there a problem, Laurence?’ asks Charles quietly, pointedly using Corbett’s first name.

‘Yes. That!’ replies Corbett, jabbing his finger in the direction of the waiting room.

‘Your con’s arrived, sir,’ explains Stanley patiently.

‘And?’ asks Charles.

‘And my fiancée has been sitting waiting for me in there with that rapist of yours!’

‘Yes?’ enquires Charles.

‘Don’t act the fool, Holborne. I know for a fact you’ve been asked by several members to keep your smutty clientele out of Chambers during normal office hours.’

‘Is my client with the instructing solicitor?’ Charles asks Stanley.

‘Yes, sir, he is sitting between Mr Cohen and his clerk. Mr Smith’s conference is waiting in there too, sir.’

‘Well,’ continues Charles, turning to Corbett and quickly stepping backwards to allow Robert to scurry past with an armful of briefs, ‘I’d have thought it unlikely that your betrothed would be ravaged in front of five witnesses, even assuming my client was interested in her, which I doubt. Irresistible though you no doubt find her, Mr Petrovicj is charged with buggering another male. He’s not, if you’ll excuse the pun, into women.’ Charles smiles.

‘That makes no difference at all, as you well know.’

‘I’d have thought it would make quite a big difference, particularly to Mr Petrovicj. However, if you’ll let me go and start my con,’ says Charles, turning his back on Corbett, ‘I can remove the evil influence from the room.’ Charles opens the door to leave, and pauses. ‘By the way, Laurence, I know you don’t do crime, but I’d’ve thought even you knew that a man’s innocent until proven guilty. Mr Petrovicj isn’t a rapist, or a bugger for that matter, till the jury says he is.’

An hour and a half later, Charles unlocks the main doors of Chambers, and directs Cohen’s clerk and the client towards Temple tube station. He returns to his room where Cohen is still packing his briefcase.

‘Thank you, Charles,’ he says. ‘That was very helpful.’

Cohen and Partners have instructed Charles loyally since his pupillage, and Charles doesn’t mind Cohen using his first name. It’s an informality that most of his colleagues wouldn’t tolerate.

‘My pleasure.’

‘I don’t want to hold you up,’ says Cohen, ‘but can we have a quick word about something new?’

Charles looks at his watch. He still has over an hour’s journey to get home, where things are already difficult enough with Henrietta. Another late return is not what he and his wife need. He reluctantly resumes his seat.

‘Fire away.’

‘I was duty solicitor at Snow Hill police station last night. They had two men in custody for the Express Dairies robbery and murder. I didn’t get a good look, but I think one’s an old client, a chap called Derek Plumber. He’s got a string of convictions for robbery, always as a getaway driver.’

Charles’s ears prick up. ‘Did you sign them up?’ he asks. He’s too junior to have been instructed on a murder case, but if Ralph Cohen has managed to get the two men to sign legal aid forms, a very tasty brief might be coming his way.

‘No,’ replies Cohen. ‘They were about to be interviewed, and I would’ve sat in, but the officer in the case was called away and they were left in the cells. Eventually I went home but, as I was leaving, I overheard that they’re going to be produced at Bow Street tomorrow. I don’t suppose you happen to be free, do you?’

‘I’m not in court,’ replies Charles tentatively, ‘so I suppose it might be possible.’

Cohen shrugs. ‘It might be a complete waste of time,’ he says, ‘and I can’t promise you’ll be paid. But if you happened to be there and they’re not represented yet … we could chap arein.’ The solicitor smiles and winks gently.

Charles is embarrassed at not knowing the Yiddish phrase and at the same time slightly irritated at the assumption that he would. Ralph Cohen, a greying man in his early sixties, has been in practice since just after the Great War. His offices, two rooms above a laundry in the East End of London where having a Jewish surname is a positive advantage, are emblazoned across three windows with “Cohen and Partners”. Different rules apply at the Bar, the much more elitist, Establishment branch of the profession, where class and religious prejudice are endemic.

Ant-Semitism has been a daily nuisance throughout Charles’s life. He and his brother David frequently returned home with bloodied noses, missing stolen schoolbooks and once, in David’s case, without his shoes. As a result their father, Harry, took the boys to the gym where he and his brothers had boxed since they were young. There, Charles discovered a talent for violence. By fifteen he was London Schoolboy Champion; during the war he represented the RAF and, when he picked up his education again at Cambridge, he got a Blue.

From then on Charles’s size and skill meant that he was rarely physically challenged. In any event, the anti-Semitism at Cambridge was more subtle; his peers and tutors traded not in fisticuffs but in snubs and closed doors. Still, by the time he was called to the Bar in 1950, Charlie Horowitz had metamorphosed into “Charles Holborne” and no longer considered himself part of the Jewish community.

Charles never refers to his Jewish background and prefers not to be reminded by others. Nonetheless, despite the camouflage of the false surname, shortly after he finished pupillage, a drunk driving brief from Cohen and Partners landed on his desk — the first brief in his own name, not a “return” from another barrister. Its delivery prompted glances and overheard comments about a “Jewish mafia”, but that was unfair; had Charles been no good, he’d never have received another. On the other hand, if he was as good as the next man (or better) what was wrong, as old Mr Cohen used to say, with instructing a nice Jewish boy, even if he pretended he wasn’t? A man’s got to live, right?

‘Sorry?’ says Charles.

Chap arein; to take advantage,’ explains Cohen.

‘Oh, I see.’

Charles considers the offer. His desk is loaded with paperwork in arrears and he’s keen to have time out of court to clear some of it. He can’t really afford to waste half a day, unpaid, hanging around a Magistrate’s Court in the hope that two potential clients might be brought up without legal representation. On the other hand, it’s a murder, and Cohen has been loyal to him…

‘All right,’ he says. ‘I’ll go and see what I can do.’

‘Good man,’ says Cohen. ‘Take legal aid forms and sign them up if you get the opportunity.’

The two men shake hands and Charles shows the solicitor out.

 

Charles wrestles with the key in the lock of his front door, unable to get it to turn. His grip on the cloth bag containing his robes and the huge briefcase, both in his left hand, begins to slip and the set of papers clamped between his head and shoulder slides to the floor. He throws everything to the porch floor in exasperation and reaches again for the keyhole just as the door opens. A pretty blonde woman of about twenty stands on the threshold, her hair tied in a ponytail. She has some sheets over her arm, as if she’d been in the middle of making up a bed.

‘Yes?’ she asks. ‘Oh, it’s you, Charles,’ she says, opening the door to him.

Her pretence of not knowing Charles raises his ire one degree further. Fiona, the au pair, joined the household against Charles’s wishes three months previously. Her older sister had been at school with Henrietta, and Henrietta was prevailed upon to give her a temporary job while she looked around London for something more permanent. Within a fortnight of Fiona’s arrival, Henrietta had warmed to the arrangement and Charles had cooled to it. They had no children and Henrietta worked only two half-days in the village; they also had a cleaner; so why on earth, protested Charles, were they paying Fiona to sit around drinking their coffee all day? Now, however, she’s Henrietta’s best friend and her stay has become indefinite. Charles is sure that her insolence, to which Henrietta seems oblivious and which grows more offensive daily, is learned at her mistress’s shoulder.

Charles scoops up his papers and other burdens and brushes past her. ‘Where’s —’ he starts, but Fiona has closed the door and disappeared towards the rear of the house.

Charles drops his things onto the Italian tiled floor and climbs the stairs to Henrietta’s dressing room — another innovation he doesn’t like. When they moved in, to a house he thought too large and ostentatious for the two of them, it at least had the advantage of two spare bedrooms. Then Henrietta decided that she required a “dressing room”, which had metamorphosed into “her” bedroom, now with an en suite bathroom, where she sleeps half the week on account of her “bad heads” and the demands of his late-night working.

‘Oh, there you are. You’re late.’ Henrietta stands at her dressing table, trying to fasten a necklace. ‘Here, do this for me, will you?’ she says.

She’s in evening dress, her long chestnut hair piled in a complicated style on top of her head. The dress is cut very low at the back and Charles sees that she’s not wearing a bra. As she approaches Charles and hands him the necklace, he smells the perfume he bought her for Christmas with the proceeds of the indecency plea at Bedford Assizes. Almost everything they own, with the exception of gifts from her family, are the indirect proceeds of crime, and it amuses him, and irritates Henrietta, to identify their belongings by reference to the crime that paid for them. Thus, last year’s holiday was courtesy of the fraud at the Old Bailey; Henrietta’s dress, the one she is wearing, came from the armed robbery at Canterbury. Who said crime didn’t pay?

‘You smell good,’ he says.

‘Thank you.’

He finishes fastening the necklace and kisses the nape of her neck. She moves away without response.

‘You, on the other hand, look dreadful,’ she comments, looking at him through the mirror of her dressing table while inserting her earrings. ‘Late con?’

‘Yes. That buggery I told you about.’

Henrietta shakes her head. ‘I bet half the Temple covets your practice, Charles.’ She disappears into the bathroom.

‘Look,’ he replies, calling after her and flopping onto her bed. ‘I’ve had a hard day. Can we save the shabbiness of my practice for the next row? We’ve the whole weekend free, if it’s important to you.’

‘I still don’t understand why you won’t move completely into civil,’ she replies from the bathroom. ‘You’d earn more and keep up with the paperwork without working every night. Daddy says you’ve the mind for it.’

‘How nice of Daddy,’ says Charles, under his breath. Then, more audibly, ‘I’ve explained this hundreds of times. Criminal work is important. Everyone’s entitled to a proper defence, especially those at the bottom of the pile who can’t afford to pay for it. You forget: I was there once.’

He stands and follows her into the bathroom. She’s straightening her stocking seams before a full-length mirror.

‘Fine words,’ she says, ‘but I’m not convinced you really believe them. I think if you really examined your motives, you’d find you just love the grubby excitement of it.’

Charles slides his arms round her from behind and cups her breasts. “‘Grubby excitement”? But you used to like a bit of rough.’

She sighs. ‘Once, maybe; not now. Take your hands away please. You’ll mark the silk.’

‘“Had a hard day, dear? Have a drink and I’ll massage your shoulders. Dinner’ll only be a few minutes”,’ says Charles with heavy irony, but he removes his hands as requested.

‘Fuck off, Charles,’ she says, walking past him out of the bathroom and beginning to search through her wardrobe. The words somehow carry added venom when spoken so beautifully, and by such a beautiful woman. Charles trails after her and sits on the bed again, watching her bare back and slim hips, hating her and wanting her. She finds what she’s looking for: a fur coat, a gift from her father for her last birthday.

‘Etta,’ he says more softly, using what had once been his pet name for her. ‘Please can we stop fighting long enough for you to tell me where we’re supposed to be going?’

She turns to him, her face a picture of scorn. ‘We aren’t going anywhere. I’m going to Peter Ripley’s do with Daddy. It’s been in the diary for weeks.’

‘What?’

‘Charles, for God’s sake, don’t pretend you didn’t know about it. I asked you over a month ago if you wanted to come, and you made it plain in your usual charming way that you wouldn’t — and I quote — “voluntarily spend an evening with that bunch of pompous farts”. Close quote. So I made an excuse to Daddy as usual and agreed to go with him. Mummy’s away till next week. Ring any bells?’

Charles nods. He doesn’t remember the exact words he used to decline the invitation, but he’d have to plead guilty to the gist. This particular “do” is the dinner to mark the end of Mr Justice Ripley’s last tour on the Western Circuit before retirement. All the judges and barristers practising on the circuit are invited and, of course, Charles’s father-in-law, the erstwhile head of his Chambers and now also a judge on the same circuit, will be present. In the absence of Martha, Henrietta’s mother, who is visiting her sick sister in Derbyshire, Charles and Henrietta rather unexpectedly received an invitation.

Charles often attempts to explain to Henrietta why he hates these dinners. It’s not that he doesn’t know which fork to use or how to address a waiter. It’s just that the Judges, the Benchers, their wives, the High Sheriff and so on all share a common background; they went to the same schools and the same universities; they play cricket in the same teams, attend the same balls, know the same people. Charles can “busk it”, be convivial, pretend to show interest in what, or who, they are talking about, but it’s an act. The sons of Jewish furriers from Minsk by way of Mile End just don’t mix well with the sons and grandsons of the British Empire. Charles may have cast off his Jewishness while at university but he knows he’ll never be one of them. And when he is persuaded to attend, he often returns home from the event hating everyone there and, for some reason he can’t explain, himself as well.

Henrietta has read his mind. ‘Tell me something, Charles: what made you choose a profession where you’d feel such an outsider? And why, if you wanted to do criminal work, did you accept Daddy’s invitation to join a mainly civil set of chambers? You talk about “tribes”, which you know I think is complete rubbish, but then you deliberately join those which are guaranteed to make you uncomfortable. And then you complain!’

‘You don’t understand. If you’d grown up —’

‘Oh, for heaven’s sake!’ she interrupts. ‘If you mention the Jewish thing once more, I’ll puke. Your father may have grown up in Bow or wherever it was, but it’s hardly the Warsaw ghetto. And not everybody’s an anti-Semite. I’m not Jewish, remember, and I married you. The only person who’s conscious of your religion is you.’

‘You can’t possibly be serious. Do you suppose for one minute I’d have got into Chambers had you not committed the dreadful faux pas of marrying me? Half the members of Chambers can’t stand me.’

‘I doubt that, but if it’s true, it’s nothing to do with your religion. Every time you upset someone, it’s never your fault; it’s theirs because they’re anti-Semitic. It’s the perfect self-defence mechanism.’

Charles stands wearily, pulling off his tie. ‘Can we please leave this one for now, Henrietta? I’ve had a particularly difficult day.’

‘Yes, we can leave it for now, Charles, because I’m off. I believe Fiona has made something for you to eat but, if not, I suggest you walk to the pub in the village.’

She sweeps past him, checks, and returns to plant a kiss on his cheek. She’s about to move off again, but Charles grabs her forearms. He looks hard at her, shaking his head slightly, a puzzled and pained expression on his face. Henrietta looks reluctantly up into his eyes and holds his gaze for a second. Then the armour of her anger cracks; she bites her lip and looks away, no longer resisting his hold on her.

‘I don’t know, Charlie,’ she says softly, in answer to his unspoken question. ‘I wish I did.’ He pulls her gently towards him, wanting to put his arms round her, but she pushes him away and runs from the room. Charles listens to the rustle of her dress and the sound of her feet flying down the stairs, and then the slam of the front door. He doesn’t hear her crying as she drives away.

 

****

Intrigued? Keep reading The Brief here!

Author Q&A with Gillian Jackson

Hi Gillian! Welcome to the Sapere Books blog!

The first two books you have published with us have similar themes of children going missing and families struggling to find them. What initially drew you to those sorts of stories?

I set out to write a compelling story (and what is more compelling than the abduction of a child?) that could be seen from several different perspectives. Those of us who are parents can imagine the horror of a missing child, and I was able to draw on my experience of a time when my own two-year-old daughter went missing from our garden. She was only out of my sight for a few moments and fortunately was found within forty minutes, but the gamut of emotions my husband and I experienced was terrifying. The fear, guilt and despair almost crippled us. I was able to project some of these emotions onto the parents in Abduction and Snatched, who had to wait more than an hour to find out what had happened to their missing children.

We will soon be publishing a third thriller by you – THE ACCIDENT. Can you give us a little teaser of what it’s about?

This is a book I consider to be my ‘ripples in a pond’ novel. It begins, as the title suggests, with an accident and follows the consequences for those involved. As the story unfolds, jealousy comes into play with a shocking outcome; a life changing injury is faced, and the very best possible outcome is derived from the very worst scenario. If that isn’t enough, there’s a smattering of romance too!

Have you always wanted to be a writer? What first got you into writing?

It wasn’t until my early fifties that I began writing seriously, although I’ve dabbled in children’s stories and short stories for most of my adult life. Initially, writing was for me a therapeutic experience, as I kept a journal while recovering from a rather difficult period in my life. The first book I ever wrote was a small self-help book, my only foray into nonfiction so far.

What part of the writing process do you find the most challenging?

Probably the ending, as I sometimes get too bogged down in tying up all the loose ends until I’m satisfied that the story is properly wrapped up. Perhaps this is because when I read a book, I find an incomplete ending so frustrating!

Where and how do you write? Do you have set hours or do you write when you feel motivated? And do you have a favourite writing spot?

Being easily distracted, I’m fortunate to have a designated study to lock myself away to write. I try to write most days but often find my mind most active late at night when all these fictional characters keep me awake with their conversations, and I need to write, or at least make notes. As a work in progress develops, the time I spend on it increases as my enthusiasm grows.

Do you like to read the same types of books you write? Or something completely different? Can you tell us some of your favourite books?

I read quite widely, from thrillers to sagas. I love all of Kate Morton’s books as well as Victoria Hislop’s, particularly The Island. Some of my all-time favourite books are Jane Austen’s novels and the works of the Brontë sisters; I love the sense of atmosphere that leaps off every page, and Austen’s wit is amazing and so timeless!

What three tips would you give to aspiring writers?

You can’t do enough editing and polishing. The temptation when you write those satisfying words ‘the end’ is to get your book out into the world. Don’t – leave it for a couple of weeks and go back to read it again with fresh eyes; you’ll be surprised. Also, write what you know, and enjoy the journey.

Tell us something surprising about yourself!

I used to walk my rather large pet goat, Hobnob, around the streets on a lead. We were discovered and interviewed for BBC TV, but I had to do most of the talking.

 

Gillian Jackson is the author of psychological and domestic thrillers.

Click here to order ABDUCTION.

Click here to order SNATCHED.