Martin Edwards - I Remember You
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- Название:I Remember You
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- Издательство:Andrews UK
- Жанр:
- Год:1993
- ISBN:9781781662793
- Рейтинг книги:3 / 5. Голосов: 1
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I Remember You: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация
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They were in Jim’s room, confronting a mountain of files and must-do memo notes. Harry flipped open his partner’s diary.
‘You can handle both the completions this morning? Fine. And what’s this appointment in the afternoon regarding a contract for Crow’s Nest House?’
‘That will be Mrs. Graham-Brown. A big sale, no purchase. Everything has to happen yesterday — you know the sort of thing.
Harry’s skin prickled. An opportunity to see the lovely Rosemary again was a chance too good to miss.
‘As a matter of fact,’ he lied, ‘I know a little about the file. Leave it to me. I’ll see her.’
Sylvia could not conceal her amazement. Conveyancing and Harry Devlin had as much in common as karaoke and Kiri te Kanawa.
‘Are you sure?’
‘Do me good to brush up on the non-contentious work,’ he said, straight-faced. He located the file and returned to his room feeling pleased with himself, although he realised he was behaving absurdly. The woman was married to a rich man and would soon be leaving the country — the situation would challenge even Finbar Rogan’s seductive wiles. Harry knew that he should not even fantasise about Rosemary. No good could come of it. And yet…
The morning flew by. At lunchtime he went out to buy a sandwich and saw the builders gathered together in a huddle, talking in low Irish voices. Their expressions were sullen and an atmosphere of suspicion hung over the courtyard. He hurried past, wondering when the construction work would be finished. He remembered that the Anglican Cathedral had taken most of the twentieth century to complete; perhaps the same firm had been hired for the job in Fenwick Court.
As he got back to his desk, the phone was ringing.
‘Harry, would you mind if I speak to Finbar, please?’ Melissa Keating said.
‘He’s not here,’ Harry replied, puzzled.
‘Really? He didn’t keep his appointment to discuss the insurance compensation after the fire?’
‘What appointment?’
Too late to keep the surprise out of his voice, Harry realised he must be letting his client down. Finbar had obviously been using him as an alibi. ‘Wait a minute,’ he added hastily, feeling shame at his half-hearted entry into a masculine conspiracy to mislead, ‘perhaps he did mention…’
‘Forget it,’ said Melissa. Her voice was muffled; he sensed she was close to tears. ‘I understand perfectly. And by the way, I thought you sounded good on Pop In this morning, Very plausible. Just like Finbar, in fact. Goodbye.
She hung up and left Harry looking angrily at the receiver. He cursed Finbar. What was the bugger up to now? He resented being dragged into the deception of Melissa. But he wasn’t prepared to take it up with Finbar — he had other things to think about. He turned to the Graham-Brown file.
Conveyancing was foreign to Harry. By temperament, as well as training, he was a litigator; someone who liked to work with people rather than documents of title, preferring the quirks and inconsistencies of human beings to those of the law of real property. Yet Jim’s files were organised with a neatness and method unexpected in a big, ungainly man and it did not take him long to pull together the strands of the transaction. Everything was happening at speed and contracts were almost due to be exchanged. Even he could manage that.
Suzanne buzzed him. ‘Mrs. Graham-Brown to see you.’
Five minutes early. Harry was accustomed to clients who turned up late or not at all, but he reminded himself that someone selling a house confronts the legal process from a very different standpoint to that of a person facing financial ruin, divorce or jail. He pushed the wad of papers to one side. No need to lose sleep over this particular matter. It was always easier to sell than to buy: caveat emptor and all that. Besides, Jim had already done the hard work, juggling non-committal answers to otiose preliminary enquiries and preparing the contract. Harry did not have much left to do except renew his acquaintance with the client.
His heart beating faster, he went to reception, where Suzanne was updating her bulletin on Jim’s condition with more reliance on morbid imagination than solid fact. Faint scepticism turned up the corners of Rosemary Graham-Brown’s mouth; he liked her all the more for that.
‘I’m glad to meet you again,’ he said, and shook her hand. It was small and warm and he took ten seconds too long to release it. Rosemary gave a small pleased giggle; he could feel Suzanne’s eyes boring into the back of his head as he led the way through into the corridor.
‘I do appreciate your taking the time to see me,’ she said. ‘You must be rushed off your feet. I’m so sorry to hear about Mr. Crusoe. Your receptionist was telling me the whole ghastly story of the accident — it sounds horrific.’
Trust Suzanne to turn a pile-up into a holocaust. The truth unvarnished was bad enough.
‘He’ll live,’ said Harry. Then he remembered Heather Crusoe’s anxiety and regretted the lightness of his tone.
‘I’m hardly an expert on property law,’ he admitted, ‘but I didn’t want to hold up your transaction. I gather there’s some urgency.’
‘Yes, very much so. That’s why I’ve brought the contract myself. We signed it last night and I don’t want to trust to the post.’
‘This is my room. Let me clear some papers off that chair. I only hope you don’t suffer from claustrophobia.’
She wriggled between a filing cabinet and a mound of documents as tall as a child, her figure hugged by a white trouser suit which must have cost more than Harry’s entire wardrobe.
‘No problem,’ she said. ‘I’m quite good at getting out of tight corners.’
Her lips parted in a teasing smile. He grinned, watching her settle into the chair and enjoying the sight. Perhaps office-bound conveyancing had its compensations after all.
‘Sorry to be a nuisance in the circumstances,’ she said, ‘but as you’ll have gathered, things are moving quickly and I — that is, my husband and I — would hate to lose the momentum.’
‘So I see from the file. The two of you are emigrating, then?’
She nodded, the light of excitement he had noticed on their first meeting shining from her eyes.
‘To the south of Spain, that’s right.’
‘Sounds wonderful.’
She leaned forward, hands gripping the edge of his desk, lowering her voice as if about to confide a long-cherished secret.
‘I’ve always longed to live in the sun. Shake the dust of Liverpool off my feet, taste a bit of the good life.’
‘And your husband? What does he do?’
‘Oh, he’s in … er … financial services. But between you and me, I think that’s a fancy name for debt collection. His company’s called Merseycredit.’ A confessional smile. ‘To tell you the truth, all his jargon’s double Dutch to me. I don’t take much notice of it.’
‘And you’ve not found anywhere to buy yet?’
‘No. But his company has organised rented accommodation for us.’
‘I gather they are paying our bill.’
‘Yes, so you don’t need to stint. They can afford it. Deduct your fee from the proceeds before you send it on — as long as that won’t delay matters.’
I like this woman more and more , Harry thought to himself.
‘No problem. I understand you already have a bank account over there: Puerto Banus, is that right? I know the name. One of the resorts, isn’t it? A millionaires’ playground or something?’
She essayed a self-deprecating shrug of the shoulders. ‘We’re hardly in that league, Stuart and me.’
But not on the breadline either, Harry reflected. A detached house in the best part of Formby would sell for five times the price of a flat in Empire Dock.
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