However, I was not to be left in total ignorance of the truth of “In the Estate of Colonel Ollard, deceased.” After we had taken off our robes, Guthrie Featherstone did me the honour of inviting me to crack a bottle of claret at the Sheridan Club, and, as he had given me my first (and my last) Chancery will, I did him the honour of accepting. As we sat in a quiet room, under the portraits of old actors and even older judges, Featherstone said, “No reason why you shouldn’t know, Rumpole. Your client had been Percy’s mistress for years.”
“Miss Beasley, Matey, the old dragon of the nursing home, his
“Girlfriend.” Featherstone made it sound even more inappropriate.
“It seems odd, somehow, calling a stout, elderly woman a ‘girlfriend.’ Are you trying to tell me, Guthrie, intimacy actually took place?”
“Regularly, apparently. On a Wednesday. Matron’s afternoon off. But when Colonel Roderick Ollard went into Sunnyside she dived into bed with
I was silent. I drank claret. I began to wonder where the planchette came in.
“But why couldn’t your client have
“His wife, Rumpole! His wife Marcia! She’s a battle-axe and she was kept completely in the dark about Matey. It seems there would have been hell to pay if she’d found out. So we had to settle.”
“Well, well, Featherstone. Matron, the
What did I believe? That the colonel spoke from the grave? Or that Matron invented all the seances to tell us a truth which would have caused her deep embarrassment to communicate in any other way? As it was, she had told me nothing.
All I knew was that I didn’t fancy the idea of the “other side.” I knew I shouldn’t care for long chats with Colonel Ollard and the Emperor Napoleon even if Joseph Stalin were to be of the party. Dying, as far as I was concerned, had been postponed indefinitely.
Masquerade
by John M. O’Toole
Pausing in the alley, the man in the brand-new custom-tailored suit set his attaché case down. Then he rummaged through a trash can, found a curled slice of pizza and hungrily devoured it.
He had lost all his money in a string of bad investments. After that his wife had left him. His credit cards had been canceled. The bank had foreclosed on his mortgage, and thirty-six hours ago a pair of sheriff s deputies had forcibly removed him from his luxury condo. He’d been lucky to escape with a few personal items — handkerchiefs, underwear, a toothbrush, and soap — hastily packed inside his attaché case.
He sat himself down on the alley’s crumbling pavement, leaned his back against the white stucco wall of a motel. He closed his eyes and longed for oblivion. The shadows in the alley soon merged with darkness, and Louis Walsh, exhausted, drifted quickly into sleep.
He awoke the next morning with his head on a pillow. He was lying on a double bed in a room with a suspended ceiling and flocked yellow wallpaper. A sharp but painless pressure framed his face. He turned his head and saw an air conditioner in a wall beneath a picture window. The air conditioner was going full blast, whooshing and humming, but for some odd reason his face couldn’t feel it.
Louis sat up slowly, swung his legs off the bed. He was still fully dressed, but not in his new suit. He was wearing bluejeans now, and a T-shirt with a big red target on the front. The clothes fit him snugly. He felt a bit dizzy and his head hurt like hell. He waited for the dizziness to pass, then rose gradually from the bed, using the headboard for support.