Authors: J. M. Gregson
Beaumont said nothing for a full two minutes, so that she hoped he had seen there was nothing in this for him; hopefully, he was thinking, as she was, about being mildly embarrassed when they met at work the next day.
Then, abruptly, he swung the big car into the deserted parking space beside the old road. âIt's time we had a little talk,' he said.
âJust drive me into Ross as you promised to do, please,' Sarah said primly.
The speed of his movement caught her by surprise. He flung himself suddenly across her. His hand clutched her shoulder and he kissed her clumsily, holding her lips against his until she managed to twist her mouth away from him. His breath was hot and damp in her ear. âYou must be able to see what you do to a man, you little minx,' he muttered. âParading yourself up and down at the vineyard, twitching your hips as though you don't know what you're doing.'
She felt as though she had got herself involved in a bad play. He surely could not be saying these things. She felt the panic of claustrophobia which she had known when she was a child, pinned to the floor by other children. Her seat belt was still fastened, and there was no way she could release it with this great bear of a man leaning on her like this. She tried to bring her knee up between his legs, to slam it into his balls the way the self-defence manuals taught you to resist, but his leg was splayed across her, pinning her own thighs to the seat. âLet me go! Get your fucking hands off me!' she shouted into his face.
She did not know where the word had come from: it was one she hadn't used in years. Her voice, harsh and grating with panic, seemed to have come from someone else. The smell of his aftershave crammed itself into her nose and her mouth, making her want to retch. Past the edge of his head, she could see a low wall, a field, bright green beneath the still steady sun and dotted with black and white cows, an innocent world which seemed to exist but be far beyond her reach.
His hand was on her knee now, trying to lift her skirt, the thick fingers sliding higher even as she tried to prise them off. âYou're not as innocent and wide-eyed as you pretend you are, young Sarah. You're a mature woman, like you said. You know what life's about and you're up for it really, however much you try to come the nun.'
Sarah managed at last to get her left arm free from under him, to bring it up and get a handful of the hair at the back of his head. She twisted her fingers to secure her grip, then tugged as hard as she could, bringing a scream and a clutch of obscenities from the mouth that was now six inches above her face and full of pain as well as lust. She was sure afterwards that it was the sight of that pain which gave her strength. She twisted abruptly sideways, brought the knee which still had his hand upon it up between his legs, bringing a new gasp of pain from him as he yelled, âYou bitch! You crazy bitch!'
She had the door of the car open as he clutched himself, but she was not quick enough with the unfamiliar catch on the safety belt. She was still fumbling with it when he clutched her arm with both of his hands, shouting, âStay where you are! If you don't want it, don't have it, you bitch! I'll drop you off at the garage in Ross as promised. You can keep your hand on your precious halfpenny!'
He reached across her, pulled shut the door she had managed to open. Sarah was still fumbling with the wretched safety-belt clasp. He restarted the engine, revving it furiously in his confusion, then moved out of the lay-by and back on to the road. They had ridden a good mile before his breathing steadied and he spoke. âYou can't blame me for trying. You're an attractive woman, Sarah.'
âI can blame you for forcing yourself upon me, when I quite plainly didn't want it.'
âSometimes women like to play hard to get. Sometimes a little resistance is just part of the game.'
âI don't believe that. I certainly don't accept that I didn't make my feelings very plain to you.'
He didn't come back with any reply to that. Perhaps he knew that she was right. They were off the old road, running into the outskirts of Ross now, and there was other traffic around them. She reached for her bag, fumbled for her comb. He reached up and pulled down the sun visor in front of her, said with an attempt at his normal voice, âThere's a mirror on the back of that.'
She ran the comb through her hair, resisted the temptation to reach for her lipstick and restore her make-up. Somehow that would have been condoning his action, accepting it as no more than a harmless romantic sally rather than the ugly attack it had been.
As if Martin Beaumont sensed what was in her mind, he said, âIt was just a pass at you that failed, that's all, Sarah. You must have dealt with a lot of those in your time. Don't make it more than it was.'
He was telling her not to make the mistake of taking this further, that this would be his story and that she had no witnesses to help her to establish that it had been anything more than that. Sarah Vaughan wanted to tell him that it had been something much bigger and much uglier than a simple pass. Passes were something callow young men did when they were seeking a kiss; not attacks mounted by an ageing roué who was trying to assert the power of company ownership. All this flashed through her mind, though she was not able to put it into words until much later.
They were running into the forecourt of the garage where her car awaited her now, so she said nothing at all. She did not even look at him again, but slid quickly from the Jaguar's leather and moved into the office area of the garage without a backward glance.
A
listair Morton hadn't given up the idea of murder. Indeed, every time that Martin Beaumont denied him the share in the business he had promised, it seemed a more attractive option. It was true that in the cold light of day murder didn't seem as easy a proposition as it did when you dreamed of it alone in your armchair in the hour after midnight, but he was still convinced that if you planned it properly the crime was eminently possible.
Sometimes you needed to fan the flames of your hatred, to convince yourself anew of how badly the man was treating you. At the end of April, two months after he had first entertained the delicious notion of ridding the world of Martin Beaumont, Alistair elected to set his grievances before the boss again. You couldn't be fairer than that, surely? Giving the man a final chance to redeem himself before you proceeded with your plans against him was more than fair.
Had Alistair not been a secretive sort of man, he might have shared his thoughts with someone else. But Morton had a wife who lived her own life and no children. There was no one to tell him that his thinking might be a little unbalanced.
He presented himself at precisely ten o'clock for the meeting he had arranged with the owner of Abbey Vineyards. Exactly on time as usual, as Beaumont observed with a slightly mocking smile. Alistair accepted the boss's offer to sit in the chair in front of the big desk. He didn't see how he could do anything else, though he really wanted to stand toe to toe and challenge the man, not go through the rituals of a polite exchange.
âWhat can I do for you, Alistair?' Beaumont had that formal smile which Morton now saw as very false.
âYou can honour your promises!' said Alistair. He had wanted it to be the harshest of challenges, cutting through the fripperies of polite exchanges. Somehow it sounded rather feeble in this large, quiet room, with its big framed photograph of the Malvern Hills, which always seemed to remind him of man's impermanence in this ancient landscape.
âAnd what would you mean by that?' Beaumont hadn't lost his surface affability; the meaningless smile remained glued to his face. But he was on his guard now, Alistair had no doubt about that. He looked beyond Morton, out through the big window to where Sarah Vaughan had just driven her Honda into the car park. Beaumont was glad to note her arrival; he had feared when she was not here at nine o'clock as usual that she might be planning some retribution for yesterday's little incident.
Alistair glanced at the photograph of Beaumont standing alone beside their first tractor, hoping that the man in the big, round-backed leather chair would follow his look and his thoughts. âI worked for practically nothing for you in the early days.'
Beaumont raised his eyebrows. This was familiar ground to him, but he had prepared his tactics. He would pretend that Morton's renewed accusations were a disappointment to him, a revival of an argument he thought he'd already settled. âWe all worked hard to get things off the ground. We can all look back to the sacrifices we had to make to get the show on the road. And equally, we can all be proud of the progress we have made since those early days.' They were the opening words of a press handout he had given to one of the glossy magazines three months ago, but he doubted whether this man would have read that article.
Morton wished the big man would just shut up and let him state his case. He followed the movement of Beaumont's lips, but as the man went on with his bluster he heard less and less of what he said. Eventually he interrupted him. âI worked for almost nothing for you for five years at the beginning. Found and exploited every loophole which a new business could exploit, got you allowances you'd never have dreamed of for yourself. Even cut one or two corners for you, to make sure that every penny could be ploughed back into development.'
Beaumont grinned, happy to show how little he was affected by the man's earnestness. âCareful now, Alistair. We wouldn't want you to go admitting to any little peccadilloes that might get you struck off, would we? Do they unfrock accountants, or is that just randy vicars?'
Alistair found his voice rising to a shout in the face of this derision. âJust shut up, will you, and listen to what I'm saying. I worked for peanuts for at least the first five years when we started this. That was on the clear understanding that I would eventually become a partner and a director of the enterprise.'
âNot my recollection, I'm afraid. I seem to remember we've had this discussion before. I was hoping we'd agreed to differ and get on with our different tasks. Not good for any business to be running a divided ship, is it? Or am I mixing my metaphors there?' Beaumont frowned and shook his head, as if a proper literary style was at that moment pre-eminent among his objectives.
âYou know as well as I do what was agreed. I was to become a partner in the business as soon as it proved itself a going concern.'
âLet other people take all the risks until the business was a guaranteed success, you mean? That hardly seems a likely arrangement for a businessman like me to make, does it?'
There was an awful sort of logic about that. Alistair could see him arguing that line with a third party and sounding very convincing. He said doggedly, âYou know and I know what was agreed.'
Martin Beaumont raised the bushy eyebrows on his wide face as high as they would go, making him look to Morton like a caricature of outraged innocence. âIt seems we remember things rather differently, Alistair, which is a great pity. Have you anything in writing to support this strange recollection of our relationship during the early years of the company?'
âYou know damned well I haven't!' Alistair sought hopelessly for some external evidence to endorse him. âMy wife remembers it. I gave more and more of my time to your affairs, as the vineyard got off the ground. Worked day and night, sometimes. The other work I scraped together as a freelancer scarcely provided a living wage. We depended on her work as a secretary to survive.'
That oily, ridiculous smile was back on Beaumont's hated features. âScarcely the most objective of witnesses, a wife. I'm sure that as an experienced financial man you'd readily agree with that, Alistair.'
Morton leaned forward, planting his fingers desperately on the edge of the big desk in front of him. âWe didn't think we needed anything in writing, in those early, enthusiastic days. Leastways, you didn't. And I was foolish enough to let you convince me that we didn't.'
Beaumont looked at the fingers clasping the other side of his desk for a moment, as if studying with interest the movements of some small mammal. Then he said, âIt doesn't really sound like the conduct of a man trained in finance, does it, Alistair? A trained accountant, whose first watchword must surely be prudence? I can't think that anyone like that would have been party to some wildcat scheme which involved him giving his valuable time and labour for nothing, in exchange for some vague promise of jam in the future. I ask you, does it sound likely behaviour for an accountant, even to you? Do you think you've made out the sort of case which would convince any kind of mediator we might choose to bring in to resolve the issue? I don't think so, and neither will you if you give the matter some sober reflection.'
âIt's over twenty years ago. I was a young man then, and you had enthusiasm and the gift of the gab. You sold me the notion of developing our own firm, of being our own bosses. You had a certain amount of capital to set up the company, I had the necessary financial skills to set it on the right lines and guide it through the early years. You know and I know what we agreed. I'm simply giving you the chance to honour that agreement, even at this belated stage.'
âI'm afraid we must agree to differ on this one, Alistair. I think you would agree that you are handsomely paid for your present services to the company. I suppose we might stretch to another thousand or so, if it would resolve your difficulties.'
âI'm not arguing about my present remuneration. I'm telling you that I shouldn't be on a salary at all. I should be taking my part in formulating the policies of the company and receiving my share of the profits.'
âCloud cuckoo land, I'm afraid, Alistair. Somewhere along the line â somewhere well in the past now â you've picked up the idea that I made silly promises to you about the future of my company. The sooner you dispense with that idea, the better for you as well as for everyone else concerned. I'm happy with the way you advise on the present financial status and problems of the company, and am content to pay you well for that. I should hate it if I had to look for a new head of finance. If you persist with these unreal ideas, I may be left with no alternative but to do that.' He made an elaborate ploy of looking at his watch. âAnd now, unless you have any more relevant ideas for me to consider, I think we should both get on with our working days.'