âI suppose so.' As I say, I wasn't in a gladiatorial mood that morning. âAlthough quite honestly I couldn't fancy him myself.'
âDo try to be serious, Rumpole. I don't think you'd catch Tom Gurnley not being serious.'
âNo, I don't think you would.' I had to agree with her at last.
Â
Â
âOh, what can ail thee, Erskine-Brown,' I asked Claude, not for the first time, âalone and palely loitering?'
The look he gave me was decidedly stricken. He had the appearance of a man who's just prosecuted a plea of guilty and lost the case.
âWould you like to come to the first night of the
Ring
cycle with me, Rumpole? It's only five hours with intervals.'
âWould that be Wagner?'
âOf course.'
âI'd do a lot for you, Claude. I'd buy you a drink' (we had both resorted, after the day's work done, to Pommeroy's Wine Bar). 'I see you're drinking the wine of the country. I'll take your children to the panto. I'd even get bail for you if you're thinking of committing a criminal offence. But I have to draw the line at five hours of Wagner.â
âI knew that when I asked. I knew you wouldn't come with me. Not even for the sake of our old friendship.'
âNot even for the sake of our old friendship,' I agreed. âNot even for that.' And then I looked at the poor fish with real concern. His condition seemed unsatisfactory, verging on the dangerous. Even the Château Fleet Street wasn't having its usual calming effect. âDo tell me, what are you suffering from, Claude?'
âA trial separation.'
âYou mean an order for separate trials?' I was at a loss.
âIt's not a case in Court, you idiot! It's life. Real life! Phillida and I are having a trial separation.'
âShe's left you?' It was surprising but not incomprehensible. Life with Claude might become something like a constantly repeated
Ring
cycle. No doubt the Portia of our Chambers, now elevated to a High Court Judgeship, would welcome an interval.
âWhat've you done, Claude?â I looked at the chap, recognizing human frailty, and, in particular, the frailty of Erskine-Brown. 'Was it the au pair or Hoskins' new pupil?â I doubted if Claude would have had the enterprise to stray further afield.
âIt's not me, Rumpole.' Claude seemed stung enough to put a certain amount of energy in his denial. âI've been a perfect husband for... oh well, for a considerable length of time. It's Philly. She's taken it into her head we should live apart, at least for a trial period.'
âSo you've got to look after the twins, cook them burgers, et cetera?'
âOh no, Philly's at home. She's made me move out.' Well of course, a High Court Judge, like my own Hilda, I thought, is someone who has to be obeyed.
âShe's made me stay at the Sheridan Club.' Claude's voice rose in misery.
My heart went out to him. I searched for consolation. âWell at least they have girls in there now.'
âI'm not interested in girls, Rumpole,' Claude lied. âAnyway they're all Heads of Colleges and Governors of the BBC, those girls at the Sheridan. They're as old as my aunts and I can't keep up with their conversation. Quite honestly, I just miss Philly terribly. What can I do, Rumpole?'
âWait and see, old chap. Time cures everything. She'll be back. I'm sure she's getting lonely.'
âShe's not, Rumpole! Trevor Lowe from number five Equity Court went to a birthday dinner at the Ivy and there she was, at a table in the middle surrounded by what he called her 'groupiesâ. They were all laughing and having a thoroughly good time.'
âInside her,' I tried to cheer him up, âperhaps the heart was breaking.'
âI don't think so, Rumpole. I hardly think so. Oh, what can I do?' If ever I heard a cry for help, Claude bleated one now, causing assorted barristers in Pommeroy's to turn and stare at him as though he were a nasty accident.
âClaude,' I said, âafter a lifetime's knocking around some frequently unsympathetic Courts I've learnt a little of the art of persuasion. Would you like me to have a word with her?'
He looked at me then, his eyes bright with gratitude. âOh, Rumpole,' he blurted, âwould you?'
Â
Â
âRumpole! This is a surprise. I hope you haven't come to ask me to give some axe murderer community service.'
âI have come,' I said, ignoring the slur on my reputation, âto ask you for an even greater act of clemency.'
My clerk, Henry, had had words with Mrs Justice Erskine-Brown's clerk on the telephone. This led me into a discreet entrance of the Great Château de Justice, the Victorian Gothic Law Courts in the Strand, where I was escorted down passages and up stairs to Phillida's room. âThe Judge is just finishing in Court,' I was told. âShe'll be here directly.' But it was nearly half an hour before she appeared, liberated as a young girl released from school, pulled off her wig, flung it on the desk, struggled out of her black, civil case gown and, crossing to the mirror, started to assess her face critically. My line about an act of clemency was carefully ignored.
âI don't look too bad, do I? For someone in sight of fifty.'
She looked, I thought, almost better than when she had appeared, all those years ago, a nervous pupil about to brighten up Equity Court.
âYou look,' I said, âof course, the most desirable member of the judiciary. Perhaps that's why he's missing you so much.'
âOh yes?' She flicked at her hair with a finger, and sounded unconvinced.
âI am here,' I told her, âon behalf of Claude Erskine-Brown QC. A man of good character with no previous convictions.'
âNo convictions?' Phillida gave her reflection a small, mocking smile. âIt wasn't for want of trying.'
âI understand that, in recent years anyway, his conduct has been beyond reproach.'
âPerhaps that's what's wrong with him.' Her voice seemed to indicate that, for the present at least, clemency was off the menu. âThere's not much fun to be had from someone who is beyond reproach.' From this I gathered that, faithful or unfaithful, Claude was on a loser.
âHe's missing you terribly. The chap is merely a shadow of his former self.'
âHe could do with losing weight.' The Judge was merciless. âAnyway, I've met someone.'
What did that mean? I'd met a lot of people, from safe-blowers to Lords of Appeal in Ordinary. So, in his quiet way, had Claude. âI suppose you mean you've met someone special.â
âYou wouldn't approve of him, Rumpole.'
âWouldn't I?'
âYou wouldn't approve of his politics.'
She moved away from the mirror and at last, in a more friendly mood now we had got on to discussing her special person, poured me a glass of sherry from the judicial decanter.
âSome young white wig who belongs to the Workers Revolutionary Party?'
âHardly! This one's more than a little to the right of Genghis Khan. Capital punishment, corporal punishment, Britain's for the British â you name it, he's all for it.'
âSounds ghastly to me.'
âIt isn't really. Underneath all that he's just a simple, rather innocent boy at heart. Anyway,' she sat in one of her leathery, masculine armchairs and nursed her sherry, âyou know there's something rather exciting about someone you disagree with. Claude and I never really argued with each other. I fell in love with my present chap during a quarrel about whether or not President George W. Bush is a total dickhead.'
Would I ever have dreamt, when I did my first case before some terrifying old monster at London Sessions, that I would ever sit discussing the erotic effect of an argument about the American President on a High Court Judge?
âDoes your present chap enjoy the opera?' I wondered.
âNot in the least. He thought
Rheingold
was some sort of South African currency.'
âDo I know him? He's not a member of the Criminal Bar?'
âNot at all.'
âOr of the Commercial? Tax? Family Division?' I asked, although I thought the last was improbable.
âNone of that. He's a Member of Parliament.'
âAnyone I've heard of?'
âProbably. He's called Tom Gurnley.' And then her phone rang. Before I could express my amazement she was smiling, one hand on her hip, chirping happily into the instrument. âWonderful, darling. The Ivy at eight? No worries. I've got a babysitter. Yes... Love you too!'
She put a hand over the mouthpiece and, in a penetrating whisper, said, âGood to see you, Rumpole. So glad you're going out with Claude. Try and keep him out of trouble, won't you?' and then she turned away from me, back to the voice of her improbable lover. âSee you there then, our usual table.' And she blew a kiss at the mouthpiece.
Â
Â
âIt's absolutely disgusting!'
Hilda, with an outburst of disapproval so violent that she actually hurled her
Daily
Beacon, usually a much-cherished possession, to the ground, said, âHe's let us down terribly.'
âNothing I've done then, Hilda?'
âHe was a man who seemed to have convictions, Rumpole!'
âWell, most of my clients have got them.'
âDo be serious! That was the point about him. He genuinely believed in good and evil. You don't believe in things like that, do you, Rumpole?'
âGood and evil? Of course I do. I just don't believe they often get taken straight. Sometimes they come mixed. Like a sort of cocktail.'
âCocktail? Do you think of nothing but alcohol, Rumpole? Well, this doesn't come mixed at all. This is pure evil. And to think how we all respected him!'
At which she scooped her newspaper off the floor and gave me a view of the front page, which was decorated with the face of Mrs Justice Erskine-Brown's favourite politician. âANTI-DRUG MP CHARGED WITH POSSESSION' screamed the headline, followed, in only slightly smaller type, by ' “Gurnley lights up a spliff ”, by our reporter on the spot, Angela Illsley.â
I hoped my face, as I read the story, expressed serious concern at the fact that Hilda's idol had, apparently, feet of cannabis resin. I'm afraid that all I could feel, at that particular moment, was quiet amusement.
âServes him jolly well right,' said merciless Mizz Liz Probert. âCracking down on cannabis! The law's ridiculous. What does that ghastly, right-wing, out-of-date old dinosaur think he's talking about? Just make it legal. That would solve all our problems.'
âSolve his problem too, apparently.'
âWhy can't we be like Amsterdam?'
I tried to think of an answer to this question. Because we didn't have little canals all over the place, and very few Dutch people. I gave up and asked, âSo you don't disapprove of cannabis smokers?'
âGet a life, Rumpole. Everyone does it.'
âNot
everyone.
I have yet to see She Who Must Be Obeyed with an enormous spliff, or Mr Injustice Graves giggling helplessly. I mean, do you think it's really good for you?'
âYou should talk!' Mizz Probert began dismissively.
âWell, yes. I usually do.'
âYou should talk about doing things that are bad for you. When you're wrecking your liver with Pommeroy's plonk and your lungs with small cigars.'
âLet's get this entirely clear! You're against a law stopping people smoking dope, but all for a law stopping me smoking small cigars?' This was a twist in the ethics of political correctness which surprised even me.
âWe didn't actually make a law, Rumpole. We didn't put it through Parliament.'
âBut you enforced it all the same.' I breathed in the dis appointingly fresh air of my room in Chambers. âYou and the other members of the smoke police. Soapy Sam Ballard and Claude Erskine-Brown.'
âClaude Erskine-Brown.' Liz Probert's manner changed. No longer the confident legislator of modern times, the girl whose life had already been securely got, she sounded uncertain and vaguely troubled. âI'm worried about him.'
âThe fellow,' I explained as best I could, âis going through a bad patch.'
âHe hangs round me,' Liz complained. âHe comes into my room and sits down. Then he talks for a long time about nothing very much. Is something wrong with his home life?'
âPractically everything. He's moved into a dusty old gentlemen's club in Whitehall which has now admitted Claude and an assortment of clubbable ladies. He's suffering Phillida deprivation.'