SEVENTEEN
In the house in the Wye Valley, there was as yet no sign of an anticipation of Christmas and work went on as usual. On Tuesday, the solicitor in Bristol phoned to confirm that the date for the Appeal was the tenth of January. After returning from his morning visit to the mortuary in Chepstow, Richard invaded Angela’s sanctum across the hall to discuss the arrangements.
‘We’ll have to stay in London for at least the previous night, as the kick-off is ten thirty in the morning,’ he said. ‘A pity it’s a Thursday.’
She looked at him enquiringly. ‘Why is it a pity?’
‘Means no chance of a dirty weekend, partner!’ he replied with one of his facetious grins.
‘You’re like an overgrown schoolboy sometimes, Richard!’ she replied with mock disgust, though she had to hide a smile of her own. ‘If I have to put up with you for a night, I suppose we could stay again at the Great Western in Paddington. It seemed so convenient for the train.’
Serious again, he nodded. ‘I’ll get Moira to ring up and make a booking. I wonder how it will turn out?’
He was referring to the Appeal itself, as until today they had heard no more from the lawyers since the conference in Bristol.
‘Are you happy with our side of the evidence?’ asked Angela, motioning to him to sit down in a swivel chair on the other side of her desk.
‘I’m quite sure that I can debunk the ridiculously over-accurate estimate of Anthony Claridge about the time of death. What about your end?’
His partner shrugged. ‘I’m absolutely sure that the blood splatter couldn’t have come from the knife; it had to be the injury to the nose. Whether or not they believe me is out of my hands.’
Richard nodded. ‘That’s not our problem. We just present the scientific truth as best we can. After that it’s up to the lawyers.’
She fixed him with her brown eyes. ‘Do you think she was guilty, Richard?’
He thought for a moment. ‘It would be wrong to say that I don’t care, as any miscarriage of justice is an affront to society, especially if it arises from bigoted minds who are more concerned with their own reputation than with the truth. But what matters to me is offering the best scientific opinion I can, without any influence from sympathy or compassion for the client. Perhaps she did kill him, but on the evidence that was presented to the trial jury, she shouldn’t have been convicted, given the alibi she had. That’s what matters to me.’
Angela nodded. ‘That’s how I feel, too. At least Millie won’t hang, whatever happens next month.’
There was silence for a time, as they both looked out across the valley, where the trees now wore their grey winter uniform. Richard, conscious of an air of sadness that had descended on them, decided to change the subject.
‘What did you think about the last part of the Dumas saga last weekend? A pity if the family get divided because of the return of the prodigal son.’
Recognizing that he was trying to divert her, Angela was grateful for his sensitivity.
‘Do you feel this chap from Thailand is genuine?’ she asked.
The final chapter of the strange story related to them by Louis Dumas was that the arrival of the alleged missing son had created a serious rift in the family. Though the father maintained a neutral scepticism until more proof was forthcoming, Emily Dumas was convinced that Pierre Fouret was her long-lost son, Maurice. When the younger Dumas, Victor, learned of the extraordinary reappearance of his brother, he exploded into a tirade of denial, both because of what he claimed was the cruel deception being played upon his parents, especially his mother, but also with an eye to his inheritance. Apart from the house and vineyard, his father had extensive property in France and the prospect of having to share it with an alleged elder brother incensed him beyond measure. He had denounced the man as a scheming impostor and every argument put forward by his parents was met with a contemptuous dismissal.
‘If he could find those facts from the army records and the old newspapers, so could anyone else, especially a confidence trickster intent on swindling you!’ he had declared, according to Louis. He refused to take part in any medical tests or to meet Pierre, threatening that if he came to the house, he would walk out on him.
The Dumases had consulted lawyers and employed an investigative agency, but they were not helpful, saying that as far as they could determine, the facts advanced by Pierre Fouret were true, but repeated what Victor had pointed out, that such public information was available to anyone who had the incentive and patience to dig deeply enough. They had contacted the Fourets in Montreal and confirmed that Pierre’s story was true as far back as his being taken by them from the orphanage, but there was no corroboration of what had happened in the years prior to that.
‘We even made enquiries through the British Embassy in Thailand,’ Louis had said. ‘But it was impossible to locate any of the nuns in the former orphanage as it had long been disbanded. Enquiries in Vietnam were out of the question, as since the contentious splitting of that country into two by the Geneva Accord of 1954, the northern part containing Yen Bai was now communist, making a search for Sukhon impossible, even if she were still alive in war-torn Indo-China.’
Angela and Richard had discussed this before and the obvious direction of the Dumases’ concern was whether any biological tests could determine whether Pierre Fouret was really Maurice Dumas.
Angela sighed. ‘I told them time and again that there was no technique based on blood tests or anything else that could absolutely prove that any child was the offspring of a particular person. All that can be done is to exclude that possibility — but it sometimes seems hard, even with intelligent, educated people, to get them to believe it.’
Her partner ran a hand through his springy hair.
‘I know, it’s like a doctor telling a patient some important fact about their illness, then finding that however well you explain it, their mind seems reluctant to accept it if it doesn’t fit with what they want to know.’
‘I can give them probability results, which sometimes can be pretty near a positive answer,’ agreed Angela. ‘But you can never get to the hundred per cent mark, even if you get lucky with all the blood subgroups and the other factors that are being discovered all the time.’
‘What about the genetic stuff that these people discovered in Oxford the year before last?’ asked Richard. ‘Will there be any hope of this DNA being useful?’
‘You mean Crick and Watson?’ she replied. ‘Well, who knows what may come out of it in years to come. But at the moment, it’s just a nice toy for geneticists. It’s not going to help the Dumas family.’
He stretched and hauled himself out of the chair. ‘Well, anyway. I’m sorry for them, as until this is settled one way or the other, there’ll be no peace in the family.’
That same morning, Meirion Thomas and his sergeant, Gwyn Parry, drove north out of Aberystwyth for a few miles on the A487 until they reached the village of Comins Coch.
‘Do you know where Ty Canol is?’ asked Meirion, as Parry swung the Wolseley off the main road and drove through the village back out into the countryside to the south.
‘Yes, and you should too! It’s where we had that stake-out for almost a week, about five years ago. Remember, we had a tip-off about rustlers and damn-all happened.’
There had been so many of those attempts to foil the sheep thieves that the DI had forgotten this one, but when the whitewashed farmhouse came into view after a couple of miles, it all came back to him.
‘Myrddin Evans, he was the farmer, wasn’t he?’ he recalled.
‘Yes, and there he is!’ said the sergeant, pulling up at the gate to the yard. A man wearing the inevitable flat cap perched on one side was dragging the gate open for them. Gwyn Parry drove across to the other side of the cobbled yard, into the shelter of a rusty corrugated French barn. There was a strong east wind and chaff was blowing around their legs as they got out of the car.