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Authors: Roderic Jeffries

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Alvarez accepted that almost certainly he would never be able to prove the truth. But he was now reasonably certain that he knew what that was. After Cooper had faked his suicide/murder, he had holed up in one of the small ‘assignation' hotels or hostels where a ten-thousand-peseta note produced total amnesia amongst the staff. Then, as soon as he'd believed it safe to do so, he'd hired a small van and booked passage on the morning ferry, gambling on what he believed to be a certainty – he'd never doubted his own cleverness – that the police would be on the lookout for his murderer, not him. He had returned to Ca'n Oliver that Wednesday night to retrieve the two Poperens and brief Rachael. Which was when his plans had started to go wrong. She had not been there. Panicking, he'd telephoned Field for help. As soon as he'd understood the position, Field had responded to what most concerned him at this point – what was to happen re his paintings; Cooper would, wouldn't he, continue whenever possible to do everything in his power to promote them? Cooper, terrified that all the time he was in the house he was at risk – probably crediting White with near-supernatural powers and therefore likely to turn up at any moment – had cut short Field's queries and pleas by brutally telling him the truth. His work wasn't good enough even to adorn the lid of a biscuit tin …

Hell hath no fury like an artist scorned. Yet Field had not just been scorned, he had seen himself betrayed and his ambition strangled – an ambition that was entwined with memories of, and homage to, his beloved wife. In his agonized fury, probably so great that he had not fully realized what he was doing, he'd stormed through to the bedroom in which the painting he'd given Cooper had been banished, wrenched it off the wall, returned and smashed it repeatedly down on Cooper's head.

He had regained a measure of self-control. Faced with the fact that he had killed and, if nothing were done to conceal this, he must be convicted of murder, he had set out to false-fake the time of death in such a way as eventually to establish his innocence after initially pointing to his guilt, confident that there was every chance that sooner or later Gore's evidence – he'd been at the house when the phone call had been made – would prove that Cooper had been alive at eleven. He had taken his shattered painting with him, driven off in the hired vehicle in which Cooper had arrived; he had abandoned it, knowing that this was a sufficiently common occurrence amongst the more inebriated foreigners that it would arouse no special comment. Once home, he'd burned the shattered frame, which had left the sliver of varnished wood in the dead man's head, but not the canvas, because even if it had been torn and therefore bore witness to the savage assault, he could not consign his own work to the flames. (Fresh paint had replaced the bloodstains.) Later, he had offered the two Poperens to the museums, partially because by doing so he could, despite failure, find artistic success of a kind – his name as donor would be remembered …

Alvarez's thoughts were interrupted.

‘Have you gone into a trance?' Jaime demanded.

Alvarez drained his glass. ‘I was thinking.'

‘What about?'

He refilled his glass after Jaime had passed him the bottle. ‘The murder.'

‘The woman in the swimming pool? Not seen her in the nude, have you?'

‘I could have done.'

‘You're a bloody liar!'

He dropped ice cubes into his glass. ‘On Saturday night, she asked me back to her place. She offered it on a plate.'

Jaime leaned forward. ‘So what was it like?'

‘I was so certain she was mixed up in the murder, I reckoned that on ethical grounds I had to refuse. But you know what? It's turned out that she didn't have anything to do with that so I could have gone right ahead. Ironic, isn't it?'

Jaime described the incident in different terms.

About the Author

Roderic Jeffries
was born in London in 1926 and was educated at Southampton's School of Navigation. In 1943 he went to sea with the New Zealand Shipping Company and returned to England in 1949 where he was subsequently called to the Bar. He practiced law for a brief period before starting to write full time. His books have been published in many different countries and have been adapted for film, television, and radio. He and his wife live in Mallorca, and have two children. You can sign up for email updates
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BY THE SAME AUTHOR

AN ARCADIAN DEATH

DEATH TAKES TIME

MURDER CONFOUNDED

MURDER'S LONG MEMORY

A FATAL FLEECE

TOO CLEVER BY HALF

DEAD CLEVER

DEATH TRICK

RELATIVELY DANGEROUS

ALMOST MURDER

LAYERS OF DECEIT

THREE AND ONE MAKE FIVE

DEADLY PETARD

UNSEEMLY END

JUST DESERTS

MURDER BEGETS MURDER

TROUBLED DEATHS

TWO-FACED DEATH

MISTAKENLY IN MALLORCA

DEAD MAN'S BLUFF

A TRAITOR'S CRIME

A DEADLY MARRIAGE

DEATH IN THE COVERTS

DEAD AGAINST THE LAWYERS

AN EMBARRASSING DEATH

THE BENEFITS OF DEATH

EXHIBIT NO. THIRTEEN

EVIDENCE OF THE ACCUSED

 

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Contents

Title Page

Copyright Notice

Dedication

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

About the Author

By the Same Author

Copyright

AN ARTISTIC WAY TO GO
. Copyright © 1996 by Roderic Jeffries. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews. For information, address St. Martin's Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.

Our e-books may be purchased in bulk for promotional, educational, or business use. Please contact the Macmillan Corporate and Premium Sales Department at (800) 221-7945, extension 5442, or by e-mail at [email protected].

First published in Great Britain by Collins Crime, an imprint of HarperCollins
Publishers

First U.S. Edition: June 1997

eISBN 9781250101815

First eBook edition: September 2015

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