Authors: Bill James
4. Rockmain thought John must realize the police needn't worry much about an inquiry followed by blame if they shot him. Everyone would recognize he was a threat and had to be âmade safe'. Rockmain believed John wouldn't choose to be made safe by getting wiped out. Harpur couldn't see how Rockmain convinced himself of this. The logic seemed to stop, to be replaced by wishfulness, and the dodgy assumption that John must see things as Rockmain saw them.
But would an experienced, star psychologist make that kind of vast, egocentric and elementary error? Harpur dropped into confusion. He could understand, though, how Rockmain convinced Iles. Obsessed by a past disaster, the ACC had yearned to be told the siege would work out peacefully. And this Rockmain conveniently and cleverly told him, with gobbledegook knobs on.
Chapter Sixteen
2007
Manse did what he'd promised himself earlier, and just before Naomi's first visit to his home he mentioned the Pre-Raphaelite originals he had on the walls there. He tried to say it in a matter-of-fact, very, very unblaring way â in fact, he considered he gave it a total absence of blare. Conversational was the tone Manse aimed for. He had thought quite a bit about the actual words.
Early on he'd considered something like, âAs chance would have it, I been able to bring together quite a few actual Pre-Raphaelite paintings, the result of a fortunate mateyness with an art dealer called Jack Lamb who by a wonderful slab of luck, Naomi, happens to be local. They hang in various rooms of the house and in the stairwell. The children as well as myself are extremely fond of them.'
He thought that by stating the pictures had come to him only via a couple of happy flukes, he wouldn't seem big-headed and boastful to her. Big-headedness and boastfulness Manse truly despised. These remarks would make it sound like anyone could of built up this collection â as long as they loved the Pre-Raphaelites, obviously, and knew Jack. Then, if Manse brought the children in, it would give a sort of pleasant, family touch, and âextremely fond of' might be what somebody would say about an old labrador or cat or battered but very much loved sitting-room couch, nothing high-falutin or swank-based. He felt pretty certain he'd come across that opening statement, âAs chance would have it', spoken by a woman at the golf club in just the chatty way he was after, or a character in some TV play about classy people, poised and very handy with phrases.
Of course, by the time Naomi came to Shale's house she and he were pretty well established with each other âwhat many would refer to as âan item', though Manse considered this quite a vulgar term, like comparing two people to something on a shopping list. The main purpose of the visit was not to show her the art but to meet Laurent and Matilda. This he regarded as an important move. When the children heard she had come all that distance from London in the train, they would understand it must be a serious carry-on, not a slight and temporary job.
Manse knew they'd behave OK when introduced to this new face. They always did with new faces. He told them he'd met Naomi in a gallery containing top grade Pre-Raphaelite works. He thought this helped the children realize that the relationship had true quality, and with an art side. Manse was sure it did. It had grown in a gradual but very sure manner. Laurent and Matilda knew the term âPre-Raphaelite' because Manse had often told them most of the paintings in the house came from that group. He also told them not to talk about the collection outside because you didn't want some villain breaking in when the house was empty and taking the fucking lot in a van.
He drove the Jaguar down to the station to meet Naomi. The children was at school. The train journey gave Manse another of them cash problems, like with the poster-prints. Should he ask if he could pay for her ticket, first class, naturally? And again he decided no. He knew her much better now, didn't he, and had a very strong idea she would be insulted if he offered. It could make her seem like freight he'd ordered being sent by rail. But she
wanted
to come to his home, and paying for her own ticket would prove this. That would most probably be as she considered it.
While he waited outside the station he tried once more to prepare his words about the art on the walls at home. He'd come to think that his first effort wouldn't do. He could see a bad flaw in the comments about chance and luck, and he knew Naomi would spot it, also. In Mansel's opinion she had quite a head on her. Possibly he would not of been attracted to her if not, despite her lovely looks and cleverness with fashion. The thing was, Manse had grown to realize that chance and luck wouldn't be no use on their own. There needed to be money, and very good money, to buy the pictures from Jack Lamb. So, it would be stupid to pretend anyone might of got a collection of Pre-Raphaelites together as long as they bumped into him locally. Bumping into him wasn't the main thing at all, nor the localness. Having enough moolah for that grasping, crooked bastard, Lamb, was.
Manse altered his art statement. In the car on their way to his house he said, âI forget whether I ever mentioned to you, Naomi, that, over the years, I been able to lay my hands on several original Pre-Raphaelite pix and I know you'll be interested to see whether I've hung them in the best light and so on.' He thought she'd decide he had only been able to afford the pictures in instalments, not a Mr Big splashing the loot around willy-nilly, but a Mr Little-by-little. In fact, because of the sodding prices Lamb wanted, it hadn't been little-by-little but big-by-bloody-big. This way of describing things kept some of the luck idea in them words, âbeen able to lay my hands on', which sounded like he saw a chance and grabbed it. That was as far as the luck part of it went, though. He wouldn't overdo it.
He made sure he let Naomi seem the true expert on art, not himself, by saying he wanted her advice on how to hang the works in his property. Calling them by that slangy term âpix' should prove he wasn't stuck up about the pictures. He hoped she would not remember he'd bought a couple of posters himself on that first day together after the gallery, the Millais
Ophelia
and D.G. Rossetti's
Beata Beatrix
. It had been just a move to make himself seem the same as her, really, so they could both leave the building carrying the prints rolled up in their cardboard containers. Obviously, he could not hang them in his home. They would of looked extremely production line against the genuine originals. That is, if they
was
genuine. You could never be completely certain when you was dealing with that sod, Jack Lamb. Manse had given the posters, still in the container, to a charity shop in the North Bewick district. The shop might get a tenner for them and send it to Africa to help beat the drought.
Naomi's own property in London was nowhere near as big as Manse's ex-St James's rectory, but OK just the same, in Manse's view. They'd gone there by taxi after that first visit to the gallery and shop and café. She had a flat in Ealing, which he regarded as generally speaking a very decent district for London. You could see people here walking to the shops without getting knife-mugged, at least in daylight. Naomi and Manse had certainly not made love in the flat on that opening visit. He would of regarded that as bad-mannered and rabbity, even though he guessed she might not of minded, and even expected it.
Manse had to consider what kind of life and trouble he could be drawing her into. That helped slow him. Although for most of the time he felt he wanted her long-term, moments came when he wondered whether that would be fair to Naomi. This was another reason not to hurry her. She seemed a gallery person. Also, she had a job as a consultant, she said, on a London âcelebrity sheet'. He didn't really grasp what that meant, but he thought she wouldn't know much re the kind of filthy domain wars that could go on in streets, public parks and music festivals.
On a second trip to London to see her several weeks later matters changed. By then she'd had the posters she bought framed and they hung in her sitting room. Manse thought they looked reasonably all right, as far as prints could. It would be wrong and unkind for him to go on and on in his mind about them being naff. Clearly, he would never say to her that they was only copies. She had chosen white frames which suited the pictures damn well, helping to bring out their colours, especially blue, in the way frames should. Because of the happy and exciting time they had together on that second visit to her flat, the posters in the sitting room didn't really matter, anyway.
That repeat visit could be regarded as the true start of things between them, he thought. Her trip now to his home could be seen as carrying matters quite a long way forward. He felt sure Naomi would like his home, the onetime rectory. The clergyman and his family who used to live in Manse's house had been moved to a smaller place. The church found running this property too expensive. He thought there might be a bit of what might be called a parable about modern Britain in that. The church could not afford the seven-bedroom house â lighting, heating, repairs, cleaning. A substances lord such as Manse, could. In some ways this saddened him. Many would regard the situation as a sign of bad decline. However, he had to admit he enjoyed owning the residence. Denzil Lake used to have a flat on the top floor, empty now. Manse hoped it might be really helpful for the children when they was older and maybe applying for jobs to have âSt James's Old Rectory' as the address on their letters.
Usually, Manse felt he wouldn't want them to follow him in the kind of career he had, although it did mean he could live in a large place and keep them in that pretty good private school, Bracken Collegiate, where the uniform was blue edged with black, nothing gaudy. Gaudiness he hated. Because of the good earnings from his business Shale hoped he could buy a splendid education for Laurent and Matilda, even including university, and so turn them away from the business that paid for the splendid education. He realized a lot of people would regard this as strange, one end of the idea pissing on the other. But you could sometimes run into such a mix-up in modern life, known as the twenty-first millennium. If they went to university he wouldn't want them climbing spires or jumping into rivers like some students did as pranks. These students longed to be daredevils and get noticed by the media, but daredevils could hurt their-selves owing to the height of spires with poor footholds or rat disease in rivers.
The thing about Laurent and Matilda when Shale brought somebody quite unknown to meet them such as Naomi now was they didn't ask the same questions as they asked the one before or the one before that. The questions was really completely right for this person. Manse thought it proved the value of Bracken Collegiate. The school did not have actual lessons in politeness, but by what could be called the atmosphere there it seemed to give them a bright habit of interest in other people, or a good show of that.
When they was all sitting in Manse's âden room' after the children came home from school Laurent seemed fascinated to hear she came from London. He remarked that in the past the river Thames, dividing London into north and south, would sometimes freeze so solid that banquets could take place on it. He wondered if Naomi thought that, owing to climate change, this might happen again. Matilda pointed out how some now believed London to be the fashion centre of the world, displacing Paris. Did Naomi, a Londoner herself, think this correct? Naomi replied she couldn't be certain on either of them points.
Then Laurent asked her whether she liked living in the capital with all its many undoubted facilities but some drawbacks such as overcrowding on the tube because of many foreign visitors wishing to see Buckingham Palace, the Houses of Parliament, Madame Tussaud's and so on, especially Americans and Japanese.
Matilda wanted to know whether Naomi enjoyed express travel by train, which, because of motorization and even electrification, had improved a great deal since the first railways of the nineteenth century, when an important politician was killed by a locomotive at the opening ceremony of a new service between Liverpool and Manchester.
âWilliam Huskisson, 1830,' Naomi said.
Manse felt a real thrill listening to them. It seemed grand that Naomi not only fucked so brilliant, with true sweetness, eyes rolled right back and sincere, very thankful gasps, but also had terrific knowledge over considerable areas, yet didn't pretend she could answer every query they chucked at her in their welcoming style.
Chapter Seventeen
2009
Harpur thought he saw Iles begin to change. In any case, it was not a natural state for the ACC to agree with Andrew Rockmain on siege tactics. It was not a natural state for the ACC to agree with Rockmain on very much at all. Normally, Iles regarded him as one step up from grossest shysterdom, though, if the ACC felt generous for a moment, one and a half steps. He'd accepted Rockmain's analysis because this brought comfort. Now, the comfort seemed to fade.
Iles had never been a great one for comfort. On the whole, he preferred rage. Comfort could fuck up and water down rage. Naturally, Harpur had become a tireless expert on Iles's mood swings. He needed to be, in self-defence. âI see myself as protean, Col,' Iles had said not long ago.
âThis is a word with considerable promise, sir.'
âMeaning, capable of endless variety.'
âThat's you to a T, sir. Or, because of the endless variety, you to a W or a J.'
âProtean from Proteus, a sea god in classical times, who could alter his shape as he wished.'
âClassical gods were so brilliant at that. One of my kids told me a god turned himself into a swan for a while âthe whole thing, feathers, webbed feet, big wings, beak,â Harpur had said. âOther gods wouldn't have recognized him â might have thrown him crusts.' Although Iles's shape stayed more or less constant, he could alter his mind and disposition as he wished, and at flabbergasting pace.