All this happened a long time ago, and it seems even longer than it is. Elaine and I didn’t share a wedding with Uncle Miles and Betty as they suggested, because I hadn’t got a job. In the spring of the following year, however, I became a reporter on a Sussex paper, and we decided not to wait any longer. A couple of years later I moved to a national, the
Banner,
and a year after that our son was born. We gave him Hugh Blakeney as Christian names. Our daughter, born a couple of years later, was named Betty, and Betty Wainwright is her godmother. Soon after that I was made Washington correspondent of the
Banner,
and I’ve been there ever since. I like the life. Elaine gave up working before Hugh Blakeney was born, and never went back to it.
I come to England four weeks in every year, but find it rather slow and smug. Elaine often comes with me but one year when she didn’t, and when I’d been down to Sussex for lunch with an aspiring politician, I took a wrong road back to London and was surprised to find myself within a few miles of Belting. It seemed natural to turn the car’s bonnet that way.
I nearly passed the drive, because it had been so much changed. There were concrete gates and a sign that said:
Experimental Weapons School, Admin. Branch (E).
There was a man in uniform on the gate, but a good many trees had been cut down and I was able to see the house. It looked smaller than I had remembered, and it no longer reminded me of a church but seemed to be simply a piece of ugly red Victorian Gothic. I stared at it for a few seconds without feeling anything, and then drove on.
I have never seen Stephen since I left Belting, but I believe that he and Clarissa are now breeding dogs in Dorset. We exchanged Christmas cards for a year or two and then dropped it. Miles is still married to Betty, and I believe they are very happy. We see them rarely, but Miles still writes me chatty letters, which I answer with shorter and less interesting ones. Betty insisted that he must have a job, and bought an advertising business for him, which Miles runs. I have his last letter in front of me now.
The routine is fairly boring, but I
do
like writing copy. Here is my latest masterpiece, written for Bronk’s steak and kidney pies. Mum is leaning out of the window calling to the children, a Bronk’s pie piping hot on the table behind her. She calls:
Jack and Jill and George and Sidney,
Come and get it! Steak and kidney!!
Growing girls and boys all just
Adore its crispy flaky crust.
Good, eh? Anyway the client liked it.
Most of my youthful notions have been forgotten, and I doubt if Betty would call me a romantic now – even
abroad
is not what it was since I’ve been living there so long – but when I read one of Miles’ letters the past comes up vividly. I see again the arrival of the claimant in the courtyard on that July day and am taken back to the world of Belting, to the strippling ream and the daylight lamps in the corridors and the battle of Tel-el-Kebir laid out on the floor of the Pam Moor.
(in order of first publication)
These titles can be read as a series, or randomly as standalone novels
1. The Immaterial Murder Case | 1945 |
2. A Man Called Jones | 1947 |
3. Bland Beginning | 1949 |
(in order of first publication)
These titles can be read as a series, or randomly as standalone novels
1. The Narrowing Circle | | 1954 |
2. The Gigantic Shadow | also as: The Pipe Dream | 1947 |
(in order of first publication)
These titles can be read as a series, or randomly as standalone novels
1. The Man Who Killed Himself | 1967 |
2. The Man Who Lost His Wife | 1967 |
3. The Man Whose Dreams Came True | 1968 |
4. The Players & The Game | 1972 |
5. The Plot Against Roger Rider | 1973 |
1. A Three Pipe Problem | 1975 |
(in order of first publication)
1. The 31st of February | | 1950 |
2. The Broken Penny | | 1953 |
3. The Paper Chase | also as: Bogue’s Fortune | 1956 |
4. The Colour of Murder | | 1957 |
5. The Progress of a Crime | | 1960 |
6. The Killing of Francie Lake | also as: The Plain Man | 1962 |
7. The End of Solomon Grundy | | 1964 |
8. The Belting Inheritance | | 1965 |
1. Horatio Bottomley | | 1955 |
2. Buller’s Campaign | The Boer War & His Career | 1974 |
3. Thomas Carlyle | The Life & Ideas of a Prophet | 1952 |
4. England’s Pride | General Gordon of Khartoum | 1954 |
5. The General Strike | | 1959 |
6. The Thirties | | 1960 |
7. Tell-Tale Heart | The Life & Works of Edgar Allen Poe | 1978 |
Published by House of Stratus
The 31st February Anderson was a bored, unhappy sales executive longing for something to liven up his monotonous life. But perhaps he wished too hard because it was not long before he found his wife lying dead at the bottom of the cellar stairs. An accident of course - so why wouldn’t the police believe him? |
The Belting Inheritance When a stranger arrives at Belting, he is met with a very mixed reception by the occupants of the old house. Claiming his so-called ‘rightful inheritance’ the stranger makes plans to take up residence at once. Such a thing was bound to cause problems amongst the family - but why were so many of them turning up dead? |
Bland Beginning A purchase at a second-hand bookshop seems an innocent enough event. Tony Shelton hadn’t expected it to be anything but that - and he certainly hadn’t expected it to throw him head first into the world of violence, blackmail and robbery. For it becomes clear that the book has a rather higher price than he paid for it - a price that was to lead to murder.. |
The Broken Penny An Eastern-block country, shaped like a broken penny, was being torn apart by warring resistance movements. Only one man could unite the hostile factions - Professor Jacob Arbitzer. Arbitzer, smuggled into the country by Charles Garden during the Second World War, has risen to become president, only to have to be smuggled out again when the communists gained control. Under pressure from the British Government who want him reinstated, Arbitzer agreed to return on one condition; that Charles Garden again escort him. The Broken Penny is a thrilling spy adventure brilliantly recreating the chilling conditions of the Cold War. |
Buller’s Campaign A powerful and invaluable reassessment of the life of General Buller and of the part he played in British military history. Beginning with his struggle for the position of Commander-in-Chief of the Army in 1895, it goes on to portray his role in the Boer War, and on its path, reveals many of the Victorian Imperialist attitudes of the day. A man of numerous failures, General Buller has been treated unkindly by history but Symons here seeks to paint a more rounded picture. Whilst never attempting to excuse the General’s mistakes, he portrays Buller as a complex and often misunderstood character and reveals the deep ironies that surrounded so much of what he achieved. An exceptional book and an outstanding contribution to military history. |
The Colour of Murder John Wilkins was a gentle, mild-mannered man who lived a simple, predictable life. So when he met a beautiful, irresistible girl his world was turned upside down. Looking at his wife, and thinking of the girl, everything turned red before his eyes - the colour of murder. Later, his mind a blank, his only defence was that he loved his wife far too much to hurt her. |
The End of Solomon Grundy When a girl turns up dead in a Mayfair mews, the police want to write it off as just another murdered prostitute, but Superintendent Manners isn’t quite so sure. He is convinced that the key to the crime lies in ‘The Dell’, an affluent suburban housing estate. And in ‘The Dell’ lives Solomon Grundy. Could he have killed the girl? So Superintendent Manners thinks. |
England’s Pride General Gordon, charged with the task of defending Khartoum, was stabbed to death on 26 January 1885 when the Mahdi’s forces took the town by storm. Two days later, the Expeditionary force arrived to relieve Gordon but found the town firmly in the hands of the Mahdi. In England’s Pride, Julian Symons tells the story of the disastrous and tragic failure of this mission. Analysing events from both a political and military stance, and consulting a wide range of sources, he questions why the Gladstone Government had not acted sooner in the first place, and then, once orders had been given, what contributed to the complex chain of events that was ultimately to thwart the relieving force. Capturing in brilliant detail all the glory of Victorian times, England’s Pride is a vivid and dramatic book on a sorely neglected subject. |
The General Strike In May 1926, Britain was gripped by what became known as the General Strike. This downing of tools lasted for nine days, during which time it divided the people, threatened the survival of the government of the day and brought the country nearer to revolution that it perhaps had ever been. In this accurate and lively account, Symons draws on contemporary press reports, letters and oral sources, along with TUC records to provide an invaluable historical account of the remarkable event and the people and places that featured so prominently in it. |
The Gigantic Shadow Bill Hunter, TV personality, made his living by asking the rich and famous difficult and highly personal questions. But when the tables were turned and he found himself being asked about his own rather murky past, he wasn’t quite so sure of himself. Out of a job and little hope of finding another, he teamed up with the reckless Anthea to embark upon a dangerous and deadly plan that was to have murderous consequences. |