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71
‘YOU HAVEN’T ARRIVED a moment too soon,’ she said.
‘That bad?’ said Alex.
‘Worse,’ replied his mother. ‘When will the Home Office realize that when judges retire, not only are they sent home for the rest of their lives, but the only people they have left to judge are their innocent wives.’
‘So what are you recommending?’ asked Alex as they walked into the drawing room.
‘That judges should be shot on their seventieth birthday, and their wives granted a royal pardon and given their pensions by a grateful nation.’
‘I may have come up with a more acceptable solution,’ suggested Alex.
‘Like what? Making it legal to assist judges’ wives to commit suicide?’
‘Something a little less drastic,’ said Alex. ‘I don’t know if his lordship has told you, but I sent him the details of a case I’m currently working on, and frankly I could do with his advice.’
‘If he turns you down, Alex, I won’t feed him again.’
‘Then I must be in with a chance,’ said Alex as his father strolled into the room.
‘A chance of what?’ the old man asked.
‘A chance of some help on a case that—’
‘The Cartwright case?’ said his father, staring out of the window. Alex nodded. ‘Yes, I’ve just finished reading the transcripts. As far as I can see, there aren’t many more laws left for the lad to break: murder, escaping from prison, theft of fifty million dollars, cashing cheques on two bank accounts that didn’t belong to him, selling a stamp collection he didn’t own, travelling abroad on someone else’s passport, and even claiming a baronetcy that should rightfully have been inherited by someone else. You really can’t blame the police for throwing the book at him.’
‘Does that mean you’re not willing to help me?’ asked Alex.
‘I didn’t say that,’ said Mr Justice Redmayne, turning round to face his son. ‘On the contrary. I’m at your service, because of one thing I’m absolutely certain. Danny Cartwright is innocent.’
BOOK FIVE
REDEMPTION
72
DANNY CARTWRIGHT sat on the small wooden chair in the dock and waited for the clock to strike ten so the trial could begin. He looked down into the well of the court to see his two counsel deep in conversation as they waited for the judge to appear.
Danny had spent an hour with Alex Redmayne and his junior in an interview room below the court earlier that morning. They had done their best to reassure him, but he knew all too well that although he was innocent of murdering Bernie, he had no defence to the charges of fraud, theft, deception and escaping from prison; a combined tariff of eight to ten years seemed to be the general consensus, from the barrack-room lawyers of Belmarsh to the eminent silks plying their trade at the Old Bailey.
No one needed to tell Danny that if the sentence was added to his original tariff, the next time he came out of Belmarsh would be for his own funeral.
The press benches to Danny’s left were packed with reporters, notepads open, pens poised as they waited to add to the thousands of column inches they had already written over the past six months. The life story of Danny Cartwright, the only man ever to escape from Britain’s top-security prison, who had stolen more than fifty million dollars from a Swiss Bank after selling a stamp collection that didn’t belong to him, and had ended up being arrested in The Boltons in the early hours of the morning while in the arms of his fiancée (The Times), sexy childhood sweetheart (the Sun). The press couldn’t make up their minds if Danny was the Scarlet Pimpernel or Jack the Ripper. The story had fascinated the public for months, and the first day of the trial was taking on the status of an opening night in the West End, with queues beginning to form outside the Old Bailey at 4 o’clock that morning for a theatre that seated less than a hundred and was rarely full. Most people agreed that Danny Cartwright was more likely to spend the rest of his days in Belmarsh than The Boltons.
Alex Redmayne and his junior, The Rt Hon Sir Matthew Redmayne KCMG QC, could not have done more to help Danny during the past six months, while he had been re-incarcerated in a cell little bigger than Molly’s broom cupboard. They had both refused to charge a penny for their services, although Sir Matthew had warned Danny that if they were able to convince the jury that the profits he’d accrued during the past two years belonged to him and not to Hugo Moncrieff, he would be presenting a hefty bill plus expenses, for what he called refreshers. It was one of the few occasions during that time when all three of them had burst out laughing.
Beth had been released on bail the morning after she had been arrested. But no one had been surprised when neither Danny nor Big Al were granted the same latitude.
Mr Jenkins was waiting in reception at Belmarsh to greet them, and Mr Pascoe made sure that they ended up sharing a cell. Within a month Danny was back in his post as the prison librarian, just as he had told Ms Bennett he would be. Big Al was allocated a job in the kitchen, and although the cooking didn’t compare to Molly’s, at least they both ended up with the best of the worst.
Alex Redmayne never once reminded Danny that if he had taken his advice and pleaded guilty to manslaughter at the original trial, he would now be a free man, managing Wilson’s garage, married to Beth and helping to raise their family. But a free man in what sense? Alex could hear him asking.
There had also been moments of triumph to sit alongside disaster. The gods prefer it that way. Alex Redmayne had been able to convince the court that although Beth was technically guilty of the offence she had been charged with, she had only been aware that Danny was still alive for four days, and they had already made an appointment to see Alex in his chambers on the morning she had been arrested. The judge had given Beth a six-month suspended sentence. Since then she had visited Danny at Belmarsh on the first Sunday of every month.
The judge had not taken quite as lenient a view when it came to the role Big Al had played in the conspiracy. Alex had pointed out in his opening speech that his client, Albert Crann, had made no financial gain from the Moncrieff fortune, other than to receive a salary as Danny’s driver while being allowed to sleep in a small room on the top floor of his house in The Boltons. Mr Arnold Pearson QC, representing the Crown, then produced a bombshell that Alex hadn’t seen coming.
‘Can Mr Crann explain how the sum of ten thousand pounds was deposited in his private account only days after he’d been discharged from prison?’
Big Al had no explanation, and even if he had, he wasn’t about to tell Pearson where the money had come from.
The jury were not impressed.
The judge sent Big Al back to Belmarsh to serve another five years – the rest of his original sentence. Danny made sure he quickly became enhanced, and that he behaved impeccably during his period of incarceration. Glowing reports from senior officer Ray Pascoe, confirmed by the governor, meant that Big Al would be released on a tag in less than a year. Danny would miss him, though he knew that if he even hinted as much, Big Al would cause just enough trouble to ensure that he remained at Belmarsh until Danny was finally released.
Beth had one good piece of news to tell Danny on her Sunday afternoon visit.
‘I’m pregnant.’
‘Christ, we only had four nights together,’ said Danny as he took her in his arms.
‘I don’t think that was the number of times we made love,’ said Beth, before adding, ‘Let’s hope it will be a brother for Christy.’
‘If it is, we can call him Bernie.’
‘No,’ said Beth, ‘we’re going to call him—’ The klaxon signalled the end of visits and drowned out her words.
‘Can I ask you a question?’ said Danny when Pascoe escorted him back to his cell.
‘Of course,’ Pascoe replied. ‘Doesn’t mean I’ll answer it.’
‘You always knew, didn’t you?’ Pascoe smiled, but didn’t reply. ‘What made you so sure that I wasn’t Nick?’ asked Danny as they reached his cell.
Pascoe turned th