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THE OLD
ANTHONY PRICE
PROLOGUE:
Loftus of the
'THERE'S NOTHING WRONG with funerals,' said Audley.
'I met my wife at a funeral.'
Mitchell studied the picture again. In the original newspaper it had been a good sharp reproduction, but the photo-copier hadn't improved it. 'I hope the weather was better than it was for this one.'
'It was bloody cold, as I recall—an east wind and an open churchyard.' Audley peered over his shoulder. 'Yes . . . they do seem a bit bedraggled, I must say. But that's because it's never been considered conducive to good order and military discipline to carry umbrellas into action—though I believe Sir Thomas Picton carried one at Waterloo, didn't he?'
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'Or naval discipline, in this case.' Mitchell ran his eye down the line of officers. 'Two captains, three admirals, and a flag-lieutenant—and the two-striper's the only dry one ... or half-dry, anyway.'
Audley smiled evilly. 'And that's only because he's holding an umbrella over the hero's daughter. Smart fellow! And the C-in-C looks rather unhappy, I do agree. But then he never did like Loftus— they were at Dartmouth together, and Loftus pipped him for the Sword-of-Honour, or something. . . although, to be fair, I don't think that was the whole reason.'
Mitchell went down the line again, and on to the civilians.
They too were in the rain, and bare-headed as the bugler called them to attention, two bald as coots and three with their variously grey and white hair plastered to their scalps, but all wearing their medals proudly.
His eye was drawn to the other picture on the page, of the
'Those old boys are the surviving Vengefuls, I take it?'
''Vengefuls'?'
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'That's the term for the crew. Like 'Hampshires' and
'Norfolks'— and your 'Wessexes', David.'
'Ah! We called our chaps 'Wesdragons' actually—because of our cap badge . . . but I take your point. And—yes, they are.
Plus two of the admirals, who were midshipmen at the time—
or one was a midshipman and the other a sublieutenant, to be exact.'
That exactness cooled Mitchell's ardour somewhat: if there was anything the big man was, he was exact in his details; and if there was anything that he wasn't, he wasn't a fool.
All the same, facts were facts, so he had to gesture to the scatter of papers on the desk. 'But I don't see that there's anything for us here—honestly, David.'
Audley adjusted his spectacles to study the papers.
And the bald, prosaic, low-key
'
There had been a gap between those two: the obituary washout of departmental records, filed and dated from three weeks ago; the pictures of the funeral and of the last fight of the
'Why do you say that?' Audley challenged him.
'Well . . .' He had to get this right, even if it was wrong.
'Well, someone's done the routine search on Loftus—and he was living way above his pension . . . But there's nothing unusual about that, in this day and age—he was prematurely retired a long time ago, that's why he never got beyond commander . . . War wounds and ill-health— quite straightforward, no black marks, although he was never a well-loved man among his equals . . . His wife left him a bit of money: she came of a well-to-do naval family. But that was also a long time ago—she's been dead nearly thirty years.
They weren't married very long.'
'He wrote books though. 'Naval historian' is how
'That's right. Naval histories. He probably made a bit from them. Not a lot, but some.'