decided that it was high time I put on a silk gown and got promoted to the front row in court.â
âYou mean you want Queenâs Counsel?â A long life in and out of the Old Bailey had given Dennis Timson a sound working knowledge of the law.
âYouâre right,â I told him. âAnd I need a judge and a satisfied client to speak up for me.â
Dennis thought this over for a moment, gave himself another swig and came up with, âYouâll be hard put to find a judge, wonât you, Mr Rumpole? Theyâre not too keen on the way you keep winning cases.â
âSurprisingly enough,â I told him, âMr Justice Leonard Bullingham has offered his services.â
âHim you used to call the Mad Bull?â
âExactly. He seems to have come to his senses. So could I rely on you to say⦠well, that Iâvealways done my best for my clients? I suppose thatâs what they want to hear.â
âQC.â Dennis repeated the magical letters thoughtfully. âWe donât get a QC doing most of our familyâs cases.â
âPetty thefts, minor break-ins, selling stolen fish and all that sort of thing. Youâre quite right,â I admitted to Dennis. âI shouldnât be able to do them. But Iâm sure youâll find a satisfactory junior. And when it comes to the bigger stuffâ¦â
âWhat bigger stuff is that, Mr Rumpole?â
âBank robberies. Serious frauds. Or letâs say âa murderâ. Not that Iâm encouraging you to commit any such crimes, of course.â
âNo, of course not, Mr Rumpole. That is clearly understood.â There was something entirely judicial about the silence that followed. Dennis was clearly having some trouble making up his mind. At last he came out with, âAll right, Mr Rumpole. Taking all that into consideration, I am prepared to speak up for you.â
âThank you, Dennis.â I was genuinely grateful. âItâs very good of you and exactly what I would expect from a senior member of the Timson family. All you need to tell them is that I always did my best for you â even in difficult cases.â
âRely on me, Mr Rumpole. And Iâll keep quiet about the cases when your best wasnât quite good enough.â
âYou mean the cases when the prosecution had you bang to rights? Well, I suppose thatâs fair enough. Now, I think the tideâs gone down in our glasses.â
When I had arranged matters with Jack Pommeroy and added the cost of another round to my hope for the arrival of another legal aid cheque, I noticed Bertie Timson smiling, apparently at the memory of some private joke.
âWhatâs so funny about Mr Rumpole going after a QC?â Dennis asked him.
âItâs not that. But when you said âcasesâ, it reminded me about the trouble old Scottie Thompson got into. Only itâs crates with him, not cases. I reckon Scottieâll be coming to you for advice, Mr Rumpole.â
âThen Iâll do my best for him. Whatâs his trouble exactly?â
âIllegal immigration. Scottieâs got his own long-distance lorry. Runs it as a freelancer. He got a call from this firm that was apparently in trouble with its transport and had some crates needed picking up in some crazy place. Eastern Europe, I think thatâs where it was.â
âSo what was the trouble?â I was curious to know.
âWell, you wonât believe this. He picked up the crates, three big ones like new. He got as far as Dover with them, when there was some sort of inspection of the cargo. It seems there was a noise from one of the crates.â
âWhat sort of noise?â
âI donât know. Perhaps a girl crying, because what happened when they opened the crates up â heâd brought girls hid in crates, Scottie said. Course, he told them he knew nothing about it, but would they believe him? Course
Jo Willow, Sharon Gurley-Headley