Ironically, an ISA, an individual savings account, was designed for tax-free saving, but there was a limit on investment, and each ISA could amount to only a few thousand pounds per year. They would help, but alone they were not the solution.
I wondered if the training business itself had any value. It would have if my mother was still the trainer, but I doubted that anyone buying the stables would pay much for the business. I had spent my childhood, at my mother’s knee, being amazed how contrary racehorse owners could be.
Some of them behaved just like the owners of football clubs, firing the team manager because their team of no-hopers wasn’t winning, when the solution would have been to buy better, and more expensive, players in the first place. A cheap, slow horse is just like a cheap two-left-footed footballer—neither will be any good, however well they’re trained.
There is no telling if the owners would stay or take their horses elsewhere. The latter would be the more likely, unless the person who took over the training was of the same standing as Josephine Kauri, and who could that be who didn’t already have a stable full of their own charges?
I had to assume that the business had no intrinsic value other than the real estate in which it operated, plus a bit extra for the tack and the rest of the stable kit.
I lay on my bed and did some mental adding up: The house and stables might raise half a million, the business might just fetch fifty thousand, and there was another fifty thousand in the bank. Add the ISAs and a few pieces of antique furniture and we were probably still short by more than four hundred thousand.
And my mother and Derek had to live somewhere. Where would they go and what could they earn if Kauri House Stables was sold? My mother was hardly going to find work as a cleaner, especially in Lambourn. She would have rather gone to prison.
But going to prison wasn’t an either/or solution anyway. If she was sent down she would still have to pay the tax, and the penalties.
Over the years I had saved regularly from my army pay and had accumulated quite a reasonable nest egg that I had planned to use sometime as a down payment on a house. And I had invested it in a far more secure manner than my parent, so I could be pretty sure of still having about sixty thousand pounds to my name.
I wondered if the Revenue would take installments on the never-never.
The only other solution I came up with was to approach the circumstances as if I had been in command of my platoon in the middle of Afghanistan planning a combat estimate for an operation against the Taliban.
PROBLEM:
enemy in control of objective (tax papers and money)
MISSION:
neutralize enemy and retake objective
SITUATION:
enemy forces—number, identity and location all unknown friendly forces—self only, no reinforcements available
WEAPONS:
as required and/or as available
EXECUTION:
Initially find and interrogate Roderick Ward or, if in fact really dead, his known associates. Follow up on blackmail notes and telephone messages to determine source.
TACTICS:
absolute stealth, no local authorities to be alerted, enemy to be kept unaware of operation until final strike
TIMINGS:
task to be completed asap, and before exposure by local authorities—their timescale unknown
H HOUR:
operation start time:
right now
6
A
ll I could see of him were his eyes, his cold, black eyes that stared at me from beneath his turban. He showed no emotion but simply raised a rusty Kalashnikov to his shoulder.
I fired at him, but he continued to lift the gun. I fired at him again, over and over, but without any visible effects. I was desperate. I emptied my complete magazine into him, but still he swung the barrel of the AK-47 around towards me, lining up the sights with my head. A smile showed in his eyes, and I began to scream.
I woke with a start, my heart pumping madly and with sweat all over my body.
“Thomas! Thomas!” someone was shouting, and there was banging on my bedroom door.
“Yes,” I called back into the darkness. “I’m fine.”
“You were screaming.” It was my mother. She was outside my room on the landing.
“I’m sorry,” I said. “It was just a bad dream.”
“Good night, then,” she called suddenly, and I could hear her footfalls as she moved away.
“Good night,” I called back, too quietly and too late.
I suppose it was too much to expect my mother to change the habits of a lifetime, but it would have been nice if she had asked me how I was, or if I needed anything, or at least if she could come into my room to cool my sweating brow, or anything.
I laid my head back onto the pillow.
I could still remember the dream so clearly. In the last couple of months, I had started to have them fairly regularly about the war. They were always a jumble of memories of real incidents coupled with the imagination of my subconscious brain, unalike insofar as they were of different events but all with a common thread—they all ended with me in panic and utter terror. I was always more terrified by the dreams than I remember ever having been in reality.
Except, of course, at the roadside after the IED.
I could remember all too vividly the terrible fear and the awful dread of dying I had experienced as Sergeant O’Leary and I had waited for the medevac helicopter. If I closed my eyes and concentrated I could, even now, see the faces of my platoon as we had passed those ten or fifteen minutes—minutes that had felt like endless hours. I could still remember the look of shock in the face of the platoon’s newest arrival, a young eighteen-year-old replacement for a previously wounded comrade. It had been his first sight of real war, and the horror it can do to the frail human body. And I could also recall the mixture of anxiety and relief in the faces of those with more experience: their anxiety for me, and their almost overwhelming relief that it wasn’t them lying there with no right foot, their lifeblood draining away into the sand.
I reached over and turned on the light. My bedside clock showed me that it was two-thirty in the morning.
I must have been making quite a lot of noise for it to have woken my mother from the other end of the house. That was assuming that she had actually been sleeping and not lying awake, contemplating her own troubles.
I sat up on the side of the bed. I needed to go to the bathroom for a pee, but it was not as simple as it sounded. The bathroom was three doors away, and that was too far to heel-and-toe or to hop.
I now wished I’d accepted the hospital’s offer of crutches.
Instead, I went through the whole wretched rigmarole of attaching my false foot and ankle just in order to go to the loo. How I longed for the days of springing out of bed ready and able to complete a five-mile run before breakfast, or to fight off a Taliban early-morning attack.
Once or twice I had done just that, half asleep and forgetting that I was sans foot. But I had soon been reminded when I’d crashed to the floor. On one occasion I’d done myself a real mischief, opening up the surgical wound on my stump as well as splitting the back of my head on a hospital bedside locker. My surgeon had not been amused.
I made it without upset to the bathroom along the landing and gratefully relieved myself. I caught a glimpse of my face in the shaving mirror as I clumsily turned around in the enclosed space.
“What do you want from life?” I asked my image.
“I don’t know,” it answered.
What I really wanted I knew, in my heart, I couldn’t have. Flying an airplane with tin legs, even a Spitfire, was a totally different ball game to commanding an infantry platoon. The very word
infantry
implied a foot soldier. I suppose I could ask for a transfer to a tank regiment, but even then, the “tankies” became foot soldiers if and when their carriage lost a track. I could hardly say, “Sorry, chaps, you’ll have to carry on fighting without me,” as I sat there with my false leg waiting for a lift, now, could I?
So what were the reasons I had so enjoyed being an infantry platoon commander? And could I find the same things elsewhere?
I went back to my room and back to bed, leaving my prosthesis standing alone by the bedroom wall as if on sentry duty.
But sleep didn’t come easily.
For the first time since my injury I had faced the true reality of my future, and I didn’t like it.
Why me? I asked, yet again. Why had it been me who’d been injured?
Yes, I was angry with the Taliban, and also with life in general and the destiny it had dealt me, but almost more so, I was frustrated and fed up with myself.
Why had I allowed this to happen? Why? Why?
And what could I do now?
Why me?
I lay awake for a long while, trying to find solutions to the unanswerable puzzles of my mind.
I
n the morning, I set to the more immediate task at hand: identifying the blackmailer, recovering the papers and my mother’s money, and making things good with the tax man. It sounded deceptively simple. But where did I start?
With Roderick Ward, the con man accountant. He had been the architect of this misery, so discovering his whereabouts, alive or dead, must be the first goal. Where had he come from? Was he actually qualified, or was that a lie too? Were there co-conspirators, or did he work alone? There were so many questions. Now it was time for answers.
I called Isabella Warren from the phone in the drawing room.
“Oh, hello,” she said. “We’re still speaking, then?”
“Why shouldn’t we be?” I asked.
“No reason,” she said. “Just thought you were disappointed.”
I had been, but if I didn’t speak to people who disappointed me, then I’d hardly speak to anyone.
“What are you up to today?” I asked her.
“Nothing,” she said, “as usual.”
Did I detect a touch of irritation?
“Do you fancy helping me with something?”
“No bonus payments involved?”
“No,” I said. “I promise. And none will even be requested.”
“I don’t mind you asking,” she said with a laugh. “As long as you don’t mind being refused.”
I wouldn’t ask, though, I thought, because I
did
mind being refused.
“Can you pick me up at ten?” I asked.
“I thought you said you’d never let me drive you again.” She was still laughing.
“I’ll chance it,” I said. “I need to go into Newbury, and the parking is dreadful.”
“Can’t you park anywhere,” she said, “with that leg?”
“I haven’t applied for a disabled permit,” I said. “And I don’t intend being qualified to.”
“What do you mean?”
“I want to be able to walk as well as the next man,” I said. “I don’t want to be identified as ‘disabled.’ ”
“But parking is so much easier with a blue badge. You can park almost anywhere.”
“No matter,” I said. “I don’t have one today, and I need a driver. Are you on?”
“Definitely,” she said. “I’ll be there at ten.”
I went out into the kitchen to find my mother coming in from the stables.
“Good morning,” I said to her, still employing my friendlier tone from the previous evening.
“What’s good about it?” she said.
“We’re both alive,” I said.
She gave me a look that made me wonder if she had thought about not being alive this morning. Was suicide really on her mind?
“We will sort out this problem,” I said in reassurance. “You’ve done the hard bit by admitting it to me.”
“I didn’t have any choice, did I?” she said angrily. “You snooped through my office.”
“Please don’t be annoyed with me,” I said in my most calming way. “I’m here to help you.”
Her shoulders drooped and she slumped onto a chair at the kitchen table.
“I’m tired,” she said. “I don’t feel I can carry on.”
“What, with the training?”
“With life,” she said.
“Now, don’t be ridiculous.”
“I’m not,” she said. “I’ve spent most of the night thinking about it. If I died it would solve all the problems.”
“That’s crazy,” I said. “What would Derek do, for a start?”
She placed her arms on the table and rested her head on them. “It would clear all the problems for him.”
“No, it wouldn’t,” I said with certainty. “It would just create more. The training business would still have to pay the tax it owes. The house and stables would then definitely have to be sold. You dying would leave Derek homeless and alone as well as broke. Is that what you want?”
She looked up at me. “I don’t know what I want.”
How strange, I thought. I had said the same thing to myself in the night. Neither of us was happy with the futures we saw staring us in the face.
“Don’t you want to go on training?” I asked.
She didn’t reply but placed her head back down on her arms.
“Assuming the tax problems were solved and the blackmailer was stopped, would you still want to go on training?”
“I suppose so,” she said without looking up. “It’s all I know.”
“And you are so good at it,” I said, trying my best to raise her spirits. “But tell me, how did you stop Pharmacist winning on Saturday?”
She sat back in the chair and almost smiled. “I gave him a tummy ache.”
“But how?” I asked.
“I fed him some rotten food.”
“Moldy oats?” I asked.
“No,” she said. “Green sprouting potatoes.”
“Green potatoes! How on earth did you think of green potatoes?”
“It had worked before,” she said. “When
he
called the first time and said that Scientific had to lose, I was at my wit’s end of what to do. If I’d over-galloped him everyone in the stable would know.” She gulped. “I had to do something. I was desperate. But what could I give him? I had some old potatoes that had gone green, and they were moldy and sprouting. I remembered one of my dogs being ill after eating a green-skinned potato, so I peeled them all and then liquidized the peel. I simply poured it down Scientific’s throat and hoped it would make him ill.”