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Copyright & Information

No Fear or Favour

 

First published in 1968

© Estate Henry Cecil; House of Stratus 1968-2011

 

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise), without the prior permission of the publisher. Any person who does any unauthorised act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages.

 

The right of Henry Cecil to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted.

 

This edition published in 2011 by House of Stratus, an imprint of

Stratus Books Ltd., Lisandra House, Fore Street, Looe,

Cornwall, PL13 1AD, UK.

 

Typeset by House of Stratus.

 

A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library and the Library of Congress.

 

EAN   ISBN   Edition
1842320602   9781842320600   Print
0755129199   9780755129195   Kindle
075512944X   9780755129447   Epub
0755150619   9780755150618   Epdf

 

This is a fictional work and all characters are drawn from the author’s imagination.

Any resemblance or similarities to persons either living or dead are entirely coincidental.

 

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www.houseofstratus.com

 

 

About the Author

Henry Cecil

 

Judge Henry Cecil Leon was born in Norwood Green Rectory near London in 1902. In 1923 he was called to the Bar and from 1949 to 1967 he served as a County Court judge. He developed his writing skills whilst serving with the British Army during the Second World War, reputedly telling stories to officers at the behest of his colonel, so as to keep their minds off alcohol whilst sailing on ‘dry’ ships. These stories formed the basis of his first collection, Full Circle, published in 1948. Thereafter, the legal year, his impressions at court, or at other official functions, as well as dinners at the Savoy Grill or at his club, the Garrick, all provided material for his considerable brain power.

He wrote during the three-week-long family holidays which were usually spent in comfortable hotels in Britain. He would sit in a deck chair in a sunny garden, exercise book on lap and pen in hand, writing from 10 am to 1pm, then again from 2.30 to 4 pm each day.

Cecil had an extraordinary ability to examine the law in both a humorous and a more serious, analytical way, providing a series of thought provoking works.

Many of his stories have been made into films or plays – notably ‘Brothers-in-Law’ and ‘Alibi for a Judge’. These and other books have also provided a stimulus for those wishing to take up law as a career, although whilst dealing with the legal system they also have more than an element of the mystery/thriller genre about them. They are a delight for those who look for authenticity in the most aptly described British characters.

Cecil died in May 1976, still at the height of his mental powers.

 

Contents

1.The Schoolmaster

2.An Attractive Girl

3.The Bank Clerk

4.The Councillor

5.The Trials of a Superintendent

6.That Girl Again

7.The Trial Begins

8.The First Two Witnesses

9.Margaret Vane

10.An Interview

11.Problem

12.Superintendent in the Box

13.Margaret’s Cross-examination Continued

14.Conversation Between Brothers

15.To Ask or Not to Ask

16.The Question

17.William Morgan

18.Fear or Favour?

19.No Fear or Favour

CHAPTER ONE

The Schoolmaster

Hugh Bridges, walking somewhat painfully and very disconsolately in worn clothes and old shoes over hard pavements on a cold December afternoon in London, did not appear to be a fruitful source of blood money to any prospective blackmailer. He was a schoolmaster, fifty-eight years old, kindly and inefficient and of very small means. His wife, whom he adored, was a permanent invalid and his only real happiness in life lay in looking after her. It was when with her that he was able to use the only talent in which he excelled. He was a good reader and nothing gave the couple more pleasure than when they could enjoy together the English classics read by him. He was no actor and no orator and, though he might have obtained a position as an announcer with the BBC (where his abhorrence of the intrusive ‘r’, so popular with some announcers, would have pleased at least one listener) he never thought of the idea. He had been educated to be a schoolmaster and a schoolmaster he became, good neither at the teaching nor the disciplinary side of his career, but accepted by pupils and colleagues as a friendly member of the staff though one of very small value.

On that December afternoon he was engaged in distributing leaflets advertising washing powder. For some time he had found that he got less and less coaching during the school holidays, for the very good reason that he was an extremely bad coach. But he needed money badly. He wanted to supply his wife with such small luxuries as he could manage to buy, but their rent and rates took a large part of his small salary. He had to find some way of supplementing his income and so he answered an advertisement calling for leaflet distributors. The pay was trifling, thirty shillings for distributing a thousand leaflets, but the few pounds which he could earn meant a lot to them and so he started work. He had to put one leaflet – no more – in the letter box of each house or flat. This often meant climbing up many stairs, and he found that the bundle of leaflets took a very long time indeed to become smaller. As the hours of drudgery went by, hours he could have spent happily with his wife, he wondered how long his present pair of shoes would stand the strain. He was not a strong man, either physically, mentally or morally. He had never done anything plainly wrong because the opportunity had never come his way. But, if he had had the handling of other people’s money he would have been sorely tempted to take some for the benefit of his wife, and he would probably have yielded to the temptation. Fortunately he had never had such a temptation to resist.

But on this December afternoon he was suddenly tempted. He was tempted to put more than one leaflet in the same letter box. If found out, he could always say it was an accident. He was careful not to break the rule in houses or flats too near each other. But he soon found that this device did not seem sensibly to lessen the load of leaflets. He thought of his wife sitting waiting at home. And then the Devil, who knows whom and when and where to strike and who presumably decided that he must on this occasion pursue a little man, decided to appear to Hugh Bridges. And he did so in the shape of a dustbin. The Devil is not beautiful, although he can appear in a beautiful disguise. A dustbin does not normally to normal people appear beautiful, but, when the thought occurred to Hugh Bridges, it looked the most beautiful dustbin which he had ever seen. Here was the solution to his troubles. He had enough leaflets left to take up hours of his time. The dustbin smiled at him. ‘Come unto me, all ye that are heavy laden …’, it began. That was a false move on the part of the Devil and he immediately regretted it. Hugh Bridges was not a particularly religious man but the words which were put into his mind, though devilishly apt, made him falter in his resolution, when he remembered who had really said them. But by this time the Devil had recovered. The washing powder was no better than anyone else’s, thought Hugh. ‘He that is without sin among you …’, quoted the dustbin. I don’t pretend to be better than anyone else, thought Hugh. I want to be back with my wife, reading to her. It’s one of her greatest pleasures, and she gets few enough. The dustbin (with Hugh’s assistance) opened its mouth and Hugh, after first looking round to see that he was unobserved, dropped in the remaining leaflets. He hurried home.

The next morning he called at his employers’ office and signed the declaration that he had duly distributed all the leaflets in accordance with his instructions and received his money and another bundle of leaflets.

‘I was expecting you last night,’ said the woman who paid him. ‘They took longer than you expected, did they?’

‘Er – yes,’ said Hugh. ‘As a matter of fact it would be a bit easier if I called in for my money next day.’

‘That’s all right,’ said the woman. ‘But you’re sticking to the rules, aren’t you? Only one in each letter box?’

‘Oh, of course,’ lied Hugh.

Those engaged in distributing agencies of this kind are well aware of the temptations which confront the distributors. And, as far as they can, they take steps to see that their employees do not succumb to these temptations. They employ supervisors, whose business it is to check the movements of distributors. And, once their suspicions are aroused about any particular person, they have him or her watched. The agencies are responsible to the firms who make contracts with them and they would soon lose their business if the leaflets were not, on the whole, distributed properly.

It was not long before the Devil was able to devote his attention to someone else, as Hugh quickly got into the habit of distributing about ten per cent of the leaflets and dumping the rest in various dustbins over his route. His arrangement to call for his money the next day was in case he called back so soon on the day of distribution as to excite suspicion. His behaviour would have been discovered in any case, as the agency which employed him was far more efficient at its job than he was as a schoolmaster. But he did have rather bad luck. He put three leaflets into the letter box of one of the directors of the company which made the soapflakes. The company complained to the agency, the agency had Hugh watched, he was summoned to the office and instantly dismissed. He went home sadly and without his money for that day, though he was not required to repay the money which he had previously received. Now he had to look for some other means of supplementing his income. But, before he had found other employment, he received a call from a man who said his name was Bates.

‘Yes, Mr Bates,’ asked Hugh, ‘what can I do for you?’

‘You’re a master at St Augusta’s, Sefton, are you not?’

‘I am.’

‘I’ve been sent by the Board of Governors of your school to interview you.’

‘Not about retirement, I hope. I’m only fifty-eight.’

‘Not specifically about retirement, although that might be involved.’

‘But why?’ asked Hugh. ‘I’ve had no complaints about my work.’

‘Oh no,’ said the man, who knew nothing of Hugh’s work at the school. ‘As far as I know, your work is entirely satisfactory.’

‘I’m glad to hear it,’ said Hugh.

‘When I say that, I’m referring to your work at the school, of course.’

‘Quite.’

‘But you have been doing some other work, haven’t you, at which you were not quite so satisfactory?’

‘Other work?’ queried Hugh, but he knew what the man meant.

‘Distributing leaflets.’

‘Yes, I did distribute leaflets for a time.’

‘Not very many, I’m afraid,’ said the man, ‘unless you count dumping them in dustbins proper distribution.’

Hugh said nothing.

‘Well,’ persisted the man, ‘do you call dumping leaflets in dustbins proper distribution?’

‘No, I don’t.’

‘But that’s what you did.’

‘I’m afraid so. My wife is an invalid and I was desperately tired. I yielded to temptation.’

‘D’you mean this only happened once – the time you were caught?’

Hugh did not answer.

‘Well, do you?’

‘What right have you to ask me these questions?’

‘Have you told your headmaster about this?’

‘No, I haven’t.’

‘Don’t you think that he and the Governors of the School have a right to know about it?’

‘Surely,’ said Hugh, ‘what I do in my own time is my own affair.’

‘Within limits, certainly. But were you not paid for this work?’

‘I was.’

‘Did you not sign a declaration that you’d done the work properly before you were paid?’

‘Yes, I did.’

‘You were paid on the strength of that declaration.’

‘I suppose so.’

‘But the declaration wasn’t true. You hadn’t distributed all the leaflets properly. You’d put most of them in dustbins.’

‘Not for the first few times.’

‘But certainly for the last few times.’

‘I’m afraid so.’

‘So you obtained money by telling a lie.’

‘If you put it like that, yes.’

‘How would you put it?’

‘I don’t know,’ said Hugh unhappily.

‘Getting money by telling a lie is called fraud,’ said the man. ‘People can be prosecuted for it.’

‘The agency knows all about it.’

‘That’s, of course, why they dismissed you?’

‘Yes.’

‘But they haven’t prosecuted you – so far.’

‘No.’

‘They could, couldn’t they?’

‘They never suggested that they would.’

‘Well, if you’re lucky, they won’t, but don’t you think the authorities of your school ought to be told about serious crimes you commit in the holidays?’

‘I’ve never thought about it.’

‘Well, think about it now,’ said the man. ‘You are partly responsible for the boys’ moral welfare. Is it desirable that a person who can be prosecuted for fraud should teach children? He might teach them how to do the same thing.’

‘Oh, I wouldn’t dream of it.’

‘It may be you would and it may be you wouldn’t,’ said the man. ‘But isn’t that a matter for your headmaster or the Board of Governors to judge?’

‘I don’t know.’

‘At any rate, you haven’t told them?’

‘No – but as they’ve sent you, I suppose they know. I wonder how.’

‘Mr Bridges, have you ever been guilty of any similar conduct?’

‘Never,’ said Hugh. ‘Upon my honour, never.’

‘The honour of a man who tells lies to get money isn’t worth all that much, is it?’

‘No, I suppose not.’

‘But it’s true, is it? You’ve led a blameless life until this episode?’

‘It’s absolutely true.’

‘I must think,’ said the man. He waited for about a minute. During the first half of it he looked steadily at a wall of the room, during the second he rose and paced up and down. Finally he spoke.

‘I’ve got some good news for you, Mr Bridges,’ he said. ‘I’m not from the Governors of your school after all.’

‘But–’ began Hugh.

‘Wait a moment, please. I’ll explain. I come from a body called the Association for the Protection of the Public from Fraud. One of our methods is to give people who are guilty of fraud but not prosecuted a nasty fright. This should ensure that they don’t do it again.’

‘Well, you’ve certainly given me a fright,’ said Hugh. ‘But, even if you hadn’t, I should never have done it again. I was heartily ashamed of myself.’

‘Only after you were caught,’ said the man. ‘If you hadn’t been caught, you’d have been collecting your money for dumping leaflets in dustbins up to this moment. Indeed, at this particular time you might have been dumping a load.’

‘No,’ said Hugh with a faint smile. ‘I should have been home by now. One of the reasons I did it was to get back to my invalid wife.’

‘Well, I’m glad to hear it,’ said the man. ‘That may enable my executive to take a lenient view. No promises, mind you.’

‘How d’you mean, a lenient view?’

‘Well – you don’t suppose I’ve come all this way for nothing, do you? The Association pays me, and it expects to get results.’

‘But I thought you’d come to give me a fright.’

‘That was one object certainly,’ said the man. ‘I’m glad to think it may have been effective.’

‘Oh, it has been, I assure you.’

‘Good. Now comes the next question.’

He paused in order to give Hugh a chance to wonder what the next question was.

‘No doubt you’d like to know what it is,’ he said.

‘Yes, I would,’ said Hugh.

‘Then I’ll tell you. The question is – should the Association report the matter to your headmaster?’

‘I see.’

‘To report or not to report, that is the question. D’you think we should?’

‘Well, naturally I don’t. I might lose my job.’

‘You think they might sack you, do you?’

‘I suppose it’s possible.’

‘Well, Mr Bridges, if it’s as serious as all that, I should have thought it was plainly your duty to tell them yourself.’

‘If I lost my job, I don’t know what would become of us.’

‘If you’d been sent to prison, what would have become of you? You’d certainly have lost your job then, wouldn’t you?’

‘Yes, I suppose so.’

‘You know, the trouble is, Mr Bridges, that an Association like ours does a tremendous amount of work entirely for the public good but no one thanks us. I don’t suppose you’ve ever seen our name in the Press.’

‘I can’t say that I have.’

‘If we didn’t get support from voluntary subscriptions, we’d have to close down. Fortunately there are just enough public-spirited people about to keep us going. But they die or go abroad or take up some other charity and we need new blood the whole time. They have to pay me a decent salary or I wouldn’t do the work. It’s not work you can give to anyone. You’ve got to have someone with – well – I don’t want to boast – with – what shall we say? – more than average intelligence. So they get chaps like me, who otherwise would be making a lot of money in commerce. But it all has to be paid for.’

He stopped and then added: ‘You wouldn’t like to become a subscriber, I suppose,’ he said.

‘We can hardly get through as it is,’ said Hugh.

‘If you lose your job, you won’t get through at all.’

‘That’s true,’ said Hugh.

‘You see,’ said the man, ‘my people have got to weigh your case up against the others. I’m not pretending there are not many worse cases than yours, and if I were able to report that you were prepared to become a subscriber, they might think that would sufficiently show your good faith and justify them in not reporting the matter to your headmaster.’

‘I see,’ said Hugh. ‘Well, I suppose I might manage a couple of guineas a year, if that would help.’

‘It would not,’ said the man. ‘I’m afraid I’ve been wasting your time and mine. I’m so sorry.’

He got up to go.

‘But what will happen?’ asked Hugh anxiously.

‘I’m afraid that I shall be instructed by my executive to tell your headmaster all about it.’

‘Please don’t,’ said Hugh.

‘It’s not in my hands. I’m only an agent. I only report what’s happened.’

‘If you could report that I’d subscribe a bit more, would it help?

‘Of course it would. Your money would help us to catch far worse criminals than you. What’s your salary?’

‘Nine fifty after tax.’

‘Net, that is?’

‘Yes.’

‘Humph! Suppose we say twenty per cent.’

‘Twenty per cent!!’ said Hugh in horrified tones.

‘Per annum,’ said the man.

‘Every year!!’

‘You can pay by the week. Say four pounds a week.’

‘I can’t possibly afford it.’

‘I quite understand,’ said the man, and grasped the door handle. ‘Thank you for seeing me and being so frank about everything.’

‘Wait a moment,’ said Hugh. ‘If I made it three, would that do?’

‘Three pounds a week?’

‘Yes,’ said Hugh. ‘Though I really don’t know how I can do even that.’

‘That’s quite simple,’ said the man. ‘We’re not like a hire-purchase company. We don’t have signed agreements. We’re not like the ordinary charity. We don’t even want seven-year covenants. When you feel you can’t pay, you just stop paying. As I said, you don’t even have to start paying.’

‘But, if I don’t, you’ll go to the school.’

‘Of course. We have our duty to do.’

‘And if I stop paying – that’s what’ll happen?’

‘Quite right. Every Friday at the corner of Wharton Street, a man called Smith will collect the money from you.’

‘But when I’m at school?’

‘Of course. How silly of me. You can send it by post to this address.’

He handed Hugh a piece of paper with an address on it. ‘You can do that from the start, as a matter of fact. Every Friday three pounds to this address. But you don’t have to start or keep it up, if you don’t want to. Please feel absolutely free to do just as you please. Now I really must be going. I’ve got a much worse case than yours to attend to. We wouldn’t let a man like him subscribe to our Association. His money would contaminate us. No, we’ll get him a nice long stretch instead. Goodbye, Mr Bridges. Thank you for being so co-operative.’