pounds risked in recently floated companies. So it wasnât particularly strange that James Wenlock lived in the size of house he lived in and drove the sort of cars I recall he favoured ... top of the range Audis, for example. I merely assumed that he had made a few shrewd investments and I thought no more about it. Either that or he had got himself into the buy-to-let market and was renting out terraced properties near the railway station to university students. I confess that that is also a very nice source of income, very nice indeed.â
âI see,â Yellich replied. âThat might be worth our looking into, but Mr Wenlock never spoke of his investments?â
âNot to me, but then he wouldnât have done so anyway. This is a large company,â Bellingham explained. âWe have ten chartered accountants and thirty-five certified accountants, and there is little contact between the two. Thatâs the way we like it ... but ... let me think for a moment. You know, youâd better ... or youâd be better, rather, talking to Nigel March. I always used to see them in each otherâs company.â
âNigel March?â Yellich repeated, as it committing the name to memory.
âYes ... March ... exactly the same spelling as the month, and also of the small market town of Cambridgeshire.â Bellingham smiled. âYou know, I always thought that March is a kind of non-month; it is neither winter nor spring in March and youâll probably find Nigel March to be like that, a kind of non-personality, as if living up to his name. I have never found much to get hold of in terms of his character â not much there at all really. I have always thought that Nigel March is a bit like âme robotâ â he has a perfunctory attitude to his work, so he does his job and holds his job down. He keeps his head above water ... you canât take that from the man ... but heâs a bit pedantic ... quite perfunctory. He goes through the motions but doesnât give much of himself as he gets through his working day. But heâll be able to tell you more about James Wenlock than I probably can.â
âWhere is he?â Yellich asked. âWe would like to talk to him.â
âHeâll likely be at his desk. If not there then heâll be in the building somewhere.â Bellingham smiled again.
âThank you; weâll go and have a chat with him.â Yellich paused and then added, âWhat do you know of James Wenlockâs home life?â
âAgain, itâs not something he and I ever talked about. My home life wasnât exactly happy and I used to stay late to avoid going back, but you know, these days I canât wait to get home.â
âOh,â Yellich replied warmly, âyou and your wife were able to settle your differences?â
âWe did that all right, we settled it all very well. We got divorced.â Clarence Bellingham chuckled at his own joke. âThese days I love the journey home because I have found that going home to an empty house is also going home to a tranquil house. My heavens, I should have got divorced years and years ago. All those long years of arguments and all that horrible silent tension ... all that could have been avoided ... but so far as I could observe, James Wenlock never showed any sort of reluctance to go home at the end of the working day, none at all. He would just tidy his desk, walk out of the building to the car park we use, get into his Audi and heâd purr away, chrome wheels, tinted windscreen, all that Flash Harry number ... His was a real poserâs car, which we didnât approve of, but we had no control over his choice of car or all the add-on goodies it boasted. We didnât like the boy-racer image â not as an accountant with this firm,â Bellingham grimaced, âbut we couldnât do anything about it.â
âIt certainly isnât the image that