In the Frame

Free In the Frame by Dick Francis

Book: In the Frame by Dick Francis Read Free Book Online
Authors: Dick Francis
it, because when Archie and I were thinking what fun it would be to buy a horse and go to the races as owners, we decided we’d like purple with a green cap for our colours, if no one else already had that, of course.’
    ‘Don?’ I said.
    ‘Mm? Oh… three bay horses cantering… in profile… one in front, two slightly overlapping behind. Bright colours on the jockeys. I don’t remember exactly. White racetrack rails and a lot of sunny sky.’
    ‘What size?’
    He frowned slightly. ‘Not very big. About twenty-four inches by eighteen, inside the frame.’
    ‘And yours, Maisie?’
    ‘A bit smaller, dear, I should think.’
    ‘Look,’ Donald said. ‘What are you getting at?’
    ‘Trying to make sure that there are no more coincidences.’
    He stared, but without any particular feeling.
    ‘On the way up here,’ I said, ‘Maisie told me everything’ (but
everything
) ‘of the way she came to buy herpicture. So could you possibly tell us how you came to buy yours. Did you, for example, deliberately go looking for a Munnings?’
    Donald passed a weary hand over his face, obviously not wanting the bother of answering.
    ‘Please, Don,’ I said.
    ‘Oh…’ A long sigh. ‘No. I wasn’t especially wanting to buy anything at all. We just went into the Melbourne Art Gallery for a stroll round. We came to the Munnings they have there… and while we were looking at it we just drifted into conversation with a woman near us, as one does in art galleries. She said there was another Munnings, not far away, for sale in a small commercial gallery, and it was worth seeing even if one didn’t intend to buy it. We had time to spare, so we went.’
    Maisie’s mouth had fallen open. ‘But, dear,’ she said, recovering, ‘that
was just
the same as us, my sister-in-law and me, though it was Sydney Art Gallery, not Melbourne. They have this marvellous picture there, “The Coming Storm”, and we were admiring it when this man sort of drifted up to us and joined in…’
    Donald suddenly looked a great deal more exhausted, like a sick person overdone by healthy visitors.
    ‘Look… Charles… you aren’t going to the police with all this? Because I… I don’t think… I could stand… a whole new lot… of questions.’
    ‘No, I’m not,’ I said.
    ‘Then what… does it matter?’
    Maisie finished her gin and tonic and smiled a little too brightly.
    ‘Which way to the little girls’ room, dear?’ she asked, and disappeared to the cloakroom.
    Donald said faintly, ‘I can’t concentrate… I’m sorry, Charles, but I can’t seem to do anything… while they still have Regina… unburied… just
stored
…’
    Time, far from dulling the agony, seemed to have preserved it, as if the keeping of Regina in a refrigerated drawer had stopped dead the natural progression of mourning. I had been told that the bodies of murdered people could be held in that way for six months or more in unsolved cases. I doubted whether Donald would last that long.
    He stood suddenly and walked away out of the door to the hall. I followed. He crossed the hall, opened the door of the sittingroom, and went in.
    Hesitantly, I went after him.
    The sittingroom still contained only the chintz-covered sofas and chairs, now ranged over-tidily round the walls. The floor where Regina had lain was clean and polished. The air was cold.
    Donald stood in front of the empty fireplace looking at my picture of Regina, which was propped on the mantelpiece.
    ‘I stay in here with her, most of the time,’ he said. ‘It’s the only place I can bear to be.’
    He walked to one of the armchairs and sat down, directly facing the portrait.
    ‘You wouldn’t mind seeing yourselves out, would you, Charles?’ he said. ‘I’m really awfully tired.’
    ‘Take care of yourself.’ Useless advice. One could see he wouldn’t.
    ‘I’m all right,’ he said. ‘Quite all right. Don’t you worry.’
    I looked back from the door. He was sitting immobile, looking

Similar Books

Losing Faith

Scotty Cade

The Midnight Hour

Neil Davies

The Willard

LeAnne Burnett Morse

Green Ace

Stuart Palmer

Noble Destiny

Katie MacAlister

Daniel

Henning Mankell