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the fields had become town, and a new estate had been built practically on the front lawn. But Harrisā€™s father had sprung by then what I took for his final surprise. In his sixties heā€™d been expected hourly to die of drink, or other over-indulgence, but instead he had cut and run to Spain with a girl of twenty-four. She was rich apparently, too. The last Iā€™d heard he was still there, seventy-one by now and going strong, his child-bride of thirty-something firmly at his side and ā€œSerenely putting up with,ā€ Harris had said, ā€œDadā€™s endless stream of bimboritas from the bars.ā€

No doubt Wybrother Seniorā€™s youthful tendencies had moulded Harrisā€™s aura of age. (How I dislike the Americanised apostropheā€™s following an s. But Iā€™ve given up on that one. Hardly any publisher in the English language would now countenance the old tradition of Harrisā€™. Not that this, as will become obvious, is ever intended for publication.)

When I received the most recent summons to lunch with Harris in London, I went. The possible chances of a book contract were usually illusory. So one took what one could get.

Harris came ā€œdown from the countryā€, from the Wodehouse house. We met at a restaurant called Le Grill in Holborn, one of those small quirky venues that can sometimes supply haute cuisine, and are a kind of Masonic secret among any that know. Harris had previously ordered me: ā€œDonā€™t tell anyone about this, eh, Roy? Keep it for us. The good and the slightly great.ā€

We ate steak, Scottish, or so it purported to be. There had been starters of something to do with Scandinavian prawns, ā€˜seasonalā€™ asparagus. We drank the appropriate wines, which were very drinkable. Naturally Harris knows exactly what to choose. Frankly I can never be that bothered. If something is palatable, and in my case, affordable, Iā€™ll drink it. After the main course there was cheese ā€“ actually very good. We took coffee.

And now, I thought, having as always been careful and restrained, as my own father would have instructed, Harris might offer a titbit, some man ā€“ or more often now, a woman ā€“ who might be interested in a book from me. At this point Iā€™d better add, my forte is usually the minor thriller or detective novel. But such basic works may, if wanted, be constructed to incorporate certain preoccupations. Or should I say themes.

This time, however my lunch impresario did not suggest a single thing. Over the brandy and coffee his eyes grew suddenly like an infantā€™s. And by that I mean through changing colour ā€“ to a sort of milky blue; by nature theyā€™re grey.

ā€œFuck it, Roy,ā€ he said, gazing out into the vistas of Holborn Viaduct, ā€œDadā€™s dead.ā€

Such a phrase, bathetically, heaven forgive me, alliterative. Dadā€™s dead.

But I was shocked too, in my own (little) way. Both at the news and Harris being abruptly so unlike himself.

Stupidly I said, ā€œYour fatherā€¦ā€ I certainly didnā€™t mean to seem to correct him.

But he snapped, ā€œDad, yes. My bloody father.ā€

ā€œIā€™m so sorry, Harris.ā€

ā€œSo am I. No, let me be painfully honest, Roy, I donā€™t give a flying ā€“ I donā€™t care, Roy. Which has to be wrong, yes?ā€

His milky eyes said something other. Poor bastard, he seemed not to know. Had some hidden unnoted weeping turned his eyes blue?

ā€œWhen did it happen?ā€

ā€œTwo days ago. Two days. Can you believe that bitch Veronicaā€¦ā€ he meant the thirty-something child wife, ā€œonly called me last night. And do I mean night? It was two minutes to two in the morning.ā€

ā€œWell, from Spain perhaps ā€“ And she must have been upset.ā€

ā€œMust she? How would one know? Perhaps. Oh, perhaps. Iā€™ll give the cow the benefit of the doubt. I have to go over for the funeral and to sort things out. And there has to be an inquest. Oh not,ā€ he startlingly nearly bellowed, so our fellow lunchers raised their brows, ā€œlike one of your bloody yarns. They just do it. Oh God, Roy.ā€

I forbore to ask if Janette, his glacĆ© fiancĆ©e, was going with him to give support. Iā€™d only met her once.

Possibly she wasnā€™t really as she had seemed to be, not when he and she were alone.

Just then anyhow his mobile phone went off. His ringtone was a special piece of Brahms.

At once, like Pavlovā€™s dogs, trained to the right response, he was chatting into it in his ordinary Harris manner. His eyes unfilmed, went grey again.

ā€œSorry, Roy,ā€ he said as the call ended. ā€œEmergency over at The Elms.ā€ The Elms was his name for a well-known publishing house near the Euston Road. ā€œGet me a cab, will you?ā€ he added to the waiter, ā€œand the bill. Really sorry to run out on you. You must email and tell me all your news, what projects youā€™re working onā€¦ā€ Projects meaning books. Projects. ā€œDonā€™t rush off because I have to, stay and have another brandy.ā€

We shook hands and he went away.

I didnā€™t want another brandy, hadnā€™t really wanted the first one. It was quite hot although only April, too hot for excess alcohol.

I walked down from Holborn to the Strand feeling rather flat, although Harrisā€™s lunches seldom led to much work nowadays. And I was slightly unnerved. Probably at the touch of what my father had been used to call the Grim Reaper. Harrisā€™s father had been just over seventy, but I was fifty. Well over the boundary on the downward path to old age and death.

After all I went into a pub and ordered half a pint of Wincottā€™s Bitter, a funny old brew you see less and less.

Sitting in the dark corner, staring into the beerā€™s murky depths, I had a bleak look at my life. What was I doing, where heading for? Why? What aims did I have, hopes cherish? It was a sorry and banal resume. I was a plodder, and I did what I was told where I could find anyone ā€“ parent, employer, publisher ā€“ to tell me. I kept the ā€œwolf from the

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