In the Frame - By Dick Francis Page 0,33

to buy it.

I knew him instantly. Brown receding hair combed back, grey eyes, down-drooping moustache, suntanned skin: all last on view thirteen days ago beside the sea in Sussex, England, prodding around in a smoky ruin.

Mr Greene. With an ‘e’.

It took him only a fraction longer. Puzzlement as he glanced from me to the picture and back, then the shocking realisation of where he’d seen me. He took a sharp step backwards and raised his hand to the wall outside.

I was on my way to the door, but I wasn’t quick enough. A steel mesh gate slid down very fast in the doorway and clicked into some sort of bolt in the floor. Mr Greene stood on the outside, disbelief still stamped on every feature and his mouth hanging open. I revised all my easy theories about danger being good for the soul and felt as frightened as I’d ever been in my life.

‘What’s the matter?’ called a deeper voice from up the corridor.

Mr Greene’s tongue was stuck. The man from the office appeared at his shoulder and looked at me through the imprisoning steel.

‘A thief?’ he asked with irritation.

Mr Greene shook his head. A third person arrived outside, his young face bright with curiosity, and his acne showing like measles.

‘Hey,’ he said in loud Australian surprise. ‘He was the one at the Art Centre. The one who chased me. I swear he didn’t follow me. I swear it.’

‘Shut up,’ said the man from the office briefly. He stared at me steadily. I stared back.

I was standing in the centre of a brightly lit room of about fifteen feet square. No windows. No way out except through the guarded door. Nowhere to hide, no weapons to hand. A long way down the ski jump and no promise of a soft landing.

‘I say,’ I said plaintively. ‘Just what is all this about?’ I walked up to the steel gate and tapped on it. ‘Open this up, I want to get out.’

‘What are you doing here?’ the office man said. He was bigger than Greene and obviously more senior in the gallery. Heavy dark spectacle frames over unfriendly eyes, and a blue bow tie with polka dots under a double chin. Small mouth with a full lower lip. Thinning hair.

‘Looking,’ I said, trying to sound bewildered. ‘Just looking at pictures.’ An innocent at large, I thought, and a bit dim.

‘He chased me in the Art Centre,’ the boy repeated.

‘You threw some stuff in that man’s eyes,’ I said indignantly. ‘You might have blinded him.’

‘Friend of yours, was he?’ the office man said.

‘No,’ I said. ‘I was just there, that was all. Same as I’m here. Just looking at pictures. Nothing wrong in that, is there? I go to lots of galleries, all the time.’

Mr Greene got his voice back. ‘I saw him in England,’ he said to the office man. His eyes returned to the Munnings, then he put his hand on the office man’s arm and pulled him up the corridor out of my sight.

‘Open the door,’ I said to the boy, who still gazed in.

‘I don’t know how,’ he said. ‘And I don’t reckon I’d be popular, somehow.’

The two other men returned. All three gazed in. I began to feel sympathy for creatures in cages.

‘Who are you?’ said the office man.

‘Nobody. I mean, I’m just here for the racing, of course, and the cricket.’

‘Name?’

‘Charles Neil.’ Charles Neil Todd.

‘What were you doing in England?’

‘I live there!’ I said. ‘Look,’ I went on, as if trying to be reasonable under great provocation. ‘I saw this man here,’ I nodded to Greene, ‘at the home of a woman I know slightly in Sussex. She was giving me a lift home from the races, see, as I’d missed my train to Worthing and was thumbing along the road from the Members’ car park. Well, she stopped and picked me up, and then said she wanted to make a detour to see her house which had lately been burnt, and when we got there, this man was there. He said his name was Greene and that he was from an insurance company, and that’s all I know about him. So what’s going on?’

‘It is a coincidence that you should meet here again, so soon.’

‘It certainly is,’ I agreed fervently. ‘But that’s no bloody reason to lock me up.’

I read indecision on all their faces. I hoped the sweat wasn’t running visibly down my own.

I shrugged exasperatedly. ‘Fetch the police or something, then,’ I said. ‘If

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