few more minutes, and then Newberry sat down on the grass and gazed across the Vale of Evesham. Brakespeare joined him. Newberry turned towards him. "You know, I'm not worried about death. I don't believe in an afterlife or anything of that sort, but I shall miss the sheer beauty of this place. Listen. Silence." He paused and Brakespeare could see that he was thinking about something. Then he spoke. "If my heart were to simply stop beating, And if I should pass away. I would be so perfectly happy To have left on this beautiful day." Brakespeare felt not a little moved. "That's nice. Who wrote it?" "I did. Just now! Verses often come into my head. I keep meaning to write them down." Brakespeare was happy just to sit and share the serenity of the Hills. Minutes passed without either of them saying a word. Newberry stood up again. "I feel better now. Better go back I suppose." They started to go down the way that they had come up. Brakespeare found that the descent was harder than the ascent, and soon his knee joints began to hurt. "That was beautiful, I can see why you would not want to move to London, but back to business; the second trip to Paris. It wasn't the same was it?" "What do you mean? " "Who are Mrs Potter and Master Potter. " "Friends." The aggressiveness came back. "Good friends?" "Yes." Brakespeare felt his temper rise. The prick was pissing him about again. He stopped in his tracks with a jolt. "For fuck's sake." Newberry who by now was slightly ahead of him stopped also and swung round. "What did you just say?" Brakespeare ignored him. “ You're a married man. Have children?" Newberry nodded. "Married men with children don't go on holiday with other married women and presumably her son unless they're rather more than friends - or was this business entertaining also? What business were you putting her way that she was happy to go on a dirty weekend with you.?!" They stared at each other for several seconds, then Newberry visibly sagged. By now they had descended to St Ann’s Well, and he gestured to an iron bench. They both sat down and Newberry bent forward; his head in his hands. "Christ how did I get into this mess. Do you know what it feels like to have every aspect of your life dug over when you've done nothing wrong. This isn't fucking justice." Brakespeare feeling that he had gained the upper hand, and now had this difficult client under control, needed to take advantage of the moment. "This is preparation for ‘fucking justice’. Who is Mrs Potter?" Newberry paused to collect his thoughts. "Kate and I go back a long way. She was my girlfriend when I worked at the Council; she was a secretary in my department. Then we had a bust up and she found someone else and married him. They moved away to London. I didn't see her for years. I got married and had kids ... " "How many?" "Two, a boy and a girl. The girl's married and the boy’s in his first year at University. Then when I started to go down to London, I met her again. She was working for one of the large estate agents. Her marriage hadn't worked, and she'd been on her own for quite a while. Waiting for me to come back she said." He laughed. "She said she knew that I would. Well, what can you do when a woman says that?" He looked up and across at Brakespeare. "Say no?" "There speaks the lawyer. Well my marriage had dried up by then and so the inevitable happened." "Dried up?" "I haven't had sex with my wife for eighteen years. Not since my son was born." One thing a solicitor learns to do is to control himself. Day in, day out clients will matter of factly, drop a bombshell. A solicitor just has to nod appreciatively and stifle all desire to laugh, cry or express surprise, shock, amusement, or indignation. Brakespeare had often wondered why it was that people will say things to a complete stranger that they would not say to their nearest and dearest. "So you started an affair with Mrs. Potter again. Did she have