Penny Vincenzi, internationally bestselling author of No Angel, has dazzled readers with her intricately crafted novels for nearly twenty years. She unleashes her signature narrative prowess once more in A Question of Trust.
   In 1950s London, Tom Knelston is charismatic and charming, with a passion for politics and reform. He is a man with ambition—and someone to watch. His wife Alice, a former nurse, shares his ideals. It seems they are the perfect match.
   Then, out of the blue, Tom meets an old childhood acquaintance, the beautiful and unhappily married Diana Southcott, a fashion model. In many ways, she is everything Tom fights against, but she is also irresistible and so, flirting with danger, they embark on an affair that is potentially damaging to both. And when his child becomes ill, Tom is forced to make decisions about his principles, his career, his marriage, and, most of all, his love for his child.
   A Question of Trust is a vintage Penny Vincenzi novel: rich characterization, life-changing decisions, love, desire, and conflict. “Seductively readable” (The Times), it is a luscious, page-turning read about a precarious situation—both utterly compelling and hugely rewarding.
   By Penny Vincenzi
   By Penny Vincenzi
   Wicked Pleasures
   An Outrageous Affair
   Another Woman
   Forbidden Places
   The Dilemma
   Windfall
   Almost a Crime
   No Angel
   Something Dangerous
   Into Temptation
   A Perfect Heritage
   Copyright
   This edition first published in hardcover in the United States in 2018 by
   The Overlook Press, Peter Mayer Publishers, Inc.
   141 Wooster Street
   New York, NY 10012
   www.overlookpress.com
   For bulk and special sales, please contact [email protected], or write us at the above address
   Copyright © 2017 Penny Vincenzi
   All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system now known or to be invented, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who wishes to quote brief passages in connection with a review written for inclusion in a magazine, newspaper, or broadcast.
   ISBN 978-1-4683-1615-5
   Contents
   By Penny Vincenzi
   Copyright
   Dedication
   Acknowledgments
   Character List
   Chapter 1
   Chapter 2
   Chapter 3
   Chapter 4
   Chapter 5
   Chapter 6
   Chapter 7
   Chapter 8
   Chapter 9
   Chapter 10
   Chapter 11
   Chapter 12
   Chapter 13
   Chapter 14
   Chapter 15
   Chapter 16
   Chapter 17
   Chapter 18
   Chapter 19
   Chapter 20
   Chapter 21
   Chapter 22
   Chapter 23
   Chapter 24
   Chapter 25
   Chapter 26
   Chapter 27
   Chapter 28
   Chapter 29
   Chapter 30
   Chapter 31
   Chapter 32
   Chapter 33
   Chapter 34
   Chapter 35
   Chapter 36
   Chapter 37
   Chapter 38
   Chapter 39
   Chapter 40
   Chapter 41
   Chapter 42
   Chapter 43
   Chapter 44
   Chapter 45
   Chapter 46
   Chapter 47
   Chapter 48
   Chapter 49
   Chapter 50
   Chapter 51
   Chapter 52
   Chapter 53
   Chapter 54
   Chapter 55
   Chapter 56
   Chapter 57
   Chapter 58
   Chapter 59
   Chapter 60
   Chapter 61
   Chapter 62
   Chapter 63
   Chapter 64
   Chapter 65
   Chapter 66
   Chapter 67
   Chapter 68
   Epilogue
   For the Magnificent Nine: William, Jemima, Ollie, Honor, Grace,
   Ellie, Niamh, Samuel and Beth: my grandchildren.
   Acknowledgments
   Acknowledgments are really thank you letters – a record of extremely heartfelt gratitude to all the people who have helped to create a book, to give it interest and colour, and to make the characters creatures of substance, with ambitions and passions beyond the personal. And writing them is to travel through the book again, from beginning to end, and realise what a journey of discovery it has been.
   In writing A Question of Trust, I have relied hugely on many people, kind, generous people, all hugely knowledgeable in their fields, who gave me their time and attention and I really do thank them from the bottom of my heart.
   From the very outset, I was lucky enough to have a brilliant and fascinating ally in Barbara Hosking, former Whitehall ‘Spin Doctor’ with an encyclopaedic memory, an ongoing passion for politics and, as a very welcome bonus, a brisk sense of humour about the political scene. She worked for such mighty legends from the forties and fifties as Harold Wilson, Nye Bevan, and Barbara Castle and the hours I spent either with her or reading her emails were both awesome and immense fun. She was also very helpful in creating situations for me that my hero, Tom Knelston, might find himself in, thus extending the plot neatly more than once. I quite simply could not have written the book without her.
   I was led to Barbara by the redoubtable Sue Stapely – no stranger to my acknowledgment pages! – who also contributed on the political front, having not only been a political candidate in the eighties, but Head of PR at the law society. She proved as always a rich source of knowledge on both political and legal procedures and on the divorce process in the fifties – astonishingly different from today.
   And Lorraine Lindsay-Gale, County Councillor for many years, who gave me a nail-biting description of the tension of polling day – and The Count!
   For information on the medical front, I was incredibly fortunate to find one Professor Harold Ellis, (still lecturing on anatomy as he marches briskly through his nineties – he says it keeps him young) who was actually working for the NHS on the day it was launched. His memories of that day and indeed those preceding it, and his life as a young surgeon, were totally fascinating.
   I was introduced to him by another doctor, Anthony Rossi, retired consultant plastic surgeon and lifelong personal friend; he dredged his considerable memory and introduced me to a medical condition, absolutely crucial to the plot, of which I had never heard, patiently explaining it to me in all its complexity at least three times.
   I met Dr Herbert Barrie, a paediatrician in the fifties, working at Great Ormond Street among other places and whose stories of caring for sick children then were both moving and fascinating. He has, very sadly, now died; but the morning I spent with him, hearing of his work and the passion he felt for it, is still a most vivid and happy memory.
   Professor Ray Powles, the distinguished Head of Blood Oncology at the Cancer Centre London, gave me a most hilarious account of his days as a medical student in the fifties and a slightly more sober one of his early days as a doctor; I could have listened all day, and actually did for several hours.
   I must also thank most profoundly Alexandra Annand, who hostessed a wonderful tea party for me and two ladies who had
 trained at St Thomas’s Hospital from 1947 onwards. Their stories were absolutely riveting, right from their very first day, under the iron rule of Sister, (prayers in the ward at eight sharp, probationers having cleaned polished and ‘hot dusted’ first). Alexandra herself trained at Thomas’s in the sixties, rising in rank to Night Sister in the seventies. Her stories were equally fascinating; I might have to write another book, just to accommodate them! This one would have been much the poorer without her help.
   Then huge thanks also to Walter Merricks CBE, former Chief Ombudsman, who was so helpful in giving me background into the life and training of a young solicitor taking his articles in those far-off days, as he lunched me most generously in the splendid Law Society building in Chancery Lane.
   And many thanks to Sheila Sharp, old friend from the same girls’ grammar school as me in Totnes, South Devon, who provided invaluable background information on grammar school entry, in those far-off days.
   Immense help on the military front; Christopher White-Thomson, another lifelong friend, recounted wonderfully vivid stories from his military family archives of the taking of Monte Casino, and the events surrounding it.
   Two of the old soldiers I met wished to remain anonymous, but I am able to thank one beloved old friend, Neil Mills, who recounted in enormous detail and with great relish, tales of his war experiences in a series of torpedo boats in both the Atlantic and the Med, two of which he commanded. Neil has, very sadly, died now, and I miss him a lot; and deeply regret that he will never know of my gratitude for what was a crucial chapter in the book.
   The stories from these men, boys really, straight from school, of the horrors they endured, and the courage that was called upon them to show, all recounted with cheery dismissiveness, were exceedingly humbling.
   On the glamour front, as you might call it, fascinating stuff from Liz Smith, one of the great Fashion Editors of my own era, who had worked with some of the legendary photographers of an earlier age, as did my heroine; and from Felicity Green, OBE, Grande Dame of fashion and fashion journalism in newspapers from the fifties onwards, a true visionary and pioneer of some of the new trends in fashion photography and presentation.
   Closer to home, and in the here and now, I have so much to be grateful for.
   Especially at Headline, my publishers; I have a wise and wonderful editor, Imogen Taylor, patient and appreciative, who never seems to pressure or hurry me in any way, while somehow miraculously getting me to deliver copy when she wants it, and then to reassure me that it is not the load of rubbish I had convinced myself I’d produced. She is also given to sudden lightning flashes of inspiration herself which add to the story considerably. Truly an editorial magician.
   Immense thanks to Jo Liddiard, Head of Marketing, who has picked up the book and run with it, ensuring its image is perfectly honed and recognised in all manner of brilliant ways; to Becky Bader, Sales Director, who has, quite simply, ensured A Question of Trust is to be found in every shopping outlet in the land and indeed in space, if you count the internet; and Georgina Moore, Communications Director, who has sprinkled news of the book like fairy dust, in her inimitable way, into just about every facet of the media it could possibly be.
   If you can judge a book by its cover, then A Question of Trust is the most glamorous, dazzling and beautiful ever; huge gratitude to Yeti Lambregts who designed it. It has left everyone who has seen it gasping.
   I don’t think we’d have seen the book on the shelves for many a long moon, and certainly well past its proper date, without the calm, tireless efficiency of Amy Perkins, Editorial Assistant, who has somehow managed to see the manuscript in its various stages is always on time, wherever it’s supposed to be, when it’s supposed to be there.
   A thousand thanks to my brilliant agent, Clare Alexander, who, apart from the more obvious agent-y gifts which she possesses in spades, has a kind of eighth sense that has her ringing me when I am a despairing, limp heap, and leaves me feeling lit up, freshly inspired and like a million dollars.
   And finally, my four lovely, lovely daughters, Polly, Sophie, Emily and Claudia, who even after all these years and all these books, know how much I need cossetting and encouraging from time to time and in spite of all the other calls on their time and attention, like husbands, children and careers, never ever fail me.
   Character List
   Tom Knelston, a young left-wing solicitor, with political ambitions
   Jack Knelston, his father, the postman in West Hilton, a small Hampshire village where Tom has grown up
   Mary Knelston, his mother
   Colin and Arthur Knelston, his brothers
   Jess Knelston, his eldest sister
   lsobel Parsons, Tom’s godmother
   Alan Parsons, her husband and heir to Parsons, a large department store in Hilchester, the nearby town
   Miss Rivers, Tom’s teacher at primary school
   Tristram Sherrin, history master at the grammar school
   Angela Smithers, Tom’s first girlfriend, a salesgirl at Parsons
   Pemberton & Marchant, firm of solicitors where Tom works as a trainee
   Gordon Pemberton and Basil Marchant, the two partners there
   Nigel Pemberton, Gordon’s son, also a trainee
   Betty Foxton, secretary to the two partners
   Mr Roberts, chairman of the Hilchester branch of the Labour Party
   Ted Moore, Labour Party member and Tom’s champion there
   Laura Leonard, a teacher and staunch member of the Labour Party
   Edith, her mother
   Babs, her sister
   Brigadier Sir Gerald Southcott, local grandee, living at West Hilton Manor
   Caroline, his wife
   Diana, their beautiful, spoilt daughter
   Michael, their elder son, a medical student
   Richard, their younger son
   Ned Welles, a fellow medical student and friend of Michael Southcott
   Sir James Welles, his surgeon father, a consultant at St Peter’s, Ned’s first hospital
   Sir Neil Lawson, chairman of the board of governors of St Luke’s, Ned’s second hospital
   Sir Digby Harrington, on the board of governors of St Luke’s
   Phillip Harrington, his son and a registrar
   Jennifer, Ned’s secretary at his private practice
   Persephone Welles, Ned’s beautiful mother who ran away with an artist when Ned was very young
   George Tilbury, a boyfriend of Persephone’s
   Susan Mills, a young patient of Ned’s
   The Hon Johnathan Gunning, who Diana marries
   Jamie, their son
   Sir Hilary and Lady Vanessa Gunning, his parents
   Piers and Timothy Gunning, Johnathan’s brothers
   Catherine, a girlfriend of Johnathan’s
   Sir Harold Morton, Diana’s obstetrician
   Hugh Harding, her solicitor
   Wendelien Bellinger, a socialite and Diana’s best friend
   Ian Bellinger, her husband
   Ludo Manners, good friend to Ned Welles and part of the Bellingers’ set
   Cecily Manners, his wife
   Betsey Southcott, married to Michael after the war, also one of the Bellingers’ set
   Donald Herbert, a rich and successful businessman, and important power behind the throne of the Labour Party
   Christine Herbert, his long-suffering wife
   Robert Herbert, his brother, Islington solicitor, and Tom’s employer
   Colin Davidson, Tom’s constituency agent
   Alice Miller, a young nurse at St Thomas’ Hospital
   Alec and Jean Miller, her parents
   Philip Jordan, a doctor, her boyfriend
   Kit, Lucy and Charlie, Alice and Tom’s children
   Mrs Hartley, Tom and Alice’s kindly neighbour
   Dr Redmond, their GP
   Jillie Curtis, Alice’s best friend at boarding school, and a medical student
   Geraldine and Peter Curtis, her rich and well connected left-wing parentsr />
   William Curtis, her uncle, a prominent obstetrician
   Mrs Hemmings, cook and housekeeper to Jillie’s parents
   Eleanor (Nell) Henderson, a young novelist
   Julius Noble, her fiancé
   Seth Gilbert, editor at Eleanor’s publishers
   Patrick Brownlow, suitor of Jillie’s
   Harry Campbell, the editor of the Daily News
   Jarvis McIntyre, the proprietor
   Clive Bedford, the political editor
   Josh Curtis, his assistant and cousin of Jillie
   Philippa Parry, the women’s editor
   Blanche Ellis Brown, fashion editor of Style magazine
   Esmé, Diana’s agent when she becomes a model
   Freddie Bateman, an American photographer
   Miss Dickens, the editor of American Fashion
   Ottilie, her fashion editor
   Leo Bennett, the diary editor of the Dispatch newspaper
   His brother Marcus, a garden designer
   Mark Drummond, proprietor of the Dispatch
   Fiona Jenkins, a journalist on the Dispatch
   Ricky Barnes, a keen young trainee reporter on the Daily Sketch newspaper
   Christian Greenfell, a vicar
   Chapter 1
   1936
   Tom Knelston was very fond of saying that the first time he met Diana Southcott he had been up to his waist in shit.
   And it was literally true; he had indeed been standing waist deep in a blocked drain outside his parents’ cottage and she had come riding up the lane on the rather fine bay mare she had just acquired and was putting through her paces before taking her out next time she rode to hounds.
   ‘Oh,’ she said, pulling the mare up. ‘Hello. That looks fun.’
   Tom had looked up, trying to muster a smile in response to what she undoubtedly thought was a joke, thinking at one and the same time how beautiful she was – and how enragingly pleased with herself – and said, ‘Yes, it is. Want to join me? I could do with some help.’
   ‘I’d love to, but unfortunately I’d be late for luncheon. Good luck with it, though.’ And she pressed her heels into the mare’s sides and trotted on up the lane.
   Tom looked after her for a moment – at her gleaming dark hair tucked neatly under her riding hat, at her perfectly cut hacking jacket, at her long slender legs encased in cream jodhpurs which, despite being spattered with mud, looked somehow immaculate – and returned to the drain.
   
 
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