Authors: Jenny Oldfield
âThey ain't thinking of renaming the old place?' Billy turned to George. âThat can't be right, surely?'
But George nodded. âYou should hear what they say about it around here.'
âAin't it going down too well?'
âYou could say that.' George turned to Frances. âI'm sorry,' he said, shaking his head, âthe brewery says it's more up-to-the-minute.'
Frances was stunned. The Duke was to be the Prince of Wales after Prince Edward, the dilettante young heir apparent. She stared at the new signs.
George thought it best to give the full picture. âThey're talking about new windows for downstairs. They ain't sure yet.'
âAnd does Pa know?'
âHe can't hardly help it. Not after Dolly went down earlier and told them the worst. About the name, that is.'
Frances took a deep breath. âLet's go and see how he's taking it,' she said to Billy, marching in high dudgeon down the court.
George looked at Billy. âThey don't like it, but there ain't a thing they can do about it,' he said sadly.
In one way, Duke felt there was nothing more they could do to harm him. If you lost everything, he said, why lose any more sleep over a couple of new signs?
When Frances and Billy showed up, full of fresh indignation, he was sitting in Annie's back kitchen surrounded by family and friends. Rob stood smoking like a chimney by the back door, his face glowering. Dolly made cups of tea. Tommy swore he would never set foot inside the pub again.
âBleeding stupid.' Dolly frowned. âWhat do you think, Frances?' She thrust a full cup and saucer into her hands.
âI know what I think,' France said scornfully. âHow are you, Pa?' She took off her cotton gloves and put them in her bag. She sat down in Annie's empty chair, opposite Duke.
âBearing up,' he said as always.
âBut did you take a look on the inside?' Dolly went over and made a lot of noise at the sink. âStripped bare. And God knows what they plan putting up instead. Pictures of young girls half
naked with their hair all over the place, I shouldn't wonder.' She grumbled about modern taste.
âPa?' Frances touched his hand, urging a smile. âHave you been up to take a look?'
He shook his head. âIt ain't worth making a special trip for.' âBut ain't you been out at all?' Frances frowned. She sipped her tea.
âIt's too hot.'
âIt ain't that hot, Pa!'
âLeave it, Frances,' Rob said from the doorway. âIf he don't feel like going up on to Duke Street, he don't have to.'
âBut a breath of fresh air, Pa. It'd do you good.'
âAnnie goes on at me just like you do,' he told her. âMaybe tomorrow. I'll see how I feel.'
âWhere is Annie?'
âShe's up the court seeing to Wiggin. She ain't roused him so far today.'
Frances only had time to grumble quietly about Annie doing too much, when heavy steps came running down the passage. Ernie burst in, white in the face. âAnnie says come quick!' he gasped. He seemed to stagger sideways and Tommy had to leap forward to catch him. By now he'd clamped his mouth tight shut, unwilling to say another word. Saying something out loud meant it had happened. If you kept quiet, it would go away. He shut his eyes to block out the misery of what he'd just seen.
âSit him down here!' Frances sprang up to help Ernie to her seat.
Duke stood up too. âLook after him, Frances.' He beckoned to his son. âRob, you and me will go and take a look.'
âBut what is it? What happened?' Dolly insisted. âWhat's the matter with him? He ain't going to faint, is he?'
âHelp me loosen his tie,' Frances said. âAnd Billy, will you make sure Pa and Rob can manage?' She sat Ernie forward in the chair, head between his knees.
Both Billy and Tommy made off after Duke and Rob. The four of them arrived at Eden House together. âThis way!' Tommy yelled. âWiggin's in the room under us, down the back.'
They ran down the dark hallway, footsteps ringing in the hollow, tall building. Annie waited for them at the door to Wiggin's room.
Duke pushed his way to the front, relieved that she seemed to be unharmed. âIs it Wiggin?'
She showed him in. The room was empty and in a dreadful state, the stench of stale alcohol, urine and decay almost unbearable. Wiggin had ripped down Annie's curtains and tried to block the light with old newspapers. His trunk was slewed across the room, the blankets on the bed slashed and torn. Broken bottles had been smashed across the bare floor, and as Duke advanced inside, he saw a dark stain seeping into the boards by the hearth.
âWhere is he?' Rob snatched the blanket from the bed and looked wildly round. âHe ain't hit you again?'
Annie shook her head. âI ain't got a clue where he is,' she admitted. âI sent Ernie down for help. I think we'll have to set off looking for him.'
Rob relaxed. âWhat's Ernie getting so het up over?' As far as he was concerned, if Wiggin had gone missing it was good riddance to bad rubbish.
Duke went over to the hearth. He stared down at the dark patch on the floorboards, still damp. He bent slowly and brushed a fingertip across it. âThis.' His finger was stained rusty red. âBlood. Ernie can't stand the sight of it.'
âWhose blood?' Rob went to join Duke. âWiggin's?'
âWho else do you think?' Tommy kicked around amongst the broken glass. âThere's drops of the stuff over here and all.'
âSo where is he?' Billy asked again. He turned to Annie. âAin't you seen him at all today?'
She shook her head. âI ain't got no answer when I came up this morning. So this time I knocked and knocked, and when I got no answer I went to Bertie Hill for the key and let myself in. I thought he was still in here, asleep or dead drunk. I could smell it through the door. But I come in and he ain't nowhere to be seen. I think maybe he's made off up Duke Street on another binge.'
âMaybe he has,' Rob agreed. âHe'll be flat out on the park bench with the other old dossers.'
âExcept there's this.' Annie pointed to the bloodstain. âErnie spotted it and it gave him a nasty turn. I had to send him down to you, Duke.'
âAnd it's time to get you back home and all,' he told her, taking her by the arm.
âBut we gotta look for Wiggin, remember?'
âTommy and Billy will take a look, won't you?' Duke agreed to send them off to reassure Annie more than anything else. âHe'll most likely come staggering back of his own accord if we hang on long enough.' He put an arm around her shoulder as they made they way out, âRob will see to the mess here. Bring a brush and a bucket of hot water with a scrubbing-brush,' he told him.
Rob went ahead with bad grace. âAnyone would think I ain't got better things to do,' he grumbled. But he agreed to clean the room, for Annie's sake.
Back home, they calmed her with tea and sympathy. Ernie was upstairs resting, Frances said. âBilly and Tommy will find Wiggin,' she promised Annie. âHe ain't gone far.'
âIt's the blood.' Annie looked up, pale and strained. âLook, Frances, I know he's a bleeding old nuisance, I don't say he ain't. But he could be out there down some alley, down a siding, he could be dying!'
It was the River Thames that gave up the secret of Wiggin's final journey.
He'd been in the water overnight, the police said. The current had taken him downstream and washed him up against a Norwegian fishing boat unloading for Billingsgate. A fisherman had heard the body knocking against the hull and spotted what he thought was a piece of flotsam. Only when he went for a pole to push it off, it bobbed and turned face up in the water, and he saw what it was. He called in the police. It took several days to track down Annie, Wiggin's only living relative.
Since his disappearance, Annie had been forced to relive the nightmare of his first vanishing act all those years earlier. She went in on herself, refusing to admit that it would be better if he never
came back, a constant caller for news at Union Street station. The discovery of the body came as a relief in the end. She and Duke went straight to the morgue and she calmly identified Wiggin, not flinching at the bruised and battered face.
âWas it a drowning?' she asked the attendant, imagining the old man, drunk and weak from loss of blood, toppling over a bridge to his death.
But the man covered the body and shook his head. âBled to death. Looks like he was stabbed. Don't ask me. I ain't no expert.'
âStabbed?'Annie echoed.
Duke and Annie went to the police station to check. âThey're saying Wiggin didn't drown after all?' Duke asked.
The bulky desk sergeant wheezed over to check the file and nodded. âVicious attack with sharp implement,' he confirmed. âDead before he hit the water.'
Annie's relief turned to distress.
âWeren't hardly nothing to identify him by,' the sergeant continued. He went to a cupboard. âJust a few old rags. You might as well take them while you're here.' He heaped Wiggin's clothes on to the counter, including the old greatcoat that Annie had rescued from the pawnshop. âOr you can let us burn them if you like.'
Annie sniffed and nodded, unable to speak.
âGo steady,' Duke warned. âThis ain't easy.'
Ignoring him, the sergeant pushed the heap of clothes to the floor. âIt was the old coat. It had Sally Army tickets in the pocket. We dried them out and went down and checked the numbers with the local spike. They took a look in their registers and came up with his name. They told us about his connection with you. Seems like you was his good Samaritan. Anyhow, that's how we found you.' He sounded proud of the policework behind it. âAt least you can give the poor old blighter a proper funeral.'
Duke took Annie away once more. They stood in a queue for a bus back to Duke Street. Neither felt up to the walk.
âHe was stabbed, they say?' Annie puzzled over this all the way home. âHe'd been in the water overnight, but he ain't drowned, he was stabbed?'
âLet the coppers work it out,' Duke advised gently. âYou gotta try and forget it.'
But as they walked down Paradise Court together under a stormy sky, Annie insisted otherwise. âIt ain't right to forget about poor Wiggin,' she said. âFor a start, we gotta give him a send-off, Duke. We gotta put him away splendid, whatever happens.'
There was hardly a soul to mourn the violent death of Willie Wiggin. The sailor who'd dragged his battered corpse from the river spent one sleepless night, tossing and turning to rid himself of the old tramp's staring, sightless eyes and the hollow knocking against the boat's empty hull. The police wrote him down as one more dosser destined for a pauper's grave until they turned up an ex-wife to claim his remains and take him off their hands. The unsentimental Tommy O'Hagan told his sister, Katie, that at least they'd get a good night's sleep in future, without the old drunk clattering about below. Dolly Ogden even came out with it straight to Annie's face: she was better off with Wiggin dead and buried, the whole street agreed on that.
Nevertheless, on the morning of 8 August Paradise Court did turn out to âput him away splendid'. They felt they owed it to Annie and Duke, who laid on a good spread in Annie's front room. Not many bothered with the graveside ceremony, just Annie, Duke and a few family and friends. Mary O'Hagan stood silent in the background as the priest threw soil on the coffin. She said a prayer and remembered the day when the police came knocking on her door with similar news. Daisy too had been stabbed. Mary crossed herself and stood head bowed for Wiggin.
Hettie and Jess had discussed who should stay in charge of the shop, and it was Hettie who came over to the funeral for an hour. She met George on the corner of the court, under the pub's new black and gold sign. He had on a smart jacket and cap, coming along at Hettie's suggestion.
âWe're meeting up with the others at the cemetery,' she told him,
taking his arm and walking briskly down the noisy street. âThen Annie's asked us back to her place.' She looked nice in a grey silky dress and a straw hat with a curling brim. George was proud to walk her along to the funeral.
By the graveside, Hettie sang âThe Lord's My Shepherd' in a full, rich voice which soared into the still, blue sky. She sang of quiet waters with such purity that she brought tears to Annie's eyes.
âGod rest his soul,' Annie said to Duke as she turned away. Upright and steady in his dark suit, he walked by her side to the cemetery gate. â'Cos he ain't had a happy time this side of the grave.' She dabbed at her eyes with her handkerchief.
Later, back at the house, she told Hettie that today would have been Wiggin's sixty-seventh birthday.
Dolly and Arthur Ogden were among the first to turn out in neighbourly fashion, to go down the bottom of the court and give Annie a boost. It would be a shame if she'd gone to all that trouble over sandwiches and cold pies if no one showed up. Since it was a Friday morning affair, they dragged Charlie out of bed to get dressed and show his face. âCome and pay your respects,' Dolly said.
âWiggin ain't worth it,' Charlie complained. He valued his lie-in after working late.
âBut Annie and Duke is!' Dolly brooked no argument, as usual. The Ogdens would show up in force.
Rob dropped in, and Kane dragged Tommy off his paint and wallpaper stall to put in an appearance down the court. The hot, sunny day lent an odd festival air to the occasion; Annie's door stood wide open, and mourners brought their food and drink outside on to the pavement to chat.
Billy Wray had come in Frances's place. He talked politics with Joe O'Hagan, predicting more miners' strikes during the coming winter. âCoal's losing a million pounds a month,' he said. âPits are dosing all up and down the Welsh valleys, and the owners want to make another cut in wages.' He supported the Federation slogan, âNot a penny off the pay, not a second on the day'.