Authors: Peter Turnbull
âI can't help being alarmed.' Davinia Bannister looked sideways at Penny Yewdall. âThough I am not fearful of any action being taken against me; I did nothing illegal. I have no fears there, but I won't be giving evidence, you may rest assured there, madam, you may rest well assured.'
âYes,' Penny Yewdall sighed, âunfortunately they all say that.'
âAnd no wonder.' Davinia Bannister was neatly, if not severely, dressed in a three-quarter length black skirt, high-necked white blouse, dark nylons and sensible shoes, and was carrying a large black handbag on her shoulder; all in complete accordance, thought Yewdall, with her position as history teacher at a large comprehensive school. âThey were, still are, very heavy boys and if you can find me, so can they. So, how did you find me, anyway?'
âLiz Petty told us about you, she said that you and she talked during that week. She recalled few details; your Christian name, that your father was a lawyer and your mother a curate.'
âShe is a fully fledged priest now, the Reverend Muir.'
âI made a few discreet enquiries, mainly of the police in Reading. Davinia is not a common name; the police seemed to know your father. He does a lot of criminal work, so I found.'
âYes.' Davinia Bannister brushed a wasp from her face. âHe is a solicitor. He represents felons in low-end crime; the sort of stuff that is dealt with in the magistrates' court, and the police do indeed know him, even though he acts for criminals whom they are prosecuting; each doing their job, but they sit and chat to each other at the conclusion of the morning's business.'
âYes, they would do. So one police officer did know of a Mr Muir whose daughter Davinia is a school teacher and whose mother joined the priesthood when she was in her middle years. I did assure the police in Reading that you were not a suspect and they insisted on phoning me back at New Scotland Yard to ensure I was kosher. Another phone call to the local education authority, again with the same assurances and with them phoning me at New Scotland Yard . . . and . . .'
âAnd here you are. So frighteningly simple.'
âOnly for the police; Arnie Rainbird and his crew won't be able to do that and they know you as Davinia Muir.'
âNo . . . no, they couldn't but they knew I was a secondary school teacher. They will assume I returned to my roots in Reading. Very easy for them to wait outside the school gates of every comprehensive school in this city until they see me emerge, follow me home and, if I am lucky, I'll only get beaten up. If I am unlucky, I will disappear and my little body will never be found.'
The two women walked on in silence for some moments, broken when Davinia Bannister said, âYou know we used to do this when I was at school, as a pupil, I mean.'
âDo what?'
âWalk on the athletics track chatting with my mates. It was meant to be run on with great effort, with gritted teeth, total determination. Sorry, but I was never particularly sporty when I was at school, and when other girls were shaving split seconds or minuscule distances from school records, me and two other girls would just stroll round the athletic track being overtaken by other girls working on their one thousand metres time, using it for the purpose for which it was laid out, and occasionally we'd catch the eye of the games mistress who'd yell, “Run, you three!”, so we'd jog along for a few yards and then start walking again. Eventually she gave up on us as a hopeless cause and forgot about us, which suited us admirably. It suited us to perfection. We would even risk a cigarette. When we were circling on the track and were at our apogee from the games mistress we'd risk a quick drag.'
âThat was risky.' Yewdall grinned.
âI'll say. Exclusive girls' grammar school, sneaking a cigarette behind the bicycle sheds during lunch break was bad enough, but smoking when purporting to be doing games, that would be akin to lighting up during maths . . . instant expulsion, and I'd really catch it at home. My mother used to be very heavy-handed, even when I was a teenager, but we got away with it, and now I am a teacher and have to keep an eye out for smoking among the children . . . what goes around comes around, as they say.'
âI grew up on a housing estate in the Potteries,' Yewdall replied. âA corner shop was run by a kindly but partially sighted old gentleman and we could steal sweets and chocolate bars very easily. So, not anything I am proud of, and I am now a copper and catch thieves. Dare say we grow up and turn out all right.'
âYes.' Davinia Bannister nodded her head slightly. âDare say that's the main thing. So what can I tell you about that so-called party?'
âWe know the gist, we know some of the details, but we don't know all the personalities. Can you tell me about your lover?'
âWell hardly my lover, and he was nothing to me as soon as we arrived and I found out what was going on.'
âYes . . . sorry, not a lover.'
âHe was my sugar daddy and I was his bit on the side to visit twice or thrice a week because his wife didn't understand him. He paid the rent on my bedsit.' Davinia Bannister shuddered. âImagine, my father a lawyer, my mother a curate, my brother studying for a medical degree and intending to join the army as a medical officer, and me a school teacher and bunking up with a career criminal.'
âBut you didn't know he was a career criminal?' Yewdall offered.
âNo.' Davinia Bannister shook her head. âNo, I didn't. I thought he was a stockbroker or something of that ilk. He led me to believe that. I did think he was a little rough round the edges, but I dismissed that as being part of his self-made, local boy makes good image, and he paid the rent and bought meals, and occasionally gave me a wad of pocket money. It all made living in London possible on a school teacher's salary, especially on the salary of a newly qualified teacher. I used to feel sorry for the males or the less attractive females who had no option but to make their salary stretch. I had an easy ride until the party . . . then I paid for it.'
âYes.' Penny Yewdall looked to her left at a stand of trees which formed the boundary of the school grounds. âThat's what Sandra Barnes described it as being like; enabled her to survive, financially speaking. Then she also paid the price.'
âSandra . . . yes, I remember her.' Davinia Bannister kept her eyes downcast. âShe was in the same boat, a primary school teacher, so even worse off than me. I earned more as a teacher of the eleven to sixteen age range, but it took that dreadful week long orgy of sex and violence to see our sugar daddies for who they really were. So how is Sandra?'
âDoing well, living in the north . . . two children, happy with her marriage.' Yewdall did not wish to provide too much information.
âAnd “Long Liz” Petty?' Davinia Bannister enquired. âI really took to her. She was a working girl but she had a naturally warm personality.'
Yewdall paused. âShe still is and still has.'
âOh,' Davinia Bannister groaned, âshe's still working the street?'
âYes, sadly for her,' Yewdall replied softly, âshe's still a working girl and a vodka merchant as well.'
âI am sorry to hear that. I did hope she could tear herself away from the street. I know it's not easy . . . but . . . I did hope the best for her.' Davinia Bannister looked at the low-rise angular brick building that was the school at which she taught. âShe and I talked of escaping.'
âYes, she told me that.'
âFanciful really, but the idea kept our spirits up a little. We would not have got far, both naked and no footwear. You have to experience that state to realize how vulnerable you are, and both so dreadfully weak through insufficient food. Picture us if you will, picking at the remains of hamburgers and carbon-encrusted sausages, not caring what we ate and talking of making a run for it. We wouldn't have got past the goons.'
âGoons?' Penny Yewdall queried.
âThe guards, we called them goons like it was some prisoner of war camp. Dogs guarded the front of the house by night and gofers, the goons, by day. The back of the house was fully fenced off with that interlocking stuff you have to use your big toe to climb and that is excruciating; if you've ever tried to do it you'll know what I mean. I did it once.'
âAt the party?'
Davinia Bannister smiled. âNo . . . no, another more innocent situation, but the same sort of wire. So we gave up the idea and realized that if we were going to survive the answer was docility and compliance, or as Liz said, “Look, just forget it. Keep your head down and don't kick up a fuss about anything and we'll get through this” . . . she had that sort of street girl savvy and she was right. And by then, of course, we'd seen Sandra Barnes get a slap, and such a slap I never saw before or since, then get half-drowned by The Baptist. Then these two wretched men getting pummelled with golf clubs and then handed to The Baptist to finish them off, though I confess I don't think The Baptist's skills were needed. I can't imagine anyone surviving an assault like that but Arnie Rainbird wanted to make sure.'
âYou saw it all?'
âYes.' Davinia Bannister kept her eyes fixed on the ground in front of her. âLittle Davinia Muir as I was then, all five feet nothing of me, waif-like, yet I was the only one who didn't faint. Some girls fainted at both assaults or at one or the other, but I didn't faint at either, or at the drownings or at the bonfire. I saw it all from beginning to end and it's lodged in here â' she tapped the side of her head â âI just cannot drive the image . . . the images from my mind.'
âWho assaulted the two men?'
âCharlie Magg and Fergus McAlpine. Imagine a name like Fergus McAlpine, you'd think you'd hear him saying things like, “Am a no a bonny fighter, Jamie?” Instead, he complains in estuary English when Charlie Magg drags him off a woman before he kills her, “Leave it aht, Charlie, ah was only given her a little slap, wasn't ah? I mean gotta learn 'em right from wrong, ain't yer?”' Davinia Bannister fell silent. âYou know, Charlie Magg saved the lives of the two women whom Fergus attacked, you really should put a word in for him for that if you can.'
âI'm afraid Charlie is past helping any. He might well have rescued women but he has a number of male victims.' Yewdall savoured the fresh air of the playing fields. âSo, if you can, tell me about The Baptist, we know nothing of him.'
âJerry Primrose was his name, probably still is; quite a nice evocative name but the character was evil; he smiled as he killed. Jerry Primrose, he owned a big house in north London and had a passion for Ferraris. Only a blood-red Ferrari would do for our Jerry. He has a large birthmark on his chest which he is self-conscious about and that explains why he kept his clothes on when he was doing his thing in Snakebite's swimming pool.'
Penny Yewdall beamed at Davinia Bannister. âYou
do
know a lot about him.'
âI should do, I was his tart. I was his to visit when he so fancied, but that was his name, Gerald Primrose. I saw his name often enough on cheques and credit cards. Kept me in a bedsit hidden away from his world and then one day out of the blue he calls and drives me up to Bedfordshire. “We're going to a party,” he says, so we go to the house and he opens the car door, and drags me out by the arm. He never got hold of me like that before. The foyer of the house is full of naked women, and he drags me across the floor and plants me in front of the only woman who was wearing clothes and says, “Do everything this woman tells you and don't argue about anything”, then he walks away out to the back of the house, to the garden and pretty soon I am starkers, too. The next day he half-drowns Sandra Barnes then seems to vanish. I didn't see him again until the middle of the week when he appears again and drowns those two tramps after they had been well worked over with golf clubs. I never saw him again.'
âAnd you are sure that you won't give a statement?' Penny Yewdall pressed. âYou saw everything. You can make a clear identification of The Baptist.'
Davinia Bannister walked on in silence. Then she said, âI wouldn't be seen as a grass, would I? I wasn't in a gang. I wouldn't be breaking the criminal code of honour.'
âNo . . . no . . . you wouldn't,' Penny Yewdall answered with a note of encouragement.
âI want to talk it over with my mother.'
âYour mother!' Penny Yewdall couldn't contain her surprise.
âYes.' Davinia Barrister smiled. âI'm a grown woman, I am not seeking her permission but I would like to talk to her in her capacity as a priest; it is a matter of ethics. I need guidance. I would also like to talk to my husband. He is a man of some standing in this town. The trial, if it comes, will generate a lot of publicity. He should at least have some forewarning. Neither he nor my parents know anything of that horrible week in Bedfordshire and about how I survived on a teacher's salary when I lived in London. They should hear it all from me first. Let me phone you. Give me a contact phone number and I will phone you in a day or two.'
âThat was hardly legal,' Harry Vicary sighed as he and Tudy Scaly sat on a wooden bench on the Albert Embankment, with the river and the Houses of Parliament on the opposite bank behind them.
âIt was all very illegal, chummy, most bent.' Tudy Scaly shrugged. âBut it got a result.' He was a tall, broad-chested man and was dressed, in Vicary's view, in a manner which could only be described as âmeticulous', with highly polished shoes, knife-edge creases in his trousers, a neat Italian cut jacket. âIt's just the way of it, Harry, my good mate; just the way the world turns.'
âIt was immoral.'
âIt got a good result, like I said.' Scaly glanced up at the sunlight streaming through the foliage of the trees. âYou know, my weird Christian name wasn't given to me because my parents were practising Christians and wanted to imbue me and my brother with the Christian ethic of right and wrong. We were given the names of obscure saints â he is Arwan â so we'd learn to stick up for ourselves on the sink estate we lived on because the other kids would poke fun at us because of our weird names. My old man, he was a Royal Marine Commando, and me and Arwan inherited his physique, so we could look after ourselves at that awful council school we went to. But the old man did tell us one thing: he hated the French . . . how he hated them.'