27
A BRUSH WITH THE LAW
Back to Glenrothes, now, and here’s a turning point in our lives that I’d rather not think about.
Davie had been pestering me for a while to go and visit his folks in Crieff. He believed, and rightly so, that my in-laws should see our boys. ‘It’s not fair, Jessie, my poor mother isnae getting any younger, she misses the bairns. I think we should go over first chance we get.’
I reminded him, ‘It’s not so much getting time, Davie, it’s affording bus fares. Your job is fine, but I’ve to put every penny by for when we have our own home. Sorry, but we just can’t spare the money.’
Shirley gave us a room to ourselves, but a blind man could see we were far too tight-packed and needed a home. I’d filled in the necessary forms for a council house, and was assured it wouldn’t be long before one became available. New houses were sprouting in every spare acre, so we didn’t have long to wait before the letter fell through Shirley’s letterbox to say that a brand-new three-apartment semi-detached was to be our very own home; just fill in the acceptance slip and it was ours. What a lovely home it was. We all trekked down with the keys to view it, in an area skirting Glenrothes named Cadam. We began packing.
A week before we were dated to move, Davie came home from work happier than he’d ever been. I put it down to our new house. He picked me up, gave a great big hug and said, ‘I think I’ll take Johnnie over to see my folks.’ He looked at me with eyes that spoke volumes. I could see he was desperate to let them know about his good job and our new house, so I agreed. He said he’d saved a few pounds and would use this to pay for bus fares to Crieff. I handed him a fiver to buy some chocolates for his folks and wished him and our oldest boy a good time. Knowing how fussy Margaret could be about her son’s appearance, I sewed two missing buttons onto his best shirt before ironing the arm and collar crease. ‘Tell your folks when the house is in order they should come and visit.’ I knew when Davie’s mother saw what a lovely home her son and grandsons were living in, she’d be well pleased. It was no secret how worried she was at our moving away from Crieff in the first place, and that she thought her laddie couldn’t settle anywhere else. Not like his wayfaring gadaboot of a wife. Just as he and Johnnie set off, I warned my husband not to go near a pub! He winked and said he’d not enough money to go anywhere, so it was silly of me to worry.
Anyway, it was quiet with my wee family halved, so for something to do on Sunday I plopped Stephen in his pushchair and went for a very long walk with Christine. It was late when we arrived back in Adrian Road. I noticed a car parked outside the door, but at first thought it was a mate of Shirley’s husband. When we got inside, however, imagine my surprise to see my father-in-law Sandy and Davie’s cousin, Brian.
‘What’s wrong?’ I blurted out, fearing my husband had met with an accident or some disaster. ‘Where’s ma bairn? Oh my God, have they been in a crash?’
Brian, a quiet, gentle soul, said, ‘dinnae be getting upset, they’re baith fine.’ He turned then to Sandy, and gestured that he should tell me why they were there without my husband and bairn. My gentle father-in-law sat me down and tickled Stephen under the chin, saying, ‘silly carry on, lassie, and I’m no right sure o’ the events, but David’ (he always gave him his proper name) ‘is in the jail at Perth—well, mair like the station cells.’
I jumped to my feet, shaking as my vivid imagination sent pictures through my head faster than Charlie Chaplin’s running feet. ‘Jail! Cells! Why? Tell me at once, Sandy, because when he left me all’s he wanted was to see you and Mither Smith. He was as happy as a pig in swill, knowing it was a long while since you’d seen the bairn. What happened?’
‘Well, lassie, seems he got intae a running battle wi’ other lads. He was drunk, and you ken what they are a’ like when the drink fuels them.’
‘Aye, I dae, but he’d nae money for drink, and I well warned him no tae go near a pub.’
Brian interrupted, and said David was just a bystander, not getting involved, until a polisman came up behind him. ‘Did Davie no’ think it was a lad looking for a fight, and with that in mind skelped the polisman. But it’s no’ as bad as it sounds.’
None of my wild imaginings could compete with the actual events—my husband was in jail in Perth, awaiting a charge of ‘police assault’! My God in heaven, how bad was that!
Shirley promised to watch Stephen to let me go and see Davie. He was to appear before the Sheriff first thing on Monday morning, which was next day. All of a sudden my nice little life seemed doomed, and the beating of my heart was all the journey to Crieff afforded me.
Margaret was quiet and distant throughout, but unable to keep silent she blamed me. ‘Traveller people are too fond of living for the day, with no thought for tomorrow,’ was her exclamation about her son’s predicament. I raised my voice, and with the tension of the situation blamed her for mollycoddling him. We cried and apologised to each other, but she’d said it—that traveller stigma once again thrown in my face cut deep. I didn’t think much of my husband that night, nor did I give any future thoughts to our marriage. All I wanted to do was get my sons, find an old blue Bedford bus, and take to the road. Perhaps this was an omen. Perhaps the ancient ones were warning me I should never have married a non-traveller, and maybe our life together would be blighted by mishaps. Oh yes, the imagination went into overdrive that night, I’ll tell you. Of course I hardly slept, and next morning even after Margaret hugged me and said not to worry, my mind was in turmoil. I’d a husband who lied to me and was violent to a man of the law; he had to go, we must part.
Sandy and I went through early in the hope we’d be allowed a moment with Davie before his court appearance, but nothing doing. We had to take our position in the courthouse like all the other relatives of criminals there to face the Sheriff’s wrath. After three bad lads had been tried and sentenced, he crept upstairs and gingerly stepped into the dock. Oh my good God, what a state he was in: a new growth of beard along with his longish tousled hair made him look more like Ned Kelly than my man. My first thought was, why had his captors not allowed him the luxury of a wash? His shirt was ripped at the shoulder, with not a single button left on the thing; and to think on how I cut those buttons off my own blouse to match the ones on his shirt. I tell you this, folks, if I had been that Sheriff, I’d have thrown not one book at him but a dozen.
One good thing in his favour was that he’d been appointed a young lawyer, and was he good! He convinced the Sheriff that leniency had to be shown because Davie had a job and was soon to move into a house. He emphasised the fact he’d never been in trouble before, well, not a violent kind, and that this incident, because of the darkness and chaos in the street, was indeed a case of self defence, Davie had not meant to harm anyone. He really felt remorse and was sorry for how things had turned out. The Sheriff believed that if a man hits a policeman then he should take a severe punishment, but in Davie’s case he thought that it could have been mistaken identity. The fact that he had a job and was awaiting our new home went heavily in his favour. He was let off with a fine of twenty-five pounds. Sandy said he’d pay it, but imagine my astonishment when Davie paid it himself. Where did he get all that money from?
The bloody tax-man, that’s who. It seemed my lying-faced creep of a man had not told me about a certain tax rebate. When I thought back to the night he came home from work smiling from ear to ear, and saying he should visit his folks, the money was safely in his back pocket all along.
You’re wondering if I got shot of him, aren’t you, my friends? No, of course I didn’t, but I’ll let you into a secret—he was a sorry lad, because I took the rest of the money off him, which was about half of the rebate, and bought myself a new coat. The boys got kitted out too. Davie—well, he did need a new shirt, so I bought him a cheap bri-nylon one, knowing how that crinkly material made him scratch. A woman scorned, as they say.
We did a powerful amount of talking about that incident, and one thing I discovered was that if we were to settle in Glenrothes he would be unhappy. So the keys to our so long awaited new home went back to the council offices, and we went back to Crieff. Somehow, although she would never say, my dear sister was more than happy to have her home all to herself once again. She wrote to me to say how quiet the place was and how she missed my cooking, but I still think she was happy that her life was a wee bit less crowded. Another letter followed to say she’d a run in with a certain big roller-haired wife while shopping down at the supermarket. Remember her? Shirley told me this individual tried to wrench a bag of tatties from her hand. Now, I ask you who in their right mind would dare take on my sister? Silly woman ended up having every one of those plastic rollers pulled from her head. Wish I’d seen that!