As Anna was lolling on the sofa, Aled sat on one of the stiff, Rexine-covered chairs in her front parlour. The absence of dust on the mantelpiece and the Victorian walnut table and chairs in front of the window suggested that the room was cleaned on a regular basis. The musty smell, however, indicated that it was rarely, if ever, used. ‘If what everyone on the Bay is saying is right and David was caught red-handed with his book and betting slips in the pub, there’s no way that the police will be able to ignore it, Aled, no matter who you have bought,’ Anna warned.
‘Someone put your Gertie up to this.’
‘Possibly,’ she conceded cautiously.
‘Definitely, Anna. She must have a regular –’
‘More than a dozen at the last count,’ Anna interrupted.
‘You’re not going to help me, are you?’ Aled said testily.
‘I look after my girls, I give them sound advice. If they choose to ignore it, that’s their affair.’
‘Gertie’s ignored it?’
‘She was brought back here by the police this afternoon. They searched her room and found David’s wallet. Gertie insisted he left it there when he visited her yesterday before they went to Barry. Apparently David insisted he had it in Barry and used the money in it to buy their train tickets. As it’s her word against his they’ve let her off with a caution. But I warned her if she brings the police to my door on official business again, she’s out.’
‘Never mind that: she’s committed the worst crime someone on the Bay can. Especially a girl in her profession. She’s grassed to the police, Anna.’
‘You don’t know that.’
‘How much more proof do you need?’ Aled hadn’t raised his voice but there was an undercurrent of steel in his quiet tone.
‘Talk to Gertie about it, not me. I’ve said all that I’m going to say to her today. She’s upstairs. You know her price; two bob will buy you an hour.’
‘Is anyone with her now?’
‘Her number one regular. He calls to see her most days, not that he pays.’
Aled remembered what Anna had told him the last time he’d spoken to her. ‘She’s with Charlie Moore?’ he guessed.
‘If you want to talk to Gertie when they’ve finished, be my guest. You want to talk to Charlie Moore, do so outside my house. I don’t want any more trouble here. Not today – or ever.’
Edyth grasped the telephone in her hand and shouted down the line. ‘No, Harry, please don’t leave the farm and travel down here, not tonight … There’s nothing you can do that Micah hasn’t already done for David … Micah has been to the police station … He’s arranged with the inspector for David to be released into his custody at eight o’clock tonight and Micah and I will go to the magistrates’ court with David tomorrow morning … The bakery is the least of my worries, trade has slackened off and Kristina and the boys can manage without me for a couple of hours … Harry … please.’ She turned around and looked imploringly at Micah, who was leaning in the doorway of her office, listening. ‘Micah is with me now … talk to him … it would be better, Harry, as he is the one who has made all the arrangements … Remember, David is going to be feeling very ashamed of himself and embarrassed after all the warnings we gave him not to work as a bookie’s runner … Yes, here’s Micah.’ She handed the telephone receiver to Micah. ‘The line is terrible. You’ll have to shout.’
To give Micah privacy, Edyth went upstairs. Judy was kneeling on the window seat in the bay that overhung the street in the sitting room. She had changed out of the expensive black day dress she had worn to lunch in the Windsor Hotel and was wearing one of her own dresses. A simple floor-length cream shift belted low at the hip with a wide cream and brown belt. The style had been fashionable two or three years before, but it suited her slim figure.
‘Are you going out again?’ Exhausted more by the news of David than her long day in the shop, Edyth sat in one of the easy chairs that flanked the fireplace.
‘To a business dinner at the Windsor Hotel. I didn’t tell you earlier because it seemed wrong after hearing the news about David. Aled has arranged for me to sing on the wireless.’
‘That’s marvellous, Judy,’ Edyth said enthusiastically.
‘It’s just the kind of good news I need after what’s happened to David.’
‘We’ll be going through the repertoire I’ll be singing in the studio. I have four four-minute spots, which means four songs. And the producer is anxious that they should show off the range of my voice. Lennie has been given two two-minute compère spots in the same show.’
‘I am so pleased for both of you. I wish you had told me earlier.’
‘It was awful to see you and Micah looking so upset.’
‘I’m beginning to think that’s the normal effect David has on people.’
‘I could ask Aled to arrange this dinner for another evening and stay here,’ Judy offered.
‘Absolutely not.’ Edyth shook her head. ‘There’s nothing you could you do if you stayed. Micah has done everything that can be done now the worst has finally happened. David chose to ignore the advice we gave him. He’s been arrested and he’s going to have to suffer the consequences.’
‘I feel sorry for him. I’m fond of David,’ she said absently, suddenly realising that she meant what she’d said, for all of David’s irritating ways.
‘We all are. Is Aled James going to be hosting this dinner?’
‘Yes. As he pointed out to Lennie and me, he gets ten per cent of any fee we earn working outside of the Tiger Ragtime, and that includes wireless performances.’ Judy crossed her fingers behind her back and hoped that Edyth wouldn’t ask for a list of the other guests.
‘David worked for Aled and look where he is now,’ Edyth warned.
‘David said that Aiden runs the bookie side of the business.’
‘Aiden Collins might be concerned with the day-to-day running of the bookie’s business, but I bet he was running it with Aled’s money.’
Judy couldn’t contradict Edyth or say anything in Aled’s defence, when on Aled’s own admittance he had bankrolled Aiden. ‘You’re probably right.’
Edyth went to the window seat, sat beside Judy, and caught hold of her hand. ‘I know that Aled James has given you the break into show business you were looking for and that working in the club is the culmination of all your dreams. I couldn’t be more pleased for you that you’re going on the wireless. You’ve worked hard for your success, Judy, you deserve it. Just one thing, please, don’t get any more involved with Aled James than you have to.’
‘How can I not, Edyth? He’s my boss.’ Judy felt the blood rushing into her cheeks. She turned aside, but not quickly enough.
‘My God!’ Edyth clamped her hand over her mouth.
‘I’m stupid as well as blind. You’re already involved with Aled, aren’t you?’
Judy met Edyth’s steady gaze but she couldn’t lie to her friend. She said nothing.
‘Judy, darling, I love you as much as I love my sisters. Truth be known, a lot more than my younger sister, Maggie. But then she always was the most difficult one of the five of us. I’d hate to see you make the same mistake as David, and trust the wrong man, only to get hurt.’
‘I won’t be going to gaol.’
‘No, you won’t,’ Edyth agreed, ‘but look at what’s happened to David and learn from it. Men like Aled James use women and discard them with no more thought than they’d give to a worn-out suit. You only have to look at the way Aled behaves, the way he throws money around. The men around him – Freddie Leary, Aiden Collins – everyone knows they’re hired thugs. That night in the hotel, the way the head waiter and everyone else fawned over Aled. They only do that because he has bought them with his tips and tickets to his nightclub. Judy, darling, now that David’s been arrested you don’t need me to tell you what the man is capable of. Please, I’m begging you, don’t see any more of him than you have to.’
‘I work for him. I see him in the club five nights a week.’
‘But you don’t have to have lunch and dinner with the man.’ Edyth lifted her legs on to the seat and wrapped her arms around her knees.
‘I do when he arranges meetings and lunches with BBC producers and impresarios like Stan Peterson. It’s business, Edyth.’
‘I can see that I’ve spoken too late. I should have said something sooner.’
Judy felt remorseful enough without having to cope with Edyth’s guilt. ‘You couldn’t have stopped it from happening.’
Edyth left the window seat and returned to the chair. ‘You saw what my marriage to Peter was like. If you get involved with the wrong man, as I did, you could be letting yourself in for a lot of heartache.’
‘I’m old enough to know my own mind, Edyth.’
‘I thought I was when I married, Peter,’ Edyth said with a touch of bitterness. ‘I just don’t want you to end up unhappy and full of regrets.’
‘I doubt I’ll end up regretful,’ Judy said wryly. ‘I’ve gone into this with my eyes wide open. I know that men like Aled James use women; I also know that they’re not the marrying kind.’
‘You know that,’ Edyth said wonderingly. ‘And yet –’
‘And yet I made love to him,’ Judy said defiantly. ‘It wasn’t one-sided, Edyth.’
‘You love him?’ Edyth asked wonderingly.
‘I suppose I must do.’ Judy was as amazed by the idea as Edyth.
‘How could you? You’ve just said he’s not the marrying kind and that means you’ll never be anything more to him than a mistress.’
‘Like you with Micah?’ Bitterly ashamed of the silence that followed her outburst, Judy said, ‘I’m sorry. I had no business to say that. But a person would have to be blind and deaf to live in this house and not know what was going on between you and Micah Holsten, Edyth.’
‘I know I’m not treating Micah fairly.’ Edyth suppressed a pang of guilt at the thought of the letter that lay hidden in her desk. ‘But that doesn’t excuse what Aled is doing to you. I’ve told you that he’s Harry’s half-brother. He threatened to hurt Harry. And he’s doing just that. He can’t get at Harry directly so he’s getting at him through the people Harry loves. David, me, you … the man is evil and vicious.’
‘He’s also capable of kindness. He knows Bay people. He tries to help them by giving them jobs –’
‘Like David,’ Edyth couldn’t contain her anger at the thought of Harry’s brother-in-law sitting in a prison cell because Aled James had persuaded him to break the law.
‘Edyth, the last thing I want to do is quarrel with you,’ Judy pleaded. ‘You gave me a home and a job when I needed them most. But I’ll understand if you want me to move out after what I’ve told you about Aled and me.’
‘If I asked you to move out, would you move in with Aled?’ Edyth asked.
‘No.’
‘Because he wouldn’t have you?’
‘Because I wouldn’t live with him even if he wanted me to. A man like Aled needs his freedom. I’d cramp his style.’
‘He probably has other women.’ Edyth knew the suggestion would hurt Judy but that didn’t stop her from making it.
‘I know.’
‘And you don’t care. My God, have you no pride?’
‘While I don’t know about them, I can’t care,’ Judy said practically. ‘Do you want me to move out?’
‘No. I want you to stay. You looked after me when Peter left. The least I can do is be there for you …’ Edyth couldn’t finish the sentence.
‘When Aled flaunts a new mistress in front of me?’ Judy suggested.
‘I don’t understand you,’ Edyth said sadly.
‘I don’t understand myself. I only know that I couldn’t stop myself from falling in love with Aled, and now that we’ve made love I want to wring the last drop of happiness from the relationship while it exists.’
‘Does he love you at all?’ Edyth asked.
‘I don’t know. I suspect not, but I like to think he cares for me a little, although I know I’m probably deluding myself.’
‘I hope I’m wrong but I suspect that Aled James is incapable of loving anyone except himself.’ Edyth heard Micah’s step on the stairs and went to open the door.
‘Edyth?’
‘Don’t worry, I won’t tell Micah or your uncles about you and Aled. But given the way things are in the Bay, I suspect that they’ll find out sooner than you’d like them to.’ Edyth opened the door. ‘Did you persuade Harry not to come down here tonight?’
‘I did.’ Micah walked in and sat on the sofa. ‘But he’s meeting me and David in a I early tomorrow morning before we have to go to the magistrates’ court. And he asked me to tell you that he doesn’t want you there. If all goes well, we’ll bring David straight back here.’
‘And if it doesn’t?’ Edyth had to ask.
Micah looked from Edyth to Judy. ‘There’s no need for you both to look so tragic. It will go well. It has to.’ He glanced at his watch. ‘Another hour and I can go down to the station and pick David up. My bed in the mission might be hard and David may be used to a better supper than waffles, butter, and preserves in Helga’s, but mission hospitality isn’t quite as bad as that of the Maria Street police station.’
Edyth left her chair and went to the door. ‘What are David’s chances in court – the truth, Micah?’
‘That depends entirely on the magistrates. It’s out of our hands.’
Edyth forced herself to concentrate on practical problems as they were the only ones she could do anything about. ‘As you’re going to the station in an hour, can I get you something to eat?’
‘A sandwich and a cup of tea would be nice.’
‘I’ll lay the table for you.’ Judy left the window seat. ‘Please don’t bother; I’ll make up a tray. Besides, the car will be here for you soon.’
‘You’re going out?’ Micah asked Judy.
‘To the Windsor, for dinner,’ Edyth answered for her. ‘Judy is going to be singing on the wireless and she needs to sort out her repertoire.’
‘Congratulations, I always knew you’d get there,’ Micah said sincerely.
‘Thank you.’ A car horn sounded outside. Judy looked out of the window, saw Freddie and waved. ‘That’s my ride. I won’t be late, Edyth.’
Edyth grasped Judy’s hand as she passed her on her way to the door. ‘Good luck with choosing your songs.’ She kissed her cheek. ‘And look after yourself,’ she whispered in her ear.
Judy choked. ‘Give my love to David,’ she said to Micah before running down the stairs.
‘I will.’ Micah looked at Edyth. ‘For all her good news, Judy seems a bit tearful.’
‘She’s upset about David and it’s a lot to take in. A few short weeks ago she was working dawn till dusk in the bakery and playing in the pubs for shillings.’
‘And now she’s heading for the high life.’
‘I only hope she’s happy there and can live it as long as she wants.’ Edyth went into the kitchen.
Micah followed her. ‘That’s an odd thing to say, Edyth.’
‘I’m worried about her.’
‘Don’t be. After her success in the club last Saturday Aled James needs her more than she needs him. He’ll look after her better than he did David.’
‘I hope you’re right, Micah,’ she said fervently. ‘Sandwiches.’ She lifted the loaf from the bread bin and set it on the chopping board. ‘Cheese or ham?’
Tired of talking about Gertie and upset by Aled’s allegations, Anna made tea for both of them and took hers upstairs to her room, leaving Aled to wait for Gertie in the kitchen. For once it was deserted. Aled sat in one of the easy chairs next to the range, picked up a copy of the South Wales Echo, flicked through it, and waited for the sound of footsteps on the stairs. He left his chair and went into the passage that led into the hall three times only to see other men leave before Charlie Moore walked straight down the stairs and out through the front door. Charlie didn’t look back. Aled was glad, he wanted to be certain of his facts before he confronted the man.
Deciding to give Gertie a few minutes to dress before going upstairs to see her, Aled returned to his chair. No sooner had he sat down, than Gertie wandered into the kitchen in a thigh-length see-through green negligee, green French knickers, and a pair of white stockings held up by sequin-encrusted garters.
She took a cigarette from an open packet on the kitchen table, filched a spill from the wooden holder on the mantelpiece, and bent over the fire to light it. She didn’t see Aled sitting still and quiet with the newspaper folded on his lap until after she’d lit her cigarette. She shook out the spill, threw it on the fire, and gave him her wide professional smile. ‘Have you come to see me?’
‘Who else?’ he asked softly.
She flicked up the corner of her negligee and lifted the leg of her knickers. ‘You know the way to my room.’
‘For what I want to do to you, down here is fine, Gertie.’
‘This is the public room, anyone can walk in. I wouldn’t want the other girls to see us at it. Not in here. But if you’re into people watching –’
‘As far as I’m concerned the whole world is welcome to watch what’s about to happen here. Sit down, Gertie.’
‘If you want me to strip …’
‘You couldn’t be wearing much less than you are now.’
‘Want to make a bet on it?’ she whispered provocatively.
‘Sit down,’ he repeated. He hadn’t raised his voice but when Gertie looked into his eyes, the blue had turned to unflinching steel. She sat.
Aled reached into the inside pocket of his suit, removed his wallet, opened it and peeled off a large white five-pound note from a roll tucked into the back. He held it up in front of her.
‘Five pounds …’ Her eyes rounded.
‘Which could be yours.’
Gertie ran her tongue over her lips to moisten them.
‘What would I have to do to earn it?’
‘Give me information.’ He watched beads of sweat form on her forehead.
‘What kind of information?’ She lifted her chin, putting on a show of bravado.
‘You can tell me exactly who ordered you to go to the coppers, and finger David Ellis as a bookie’s runner.’
‘I have absolutely no idea what you are talking about.’
‘Yes, you do,’ he contradicted her calmly. ‘You went into the Mount Stuart pub around two o’clock this afternoon with a rookie constable straight out of training school. You pointed out David Ellis to him and told him that David was taking bets.’
‘It’s no secret that David is a bookie’s runner. He told me so himself.’
Aled sat back in his chair, took his cigar case from his pocket, removed a slim black cigar and tapped the cut end on the closed case. ‘How long have you lived on the Bay?’ he asked, conversationally.
‘About a year. Why do you want to know?’ she demanded.
‘I’m surprised a year hasn’t been long enough for you to learn the first unwritten law of Tiger Bay. You never grass on your neighbours, not even if they murder your father and rape your mother.’ He took his lighter from his pocket, lit his cigar and drew on it. ‘I’m asking you for the second time, Gertie. Who put you up to grassing on David Ellis?’
‘No one,’ she answered defiantly. But she saw him watching her rip at the bitten edges of her nails. She pushed her hands beneath her thighs and sat on them.
‘I don’t believe you.’ He returned his lighter, cigar case and wallet to his pockets.
‘It’s true. David and I went to Barry Island yesterday and we quarrelled there.’
‘I know. I also know that the police found his wallet in your room.’
‘It was empty when David left it there,’ she snapped pre-emptively.
‘Really?’
‘Yes, it was.’
‘You said you quarrelled with David.’
‘I did.’
‘About what?’
‘Nothing.’ She squirmed uneasily on her chair.
‘In my experience people rarely quarrel about nothing.’ He flicked his ash into the grate.
‘We were at the funfair. I talked to a couple of soldiers, that was all. David got jealous.’
‘Because you were touting for trade.’
‘I wasn’t.’ Her voice rose precariously. ‘I was just being friendly, that’s all. David took it the wrong way. He said some horrible things about me. And I wanted to get my own back on him,’ she blurted furiously. ‘That’s why I went to the police this afternoon.’
‘You wanted to get your own back on David enough to put him in gaol?’
‘Yes.’
‘Wasn’t that a little extreme? Even for a tart?’
‘I was angry.’
‘You’re sorry now?’
‘No.’ She tossed her head in the air and flicked her hair back from her forehead. ‘David had it coming to him.’ He looked her in the eye.
‘I am now asking for the third and last time: who put you up to fingering David and the others?’
‘What others?’
‘Don’t play games with me, Gertie,’ he threatened coldly.
‘No one put me up to anything –’
‘Come in, Aiden.’
Gertie turned her head and saw Aiden Collins standing in the doorway.
‘Boss,’ Aiden acknowledged.
‘You heard me ask the lady a question.’
‘I did, boss,’ Aiden replied softly.
‘Find out the answer. I’ll be waiting with Freddie in the car.’ He handed Aiden the five-pound note and his cigar.
Gertie shrank back even further into her chair and watched Aled leave. He closed the door behind him.
Aiden moved swiftly. Catching Gertie unawares, he grabbed her by the shoulders and lifted her off the chair.
Closing his right hand around both her wrists he yanked her arms high behind her back. She screamed.
‘Talk, or we’ll carry on this conversation upstairs in your room. People expect to hear screams coming from a whore’s bedroom.’ He drew on the cigar until the end glowed crimson. Then he held it, poised above her face.
‘It was Charlie Moore,’ she gabbled hastily. ‘He was running the book down here before you lot moved in … he wanted all your boys picked up … it was Charlie …’
Aiden inhaled on his cigar again; the tobacco crackled with the heat. He heaved her arms higher and she screamed again.
‘Who is behind Charlie Moore?’
‘No one is behind Charlie Moore. He has all the money he can spend. His family are rich. He was the most powerful man on the Bay before you and Mr James came here. Please,’ she begged when he drew on his cigar again. ‘That’s the truth, I swear it.’
Aiden dropped her arms and released her. She fell back into the chair.
Anna walked in. She saw Gertie trembling and looked at Aiden.
‘You should be more careful who you give house room to, Mrs Hughes.’ Aiden flung the five-pound note on to Gertie’s lap. ‘Buy yourself a one-way ticket out of here. I hear they quite like Welsh girls in Cork.’ He tossed the remains of the cigar on to the fire and left the house.
From the moment Micah picked him up at the police station, David kept expecting a lecture but Micah made a couple of innocuous remarks about the weather, drove him to the mission, and left him with Moody, who made him and a crowd of seamen a waffle supper. The sailors produced a couple of bottle of aquavit to wash down the waffles and shortly afterwards they started singing. The party spirit was at its height when Micah reappeared to remind David that he had to be up early in the morning. He showed him to his own bedroom and left.
David tossed and turned on the thin mattress for most of the night, listening to the singing and raucous laughter of the Scandinavians. He felt he had only just closed his eyes when Micah came in and shook him awake. To David’s surprise, Micah was already washed, shaved, and dressed in a dark three-piece suit, sober tie, and white shirt and collar.
‘Here’s a cup of coffee. I hope you take milk and sugar. There’s a razor, shaving soap, and ordinary soap on the washstand. I’ve brought warm water for you to wash. Don’t be long. I want to get away by a quarter to seven. We’ll breakfast on the way.’
‘But I don’t have to be at the magistrates’ court until half past eight …’ David found himself talking to the door. He rose, washed, dressed, and shaved in record time and left the bedroom. There was no sign of Micah in the public room that adjoined the bedroom. He went downstairs to Micah’s office, which was also empty, saw that the front door of the mission was open and found Micah outside, warming up the engine of his van.
He climbed into the front passenger seat and stared sleepily out of the window as Micah drove up Bute Street. Halfway along, Micah pulled up in front of a cafe and killed the engine.
‘Why have you stopped?’ David asked, lack of sleep making him irritable.
‘Breakfast.’
‘I’m not hungry.’
‘We’re meeting someone.’
David looked in through the I window. He saw Harry sitting at a table. ‘So this is where you two give me the “we told you so” lecture.’
‘This is where we have breakfast.’ Micah opened the van door.
‘Now I know why you didn’t say anything to me when you picked me up at the police station last night. You talked to Harry on the telephone and the two of you decided –’
‘We decided nothing, David,’ Micah broke in. ‘You made all the decisions that had to be made when you broke the law and got yourself arrested.’
‘You may as well get it off your chest now.’ David folded his arms.
‘I’ve nothing to get off my chest,’ Micah said. ‘I said my piece when I discovered that you’d taken the job of bookie’s runner. Harry, Edyth, Judy, me – we all tried to persuade you to change your mind, and stop working for Aled James, but you wouldn’t listen to any of us. It’s too late for recriminations now. All that’s left for you, Harry, and me to talk about is how best to deal with this bloody awful mess you’ve got yourself into.’
David was shocked. It was the first time he’d heard Micah swear. ‘Neither you nor Harry have to do anything,’ he said. ‘Aiden Collins came to see me in the police station last night. He has got me a first-class attorney –’
‘Solicitor,’ Micah corrected. ‘You’re in Britain, not America.’ He stepped out of the van on to the pavement. ‘I’m hungry. Do you want me to order breakfast for you? They do a good full English breakfast here: bacon, eggs, sausages, tomatoes, mushrooms, fried bread, and laver bread.’
‘I’m not hungry,’ David said sourly.
‘It might be your last chance to eat for a while.’
‘All right, I’ll have the breakfast,’ David agreed, embarrassed and angry at having put himself into a position where he was beholden to both Harry and Micah.
‘How do you like your eggs?’
‘Fried.’
‘Tea or coffee?’
‘Tea.’ David added ‘Please,’ but by then Micah had entered the café and joined Harry.
David left the van, closed the passenger door and stood, shivering, on Bute Street. The chill in the air and the mufflers tied around the necks of the workmen painting the windows of a bank lower down the street announced the arrival of autumn. Even at this early hour the street teemed with traffic, and David wondered if the people on the Bay ever slept.
A milk cart had stopped at the side of the road opposite. Its khaki-coated driver was busy ladling milk from a churn into the jugs of a queue of housewives who were gossiping whilst they waited their turn to be served. A road sweeper was piling rubbish on to a giant dustpan. Half a dozen shabbily dressed men were walking, heads down, caps pulled low over their faces, towards Penniless Point.
David looked at the watch Micah had retrieved from the police along with the rest of his personal possessions. It was almost seven o’clock. Another hour and a half and he would have to be in court. And he didn’t even know where it was.
Despite Micah’s assurance, he braced himself for a dressing-down, pushed open the door of the I and went inside.
‘David, sit down. Your breakfast is on its way.’ Harry pulled out the chair next to him. An elderly waitress appeared with a pot of tea and one of coffee. She put them on the table.
‘I’ll bring your hot water now, gentlemen.’
‘Thank you, Mavis. How’s your husband?’ Micah asked.
‘Crippled with rheumatism, but thank you for asking, Micah. How’s your sister?’
‘Burgeoning.’
‘You’ll make a daft, soft touch of an uncle.’ She bustled off.
‘And how are you?’ Harry asked David after she’d left.
‘Fine.’
‘Really?’ Harry pressed him.
‘If you’re going to have a go at me …’
Harry poured himself a cup of coffee. ‘You’ve enough problems on your plate, David, without me adding to them.’
‘So why am I here?’ David demanded.
Micah poured him a cup of tea and pushed it across the table towards him. ‘To have breakfast.’
‘I could have eaten that at the mission or Helga’s.’
‘Not Helga’s.’ Micah sugared his tea and passed David the bowl. ‘The police insisted that you could only leave the station on condition you stayed at the mission.’
‘We’re here to show solidarity.’ Harry buttered a piece of bread. ‘No one should have to go into court alone. No matter what they have done. Pass the salt and pepper, David.’
Micah parked his van behind Harry’s open-topped Crossley tourer outside the court at a few minutes before eight. David opened the passenger door and climbed out. The first people he saw were Aiden Collins and Freddie Leary, who were waiting in front of the building with the solicitor he had seen at the Maria Street police station the night before.
Another man was standing a short distance away from the group. Dressed like a tailor’s mannequin in a fine woollen three-piece suit, cashmere overcoat and trilby, he walked over and greeted Harry as he left his car.
‘Mr Evans, sir, I’m Alfred Lewis, from Mr Richards’s office.’
‘Pleased to meet you.’ Harry shook his hand.
‘I am going to need some details from you regarding your brother-in-law’s case, sir.’
‘We’ll talk inside and, please, call me Harry. Did you leave Mr Richards well?’
‘As well as can be expected. He doesn’t complain, but he hasn’t been the same since his recent stroke.’
‘I must call in and see him soon. David.’ Harry took David by the elbow and drew him aside. ‘This is the solicitor I have engaged to represent you, Mr Alfred Lewis. Alfred, this is my brother-in-law, David Ellis.’
‘I told you, Harry, Aiden has already got me a solicitor. I’m sorry you had to come down here on a wild goose chase, Mr Lewis. If you’ll excuse me, I must join Aiden and the others.’ David practically ran over to Aiden.
‘I’m sorry, Alfred,’ Harry apologised. ‘My brother-in-law is young, impetuous and, on occasions like now, downright ill-mannered.’
‘He must be under considerable strain,’ Alfred suggested tactfully.
‘Nevertheless, he could have been more polite. It was good of you to come down here at such short notice, and obviously I’ll pay your fee.’
‘It was the least the firm could do, Mr Evans, considering the amount of work your company puts our way.’
‘Would you mind coming into court with us and sitting in the public gallery?’ Harry asked. ‘There are bound to be things that we, that is Pastor Holsten and I, won’t understand.’
‘Not at all.’ Alfred shook Micah’s hand. ‘Pleased to meet you, Pastor.’
‘Micah. Shall we go in? Between the press, interested parties, families of the accused, and nosy parkers, the seats go early, and they won’t allow anyone to stand in the magistrates court.’ Micah led the way inside the building, and Harry stopped and read the details of the cases pinned on board.
‘Are these all due to be heard today?’ Harry was daunted by the prospect.
Alfred Lewis studied the list. ‘If the timetable goes to plan, your brother-in-law’s case should be the last to be heard before lunch. If a prior case overruns we could be here until the end of the day. Or, if we are extremely unlucky, and more than one case drags on, David Ellis’s case could be postponed until tomorrow, or even the day after.’
‘Perhaps we should have brought a flask, sandwiches, and camp beds, Harry,’ Micah suggested, not entirely humorously.