I knew that whatever I said wouldn't make the slightest difference to His Lordship's decision. So Mr Rumpole agreed, with unexpected results.
22
âLuci Gribble tells me you're writing your memoirs, Rumpole.'
âThat's true. And I've just reached the point of crisis in perhaps the most important case I ever did. Although, and I have to add this in all fairness, I have done many important cases, and even managed to give a feeling of importance to the dull ones.'
âBut you are writing your memoirs in a room in chambers.'
âMy wife, Hilda, has got an old schoolfriend to stay. My flat in the Gloucester Road is filled with loud laughter and hilarious accounts of life in the dorm and on the hockey field. I came here in search of quiet, Ballard. I have just reached a vital moment in my life, so if you'll forgive me . . .'
âYou're dealing with your life in these chambers in this book, are you, Rumpole?'
âMy legal life, yes.'
âDuring a great part of which I have been your Head of Chambers.'
âYou are now.' I had to acknowledge it.
âAnd as your Head, I shall of course wish to see the chapters you have written about me before you have any thought of publication. Can I do that? I shall have to be satisfied that you have written nothing libellous and that I haven't been treated with ridicule and contempt. I know how greatly you are tempted to ridicule, Rumpole, even Her Majesty's judges.'
âParticularly Her Majesty's judges. At least some of them.'
âSo let me see.' Soapy Sam Ballard held his hand out, as though expecting to receive a bundle of manuscript pages.
âIt absolutely can't be done.'
âWhy ever not?'
âBecause there aren't any chapters about you.'
âNone?' Soapy Sam apparently couldn't believe it.
âNot a single chapter. And only a passing reference.'
âA
passing
reference?' He sounded deeply disappointed. âWhat sort of reference is that?'
âA passing one.'
Ballard thought this over and then pronounced judgement. âAs your Head of Chambers and a leading counsel, ' he pronounced his verdict, âI feel I'm entitled to more than a
passing
reference in any account of your life in the law, Rumpole.'
âI'm sorry,' I told him - the man was taking up valuable memoir time - âI feel I've rather exhausted the subject.'
There was a pained silence then and Ballard said, in tones that were quiet and clearly intended to be menacing, âThis room is set aside for you to do your legal work in, Rumpole. To note up briefs and write opinions. I don't believe your tenancy covers the writing of memoirs. It's a matter I shall consider asking Luci Gribble to put on the agenda for the next chambers meeting.'
With which dire threat Soapy Sam withdrew, and I bit the end of my pen as I remembered those faraway days at the Old Bailey and took out another sheet of paper.
Â
It was the longest weekend I've ever lived through. The hours seemed to take days to pass and the days felt like months. On Sunday morning my landlady, Mrs Ruben, unexpectedly brought up my breakfast, the full English on a tray, together with the copy of the âNews of the Screws'. â“Did you shoot pilot heroes?” Penge Bungalow barrister accuses' and there was my name, staring out at me and staring out at a nation eating a late Sunday breakfast and enjoying other people's tragedies. And then I thought of the number of deaths it had taken to get Mrs Ruben to bring me breakfast in bed and fell into a mood of bleak despair, considering that next week's newspaper would announce the verdict and terrible sentence passed on Simon Jerold.
The flicker of fame that Sunday morning had brought me was no doubt the reason for Teddy Singleton ringing me up and suggesting we might have lunch in the French pub in Soho and then, âWhat about doing a movie?' I was grateful to him, as I had been for his handing over to me the brief in the Timson case. I was also thankful for anything that might take my mind off Simon and his troubles over some part of that long, empty Sunday.
Teddy had given up his velvet-collared overcoat and rolled umbrella when we met at the French pub, in fact called the York Minster, just off Old Compton Street. The walls of its small bar were crammed with photographs of artists and writers. At least, that's what Teddy Singleton assured me they were. The drinkers in the pub looked dazed, hung-over and not yet fully awake as they reached eagerly for their life-saving first whisky. Teddy, dressed for Sunday in a tweed jacket and grey flannel trousers, shod with polished brown brogues, said, â
La vie de Bohème
. That's what you get a taste of in this French pub. Gaston!' He called to an elderly man with a luxurious moustache behind the bar. â
Deux
of your
vin ordinaire
for me and my learned friend,
s'il vous plaît
.' After a number of calls for â
encore du vin ordinaire
' from Teddy, we climbed the stairs to an almost empty dining room, where a pair of elderly and sullen waiters managed to ignore our existence for a considerable time, until Teddy eventually persuaded them to bring us â
deux
steaks, medium rare, with
beaucoup de pommes frites
'.
âWystan's really going to kick you out of chambers, isn't he?'
âDo you think so?'
âOh, I'm sure so. I mean, as I read it in the “News of the Screws”, you're really doing quite well. Wystan won't be able to forgive you for that. He'll chuck you out with the empty sherry bottles.'
âYou think he'd do that?'
âOf course. I say, you're not in any danger of winning that case, are you?'
âSometimes I think I've got a chance. Most of the time I don't.'
âFor God's sake,' Teddy was sawing away at the medium rare, âif your chap gets off, Wystan'll have you out in the next ten minutes. He couldn't bear that.'
âIf I get him off, it would be worth it.'
âYou really think so?' Teddy seemed to find this hard to believe.
âOf course I do.'
âThen when you're kicked out, which you will be whatever happens, let's you and I start a fun chambers.'
âWhat's a “fun chambers”?'
âWell, we could get some rooms just outside the Temple. Have them decorated by some really fun people. You know, one wall yellow and one blue sort of idea. And we can do fun cases.'
âWhat's your idea of “fun” cases exactly?' I was curious to know.
âDivorce is the most tremendous fun.'
âReally?' I felt I'd need a great deal of convincing.
âWho's up who and who pays,' Teddy told me, I thought mysteriously.
âWhat's that mean?'
âWell, it's all about sex. And people throwing their dinner plates at each other, and screwing money out of their husbands for adopting unusual sexual positions. It's generally about the fun ways married people find to torment each other.'
âI've done some of that in the magistrates' court,' I told him. âI think I'd rather stick to ordinary decent crime.'
âOh, well.' Teddy continued to smile cheerfully at the prospect of so much fun divorce. âYou'll probably change your mind when you're out on the street and homeless. Now, eat up, we're off to the flicks.'
That afternoon, Teddy Singleton and I sat in a darkened Odeon watching
Quo Vadis
. The emperor Nero lolled about, ordering various bloodstained events which took place in the Colosseum, a venue almost as fatal as the Penge bungalows. When we emerged blinking in the late afternoon, Teddy said, âI'll find you a home, Rumpole, don't worry your not so pretty little head about it.' Then he kissed me lightly on the cheek and wandered back into the purlieus of Soho.
I spent a mainly sleepless night, worrying about Simon and realizing that there was at least this to be said about fun divorce cases: very few of them ended in a sentence of death.
Inevitably the morning came and I was back in the Old Bailey robing room, where I was accosted by an unusually quiet and far less triumphant Reggie Proudfoot.
âOh, there you are at last, Rumpole,' he said, as though I'd been deliberately hiding from him. âMy leader wants to see you as a matter of urgency. He's in the bar mess.'
âI'll go up right away.'
âYou do that, Rumpole.' Reggie spoke with all the bitterness of a man who hadn't been invited to join the party.
23
It's notable that so many of the important events of this period of my life took place, not only in court, but while people were eating meals. When I got up to the bar mess, on the top floor of the Old Bailey, Tom Winterbourne was finishing up his breakfast, wiping the last stains of fried eggs off his plate with a piece of bread. His wig was off his head and was nestling beside the toast rack. âSit down, young Rumpole,' he said, âand have a cup of coffee.'
I agreed to both propositions and then he surprised me by saying, âYou know, your cross-examination of Benson was so effective that the witness in question has gone absent without leave.'
âWhat do you mean?' Could this possibly be good news on a Monday morning?
âMoved on. Taken himself off and left no forwarding address.'
âI suppose you'll find him.' I hurried to dampen what might be a flickering but misleading light of hope.
âI'm not so sure. The police have been round to his flat, of course. It's all locked up and empty. The neighbours said they saw him leave on Friday night in a taxi. He had a case with him and no one's seen him since. Of course, we didn't keep a check on the ports and Northolt during the weekend. He may have gone to ground anywhere in Europe.'
Gone to ground. Done the vanishing trick. The disappearing act. It seemed to have happened to so many people. Harry Daniels, who might have given evidence helpful to the defence, had been persuaded to go AWOL by somebody. The story started when Jerry Jerold and âTail-End' Charlie decided to disappear at a difficult moment of the war and now Peter Benson, star prosecution witness, had also melted away into the great unknown.
Tom Winterbourne pulled a piece of toast from behind his wig and started to butter it lavishly. âWould you ever consider doing a bit of prosecuting?'
âNo.' I didn't have too much difficulty in answering the question.
âWhy not?'
âI suppose I'd rather get people out of trouble than into it, by whatever I might do in court.'
âThat's very odd.' Winterbourne applied a thick coating of marmalade. âI much prefer getting people into trouble. In fact I greatly enjoy it! All the thoroughly bad men and women in the world! I consider it's my mission in life to make them squirm.'
âAnd do you think of young Simon Jerold as one of the bad people of the world?'
âThat remains to be seen.' He chewed his toast thoughtfully. âWe'll have to see what the jury make of it.'
So I wasn't going to do fun divorce cases and I wasn't going to prosecute. I was stuck with a life of crime. But it was the most anxious moment of one of the most alarming cases I was ever going to do. A matter, quite simply, of life and death.
We went back to Court Number One and further facts emerged, one of them being that Peter Benson had removed a large amount of money from his bank in cash on the day before he gave evidence, as though he was already considering the possibility of flight before he entered the witness box. Mr Winterbourne asked for another adjournment for further enquiries.
Mr Rumpole said it was intolerable for Simon Jerold to be kept waiting for his fate to be decided merely because a prosecution witness could no longer face the court. He also wanted the jury to be told about Peter Benson cashing in a large amount of money.
Rather to my surprise, the judge agreed with Mr Rumpole on both points. The trial would start again the next morning and, if Mr Benson didn't turn up to be re-examined, we would have to make the best of it and go on without him.
After another day of waiting and nerve-racking suspense, Tom Winterbourne announced that the police were no nearer finding Peter Benson, and there seemed a strong likelihood of his having gone abroad over the weekend. He called his last witness, Joan (âeveryone calls me Joanie') Plumpton, who acted as cleaning lady for both of the murdered men. She took the oath and, unlike the vanished Benson, looked straight at the dock and gave Simon a broad smile, which he returned faintly but, I thought, with gratitude.
Joanie told us that she had been working as a dresser at the old Streatham Empire, but now just did cleaning round the bungalows. She gave her horrified account of finding âTail-End' Charlie dead in his hallway when she opened his front door with the key she was allowed to keep. He lived alone in his bungalow and he was alone when she found him.
When I rose to cross-examine her Joanie gave me one of her smiles and was clearly anxious to help. She remembered vaguely being in Jerry Jerold's bungalow when he was having an argument with one of his friends about his having been a prisoner of war. She thought things were going to turn nasty, so she went off to clean the bath. So the prosecution case ended on a note that was only just favourable to the defence.
It's often wiser for customers accused of crime to stay silent and sit in the safety of the dock, where they can't be cross-examined, rather than come into the dangerous witness box, where their evidence can be attacked and torn to pieces. As much of my case depended on Simon's account of his father's fears, I had no choice but to expose him as a witness.
So he stood in his best suit and, at first, the jury were reluctant to look at this young man, this boy almost, they might feel bound to condemn to death. But as time went on, and as his answers sounded modest, quietly spoken and reasonably convincing, some of the jury members turned to look at him, and their looks were not entirely unfriendly.