âForensic science report,' I said, and Bernard, the young office boy, supplied the reference. âPage 56 of the depositions. '
Wystan looked it up reluctantly and then rebuked me. âThe gun and magazine had evidently been wiped. There were no fingerprints of any sort.'
âExactly!' I told him.
âIn any event, everyone had seen our client holding the gun. What would have been the point of his wiping off his own fingerprints?'
âThat was the question I felt sure you'd want to ask,' I told Wystan, hoping I sounded respectful.
âWell, Jerold. Did you wipe the handle of the gun to remove fingerprints?'
âNo, sir. Never.'
âThat's your answer, Rumpole. I know you were trying to help.' Then Wystan turned to the client with what I supposed he thought were consoling words. âMr Rumpole, Jerold, is, like yourself, a young man. But
you're
not to worry. Mr Rumpole will be a great help to me by taking a full note of the evidence. But all the questions will be asked by me and I will, of course, make the final speech to the jury on your behalf. Now, does that set your mind at rest?'
Simon Jerold didn't look as though his mind was at rest. He gazed at me as though I had asked a new question which might, just possibly, supply some sort of chink of light in the darkness which surrounded him. But Wystan hadn't entirely finished with young Simon, and he seemed, at last, ready to sound a more positive note.
âAs far as your father's case is concerned -' Wystan looked up to the ceiling as he spoke, as though seeking inspiration from heaven - âit would help if he had threatened you again, perhaps attacked you when you got up to get water from the kitchen. We might, might we not, Mr Barnsley Gough, go for provocation?'
âSeems about the only thing we could go for. I agree with Mr Wystan,' our sharp solicitor told Simon.
âIt would only reduce murder to manslaughter, of course. But we might avoid the worst consequence.' Wystan seemed shy of mentioning the great obscenity, hanging by the neck.
âI've put this to you, Simon, haven't I? That he attacked you and that's why you shot him?' Barnsley Gough had been, apparently, one step ahead of my leader.
âHe couldn't have attacked me.' Simon sighed, as though tired of explaining a simple fact. âHe was dead. And I never shot him, never!' Was this a client, I wondered, who refused to tell a lie even in the hope of saving his life?
âMr Wystan,' Barnsley Gough was persistent, âis only suggesting what might have happened.'
âWell, it didn't!' Simon was equally persistent. âI'm quite sure of that.'
âWhat will happen,' Wystan gave us his idea of a smooth solution to a difficult problem, âis that we shall listen to all the evidence about the party and the medical evidence. We really don't need to challenge any of it. And then, when the time comes for him to give evidence, our client may have a clearer memory of the events of that terrible night. In the fullness of time.'
At which Simon only repeated, âI never shot him.' And the conference was over.
On my way back to the Temple I said to C. H. Wystan, âSo you wanted him to say his father attacked him in the night?' Suggesting this story hadn't seemed, I had to admit, in strict accordance with the finest traditions of the bar.
My leader, however, was unashamed. âHe may remember that's what happened in the fullness of time,' he said.
âHow does that fit in with Charlie Weston's murder? Are we suggesting Simon went round to his bungalow and got attacked by him too?'
âHe may remember more about that. You'll have to rely on me to conduct this case in my own way, unless you can suggest a better sort of defence.'
I had to confess that I couldn't, although I made a silent vow to do so. In the fullness of time.
6
âYou should sit, best part of the day, Mr Rumpole, with your leg elevated.'
âThat's quite impossible.'
âOf course it's not impossible. Just get a low stool, put a cushion on it and elevate your leg. It doesn't require great athletic skill.'
I had visited Dr McClintock, our local quack, on my wife Hilda's (known to me only as She Who Must Be Obeyed) often repeated insistence. Check-ups are, in my experience, a grave mistake; all they do is allow the quack of your choice to tell you that you have some sort of complaint that you were far happier not knowing about. Or else they prescribe some totally impossible course of conduct, as was the case with McClintock, who looked at me as though I might soon become a blank space on his National Health list.
âWhy on earth should you want me to do that?' I asked.
âBecause,' McClintock spoke very slowly as though explaining the secrets of the universe to a small halfwit, âit'll be good for your circulation.'
âIt may be good for my circulation, but it'll be extremely bad for my practice at the bar.'
âI'm not sure I'm quite clear what you mean, Mr Rumpole.' He was puzzled but tolerant, as though the halfwit had started to babble.
âDo you think I could address a jury with my leg elevated? Could I cross-examine with my foot in the air?'
âMr Rumpole, I don't think you quite understand . . .'
âYou don't think I understand?' By now the quack had touched a nerve. He had challenged all I had learned from a lifetime's experience ever since . . . well, ever since the case which confirmed me as a force to be reckoned with down the Old Bailey. âDo you imagine,' I asked the final question that would blow his medical theories to the winds, âdo you honestly imagine that I could have done the Penge Bungalow Murders, alone and without a leader, but with one leg cocked up on a joint stool?'
âI'm not concerned with how many murders you might have done in the suburbs of London, Mr Rumpole. I'm concerned about your circulation.'
It was to escape the rule of the eccentric Dr McClintock, and to be able to write with both feet firmly planted on the ground, that I took my memoirs down to chambers and started to write in my room there. I was about to have another great remembrance of things past, when my sweet silent thoughts were interrupted by a brisk knock at the door and the entrance of a personable young lady carrying a mug which she put down carefully on the corner of my
Archbold on Criminal Law and Procedure
.
âAlbert told me black with no sugar. Is that how you like it, Mr Rumpole?'
âThat's exactly how I like it. Do you work for any of our solicitors?' I was hoping she might be bringing a brief to go with the coffee.
âAfraid not. I'm Lala Ingolsby, Liz Probert's pupil. She told me you know more about the practice of the criminal law than anyone in the Temple.'
âThat's strictly true.'
âSo she's sure you can give me some excellent advice.'
âPossibly.' I took out a small cigar to go with the coffee. âDo you mind?' I remembered to say as I struck a match.
âNot at all. In fact I rather like it.'
I began to warm to this Lala Ingolsby.
âWhat's that you're working on now?' Lala was inspecting the pieces of virgin paper, across which that day my pen had scarcely travelled.
âMy memoirs. I am recalling the Penge Bungalow Murders. You won't have heard of the case.'
âWasn't that the one about the two ex-air force officers found shot?'
âYou know that?' Lala's approval rating continued to rise.
âOh, yes, we had books at home called
Notable British Trials
. You were in that case, weren't you?'
âWhen my wig was as white as yours, Miss Ingolsby.'
âAnd you did it without a leader?'
âIt was all a long time ago.'
âHow can I get into a case like that?'
âYou'll have to wait until someone gets killed in an interesting way in the suburbs. Then get led by your Head of Chambers.'
âBy Mr Ballard?'
Soapy Sam, I thought, would make an excellent lost leader, but I resisted the temptation of pointing this out to my new-found and young learned friend. All I said was, âSomeone with Sam Ballard's qualities, yes.'
Lala thought this over and said, âThere's something else I'd like your advice about.'
âYou probably need my advice on the subject of bloodstains?'
âIt's not bloodstains. It's Claude Erskine-Brown.'
Again I resisted the temptation to say, âMuch the same thing.' So I said, âLiz Probert has reported him to the Society of Women Barristers. Re the matter of your legs.'
âI didn't really mind that. It's just that he keeps on about it. And quite honestly I don't fancy Erskine-Brown.'
âQuite honestly,' I had to admit, âneither do I.'
âI know Liz got excited about it. I just want him to stop. It's become embarrassing.'
âEmbarrassing to have him making flattering remarks about your personal appearance?'
âWell, it is. Quite honestly.'
âAnd you want him to stop?'
âQuite honestly, yes. What do you think I ought to do, Mr Rumpole? You've had so much experience of life.'
âA life of crime,' I had to admit.
âSo what should I do?'
âYou really want to stop Claude dead in his tracks?'
âThat sort of thing, yes.'
âThen tell him you love him passionately. Tell him you want him to get a divorce and marry you. Above all, tell him you're going to ring up Mrs Justice Erskine-Brown, once the Portia of our chambers and my long-ago pupil, now married to Claude.'
âWhy should I want to ring her up?'
âTell him it's to beg her to set him free because you can't live without each other.'
âWhat do you think will happen if I tell him all that?'
âI think he'll run a mile. I think he'll drop your legs as a topic of conversation. I think he'll never speak to you as you're standing by the notice board again.'
âIt's not very flattering to think he'd react like that.'
âIt may well not be flattering, but it'll work,' and I added, in words she could understand, âquite honestly.'
âI suppose I might try it.' At which she left me, grinning broadly.
I no longer thought of what havoc I might have wreaked on the love lives of the present members of our chambers. I picked up my pen and dived back in time to the days when my wig was as white as Miss Lala Ingolsby's. I summed up the situation and carried on my narrative in the following way.
Â
Looking back at Equity Court in the days when C. H. Wystan was our Head and Uncle Tom was chipping golf balls into the wastepaper basket, I miss the figures who have become so much a part of my life and seem inseparable from the building. Claude Erskine-Brown had not arrived to bore us about his nights at the opera and fall hopelessly in love at least once a month, nor had our Portia, Phillida Trant, who remarkably married him. Guthrie Featherstone, QC, MP, was still to take us over and Soapy Sam Ballard was organizing debates among his fellow law students on such subjects as âIs adultery a quasi-criminal offence?' and âA Christian approach to smoking'.
Most of the members of chambers at the time of the Penge Bungalow affair have died or become judges or, in other ways, put an end to their active lives. Their faces, plump and self-satisfied or sharp-nosed and inquisitive, have drifted into that great gallery of past learned friends I have been against and judges I have found irritating. Little labels which might have given me a clue as to their names and identities have got rubbed smooth and become illegible over the course of the years.
A character who sticks in my mind, however, and had some influence on events surrounding the Penge Bungalow affair, was Teddy Singleton. He was by far the most elegant member of Equity Court. He lived in South Kensington with someone he always referred to as âMumsie' and rarely left chambers without putting on a fawn overcoat with a velvet collar and carrying a tightly rolled umbrella. He spoke in a voice which, having hit on an effective note of amused contempt, was disinclined to try any change of expression.
Uncle Tom, defeated by the wastepaper basket, had drifted off home and the gas lights were being lit. I sat on in our room, turning the pages of the forensic science book, trying not to look at the photographs of battered babies and strangled women, but to concentrate on the information to be gained from bloodstains and the spattering of blood, making a note which I hoped C. H. Wystan would find useful. Teddy Singleton glided into the room and asked me what I was doing. I was good enough to tell him but he dismissed my efforts with a short, staccato burst of laughter.
âDon't worry your pretty little head about that, Rumpole. You might think you've got an important job. Case in the public eye. Head of Chambers leading you. I tell you, I've been led by Wystan and he won't even let his junior read out an agreed statement.'
âI'm just seeing if we can get anything from the blood.'
âDon't worry your pretty little head.' It was the sort of remark that would get Erskine-Brown in trouble with the sisterhood these days, and it seemed peculiarly inappropriate when applied to me, as he soon realized. Teddy gave me a more critical examination. âYour head's not exactly pretty, is it? All the same, I'm going to offer you a speaking part. Dear old con, spent half his life in chokey, so it won't come as much of a shock to him. I can't do it. I'm in a fun divorce case across the road.'
âYou mean he's pleading guilty?' My interest in Teddy's brief was already shrinking. âWhy's he doing that?'