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Authors: Peter Guttridge

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BOOK: City of Dreadful Night
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‘Get his bag, Russell.'
A young man with a pockmarked face loped over to the table Tingley had been sitting at and picked up a slender bag. As he took it back over to Cuthbert, he rooted in it and came out with a newspaper and a collapsible umbrella. He peered in the bag and passed it to Cuthbert.
‘That's it.'
Gilchrist was back on the edge of her seat. Tingley remained impassive.
‘What's this?' the pockmarked youth said, fiddling with the umbrella. Suddenly it sprang open. The youths laughed as he waved it around.
‘Fucking neat, isn't it?'
‘Fucking is,' one of the other youths said.
‘Fucking neat.'
Tingley laughed along with them for a moment or two. Then:
‘It's bad luck opening an umbrella indoors.' He nodded at the mirror behind the bar. ‘If that goes as well, we're all fucked.'
He held out his open hand out for his bag.
‘If you please.'
Gilchrist was thinking that in a movie, silence would have fallen at this point. Here it was a change in the atmosphere, a drop in pressure.
‘If I please,' Cuthbert said. ‘If I please.'
Tingley kept his hand out but looked across at Gilchrist. As she started to rise, he gave an infinitesimal shake of his head. Then he reached over and took hold of his bag. Tingley and Cuthbert exchanged looks.
‘Check me out,' Tingley said. ‘Name's James Tingley. I'll come back in a couple of days so we can talk.'
Cuthbert frowned but released the bag. Tingley turned to Cuthbert's posse.
‘Gentlemen.'
He turned and walked to the door. Gilchrist was on her feet a moment later. Trying not to hurry, she strolled out of the pub after him.
Tingley was standing about twenty yards down the road looking back at her. She walked towards him.
‘Bet you're glad you didn't have to pull your warrant card,' he said when she reached him.
‘Is it that obvious?'
‘To me.'
‘I know of you, Mr Tingley.'
‘I know of you too, Ms Gilchrist. That was very foolhardy of you to go in that pub. Had you been recognized—'
‘You know who I am?'
‘Your photo has been in all the papers – that's why you were taking a risk going there.'
Tingley looked beyond Gilchrist and quickly took her arm.
‘Get in your car and follow me – I'm parked down at the end of the street.'
Gilchrist crossed to her car, head down, ignoring the two men who were standing outside the pub watching her. One of them called to her but she slid into her car and drove down the street.
Tingley led her to the Marina.
Driving home, Kate couldn't concentrate. She was thinking about the Trunk Murder but she was also thinking about Watts. Although she didn't really go for older men, he was a bit of a hunk. He was a quiet man, but there was something about him that suggested he could take care of himself. And others?
She wondered about the third glass – whether Watts had been entertaining somebody who had hidden. Who might that have been?
She let herself into her flat. She lived in a first-floor flat in Sussex Gardens in Kemp Town, overlooking the sea. Kemp Town was the fashionable place to live in Brighton. Rows of Georgian terraces and brightly coloured cottages interspersed with restaurants and New Age shops.
Her flat in Sussex Gardens was her one concession to her parents. When she had moved to Brighton to do her doctorate, her father had bought the flat. As an investment, he said, but for her to live in whilst she was there.
She hated being beholden to her father but her mother pleaded with her. Kate selfishly didn't want to share with other people – the last time had been a disaster – but she couldn't afford the rent on anywhere decent in Brighton. Prices were the same as London. And this was more than decent.
She agreed. It was a two-bedroom flat and her parents came down sometimes to stay in the second bedroom over a weekend. It didn't happen very often since it was awkward. She had worried at first that her father would want to stay when he came down for the Party Conference or when he had meetings with Labour politicians in town. But he chose to stay around the seafront in the Grand or the Hotel du Vin.
Kate went to the box in her living room. She moved the vase of lilies from the dining table and started to empty the box on to it. There was a box file labelled ‘Witness statements' and a dozen or so cardboard files, all empty. Some had odd titles neatly printed on the covers: ‘Smells', ‘Missing Women', ‘Paper', ‘Empty Houses'.
She took out the loose sheaves of papers from the cardboard box, papers that had at one time presumably belonged in these files. They were in no discernible order. A number were headed ‘County Borough of Brighton' then ‘Statement of Witness'. Most were typed on manual typewriters, the occasional red letter coming through in the black type. Others were handwritten in blue or black ink by many different hands.
She turned one sheet over and found something strange typed on the reverse.
‘
This isn't a diary as such. It's a memoir if you like. A reminiscence. A slice of autobiography. Call it what you will – just don't call it a confession.
'
Her interest piqued, she turned other sheets over and soon had a stack of what were clearly entries from a diary.
Excited, Kate settled down on her balcony. She looked around the square and smiled or nodded at those people in other flats who were on their balconies. Music drifted across the square. Coldplay and Bach and Miles Davis.
The sea was calm. As the sky darkened, the white lights that strung the length of the stubby finger of the Palace Pier grew brighter.
She had gathered the pages of the anonymous diary into some kind of date order. She was sure there were more pages in the files, but since the entries were typed up on the back of other documents, or on witness statement sheets, it was difficult on cursory examination to distinguish them from other typed material.
There were fragments that didn't have dates attached. She put these aside. She started to read the entry for 6th June, the day the trunk was deposited at Brighton station.
NINE
Wednesday 6th June 1934
I
remember 6th June. I don't remember it because it was Derby Day. I'm not a betting man. I remember it because of the platinum blonde.
It had been a difficult week for me. Frenchie had been over on the Monday for her visit to Dr M. I met her off the ferry at the West Pier and she was alternately weepy and angry. She'd said she didn't want to see me after, so I took her over to Hove and asked the receptionist to be sure she got a taxi back to the pier in plenty of time for the ferry back to France. I left more than enough money.
I was working that afternoon but I felt sorry for her – yes, me – so I nipped down to see her off. However, I got waylaid by a shopkeeper complaining about kids throwing stones at his shop window. By the time I got to the pier the ferry was already chugging towards the horizon. It was too far away to make out anybody on deck, if she was on deck.
I never saw her again.
That Wednesday was hot and sticky and I was relieved to be out of the office. Brighton's main police station is in the basement of the Town Hall, two floors below the magistrates' court. It was no place to be on a sunny day.
I'd been out since noon. First I'd been up at the railway station. It had been mobbed. The trains clattered in at the rate of 500 a day at this time of year. From London alone, a train every five minutes from Victoria, every fifteen from London Bridge. Half a million people over a weekend, five million a week in a couple of months' time during the wakes holidays.
I stood at the end of platform three and watched people getting off their trains, then swarming across to the single track inset between platforms three and four. There they boarded the special train that took holidaymakers up to the Devil's Dyke, the pleasure park set in a deep gorge on the Downs.
When I came out of the station I was jostled by more arrivals spilling into the sunlight. Some queued for the little trams that ran from the station to the two piers. Others set off to walk the quarter of a mile down the Queens Road to the sea glittering at its far end.
Many families had come from the dark slums of London and you could see them dazzled by the light, looking up at the expanse of blue sky and down towards the bright sea.
I'd observed before that usually the women and children reached the seafront first. The men would find an excuse to stop off in one of the public houses that lay between the station and their family day ahead.
A day spent on the beach, on the silver painted piers, splashing in the sea, racing in miniature motors, listening to the bands playing. Idly watching small aeroplanes out of Shoreham airport write their advertisements for all kinds of products in languid trails of smoke across the sky.
Don't tell me I can't be poetical.
No sooner did I walk in the police station than the desk sergeant sent me straight back out to deal with an incident in the Winter Gardens on the terrace above the aquarium. A drunken man claiming to be Lobby Ludd had been pestering the young women using the deck chairs.
‘
How do we know it isn't Lobby Ludd?' I said. ‘He's due down here today.
'
Lobby Ludd was sent by the
Westminster Gazette
to tour the south coast resorts during the summer. When he was in Brighton, his photo and approximate whereabouts were given in that day's copy of the newspaper. If you thought you recognized him, you went up to him with a copy of the newspaper and said: ‘You are Lobby Ludd and I claim my
Westminster Gazette
prize.
'
I'd heard he was so popular that special excursion trains ran to resorts where he was due to appear. His popularity was to do with the fact that the main prize was £50 – more if no one had won the previous day. There were also prizes of ten bob a go if anyone found one of the Lobby Ludd cards he hid in various places about the town.
The man claiming to be Lobby Ludd had scarpered by the time I got to the deckchairs. But the platinum blonde was there. She was pretty, with freckles and a cheeky smile.
She didn't have much to say, except with her eyes.
‘
Lobby Ludd? He tried to get fresh. Sat down next to me and invited me to lunch. I said no, so he said, “Well, what about a drink?” He said he wasn't after anything –' she gave me a look – ‘but then you all say that, don't you?
'
‘
You weren't tempted?' I said, giving her a look back.
‘
He stank of gin and he was too desperate – kept saying all he wanted was for me to “stick close”.
'
‘
Too desperate, eh? I'll make a note of that.
'
A few yards along, a fat spotty girl in pink was plonked in a deckchair. Her feet hardly touched the ground. A pale, bloodless girl sat beside her. She watched me avidly.
‘
Was it Lobby Ludd?' I said to the spotty girl.
‘
He waved some cards but I don't know if they were real. He said if I went with him for a drink, he'd let me have one of his cards so I could claim the ten bob.
'
‘
What did you say?
'
‘
I said give me the fifty pounds and I might be interested.
'
She and her friend squealed.
‘
Then what happened?
'
‘
I said I couldn't leave my friend and didn't he have one – to make a foursome like? He said no, then a young friend of his turned up.
'
‘
A young friend?
'
‘
He looked a bit of a bad sort.
'
‘
Did he now?
'
Behind the Regency terraces and the glamour of the seafront there was another Brighton of dark alleyways and festering slums. From here violence and crime had begun to spread.
In particular we'd been having trouble with razor gangs of young criminals marauding around town. They carried cut-throat razors and weren't afraid to use them when they caused trouble in the dance halls, on the piers and up at the racetrack.
‘
They had a bit of a to-do,' the spotty girl said. ‘Fred – that's what Lobby Ludd said his real name was – left then.
'
‘
This young man he had an altercation with . . . ?
'
‘
Well, he obviously knew Fred. But Fred denied it. Even said his name wasn't Fred. Then he ran off.
'
The platinum blonde was looking out across Madeira Drive to the Palace Pier. I walked back to her.
I was at the railway station twice that day. But had I been there some time between six and seven in the evening, would it have made any difference? All those people flooding off the trains – would I have noticed a man lugging a brown trunk with a woman's naked torso in it? A man who, some time in that hour, deposited it in the left parcels office, receiving in return the deposit ticket CT1945?
I returned to the station at about ten that evening to see the platinum blonde safely on her train back to whichever London slum she'd come from. It was the least I could do.
Kate paused for a moment and looked across at the Pier. She wondered who Frenchie was and Dr M. She couldn't quite get the tone of his remarks about the platinum blonde. That last paragraph sounded harsh, callous.
The next entry she found was eleven days later.
BOOK: City of Dreadful Night
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