Authors: Peter Turnbull
âSorry?' Penny Yewdall asked.
âI mean, I fainted. I was one of the last to faint but eventually I felt light-headed and I blacked out.' Sandra Barnes once again looked skywards. âI must have been out for quite a long time because I woke up feeling cold, the sun was setting, and the swimming pool had been emptied and four girls had been set to scrubbing the sides and the bottom of it with stiff brushes and a bleach solution . . . like they do in public swimming baths . . . if someone drowns, they empty the pool and clean it and then refill it.'
âYes.' Penny Yewdall nodded. âThat is the policy.'
âI don't think they were really being sensitive, though,' Sandra Barnes explained. âI think it was because the water was contaminated with blood so it was a matter of hygiene, not sensitivity.'
âI see,' Penny Yewdall replied, âthat makes sense. They may also have wanted to get rid of evidence.'
âAnd those women in the pool were being well supervised by my man, my ex, Tony Sudbury, “Scrub it well or I'll scrub it with your head”, shouting like a sergeant in the army. Then he turned to another member of Arnie Rainbird's team and said, “Scrubbers scrubbing a pool” and they both laughed.' She fell silent. âI don't know whether I want to write to Charlie Magg after all. He was so protective to the women yet he could do that to another man.'
âIt probably wouldn't be a good idea, really, but it's your call,' Penny Yewdall replied, as a young mother, beaming with pride, approached from the opposite direction pushing a pram. She and Sandra Barnes smiled warmly at the woman who returned their smiles.
âAt night they burnt the two bodies.' Sandra Barnes carried on with her story, seemingly, thought Penny Yewdall, finding it easier to talk after her initial reluctance. âThat smell . . . so sickly sweet . . . I'll never forget it; the smell that burning flesh makes is horrible . . . the way the bodies twisted in the flames.'
âYou saw that!'
âThey made us watch it, all in a line. They made us line up to watch the murders and they made us line up to watch the cremation. Some of the girls fainted at the cremation as well. I didn't; I kept telling myself that at least they're dead, not feeling anything. And the following day . . .' Sandra Barnes added, âthey did it all again.'
âMore victims?'
âNo, no, I mean that they built another fire and a guy they called “The Butcher”, he cut the charred bodies with a saw and a machete and put the bits on the second fire. They used coal to build the second fire for some reason, probably because it produces more heat than wood produces. But in the morning after the second fire there were just bones in the ash, no flesh at all, and the bones were put in a big cardboard box and given to a gofer, and The Butcher said, “You know what to do with them?” and the gofer says, “Yes, Mr Harley.”'
âMr Harley?' Penny Yewdall queried.
âYes,' Sandra Barnes replied confidently. âIt was “Yes, Mr Harley.” I had, I still have a friend with that surname so I remembered it, it registered, “Yes, Mr Harley.”'
âMr Harley,' Penny Yewdall repeated. âSo The Butcher was called Harley. That is very useful. Did you get to know any of the other girls?'
âChatted to a few, but really only got to know one; she was a hard street girl on the outside but lovely on the inside. She had been brought there with the other street girls on the coach with the promise of two hundred pounds for one night's work.'
âDo you remember her name?'
âElizabeth Petty. She was known as “Long Liz”. We came to be quite pally, but just for the duration of the party. A really tall girl, over six feet, and she was a bit of a history lesson,' Sandra Barnes added.
âOh?'
âWell you see one of Jack the Ripper's victims was also called Long Liz.'
âYes, I seem to remember that, “Long Liz” Stride, wasn't it?'
âYes.' Sandra Barnes nodded. â“Long Liz” Stride and she was all of five feet seven inches tall. Poor diet, no sun getting through the smoke over East London in the 1880s meant that the people were short, so short that someone who stood five feet seven inches tall was called Long Liz because of her height. But in the early twenty-first century a girl from the East End has to stand in excess of six feet to earn a nickname like Long Liz, so we are larger and taller and healthier.'
âA history lesson, as you say,' Penny Yewdall agreed, smiling. âWe learn something every day.'
âIndeed, Long Liz was a tall East End girl with no qualifications, she took a few wrong turns, accumulated a few petty convictions . . . so she ended up on the street; just a basically good girl trying to survive.'
â“Long Liz” Petty,' Penny Yewdall repeated, committing the name to memory. âInteresting name.'
âSo . . .' Sandra Barnes once again looked down at the pathway upon which she and Penny Yewdall were walking; it consisted of plain black asphalt mixed with grit to create a harder-wearing surface. âSo, the party continued but the men were flagging by then and the two murders had put a real damper on things.'
âI'll bet.' Penny Yewdall sighed.
âYes, I think by then that the men just wanted to get back to their manor and get up to the pub. A weekend of it would have been sufficient for most of the men, if not all,' Sandra Barnes added, âbut a week, a whole week of readily available young females . . . all those naked bodies, it just stopped getting exciting for them and started to get tedious; but Snakebite was adamant that it was Arnie Rainbird's coming out party, like he was a debutante or something, and so it was going to last the long week, including two weekends. He wanted it his way and he always got it his way, and so it went on until the second Sunday afternoon when the old woman unlocked the room where all our kit was stored and handed out the plastic bags, and we passed them round amongst us until we found the bag with our own clothes in it. When we were all good and presentable we were told to get back on the bus. I sat with Long Liz on the journey back but we didn't talk, no one did; the journey was undertaken in utter silence. I mean utter and complete silence. It was as if we were all dazed. Anyway . . .' Sandra Barnes paused, âgetting to the end of the tale now.'
âYou've done very well,' Penny Yewdall replied warmly, âvery well indeed.'
âThanks. It's not been easy but it's been good to talk about it. Sometimes you have to talk about things . . . Well â' Sandra Barnes looked down, took a deep breath, and paused before she continued to relate her experience at the garden party â âwe were dropped off at High Barnet tube station and all the street girls and also the five play babes were given an envelope each . . . containing fifty pounds, but written on the front of the envelope was the name and address of each one of us. I mean, they called out the name on each envelope and when a girl put her hand up the old woman handed the envelope to her. You see, at some point during the week the older woman must have been through the plastic bags containing our clothing and handbags and had noted the identity of each of us, including our address, and my envelope had my parents' address up here in Chesterfield, not the address that Tony Sudbury had installed me in as his plaything.'
âOh . . .' Penny Yewdall groaned, âoh my. So they were telling you that they knew your identity and address?'
âYes.' Sandra Barnes took another deep breath. âJust telling us, all of us, not to go to the police, and no one complained because just then life had become very, very precious. Very precious indeed.'
âI know that emotion,' Penny Yewdall replied.
âDo you?'
âYes,' Penny Yewdall said firmly, âyes, I do . . . but that's another story.'
âSo there we were in a bus outside High Barnet Underground Station receiving fifty quid in really cheap brown envelopes and nobody made any kind of complaint or comment. We had seen two men murdered in a horrible way, been made to watch the way their bodies had been disposed of, two women had been battered half to death â I still had a black eye from the slap the older woman gave me a week earlier. We had all been used in every way that a man can use a woman. After that the one hundred and fifty pounds we had, or the street girls had, been short-changed by was like a penny on the pavement â it just wasn't worth stopping to pick it up. Even before we got to High Barnet I was thinking, did it really happen? At the tube station we just wanted to get off the bus; life, like I said, had just become so very, very precious.' Sandra Barnes walked a few paces before continuing. âWhen we got off the bus, the girls just went either of two ways: about half went down the inclined path to the tube station and the rest, me being one, waited for the next London Transport bus to take us into the city. Liz, Long Liz, went down the path to the tube station and that was the last I saw of her. No one talked while we were waiting for the bus and we stood well apart from each other. When the double-decker number 134 came we did the same, just sat well apart from each other.'
âI can understand that,' Penny Yewdall replied. âI mean, you represented a reminder of a horrible event for each other, didn't you? What did you do then?'
âReturned to the flat in Earl's Court, I did that journey in the T-shirt, cut-down jeans and shoes with no socks, and spent just one more night there, packed my bags, posted my resignation of my job, got a train north. I buried the memory of the garden party for a year or two and then it returned piecemeal; sometimes when I can't sleep the memory floods into my mind, like a film which just keeps repeating itself over and over and over again.'
âWould you make a statement?' Penny Yewdall asked.
âNo. No. No . . .' Sandra Barnes shook her head vigorously. âNo statement. I'll help all I can, off the record, but these people have my parents' address, and so they can find me easily enough. I can't go into witness protection; my husband is well settled in his career. I am now Mrs Sandra Wynstanley. I like my name, it has a certain ring to it . . . and my daughters are well settled in their school. So, sorry. No written and signed statement. No verbal evidence in the witness box.'
âPolice!' Big-boned, bearded Frankie Brunnie spoke authoritatively into the intercom which was attached to the solid wooden gate which stood at the bottom of the driveway separating Johnnie âSnakebite' Herron's house from the public highway.
âWhat's it about this time?' The replying voice was gruff, moaning, hostile. âYou're harassing me. You got nothing better to do?'
âJust a few questions, Mr Herron,' Brunnie replied in a deliberately calm, though still very seriously toned voice. âIt's nothing to be alarmed about, just a routine visit.' He stood upright and he and Victor Swannell surveyed the scene about them. It was indeed as Penny Yewdall had said Charlie Magg had described it: a long, straight, roughly surfaced â almost cratered in places â driveway ran between two fields used for grazing cattle and was strongly fenced at either side. At the top of the ground a long, wide mound of soil, grass covered, went from left to right; behind it were to be seen the bright red tiles of a recently built house, though the house itself was hidden from view.
âWait.' The voice leapt out of the intercom. âI'll get the dogs in . . . just a couple of minutes.'
Frankie Brunnie bent down so his mouth was close to the intercom. âWe can wait, we are not going anywhere.' He stood upright again and he and Swannell waited in silence, both men enjoying the escape from inner London, both savouring the vast expanse of green, the rural smells and scents, the birdsong and the occasional fluttering butterfly. It was, they both found, a pleasant excursion to the house of Herron in Bedfordshire. For famed London Town is, they had both learnt to accept, overcrowded, dirty and malodorous. Presently the male voice once again leapt from the intercom. âAll right,' he said with a clear note of resignation. âYou can come in now; the gate will open and close by itself.' The gate then clicked open upon being released from its locked position and swung wide silently. Brunnie and Swannell returned to their car and then drove through the gateway and up the unevenly surfaced driveway. As he drove, Swannell saw in the rear-view mirror that the gate was closing behind them, clearly responding to a timing mechanism. He drove slowly until he reached the top of the drive and turned left into a forecourt, which was indeed large enough to accommodate a coach and a number of other cars, in front of a two storey house, which appeared to be about twenty years old. Swannell parked the police car beside a blood-red Ferrari, beyond which was a black two-seater Audi. The front door of the house was open as the officers arrived and in the doorway stood a tall, well-built man. He had long, silver hair which he wore in a ponytail; he was clean-shaven with a pinched face and cold, piercing eyes. He had, thought both Brunnie and Swannell, âcriminal' written all the way through him like a stick of Clacton rock. A small King Charles spaniel sat at his feet, then, upon the approach of the officers' car, stood and barked aggressively.
âNot the sort of dog or dogs we were expecting,' Swannell remarked as he and Brunnie got out of their car, though he did so with a smile.
âThe Dobermanns are in the cage,' the man replied aggressively. âHe does for the house. The Dobermanns are for the grounds. So what do you want?'
âJust a chat and a little information,' Frankie Brunnie replied as he and Swannell approached the man. âYou are Mr John Herron?'
âYes,' the man snarled, âthat's me.'
âThe owner of this property?'
âYes.' Herron hissed his reply through clenched teeth. âSo what is it you want?'
âA few answers to a few questions,' Swannell replied, still smiling. âQuestions about yourself, this house, the goings on in this house and in the garden at the back of the house.'