ELIZABETH Charlotte nods, relaxing a bit, unfolding her arms. Will regards her, chin resting on his fist.
âYou donât like the Police much, do you Charlotte?â
âNot much, no.â
âWhy not? I think thereâs more to it than this misunderstanding over James.â
The folded arms are back. âBecause on the half dozen or so occasions I ran away from Blessingmoors, every single time, the Police caught me and took me in, and regardless of anything I tried to say to them, delivered me right back there to have the shit beaten out of me.â
Will rubs his lower lip thoughtfully. âSo, why did you agree to help us at all?â
âBecause Mr Haswell asked me to.â
Will looks startled. âMr Haswell? Richard here?â
âYes.â
âWhat has he to do with it?â
âI owe him.â
Richard doesnât look up, instead, paying close attention to his lamb in mint.
Will continues. âAnd you pay your debts?â
âI do.â
âDo you think this pays your debt to Richard?â
âNope. I reckon I owe him a bit more than this.â
Will pulls a document wallet from his briefcase. âSo, Charlotte, about Blessingmoors, I have your file here, taken from the records on the premises at the time it was closed downâ¦.â
She looks uneasy, shuffling in her chair. Michaelâs hand snakes out, taking hers.
Will continues. âI have to say that it doesnât look too good. It says here that you were in trouble numerous times for all kinds of petty crimesâ¦. shoplifting.â
âIâm not a thief.â
âThatâs not what it says here.â Will waves the file he is holding.
âItâs still not true. How can I have been a shoplifter when they never let us out?â
âSo, youâve never stolen anything from a shop?â Will raises an eyebrow, looking sceptical.
âWell, yes, I did, but it was when I was trying to run. I was a kid. I had no money. I had to eatâ¦â
He says nothing, simply nodding as he writes a note in the margin.
âDrugsâ¦.â
âIâve never touched drugs.â
âNot ever?â
âNot ever.â
He leans forward. âIt is known Charlotte, already, that Blessingmoors was rife with drugs. No-oneâs going to hold it against you.â
âIt hardly matters. Yes, they were there. And no, I never used them.â
He sighs, then scribbles in the margin.
âAssault on a warden? On several occasions?â
âUm, yes, that bit is true.â She hangs her head, looking shamefaced.
âWhat were the circumstances?â
âSometimes they were trying to⦠you know. Other times, itâ¦. just kind of burst out of me.â
âWhen you say, âYou knowââ¦. you are implying sexual assault?â
âUm, yes. But I always fought back, andâ¦. I didnât look like much then. It always ended up with one of the other girls.⦠or boys.⦠getting it instead. Theyâd just lock me up for a couple of weeks.â
âI also have it here, that you were reported earlier this year for assaulting a customer in âFrancescaâsâ
tea rooms in the City? Although the charges were later droppedâ¦.â
âYes, that did happen, butâ¦.â
Richard interrupts. âOn that occasion, Will, I know personally of the circumstances. Two drunken louts were trying toâ¦press their attentions on Charlotte and my wife. Charlotte put up a spirited defence on Elizabethâs behalf.â
Will says nothing, but pencils in another note.
âYour school records have you listed as disruptive, and a bad influenceâ¦â
Now my Master interrupts. âBut Charlotte loved school. Sheâs told us about it herselfâ¦â
âEr, that was the school when I was with my foster family. Yes, it was great there. The school at Blessingmoors, no, I didnât do very well.â
âWhy not?â asks Richard.
âUm, bored really. They had no books to speak of, and never tried to teach us anything beyond basic reading and writing. Iâd got all that by the time I was six or seven, so after that they were just trying to make me sit in a classroom, staring into space all day.â
Again, Will writes a note. âAnd the last thing I need to ask you about Charlotte, is that according to our records, you now co-habit with two men, Mr James Alexanders and Mr Michael Summerford?â
She flushes. âI donât see what that has to do with anyone else?â
Will sighs. âThe point Charlotte is that I am trying to establish if you are a credible witness.â
âSorry?â
âIf we take your testimony and it leads to anything, we will have to go through the courts. The people we are dealing have a great deal of money from theirâ¦. trade⦠and can afford the best of legal representation. If you have the kind of character that a lawyer can simply discredit in the eyes of a jury, then we are wasting our time, and I might as well not put you through a lot of pain.â
There is violence in her eyes at his words, but her voice is level.
âAnd you think I am a non-credible witness?â
âIâm not sure. If you can eyeball a solicitor and say that you only stole because you were a child, and you were hungry. Or that your personal arrangements are none of his damn business, then you should be okay. Do you think you can do that, or would you be intimidated?â
âIf I have to, yes, I could do itâ¦. Mr Stanton?â
âYes?â
âIs there anything else in that folder?â
He glances at it. âLike what?â
âAnything earlier?â
He stares at her for a minute. âYes, there is. You would like to see it?â
She whispers, her eyes big. âYes.â
He pushes the file to her, sliding it across the table. âHere, take a look through it while I talk to Richard here.â
She picks up the file, Michaelâs eyes following her all the time.
*****
CHARLOTTE I look through old papers, riffling through, seeing snatches of words, phrasesâ¦âWard of the courtââ¦.â, â¦taken into careâ¦.â, ââ¦single parent deemed unfitâ¦â
â¦.and stapled to the paper, an old photograph, tiny, curled up at the corners and badly creased.
A woman looks out at me; young, pale-skinned and red-haired. Her eyes are badly shadowed. She looks ill. On the back, a name, âMichelle Conners.â
*****
ELIZABETH After a few minutes of talking quietly with Richard, Will turns back to Charlotte.
âCharlotte⦠Miss Conners?
She holds a small, very dog-eared photo in her hand, her eyes glossy. âYes, Mr Stanton? And itâs okay.
Itâs âCharlotteâ.â Her former antagonism has vanished.
Will hesitates, looking at the photo in her hand. âThank you, Charlotte. And itâs âWillâ.â
She nods, smiling. He continues. âCharlotte. I canât give you that file, but thereâs no reason I canât have it scanned and copied for you, including the photo, if you would like?â
She sucks on her lips, her voice small. âYes. Please.â
âDo feel able to talk some more?â
She nods. I notice Richard nodding, discreetly, to Ross, a quiet gesture telling him to fill Charlotteâs wine glass. Michaelâs hand, I notice, is back, holding hers.
James said that heâs her Rockâ¦.
Will speaks. âCharlotte. You have mentioned that sometimes, the children you knew at Blessingmoors would simply disappear, taken away. Can you tell me any more about that?â
âAll I really know is that at about fourteen or fifteen, we just didnât see them anymore. We were told that the older ones were moved on, to another home, for seniors, but we never ever heard back from any of them.â
âNone of them?â
She shrugs. âNot that I ever saw.â
âSo, for your purposes, the older teenagers simply vanished?â
She nods, then stares at the ground.
âWhat about the younger ones? Did they ever disappear?â
âSometimes, usually if theyâd been beaten hard. Weâd be told they were taken from the Infirmary to a hospital, but sometimes, they didnât come back.â
James interrupts. âYou told me Charlotte, that you were in the Infirmary on one occasion?â
âYes, Iâd run away, again. I was always caught sooner or later, and the Police would bring me backâ¦.â
She stares at Will for a moment, who blushes and looks down. ââ¦. We were always beaten for running away. That time, yes, I ended up in the Infirmary. They told the Social Worker Iâd been drinking and taken a fall down the stairs.â¦â
âDid children ever disappear from the Infirmary itself?â
âWell, the kids would go in there sometimes, and we wouldnât see them again, if thatâs what you mean.â
âAnd you have no idea where they went?â
Charlotte is silent, staring down. Her breathing is quickening, her face pale. At first, I think we have lost her, but then, her words visibly being forced outâ¦.
âYou know there were cellars there, right?â
âYes, we know about the cellars. The whole premises were, of course, searched at the time, before it was demolished.â
Richard interrupts. âWhen we took the building down last year, the cellars were filled in and covered over, as part of the rebuilding program, both of them.â
Charlotte looks up. âBoth of them?â
âYes, both of them.â
âRichard, there were three cellars in that placeâ¦.â