Read A Daughter's Secret Online
Authors: Anne Bennett
He had no idea where Finch spent his time now and so he went first to Rogers. Rogers looked at the man before him dispassionately. He had never seen him in such a state before; he could almost see the barely controlled rage surging through him.
‘Why do you think that I would know where Finch might be?’ he asked mildly.
‘Because the pair of you are as thick as thieves,’ Levingstone said through gritted teeth. ‘And I warn you, Rogers, I am in no mood to play games.’
Rogers shrugged. ‘So who is playing games? What do you want him for, anyway?’
‘That’s my business.’
‘Not if you want information it isn’t.’
Levingstone had the urge to lift the smug Rogers from behind the desk and throttle the life out of him. ‘All right then,’ he yelled. ‘I have just found out he is the man who raped and attacked my Agnes and left her for dead. He is not getting away with that.’
Rogers’ sharp intake of breath was inaudible. He had asked Finch at the time and he had sworn he had nothing to do with it. Rogers wasn’t totally surprised, though, for he knew Finch had a fixation for that little whore, so much so that he had asked Rogers to stop Levingstone marrying her.
Rogers had said he could push Levingstone only so far and that he didn’t own the man body and soul. Finch hadn’t liked it, but, God Almighty, what he had done to that girl was horrendous. He remembered how distraught Levingstone had been and the injuries he had described.
Maybe it was time that Finch was taught a lesson.
‘Try the 501 Club,’ he said.
Levingstone knew the 501 Club was on the edge of the Jewellery Quarter of the city, where there were lots of alleyways and courtyards, a hive of industry in the day but deserted at night. It would suit Levingstone’s purpose very well. He wanted no witnesses to what he intended to do to Finch.
‘If he isn’t there, try Flamingos off Broad Street,’ Rogers said. ‘But try 501 first, and if I were you I would take someone with me.’
‘I need no one else,’ Levingstone said. ‘It would be wrong to involve anyone, anyway. This business is between Finch and me.’
Rogers shrugged. ‘Don’t say I didn’t warn you,’ he said, and extended his hand. ‘Good luck, and I hope you find him.’
Knowing the clubs would not be open yet, Levingstone made his way to the city centre and into a pub for a bite to eat and a few pints of beer to while away a few hours. Not too many beers, though; just enough to fuel his anger.
* * *
Aggie was concerned that Alan was so late coming home. Then Jane came to see her. She hadn’t known that Levingstone had not seen Aggie when he was in earlier and so presumed that she knew all about the person he had to see that evening.
‘As the master is going to be late, do you want to wait to eat with him, or have your meal earlier, Cook wants to know?’ she asked.
‘How do you know that the master is going to be late?’ Aggie asked.
‘Well, he said he had to see someone when he left.’
‘When was this?’
‘Just a while ago.’
Aggie stared at her incredulously. ‘Jane, the master hasn’t been in this evening yet.’
‘Pardon me, ma’am, but he has,’ Jane insisted.
‘But he couldn’t have,’ Aggie cried. ‘He would have come into the bedroom if he had come home. He always does.’
Jane looked troubled. ‘Don’t know about that, ma’am, and I didn’t see him come in, because I was in the kitchen helping Cook, but when I come in again, it was to see the master lifting his coat off the hook. I assumed that he had already been to see you. Anyway, I made a comment about him leaving when he was just in, like, and he said he had to go out unexpectedly to see somebody.’
‘But it’s so odd.’
‘It is, ma’am,’ Jane agreed. ‘Tell you something
else too, if you won’t feel that I’m speaking out of turn, like.’
‘Is it relevant?’
‘Don’t know, ma’am,’ Jane said. ‘It is just with his behaviour being out of character, like…’
‘All right then. Go on.’
‘It was just this, ma’am.’ Jane said. ‘The master’s face was all red and he looked murderous. Yes, murderous is the only word for it. I mentioned it to Cook. Said I wouldn’t like to be the person he was going to see, like.’
Jane didn’t go on to say that in any normal household, they might assume the master and Aggie had had a few words – they didn’t seem to have words like other couples – but none could deny that the master’s behaviour was decidedly peculiar that evening.
Finch had been expecting a visit from Levingstone, but long before this, feeling sure that as soon as Aggie had recovered herself enough, she would tell him the name of the one who had made such a mess of her and raped her into the bargain. He had got himself a couple of heavies to go round with, so sure was he that Levingstone would show up. But as time had gone on, he had begun to think that maybe Aggie was going to say nothing and he had let down his guard a little and almost told the heavies they were no longer needed. How glad he was he hadn’t done that when he saw Levingstone approaching him that night just as they neared the 501 Club.
Levingstone couldn’t believe his luck at actually meeting Finch on the road. He thought he might spend all night trying to find him, but there he was before him, delivered into his hands as if it was meant. He didn’t notice the heavies detach themselves from Finch’s side and melt into the night, knowing instinctively that Levingstone would be unlikely to start on Finch in open view of any that might pass. His eyes were boring into Finch’s and he strode up to him and said, ‘I think you and I have got some unfinished business.’
Finch regarded him with a supercilious smile. ‘Really? I don’t think so.’
‘I know so, but not here,’ Levingstone said. ‘There are too many people about. When I knock you to kingdom come I want as few witnesses as possible. I want to knock that smile off your face, for one thing.’
‘Oh, do you?’ Finch said, and added goadingly, ‘and how is dear Agnes these days?’
Levingstone could no more have stopped the punch that he levelled at Finch after that remark than he could have stopped the sun from shining. There was such power and anger behind it that Finch was nearly rendered senseless. Levingstone took full advantage of his stunned state to take him by the scruff of the neck and drag him into one of the alleyways where he threw Finch to the ground, saying as he did so, ‘You are not even worthy to speak her name.’
‘What, speak the name of a common prostitute?’
Finch said. ‘Or are your wits so addled with her that you forget the profession she is in?’
‘I forget nothing,’ Levingstone ground out, ‘and that includes the state you left her in just a few weeks ago. I am going to teach you a lesson you will not forget in a hurry.’
Finch knew he could do it too because he was angry enough, despite the fact that Finch was a much younger man. When Levingstone had flown at him he had knocked him to the ground. Levingstone was unaware of the stealthy footfall behind him and the arm raised until it was too late. He turned and the karate chop caught him at the side of the neck. With a grunt, he fell forward unconscious.
The second heavy helped Finch to his feet and he looked at the unconscious heap on the floor. He adjusted his clothes, which had become disarranged in the tussle, and said, ‘You know what to do. Deal with him.’
In the end, Aggie had her dinner with Lily at about nine o’clock in the apartment dining room, but she was too worried to feel hungry and just pushed the food around her plate.
‘Try something, Aggie,’ Lily urged.
‘I can’t,’ Aggie said. ‘What can have happened to him?’
‘Nine o’clock isn’t late,’ Lily pointed out.
‘It is for Alan,’ Aggie said. ‘The club has been open for an hour already, and no one knows about
this strange meeting he had because Bob Tyler came up to see if everything was all right when Alan hadn’t put in an appearance.’
‘Surely they can run the place without him for the one night?’
‘Of course they can, but you are missing the point,’ Aggie said. ‘Why isn’t he here?’
No one could answer that question, however. The minutes ticked into hours and still there was no sign of Levingstone. Twice more Bob Tyler came up, and eventually he realised that the club would have to do without Levingstone that night.
Aggie became so agitated in the end that Lily was all for fetching the doctor, but she said she would refuse to see him, that it was Alan she wanted to see. Eventually, she was so weary that she lay on the bed in all her clothes except for her shoes, as she had refused point-blank to get undressed, and fell into a doze. Lily didn’t undress either, but resumed her old place on the chair by Aggie’s bed and closed her eyes.
The pounding on the door roused her. As Bob and Jane had gone to bed it was Lily who answered the door, glancing at the clock in the hall as she did so.
‘Four o’clock,’ she said to herself. ‘Almighty God, what now?’
When she saw the policeman outside she wasn’t unduly surprised. Normal mortals didn’t nearly knock doors down at four in the morning, but still she asked, ‘Can I help you?’
‘I have news about a Mr Alan Levingstone.’
‘Bad news?’ Lily asked, and when he nodded her stomach gave a lurch. ‘You had best come upstairs and speak to his fiancée.’ Then once inside the apartment she said, ‘If you wait in the sitting room for a moment, I will see if she is awake.’
Aggie was more than awake. She was up and putting on her shoes. ‘It’s a policeman,’ Lily said. ‘He wants to speak to you.’
Aggie nodded as if she wasn’t surprised, though her mouth was so dry she could hardly swallow. When she entered the room she flew at the policeman crying, ‘It’s Alan, isn’t it? Something has happened to Alan.’
The young policeman recognised Aggie from the photograph found in Levingstone’s jacket pocket. He said, ‘Yes, miss, I am afraid it has. Mr Levingstone was found in an alleyway in the Jewellery Quarter.’
‘Is he badly hurt?’
‘I’m sorry, miss,’ the policeman said. ‘I should have said Mr Levingstone’s body. I am afraid that he is dead.’
The primeval scream that came from deep within Aggie woke Jane and Bessie, and sent them scurrying from their beds to see Aggie on the floor in a dead faint. Lily was tending her, although tears ran down her own face, while she instructed the young and very nervous-looking policeman to fetch the doctor for Aggie, and quickly.
‘What’s happened?’ breathed Jane in an awed whisper.
Lily was so distressed, she could barely get the words out, and then Jane and Bessie wept too. And that is how the doctor found them: one unconscious on the floor and the other three sodden with weeping.
The doctor sedated Aggie because, although she had come round after the faint, she was so overwrought he was afraid that she was going to lose her mind.
‘This is all connected, isn’t it?’ he said to Lily, later. ‘Levingstone should have gone for the police about Aggie in the first place and let them deal with it.’
‘I wanted him to,’ Lily said, ‘but Aggie claimed then that she didn’t know who did beat her up, that it was too dark and that. You know she did because she told you the same. Anyroad, Levingstone weren’t keen on getting the police in either, because they snoop around and ask questions. When a person is in this line of business, it is better to involve the police as little as possible.’
‘Aggie was lying, though, wasn’t she?’ the doctor said. ‘She did know who her assailant was.’
Lily nodded. ‘She told me who it was and the reason she said nothing to Levingstone was to prevent
him doing just what he did: go after him, and his death is the result. Point is, whether we wanted to involve the police or not, this time it has been taken out of our hands. But,’ she went on, ‘doesn’t matter who investigates this, the man concerned will get away with it because he won’t have done the dirty on Levingstone himself. He will be high and dry with a cast-iron alibi, I bet.’
‘Couldn’t Aggie go to the police now?’ the doctor asked. ‘Tell them what the man did to her?’
‘D’you think she is up to coping with that?’
The doctor remembered the frail woman he had sedated for her own good. He knew how close she was to breaking point and he shook his head. ‘No,’ he said, ‘you are right, she would never cope with that.’
‘And if she could,’ Lily went on, ‘d’you think the police would take the word of a prostitute, for that’s what she was, especially as the man responsible for her attack is influential and powerful? Aggie could easily find that she was the one banged up. But just say by some miraculous chance they did believe her, she’d know as well as I do that if she tried to point the finger, her life wouldn’t be worth tuppence. She hasn’t even got the partial protection of Levingstone any more. In fact I really don’t know what in God’s name she is going to do after all this.’
‘What are
you
going to do?’ the doctor asked.
Lily sighed. ‘Go back on the streets, I suppose,’ she said. ‘It is all I know. But as I get older it gets
harder to get the punters. I did hope that that part of my life was over. Levingstone almost said as much, and I think he intended keeping me on here, but both Aggie and me are completely scuppered by this.’
‘You could always work in one of the munitions factories,’ the doctor said. ‘In fact you both could. The money is good, and they are so desperate for any help they can get, they don’t ask that many awkward questions or even need references at some places.’
Lily thought about the alternative: going out night after night, regardless of the weather. She realised that she had gone soft, living in Levingstone’s place, and she was beginning to feel her age. The more time went on, the less she wanted to go back to her old life.
‘It’s dangerous work,’ the doctor went on, ‘I’ll not deny it, and normally I wouldn’t be recommending it at all, but…’
‘It’s a sight less dangerous than here, believe me, Doc,’ Lily said. ‘The lesser of two evils, I’d say. Jane told me that her sister had gone into it and she said she was earning two pounds and ten shillings a week. I could save a good bit on that sort of money; salt it away, like, for when the war is over. Have a bit of a nest egg for the first time in my bleeding life.’
‘So you will think about it?’
Lily nodded. ‘I will, and it will be a solution of sorts for Aggie, and all. I’ll talk her into it. Not yet,’ cos she ain’t ready, but as soon as I can.’
* * *
Rogers, who felt guilty that he hadn’t done anything to stop Levingstone going for Finch that night, called to see them to offer his condolences, but Aggie was so heavily sedated that only Lily was in a fit state to see him. When he offered to organise and pay for the funeral, Lily was surprised. Rogers wasn’t known for his acts of charity, but she accepted gratefully.
‘Terrible business,’ he said. ‘Kicked to death was the way I heard it.’
Lily blinked back tears. ‘He was, and left in a pool of blood. Christ, he dain’t deserve to die, but to die like that … It were just plain wicked, that’s what it was. The coppers asked me to go and identify the body. I mean, Aggie couldn’t go. The doctor has her heavily sedated ’cos he says her mind can’t cope with it yet. By Christ, was I glad she was spared that, because the state of him … well, it was enough to turn anyone’s brain. I mean, I had to identify him by the clothes he had on and the gold wristwatch he always wore.’
She looked at Rogers and continued, ‘I have known Levingstone all my bleeding life. We grew up in the same street and I am going to miss him a great deal, but I suppose you will want us out of here as soon as possible?’
‘Yeah. Well, I’m not going to throw you out or anything, but as soon as the funeral is over I am going to put this place on the market,’ Rogers said.
Lily’s eyes opened wide in surprise and Rogers smiled grimly. ‘Been thinking about it for a few
weeks now, and this business has knocked me for six.’
‘So what will happen to all the girls?’
‘Well, I hope to sell it as a going concern,’ Rogers said, ‘so the girls will probably be all right, but Aggie – well, she was in a special position, wasn’t she?’
‘Yeah,’ Lily said. ‘In just under a week she would have been Levingstone’s wife.’
‘I know,’ Rogers said in a conciliatory tone. ‘Terrible business.’
‘Don’t concern yourself about us,’ Lily said. ‘I have some irons of my own in the fire. I will see to Aggie and the pair of us will be out of here as soon as possible. I am very grateful for you organising and paying for the funeral, and I know that Aggie will be when she is more herself.’
‘Not at all,’ Rogers said. ‘It is the very least I can do.’ It also went some way to salving his conscience because he knew in his heart of hearts that he could probably have prevented Alan Levingstone’s death. No need, though, to share that knowledge with anyone else.
The next day, Lily tried to tell Aggie about the funeral arrangements. She had got out of bed, but was moving around like a zombie. Since the policeman’s visit she had eaten nothing, but when Lily offered to make her a tincture she had shaken her head.
Since the announcement of her engagement, Aggie had seriously cut down on the amount of
gin and opium she had been taking. She knew that Levingstone had been pleased about this because she was well aware how much he hated seeing her getting so drunk and drugged every night of the week. When he praised her cutting back so much and so thoroughly, she had kissed him and assured him that she didn’t need to blot anything out since she was off limits to all the punters. Lily was almost as pleased as Levingstone, because she had been worried at the amount that Aggie had been taking, and guilty too because she had not only started her on the opium and gin, but encouraged her to keep taking it.
Lily had reviewed her own situation, cut down her intake too, and had stopped altogether when she had moved into Levingstone’s place to nurse Aggie. It was no good getting drugged up or drunk and expecting to nurse someone effectively, especially when that person was as sick as Aggie was. Lily had had a few uncomfortable days, when she would have the shakes and sweat profusely, and in the early days she often felt sick and was unable to sleep, but all that had gone now.
‘I don’t want to start taking drugs and booze any more,’ Aggie told Lily now. ‘A lot of the time when I did that before, I wasn’t aware of much some days and yet I had the abiding love of a good, kind man. I don’t think the aching loss will ever go away completely. His funeral is the last service I will be able to do for him and I want to be in full control of myself. I will not besmirch
Alan’s memory by doing the very thing he disapproved of.’
‘I am that proud of you, Aggie,’ Lily said, putting her arms around Aggie’s shoulders. She expected tears but there were none, and Lily realised with a start that Aggie hadn’t cried at all, not once. It was as if she were frozen inside.
The following day, the vegetables were delivered to the kitchen. Jane used the sheets of newspaper that lined the box to make up the fire in the sitting room. It was as she left the room to get wood that Aggie crossed to the hearth. She would be glad of the fire because she felt cold inside, yet she knew it wasn’t the sort of cold that any fire would reach. She had always liked to see a cheering fire in the grate, but she doubted anything would cheer her at the moment, for she felt full of misery and despair.
It was as she gazed at the screwed-up newspaper that she caught sight of Alan’s name. She withdrew the sheet of paper from the grate and smoothed it out. She had not seen a paper – she imagined that they had not let her see one – but this paper was a few days old and the headline screamed: ‘Club Manager Kicked to Death in Alleyway’.
Aggie took the paper into the bedroom and there she read of the gruesome end of the man she had loved. She knew the fear and desperation he would have felt, and the agony he would have suffered at
the merciless attack until he died in a pool of blood. She felt as if a heavy weight was pushing down on her and a tight band of pain was encircling her waist so that she cried out like an animal in deep distress, and great gulping sobs racked her body as the tears spurted from her eyes.
Lily came running, and though she enfolded Aggie in her arms, and rocked her gently, she thanked God that Aggie had shed those much-needed tears, while Aggie felt as if she were breaking up inside, as though her heart was shattering into a million pieces.
Much, much later, when the tears were spent at last and Aggie was limp and lifeless, Lily tucked her into bed and she slept long and deeply.
‘She’ll do all right now,’ Lily remarked to Jane and Bessie.
‘What d’you mean?’ asked Jane.
‘She did what she had to do, and that was mourn and grieve for her man,’ Lily said. ‘She will always miss him and a piece of her heart will be with him for ever, but she will survive this and eventually will be able to look forward again.’
After Aggie had cried for the first time, she seemed unable to stop. It was as if she had opened the floodgates. By the day of the funeral her eyes were red-rimmed and encircled with black. She was glad her hat had a veil attached that would hide her white, ravaged face.
As Aggie and Lily were leaving the apartment
to get into the funeral carriage Rogers had ordered for them, Aggie said fiercely, ‘Finch should be the one being laid in a hole in the earth. I would dance on his grave.’
‘And you wouldn’t be on your own,’ Lily said.
‘There will never be another like Alan,’ Aggie said. ‘I feel sort of lost. He has been so much part of my life for fifteen years.’
‘I know that too, and after the funeral is over, you and I must have a talk about where we will go from here.’
‘Lily, I don’t think I want to go on.’
‘What sort of talk is that?’ Lily said sharply. ‘You are a young woman.’
‘Don’t say I have my life before me or I will laugh, ‘Aggie said. ‘Because my life from now on will be spent on the streets and I would rather die than have that prospect dangled before me.’
‘It won’t necessarily be that sort of life, though,’ Lily said. ‘I have got some ideas up my sleeve.’
‘What d’you mean?’
‘Not now,’ Lily said. ‘There’s not time.’
It was as they were in the carriage, with Witton Parish Church in view, that Aggie suddenly grabbed Lily’s arm and said, ‘If Finch is there I will go for him. I will not be able to help myself.’
‘He won’t be,’ Lily said confidently. ‘He can’t risk being linked in any way.’
Lily was right, Finch was not there, but so many others were, the church was packed solid. Aggie felt proud that she had been associated with such
a wonderful man to whom so many wanted to pay their last respects, and most looked with sympathy at her as she entered the church.
That sympathy sustained her during the service, and kept her upright and on her feet when she really wanted to sink to the floor and let the world go on without her. The worst was at the grave-side, thronged with people to hear the last prayers said, and she had to step forward in front of them and throw the first clods of earth onto the mahogany coffin.
Afterwards, at the reception, her hand was shaken many times by people who told her what a great man Alan was. She didn’t need telling really, though it soothed her a little, but did nothing to lift the huge weight of sadness that seemed lodged inside her.
Lily was at her side, as she had been most of the time, and three hours later Aggie was so weary she sighed and said, ‘Oh, Lily, I know that this is very fine and all, and it was kind of Mr Rogers and everything, but I wish it was all over now.’
‘And me,’ Lily said. ‘But it won’t be long, you’ll see. Now the food is nearly eaten, some have already dwindled off. I’m sure that is what some people attend funerals for, to get a good feed, because they certainly pay more attention to that than to anything or anyone else.’
Lily was right, and soon the party broke up and people went their separate ways. Lily and Aggie were able to leave.
‘I wonder,’ Aggie said as she went into the flat that day, ‘how long I will be able to consider this place home.’
‘Not long,’ Lily said. ‘Rogers is selling the club, and then it might be all change for a lot of people.’
‘And where will that leave us?’ Aggie asked. ‘As if I don’t know.’
‘That is what I wanted to talk to you about,’ Lily said, ‘but are you ready for it today, after the funeral and all?’
‘Lily,’ Aggie said earnestly, ‘if you have a plan to keep me from selling my body on the streets of Birmingham, then I am always willing to listen.’
‘All right,’ Lily began. ‘Why don’t the two of us go into the munitions?’
Aggie stared at her. ‘Lily, I know nothing about making guns and things like that.’
‘I should imagine most of the people in the factories was the same once,’ Lily said. ‘And what they can learn we could learn just as easily. The doctor says they are crying out for people.’