Emma Brockes Visiting Time I had it all worked out
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Emma Brockes
Visiting Time
I had it all worked out. I'll tell you the truth, I've
never been a liar. I'm six-foot six on the left. On
the right I'm six-foot four. Broke my leg in a
motorbike accident in the sixties, riding pillion. I
walk on the slant but I have the advantage of
height, which is handy when you're planning on
killing a man.
As I saw it, if I went into that prison and I knew
roughly how tall it was, and if I could get my hands
in the correct position, get my thumbs fast enough
under its chin, I could break its neck. I'd worked
out where I'd have to stand and how fast I'd have
to do it, how long before the screws came in. I
never told my wife. I try to keep her in the dark,
like if there's a programme on TV about murder, I'll
tear the page from the Radio Times. We don't
discuss it. We haven't referred to it since the day
of the sentencing. Therapy whatnot, we don't need
reminding. It's how we get along.
Before I entered the prison, I went to a church 20
across the road and said a small prayer. Then I
walked into the governor's office. I'd seen the
murderer standing roughly where that chair is
there and I walked over and the governor was
there and I asked to use the toilet and I went in
and was saying the prayer again and running cold
water on my wrists. I was thinking, if you harm it,
it's more aggro for the wife. She'll have the police
at the door again, don't know if she can take it. But
simultaneous I'm thinking, I want it dead. So I
come out of the toilet, walk straight towards it and
everyone's looking at me thinking this is it, which
way am I going to go? .
There's things flashing through my brain, all
the traumas, like how when I was a kid my best
mate was killed by a lion. It sounds funny, but it
ain't so funny. The teachers said we could venture
off round the zoo, so we went to the lion
enclosure. We came up the wooden steps and the
chicken wire that keeps kids away was all open. 40
Alan, John and Tony got through the wire, but I
couldn't get through, I was too big, so they told me
to sit there and look after the luggage. I sat on the
school bags and watched them through the fence.
The boys swung on the ropes that lifted the
weights that opened a sheet of metal into the lion's
den. Tony crawled through. I'll never forget. He
died in hospital. We were ten years old. There's
one loss.
The brain can only take so much and then it
goes crash. All the teachers told us, honesty is the
best policy, crime don't pay, and all this
about the coming of the second prophet.
They was all lies; I wish I could sue 'em. If
I'd brought up my kids the way the Krays
brought up theirs, perhaps we'd be rich.
Instead of that, you remain nobody and
John ends up getting murdered and John's
nothing, but the murderer's likely to come
out and be found a respectable job and 60
everything that goes with it.
After school, I got a job in St Thomas's
hospital: maintenance, pushing trolleys. I
met the wife and got on a building site as a
labourer, then with a stone masonry firm
and that's where I was working right up to
when we lost Johnny. My epilepsy was just
another hurdle; so what, tell me about it, I
couldn't care less.
John had gone to Waltham Abbey that
day to pay for his holiday. His friend had
died in April from a brain tumour and, come
September, John and his friend booked a
holiday to get over the loss of the boy,
Richard. So they went to pay for this
holiday, which was to be in Norfolk and they
came out and were standing at a bus stop.
John told us, 'If I miss the last bus home, I'll
stay with Jimmy.' So when he didn't come
home we didn't get bothered. Then the 80
police came. Valerie collapsed in the
kitchen, chipped two tiles. She's got asthma
and they had to call an ambulance. Jane
our daughter started screaming and ran
upstairs. Our son Peter, who's eight years
old, was asleep. I had to go and wake him
up. I didn't know what to say to him. I half
lied. I said would he go to the hospital with
his mum. I said John was there and he was
unwell.
They were standing, the five boys, at the
bus stop. Just up the road was a pub called
the Queen's Head. These twelve adults had
been drinking and came out of the pub and
headed to the bus stop to start trouble. This
21-year-old, who had thirty-six previous
convictions, stabbed and wounded Jimmy in
the stomach. Jimmy got away, into a
woman's house nearby, and she phoned for
an ambulance. While this was going on, our 100
son tried to defend his friends. He stepped
forward and was stabbed directly in the
heart. And he staggered over to a lady who was
sitting in a car waiting for a friend and asked her to
help me, please help me and told her he'd been
stabbed and fell to the ground. She read all this
out in court and the murderer's solicitor asked her
a question with a big grin on his face and she was
in tears. When he asked her a second time, I
jumped up in the court and done me nut, I said,
'Well she ought to remember because the last time
you asked her you had a fucking big grin on your
face.' I was chucked out of court for that. l
apologized and they-let me back in.
Eventually, it testified and it did everything it
could to sound like a bleeding little poor type of
character. Bad childhood, bad home. The
confidence it had was ridiculous. I have to fight to
bring words back now because there's something
in the brain that tries to block it all off. 120
Me and the brother-in-law went to the trial on
our own, that way none of my family knows what
the murderer looks like. So they could pass it in
the street and they'd never know the difference.
See what I mean? And that's how it should be,
surely.
Every neighbour will tell you their hearts were
broken, they miss John. This particular morning,
as he run out of the house, there's an old lady
coming out with two bags of shopping and John
stops and says, 'You don't carry that, I'll carry that.'
He would cut sandwiches in the kitchen and take
them to the church and give them to men who'd
dropped out of society. That's something we live
by: do as you're told and stick by the rules. So, all
right, we stuck by the rules and look where it got
us.
We got John a decent funeral. About five
hundred came, we had the wake at the fire station
and there was the chief there, Doug, he died from 140
a brain tumour at a later date, his son and John
were friends.
I decided to go to prison and talk to the boys
who were in on minor charges, who hadn't been
done for the full violent murder but were heading
that way. I set it all up, they was brought into a
room with two coffee pots and as many fags as
they wanted and they could eff and blind and walk
out of the room feeling OK. I was told that when a
policeman or a judge comes in, they play them up
cos they think they're do-gooders. So it was a
case of: how are they going to react to me?
We sat there and after they'd given me all their
who they ares, I eventually told them who I am. I
told them how I wake up in the morning and I
think, first of all, where's John? Then I think, it
wasn't a dream, it was true, so that means every
day we're one day further from John, but that's
one day closer to him getting out. The coffee pot
didn't get touched; the fags didn't get touched. 160
They just sort of shut up and listened.
The following month, I'm down there
again and I'm in the governor's office and a
man comes rushing in, a boy rather, and
he's wearing this chef's uniform and he's
wiping his hands and he says, 'Bill, I can't
stop, but what you said last time is right.' He
said, 'I've got a five-year-old daughter and a
wife and I'm not coming back in any of
these places,' and he thanked me for doing
him a favour.
Eventually I decided, I wanna meet it
direct, John's murderer. Now if I wait until its
parole, they'll give it a different name and I'll
probably never see it again. I want it now.
So I start the ball rolling, push push, five
years that went on for, to get the right
contacts, MPs, the House of Lords. It was
1986 when it was imprisoned, and it was '91
that I was given the go-ahead to visit it. 180
Restorative justice they call it now. Back
then, though, it hadn't never happened
before. Letting the families meet the
murderer.
Arrangements were made for me to see
it in prison. First, I had to talk to these two
probation officers, to make sure I was of
what they called sound mind and pure
intention. There was one there, his name
was Brian, and he came up with some right
insulting-type questions, but I knew why he
was doing it he thought if he could wind me
up and suddenly I blew it, he wouldn't let me
anywhere near the murderer. Because if I'm
in there with the murderer and the
murderer's only got to say the wrong thing
and I'm up in arms and they've got trouble
on their hands. But, of course, I had it
worked out different.
I don't know where it comes from, but 200
there is such a thing as a guardian angel. I
had one there and it was holding me down.
It just would not happen. I was managing to
find the right answers and this Brian said, I
don't get it, every time I get through to you a
brick wall pops up. He said, I tear it down
and you put up another one. So I said, Don't
have a word with me, I'm only the labourer,
have a word with the bricklayer. Those sorts
of arguments and they're taking notes;
Eventually they decided that the best thing
in the world to happen is for me to go in and
see it for myself.
I had it all worked out. I'm six-foot six on
the left, on the right I'm six-foot four. It was
smaller by four inches. I could knock it out
in a matter of minutes. There's two pressure
points in your throat that if you have a go at
with enough force you can kill a man before
there's time to pull you off, or at least do it brain 220
damage. When I entered the governor's office, the
murderer sat back, mister clever and it looked
pretty smart, scrubbed shirt and navy blue jumper
and short-cut hair and I tell you on the quick who it
looked like, you ever seen that O'Sullivan, the very
fast snooker player? It looked close to him - and
his father was a murderer too, funny enough.
See what I mean, all the stupidity of life? The
things you think of. I can be sitting there talking
and my wife will say, Do you want a tea or coffee,
simple as that. And I have to say, Hang on hang
on hang on, what was that again? And she says it
three or four times and I'm trying to sort the words
out, because inside I'm thinking, 'John is dead.'
I blinked. The light was one of them bright
ones, fluorescent, which cut shadows in its face. It
was pushed back in its chair, one leg on its knee,
small and cocky like. It's not much to look at,
narrow shouldered and smirking while it waits for
me to say something. I don't say nothing. Its 240
neck's where I'm looking. I'm looking so hard I
think I can see its pulse. There's a thud in my
wrists and this beat in its neck and I'm still
undecided, which way to go? It stops smirking. It
shifts in its chair. Suddenly I see my calculations
are wrong, I could do its windpipe in half the time
or hammer its head on the wall, which is pale and
glossy green, like was used in the hospitals. I feel
enormous, like a giant, and the bigger I feel, the
smaller it looks until I see that it's nothing really,
nothing at all, just a badly sewn boy of no fixed
identity. I can feel its heart fluttering, its breath
sucking in and out and I think, Yeah: at the end of
the day that's all it comes down to, the blood going
round. I see that it doesn't take much to kill a man.
This much we both know.
I put out my hand. 'Luke Slater,' I say. He
stands up and shakes it.
No I'm sorry, no I forgive you, no call for the
priest either way. I feel a huge weight lift off me, 260
like I've jumped ten feet in the air or won a race.
'I've come to let you know we exist, Valerie and
me,' I say, soaring. He does a shrug. 'Mr Garrison,'
he says, 'you don't understand, I've had it hard
too.' He fiddles with the hem of his shirt. 'My life
wasn't easy neither.' I let that one settle, then I tell
him how I sometimes imagine John is in Australia,
how every year I sign his name on it Christmas
card and give it to my wife and each thing I say
pushes him back in his chair. I'm landing them on
him one after another. He says feebly, 'It ain't over
for me either, like how am I going to find a job
when I get out?' He shifts and his eyes flit about.
He tries to get one over by saying about some
bloodstains the police never found. I said, You've
killed my son and I've shaken your hand. I said,
Do you really think there's anything else you
can do to see me blow my lid? After that we
sit in silence. Then he pushes his chin out
and says, 'I'm sorry, Mr Garrison,' like he's 280
wheedling to his father. I say, 'It's too late
for that.' When I shake his hand at the end
of the visit I feel the small bones of his
fingers chafe against each other. His eyes
are round and frightened.
At a later date, the probation officer told
me that ten days after the visit he still hadn't
come out of his cell. He was pacing up and
down, punching the bed, saying, 'How can a
man come in here and do what he did after
what I did to his son?' I never laid a finger,
but in a way my hand's still round his throat.
I went in there to kill a man, and to my way
of thinking that's just what I did: He won't
rest in peace. If that's been done properly,
telling him how it's been for Valerie and me,
then he's gonna wake up in a bit of a sweat
now and then, and turn to find me lying
there beside him.
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LAST UPDATED                      25/06/2006