Authors: Elly Griffiths
âMr Davies,' Nelson leans forward, âduring your time at
the home was there any ill-treatment of inmates ⦠sorry, residents.'
âNo, never,' Davies answers. Too quickly? wonders Nelson.
âNo corporal punishment?' asks Clough. âQuite common in the seventies.'
âNo,' says Davies quietly, âFather Hennessey believed in kindness.'
âWhat about the nuns? The sisters. Could they be strict?'
Davies considers. âThey could be strict, yes. No physical violence but some of them had sharp tongues. A few were kind. Sister James. Sister Immaculata. But some of the others ⦠they were good women but not kindly women, if you know what I mean.'
âSo what were the punishments for bad behaviour?' persists Nelson.
Davies smiles. âWell, for really bad behaviour you got sent to Father Hennessey but that usually turned out to be more of a treat than anything else. He'd get you to help clear out his cupboards or weed the kitchen garden. Some of my happiest memories of SHCH are of working on that garden.'
Nelson sighs and changes tack. âDid you know two children called Black? Martin and Elizabeth Black.'
Davies frowns. He has an anxious, squashed-looking face at the best of times. Now his face is positively pleated in thought. âYes,' he says at last, âthey went missing. It was just after I came to SHCH. Martin was about a year younger than me. He was very clever, I remember.'
âDo you remember anything about their disappearance?'
âWell, there was a big to-do at the time. We used to have a free hour at the end of the day and I remember that I'd
actually been talking to Martin. There was a craze for collecting football cards and we were filling in our scrapbooks. Elizabeth was there too, playing with some stuffed animal. A dog, I think it was. She took it everywhere with her. After a while she wandered off and Martin went to find her. That was the last I saw of him. Then one of the sisters rang the bell for bedtime and they were nowhere to be seen.'
âWhat happened next?'
âFather Hennessey went out to search. Then he must have called the police. I remember being interviewed, being asked when I last saw Martin and Elizabeth. The police were around for a few weeks, asking everyone questions. I remember Sister Immaculata being angry because they interrupted us when we were saying the rosary. Then everything went back to normal. We still prayed for Martin and Elizabeth but we didn't really talk about them. We forgot. You know what kids are like.'
âWhen the police were at SHCH, do you remember them searching the grounds? Digging?'
âNo,' says Davies slowly, âI don't remember them digging.'
He looks up suddenly. âIs that what all this is about? Have you found a body?'
âI'm not at liberty to say,' says Nelson.
âThey're knocking it down, aren't they?' says Davies. âI walked past the site the other day.'
âThey're developing it, yes.'
âIt's a shame. It was a lovely house. Like a mansion, I always thought.'
âYes.' Nelson looks at Clough. âMr Davies, would you be prepared to come to the site and look around? You might
be able to tell us where things were. Which rooms were which, that sort of thing.'
âYes,' says Davies, âI'd be happy to.'
He gets up to leave, shaking hands with both policemen. At the door, Clough asks, âYou say Father Hennessey got you an apprenticeship. What trade was that?'
Kevin Davies smiles, the creases in his face turning upwards. âOh, I thought you knew. I'm an undertaker.'
*
Judy Johnson is pushing a wheelchair along Southport seafront. The tide is out and the sand stretches into the far distance, bands of gold and white and silver, dotted with tiny figures carrying nets and buckets. As she watches, three racehorses canter into view, their necks arching as they fight their bits, the sand flying up behind them. Judy stops for a second and Sister Immaculata turns and says, âRed Rum was trained here. Did you know that?'
âNo.'
âI had a bet on him in 1976. That was the year he came second. Typical.'
âWas it each way?' asks Judy, a bookie's daughter.
âNo, on the nose. Typical.'
The horses are galloping now, stretching out joyfully across the sand, manes and tails flying. The jockeys hover over their necks, seemingly balanced in mid-air. Judy had wanted to be a jockey once. Before she got interested in boys.
The old people's home turns out to be a convent that looks after aging nuns. The sister in charge suggested that Judy take Sister Immaculata out âfor a walk'.
âThat way she'll get fresh air and you can have some
privacy.' A mixture of kindness and absolute authority that Judy remembers from her own (convent) schooldays.
Judy stops by a bench, puts the brakes on the wheelchair and goes to sit beside the elderly nun. She knows from the police records that Sister Immaculata (real name: Orla McKinley) is seventy-five but the veil covering her hair and her high-necked habit serve to mask the most obvious signs of age. Her face is curiously unlined, the blue eyes still sharp. Only the hand, pointing now at Southport Pier, betrays its owner's age. It's a mummy's hand, skeletal and misshapen.
âSister Immaculata,' begins Judy, âyou worked at the Sacred Heart Children's Home from 1960 to 1980.'
âIt wasn't work, it was a vocation,' says the nun sharply.
âI'm sorry. But you were resident at the home?'
âYes.'
âWhat sort of a place was it?'
Sister Immaculata is silent, looking out over the miles of pale sand. But Judy notes that her hands are shaking slightly. Age? Infirmity? Or fear?
âIt was a beautiful house. Lovely grounds. The sort of place where you can't imagine bad things happening.'
Judy holds her breath. She mustn't mess this up. The boss expects her to get results. That's why she has been sent instead of Clough, who'd probably have accused the nun of satanic abuse by now and be on his way for an early lunch.
âWhat sort of bad things?' she asks gently.
The nun looks at her sharply, eyes narrowed.
âTwo children vanished. Isn't that bad enough for you?'
âMartin and Elizabeth Black?'
âYes. They disappeared. Vanished. Into thin air.'
Judy shivers. It sounds a little like a fairy tale and she has always found these particularly terrifying. Two children go into the woods and bang! they are eaten by a wolf or enticed into a gingerbread house or given a poisoned apple by a close female relation. Vanished. Into thin air.
She struggles to make her voice sound businesslike. âHow well did you know Martin and Elizabeth?'
Sister Immaculata seems to have recovered her poise. âI taught Martin,' she says, âdidn't have much to do with the younger children. That was Sister James, God rest her soul. But I remember Martin. Father Hennessey thought the world of him but he was always trouble, in my opinion.'
âIn what way?'
âHe was clever. Very interested in history. Gladiators, dinosaurs, that sort of thing. Science too. He was always trying some far-fetched experiment. Father Hennessey encouraged him, even made a laboratory for him in the basement. Gave him books to read. But he was the sort of boy who used his intelligence to make trouble. Always asking questions in class. Sacrilegious questions about the Holy Ghost and the Blessed Virgin.' She nods her head in pious reflex.
âWhat did Father Hennessey think about that?'
âHe made excuses for him. The children had a tragic start in life. Their mother died. The only other relative was a drunken father in Ireland. Martin was always talking about his father, making him out to be some sort of hero. That's why, when they disappeared, we thought they might have gone to Ireland.'
âDid it come out of the blue, their disappearance?'
âWell, we thought Martin might have been plotting something. He'd been stealing food for weeks. Father Hennessey knew but he didn't want to confront the boy, not until he knew what was in his mind. I think he regretted that later.'
âWhat did
you
think?' In Judy's experience, everyone likes to be asked their opinion and it seems nuns are no exception to this rule.
âI thought he needed a good hiding. But Father Hennessey wasn't having any of that. No physical punishment, that was the rule. Not even a clip round the ear for cheekiness. Not like it was when I was at school.' She broods for a minute, lower lip stuck out.
âI told Father Hennessey that Martin Black was trouble but he wouldn't have it. Just said the boy needed love and attention. Love and attention! Look where that got him. He ran off, taking his poor innocent sister with him. Probably got themselves killed.'
âIs that what you think happened?' asks Judy.
Sister Immaculata is silent for a moment and Judy sees now that she has a rosary in her hands. She is twisting the beads between her arthritic fingers. âYes, I think that's what happened. The world is a dangerous place for children.'
âWhat did Father Hennessey think?'
Sister Immaculata looks her full in the face, the blue eyes slightly amused. âHaven't you worked it out yet, girl? Father Hennessey is a saint. And saints cause a lot of trouble for the rest of us.'
Ruth is excavating the bones. The skeleton has been completely exposed, has been drawn and photographed from all angles. Now, it is Ruth's job to remove the bones themselves so that they can go to the post-mortem. She moves calmly, placing each bone in a labelled bag and then checking it against what she calls her âskeleton sheet', recording the measurement and appearance of each fragment. Respect and care, that's what she tells her pupils. Human bones, however old, should be treated with all the respect that you would give to a body. Excavation should take place over one day so that no fragments are lost or stolen. Every bone should be saved, recorded and preserved. Ruth has worked on sites, like the war graves in Bosnia, where many skeletons are mixed together. Then, the process of trying to separate and record is an arduous one. But this is just one skeleton, one little body. Ruth handles the bones with tenderness, reverence even.
Irish Ted has already bagged the bones of the cat. She will take them to the lab on her way home. Neither cat nor human skull has been found.
âGood day.' The voice is so close that Ruth jumps. She looks up and sees a good-looking man of about her age, immaculately dressed in a cotton shirt and linen trousers. With him is an older man in a panama hat. Ruth straightens up, shielding her eyes with her hand.
The younger man squats down as if he is about to jump into the trench. Ruth is horrified. Like most archaeologists, she likes to keep her trench immaculate. Standing in someone's trench is like walking uninvited into their house.
âStop!' she says sharply.
The man looks at her quizzically.
âYou can't come into the trench,' says Ruth, struggling to keep her voice polite, âyou'll contaminate it.'
The man straightens up. âWe haven't been introduced,' he says, as if the introduction will make all the difference. âI'm Edward Spens.'
That figures. The famous Edward Spens no doubt considers that Ruth's trench, like the rest of the site, belongs to him.
âRuth Galloway.' Ruth forces herself to smile up at him.
She feels at a disadvantage being so low down.
âSo these are the fateful bones.'
Fateful, thinks Ruth. It's a funny way of describing the find but somehow appropriate. She sees Spens' intelligent eyes fixed on her face. She must be careful not to give too much away.
âThis is the skeleton, yes.'
âAnd have you any idea how old it is?'
âNot yet. We might find some clues in the fill.'
âThe fill?'
âThe grave,' says Ruth, thinking how emotive the word is. But that is what they have found: a grave, where a body is buried. âWe might find bricks or pottery,' she explains. âI thought I saw a shard from a bottle. That can be dated. And we'll do radiocarbon dating, though that's less useful when dealing with a modern skeleton.'
âWhat exactly does radiocarbon dating involve?' Edward Spens smiles down charmingly.
âIt tests the amount of carbon in the bones. When we're alive, we take in carbon fourteen. When we die, we stop. By estimating when these bones stopped taking in carbon fourteen, we'll be able to estimate the age of the skeleton.'
âFascinating. How accurate is it?'
âTo about plus or minus five per cent.' Then, relenting slightly, âOther factors affect the carbon dating but we can be accurate to about a hundred years.'
âA hundred years! That's not very accurate.'
âThere are other indicators,' says Ruth, slightly irritated. âRecent bones still contain blood pigment and amino acids, for example. We'll be able to tell if these remains are medieval or relatively modern.'
The older man, who has been looking around him with every appearance of pleasure, now says, âYou know this used to be a church?'
âMy father, Sir Roderick Spens,' introduces Edward. âHe's very interested in history.' He says this in a resigned way, as if ferrying his elderly father to sites of archaeological interest is not his preferred way of passing the time.
Roderick Spens doffs his hat with a flourish. âDelighted to meet you.'
Ruth smiles. She thinks she prefers Sir Roderick's interest to Edward's barely concealed impatience.
âThey say that a church used to stand here,' Roderick Spens explains. âProbably destroyed during the dissolution of the monasteries, gravestones broken up, stained glass smashed, gold and silver melted down.'
Ruth thinks of the workman smashing the windows in the conservatory and the momentary regret she had felt for those coloured pieces of glass, for the destruction of anything that was once prized. âWe found a chalice yesterday,' she says, âprobably 1400s or thereabouts. Some beautiful work on it.'