ONE
1975
‘Fuckin’ hell, Tommo, he ain’t moving.’
White as a sheet, Tommy Hutton bent down to try and
wake his victim. ‘Wake up Smiffy, please wake up,’ he said, as he
frantically prodded and shook him.
Tibbsy, Benno and Dave Taylor stood rooted to the
spot. Along with Tommy they were members of a notorious local gang
known as the Stepney Crew.
Tonight they had organised a big off with a rival
firm from Bethnal Green. Top four versus top four. Both gangs were
determined to be crowned Kings of the East End; both thought they
were the business. Tommy Hutton, AKA Tommo, had formed the gang:
therefore he was their undisputed leader. Terry Smith, AKA Smiffy,
had started the other firm and he was their top boy.
Tonight, however, things had gone very wrong.
Determined not to be outdone by Smiffy, who had recently threatened
him with an air gun, Tommy had decided to steal his old man’s
fishing knife. He’d been keen to frighten Smiffy, cut him, scar
him, show him who was boss. He certainly hadn’t meant to stick the
knife straight through him.
Taking charge of matters, Tibbsy picked up the
weapon. ‘We’d better get out of ’ere lads. The cunt’s dead, I’m
telling yer. You take the knife, Tommo, get rid of it.’
Tommy shook from head to toe. He couldn’t move, his
legs weren’t doing as they were told. ‘What am I gonna do? I didn’t
mean to kill him,’ he sobbed.
Tibbsy grabbed his arm. ‘We’ve gotta go, Tommo,
before anybody sees us. Don’t fuck about or we’ll all be going
down.’
Tommy tucked his flared trousers into his socks and
urged the others to do the same, fashion was a no-go at times like
these. Ashen faced and panic stricken, the four lads ran for their
lives.
Less than a mile away, Maureen was totally unaware
of her son’s dilemma.
‘See yer on Saturday then, if I don’t see yer
before, Sarn. It starts at seven, so don’t be bloody late.’
Maureen Hutton smiled as she shut the front door.
It was her thirty-second birthday on Saturday and she was having a
party to celebrate.
House parties were a regular occurrence on the
Ocean Estate in Stepney. All skint as arseholes, she and her
neighbours got together every Saturday night for some cheap booze
and a knees-up. Maureen had numerous good mates who lived near by.
Some were single mums who had it hard like herself, but her best
friends Sandra and Brenda, they both had husbands. Neither she nor
her friends dwelled on their poverty. Like most cockneys, they made
the best out of what little they had. Every now and then they’d
take it in turns to watch one another’s kids so they could have a
night at the bingo. Apart from their Saturday night parties, bingo
was their only other source of entertainment.
Maureen put the kettle on and made herself a brew.
Her life had always been hard, but lately she’d been content. Her
husband Tommy had left her years ago. A gambler and a piss-head,
she was far better off without him. Sometimes he’d turn up like a
bad penny, but he never hung about for long. A quick pop in to say
hello to the kids or the occasional visit to his mother was about
all he was good for. Alcohol was far more important to him than his
family.
His mother, Ethel, was a legend in her own manor.
At fifty-six she was a coarse, boisterous woman and as famous in
the East End as Ronnie and Reggie. She swore like a navvy, drank
like a fish, regularly went out on the thieve, and could tell a
story to match the best of them. Hard as nails, she was. In the war
she would wash down the dead bodies and help patch up the
casualties. When the war ended, she set herself up in business with
her friend, Gladys, and together they would perform illegal
abortions. A tin bucket, a syringe and a bar of washing soap was
the method they used. They were no experts, but were always careful
to keep the end of the syringe in the bucket. One slip of the hand
and the air bubbles could be fatal. Ethel had come up with the idea
herself. She’d used the same method on the kids to wash out their
worms. Many a time she’d shove a syringe of lukewarm water up their
harrises and smile as their screams echoed from Stepney to
Soho.
Maureen glanced at the clock. Her son, Tommy, was
well late tonight and she’d skin the little bastard when he got
home. Thankfully, her other two were safely tucked up in bed. Tommy
was her eldest child – she was seventeen when she had him and he’d
been a little bastard from the moment he’d let out his first cry.
He was fourteen now, a cocky, streetwise little bleeder who was
forever getting himself into trouble. Tall, dark and cheeky, he was
popular with the girls, but even they found him a handful. He
rarely went to school, was always fighting and she knew full well
that he went out thieving with his pals and his gran.
Susan, her twelve-year-old daughter, was another
worry. Sullen and obnoxious, she had a plain face, a plump body and
a spiteful streak in her. She was unpopular at school, with very
few friends, and even the kids on the street steered well clear of
her.
Thankfully, her youngest son, James, was no trouble
at all. Sweet, kind and funny, he was everything that Maureen had
ever wanted in a child. She hadn’t known what to call him when she
was carrying him. She had plenty of girls’ names, but no boys’. Her
friend, Brenda, had chosen his name. A massive fan of the singer
James Taylor, Bren had played his album till the grooves wore
white. Maureen herself had fallen in love with the track ‘Sweet
Baby James’ and, at Brenda’s insistence, agreed that if her unborn
was a boy, she’d name him James.
The title of the song suited her son perfectly and
Maureen was over the moon when her mother-in-law thieved her a
record player along with the album. For hours she’d play that
record to James when he was a baby. She’d sing the words as she
rocked him to sleep, her special boy with his own special song.
Trouble was, as the years went by, he became known as Jimmy Boy.
Tommy had started the trend by insisting that James made him sound
like a poof. Maureen had been pissed off at first by his change of
identity, but as time went by she’d accepted it. A name’s just a
name and he’d always be James to her.
All her neighbours had been shocked by her last
pregnancy – she had been split up from her Tommy for years when
she’d fallen. A drunken night of passion for old time’s sake had
been her excuse. Little did they know what had really
happened!
Maureen’s reminiscing was ended by the sound of the
front door opening and the arrival of her eldest son. ‘Tommy, I’m
gonna marmalise you, get your arse in ’ere, yer little bastard,’
she shouted at the top of her voice.
Ignoring her, Tommy Hutton ran up the stairs as
fast as his legs would take him. His clothes were covered in blood
and he had to get changed before his mother spotted him.
Just about to chase the cowson up the stairs and
drag him back down by his hair, Maureen had a change of heart. He
shared his bedroom with James and if she ran upstairs like a raging
bull, she’d be bound to wake him up. Maureen lit the gas and put
the kettle on to boil. She needed to calm down and a cup of Rosy
was usually the answer. Tomorrow she’d have the little bastard’s
guts for garters. Yawning, she made her brew and took it into the
living room. Just lately she’d taken to sleeping downstairs on the
old sofa. The house only had two bedrooms. The boys shared one and
her and Susan the other. Ethel lived slap-bang opposite in a nice
little one-bedroom flat.
Over the last few months, her daughter had become a
nightmare to share a bed with. She’d nick the blanket then wriggle
like an eel all night, and Maureen had a feeling that the little
cow was doing it on purpose. Worn out by her lack of shut-eye, she
had no alternative other than to move out of her own bedroom.
Tommy lay in bed wide awake. Now he’d pulled
himself together, he felt a right prick for crying in front of his
pals. He was meant to be the leader of the gang, not some fucking
mug. After they’d legged it, him and the lads had headed to the
park to sort out an alibi, and a plan, and as luck would have it,
they’d bumped into Lenny Simpson. Seeing the blood on Tommy’s
clothes, and the state of the four of them, Lenny guessed that some
major shit had hit the fan and had fired awkward questions at them.
Stuck for answers, they’d had no choice other than to spill their
guts to him. He was sound, Lenny, and if he couldn’t help them, no
one could.
‘I’ll be your alibi. I’ll say you were round at
mine all night. We had a few beers and were playing David Bowie
records. I’ve got all his stuff, every album, so if anyone asks, we
were boozing while listening to Bowie, right? If you stick to the
same story as me, you’ll be all right, boys.’
Tommy hugged Lenny and repeatedly thanked him.
Lenny had his own reasons to want to help out. Smiffy, the piece of
shit in question, had terrorised his younger brother for the past
three years. Lenny had been planning on disposing of the scumbag
himself, but didn’t quite have the bottle to go through with it.
Tommo had done him and his family a massive favour.
The other thing they’d discussed were the other
lads in Smiffy’s gang. They’d all scarpered in separate directions
when it had got a bit naughty. Tommy had chased Smiffy for at least
five minutes before he’d caught him and, apart from his own crew,
there’d been no one else about.
‘There’s no way the Bethnal Green boys’ll grass,’
Tibbsy said confidently.
‘All they’ll do, if anything, is come after us for
revenge. They definitely won’t involve the pigs,’ Benno
insisted.
Tommy looked at Dave Taylor. ‘What do you
think?’
Taylor shrugged. ‘Dunno. Our top four boys have
done their top four, case closed. You can never say never, but I’ll
doubt they’ll grass.’
Tibbsy called an end to the meeting. ‘Look we can’t
stay out ’ere all night, it’s too suspicious. Let’s all go our
separate ways and when we get home, we must act normal.’
Tommy stood up. ‘I can hardly act normal, can I?
I’m covered in Smiffy’s blood. What am I meant to say to me
mum?’
Tibbsy put an arm around his pal. ‘Just leg it up
the stairs before your mother sees yer. You need to wash the knife
so none of our fingerprints are on it. Bag up all your stuff, wait
till your mother’s asleep, creep out and dump it.’
As he lay awake in bed, Tommy thought over his
pal’s advice. He’d bagged the gear up, washed the knife, but was
far too scared to leave the house. Say someone saw him? Say his
mother caught him or the pigs were lurking near by?
Seeing his brother stir gave Tommy his solution.
He’d lifted James out of the window a couple of months back to run
a couple of errands for him. The boy had shit himself and he didn’t
really want to get him involved again, but what choice did he have?
He couldn’t go himself, it was far too dodgy.
Tommy was an expert at climbing out of his bedroom
window. There was an old coal bunker below and as long as you
positioned yourself right, the drop was a piece of cake. What he’d
have to do was climb down first with the gear, then climb back up
and lift James down. Umming and aahing with his conscience, he made
his choice.
‘Jimmy boy, wake up.’
James sat up and rubbed his little eyes. ‘Whatta
matter Tommy?’
Tommy put his finger to his lips. ‘Get dressed,
Jimmy, I need yer to do summink for me.’
James obediently did as he was told. He loved his
big brother very much. Tommy was his hero and he’d do anything he
could to make him happy.