16
Summing up in the trial of Patrick McCann took
only ninety minutes in total. The jury retired at 11.32 a.m.
The Court waited in readiness for a verdict, until
1.00 p.m., when the jury was given lunch.
Rachel ate in the Court restaurant with the
Advocate Depute and with Sam Burns, the instructing
solicitor.
The AD had looked sure of his success when the jury
retired, but Rachel noticed him grow more and more edgy as time
wore on. Anything longer than forty minutes normally meant
disagreement. In a case like this, anything more than an hour could
be ominous for the prosecution.
Rachel was nervous too. Suddenly, success looked
like a real possibility. Soon, the evil McCann might walk free
through the front door of the Court, instead of being hustled
through the side exit, handcuffed to prison officers. She began to
experience, truly, for the first time in her career, that terrible
divide between elation and guilt. This was not the same as the
Chinese trial. Her client then, Shun Lee, had been a simpleton,
who, she still believed, had played no part in the girl’s
murder.
Lunch over, the jury remained closeted in its
room.
Finally, at 3.52 p.m., a bell rang, summoning
participants and public to the Court. The jury was on its way
back.
McCann was brought up from the cells. And the
eleven men and four women, unanimously, declared him guilty of both
charges.
Lord Orlach wasted no time. After McCann’s previous
convictions had been read out by the Clerk, the old judge told the
prisoner that it was clear that he had to be removed from society
once again, and for a long time. He sentenced him to life
imprisonment for rape, with the recommendation ‘to those whose task
it will be to consider your eventual release’ that he should serve
at least fourteen years. He also sentenced him to six years’
imprisonment on the wounding charge, to be served
concurrently.
Rachel Jameson’s last duty after the trial was to
visit McCann in the cells, as he awaited transfer back to
Barlinnie, this time as a convicted prisoner, a sex offender, a
prison pariah.
The man who had sat so calmly through trial and
sentence was now in a rage. He sat at a plain table, a burly prison
officer at his side, and swore savagely at Rachel. ‘So you were
clever, eh. You said ah’d get life and you were fuckin’ right. If
you hadna held back on that hoor in the witness box, ah’d be out
now! Ah tell you somethin’, hen. Fourteen years won’t be long
enough for you. As soon as ah’m oot, you’re finished. In fact
you’re fuckin’ finished now!’
Rachel screamed as McCann lunged across the table.
The big prison officer thumped him on the side of the head. McCann
swayed to the side, then suddenly swung back toward the guard, who
had been thrown off balance by his own blow, and butted him
savagely between the eyes.
The man went down poleaxed, just as his colleague
threw the door open. The newcomer had no time to react as he was
seized and shoved backwards. His head cracked loudly against the
wall.
Smiling now, McCann released the unconscious man,
and turned towards Rachel. She had backed into a corner of the
white-tiled room, cowering and mute with fear, unable to scream or
even speak. Her handbag lay open on the table. McCann saw the
wallet inside. He snatched it up, clawed £55 from the notes
section, and emptied the change pocket, then threw it into the far
corner of the room. He looked back towards her. His face was calm,
the eyes shining, the familiar arrogance back. He smiled. ‘I’ll see
you again, Miss Jameson.’ He looked out of the room, left and
right, and then he was gone.
Rachel stood frozen in her corner. She heard, but
she could not react to the sudden commotion as McCann crashed
through the exit door. She did not move for almost two minutes,
until the prison officer nearer to her on the floor began to come
round. She crossed the room towards the man. His nose was pouring
blood and there was a deep vertical cut between his eyes.
A young police constable appeared in the doorway.
‘Oh Christ,’ he gasped, then turned and ran. Seconds later an alarm
blared. Rachel looked along the corridor. The exit door lay ajar.
The feet and legs of a third uniformed man were visible, sprawled
like his colleagues. McCann was free and clear.