Автор: Stuart Howarth
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Биографии и Мемуары
isbn: 9780007319565
isbn:
It was strange being back in my old haunt, the club where Tracey and I first got talking. I was drunk and in a highly emotional state and really I should just have gone straight to my bed, but that wasn't possible because the party was still in full flow back at Mum's. I went to buy some cigarettes but the machine was broken so I asked a lad who was sitting nearby smoking.
‘Have you a spare fag, mate?'
‘I ain't fuckin' giving you a fag,’ he snarled.
‘Look, I'm just out of prison and I want a fag but the machine's broken. Will you give me a fag, please? I'll buy it from you.’
‘No, fuck off!’ he said, and I saw red. I grabbed him by the throat and laid him flat along the seat then I took the lit fag from his mouth and held it just above his eyeball, shouting abuse at him.
Fortunately the doormen saw what was happening and came rushing over or I don't know what I would have done.
‘Easy, Stuart, calm down,’ they said, pulling me off.
‘All I wanted was a fag and this asshole wouldn't give me one,’ I explained.
‘Right you – out!’ they said to the lad, and despite his protests they threw him and his mates out of the club. It's useful having friends in the right places sometimes.
In my drunken state, I then decided to go to the garage next door to buy some cigarettes.
‘You'd better not, Stuart,’ one of the door lads said. ‘Those boys are still hanging around out there and they might all go for you.’
‘Fuck that. I'm not scared of them,’ I said, and marched straight out across the car park. Sure enough, the lads were standing there, one of them brandishing a golf club. ‘Go on then, bring it on if you're going to,’ I yelled. At that moment I'd have fought the whole lot of them. My prison mentality was still at the forefront. Show any sign of weakness on the inside and you're in big trouble.
The doormen stood between me and the lads and I got my cigarettes and went back into the club to find Tracey, but not before I shouted, ‘Fancy a game of golf, do you?’ to the crowd of lads.
‘I wondered where you were,’ she said, oblivious to the drama. ‘Were you just catching up with your mates?’
‘Something like that,’ I said.
I was burning up with rage that night. Maybe it was partly alcohol-induced but I felt furious with the world for everything I'd been through. If I'd made a list of people I was angry with it would have stretched the length of the nightclub and out into the car park outside: the prison guards, some of the arsehole inmates I'd had to put up with, some of the people at the party earlier, my Mum, my stepdad, the guy who wouldn't give me a fag. I was like a powder keg just waiting for the fuse to be lit, or a hand grenade with the pin half out. I honestly thought I was going mad.
When you're released from prison, there's virtually no support network waiting for you. I was a big guy – six foot three, weighing twenty-one stone – and thirteen months earlier I'd killed someone due to diminished responsibility, yet I was just sent back into society without any doctor's appointments or psychiatrists to advise me or help me stay sane and grounded. I'd been thoroughly assessed before the murder trial, but after that there was no more help. If anything I was more damaged after prison than when I went in.
I had a probation officer, who by bizarre coincidence had been the magistrate who gave my stepdad permission to adopt me when I was five years old. We both remembered her asking me at the time if I liked my new daddy, and I said, ‘I don't like it when he hits me and hurts me.’ All the adults in the room thought I was joking. No one took me seriously, and the adoption was approved. I always felt weird about seeing her because of that, but in fact our once-weekly meetings were just a formality. I'd turn up at her office and say ‘Hi’; she'd ask how I was and I'd say ‘Fine’. She would ask me how I was coping and if I had any problems but I didn't feel I could tell her the truth: ‘Yes, I'm having flashbacks and nightmares and I'm not coping at all.’
Dad peeing into my mouth.
Dad forcing me to eat pig swill.
Dad ramming my face into my dinner and saying, ‘You're a naughty little bastard, aren't you?’
I was terrified they might decide to lock me up in a mental institution if they knew what was really going on in my head. Mental illness runs in my real dad's family. I was scared that I'd end up in a psychiatric ward somewhere, pumped full of pills and rocking back and forwards all day. Given my record of killing a man, I might never get out again.
I occasionally saw Neil Fox, the counsellor I'd had sessions with in prison, but it was difficult to arrange appointments because he was always so busy. I never blamed him for this in any way; he had his own life to get on with. What I really needed was a regular therapist on the outside with whom I could discuss all the pressure I felt under, the fears and the depressions that were weighing me down. I needed someone to say, ‘What your stepfather did to you was wrong,’ and to help me find a way through all the conflicting emotions that were chewing me up inside.
The one thing that no one understood was that I missed my stepdad. I loved that guy so much as a child and, while I didn't like him hurting me, I never really understood that what he was doing to me was wrong. When I visited his house that night in August 2000, I was still yearning for him to love me back. Once he was dead, it was like a massive chasm that could never be filled. I ached for a man's love, a guiding figure in my life, someone who would give me a push when I needed it, or offer a shoulder to cry on. I missed him – and it was my fault he was dead.
I knew I needed help but I didn't know how to get it. I didn't think I could just go to my GP and say, ‘I can't cope.’ That would have felt as though I was a real failure, and I wasn't sure what he could do anyway. No, I decided; I would just have to find a way through this on my own, with Tracey by my side.
It wasn't only the after-effects of having killed someone, and the experiences I'd had in jail. Lots of other things were preying on my mind as well. There were two court cases pending that would drag all sorts of memories to the surface again. One was the trial of an old friend of my stepdad's who used to babysit for us when we were kids. While I was in prison, Christina had gone to the police to complain about him and he had been arrested and charged with several counts of rape and buggery. Christina and I were both due to testify against him.
The other case looming on the horizon was the one against the prison service for all the abuses that had taken place while I was inside. There were the ridiculous number of strip searches, often carried out without so much as a nod to the rules that you should be allowed to protect your dignity by keeping an item of clothing on. There were the unbelievably cruel comments made by one guard in particular, who never missed a chance to taunt me, saying, for example, that I'd probably enjoyed it when my dad was raping me. There was also the fact that they often prevented me from getting to my therapy sessions on time and sometimes made me miss them altogether: ‘We run the jail, Howarth, not you.’ And then there was the fact that I was put in cells near the sex offenders' wing, which drove me completely mental given my background.
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