DEVIANT Eddie Bantham was forty-two, still good looking, and only slightly overweight. He was also a very clever engineer, but arrogant and intolerant. He did not get on at all well with other people and was, therefore, unmarried, justifying it by claiming that nobody good enough to share his life, had ever come his way. But all Bantham really cared about was his work. Sports, politics and other pastimes never interested him. Deep down, though, he knew he was a racist, but he kept the fact hidden, even from his doting mother with whom he still lived. His main dislike concerned second-generation immigrants. He grudgingly respected their hard working parents, the ones who were grateful for the freedom their new home had provided. However, he was aware that many of their children were not a

