Read Mothers and Daughters Online
Authors: Leah Fleming
There was a window in the form room on the top storey of Moor Bank County Grammar School that looked out over the centre of the town, over the roof tiles and chimneys and the steeple of the Our Lady of Sorrows and the railway sidings, across to the great chimney of Standard’s Cotton Mill and Magellan’s Foundry. In a gap Joy could see the turrets of Connie’s school as it nestled in the foot of the hillside before the moors stretched far into the distance. She knew they would be finishing the last two periods of art. She knew Connie’s timetable better than her own.
She sometimes sneaked back up into this form just to catch a glimpse of Connie’s world because it seemed better than her scruffy building sandwiched in the middle of town; its red brick blackened with soot. She was supposed to be finishing off her chemistry, wrapped in her blue cotton overall that barely
stretched across her tummy. They were doing experiments mixing chemicals over a Bunsen burner while Mr Kopek droned on about safety and not larking about. Joy hated her figure. She was the plumpest girl in her class when they undressed to do PE. They had to wear these bright blue romper suits for gym with knickers attached to a bodice that showed every curve.
Most of the girls were flat-chested and neat, but Joy had busts that wobbled. It was bad enough having skin a shade darker than anyone else and blacker hair, and, worst of all, having the curse once a month.
‘Do your bosoms hurt when you run down stairs?’ she’d asked Connie, who looked blank and then burst out laughing.
‘If only … My bosoms aren’t worth a second glance. I have to stuff my bra with socks,’ she confessed. ‘Be grateful you’ve got a figure.’
Joy was not impressed.
She had not forgiven Ivy for those cruel words, lashing herself with them inside her head over and over again. She was a big fat dumpling, anyone could see that. Thanks goodness it was Friday afternoon and they’d meet up in Santini’s with Rosa to plan their outfits for the next Silkie gig.
Every time she looked in the mirror all Joy could see was her bulging tummy and fat chest. Connie was so thin and tall, and Rosa so wiry. Joy felt like a big lump of lard beside them. Mummy liked to cook for
the guests and she was expected to eat the leftovers even when she wasn’t hungry. ‘Eat up, you are a growing girl. A clean plate, please. Think of all those starving orphans in China!’
There was no escaping food. Every month they all trouped to Auntie Ria’s flat for spaghetti and ice cream after a concert, and Mr Milburn, who was a new permanent and rented the front bedroom while Dr Friedmann was abroad studying, was kind and brought her sweets in boxes from his trips during the week: boxes of fudge that said, ‘A Present from Filey’ or ‘Southport’ or ‘Whitehaven’. He had a small Morris car and gave Joy lifts into town. The back seat was crammed with cases of medical supplies and surgical appliances that were like strange corsets with tubes and straps and funny bulbous ends, harnesses coiled in his case like snakes. The front was a squash and their knees were jammed together when he drove. ‘He gives me the creeps,’ she’d once sniggered to Connie. ‘I’m not his “dusky princess”.’
She wished it was hometime. There were five floors from the gym and the physics lab in the basement, to the chemistry lab and forms at the top. There was cookery in an outbuilding and separate yards for boys and girls. It was not a bit like Connie’s school and there were boys: spotty and swotty with armpits smelling from their Bri-Nylon shirts.
Rosa was full of the Catholic College boys, heartthrobs called Julian, Chris, Howard, and especially
Paul Jerviss, who swaggered around thinking he was James Dean at the bus stop.
Moor Bank didn’t seem to sport anyone handsome, just a load of lads making jokes about girls’ figures, lads called Eric, Brian and Tom, who treated the girls as if they were simpletons.
Only last week she’d accidentally bumped into Graham Best, one of the boys in her class on the bus, and he had called her a ‘fat, slit-eyed wog’.
If only she was as slender as Mummy, who was tiny-boned, with small feet, but Joy was made like the Winstanleys, curvy and awkward. Everyone called her bonny. She hated that word.
‘Bonny means I’m fat, not pretty. Why can’t I be like the others?’ she sighed. ‘Tall, skinny and clever.’ If only she was into sports like Connie. Moor Bank had playing fields miles out of town, so their teams were hopeless at cricket and tennis and football. Joy managed to skive off hockey by missing the bus and arriving too late to be picked. She hated exercise, although Latin dancing and jive was fun, but no one ever asked her to practise in the playground with them.
Only last week she’d made the mistake of complaining to Mr Milburn as he sat at the breakfast table eating Force Flakes and toast. He was a vegetarian and so one of her jobs on a Saturday was to buy tins of nut cutlets from Uncle Levi’s herbal store on the market, where Neville sometimes helped out.
Mr Milburn had offered to teach her to waltz and quickstep once. They practised on the wind-up gramophone in the front room. That was not much fun either, for he’d held her so tight she could hardly breathe, close enough to smell his tobacco breath, and he stepped on her toes. He had no sense of rhythm.
‘If only I was good at something,’ Joy moaned. ‘It’s no fun being C plus in homework, in dancing class, in the school choir. I didn’t make the semi chorus. They sing all the best bits in the Speech Day concert.’
Rosa was appearing in the King’s Theatre again, as the leader of the Mini Maids dancing chorus in the pantomime. Rosa didn’t have to try hard at anything; even her curls bounced naturally and needed no rags in them. Her eyes were dark and bright and she was tiny and full of energy. She talked for hours about her rehearsals and how the chorus girls went to the digs of Jonnie and the Giraffes, the rock band who were heading up the star cast. She got autographs to sell and time off school to head up the children’s ballet when Miss Liptrot, who was once a pupil at the Sorrows, persuaded the head teacher, Sister Assumpta, to let her dance and guide the youngsters.
Rosa always got what she wanted and now she was into boys big time, which was boring, chasing them at the bus stop and hanging around just to catch the right ones. She was shameless.
Connie didn’t like Joy clinging on to her school
gang either. Only at weekends did they all get together for rehearsals, when Nev bossed them around. Sometimes she just wished the week away, waiting for the weekend to come along.
‘I love Thursday,’ she said. ‘It’s the turning point of the week after sports afternoon, on the homeward run to the Friday gathering in Santini’s.’
Connie stared at her as if she was talking Spanish when they met at the bus stop later.
It was no wonder she stuffed herself with Mars Bars and Fry’s Five Boys dark chocolate, she thought miserably. She would sit on the bus looking out of the window, stuffing toffees in her mouth, dreaming she was in Hollywood, chosen as a child star like Mandy Miller or Diana Day.
‘I wish I was France Nuyen, the tragic Liat in
South
Pacific
, mysterious and beautiful,’ she murmured.
They’d been to see the film five times and Joy cried every time, trying to imagine herself in the arms of John Kerr, the handsome Yank who had to choose between duty and love.
Joy found romance in the pages of the red-covered Mills & Boons in the library. Enid Blytons were boring now that there was something more grown up to interest her. These books were in the adult section so they were sneaked out on her mother’s tickets and read with a torch in her room. They gave her wonderful dreams of handsome men ready to carry her away to happiness and marriage, but who would
lift her onto their horse when she weighed in at a massive ten stone?
Connie always laughed at her reading romances and said they were sloppy.
‘It’s all right for you, Connie,’ Joy sighed to herself, staring into mirror. ‘Look at me. Who’ll want to marry me? I’m a freak,’ she said, and hung a silk
longyi
over the mirror in disgust.
‘See you tomorrow, for rehearsal,’ she said now, slurping her ice cream through a straw in Santini’s after school.
‘Sorry, I’ve been meaning to tell you, I’ve got a place in the second lacrosse team,’ Connie mumbled, sipping her frothy cappuccino. ‘It’s an away match and some of my gang are going to the flicks afterwards.’
‘That’s OK, I’ll join you later,’ Joy smiled, trying not to look too disappointed.
‘Sorry, but we’re not too sure of our plans yet. We may go into Bolton, it depends,’ Connie replied quickly. ‘Another time, perhaps?’
She was being mean and wanted to be with her own crowd. They didn’t want a Moor Banker around, thought Joy, bowing her head into her soda before turning to Rosa.
‘What are you doing tomorrow?’
‘What?’ said Rosa, as if she were miles away. ‘Extra practices for my Intermediate exam. If I pass this I can become an assistant teacher at the studio. I’ll be too tired then to do anything but sleep.’
‘I could come and join you,’ Joy offered. Her weekend was fast melting into nothing, like her ice cream.
‘Thanks, but it’s a bit of a crush in the flat with the babies, and I’ve a pile of homework to catch up on. Yes, even I do prep. It’s part of the deal with the Head,’ said Rosa, trying to let her down gently.
She would just have to make her own amusement. Saturday would drone on for ever. Mummy expected help with the bed-changing and linen. Shopping was Joy’s job, to earn her pocket money. She would buy a pile of sweets to make up for all the boredom. There was only a second division home match and Auntie Lee was resting now – having another go for a baby, Mummy whispered – so she mustn’t bother her either. Perhaps a trip to see Granny Esme would while away a few hours. None of it would be any fun on her own but it was better than staying in.
There she was, standing at the bus stop in her navy-blue gabardine mac and felt hat on a Friday night, knowing she was going home to fish pie, and feeling like a lump of lard.
She had resigned herself to a lonely ride home when who should come and sit beside her but Neville, looking like a Belisha beacon in his black and white striped blazer and cap. He was fast losing his Lancashire accent, being at the Lawns School, and talking like one of the Battle of Britain pilots in
The
Way to the Stars
.
‘I say, what luck. How’s things?’ He plonked himself down beside her. His voice was high-pitched and unbroken but his legs were sprouting like rhubarb stalks. He didn’t give her a chance to answer, going on about getting the Silkies a turn in some talent competition near Bury, and about his part in the school play.
They were doing Shakespeare – an all-boys production of
As You Like It
– and he was playing Rosalind. ‘I’m the only boy in my year whose voice hasn’t broken,’ he laughed. ‘But I get all the best costumes. What are you up to this grey wet weekend? Hope it’s better than mine.’
For all his gossip and banter, there was something about his confidences that made Joy think that he too was a bit out of place with the toffs from the Lawns. Boys could be just as cruel as girls, she knew.
‘What are you up to tomorrow?’ Joy asked.
‘I have to do my stint on the stall and then nothing but prep. I
hate
prep.’
‘So you’re not in the football team?’
‘What me, with my two left feet? And it’s rugby, not football, at the Lawns. I’m hopeless.’ No surprises there, she thought.
‘Me too,’ Joy said, smiling at his blue eyes and mass of freckles. ‘I’m too slow and too fat.’
Neville looked her up and down. ‘You are a bit on the podgy side for an oriental, but you could always change that,’ he said, looking out of the steaming window.
‘How?’ Joy said.
‘Go on a diet. Cut down your meals, eat only certain things and you’ll lose weight. I read about it in
Woman’s Own
. The Banana Diet, it’s called. It works miracles but you have to stick to it for two weeks.’
‘I hate bananas, won’t apples do?’ Joy asked, curious now.
‘I don’t think so. It’s bananas or nothing,’ Neville replied. ‘Fancy going round the shops tomorrow? We can buy some bananas off the market, if you like.’
‘Go on then, seeing as you’ve twisted my arm. We can have fish and chips and go to the Gaumont, if you like,’ continued Joy, all smiles now.
‘I thought you wanted to go on a diet?’ he said, pinching the flab on her arm. ‘You can weigh yourself on the scales in the market hall. Those won’t break!’ he laughed.
‘Don’t be so rude. If I go on this diet you’ll have to keep it a secret. I’m not very good at doing new things,’ Joy added, feeling now as if a whole new opportunity was slowly presenting itself. Going round town with Neville was better than nothing, and he liked window shopping as much as she did. He knew all the latest fashions and the latest hits. Starving yourself on bananas didn’t sound so thrilling, though.
‘Have you heard of the Banana Diet?’ she asked Connie later on Friday night.
‘No. Diets are for invalids. I expect it’s some craze from America. Why?’
‘Neville was asking about it,’ Joy lied, sensing it wouldn’t do to spill the beans.
‘Bananas are the perfect food,’ said Mr Milburn, listening into their conversations, as usual. ‘Troops in the jungle lived off them. I hope you’re not thinking of dieting. You are just right as you are.’
‘What’s Neville bothering about diets for?’ said Mummy.
‘Nothing. We’re just going shopping and then to see
Seven Brides for Seven Brothers
. Connie’s got a match and plans, haven’t you?’
‘Don’t be late back. Ivy won’t like you going out with her precious son. She has him wrapped around her little finger. They spoil him rotten, sending him to that private school and giving him airs.’ It was not like Mummy to be snappy.
‘Neville’s OK on his own,’ Joy said.
Mr Milburn snapped two half-crowns on the table. ‘You go and enjoy yourself, dusky maiden from the Far East, lovely lotus. You’re only young once,’ he winked, and Mummy whipped his plate away with a sniff.
‘That’s enough of that, Mr Milburn. Your grandmother, Ma Nu, was Burmese, and her father an English man, but you are a British girl, not an oriental,’ she explained.