The staircase is directly opposite us; it's like something out of a film on the telly. She leads us to the kitchen where there's an oblong table made of wood. Light wood. The table's in the middle of the room; you can walk all the way around it. We sit down. The lady puts the baby in a pram and fills the kettle. She turns to me and smiles.
âYou must be Robyn?'
I nod.
âI'm Carmel.'
She pours me a glass of lemonade, puts three jaffa cakes on a plate. Gives Mum a cup of tea. âThere you go. I'll show you your room in a minute. We're full to bursting, but there's one small room, at the back of the house.' Carmel leaves the kitchen.
Carmel doesn't talk like us. Mum says she came here from London to get away from a man. Mum says you can tell from the way she talks she was born with money, and people like her can't survive in the real world. And if the whole world was full of the likes of her it would be a scary place and to top it all off her name sounds like a fucking sweet. When Carmel comes back into the kitchen I wonder what it must be like to be born
in London with loads of money and not have to live in the real world.
Women with babies come in and out of the kitchen all the time. Stand a bottle of milk inside a pan of boiling water. Test it on a wrist or a tongue before nudging the teat between a baby's gums. Little kids run in and out of the kitchen, sneak a biscuit from the tin, take a sly look at me and Mum while they're at it, walk away giggling.
We follow Carmel up three flights of stairs to our room, last door on the left. It has a high ceiling not even Dad could reach and a big window with no curtains on it. I walk over and look out. I can see more trees and grass and people walking dogs and pushing prams. I try to lift open the window to stick my head out. It won't move. Then I see the nails. The window is nailed shut. I look around at Carmel. She's showing Mum the bathroom. It's outside our room on the landing. I hear Carmel tell Mum, âYou have to share it with everybody on this floor.' She shows her a small cupboard where we can put our clothes. Then she leaves us alone.
We sit on two single beds opposite each other. âThis is just temporary,' Mum says. âWe'll get a place of our own faster if we stay here.'
She takes out her fags, strikes the match then goes over to the window. She tries to open it. âIt's nailed,' I say.
Mum shakes her head. âIt's not us that should be locked away in a fucking hostel, it should be that bastard.' She finishes her fag, taps it out in the ashtray. âIt's a fucking man's world all right.'
I lie on my bed and think about how it is a man's world. A man can take money from you, beat you, stay out all night, call you names, say he'll stab you, walk the streets without pushing a pram, look at you with soft eyes, sing to you, slow dance you, pin you against a wall by the neck until your face nearly bursts, kick you in the face, run away from your blood to the pub.
*
We get up early next morning. Every seat around the kitchen table is full. Kids sit elbow to elbow, eating breakfast. Carmel is at the oven cooking eggs and bacon. There's a kid about my age buttering toast: thick brown hair all over the place, a green T-shirt and faded blue jeans.
Carmel sees us in the doorway. âAh, morning, Babs, Robyn, help yourself to toast.'
Mum looks around the table. âWe're not hungry.' She turns away. âSee you later.'
Carmel turns back to the oven.
âBabs, is that you, love?'
Mum turns back around. It's the lady from Greaty Market. The one who looked shattered, with the twins and two other kids either side of the pram. I don't recognize her at first. She has no front teeth and her hair is cut short now. She wears rosary beads around her neck.
âMargy? What the fuck happened to you?'
Margy stands, puts a twin boy in the pram next to the other one. She gives Mum a sideways nod to follow her into the hall. Mum takes her fags out, hands one to Margy. âGet yourself some toast, Robyn, sit in Margy's place, won't be a minute.' They step outside. Carmel gives me a plate with fried eggs, bacon and two slices of toast. The girl who was helping Carmel sits down opposite me.
âI'm Lizzie,' she says. âWho are you?'
âRobyn.'
âJust you and your mum?'
âYes, you?'
âJust me.'
âWhere's your mum?'
âWho knows? We came together five days ago. She left, hasn't come back.'
âYour dad?'
âLeft us years ago.'
I look up at Carmel.
Carmel rubs Lizzie's shoulders. âShe'll be back soon. You wait.'
âWhen she sobers up,' Lizzie says.
Mum is back in the kitchen with Margy. I finish my breakfast and she takes me on the number 25 bus to school. âWe'll have to find you a new school,' Mum says. âThis one's too far now.' Mum tells me a neighbour told Margy that her husband was in the pub with another woman. Margy went around and saw them together. She went for the woman with a glass. Margy's husband dragged her home by the hair and kicked out her teeth. I feel sorry for Margy.
I like Mum telling me things, grown-up things. It makes me feel like somebody. Mum lights a cigarette. âMen,' she says. âBastards, all of them, fucking bastards. Especially that drunken bastard I married.'
I
sit on the front step with Lizzie. The gates are locked. The rain stopped an hour ago and the little ones have got the toys out. There's a circle of grass in the front garden, over by the fence, with a tree in the middle. A concrete path takes up the rest of the space. We're in charge Carmel said, me and Lizzie. Mum is in Margy's room, having a little chat.
âAny news?'
âNo. She hasn't turned up. They want to put me into care,' Lizzie says.
âCare?'
âIn a big house in Formby called St Theresa's.'
âLike this place?'
âNo. No parents, just kids. I went to visit.'
âDo you still have to go to school?'
âYou get taught stuff there, go to a class.'
âDo you have your own room?'
âDorms, ten girls in each, the younger ones are together in a different dorm.'
Two of the kids are fighting over a bike, legs sprawled half on half off. I wriggle the little bike up high away from them. âShare it. Ten minutes for you, then ten for you,' I say.
âThat's not fair,' the smallest lad says, milk teeth wet with crying.
âIt is,' the other one says. I give him first go.
âYou're good with kids,' Lizzie says. âThey get on my nerves. I've got a brother, well a step-brother. Mum's first boyfriend. His name's Michael. He lives with his dad, Mike.'
âCan't Mike take you?'
âMy social worker asked. He's with a new woman now. She said no chance. She's already taken on one, that's enough. What about you and your mum, what's happening?'
âMum said we'll get a place away from Dad faster if we stay here.'
âDid he do that to her face?'
âWhere's Formby?' I say, not wanting to answer.
âDunno. I went in my social worker's car. On the way to Southport she said. Why?'
âI was just wondering.'
âYou planning to visit?'
âI'll visit, if you want.'
âThat's up to you.'
âAnyway, your mum could still turn up. There's time.'
The lad who said it wasn't fair is back at the bike. I stand up.
âI'll go and ask Carmel for the proper address, if you like. Get her to write it down.'
âOkay.' I pick the little lad up off the bike. The other lad grabs the handlebars and sits down. âWant a swing?' I say. He nods. I press his back into my belly, swing him through my legs.
What's the time, Mr Wolf? One o'clock, two o'clock.
He giggles. The lad on the bike watches. âThat's not fair,' he says.
Lizzie is back outside. âYou giving out free sweets or what?'
I look down and see a queue. They all talk at once.
I want a swing. So do I. Me next.
âCome on, Lizzie; give us a hand with this lot.'
And she does. We swing them, one at a time between our legs until our backs ache, around and around in circles until we fall down dizzy on the bit of grass. We take an arm and a leg each and give them shake the beds. Lizzie's cheeks are red. âI can't remember the last time I felt this great,' she says.
At the dinner table Lizzie sits down next to me. Carmel's made egg and chips with baked beans. There's a mountain of bread buttered in the middle of the table. We make chip butties, dip bread into the runny egg yolk. It tastes delicious. Carmel tells us to leave some room, there's cake to shift yet. Before bed, Lizzie gives me the address of St Theresa's in Formby. I fold the piece of paper up and put it in my pocket. âI'll visit.'
âThat's up to you,' she says.
In Jimmy's Café Edna's got the radio turned up loud. She says it makes the day go faster listening to music. I love the songs. Learn words by heart for when they play them again in the early afternoon. Sing along in my head to âWaterloo'.
Edna still moans and screams at me but I just nod and hum along with the radio. Now I know she's angry with herself and it's not about me, I play little games with her like hide and seek. If I see a table that needs clearing, I save it for her to catch. Let her say, âTable five, Robyn,' see her shake her head at Jimmy. Jimmy looks across at me and grins. I might even let them pile up if we're busy; give her a whole list of tables to scream about.
Mum is serving people on her stall. It's been a month now since we've seen him, but Mum says he's bound to turn up sooner or
later. She says she's gonna tell him straight, she wants nothing to do with him.
Saturday is mad in St Michael's Market. People jammed together shoulder to shoulder, at Jimmy's Café it's non-stop food, and he loves it. It's late in the afternoon before I get a break today. People saying how warm the weather's getting now. The heat brings people out, Jimmy says. The till's full three times over. Jimmy puts the notes into a blue cloth bag, hides it in the bread bin.
I sit at a table, eating a cheese sandwich when I see him in Mum's queue. Black polo neck jumper, sleeves rolled up past the elbows. I put down my sandwich and watch. Mum doesn't see him at first. When she does she looks like something has been flung in her face. He holds his hand out towards her. She doesn't move, doesn't speak.
He reaches over the counter and presses something into her hand. There's nobody behind him in the queue. She can tell him to fuck off if she likes. Tell him all men are bastards. Choose not to live in a man's world. Start screaming out loud how he tried to kill us both. Scream out loud that he still can. She turns, picks up the scoop, fills it with peanuts and takes it to the scales. I push the plate away, my face and ears feel hot. She hands him the white paper bag and turns to the till. Counts the notes out into his hand:
That's one pound, and four ones make five. Thank you.
When we finish work, he's outside on the street. He walks with us to the bus stop and waits, pops peanuts into his mouth from the white paper bag. I look at Mum and think if she looks at me I'll scream at her,
what the fuck are you doing?
But she looks away. We're at the wrong bus stop, I want to say, this bus will take us back to Tommy Whites. The bus is full and I have to sit at the back away from them. I watch him talk and talk at her all
the way back to the flat, saying stuff into her ear. Her face stays straight ahead.
Once we're inside I go to my room, open the window and stick my head out. My throat is hot and the tears come fast and I can't stop them. I wipe them away but they just keep coming. I can hear them talk in the living room. That's all it is, talk. Mum isn't shouting or throwing stuff at him. She talks, and all I can do is wait.
When it's dark, Mum comes into my room. âRobyn, we're just going around the Stanley for the last hour. You can watch the new telly if you like. Your dad got us it off a man in the pub. The picture on it's a bit fuzzy, better than nothing though. I'll bring curry and chips in later.'
Her words suck the air out of me.
She chose to keep me.
Why keep what you want just to throw it away? She sits down on my bed. âRobyn, you know your dad had a bad time when he was a kid. His mum put him in a home and he got battered there every day by the adults. He's sick, love, needs help. He's said sorry and he's going to try harder and I believe him. When I think of the way Margy's been treated, left with all of them kids on her own. At least he hasn't gone off and left us. I'm giving him another chance.'
I hear the click of the latch then push my head out of the window. I hate this flat; the tiny kitchen with no space to turn around. The three-sided table pressed tight against the wall, and the tablecloth full of holes.
I hate how she tricked me with all that talk about men, and how they're no good. And about how we were going to get a place of our own. All lies. And now, she's gone out for a drink with a man who can kill us both any time he chooses. I hate how people blame the wrong somebody for how bad things have been for them. But right now, I hate her for not wanting better. I wonder
what the next thing to make him snap will be? Somebody closes the door too loud? Somebody puts his slippers in the wrong place in the living room? Somebody peels potatoes the wrong shape for roasting? Nellie said next time Mum might not be so lucky. I think she's right. I check under my pillow, the knife's still there. Knowing it's there makes me feel safe.
I don't have to change schools, Mum says, as it's my last couple of weeks at Our Lady's. All of the teachers are nice to us. Even Blackbeard, the dinner lady, lines us up without a poke. They say we're off to big school soon and it's going to be a very different story. Heads get patted more, we get smiled at more and in the dinner centre our plates are filled up more. Mr Thorpe puts the telly on for an hour for us in the morning while he teaches Gavin to count without using his fingers. When Gavin eventually does it, Mr Thorpe leaves the room to fetch Mr Merryville. Gavin gets to choose a treat from Mr Merryville's box. Mr Thorpe has a grin on his face which lasts all day.