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Authors: Carol Birch

BOOK: Jamrach's Menagerie
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He gave her a card with his name on.

We ate wel that night, no hunger sickness for me. I was very happy, fil ed up with love for the tiger. She washed my toes with warm water and rubbed them with butter she got from Mrs Regan. Mr Reuben sat in our room sucking on his pipe, and al the neighbours jostled at our door. It was like a carnival. Ma was tickled pink and kept tel ing everyone, ‘A tiger! A tiger! Jaffy got carried off by a tiger!’

The tiger made me. When my path and his crossed, everything changed. After that, the road took its branching way, wil y-nil y, and off I went into the future. It might not have been so. Nothing might ever have been so. I might not have known the great thing that came to pass. I might have taken home Mr Reuben’s baccy and gone upstairs to my dear ma and things would have gone altogether differently.

The card sat propped importantly on the mantelpiece next to Ma’s hairbrush and a jug of wispy black feathers, and when Mrs Regan’s son Jud came home from work he read it to us.

Charles Jamrach
Naturalist and Importer of Animals, Birds
and Shells

2

The first time I saw Tim Linver he was standing out in our street shouting up at the house.

‘Jaffy Brown’s wanted!’

It was the morning after my great encounter. I was standing in the room of Mari-Lou and Silky, who knew nothing of my adventure, the tops of my toes stil burning and my plasters turning dirty and raggy. Mari-Lou, unlaced, fat brown breasts spil ing, counted pennies into my palm for the fried fish stal , and a penny for me for going. Mari-Lou wore her hair very black with scarlet roses at the sides. Elaborate crinkles sprouted round her eyes, and a great round bel y stuck out in front and carried her forward. ‘Now, Mister Jaffy,’

she instructed, ‘no brown bits. Yah? No brown bits and a nice big pickle, and no you sucking on it.’ Her rouge was faded. The mountain of silk that was Silky was sitting up in bed with her two thin breasts drooping down to her waist.

They’d have their fish supper in bed and be snoring deeply in half an hour.

And the cry came: ‘Jaffy Brown’s wanted!’

I went to the window and looked out with the pennies warm in my hand and there he was. Older, bigger than me, different as could be, straight goldy-haired, pretty and girl-like of face. Tim Linver. It was late morning, the street thronged.

‘Who wants him?’ I shouted.

‘Jamrach wants him,’ he said. ‘Come down.’

‘What about our cod, Mister Jaf?’ Mari-Lou’s long red claws dug into my arm.

‘I’m going!’ I cried and bounded down the stairs.

The boy came forward. ‘You him?’ he asked gracelessly.

‘Yes.’

‘I’ve got to get you a raspberry puff,’ he said morosely.

‘Jamrach said.’

The raspberry puffs in the windows of the pastry cook’s shop I walked past every day on Back Lane were beyond me. The berries bled juice through their hairs. The furrowed cream was pale gold, the pastry damp with sugar.

The tiger had opened magical doors.

‘I’m running an errand,’ I said. ‘I’ve got to get fish.’

‘Well,
I’ve
got to get you a raspberry puff and take you to Jamrach,’ he said, as if that was far more important. ‘Getting the special grand tour, you are. See al the wild animals?’

Mari-Lou leaned out of the window. ‘Off you go and get that fish, you, Mister Jaf!’

‘What’s it like getting eaten?’ the boy said.

‘Eaten?’

‘You’re eaten,’ he said, ‘so they say.’

‘Do I look it?’

‘It’s al around that you’re eaten,’ he said, ‘eaten up and just your head left on the stones.’

I saw it, my head on the stones. It made me laugh.

‘Just your head,’ he said, ‘and your hands and feet. And some bits of bone, I suppose, gnawed ragged.’

‘Didn’t hurt a bit,’ I said.

Mari-Lou threw a bottle at my head. It missed and smashed in the gutter.

‘Two ticks,’ I said to the boy. ‘Wait.’ And I ran al the way to the fried fish stal and al the way back.

Mrs Regan was just taking up her post on the doorstep and looked disapprovingly at my filthy feet as I shot past her.

‘You’l get blood poisoning, you wil ,’ she remarked. I pelted upstairs and shoved the steaming bundle into Mari-Lou’s eager red claws. Mari-Lou and Silky liked their fish drenched til it was soggy. My eyes stang from the vinegar. I’d forgotten the pickle. You’d have thought I’d robbed a cripple. I had to give them back a penny, but I didn’t care. Wild animals were roaming in my head: lions, tigers, elephants, giraffes. I was going to have a raspberry puff and see the animals.

The boy was stil there when I reached the street, hands deep in his pockets, shoulders high. ‘Come on,’ he said, and I fol owed his straight, insolent back down through the crowds between the market stal s til we came out on Back Lane, where he barred me from going with him into the shop with one movement of his arm and not a word. Himself, he went in and requested one raspberry puff to eat now please, Rose, darling, as if he was a man. I did not know then that he was only a year my senior and thought he must be at least eleven.

I could see Rose through the glass, a nice smily girl with flour dusting her eyelashes. Then he strol ed out, looked up at the sky, handed me a raspberry puff nestled in a little napkin for me to hold to keep my fingers clean. Not that they were clean in the first place.

There he stood with his hands in his pockets and watched me eat the raspberry puff. The first bite was so bitterly sweet the corners of my mouth ached. So beautiful, a film of tears stung my eyes. Then the pain dispersed and there was only delight. I had never tasted raspberry. Never tasted cream.

The second bite was greedy and gorging, stopping my mouth up. He had eyes like a statue. Never moved. He’d probably never had a raspberry puff himself. He was better dressed then me, shoes and al , but stil , I bet he never ate a raspberry puff in his life.

‘Want a bit?’ I said.

He shook his head sharply and made that banning motion with his arm again, smiling a little, proudly.

The smel hit me first, a good thril ing smel , stronger than cheese. Then the noise. We came in from the street to a lobby where coats were hung, and boxes and great sacks stored, and a green parrot leaned over me and peered into my face. It looked as if it knew something funny.

‘She speaks,’ said the boy. ‘Go on, Flo, say: “Five pounds, darlin’.”’

Flo cocked her head sharply, shifting her gaze to him in a sympathetic way but saying nothing.

‘Five pounds, darlin’! Go on, you stupid bird.’

She blinked. He made a quick sound of disgust and led me to an open door from which a smog of dark smoke was visibly spreading into the hal .

‘Here he is, Mr Jamrach. He’s had his creamy doodah.’

I fol owed him in. The great, red-faced Jamrach came down through the murk with a smile and cried: ‘Ha! Jaffy Brown!’ He punched me gently on the shoulder. ‘Did you have a good supper last night?’ He bent down with his face so close I could count the red veins in the whites of his eyes.

The air was heavy, lush and rotting, fil ed with traces of bowels and blood and piss and hair, and something overal I could not name, which I suppose was wildness.

‘Mutton stew,’ I said. ‘It was lovely.’

‘Excel ent!’

Mr Jamrach stood up and rubbed his palms together. He wore a business suit that made him look stout, and his hair was parted in the middle and slicked down with oil.

‘Bulter,’ he said to a pale young man scowling and picking his nails behind a very untidy desk, ‘get Charlie out.’

Bulter stood, long and thin, flounced round the desk and stopped before a large cage. A wonderful, outrageous bird perched attentively, watching the dim room as if it was the most wonderful show. The bird was al colours, and its beak was bigger than its body.

‘Come out, Charlie, you stupid bird,’ Bulter said, lifting the latch.

Charlie danced with delight. Didn’t he crawl as gentle as a sleepy kitten into Bulter’s arms and nestle up against his breast with that hard monster beak and the downturned head bashful? Bulter stroked the black feathers on top of the bird’s head. ‘Daft he is,’ he said, turned and placed Charlie in my arms. Charlie raised his head and looked into my face.

‘He’s a toucan,’ Tim said.

‘Got the touch, you have,’ Bulter said to me. ‘He likes you.’

‘Likes everyone,’ Tim said.

Charlie was a sane and wil ing bird. So was Flo, the parrot in the lobby. The birds that came after were not.

Mr Jamrach led me through the lobby and into the menagerie. The first room was a parrot room, a fearsome screaming place of mad round eyes, crimson breasts that beat against bars, wings that flapped against their neighbours, blood red, royal blue, gypsy yel ow, grass green.

The birds were crammed along perches. Macaws hung upside down here and there, batting their white eyes, and smal green parrots flittered above our heads in drifts. A host of cockatoos looked down from on high over the shril madness, high crested, creamy breasted. The screeching was like laughter in hel .

‘This is how they like it,’ Jamrach said.

My eyes watered. My ears hurt.

‘They flock.’

‘They’re crying out for parrots,’ Tim Linver said sagely, bobbing alongside with a loose and cocky gait.

‘Who is?’

‘People is.’

I turned my head. Smal ones, pretty things, blue, red, green, yel ow, in rows behind the wire, good as gold and quiet.

‘My parakeets,’ said Jamrach. ‘Lovely birds.’

‘In and out in no time, this lot.’ Tim rocked back on his heels, speaking like a man, as if the entire operation belonged to him.

The second room was quieter. Hundreds of birds, like sparrows but done out in al the colours of the rainbow, in long boxes. A wal of bluebirds, breasts the colour of rose sherbet. The air, fluty with song, like early morning.

‘Six shil ings a pair,’ Tim said.

The third and last bird room was completely silent. Al the way up to the ceiling, tiny wooden cages piled on top of one another, in each one a bird just the right size to fil the space, al of them mute and stil . More than anything I’d seen, this room bothered me. I wondered if Mr Jamrach would let me have one. I could tame it and it would fly free in our room and sing.

Out into the dazzling yard. Bulter from the office was there with another man, sweeping up outside a pen. A camel chewed behind the bars. A camel has to chew like it has to breathe. I know that now. Then, I might as wel have stepped into a picture book. The animals were the stuff of fairy tales, the black bear with the white bib, the sideways-looking eye of the baby elephant, the head of the giraffe, immense, coming down at me from the sky to wet me with the heat of its flexing nostrils. I grew light of mind from the gorgeous stench. A wilderness steamed in the air al about me. And then I saw my tiger in his cage, with a lion on one side and some dog things on the other. The lion was a majestic and dreadful cat with the stern, sad face of a scholar and wild bil owing hair. He looked me in the eye for a whole moment before turning away in total indifference. A thick, pink tongue licked out, carressing his nostrils. The hair stood up on the backs of the dog things. My tiger paced, rippling, thick tail striking the air. Little black fishes swam on his back.

Scimitars, blades, dashes, black on gold, black on white.

Heavy-headed, lower jaw hanging slack, backwards and forwards, steady:

three paces and a half – turn—

three paces and a half – turn—

three paces and a half—

‘See!’ said Jamrach. ‘This is the bad boy. He knows he’s been a bad boy, he is shamed, see.’

‘Has he got a name?’

‘Not yet. He hasn’t found his buyer yet.’

‘Who buys a tiger?’ I asked.

‘Zoos,’ Tim said.

‘London Zoo,’ I said. I’d never been there.

Tim and Jamrach laughed as if I’d said something funny.

‘Not just zoos,’ Jamrach said, ‘people who col ect.’

‘How much for my tiger?’ I asked.

‘He is a ful -grown Bengal tiger,’ Mr Jamrach said. ‘Two hundred pounds at least.’

Tim babbled: ‘Two hundred for a tiger, three hundred an elephant, seventy for a lion. You can pay three hundred for some lions though. Get the right one. An orang-utan, now that’s three twenty.’

We went up a ladder to a place where there was a beast like a pie, a great lizard mad and grinning, and monkeys, many monkeys, a stew of human nature, a bone pile of it, a wal , a dream of smal faces. Baby things. No, ancient, impossibly old things. But they were beyond old and young.

The babies clung fast beneath sheltering bel ies. The mothers, stoic above, endured.

‘And here …’ Jamrach, with some showmanship, whipped the lid off a low round basket. Snakes, thick, green and brown, muscled, lay faintly flexing upon one another like ropes coiled high on the quay. ‘Snappy things, these,’

Jamrach said, putting back the lid and tying a rope round it.

We passed by a huge cat with pointed ears and eyes like jewels that miaowed like a kitten at us. Furry things ran here and there about our feet, pretty things I never could have imagined. He said they came from Peru, whatever far place that was. And right at the end in the darkest place, sitting down with his knuckles turned in, was an ape who looked at me with eyes like a man’s.

That was al I ever wanted. To stay among the animals for ever and ever and look into their eyes whenever I felt like it.

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