Authors: Alan Watts
TOUCHED BY ANGELS
Alan Watt
s
Published in the United Kingdom by Aston Bay Press in 2012
Kindle Edition
Copyright © Alan Watts, 2012
Aston Bay Press, Dallam Court, Dallam Lane, Warrington, Cheshire, WA1 7LT
Alan Watts has asserted his right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 to be identified as the author of this work.
This novel is a work of fiction. Names and characters are the product of the author’s imagination, unless otherwise stated, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
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ISBN 978-0-9569830-8-4
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Conversion to ebook by www.danielgoldsmith.co.uk
Part One
East End
, London, 1912
A musky tang of oil and steam drifted
in wreaths through Rice Lane from the cargo ships at West India Dock, mingling with the soot and smoke of a thousand coal fires. The factories at Wapping beat a steady throb while their chimneys pointed to a slate sky. A retch of whooping cough came through an open window, while cats screeched fighting over a dead rat.
None of this could be h
eard by nine-year-old Robert Smith.
All he could hear was
the rapid sound of his own pulse, as his hand hovered over two straws, held in the grubby fist of Lenny Chapman. If he picked the short one, he risked a battering from Big Molly O’Brien. Topping seventeen stone, and with fists like hams, she lived with her mother in the house opposite, and was given to terrible rages over nothing.
The
other two members of the gang, Dick Morgan and Nigel Boakes were starting to fidget. Feeling safe, they’d drawn long straws ages ago and now they wanted some action.
It all became too much for Nigel, as he snarled, “Go on then, for fuck’s sake. We ain’t got all day!”
He glanced around nervously
in case they were being watched.
“
Yeah
,” added Dick Morgan, “what are you, a drip? You only gotta nick a couple o’ coins.”
He shoved him hard
and Robert sprawled against one of the empty beer barrels they were hiding between.
“
No, I ain’t,” Robert gasped, winded, as he pulled himself up, “and I’ll fump the next wanker who says I am, so fuck off!”
He threw a mouldy tomato skin at them.
“
Well go on then,” said Lenny through gritted teeth, “pull one!”
There was a fifty-fifty chance that
he
would have to perform the dare.
Robert closed his eyes
and pulled and knew before he’d even opened them what the verdict was, as laughter echoed all around.
He dropped it as he stood
and shook as he made his way, white faced, past the Dog and Duck, across the street, then through the open front door of the O’Brien house, feeling their goading eyes upon him.
The boys were tensed up, grinning and ready, for it was normally about now it all went wrong.
They had all seen Big Molly in action and some had the scars to show for it.
In the hall, where he was terrified of creaking floor boards, he could hear the sound of singing coming from the back yard and the squeak of a mangle being turned. There were stairs to his left, with a scabby cat at the top, staring down, its yellow eyes marking him.
The Irish kept their dead bodies in the parlour for a couple of days before internment, and that was where the pennies would be, pressed into the dead man’s eyes.
There were two doors, but which led to it? The left was slightly open, so he pushed it gently and peered inside. The pungency hit him like a hammer and he reeled back, gagging.
In the half light, he saw her sitting in a wing-backed chair, head back, amid puffed-up ginger hair, gaping mouth lined with great yellow teeth. An empty gin bottle was rolling slowly on the floor beside her.
He nearly ran, there and then, because his mother had warned him time and time again to steer well clear. He’d seen Big Molly knock grown men to the ground.
He closed the door carefully, walked to the other and tried the handle. It squeaked as he depressed it, only faintly, but he knew she wasn’t sleeping very deeply.
He closed his eyes in relief when he had pushed the handle down as far as it would go, wishing his heart would stop galloping, and carefully pushed the door open.
He was half way there. A couple more minutes and the prize would be his.
The curtains were pulled and the parlour stank of must
and burned tallow. A wooden crucifix hung on the wall, above a porcelain statue of the Virgin Mary.
He gazed at the coffin, balanced on two trestles, with a lit candle either side, each burned three quarters of the way down. A moth fluttered around one of them, the rasp of its wings the only sound. He saw the waxy grey face of the elderly body in the ochre glow, copper discs for eyes, cheeks sunken in, thin arms crossed athwart his narrow chest, over the moth-eaten suit with a folded handkerchief in the top pocket.
Taking the pennies was more than just a dare, they were desperately needed income, which, as part of the deal, he alone would benefit by. Robert’s heart thudded as he reached out, knowing he would faint if the mouth dropped open.
Then, just as he touched the nearest coin, he heard a shriek from behind. He turned to see the door flying back on its hinges with a bang and Big Molly charging at him with a soup ladle clutched in her hand.
The stench of urine hung around her like a green cloud.
“
You ’orrible little
pig
!” she screamed, spit flying from her mouth.
Robert darted around to the other side of the coffin, terrified. He could hear the others laughing outside. Running would be impossible. He was hovering, left then right, knowing the only exit from the room was her side.
She knew it too. “I’m gonna make you wish you was never born!” she screamed. “An’ I don’t care if I fuckin’ swing for it, and then I’m gonna put your dick fru that bleedin’ mangle, ’til there’s blood and fings squirtin’ out of it, that’ll teach…”
“
Flippin’ ’ell!” Robert gasped. “It’s only a joke.”
He saw the mindless fury in her little pig eyes and a raging certainty came over him. He was going to die, horribly and painfully.
His voice was papery, no spit at all. “Look, I’ll just go. If you don’t peach on me, I won’t peach on you, cause if my dad finds out you’ve ’urt me, he’ll…”
She took a sudden swipe.
It came so close it skimmed the tip of his nose, leaving his eyes watering. He tripped backwards, lost his balance and his right foot shot out, clipping one of the trestles.
The coffin started to shake, and before he could do anything, it dropped, tipping sideways. The body tumbled out face down, with the coffin lying on top.
Molly staggered back in horror
with her hands over her face, the ladle dangling frantically from one of her fingers.
An older woman appeared in the doorway, wiping her hands on her apron, as Robert was scrambling back up with his heart thudding. A black band circled one arm. She was Molly’s mother, a big woman herself, who muttered, in broad brogue, as she crossed herself, “What in the name of sweet Jesus…”
With that, Robert saw his chance. He leapt over the coffin, shoved between them, ran out into the hallway, skidded down the steps and was gone.
***
As Robert tore past them, t
he other boys, who had been holding their ribs laughing, suddenly came to their senses and took off. They stopped running after several streets, heaving for breath, watching the route they had taken for any sign of Big Molly, or worse, a cop.
Nigel Boakes, who was examining a graze on his left foot, was sure he wouldn’t be doing a lot of sitting down if this got back to his parents, and said so, while Lenny asked, “What the
fuckin’ ’ell are we gonna do?”
“
Well
I
don’t know, do I?” replied Dick Morgan. “Anyway, it’s all your fault, you stupid prick. I never would ’ave done it, if…”
“
Is it, fuck!
Anyway, they only saw Rob. They don’t ’ave to know about the rest of us.”
“
But you were all there too,” Robert protested, seeing human nature, starkly, and not for the first time, for what it really was, “and if I get
my
arse skinned, I’ll bleat, I can tell you that!”
They spent the next
minutes hiding in the shadows, watching and accusing each other of thinking up the stupid idea, swearing they wouldn’t do anything like it ever again.
Then, when they were certain there was no pursuit, they made their way back, their eyes peeled constantly, before splintering, and going their separate ways, knowing that by now, news may have reached home.
It was worse still for Robert, as his house was nearly opposite the O’Briens’. Shaking, he walked down the alley behind, so he could enter by the back door and not be seen, hoping that at that moment Mrs O’Brien would be too upset and angry to go around knocking on doors, shouting the odds.
***
He was in luck, but only because Molly had
flown into a hideous fury after throwing the statue of the Virgin Mary at the wall. It had struck it so hard, that when it shattered, a fragment flew back and cut her above the left eye.
Then, howling with pain,
she had kicked the parlour door off its hinges, and Mrs O’Brien had made a run for it, and hidden herself in the outside toilet, shaking with fear.
The neighbours had
heard the shouting and screaming, but knew the folly of intervening.