Don't You Want Me? (4 page)

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Authors: India Knight

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‘Everyone!’ Felicity says, clapping her hands. ‘Everyone!’

Everyone looks up.

‘This is Stella,’ Felicity says, pointing at me.

Everyone stares a slow, up-and-down stare, and I feel like it’s my first day at primary school. Maybe the slingbacks
weren’t such a good idea: this looks very much more like Birkenstock and unvarnished toes territory.

‘And this little bundle – ’ Felicity points at my arms – ‘is Honey. How old is Honey, Stella?’

‘Honey is eighteen months, Felicity,’ I answer in kind, making myself want to laugh, but not daring.

‘Aah,’ says Felicity, sweetly but pointlessly. ‘Eighteen months.’ She raises her voice: ‘Honey is eighteen months, everyone.’ This doesn’t elicit much of a response from the crowd, who keep on staring uninterestedly.

‘Right,’ says Felicity, crazily brightly. (Is she on Prozac? I don’t feel I know her well enough to ask.) She looks around her somewhat wildly. ‘Now. Introductions. This is Marjorie – she’s Play Leader – and little Euan,’ she says, pointing at the woman with the udders. ‘I’ll work my way around the group clockwise, Stella. So, at one o’clock: Emma and Rainbow, Amelia and Perdita, Venetia and China, Kate and Ichabod, Susannah and Mango, Julia with the triplets – ’ IVF, I think to myself – ‘Hector, Castor and little Polly – that’s Pollux, he’s a boy, but we don’t believe in gender stereotypes here, do we, everyone? No, we don’t. Oh, and Louisa with Alexander,’ she adds, almost as an afterthought: name shame, clearly.

I give Louisa-with-Alexander a broad grin, which she returns; I feel myself about to become hysterical. Ichabod? Mango? And call me an O-level Classics swot, but Hector? Hector, whose mutilated body was dragged behind a chariot until his face fell off? And Perdita, meaning ‘the lost one’? What do people think of when they name their children? I know ‘Honey’ is hardly conventional, but we only called her it because we optimistically thought that it
would force everyone to be kind to her all the time. How could you snarl at a Honey?

‘Righty-ho,’ says Felicity in her jolly Sloane tones. ‘That’s the intros over and done with. Make yourself at home, Stella. There’s a kettle over there if you fancy – ’ and here she puts on an amusing cleaning-lady voice – ‘
a nice cup of char
, and then we’ll get on with the activities.’ She raises her voice again and claps her hands: ‘Free time, everyone, free time.’

Oh, dear Lord, what an unprepossessing little group. I put Honey down by a pile of manky-looking Duplo and wander off towards the kettle, but am immediately pulled back by Honey screaming, and then crying broken-heartedly. A small but oddly corpulent boy has pushed her on to the floor and is standing on her hand, stamping his grubby trainer down on it again and again.

‘Oi!’ I shout, like a fishwife. ‘Don’t bloody do that.’ I shove him away – his arm is sticky – and pick Honey up.

‘Ow,’ says Honey. ‘Ow me.’ She starts crying.

The fat child is glaring at me, nasal leakage crusting his upper lip. His skin is the colour of greying underwear. He’s about three years old.

‘Don’t do it again,’ I tell him, showing only a fraction of the anger I feel. ‘You can’t go round hurting people, and look, she’s so much smaller than you.’ I kiss Honey and put her down again.

‘My Duplo,’ the child says, kicking it and narrowly missing Honey.

‘It’s everyone’s Duplo,’ I say, ‘and you weren’t even playing with it.’

The child crouches down by Honey so that they are the
same height. Before I can do anything to stop him, he’s put his face right next to hers and bitten her little cheek, hard.

‘Ow!’ screams Honey.

I can’t very well spend my first morning at Happy Bunnies beating children up, but my goodness, I am sorely tempted.

‘I said, behave yourself,’ I hiss. I can feel the poison in my voice, reminding me that I am not one of those nice women who unilaterally like all children. ‘Now go and play somewhere else. Go on, scram.’ Piss off, blob, I want to add, but don’t, obviously.

‘Icky, darling,’ says a voice behind me. ‘Oh, Icky. Were you a little bit silly?’

‘Waaaah,’ wails Ichabod – not a cry, more of a demented roar. ‘WAAAH.’ He kicks his mother right in the shins as she approaches. I see her wince with pain.

‘Silly? Hardly. He stood on my daughter’s hand and then he bit her face,’ I tell the woman – Ichabod’s mother, Kate, it turns out, a harassed-looking woman with badly dyed hair cut like an old lady’s, with weird clumps above the ears – above Honey’s screams. ‘It seems a bit much in the space of five minutes.’

‘Oh, Icky,’ Kate says. ‘Oh, Ick.’ Can’t she say anything else, like ‘Sorry’? Why isn’t she metaphorically walloping him around the head for being such a little shit? She turns to me, looking none too pleased. ‘I do hope you didn’t tell him off?’ she asks accusingly.

‘Well, I did, actually. Look.’ I show her Honey’s hand, on which the imprint of a trainer sole is coming up in angry welts. There are bite marks on her cheek.

‘We never tell Icky off,’ Kate says. ‘We don’t believe in
telling off. He is expressing his anger as best he knows and, being a child, that means physically.’

Zoom, goes my temper. Zoom, and whoosh. ‘I am expressing
my
anger in the only way I know how,’ I tell her, making a gigantic effort to keep my voice pleasant. ‘And being an adult, that means verbally. Though I’m sure I could muster up something a little more
physical
if you insisted.’

‘Icky’s just tired,’ Kate says. All the bulgy veins in her neck are showing and she is looking at me with pure hatred. ‘You’re a tired boy, aren’t you? Yes, you are,’ she says, adopting the tone we used to use with our dog.

‘Then I suggest you take him home,’ I say, in the same even tone, ‘and put him to bed.’

‘Felicity obviously hasn’t explained the playgroup’s Basic Rules to you. Telling children off is very old-fashioned. These days – ’ she looks me up and down: that phrase was a reference to my age, I expect, though she can only be a couple of years younger than me – ‘we don’t believe in disciplining children. They just grow and evolve organically, like, like
herbs
.’ Kate shoots me another filthy look, sniffs furiously and, ignoring my flabbergasted face, stomps away, Ichabod wobbling in her wake.

Herbs? And the vile nappy smell, I register, is coming from him. Tired, my arse. The absolute mantra of crap, middle-class parenting is He’s Just Tired. Hand grenade lobbed right into your face? Excrement smeared over your walls? Setting fire to hair? Walking up and down the dining table kicking glasses on to the floor? Murdering the baby with a kitchen knife? Aah, He’s Just Tired. Which always begs the question, never satisfactorily answered,
If he’s so fucking tired, why isn’t he in bed?

I want to scream; ridiculously, my hands are shaking. Honey has calmed down and I put her on the floor again: I really need that cup of tea.

‘Hi, I’m Louisa.’ The pretty blonde whose eye I caught earlier has appeared by my side. She pats my arm and smiles as she hands me the milk. ‘Don’t worry about her. She has some fairly peculiar notions about child-rearing. Ichabod isn’t potty-trained, for instance – Kate doesn’t believe in it,’ she says, rolling her eyes.

‘I’m Stella.’ We smile at each other. ‘Horrible little fucker.’

Louisa, to her immense credit, giggles. ‘Isn’t he?’ she asks rhetorically. ‘Absolute nightmare. Not the only one, unfortunately. As you’ll no doubt discover – you’re doing the activities this morning, aren’t you? I’d better let you get off, then. I just wanted to say hello and, you know, don’t worry.’

‘Well, thanks for coming over,’ I say, feeling immeasurably better. ‘See you later.’

‘I hope so,’ Louisa says shyly. ‘I sometimes feel like I’m in a madhouse when I come here. You – ’ she smiles – ‘have the virtue of seeming reasonably sane.’

‘That’s what you think,’ I clumsily joke back, but I am delighted: a friend! Well, a potential friend, anyway: a counterpoint to Udderella in the corner, who’s finally put away her giant breast and is proudly watching little Euan, who has the springy, hunched walk of a teenager, scamper up the indoor climbing frame, a pleased, satisfied, and – yeurch –
bucolic
look spreading across her bovine features.

OK. Perhaps it’s me. Perhaps it’s just me, and I am weird and have strange foreign ideas, and prehistorically believe
that children ought to have some vague notion of what does and what doesn’t constitute normal, decent behaviour. If it’s me – and it does seem to be – then I apologize. But Jesus Christ almighty, that was surreally horrible. Just after I’d led the children into a sing-song – we’d just got to ‘Hey, Diddle Diddle’ – Euan, son of Marjorie, pulled down his blue corduroys, squatted, grunted and did a poo right by Book Corner. No one said anything. The poo stayed there for minutes, with us all staring at it, until his mother languidly said, ‘Just a little accident,’ picked the poo up in her bare hand and walked over to the bin. Not the lavatory, which is situated just around the corner: no, the kitchen bin. Euan then lay on the floor, his enormous boy’s legs up in the air, while his mother wiped ineffectually at his bottom with a tiny, Economy nappy wipe.

Then, as we were making worm spaghetti out of red Play-Doh, Ichabod punched Mango right in the face. ‘Never mind. Icky has issues with anger,’ Mango’s mother said, in the manner of one attempting self-hypnosis, though I could see she was pretty pissed off. ‘Oh, he’s just tired,’ said Kate, Ichabod’s mother, at which, I am sorry to say, I sniggered out loud – me and this Ichabod are going to have a problem, I’m afraid – and earned myself another black look.

Polly, which is to say the unfortunate boy Pollux, delighted everyone by leapfrogging over gender stereotypes and choosing to dress as a ballerina for the duration of the games; his mother told him he looked very pretty, darling, and I tried not to think about Dr Freud. Polly’s brother Castor didn’t speak once, despite being two and a half, and played obsessively with the same train engine for two hours, screaming like a wild animal whenever anybody
approached him, so then I tried not to think of articles I’d read about autism.

Rainbow, Perdita and China, all about four years old, seemed entirely preoccupied with showing each other their knickers; Perdita taught the other two that her mummy called her vagina her ‘pussy’. ‘Miaow, miaow, pussy,’ they chorused for half an hour: one step to the left, one to the right and UP with the skirt. ‘Miaow, miaow,
pussy
.’

And sweet little Alexander, aged two and a half, sat quietly on the floor by a bewildered Honey and pretended to read her a book about bears.

Louisa and I did go for a coffee, and what do you know? She’s a single parent too. Although I always feel a bit fraudulent when I include myself in this category, a single mother is what I am: a single mother living in a big house, with childcare whenever I need it, which I do see isn’t the same thing as being a single mother on income support on the seventeenth floor of a tower block, but still. Louisa’s husband traded her in ‘for a younger model’, she told me, which is pretty tragic considering that Louisa is thirty-four. She lives in a flat above the organic bakery on Regent’s Park Road and works part-time as a hat maker. Over coffee and hot raisin toast, we had the kind of shy, delighted conversation two lonely people have when they discover they like the same things. Anyway, Louisa and Alexander are going to come over and play next week, and she says we should go for walks to the park together. So there was a silver lining to my gigantic cloud: Happy Bunnies turned out all right in the end.

‘See you on Tuesday!’ Felicity had called out as we left. ‘Marjorie is going to teach the children yoga!’

‘Yoga?’ I’d asked Louisa.

‘That’s what she does – she’s a yoga teacher,’ she’d answered.

‘Why does she weigh twenty stone, then? I mean, she’s hardly toned and sinewy, is she?’

‘Maybe she’s twenty stone and
very bendy
,’ Louisa had replied, and we’d laughed all the way up the hill. Yes, things are definitely looking up.

3

We go to Sainsbury’s after Honey’s afternoon nap, and when we come back at about six o’clock, exhausted (toddler in the trolley: total nightmare) the living room has Casablanca lilies on every available surface: in vases, in jugs, in the tiny Sèvres teapot my father gave me on my eighteenth birthday, and crammed into glasses and jam jars. There’s a delicious smell of lemon and rosemary permeating the house. Bang on cue, Frank appears, wearing my rose-patterned Cath Kidston apron. ‘Amends,’ he says, smiling his goofy smile. ‘I am making amends. Flowers, and then roast chicken, roast potatoes, glazed carrots and chocolate tart.’

‘You shouldn’t have,’ I say, beaming, as I bend down to undo the clasps on Honey’s buggy. ‘But I’m glad you did.’

‘The way to your heart is through your stomach, I know. And I’m really sorry about last night,’ Frank says, holding Honey while I scrabble underneath the pushchair to fish the three squashed bags of shopping out. ‘Hello, Honey.’

‘Oi here,’ Honey says, smiling at him. I don’t know why she talks like a simple yokel. It’s one of the mysteries: why does my daughter speak like Pam Ayres?

‘There’s no need to be. You’re a grown man – you’re allowed to have sex.’ Though so much sex with so many different people isn’t ideal, I think to myself. ‘Anyway, I’ll
just whisk miss upstairs for her bath, read her a quick story, and then I’ll be all yours.’

‘Cool,’ says Frank. ‘It’ll be ready at eight. Oh, and by the way, your dad phoned.’

Oh, God. ‘What did he say?’

‘Something about coming to stay for a couple of days – he’s ringing back later.’

‘Do you know,’ Frank says at dinner, ‘you’ve been in every night since I moved in.’

‘Not quite every night – I’ve been out a
few
times, Frank. And anyway, I’ve got another bloody translation hanging over my head, and I can only work in the evenings. Besides, you’ve been out enough for both of us. Pour me some wine, will you?’

‘Here, pass your glass. Well, pretty much every night, then. You should get out more. You know I’d be happy to baby-sit, or you could always ask Mary.’

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