Authors: Deborah Moggach
âYou said I wasn't to have sweeties from men I don't met before.'
âSweeties?'
âBut he's my friend.'
âActually, they're throat pastilles,' said the man. âSunny Jim here always likes them.'
I paused, steadying myself. âBut . . . what about . . . the pills?'
âPills?' said the man. âWhat's this?'
âThe pills,' I said to Teddy. âThe
pills.'
He gazed at me with his clear blue eyes. I lunged forward and shook him.
âWhat've you been eating?' said the man. âYou pinched her aspirins?'
I gripped his frail shoulders, digging my nails in. âTeddy!' I screeched, sobbing.
âSpeak up,' the man told him.
âTeddy! The pills in my room!'
Teddy paused, jiggling the scissors. Then he said, âThey're in the bomb store, stupid.'
âThe where?'
âThe bomb store,' he said patiently. âUnder your stupid bed. You're hurting.'
They were. I fished them out, grey with fluff, and wrapped the twenty-one pills in my handkerchief.
If you think I was too shaken to go out that night, you're wrong.
Oh, I was shaken; you're right about that. I could hardly put on my eyeliner. It kept smudging and I had to rub it off and start again. I'd never hated myself so much in my life.
I went into the kitchen and ate a whole tin of creamed rice, scooping it out with a spoon. Some slopped on to the floor.
I was going to the Spread Eagle disco with Naz, a girl from work. Thank goodness the music was too loud for us to talk. I jiggled about, full of rice pudding. After she'd gone I got into a van with two people. We'd shouted a bit at each other in the disco, in the pulsing gloom. They'd had a lot to drink. I hadn't. The only thing I discovered was that one of them, the skinny one, was a compère at a holiday camp each year. He said it was worth it, for the crumpet. He said he'd had twenty-two last season, sixteen of them virgins. He said it was all to do with the way he held the microphone. He said he had to sing dopey songs for the kids, âPuff the Magic Dragon', crap like that.
We were parked near the canal. I could hear the roar of the sluice-gates and the roar of the traffic, farther off. I remember telling myself: this is me, sitting here. I sat numb as a doll, but perspiring too. I kept my mind locked shut; if I closed my eyes I saw Teddy swelling up.
Do what you want with me. That's what I told myself, lavishly, but I was sure they were too drunk to hurt me. Giggling, they manhandled me into the back, pressing the breath out of me. My spine scraped against a petrol can.
Despite the bragging they didn't manage it so well; they snorted and swore, they were even more embarrassed than me. An elbow butted my eye. As far as I could feel â and I didn't want to â one of them stayed as soft as a puppy. I ended up half-buried under a tow-rope, in a litter of unpaid parking tickets, all slippery Cellophane, and soon the other one gave up as well. It was too dark for his mate to know â only I did, and I was really afraid then. I thought he'd get violent with me, because I'd known he hadn't managed it. So I struggled up and groped for my handkerchief, to blow my nose. But I took out the wrong handkerchief . . . I felt the pills scattering over my blouse, which neither of them had bothered to unbutton.
They let me out at the roundabout. I realized, with a sick sort of satisfaction, that they hadn't even known my name. I tucked in my skirt and took a breath. Opposite, the AA caravan was shuttered; under the sodium light its tulips, like everything else, were a flat brown.
A week later, when my back had healed, Teddy wandered off as usual. But this time he was driven home by the police. My chest closed when I saw the car bumping up our drive. But there he was inside it, alive. It was one of those blue and white panda cars, and there was a police lady climbing out, holding his hand.
He was as chirpy as ever. They'd found him asleep in a double-decker bus. I knew the bus. You can see it from the road even now, it's parked in a corrugated-iron shelter just off the motorway. Its owner, a mate of my Dad's, was a stock-car maniac.
Teddy was really proud about the panda car; they'd let him press the buttons. But the next week, as I'd feared, we had a visit from the social worker. I think she called herself a visitor but she didn't fool me. She looked different from the lady who came when Teddy was new-born â she was younger and less hairy â but she behaved the same. Her eyes slid pleasantly round the lounge in just that manner. She wasn't a possible ally now, who might be able to explain things; she was an enemy. I was terrified for Teddy. I was also frightened for myself, and even frightened for my Dad. She gave off authority like a smell.
We were all four at home. She didn't get far with Mum and Dad. As I said, officials turned them into cowed strangers. My Mum shrank, sallow and watchful. Dad, on the other hand, grew bigger and more tongue-tied. They didn't seem to belong to me. They sat there, sharing their smokes.
We'd had a postcard about this, so Mum had prepared the house and told me not to put any muck on my face. For once I'd obeyed.
Mum made us some Nescafe. She wore her beige cardigan, buttoned up, with a white collar showing. With a shock, I realized she looked as old as a pensioner.
The lady â girl really â sipped her coffee and said that Teddy was a super kid, he could twist anyone round his little finger. A clink, as she lowered her cup. But that he was also an unusually disruptive influence at school. After consultation, they'd decided to allocate him weekly sessions with the area schools' psychologist.
âNothing wrong with our Teddy!' Dad's face was brick-red. âJust high spirits.'
He kept his gaze on the carpet. I was blushing too. What would Teddy say, closeted with an expert? Psychologists sucked out the secrets, didn't they? They drew them out like dentists' gas. That was their job . . . Especially secrets a person didn't know that he knew. Those were the important ones.
âYou can't!' I blurted out. It was me who'd caused Teddy to become like this. Me and Dad. He'd never really seen anything, but that was irrelevant. He'd been squashed next to us, as a baby. Since then he'd felt it in the air, like an infection, and it was turning him potty.
âHe's not potty!' I cried.
âHeather, of course he's not.' She leaned over and put a hand on my arm. âI do appreciate your anxiety. It won't start until next term, anyway . . . He'll be re-evaluated before we begin.' She paused. âMeanwhile, we need your help too. At home. You see, every child needs some discipline.' She laughed, hurriedly. âI don't mean physical discipline â “belting them one” â I mean, well, rules and security. That wasn't the first time Teddy's wandered off, was it . . .'
âThat's youngsters for you,' said Dad.
She turned, smiling. âWell, not quite, Mr Mercer. We have been keeping an eye on him, you know.'
There was a silence, then a hiss as Dad stubbed out his cigarette in his saucer.
Soon afterwards the woman rose to leave. At the door she paused:
âHeather, I wonder if you could see me down to the road?'
I knew, then, what they meant by âturned to stone'. I simply couldn't move.
âDo you mind?' she asked.
I turned my stone head slowly from side to side.
âDo what the lady says,' said Mum. âWhere's your manners?'
Somehow I lifted my stone legs, and managed to get myself into her car. It was raining and the windscreen wipers slewed to and fro. She drove down to the main road and then switched off the engine.
âI thought it would be nice for us two to have a little chat.'
I watched the drops sliding down the window.
âCiggy?' She offered the packet. I shook my head.
âJob going OK?'
I nodded.
âI hear you've set your heart on being an air hostess.'
I swung round. âHow did you know?'
âAh,' she said with a smile. âVe 'ave our methods.' She paused. âActually, your ex-teacher told me. Melanie Cockerell.'
âOh yes.' I willed this woman to stop. I'd grown just like my parents. I feared the lot of them.
âSeems a super idea,' she said, then paused. âI just wanted to tell you, Heather, that it's not just Teddy that we're concerned about.'
Traffic roared past, shaking the car.
âI've spoken to several people, you see, who know your home environment. They're all in agreement about this. You're close to your parents, aren't you . . . especially your father?'
I didn't speak. A lorry passed, spattering spray.
âAnd fathers like yours . . . well, he is a bit old-fashioned, isn't he? It's fathers like him who often find it hard to . . . well, come to terms with their daughters' maturity.'
I whispered, âWhat?'
âYou're seventeen, aren't you, Heather? No longer Daddy's little girl. But I think he finds that hard to recognize . . . That you're a grown, sexually mature young woman now.' She paused. âBut then, I suppose you've been forced into that rather early.'
Three lorries passed, spattering us. The car juddered. Then a coach went by, its windows a blur of light.
âPerhaps I'm being presumptuous. Let me put it like this, Heather. From all accounts, you've been taking on a role that young girls shouldn't have to take on . . . not until they're much older . . . Until they're, in a sense, ready for it.' She tapped her cigarette. âWhich means that you've rather missed out on your childhood.' She paused. âHaven't you?'
I sat there, stone cold.
âI mean the mothering role, with little Teddy. The adult role.'
In the silence that followed I realized that it was impossible to speak. My throat had closed up.
âIt might sound funny, coming from me â I'm only twenty-three myself, Heather. But I honestly think that you should-well, have some fun. Like other girls your age.'
Relief had drained my head. I nodded.
âFrom what I've heard, you've been â it seems a curious way to put it, Heather â but too good for your own good. Why not get out more, meet some fellas . . .' She put on a funny accent. âLive it up, down the disco.'
She stopped. âHeather, sorry â I see a blush. It's only a suggestion.'
From then on Dad grew strict with Teddy. When he came home from school, there was Dad waiting. He'd trek across the cabbage field, Teddy in tow, back to the distant tractor shed. Over his tea Teddy would tell me about all the sweets Dad had given him, and how if he was good Dad would raise his pocket money to a pound a week.
Between us, the fair head bent over his plate. He skidded the chips around in his ketchup. As usual, Dad didn't meet my eye. He knew that I knew the reason for this sudden solicitude. If Teddy stopped getting into trouble, he might not be sent to the shrink.
I did it too. I knelt down with Teddy in his bedroom, the old boxroom next to the veranda, and zoomed his cars across the floor. âNe-naw, ne-naw,' I whined, making the police noises he demanded. I should have been doing it for Teddy, who I loved more than anyone on earth.
Partly I was. But I was also doing it out of fear for myself.
I WONDER WHAT
you felt about your first job. Mine meant a lot to me. Yvonne, who worked for a surveyor in Staines, called hers a drag. She was always yawny about things â she was engaged, and yawny about her fiancé.
I didn't feel like that. But then I didn't know if my feelings were the usual ones. Most of my class left-school when I did. Perhaps they felt that taut, breathless separateness of sitting in a bus each morning, speeding away from their home.
At work nobody knew where I came from, or that they'd called me Porky at school. They knew me as Heather, in my cap and overalls, just the same as theirs. They didn't even know my surname. You'd probably call the work repetitive, but for me it was freedom. And it finally changed the physical thing with my Dad.
This didn't happen overnight, but gradually over that autumn. The best way I can explain is that he stopped presuming on me. My last year at school, when I was learning to use my power, he'd become both meeker and more blustering, but he'd still been sure I was his. And I was his, you know . . . I still am.
But when I became a working girl, this changed. I had my own money in my pocket â my money, not his. More awesome, I had my own cheque book. I paid Mum for my board and the rest I put into Barclays Bank, over the other side of the airport. Believe it or not, Dad had never had a bank account; heaven knows how he was paid for that field, but every other transaction he made was cash or barter. He regarded banks with a mixture of humility and suspicion, as if there might be policemen in there: not for the likes of him.
One night, when Mum had gone to bed early, I was standing at the kitchen sink cutting my fringe. The light was brightest in the kitchen, that was why. He came up behind me. One hand, with its smoking cigarette, touched my hair.
âYou'll go easy on that,' he said, âwon't you?'
âWhy?'
âGirls got their hair like that at work?'
âThey're mostly Asians,' I said. âI told you.'
âDon't want you to change.'
âI've always had a fringe, Dad.'
âDon't want my girl to change.'
âI'm not.'
He stroked the back of my head gently.
âYour Dad misses you, out at work all day.'
âI was out at school all day before.'
âSoon be off . . . off to the bright lights. What'll I be doing then?'
âYou've got Mum and Teddy.'
âWho'll I be talking to then? . . . Get so lonely, see. With no one to give me a hug.'
âCan you shift a bit? You're in my light.'