That night she made Catherine sleep on the settle with her, uncomfortable though it was. The next day at the Penny Whistle she asked for her wages in liquor and drank half of it before she reached home. She wandered the streets in a mellow daze, smiling at the Saturday shoppers, putting off returning to the New Buildings.
Just as she turned the corner into Leam Lane, she caught sight of a familiar figure running out from under the vast railway arches.
‘Kitty!’ she cried. ‘Hello, hinny.’ She lurched into the child’s path, catching her foot on the uneven cobbles. She fell against Catherine and they both bumped against the slimy wall leading into the tunnel.
‘Sorry, pet,’ Kate said, steadying herself. ‘Where’ve you been, eh?’
The girl averted her face and would not look at her.
‘Whas a matter?’ Kate slurred, pulling her round. ‘Been gettin’ into bother?’
The girl muttered, ‘No, I’ve been to the pictures with Belle.’
Kate focused on her. She became aware of another small figure in the shadows. Catherine’s friend hovered behind.
‘Hello, hinny,’ Kate said expansively, waving her forward. The girl stayed where she was. Kate turned back to her daughter. ‘That’s canny of Belle to treat you to the pictures.’
‘She didn’t.’
‘Oh. Where d’you get the money then? Not been thievin’, have you?’
Catherine shuffled her feet. ‘Our Jack give us it.’
Kate felt her stomach twist at the mention of her brother. It maddened her that he should spoil the girl when she could afford to give her nothing. She felt suddenly belligerent.
‘Well, it’s all right for some! You shouldn’t be playing round here, any road,’ she shouted. ‘Gerr off home, the pair of you.’
Catherine darted under her arm and was gone, leaving Belle to catch up. By the time Kate had swivelled round on unsteady feet, the girls were already out of shouting distance. But that did not stop her yelling, ‘If I catch you down here again, I’ll skelp you!’
She felt sick and dizzy as she toiled up the bank, filled with a rage she could not name. It was something to do with the shame of the half-drunk bottle of whisky that weighed so heavily in her coat pocket and the look of panic on her daughter’s face when she caught sight of her under the arches. How Catherine had turned away, pretending she had not seen her or did not know her. The girl was ashamed of her. Even in her befuddled state, Kate knew this. And the lass did not even know she was her mother.
The following week, the lodger, Bill, came rushing back early. ‘Been an accident down the docks,’ he cried. ‘Two lads. I heard one was called McMullen.’
‘Accident?’ Kate’s insides jolted. ‘What sort of accident?’
‘Falling timber - legs crushed.’
Rose gave out an anguished cry. ‘Not Jack? Not me bairn! Mary Mother, not the lad.’
Kate’s heart began to pound. ‘Are they all right?’
Bill shook his head. ‘Been taken to the infirmary - that’s what I heard. Don’t know any more, but thought you should know.’
Rose was whimpering in her chair, half praying, half babbling.
‘Don’t fret, Mam,’ Kate tried to calm her. ‘There’s dozens of McMullens down the docks - could be any one of them.’
Bill gave a sorrowful look. ‘Said he was from the New Buildings.’
Rose gave out a wail of distress. Kate threw her arms around her.
‘Father’ll be back soon. He can gan down the infirmary and find out.’
It frightened her to see her mother this upset; she was usually so strong and never shed a tear. But as they waited and Kate busied herself to stem her nervousness, she could not silence the voice in her head.
What if it’s Jack? If he loses the use of his legs, he’ll not be able to pester me ...
What was she thinking? He was her brother and she still loved him. Besides, she did not want another invalid on her hands, tying her down to this place for evermore.
No. If only it had been her father. If only he would never walk through that door again, making her life a misery.
Catherine returned from school and evening came, but John did not.
‘Maybes he’s at the infirmary,’ Kate suggested as she served up the tea to the lodgers and her daughter. Rose and she did not have the stomach to eat.
‘I’ll go over if you like,’ Bill offered.
Kate nodded. ‘That would be kind.’
Catherine kept asking questions. ‘How did it happen? Has Jack lost his leg? Will he get a wooden one? What’ll happen to his old leg?’
Kate could bear it no longer. ‘Shut up! Can’t you see the state Mam’s in without your daft questions? Gan outside and make yoursel’ scarce.’
Catherine scrambled off her chair and escaped into the street. Kate watched her skip over to the streetlamp where her friends were gathered. They swarmed around to hear her news. Judging by their wide-eyed looks she was exaggerating the tale.
Kate went back to clearing the table. She was carrying dishes through to the scullery when she heard her mother’s cry.
‘Mary Mother, it’s you!’
Kate dropped the plates with a clatter and hurried into the kitchen. Jack stood there, large as life, his face still grimy from work but unharmed.
‘We thought you’d had an accident,’ Rose gasped, holding out her arms to him.
‘Not me,’ he grunted. ‘Me da. Keepin’ him in for the night. Leg might be broken.’
Rose heaved a sigh of relief. ‘Thank the saints it’s not you!’
‘So old John’s all right?’ Bill asked.
‘He’ll live,’ Jack muttered. ‘Shoutin’ at the nurses for baccy and beer when I left him.’
Kate could not speak, as disappointment engulfed her. Yet she was seized with guilt at wanting harm to come to either man.
Catherine came running in. ‘Is me da dead?’
‘No, hinny,’ Rose said. ‘He’s in the hospital. Be back the morra more than likely.’
Catherine fell into her lap. ‘I’ll pray to Our Lady for him to get better, Mam. He mustn’t die with his sins unwashed.’
‘Aye, you do that,’ Rose agreed, stroking her head. ‘There’s a canny pile to wash.’
‘Time for bed,’ Kate said abruptly. ‘I’ll sleep with you the night, Mam. Kitty can go on the desk bed.’ She avoided Jack’s look. ‘We’ll not leave Mam on her own, will we, lass?’
‘Can I sleep next to you, Mam?’ Catherine pleaded. ‘Our Kate can gan on the desk bed.’
‘You’ll sleep where I tell you.’ Kate was sharp.
Catherine’s look was stubborn. ‘I want to sleep with Mam. She doesn’t smell of whisky like you do.’
Kate reddened. ‘Watch your tongue—’
But Rose intervened quickly. ‘She can come in me bed -just while Father’s not here. Now off you go, Kitty, before I change me mind.’
Catherine scampered off with a triumphant glance at Kate. Kate swallowed her humiliation and stalked back into the scullery.
***
The next day, John was brought home in an ambulance. The whole of the street came to their doors to gawp. One trouser leg was ripped to the knee and his leg was heavily bandaged. He groaned and winced as he was helped into the house, but Kate suspected he was enjoying the fuss.
‘Fought the bloody Afghans and marched with Lord Roberts,’ he cried, ‘but I’ve never had pain like this. Shouldn’t have let the bloody doctors near me. Fetch me whisky, lass.’
‘You’ll drink tea,’ Rose told him firmly. ‘Get him on to the settle. He can give his orders from there.’ Her look was unsympathetic.
Over the next few days, John held court from the high-backed bench. Drinking friends came in with bottles of beer and tots of rum, and sat around listening to the story of the accident. It grew in length and seriousness with each telling.
‘It’s a miracle you’re still here to tell the tale,’ Kate said drily, after hearing it for the ump
teenth time.
‘Hold your gob and pour us another drink,’ John ordered.
What was certain was that John had no intention of going back to work. A union official came to see him and talked about trying to get compensation from the yard. Kate watched her step-father visibly puff up with self-importance after the visit. But even she was excited by talk of lump sums. They could pay off all their debts in an instant. The bairn could have new clothes, she new shoes. Maybe she wouldn’t have to slave every waking hour to try to make ends meet. Oh, to be able to put her feet up at the end of the day and just sit for an hour!
Kate’s spirits rose in hope. There was another bonus to her stepfather’s accident too. As he found it so difficult to move around, it was decided he should sleep on the settle for the time being. Every night, Kate escaped happily to the security of the parlour with Rose and Catherine, knowing Jack would not dare follow her there.
Catherine, she noticed, was lording it over her friends with her injured father. She repeated John’s story until it became heroic. He had saved the other worker from almost certain death by taking the brunt of the falling timber.
‘And he used to fight the Afghans,’ Catherine boasted, ‘so my da’s braver than yours.’
Kate thought there was little harm in it. But one chilly Saturday afternoon while she was standing at the kitchen window rolling out pastry, she heard shouting erupt in the back lane. Catherine had been playing ‘shops’ with some of the other girls, swapping and trading buttons and bits of broken china and coloured glass.
‘You took it!’ Catherine yelled.
‘I never!’
‘You did so - I saw you. Show me what’s in your hand.’
‘Gerr-off!’
Kate wiped her hands on her apron and went to the back door. She was minding baby Alec for Mary and he was sleeping in his pram in the yard. The last thing she wanted was him waking up before she’d finished baking. On the point of calling for hush, Kate stopped. Something about the tone of the argument made her hesitate. There was menace in the other girl’s voice.
‘What you going to do about it?’
‘I’ll tell me ma on you,’ Catherine cried.
Belle rounded on her. The look of savage triumph on her young face made Kate go cold.
‘She’s not your ma!’
‘She is so,’ Catherine exclaimed indignantly.
‘She’s not. If you want to know, she’s your grandma. Me mam says so.’
‘No she’s not. I’ll hit you—’
‘Your Kate’s your ma. And she drinks. I’d hate to have a ma who drinks like yours.’ Belle thrust her face right at Catherine’s.
‘No, she’s never,’ Catherine gasped, horrified. ‘I’ll get me da on you for saying so - and - and he’ll belt you one!’
‘Your da?’ Belle laughed in scorn. ‘I’m sick of hearing ‘bout your da - ‘cos he’s not your da neither. He’s your grandda. You’ve got no da!’
Kate felt thumped in the chest. She staggered back out of view, gasping for breath. She could not bear to see the look on her daughter’s face. This was the moment she had dreaded since the day Catherine was born. But for her to find out from other children - friends - was too humiliating. She wanted to rush out and shake them till their teeth rattled for their cruelty. But she could not move. All that Belle said was true. Gripping the table to stop herself collapsing, she listened to the vicious taunting of the neighbours’ children who all took up the cry.
‘You’ve got no da! You’ve got no da!’
Through the window she could see them circling Catherine in the lane, chanting as if it was a game. Kate’s throat burned.
‘What’s all that racket?’ Rose asked, turning in her chair.
‘They know,’ Kate whispered. ‘Everyone knows.’
‘Knows what?’
Kate looked up, her face drained of colour. ‘Listen to them, Mam.’
The high-pitched chorus rang out across the icy yard. ‘She’s got no da! She’s got no da! Kitty McMullen has got no da!’
John paused in his game of patience at the table. ‘What them little beggars shoutin’?’
‘They’re teasin’ our Kitty,’ Rose said in distress. ‘They know we’re not her ma and da.’
John thumped the table. ‘I’ll thrash the little wasters!’ he cried, going purple in the face. ‘If I had the use of me legs ...! Get after them, woman.’ He waved his stick at Kate. ‘Chase ‘em off!’
But the next moment, Kate saw Catherine bolting through the yard gate, hands clamped to her ears. Tears were streaming down her face. Running towards the back door, she caught sight of Kate at the window and stopped dead.
They stared at each other for a long moment. Kate saw her daughter’s young face ravaged with doubt and confusion. The eyes that gazed at her were Alexander’s. How could she possibly deny the truth? There wasn’t a trace of McMullen in her. Catherine was Alexander’s through and through.
Kate smiled tentatively. Perhaps now the truth was out, they could start again. Mother and daughter. Catherine stood, shoulders heaving as she sobbed. She looked so vulnerable and alone. Kate’s heart went out to her. She stepped away from the window to go to meet her daughter, throw comforting arms about her. In that instant, she saw fear cross the child’s face. Or was it something else? Disgust.
Kate withered inside. Catherine spun round and dashed into the privy. The door slammed and Kate heard the bolt lock. She crossed the yard and stood outside.
‘Haway out, ninny,’ she coaxed. ‘Come for your dinner.’
‘G-go away!’ Catherine sobbed.
‘You shouldn’t listen to what Belle says.’
There was loud sniffing, then silence.
‘Just silly name-callin’.’
‘Go away - I hate you!’
Baby Alec chose that moment to wake up and start crying. Kate gave up with a heavy heart. She picked up her nephew and took him back inside.
‘She won’t come out the netty,’ she told her mother.
‘She’ll come round,’ Rose said.
But they sat on gloomily throughout the afternoon and the girl did not reappear. Eventually Mary came to claim Alec, and the lodgers and Jack came back for tea. Kate went out into the dark yard and hammered on the privy door.
‘You have to come out, Kitty. It’s past tea time. The men want in the netty.’
There was no reply. Kate lost patience.
‘If you don’t come out, I’ll get Bill to break the door down and hoy you out!’
She heard a movement inside. The bolt slid back and the door opened. Catherine slipped out, shoulders hunched and face averted. She passed like a ghost, pale and silent. Kate followed her back inside.
‘Come and sit by me,’ John ordered. ‘You can share the top of me egg.’
Catherine shot him a look, then slowly took her customary seat beside him.
‘What’s wrong with me chatterbox?’ Bill asked, unaware of the source of the tension.
The girl neither looked at him, nor spoke.
‘There’s no need to be rude,’ Kate scolded, unnerved by her icy silence.
Catherine glowered across the table. Kate filled with sudden fury. What was she supposed to do? She had protected her all she could. But none of them was immune to the bigoted censure of those they lived amongst. She had had to endure their whispering gossip and contemptuous looks for years. Catherine would have found out sooner or later.
That night, the girl did not go to Rose to have her hair combed or stand between her knees while her grandmother checked for lice. She would not go near Rose at all or speak to her. Her look was full of hurt as if she trusted none of them. She went to bed without a word.
Later, Kate found her curled up on the desk bed, hidden under the blankets. When she bent over her, the child shrank from her touch.
‘I’m sorry,’ Kate whispered, ‘sorry you had to hear it like that.’
Catherine burrowed further into the covers.
‘It
’s not easy for me an’ all,’ Kate sighed. ‘But now you know. I’m your mam and you’ll have to get used to it.’
Suddenly Catherine emerged, her face hot and tear-stained. Her eyes blazed.
‘Never,’ she hissed. ‘You’re not me mam. I hate you.’ Her chin trembled as she gulped back more tears. ‘You’ll never be me ma!’
Kate reeled with shock at the savage words. Her daughter hated her. She had never guessed how much she was despised. But it was written all over the girl’s hostile face.
Something inside Kate snapped, a last cord of tenderness towards her troublesome daughter. If her own flesh and blood loathed her so much, what hope had she for love in this bleak world? Alexander had not only deserted her, he had cursed her with a child who despised her so much she would disown her as a mother! Well, she’d waste no more time trying to comfort the girl. Let her stew in her own misery.
Kate got to her feet, blinking back hot tears. She wished she could tear out the pain inside her, run away and never have to face her daughter again. But she was chained to her for ever, tied to this place that was more prison than home. There was only one way to blot out the overwhelming desolation and rage.
Kate swallowed her pride and begged her stepfather, ‘Give us a lend and I’ll gan fill the grey hen.’
He fished out a coin from his waistcoat pocket and threw it across the table. Avoiding her mother’s withering look, Kate scrabbled for the coin and picked up the earthenware jar they kept for fetching whisky. She hurried out into the black, windy night, her step quickening at the thought of liquor. She would drink until she was senseless. Only then would there be no more pain.
Chapter 40
1914
In the spring, John received one hundred pounds in compensation. The mood at Number Ten was joyous.
‘That’s me set for retirement,’ he declared, propping his bad leg on the fender. ‘I’ll have a new suit for starters, and we’ll buy furniture for the parlour like Mary and Alec got. Brand new from The Store. What about that, eh, Rose? And you can treat yourself to a Sunday bonnet, so you can tak the bairn to Mass.’
‘I need a new suit an’ all,’ Jack joined in.
Jarrow Trilogy 02 - A Child of Jarrow Page 33