Potato Factory

Home > Fiction > Potato Factory > Page 6
Potato Factory Page 6

by Bryce Courtenay


  Mary, by now sufficiently out of her daze to understand what was about to happen, stared mesmerised by the razor in the man’s hand. She was too weak to fight, too exhausted even to resist, yet the spirit within was not yet willing to die. ‘Fuck me, kind sir,’ she said, her voice hardly above a whisper.

  The slasher leaned closer to her, carefully inspecting her face as if deciding where to make the slash. ‘Ya can make it easy on y’self, lovey, jus’ close yer eyes and think of summink beautiful.’

  Mary fought back her fear and smiled in a coquettish manner, her hands concealed behind her back.

  ‘I’m clean, I’m not with the pox, you have my Gawd’s honour!’ Her smile widened and her green eyes looked steadily at him, ‘G’warn, just one more time with an ‘andsome gentleman so I dies ‘appy, please, sir.’

  ‘Tut, tut, yer too pretty to die, lovey, it’s just a little scratch and a bit of a burn. A bit o’ punishment, a permanent reminder, ‘cause you’ve been a naughty girl then, ‘asn’t ya?’

  Mary kept her voice light, though inwardly her bowels twisted with fright.

  ‘You’ll fuck me to be remembered by and I promise you, kind sir, you too will not quickly forget me lovin’ ways!’

  ‘No fanks, lovey, I don’t mix business wif pleasure, know what I mean?’ A slow grin spread upon his face, an evil grin but with some of the harm gone out of it. ‘Yer game, I say that for ya, game as a good ratter and still a nice looker!’

  ‘Game if you are?’ Mary replied cheekily, knowing her life might depend on the next few moments. Though she had long since abandoned any faith in God she now made a silent prayer that, if she should survive, she would never again let strong drink or opium pass her lips.

  ‘Tell ya what I can do,’ the slasher said suddenly. ‘I can give ya a bit of a kiss, ain’t no harm in that is there?’ He threw back his head and laughed. ‘I’ll not spoil yer gob, just a little slash, add a bit of character. It won’t be the last time a man wants to kiss ya!’

  For a fraction of a second Mary could not believe what she had seen. The slasher’s laughter revealed that he was missing his two front teeth but to either side of the gap he sported gold incisors. Her heart leapt and started to beat furiously.

  ‘If it ain’t Bob Marley, last observed fleein’ from the laundry of a certain Chelsea ‘ouse, by means o’ the garden wall with ‘is breeches ‘alf on and ‘is boots carried, quick as a ferret down a rat ‘ole you were, over the wall with your bum showin’ where you ‘adn’t got your breeches fully up!’

  Mary, though weakened by the effort this outburst required, held her smile. She had a good head for names and faces, though in the ensuing years both of them had changed greatly and for the worse.

  ‘ ’Ow d’ya know me name, then?’ Marley demanded.

  ‘The laundry maid? Remember? We met in Shepherd Market? Me buying fish, nigh eight year back! You ‘ad a gold watch what had a brass chain. You was ever so posh! I took you back to me master’s ‘ouse. Remember, we done it on the linen pile. Well, not done it really. You see, before you’d ‘ad your wicked way with me the bloody cook come in on us and you ‘ad to scarper! Surely you must remember that, Bob Marley?’ Mary, exhausted, lay back panting.

  Bob Marley grinned broadly as he suddenly recalled the incident and the details of it flooded back to him. ‘Blimey! That was you? You was the dollymop?’

  He shook his head in wonderment. ‘Well ain’t that a turn up for the bleedin’ books! I remember it now, I stubbed me big toe ‘cause o’ not ‘avin’ me boots on, all black an’ blue it were, took bleedin’ forever to come good so I could walk proper again. I’ve told that self same story a ‘undred times or more. Oh, deary me, what a laugh, eh?’

  Marley had closed the razor in his hand and now he slipped it into the pocket of his jacket.

  They sat together in the alley and finished the brandy, talking of the things that had happened to them. Marley asked Mary about the abacus which lay beside her and she explained its use to him in accounting and numbers.

  ‘Pity ya wasn’t a man, lovey. I knows a gentleman, matter of fact I used to be ‘is snakesman when I was a nipper, before I grow’d, I’d climb in an’ out of ‘ouses like a rat up a bleedin’ drainpipe, thievin’ stuff for ‘im. This self same gentleman’s got word out, very discreet mind, that ‘e needs a clerk what ‘e can trust. Someone wif a bit of form, if ya knows what I mean?’

  Ikey Solomon, Marley explained, trusted no one and was loath to make such an appointment, but stolen goods were piling up unledgered and unaccounted for.

  Bob Marley pointed to the abacus. ‘Don’t suppose ‘e’d en’ertain a contraption like that,’ he remarked gloomily, ‘even if ya was a man. I think ‘e’s got more yer normal quill and blackin’ pot in mind, some old lag what is a clerk and can be trusted never to talk to the filth and what can be suitably blackmailed into keepin’ ‘is gob shut.’

  Mary explained to him that she could use a quill, ink and paper for clerking and that she knew how to write up a ledger. Bob Marley scratched his head, pushing his top hat further back in order to do so.

  ‘If it were up to meself I’d give ya a go. “What’s I got to lose?” I’d say. Nice lookin’ tart like you, well worth a try, eh?’ Marley mused for a moment. ‘But then I got a kind ‘eart and ‘e ain’t, ‘e’s an old bastard!’ He looked up and smiled. ‘I can give ya ‘is address, confidential like, mind.’

  He scowled suddenly. ‘But if ya tells ‘im who give it to ya, I won’t take it kindly, know what I mean?’

  Mary shook her head. ‘Gawd’s ‘onour, Bob, I won’t tell no one who it was what told me. I’m exceedin’ obliged to you.’

  Mary’s hopes soared. Bob Marley was not going to kill her, or even mark her.

  ‘It’s Bell Alley, ya know, ring-a-ding-ding, bell, got it? Islington. I dunno the number, but it’s got a green door wif a brass lion wif a loop through its nose, as a knocker, like. There’s a lamp post in Winfield Street where ya turn into the alley, only light in the ‘ole bleedin’ street, but it don’t work. Best time to catch ‘im is dawn when ‘e’s coming ‘ome. It’s not ‘is real ‘ome, it’s where ‘e keeps ‘is stuff and does ‘is accounting like. Wait for ‘im at the entrance o’ the alley; ‘e can’t come no other way.’

  Their conversation waned and then came to a complete silence. Bob Marley had shown no signs of producing the razor again, but the tension so overwhelmed Mary that she could not put the prospect of the razor aside and idle chatter between them became impossible for her.

  ‘You ain’t gunna cut me, then?’ she asked finally, smiling disarmingly at the man squatting in front of her.

  Marley coughed politely into his fist and looked up at Mary so that their eyes met again for the first time in a long while.

  ‘I’m sorry, love, but I ‘ave to.’ He smiled in a sympathetic way, and his gold teeth flashed. ‘I don’t like doin’ it in yer case, I sincerely don’t!’ Bob Marley shrugged and turned away.

  Mary was flushed with the brandy, but with only a few mouthfuls of stale bread inside her stomach she felt it turn and she was sure she was going to be sick.

  ‘Please don’t cut me, Bob Marley,’ she begged.

  ‘I won’t cut ya bad, lovey, just a straight slash what will ‘eal quick, a slash and a little dab of acid to keep the scar permanent like and as witness that I done me job. Yer still a corker to look at an’ all, I don’t wanna spoil that, it don’t say in the contract I gotta mutilate ya, I can make up me own mind ‘bout that! Cut ‘n acid, a slash ‘n dab, that’s all I gotta do accordin’ to me code of efficks.’

  Mary, attempting to hold back the bile rising in her throat, concentrated on looking into Bob Marley’s eyes. She didn’t see the razor come out of his pocket and she barely saw the flash of its blade when she felt the sharp, sudden sting of it across her cheek.

  ‘I’m truly sorry, lovey,’ she heard Bob Marley whisper. ‘If ya move now I’ll splash the acid, stay still, very still, so I don’t ‘a
rm yer pretty mug too much.’

  Mary wanted to scream and vomit at the same time but she clenched her teeth and held on and then there was a second blinding, unbearable sting as Bob Marley pushed back her head and poured acid into the cut. She could no longer keep her hands behind her back and now she clasped them to her face.

  ‘Jesus Christ! What ‘appened to yer ‘ands?’ Bob Marley exclaimed, then he rose quickly and was gone before the scream was fully out of Mary’s mouth.

  Mary could scarcely remember how she survived the next three weeks. Despite her pain and misery she had determined she would somehow fulfil her promise never to drink again. Denying herself gin and the opium pipe to which she’d become accustomed sent her into fearful spasms and cramps. She sweated profusely so that her clothes were soaked and she was only dimly aware of her surroundings.

  By the time she had set out to meet Ikey Solomon, though still shaky, she was over the worst of her tremors. The scar on her cheek, though not entirely healed, was free of scab. Bob Marley had done his job skilfully and her face, despite the scar, was not in the least misshapen, the parts of it remaining as is normal on a woman’s countenance, nose, lips and eyes where they ought to be and perfectly intact.

  Mary waylaid Ikey at dawn, just as Bob Marley had suggested. Standing in the shadows several feet into Bell Alley, she had seen him enter from Winfield Street and let him almost pass her before she stood suddenly in his path.

  Ikey stiffened and gasped in fright, bringing his arms up to his face as Mary stepped out of the shadows, but then seeing it was a woman he lowered his hands, dug his chin deeper into his overcoat and proceeded on his way.

  ‘Please, Mr Solomon, sir,’ Mary called, ‘can you spare just one minute of your time? I’ve waited ‘ere all night with news that may be o’ great benefit to you.’

  ‘What is it, woman? ‘Ave you got somethin’ to sell?’

  ‘Yes, sir, but I cannot speak of it here, you must grant me time to see you elsewhere. What I ‘ave to offer is o’ great value. You will wish to see a sample, I feel sure.’

  ‘Where will I come? When? Be quick, it’s late! I must be gorn. Where?’ Ikey snapped, expecting to intimidate the woman who stood before him.

  Mary had thought about this meeting too often to be thrown by Ikey’s brusque manner. ‘I shall come to you, sir,’ she said calmly, though her heart was beating furiously. ‘What I shall bring with me will be worth your while.’

  ‘Bah, humbug!’ It was unusual for a woman of Mary’s standing to confront him unless she had some urgent business, probably of the stolen goods kind. Or she might be a spy of some sort, or a trap set by the runners.

  ‘Who sent you? Who told you to wait ‘ere?’ Ikey asked.

  ‘I cannot say, sir, I pledged to keep me gob shut, but it ain’t no one what means you ‘arm.’

  ‘Hmmph! I cannot think that such a man exists,’ Ikey sniffed, though his instinct in these things was usually sound and he could feel no malice of intent in the woman who stood before him. ‘Very well, tonight, at seven o’clock precisely in Whitechapel. If you are late and not alone you will not be let in. You shall say one word, “Waterloo”, to the woman what answers the door, “Waterloo” and no other, do you understand?’

  Mary nodded, too nervous and overcome even to thank him as Ikey gave her the address of his home in Whitechapel.

  ‘G’warn, be off with you now and don’t you be late, you shall ‘ave ten minutes tonight!’ Ikey paused. ‘That is, if you ‘ave something of worth to show me, less, much less, I can assure you, if you doesn’t!’

  Without a word Mary moved past Ikey and into Win-field Street. She had succeeded in the first step, though she had done so with a trick, a deception, yes, but not a lie. Now she had given herself the chance to pick up the broken pieces of her miserable life and perhaps change it forever.

  At seven o’clock precisely that evening Mary, carrying her abacus, tapped on the door of Ikey’s Whitechapel home. It was not as big a house as any in which she had once worked, but imposing nevertheless and grand for where it stood one street from the Whitechapel markets. The door was answered by a raw-boned woman who appeared to be about forty and whose breath smelled of stale beer.

  Mary, afraid even to offer the pleasantry of an evening greeting lest she betray Ikey’s instructions, blurted out, ‘Waterloo!’

  ‘You’re expected t’ be sure,’ the woman said in an Irish brogue. ‘Will you be after followin’ me then, miss?’ The woman, taking a candle from a ledge in the hallway, then led Mary through the darkened house to the door of Ikey’s study where she tapped three times and departed, leaving Mary waiting in the darkness. She had a sense of being watched and then she heard a sniff followed by the muffled giggle of a child, though she could see no one.

  In a moment or so Mary heard the rattle of a key placed into the lock and the door opened, though only a crack. The light was behind Ikey’s head and Mary could only just make out his long nose, a single beady eye and a scrag of beard in the space allowed by the opening. The door opened wider and Ikey silently stood aside for her to enter the small room beyond. The door closed behind her and she heard Ikey lock it once again.

  Ikey brushed past where Mary stood, turned and surveyed her with his hands on his hips. He was wearing his great coat though he’d removed his hat and she now saw his face clearly for the first time. This she found the way she had imagined it to be. That was the point with Ikey’s face - to those who saw it clearly it was exactly what you would expect his face to look like if you knew his vocation in life. Behind Ikey stood a coat-stand and beside it a high desk above which a lamp burned brightly. Two further lamps lit the room to give it an almost cheerful look which contrasted markedly with the general darkness of the house.

  Ikey did not bid her to be seated, though there was a small table and single chair some four feet from the desk. Mary moved past Ikey and placed her abacus flat upon the table and then returned to where she’d formerly stood.

  ‘Well, what is it? Why ‘ave you come? Show me, I ‘ave no time to waste.’ Had she been a man who might be carrying news of a rich haul, Ikey might have been more circumspect, he might have smiled at the very least, ingratiating himself, but such pleasantries were not necessary for a woman of Mary’s sort.

  ‘Please, sir, you ‘ave granted me ten minutes, it will take some of this time to tell you me story.’

  ‘Story? What story? I do not wish to hear your story, unless it is business, a story o’ the business o’ profit, some for who it is who sends you ‘ere and some for yours truly! Be quick. I am most busy of mind and anxious to be about me work.’

  Mary smiled, attempting to conceal her nervousness. ‘You will assuredly profit from what I ‘ave to say, kind sir, but I begs you first the small charity of your ears, no more, a few minutes to ‘ear a poor widow’s tale.’

  Mary then told Ikey how she had been recently widowed from a merchant sailor who had been swept overboard in the Bay of Biscay. How she, penniless, had been forced with her darling infant twins to share a miserable room with a destitute family of five and pay each day from her meagre salary for an older child to mind her precious children while she worked as a laundry maid in a big house in Chelsea. How the husband of the mistress of the house took advantage of her desperate circumstances to use her body for his pleasure whenever he felt inclined and without any thought of payment. How one night a most frightful fire had swept through the netherken where she slept with her baby infants and she had been dragged from the flames but had rushed back to save her precious children.

  ‘I bear the marks, good sir, the marks of that terrible tragedy!’ She gave a little sob and withdrew the woollen mittens from her hands, holding them up to reveal her horribly blackened and mutilated claws. ‘It were to no avail, me little ones was already perished when I pulled them from that ghastly inferno!’

  ‘Ha! Burnt into two roast piglets, eh?’ Ikey snorted.

  Mary ignored this cruel remark. ‘I lost me bill
et as a laundry maid ‘cause of me ‘ands and being burned an’ all and not even a sovereign from the master of the ‘ouse to send me on me way!’

  At this point Ikey waved his hands, fluttering them above his head as though he wished to hear no more.

  ‘Enough! I ‘ave no need for a laundry maid ‘ere, missus. Be off with you, at once, you will get no charity from me!’

  ‘No, sir, you are mistaken,’ Mary hastily exclaimed. ‘I want no charity. I ‘ave come to apply for the position as clerk, the same as what you was lettin’ out you wanted, a clerk well acquainted with all manner of bookkeepin’.’

  Ikey’s face took on a look of bewildered amazement.

  ‘A clerk? You come ‘ere to offer your services as me clerk? A woman and a laundry maid is a clerk? ‘Ave you gone completely barmy, missus?’ Ikey thumped the side of his head with the butt of his hand. ‘Bah! This is quite beyond knowing or supposing!’ He made a dismissive gesture towards Mary. ‘Go away, I’m a busy man. Be off with you at once, you ‘ave already taken up too much of me time. Shoo, shoo, shoo!’ He made as though to move towards the door.

  Mary took the abacus from where she had placed it on the table. ‘Please, a moment, sir, Mr Solomon! I ‘ave a gift with the Chinee abacus, sir.’ She held the abacus up in front of her. ‘A most extraordinary gift what will make you very rich, sir!’

  ‘Rich? That thing? A Chinee. . .why, it be nothin’ but a bit of wire and beads! Coloured beads! What manner o’ trickery is this? Beads and laundry maids and ‘anky panky, roasted twins and drownings, gifts and very rich! Bah! Go! Be off with you at once!’

  ‘Please, sir, I beseech and implore you. I ask for no charity, not a brass razoo, only for a test.’ Mary appealed to Ikey with her eyes. ‘Me abacus, that is, me beads and wire, against your astonishin’ and well-known and altogether marvellous way with numbers. Ways what people talk about in wonderment.’ Mary gulped. ‘While I know a poor clerk like me ‘asn’t got no chance against such as your good self, it’s a fair chance I’m a better bet than most men who count themselves clerks.’ Then she added, ‘And I am trustworthy, most trustworthy and not known to the beaks, you ‘ave me word on that, sir!’

 

‹ Prev