Durham Trilogy 02. The Darkening Skies

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Durham Trilogy 02. The Darkening Skies Page 49

by Janet MacLeod Trotter


  On a hot sultry Saturday in Brassbank, people came to their doors to talk, grandmothers took children to the shops clutching hands and purses, and men padded out in slippers. But in Brassy, Carol noticed, the main street was deserted and still as a cemetery. Up here the air was cooler – catching a hint of sea breeze that set leaves softly rustling - and the houses set apart and hidden behind high walls. Brassbank hummed, chattered and sweated; Brassy breathed quietly and fanned itself gently in the heat.

  A long line of cars was parked up on the verge either side of the old lych gate, including Vic’s green Triumph Stag sports car which would be used to whisk Fay away after the reception at Brandon Castle to their mystery destination.

  ‘Look at all those people at the gate,’ Nancy exclaimed, pushing the boys out of the limousine and smoothing down her skirt. ‘I see Val Bowman’s come to have a gawp.’

  Carol squinted against the sun to pick out her employer, who waved and smiled. Typical of warm-hearted Val to take time away from her shop on a busy Saturday to wish them well. She and Nancy were related on the maternal side and Carol felt Val should’ve been invite, but Val had gone beyond the pale when her sister Lotty had married into the Todds. The Todds and the Shannons did not speak; something to do with village history. The Todds were union people, while Ben Shannon had gone over to the management side many years ago, and they never met socially. To Carol, these petty divisions were baffling and she was constantly in trouble from her mother and sister for transgressing them.

  ‘Carol!’ a voice screamed from the throng on the footpath. ‘Over here, you blind old bat.’

  She turned and screwed up her green eyes. Kelly, unmistakable in a tight shocking pink t-shirt and orange shorts, was waving madly. Her red hair was tied up with a trailing Indian scarf that Carol had persuaded her to buy from Bowman’s boutique, even though they both knew it wasn’t her style.

  ‘Hiya, Kelly,’ Carol shouted back. ‘Bet you wish you could be in this snazzy gear, eh?’

  ‘Shut up and keep walking,’ her mother hissed.

  But before they could pass safely, Kelly was darting out and emptying a bag of rice all over them. Nancy shrieked as rice found its way beneath her silk jacket and into her strappy shoes.

  Carol laughed. ‘That’s supposed to be for the bride after the service, you daft idiot.’

  ‘Don’t worry, there’s more where that came from. It’s pudding rice and it’s on special offer at Marshall’s.’

  Nancy was still shaking herself down, her heavily tanned face turning a strange orange, when Carol’s brother Simon appeared to usher them in. Simon looked handsome in his formal suit even though his blond hair was cut unfashionably short for the police force. His decision to join the force had pleased their parents and her mother was triumphant that he did not intend to follow his father into the mining industry.

  He winked in encouragement. ‘I know it’s bad for your image, but you look fantastic in pink.’

  Carol smiled. ‘You look pretty good too, in spite of that terrible hair cut.’

  Simon gave Fay a broad smile as she appeared on her father’s arm, and led Nancy down to the front, while Carol held hands with the page boys and whispered, ‘If you manage not to stand on Auntie Fay’s train, I’ll treat you to ice cream at Dimarco’s.’

  One squealed, the other said loudly, ‘That’s not a train, it’s a sheet.’

  Carol laughed low. ‘Well keep off the sheet.’

  Fay turned to hush them. Carol mimed zipping her mouth to the boys, who grinned, then the organ burst into the bridal march and they were setting off down the aisle.

  Carol was mesmerised by the rich colours – crimson altar cloth and the psychedelic patterns from sun shot through stained glass – and the earthy smell of fresh flowers mixed with cold dank stone. This church had stood here for seven hundred years looking out on the temperamental North Sea, while deep below the layers of black coal lay waiting to be roused like a beast from sleep. She shivered to think that she was a part of it: the cycle of birth and growing up, of grafting and striving, of decay and dying that had gone on for centuries in this ancient corner of County Durham. What would her contribution be? A measly part time job in a second rate boutique. For a moment she yearned for something greater, something exciting that would make a difference.

  ‘Come on Auntie Carol,’ David said, ‘we’ve got to go in the cupboard now.’

  She had hardly been aware of the marriage ceremony and now it was over; Fay, Vic and her father were heading for the vestry. Guiltily she grabbed the boys’ hands. Fay was so garrulous with relief and Vic his usual jovial self that Carol did not have to say anything or pretend it had been a wonderful moment. And yet, in a strange way it had been. Carol laughed at herself; must have had a touch of the sun.

  Following the jubilant bride and groom out of the vestry and past the throng of floppy wedding hats and eager faces, Carol squeezed the hands of her new nephews and grinned in anticipation of the expensive reception at Brandon Castle.

  Mick Todd climbed from the diesel train that had taken him five miles from the coalface and got into the two-decker cage. With a signal from the onsetter, the men coming off shift rocketed up the shaft to the surface and emerged, hot and grimy, in the blinding sun.

  ‘Out the night?’ he asked his friend, Sid Armstrong, as they made their way towards the newly refurbished pithead baths. His head still rang with the underground noises of cutting machines and water sprays, diesel locomotives and the whir of the belt conveyors. His orange overalls stuck to his broad back and sweat trickled in rivulets down his blackened face. The thought of a Saturday night’s drinking quickened his step.

  ‘Aye,’ Sid agreed, spitting dust out of his parched throat. ‘Fancy a trip over Quarryhill? Or we could gan on the bike to Whittledene and drink round the pubs there.’

  ‘I was thinking of a quiet pint at the club and a game of pool,’ Mick snorted, as they trudged past the preparation plant, ‘not driving you all over County Durham on my bike.’

  ‘Where’s your sense of adventure, Toddy man? We can take my Capri if you like. I know,’ Sid’s dirty face broke into a grin under his thin moustache, ‘let’s gan over to Brandon Castle and gate-crash the wedding.’

  In front of them a train emerged slowly from the towering coal bunker, its trucks loaded with coal, and drowned out Mick’s blunt reply. They continued to argue as they peeled off wet overalls and scrubbed off the day’s grime in the showers.

  ‘We might get a few free drinks out of old man Shannon – he’s bound to be in a good mood with having Vic Proud’s bank balance in the family,’ Sid said, pulling on clean jeans and a short-sleeved t-shirt with a faded Genesis motif.

  Mick rubbed vigorously at his long fair hair. ‘You’ll not catch me scrounging off the Shannons; just a bunch of jumped-up snobs whose family sold out to the bosses years ago.’

  ‘Bloody hell, you sound just like your old man,’ Sid laughed. ‘I don’t give a toss who’s not speaking to who, as long as there’s free booze flowing. All that carry-on between your dad and Shannon is ancient history anyway.’

  ‘Not to my dad, it’s not,’ Mick answered with a stubborn look on his clean-shaven face. He laced up his trainers and pulled on his worn leather jacket, not bothering to comb his hair, waiting while Sid combed his dark hair in the mirror. Mick was resigned to his hair receding, but his workmate spent anxious minutes every day checking his temples for signs of premature ageing. Sid had done so since their days in secondary school, Mick thought with amusement, and would probably continue to do so until they came to cart him off to the old folks’ home.

  Sid inspected his comb for fallen hairs. ‘Well if you won’t come I’ll find someone who’s willing.’

  ‘Oh aye,’ Mick snorted, ‘like Kelly Laws, you mean.’

  ‘Maybe,’ Sid flushed. ‘At least that lass knows how to have a good time, which is more than can be said for you, you miserable bugger.’

  Mick sprang over and ruffled
Sid’s hair, pulling him backwards. Mick was smaller but stocky and well-muscled and deceptively strong. They were on the floor and wrestling in seconds.

  ‘Lay off us man!’ Sid shouted, struggling off the wet floor. He grabbed a can of shaving foam and aimed it at Mick. Mick retaliated with a wet towel and brought him down again.

  ‘Steady lads,’ Stan Savage, one of the older face workers, warned them. ‘I wish you showed half as much talent on the rugby pitch.’

  Mick swore cheerfully at their team coach but released Sid from an arm lock. The men grabbed their kit bags and swung out of the mine gates together into the baked streets of Brassbank. The heat hung hazily over the village and the sea had disappeared in mist. The monotonous bellow of a fog horn competed with the merry jingles of an ice-cream van somewhere in the maze of terraced streets. Children were in the back lanes playing hopscotch and French skipping and banging footballs off yard walls where goal mouths had been chalked. Two girls sped by on roller skates, blowing balloons of bubble gum as puce as their hot cheeks. One of them waved but was gone before Mick realised it was his younger sister Linda. Doors and windows stood open gasping for air and bleached, bone-dry washing hung in yards.

  As the men went up the street, they saw that a group of drinkers at the Red Lion, rosy-cheeked from sunburn and liquor, had spilled outside with their pints. The smell of hops wafted to them on the hot air and beckoned them to quench their thirst.

  ‘Just one, eh?’ Sid suggested, already dropping his bag from his shoulder.

  Mick grinned, thinking this was how so many Saturday night binges with Sid had started in the past.

  ‘Aye, just one.’

  By the time Mick reached home, the intense heat had gone out of the day and he found his mother and Auntie Val sitting on the back steps of the neat yard, smoking in the evening sun. His motorbike leant against the wall, covered in tarpaulin and surrounded by pungent-smelling boxes of red and white geraniums.

  ‘I’ve got to say, she was a lovely bride,’ Val chattered. ‘That dress must’ve cost a fortune - I’d say hundreds – and that’s just for starters.’

  ‘Yes,’ his mother agreed. ‘Think of the pageboys’ outfits.’

  ‘I wish she’d bought them at my boutique,’ Val said ruefully. ‘And the bridesmaid’s dress was a picture. Funny seeing Carol Shannon in a dress – doesn’t happen often.’

  Lotty Todd gave a short laugh. ‘Looked like butter wouldn’t melt! But we all know better. I don’t know why you let her work in the shop. You say she’s always late or skiving off.’

  ‘Carol’s a nice girl underneath the wild image,’ Val defended. ‘And I bet she wouldn’t act so daft if her parents paid her an ounce of attention.’

  Lotty ground out her cigarette and stood up to greet her son, pulling at her short cotton skirt.

  ‘Hello pet, tea’s in the fridge; ham salad and potatoes. I didn’t want it curling up in the heat. Been for a drink with Sid?’

  Mick nodded and grinned. ‘And you’ve been nosing at all the posh folk, by the sounds of it. Don’t let Dad hear.’

  Lotty fiddled with her fading fair hair. ‘Oh, what’s the harm in it? Anyway, your father’s been up at the allotment all day. If I didn’t know better, I’d think he was keeping a woman up there, the hours he spends.’

  ‘Honestly Lotty,’ Val laughed, ‘he’s making the most of the good weather.’

  Mick kept to himself that his father spent most of his time with his feet up, reading newspapers and library books in his corrugated shed. He followed his mother into the kitchen. In the late sixties, when the Coal Board had installed inside toilets and bathrooms in the houses in Septimus Street, they had knocked the tiny scullery and kitchen into one. His mother got rid of the old range that she had battled with for over twenty years and installed a new gas cooker, as well as a fridge instead of the cold slab in the larder. Lotty was keen on any gadgetry going: an electric mixer two years ago, a telephone at the bottom of the stairs and a teasmaid in the bedroom last Christmas. Mick recalled recent skirmishes with his father over gas central heating.

  ‘Nice and clean, Charlie,’ Lotty had argued. ‘No more coal dust or need to decorate every year.’

  ‘We work down a pit,’ Charlie had protested. ‘Coal is a perk of the job – keeps the boiler red-hot. Whoever heard of a colliery house without coal?’

  ‘We could still keep a coal fire for winter evenings,’ she had bargained. But Charlie had refused to discuss it further and gone off to the allotment muttering, ‘Gas, you bugger.’

  Mick slung his leather jacket over the back of a chair and sat down while his mother fetched his tea. Val followed, tidying up from the table the Simplicity dress pattern she had brought to show her sister. She hung Mick’s jacket on a peg behind the door, with a look that said he should have done it himself, then spoke.

  ‘There’s a new three-screen cinema opened in Whittledene, Lesley was saying.’

  Mick knew his aunt was about to organise him into taking her. ‘You and Mam should get yourselves over there and see something then,’ he answered, starting on the buttered bread. ‘Dad down the club now? Thought I might join him for a pint.’

  Yes,’ Lotty said, ‘he’s been over to fetch Grandda and take him for a game of dominoes.’ She poured him a mug of tea. ‘You’re not meeting Sid again?’

  ‘No, he’s got this daft idea of going over to Brandon Castle and the wedding reception.’

  Val gave a throaty laugh. ‘He can’t do that; he’s not invited.’

  ‘Anything for a free drink,’ Mick grunted, tucking into his food.

  His mother sighed, ‘I worry for that lad. He used to be sensible at school, but since he started mixing with Kelly Laws and her type, he’s gone off the rails.’

  ‘He’s just going to scrounge and drink or two,’ Mick defended, ‘hardly a hanging offence.’

  ‘And there’s that time with the motorbike,’ she reminded. ‘He had no right to take it without you knowing – could’ve killed himself or that lass.’

  ‘All right, let’s not drag that up again. Sid paid for the repairs.’

  But his appetite faded with the reminder of Sid’s recklessness. They’d gone drinking at neighbouring village Quarryhill and he’d decided to abandon the bike for the night. Somehow Sid got hold of the keys, driven it home with Kelly on the back and crashed into a ditch. Miraculously, both had walked away with only cuts and bruises, yet it had shaken Mick more than his friend, haunted by the thought that someone could have been killed. If he hadn’t drunk so much he could have driven the bike safely home himself.

  Kelly was bad-mouthed by many in the village – branded wayward and loose – but Mick quite liked her. She’d had a hard time, losing her mother as a small child and coping with a drunkard for a father. People didn’t make enough allowance for Kelly having to grow up too quickly.

  Mick pushed his plate away, noticing the look passing between mother and aunt. Was it so obvious that he avoided taking the bike out these days? Both Val and Sid kept thinking up excuses to get him out on it again. Well, he hadn’t lost his nerve, he just wasn’t going to take anyone for a spin when he’d had a few pints already.

  ‘I said I’d meet some of the lads for a game of pool,’ he said, getting up and grabbing his jacket. ‘See you later.’

  As he left he heard his mother say, ‘I’ll fetch Linda in and we can all go to the pictures. It’ll have to be local – I don’t want the bairn out too late – and Charlie’ll want his supper later.’

  Mick felt a stab of guilt and hesitated on the back steps. Lotty added, ‘Thanks for trying, Val. I don’t know why he’s so sensitive about the bike; it’s not as if he was even on it when it crashed. What’s the use of having it standing in the yard unused?’

  Mick strode across the yard without a glance at his neglected Yamaha, jacket over shoulder. Lotty watched him go from the kitchen window.

  ‘Well, it’s up to him what he does with it,’ Val said.

  Lotty s
ighed, saddened for her son. He had always been the easy one, unlike her forthright husband or rebellious cheeky daughter. Mick was uncomplicated and bashfully affectionate; popular with the other men because he fitted in. He would never be a leader like his father, but always a loyal and reliable follower and a good team member, as he had proved with the village rugby team. Until the motorbike episode, Mick had been as happy-go-lucky as Sid; now his youthfulness was dented and at twenty-three he seemed to carry the cares of the world. This sensitivity had surprised Lotty and she wondered if there was a side to Mick that had gone unnoticed in those busy years of rearing her family.

  Just then, she heard someone whistling an Elvis song and Eddy Todd, her brother-in-law, went swaggering past the gate in his outdated winkle-picker shoes and velvet-collared jacket; his sideburns grey but dark hair still slicked back with Brylcreem. He caught her looking and blew a kiss. Eddy in turned-up, well-pressed jeans, ready for a night out, could always lift the spirits. She waved back. He was an irresponsible spendthrift, an ageing Teddy Boy whom kids on their chopper bikes would trail and exchange good-humoured insults, yet Lotty knew he was the kind of man who would do anything for anyone.

  ‘There goes Eddy off to paint the town red.’

  ‘Lesley with him?’ asked Val, coming to the window.

  ‘No, Lesley was invited to the wedding disco remember?’

  ‘I think it was small-minded not inviting Eddy with her – they’ve been going out for donkey’s years.’

 

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