Sunday, 31 July 2016

Episode 5



Previously…

Everything had gone so horribly wrong: right from the beginning really. Trapped with a man who thought it was his right to complain about everything and never lift a finger to do it himself; whose only conversation was reading bits of facile nonsense from his newspaper aloud to her when she was trying to cook a meal, or get the kids ready for bed, or doing the washing.
“Listen to this…” If she ever heard that sentence again it would be too soon. And what happens when the children leave home and she’s left alone with him? She just couldn’t bear thinking about it. These are things depressions are built on. These are things murders are built on. And then there’s her latest disaster waiting outside on the kerb. And tonight? Round two between Beulah and Samuel?
“Can I go and play at Trevor’s?” She hadn’t wanted to look at his drawing so he had lost interest in her.
“What? Oh yes. Sure. Just don’t be late for dinner,” she intoned liked a parrot, just saying what a mother is supposed to say, like some mechanical toy. She wished she hadn’t said it though. It would actually be best if he was late tonight. She didn’t want him there when the action kicked off. Bloody men. Bloody husbands and daughters. They deserve each other.


And now...


In a daze she made her way upstairs and turned on the hot tap in the bath. Perhaps she could wash it all away. All her desires, all her unhappiness. She had kept them under control for so long, surely she could manage a few more years. A few more years of living death. It had been quite easy to achieve up to now. The difference this time was the boy. He had gotten under her skin and unlocked something in her that just wouldn’t go back into its cage. She had tried to walk away from him like she had walked away from all the others, but it wasn’t working. He was always there, like a nagging ache, reminding her that she was human…not an unfeeling machine. Now she thought of him and her body began to get excited again. She could feel how easy it was to throw caution to the winds. Perhaps she could just sneak a look to see if he was still there. No harm or danger in that? Perhaps she should give him a thrill and parade naked at the open window. Throw caution to the winds. That would be one for the diary. Some of the excitement was starting to come back now that she felt safe in her home. She felt her emotions surge inside of her, dying to come out. She so desperately needed…something…someone. At this moment she felt like she would go mad if she didn’t get some relief…some loving contact…someone who would wrap her up in a cocoon and keep her safe and happy….like her father did. He had always been there for her…hugging her and stroking her hair when she got into a tizzy…telling her things would be alright. She wanted him to stroke her again and tell her it was alright. Oh God she missed him so much. Her legs gave way and she sat down on the edge of the bath, her limbs shaking with delayed shock and excitement. Why shouldn’t she look for love if she wasn’t getting any at home? What did she have to lose? Her life was dead anyway…what would it matter. In her heart she had been divorced a long time ago. What was she afraid of? Beulah was just about to fly the nest and Joshua was growing up fast. It wouldn’t be long before he too would leave her - alone with him.
She dipped her toe into the bubble bath and admired her skin tone and her slender leg. “What a waste. What a beautiful waste,” she said, running her hand lovingly down her calf. ‘A body is such a beautiful thing,’ she thought as she stood up and stepped into the hot water.

An hour later she rose from the depths, steam rising off her damp skin. Her feet left soft wet footprints across the floor as she went into the bedroom. She set her towel-draped body gracefully down on the window-sill and stared at her reflection in the glass pane.
“Mirror, mirror on the wall, why am I not beautiful anymore?” But there was no answer. Her mind drifted with the afternoon breeze. Flecks of sunlight on the bedroom floor…butterfly dust on the windowpane, from all the angels that knocked in vain.

***

“Just say yes. Whatever he says, just say yes. Even if you don’t mean it – please, just for me, say yes.”
Beulah sat for a long time staring at her mother.
“What happened to honesty and integrity,” she asked.
“Nothing happened to them. They just don’t like it when your father’s around.”
Beulah almost giggled at that, but managed to keep a po face.
“Anyway, it’s just for the time being.”
“Till when?”
“Till you leave home. Your father, you may know, is not very impressed with honesty and integrity. He’s more impressed with obedience and silent subservience.”
“That’s draconian.”
“You don’t even know what that means.”
“It means he’s an old fart.”
“Yeah? Well, remember, your new boyfriend will be an old fart one day. And sooner than you think. Men become old farts long before they get old.”
“Well, daddy doesn’t scare me. He won’t do anything to me.”
“Don’t be too sure. You’ve never pushed him this far. I would be careful if I were you.”
“What are you two talking about?” asked Joshua from the doorway.
“Nothing,” says Clara.
“None of your business.”
“It’s about your boyfriend isn’t it? Dad’s gonna kill you.”
“Joshua, don’t talk like that. He’ll do no such thing.”
“Did you know that eighty-five percent of all murders happen between family members?”
“That’s stupid,” says Beulah. “You’re making it up.”
“Where do you learn things like that?”
“School.”.
Clara shakes her head.
“Anyway,” she says to Beulah. “Just don’t antagonize your father. Just apologize nicely and promise you’ll behave better in the future. It’s just a little white lie really…”
“My teacher says a white lie is worse….”
“Yes Joshua, we really don’t want to know what your teacher says at the moment. Your teacher has never met your daddy. And have you done your homework?”
Silence.
Joshua found himself unable to say yes, seeing as he had just said what his teacher said about little white lies.
“Well go and do it.”
Hoisted by his own petard. That’ll teach him to be so clever.
“I’m not going to apologize. I didn’t do anything wrong,” said Beulah.
“You were rude to your father.”
“How?”
“By ignoring him and disobeying his orders.”
“You’re on his side aren’t you?”
“I’m not on anyone’s side.”
“Yes you are. You’re ganging up on me. You’re such a bloody hypocrite.”
Beulah flounced out of the room on these last words.
‘And that’s what happens when you stick your oar in where it isn’t wanted,’ she mused to herself. She also knew that this was just a taste of what was in store for tonight.
“Boy is she in a bad mood,” said Joshua.
“Her and your dad both. Are you still here?”
“Do you think he’s going to give her a hiding?”
“I think he’s going to try.”
“Are we going to get a divorce?”
Clara couldn’t help but laugh at his innocent candidness.
“I don’t know dear. I don’t think so.”
“Roger’s family got a divorce, and his mother cries all the time.”
“I don’t think it’ll come to that,” she said, but she wasn’t so sure.
“Why is daddy so cross about Beulah’s boyfriend? Is it because she’ll get pregnant?”
“You know an awful lot for a little boy.”
“Not so little. Roger’s sister got pregnant, and his mom cries…”
“What about that homework of yours,” she interrupted him. “And I think it would be a good idea to stay in your room until I call you down for supper. Okay?”
“Okay,” he said, his mind already on the pile of comics under his bed.
He was such a good boy, she thought, trying to swallow the lump in her throat. She loved him very much. And she’d have to keep a close eye on him if those other two got out of hand again. She hated Samuel for hijacking her life and making home such a hell. He never treated her like an equal. They were her children too; surely she should also have a say in their upbringing. What made him the fucking expert on everything? His fist made him the fucking expert on everything –that’s what. Brute force buggers democracy, every woman’s cry of woe.
She could feel herself sinking into a bed of hatred again. Not good. Now was the time for her to be honest and fair…even if he wasn’t; but she just didn’t seem to be interested in dredging up his redeeming features – or any of the good times. She just wanted to hate him today. She wanted him to be a monster through and through.
Her mother had been just like him, refusing to let her go out with any boy – calling her a tramp and a slut – a whore. And she remembered the things she had called her mother in return. She reckoned Samuel and Beulah were just about at that name-calling stage. Her mother had literally driven her into Samuel’s arms. She didn’t love him. But he was any port in a storm.
Suddenly there was smoke pouring from the stove. Clara leapt for the dishcloth and flung the oven door open but it was too late. The meat was burnt to a crisp. She’d forgotten to turn the dial down. She shrugged off her pinny on the way out of the kitchen and grabbed her purse and shopping bag from the hall table. She opened the front door and stopped on the threshold.
“I can’t do this anymore,” she said to the street. “I just can’t do this anymore. I am so tired of………….smiling. At him, for him, for the world. My chimpanzee smile. Doing my little monkey tricks to keep them amused and distracted.”
She stared into the empty suburban afternoon for a long while, and then turned around and went and sat down at her kitchen table, the smell of burnt roast hanging thickly in the air. She sat quietly and stared unseeingly at the pattern on the plastic table cloth. She couldn’t take this tension anymore. She’d had enough. This far and no further.
She waited.

Monday, 25 July 2016

Episode 4






Previously…


Joshua was in tears now, making a continuous whining sound to try and blot out the noise. Samuel threw his chair back and stormed after Beulah. But she hadn’t gone up to her room. She’d made a run for it...out the front door and down the street before Samuel realized his mistake.
Clara scooped a distraught Joshua off his chair and bundled him upstairs into his room. She closed the door and sat the two of them on the bed, hugging him tightly to her. Samuel had never gone this far before. She’d never seen him this out of control. They were breaking new ground and no-one quite knew how to deal with the situation.
After a while she heard her husband come upstairs and stop outside their door.
“Clara?”
She didn’t want to talk to him but she realized she had to say something if she didn’t want to make things worse. He’d probably kick the door in, the mood he was in.
“What?” She wasn’t giving him anything. Swine.
Silence.
“Never mind.”
She and Joshua listened as he got himself ready for work and finally left, slamming the front door behind him. At that moment she almost felt sorry for him. She hoped he wasn’t losing it. She had often thought that she was the one who would have the nervous breakdown. Turns out she was stronger than she thought.

And now...



Clara slid her hand smoothly over the suggestively shaped cap on the bottle of perfume perched on her dressing table. She let her hand linger on its silky surface while her eyes drifted down to the contents of the bottle. Inside the shell-shaped bottle was a dark amber liquid containing the reddest, deadest rosebud she’d ever seen. She turned the seldom opened bottle around in her hand. ‘Bewitched’, it was called. ‘Temptation in a bottle’ it said on the gold and russet label. ‘The Damask Rose is renowned for its ability to rouse the most dormant of passions’ it boasted underneath. 
It took pride of place on her dressing table so that she could look at it everyday. But like everything we see every day, we quickly stop noticing it; except once in a while. This morning the bottle fairly jumped out at Clara. She had bought it for herself once in a fit of exuberant and romantic optimism, because it reminded her of the rose she had worn at her high school dance. There had been fairy lights strung between the trees and coloured lanterns hanging in the arches, twinkling over the young couples as they listened to the band playing in the pavilion. She could still hear the music, the muted trumpets playing soft and low while she danced with her beau. They had fallen in love that night and let the whirlwind carry them where it may.
Her mother had caught them making love in the bushes. And whirlwind indeed she was. She had then driven them straight to the boy’s house and threatened his parents that if he ever came near her daughter again she would bring rape charges against him. That was the last she ever saw of him.
She looked at the perfume. On an impulse she opened it and patted a few drops on her cheek and throat. It wasn’t very strong, more like a cologne really, but the scent caught in her throat and memories of that night tumbled over in her mind. Oh how she missed him. Oh how she missed being in love. How she hated this grey grimness that was her life. She looked in the mirror and was shocked to see two dark ringed eyes staring back at her…haunted and harrowing. This is because of Beulah and Samuel, she thought. For the last six months they’d been grinding against one another; ever since Beulah had begun her periods the house was a bloody nightmare. It seemed as if she was purposely antagonizing her father. She did everything she could to ignore, contradict or upset him. Clara had tried to speak to each of them but only succeeded in bringing their wrath down on her own head. That’s what happens when you stick your finger in someone else’s fight. But it was getting her down…and it was starting to show.
She couldn’t go to work like this. People would say things. Hurriedly she sat down and began to put on some powder and paint. That was all she had wanted to do really, to cover up her bruised eyes, but once she got started her hands just seemed to keep going. Eyeliner, mascara, lipstick, all carefully and lovingly applied. She combed out her long blonde hair which she normally wore tied back in a no-time-for-fun bun.
And there it was again. The magical transformation. Not just of her face, but her confidence, and that feeling of….happiness wasn’t quite the right word…..celebration? Almost. Joie de vivre. That was it. The joy of life. She hadn’t felt that in years. She felt lovely, strong…beautiful.
But she couldn’t go to work looking like this. People would think she was having an affair. Her hand reached automatically for the cleansing pads, but she stopped herself. Why not? Why not be a bit different for once? A bit daring. Give people something to gossip about. Why always be one of the grey people? This was her life going to waste. A few more years of this and it would be over. As it was she felt like she was clinging to the last leaves of autumn. Indeed, they could be more beautiful than the summer ones…if she gave them a chance. Screw it. For once in her miserable life do something courageous and exciting, she thought. Do something worth living for. Do something worth dying for.
She looked approvingly at her face in the mirror. Not bad. But now the face had to have a dress to go with it; and shoes. Full of confidence she flung off her old work-frock and, from a meagre selection in her wardrobe, selected a silky summer dress she had worn once in Barbados, together with a pretty pair of high heels, only ever used in first gear.
She took a last admiring glance in the mirror, then grabbed up her purse and rushed from the room before she could change her mind. The front door slammed behind her as she click-clicked down the path, feeling ten feet tall and irresistible. God she felt sexy, and God seemed to agree with her because the bus arrived on the dot, giving her no time for second thoughts. She got on the bus feeling everyone was looking at her - and indeed they were - for she glowed with happiness. She made her way swayingly down the aisle to her normal seat, greeting the occasional familiar face with a smile and a nod. It was a wonderful day. The windows were wide open and a slight breeze kept it from being too hot. Even the driver was mellowed out and didn’t throw them around as much as usual. She looked out the window. How she loved this little town. Suddenly she wished she had been a little bit more public minded…or public spirited. She should get more involved in local events. There were lots of things she could do to help the community. It would make her feel better about herself and she wouldn’t feel so trapped at home. More importantly she’d be able to meet more people. She turned to look at her fellow passengers and suddenly there he was…the boy. Her heart turned a somersault and a warm flush spread out from between her legs. She realized that she had done all this for him without being aware of it; as if she were two people and the one didn’t know what the other was up to. She’d just caught herself out. Her body had betrayed her. There was no denying her visceral response to him. Her body was crying out to be touched and for one shocking, blessed moment she was truthful with herself. She just wanted some sex. No wrapping it up in acceptable euphemisms or hiding it behind a romantic veil. No true love fairy tale…just sex. The thought thrilled her to the bone. It had been too long. She had too many years of strangled emotions under the hood. The wolf in her had been let loose and given a sniff of blood.  And her blood was up and baying for release.
There he was, not so much a boy as a young man, hanging on his leather strap, eyes wide with wanting her, just like the first time they had stared at each other. She had seen him many times after that but had always avoided his eyes. This time her eyes wouldn’t let her look away. She looked boldly back at him, tired of having to squirm away from him. She felt her power run up and down her skin like electricity. The phrase ‘sparks flew between them’ came to mind. She was sure the whole bus could feel it…and she didn’t care. And then to add dynamite to the mixture she smiled at him, casually, and let her eyes drift slowly away from him and out the window. She felt strangely strong and in control of herself for once in her life.
Outside the window the colours were overly bright and the air crisp and clear. Even the sight of the factory ahead didn’t depress her as much as it usually did. She turned back to the boy but he was looking the other way now. ‘Probably lost his nerve’, she thought. He wasn’t bad looking, but he was very young and probably useless in bed. But that wasn’t the point. She wanted to be touched. Any which way. She hadn’t been touched in ten years, not counting the occasional grope and poke from Samuel. Who could blame her? The bus was nearly at her stop so she got up from her seat and made her way to the front, her dress brushing briefly against the boy as she went past.
At the last moment she turned and gave him a searing come hither look; half hoping he would follow her, half knowing he wouldn’t, which was just as well for she didn’t know what she’d do if he did. That thought made her do a double take. What would she do if he did approach her? Would she actually go through with it? She couldn’t just turn and run away from him. She felt the craziness begin to creep up on her.
The sweat trickled down between her breasts as she stepped down onto the pavement and frantically elbowed her way through the waiting crowd. Suddenly it was all too much for her. She felt like all her circuits were overloading……too much, and too late; too right, and too wrong. She couldn’t deal with all the contradictions. Then she had one of those moments where she didn’t quite know where she was, like her brain had just blacked everything out. She couldn’t remember whether she was coming or going, and far away she thought she could hear Joshua calling to her, and that made her even more frightened. Maybe something bad had happened to Joshua because of what she was doing. Maybe this was the way God was going to punish her for her wicked thoughts.
“Oi lady, you can’t stop there. There’re people trying to get on the bus.”
The rest of the day at work was wrapped in cotton wool, with dislocated thoughts poking out here and there; the tired old make-up not doing its magic anymore, the dress now just inappropriate and embarrassing. No one dared ask her what was going on.
That afternoon, on the bus home, she sat and stared out of the window, looking like Cinderella after the ball, her Tesco’s bag on the seat next to her. Of course the boy was there…the young man, and she was all too aware that he was now looking at her with renewed vigour and determination. Oh dear God what had she done. She just wanted to run and hide. The fairy tale had turned into a nightmare. And to make matters worse, when she got off at her stop, the boy got off as well. He’d never done that before. He obviously intended to follow her home. Her worst fears were coming true. Her legs went weak with fright. On top of that, she was enveloped by a cloud of petrol fumes as the bus pulled off that made her feel sick and dizzy. She hurriedly made her way home as best she could, wobbling self-consciously on her high heel shoes as his eyes burned into her back. When she got to the house she went inside without looking back and slammed the door with a shiver.
“Ma, look at the drawing I did.”
“Yes dear that’s very nice,” she said, hardly even noticing the piece of paper Joshua was holding up. She was relieved that he was alright and made a silent promise to God never to do that again. “Now help me put these groceries away.” She didn’t know which way to turn. She dared not look out the window. She knew he’d be there because she could feel it in her loins.
‘Damn.’ She’d forgotten the Bisto. ‘Oh well, its going to have to be home-made gravy tonight and watch him moan about it.’ Suddenly she felt very old. She was just so tired of all this…thankless servitude. Life seemed to be closing in on her with a vengeance now; her little taste of freedom emphasizing her slavery.
Everything had gone so horribly wrong: right from the beginning really. Trapped with a man who thought it was his right to complain about everything and never lift a finger to do it himself; whose only conversation was reading bits of facile nonsense from his newspaper aloud to her when she was trying to cook a meal, or get the kids ready for bed, or doing the washing.
“Listen to this…” If she ever heard that sentence again it would be too soon. And what happens when the children leave home and she’s left alone with him? She just couldn’t bear thinking about it. These are things depressions are built on. These are things murders are built on. And then there’s her latest disaster waiting outside on the kerb. And tonight? Round two between Beulah and Samuel?
“Can I go and play at Trevor’s?” She hadn’t wanted to look at his drawing so he had lost interest in her.
“What? Oh yes. Sure. Just don’t be late for dinner,” she intoned liked a parrot, just saying what a mother is supposed to say, like some mechanical toy. She wished she hadn’t said it though. It would actually be best if he was late tonight. She didn’t want him there when the action kicked off. Bloody men. Bloody husbands and daughters. They deserve each other.

Thursday, 21 July 2016

Episode 3




Previously...


“Just leave her be. She has her period, so she’s very touchy. And she doesn’t dress any differently to her friends. They all…”
“I don’t care. She’s not going out of this house looking like a whore.”
“The more you tell her not to do it the more she’s going to. I know you feel…”
“You don’t know what the fuck I feel,” he said, and fell silent, as if he himself didn’t quite know how he felt.
“Excuse me,” she said, and brushed past him into the dining room where Joshua had vomited over the table.
“Oh God,” she said, going to his side. “Come on, let’s get you to the bathroom.


And now...
 Samuel hadn’t known what to expect from marriage. He hadn’t actually given any thought to having children until they began arriving, so he was ill prepared for the sleepless nights and worrisome days that took over his life. Apart from the strain of having to find enough money to support them, having a family seemed to be an endless round of crisis management. And now that the kids were growing up it was even worse. Most times he felt like a stranger in his own home. No one seemed to listen to him. No one valued his opinion.

‘You have to follow the rules’ he kept telling them. ‘That’s what keeps you safe.’ Especially Beulah. He worried for her. She didn’t know about boys and their dirty tricks.
He sat down in his chair and opened up his newspaper, but the smell of vomit was so overpowering that he had to move to the lounge to escape it. No-one was usually allowed in there, even on Sundays. It was reserved for visitors who somehow never came. The curtains were always closed; to protect the furniture from fading, and also because the window looked out onto the brick wall of the house next door not four feet away. He sat down in the musty armchair and opened his paper. But this didn’t feel comfortable so he got up and went into the kitchen.
Once again he opened the paper but couldn’t seem to concentrate. The dog came and laid his head on Samuel’s knee and whined softly.
“Hello boy, you wanna go out?”
The dog looked at him with sad expectant eyes. At least he didn’t hate him. He was a toothless old thing: fed on soft food which made him fart all day long, half blind, his fur falling out, and incontinent…which was why he had to be let out several times a day. He had belonged to one of the old prison inmates who had died and Samuel hadn’t had the heart to have him put down.
“Come on then,” he said, getting up.
He opened the back door and both of them stood staring out at the rainy night.
“Rather you than me, boy.” He had to give the dog a nudge from behind before he would venture out, and then he closed the door and sat down again.
If truth be told, the only fun he had left in life was going to work, out there amongst his compadres, chatting and having a bit of a laugh. Even the prisoners were friendlier to him than his family. There, everyone understood the rules and the consequences. But he couldn’t enforce prison policy on his family, though he had tried without much success. Being a father and husband didn’t come naturally to him. His heart did not thrive in this environment. It brought out all the wrong qualities in him. He wasn’t made for this. He overreacted to everything. Every situation made him panic and shout. And the more he shouted, the less they listened. He felt too responsible.
He stared blindly at his paper for a while and listened to the soft voices filtering down from upstairs. Then the front doorbell rang and simultaneously he heard Beulah’s fast footsteps flying down the stairs. Before he’d even got off his chair, the front door had opened and closed and silence reigned once more. Samuel hurried to the front window in time to see Beulah get into a strange car and drive off. Carefully and deliberately he walked back to his chair in the kitchen and sat down. His mind was a blank. He had no idea how to play this one.
After a while Clara came down the stairs and sat down opposite him with a sigh.
They had nothing to say to each other.
“Tea?” she asked.
“Yes.” After which Samuel pretended to read his newspaper.
Clara stirred her cup and took the opportunity to look at him. He was a short, thickset man with dark hair and sallow skin. He had a heavy beard that made him look unshaven all the time, and dark ominous eyebrows. He rarely smiled. Not anymore anyway. What had she been thinking? Escape from her mother was what she had been thinking: anything to get her out of that woman’s house. Samuel was the first eligible lifebuoy to come along…with a job that could keep them afloat. And he liked her. What more could a woman want? As it turns out…a lot more. They had never dreamed together; just got down to business. No déjà vu. No love at first sight. Just two people who washed up against each other on the edge of town, where the stars fall down way out of reach.
She ran her hand over the smooth plastic tablecloth. It felt cool but her skin felt like dry parchment. She understood Beulah’s dilemma. She didn’t want to drive her away like her mother had done, but Samuel was making things very difficult. He always felt like he had to be in charge. There was no notion of compromise in him. She couldn’t wait for him to go back on the nightshift again. Then they could all get on with their lives with no interference.
‘What a way to live,’ she thought to herself. ‘If this is living.’
  
At ten o’ clock they heard the front door close very quietly and a pair of padded feet fly up the stairs. Samuel didn’t even look up from his paper and Clara breathed a soft sigh of relief. But her relief was to be short lived. Samuel wasn’t a fool. He knew he wasn’t going to catch Beulah tonight. Even if he went up now she wouldn’t let him in, saying she was undressed or some other excuse. No. He was carefully biding his time.
“Might as well go to bed then,” he said, and stood up. Clara watched him suspiciously as he let the dog in and locked up for the night. Yes. She also knew this wasn’t over.

The next morning Beulah breezed into the kitchen with an artificial cheerfulness that could have iced a cake. Samuel sat staring at his paper, studiously ignoring her, waiting for the perfect moment. Beulah sat down, poured herself a plate of Cheerios, and started jabbering on about her life, wall to wall, leaving no opening for the recriminations she knew were coming. Joshua stared into his empty plate and Clara busied herself getting their breakfast; with one eye on Samuel, ready to jump in the moment he launched off.
‘Respect – that’s what it was all about,’ Samuel thought to himself. ‘Even my prisoners have respect for me.’ But that was because he had respect for them. His daughter had no respect for him simply because he had none for her.
“So,” he announced loudly, clattering his knife on his plate for effect. “So you decided to disobey me?”
Clara snuck a look at Beulah and didn’t like what she saw. Far from being cowed or scared, Beulah’s face was hard-set and determined.
‘Oh, oh,’ she thought.
Beulah ignored her father to his face. She had never been that brazen before, and it made her heart beat a little faster.
“Pass the milk please, Joshua.”
And that’s where Samuels’s patience snapped. He smashed his fist down on the table and the plates jumped into the air.
“You will answer me when I talk to you!” he roared at her.
Beulah threw him a hate-filled look and ran from the room.
“You come back here young lady,” he shouted after her.
Joshua was in tears now, making a continuous whining sound to try and blot out the noise. Samuel threw his chair back and stormed after Beulah. But she hadn’t gone up to her room. She’d made a run for it...out the front door and down the street before Samuel realized his mistake.
Clara scooped a distraught Joshua off his chair and bundled him upstairs into his room. She closed the door and sat the two of them on the bed, hugging him tightly to her. Samuel had never gone this far before. She’d never seen him this out of control. They were breaking new ground and no-one quite knew how to deal with the situation.
After a while she heard her husband come upstairs and stop outside their door.
“Clara?”
She didn’t want to talk to him but she realized she had to say something if she didn’t want to make things worse. He’d probably kick the door in, the mood he was in.
“What?” She wasn’t giving him anything. Swine.
Silence.
“Never mind.”
She and Joshua listened as he got himself ready for work and finally left, slamming the front door behind him. At that moment she almost felt sorry for him. She hoped he wasn’t losing it. She had often thought that she was the one who would have the nervous breakdown. Turns out she was stronger than she thought.

Thursday, 14 July 2016

Episode 2





Previously...


Clara was starting to run out of steam and began shaking with fright from the audacity of what she had done. She looked straight ahead, desperately trying to control the quiver in her lip, clasping her hands tightly in her lap.
Without a word Samuel started the car and slammed it into gear. The speedy drive home, with everyone hanging on for dear life, was a relief. By the time they arrived things appeared strangely normal again.


And now...

“Dad, can I have new shoes?” Beulah was the kind of girl that never knew when to stop.
“No.”
There was a silence in the little kitchen.
“Please?”
“What do you want new shoes for?”
“For going out.”
“Oh. For going out hey? Going out where?”
“With my friends.”
“Where?”
“I don’t know. The movies. Parties.”
“That’s what I thought. No!”
He put a forkful of food in his mouth and chewed away loudly to waylay any further conversation.
“The ones I’ve got are for school….” But he just munched on right through her appeal.
“Have you done your homework?” he asked, wiping his mouth on a linen napkin.
“Yes.”
“Let me see.”
“Didn’t have any.”
“Let me see.”
“Didn’t have any.”
“Let me see.”
“I looked at it,” Clara jumped in, trying to avoid the inevitable head-on-collision. “It’s fine. Go to your room and get ready,” she said to Beulah.
“Where is she going?” he said looking at his wristwatch.
“She’s going to a sleepover with her friend.”
“No she’s not.”
“Just go and get ready,” Clara said. “It’s alright.” She turned to her husband. “I’ve already spoken to the other girl’s mother. It’s all arranged.”
“What about her schoolwork? She nearly failed last term. Last thing she should be doing is gallivanting around on a school night.”
Clara sighed. She really didn’t have the energy anymore for this kind of thing. It tired her no end.
“Just leave her. She’s at a difficult age. More than that, she’s growing up…trying out things.”
“What things?”
“I don’t know. Independence.”
“She can be as independent as she likes once she’s earning her own money, which, judging by her grades, is not going to be much.”
Joshua had long since stopped eating, head hanging over his plate, staring into his rice.
“Eat your food,” said his father. “I don’t work for nothing you know.”
Joshua picked up his fork and stirred his food around.
Samuel wasn’t a bad man. He was just old fashioned as the saying goes. He hadn’t always been a tyrant. At school he had discovered a hidden talent for acting, but as the years went by it seemed he was only allowed to play the role of the villain, and his whole family conspired to keep it that way. Funny how life can pigeon-hole you.
“Eat your food Joshua. Don’t play with it.”
“I’m not hungry.”
“I don’t care. There’s too much waste in this house.”
“It doesn’t taste nice.”
“It tastes just fine. I’ve eaten mine.”
“It’s cold.”
“That’s because you didn’t eat it.”
“I don’t want any.”
“Well you’re not leaving this table until you’ve eaten. And if you cry I’m going to give you a clip around the ear.”
“Samuel…”
“No. He has to learn.”
“Has to learn what? That it’s good to have someone bully you into doing things you don’t want to.”
“A good hiding is the quickest way for a child to learn.”
“No it’s not. I hate your slap dash way of treating them...us.”
“Toughen them up.”
“Rubbish. Did you know it’s illegal to hit your child?”
“What you going to do? Report me to the authorities? Turn me in?”
“Don’t tempt me. Wouldn’t that be nice? You locked up in your own jail for child-abuse. Boy will you have a fine time with all the inmates you’ve been keeping in there. I hope you haven’t been too nasty to them. Bet they’d just love to see you on their side of the fence.”
“Nonsense,” said Samuel, but she could see she had given him pause for thought. Perhaps he wouldn’t be so quick with his hands in future.
“And look how your ‘toughening up’ is working. Look at him. All you’ve done is make him scared of you. How would you like it if someone was always on your case, hitting you all the time?”
“It’s what my mother did….and look at me…”
“Yes. Just look at you. I don’t want my boy to grow up like you, thank you.”
“How else am I going to make a man of him?”
“I don’t want you to make a ‘man’ of him. I want him to be a human being.”
“Crap. If he doesn’t toughen up they’ll eat him alive.”
“You’re the only one eating him alive. Leave my son alone.”
“He’ll turn into a bloody queer.”
“Oh. So that’s what you’re afraid of. Afraid people are going to say like father like son hey? Anyway, this world could do with a few more sissies.”
“Bloody idiotic nonsense.”
“Listen how you talk to me. Is this what we can expect of him? I think you’re a terrible role model.”
“Then why did you marry me?”
“Because I didn’t know you yet. I must say my mother warned me. Marry in haste, repent at leisure.”
“You mean you’re sorry you married me?
“How can I put this…….yes.”
Things seemed to be going to hell in a hurry. Clara took a deep breath and turned away. Life was a continual battle with Samuel. Today was particularly bad. She’s never been so outspoken against him and was surprised how far she got. The audacity of her attack left her a little bit shaken, but she was tired of not saying anything and letting him rule the roost. She carried the dirty plates through into the kitchen with shaky hands, being careful not to drop them. Where was she in all this? She couldn’t just stand by and watch him hammer her children? Like that picture by Goya…Saturn devouring his children. Alright, the painting is an analogy for war…but this is no less. A war between four people. The proletariat rebelling against the flint faced fascist dictator. He’d never given any hint of this side of his nature before they were married. Truth be told he never gave much of a hint of anything. Silent, broody, monosyllabic. Dear God she wouldn’t make that mistake again - if she ever got the chance. Intense just wasn’t enough.
She was clattering at the dishes in the sink when Beulah clip-clopped her way down the wooden stairs and walked into the dining room.
“You’re not going anywhere dressed like that, young lady,” said her father.
Beulah ignored him and went into the kitchen.
“Can I have some money please Mom?”
“Didn’t you hear me? You’re not going….”
“Yes, we all heard you,” shouted Clara with an exasperated edge to her voice. “There’s nothing wrong with the way she’s dressed. I used to dress just like…”
“She looks like a whore,” he said, coming into the kitchen.
“You should know,” shot back Beulah.
“What? What was that?”
“Nothing,” said Clara. Perhaps she should just step back and let the two of them kill each other. Beulah was as stubborn as him…her father’s daughter alright. She knew which of his buttons to press and how far she could go with him. She was as merciless with him as he was with her…never allowing her a moment of freedom or independence. ‘As ye sew, so shall ye reap.’ In his case he’d reaped the whirlwind. No peace of mind for him. Just daily aggravation until some or other blood vessel finally burst.
“Do I have a say in this house or what?” he said.
At that Clara nearly burst out laughing. She did give a little snort though.
“You think that’s funny?” he said.
“Yes actually. Because you’re the only one in this house that has any say.”
“Well then. Why does no-one listen to me? You, young lady, you go right up to your room and take that gunk off your face. And put on a dress that covers up your arse. Go!”
He made a lunge at her but she slipped past him.
“And where did you get money for that make-up?” he shouted after her. “Have you been stealing again?”
He was just about to follow her up the stairs to drive his point home when Clara interrupted him.
“Just leave her be. She has her period, so she’s very touchy. And she doesn’t dress any differently to her friends. They all…”
“I don’t care. She’s not going out of this house looking like a whore.”
“The more you tell her not to do it the more she’s going to. I know you feel…”
“You don’t know what the fuck I feel,” he said, and fell silent, as if he himself didn’t quite know how he felt.
“Excuse me,” she said, and brushed past him into the dining room where Joshua had vomited over the table.
“Oh God,” she said, going to his side. “Come on, let’s get you to the bathroom.