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    Toffee

    Page 6
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      and made do with high-fives

      and the occasional cuddle.

      I have never been kissed.

      Bloody

      Red splodges on the lino.

      Smudged fingerprints smeared on the doors.

      Marla?

      She is slumped in the hallway,

      hand over her nose,

      face sticky with blood.

      The press in the kitchen came at me, she says.

      A poltergeist for all I know.

      I need an ambulance.

      My heart pumps hard.

      How will I explain to a paramedic who I am

      and why I found her?

      Will they assume I did something awful?

      Marla won’t remember what happened.

      Let me look.

      I press her head to feel for bumps.

      Her hair is matted with dried blood.

      Can you stand up?

      I don’t feel magical.

      I might need a doctor.

      I get her to a chair.

      I’ll run you a bath, I say.

      A bath will be a distraction.

      Eggshells

      Marla is watchful,

      glancing at me now and again

      as though waiting for me to speak.

      I stay quiet,

      not wanting to make her mad

      or confused

      or throw me out again.

      I have left stepping on eggshells

      for stepping on eggshells.

      With one difference.

      Marla hasn’t hurt me.

      When the Sun Comes Out

      I arrange a tray

      and take it into the garden,

      where Marla and I sit in our coats

      nibbling on buns and sipping lemonade.

      It’s a weedy mess out here, she says.

      Mammy’s usually so good at keeping up with the garden.

      Let’s tidy it, I suggest.

      Marla lifts a glass to her lips.

      We can plant anything we want.

      Let’s get some sunflower seeds!

      Or we could grow vegetables.

      How about cabbage?

      Dad would disapprove.

      He’d think it was

      bullshit

      to grow your own food.

      Yes. Let’s try cabbage, I say.

      Clearing Up

      Marla wears a sunhat and too-big gardening gloves.

      She starts by weeding the patio

      but can’t bend for long,

      goes inside for water.

      I cover myself over in her old nightie and get busy

      picking pieces of broken glass from the grass,

      stones from dead flower beds.

      I can’t see much progress

      even after a couple of hours

      but Marla is smiling.

      It’s lovely this garden, isn’t it? It’s lovely.

      I’m not sure she can remember what it was before

      but she seems to know what it is now

      and is happy.

      Which is the main thing.

      What Is Left Over

      Peggy leaves food covered in foil

      for each evening meal.

      Usually

      Marla wanders into the kitchen and

      eats straight from the carton.

      But tonight she forgets

      so I serve her food

      on a tray

      with a glass of orange juice

      diluted down with a little water.

      Marla doesn’t ask where the

      food has come from

      and when finished,

      passes the tray to me like I’m a waiter,

      like I have always been there.

      Thank you.

      She doesn’t eat much,

      leaves potatoes on her plate

      that look too good to waste.

      I eat what is left over.

      Mercy

      I made jacket potatoes with tuna-sweetcorn.

      Dad curled his nose

      like I’d piled the plate

      with dirty underwear.

      You can’t even get the easy stuff right, he said.

      I try, I told him.

      He raised his hand at this retort

      then changed his mind.

      You make it very hard to love you,

      you know,

      Allie.

      At times he could be merciful.

      Love

      If you could learn to be loveable

      like you can learn to play the piano

      or conjugate verbs,

      my report would read:

      Must try harder.

      Washing-Up

      When I went to the loo,

      Dad started on the washing-up.

      He’d scraped the cold potato into the bin

      and was scrubbing the pan clean.

      I can do that, I said.

      He smiled.

      Nah. It’s my turn.

      And, hey, the dinner was fine.

      I’m just a grump.

      I didn’t reply.

      I set to drying the plates,

      asking myself if his changed mood

      meant I was loveable after all.

      Rolling Smokes

      I boil the kettle while Lucy rolls joints

      and explains how her ex

      has landed a TV commercial for zits.

      No way I’d get back with him now.

      Well cringe!

      Kate’s welcome to him.

      She laughs and I copy her,

      pouring milk into steaming mugs.

      I laugh

      not because I see what’s funny

      but because

      I do not want to be alone.

      I must try harder.

      Scabby

      The burn itches.

      A scab is forming.

      I pick at its

      crumbly, crusty

      edges

      until it stings.

      Allowed

      Marla is sitting on the stairs

      in her raincoat.

      Hood up,

      mouth down.

      What’s happening? I ask.

      I’m not allowed out.

      I mean, is it prison I’m in or what?

      Who put up that sign?

      I feel like bloody Oscar Wilde

      without the hat.

      Or the talent.

      I don’t know, I say,

      glad the sign is there and Marla

      knew to stay put.

      Why don’t we go to the corner shop

      for some sweets? I suggest,

      handing Marla her handbag.

      She smiles at the front door,

      points at the A4 printed sign on it.

      And I’m taking that down.

      IMPORTANT: DO NOT GO OUT ALONE.

      CALL PEGGY IF YOU NEED ANYTHING.

      We leave the house.

      And we leave the sign.

      Conkers

      Marla stops, stoops,

      picks a chestnut from the path.

      I love the feel of them.

      It’s a shame the season ends so quickly,

      isn’t it?

      Before you know where you are

      they wrinkle up and go all wrong.

      Like people, I suppose.

      She pockets her find.

      I reach down,

      curl my fingers around

      a flat-edged conker,

      then find another, and another,

      collect until my pockets bulge.

      I like them too, I admit,

      but Marla is already ahead of me

      at the crossing.

      I run to catch up,

      to stop her stepping into the road.

      She looks surprised to see me at her side.

      Hello again, she says.

      Now isn’t it nice to be together like this?

      Stinging Nettles

      The conkers fell,

      crashing to the ground and shaking off their

      tough-on-the-outside
    ,

      velvety-on-the-inside

      shells.

      I begged Kelly-Anne to walk with me to the park

      so I could gather a bagful

      and take them to school

      to boast about I-don’t-know-what.

      Dad stood up from the couch. I’ll come for some air.

      Kelly-Anne beamed;

      it was before

      he started treating her really badly,

      and I was probably pleased too.

      Dad never went anywhere with us

      unless it was somehow about him –

      a trip to Homebase for paint

      or the Chinese for dinner.

      It was drizzling at Downhills Park.

      You could spot the chestnut trees easily,

      brown-leaved against a sky of still greens.

      I sprinted.

      I foraged.

      My bag filled quickly with the

      chocolatey brown globes,

      but I was greedy for more

      and more

      and more,

      crawled my way beneath briars to trawl.

      I didn’t see the stinging nettles,

      didn’t notice the blanket of them

      or that my hands, knees and legs tingled,

      until it was too late,

      until my body was covered in their toxins

      and I was scratching, scratching,

      spotting uncased chestnuts but too sore

      to collect them.

      Oh, you poor thing, said Kelly-Anne,

      kneading my hands with dock leaves.

      Dad was grinning.

      Even I spotted the nettles.

      You’re too old to be collecting conkers anyway.

      I was eleven.

      At twelve

      I didn’t bother

      collecting conkers come September,

      and when I was thirteen I told

      anyone who flaunted theirs

      how stupid and babyish they were

      until they hid their treasure

      or threw them away entirely.

      Babyish

      Dad badgered me to

      grow up

      hurry up

      shut up

      stop being a baby

      stop whining

      stop moaning

      act my age

      act like an adult

      quit the crocodile tears,

      as though

      being a child was a serious problem

      and something I could remedy.

      Carol and Lee

      I was little when

      Dad decided he was in love

      with someone called Carol

      and invited her to live in our house

      with her son.

      So Carol and Lee

      stayed with Dad and me

      for a few months.

      At first it was easy.

      Carol liked baking.

      Lee was quiet.

      Then Carol quit with the buns and

      took to shouting at Lee until he cried.

      He was older than I was –

      eight maybe –

      and hated when I saw him tearful,

      hit me to make me unnotice.

      It’s your stupid fault, he said.

      She didn’t want a daughter.

      She doesn’t like you.

      I watched Carol.

      It wasn’t hard to see that Lee was right.

      She never tucked me in at night

      or washed my uniform for school.

      She scowled at me

      and at Dad too sometimes,

      until one day they were gone –

      Carol and Lee –

      and Dad and I carried on as usual,

      pretending no one was missing.

      Pretending we were happy alone.

      Loss

      It wasn’t like that when Kelly-Anne dumped us.

      We couldn’t pretend she had never existed

      because we were so charged up on her.

      I didn’t believe Dad could get meaner but he did.

      It was grief. I get it.

      Like how he never got over Mum.

      But was it my fault everyone left?

      Can Dad’s life really have been all my fault?

      Sometimes I Forget

      Sometimes I forget I was born to an actual mother

      with wide arms and a smile.

      Sometimes I feel so grimy

      I can’t believe anyone ever longed for me enough

      to tear herself open

      to give me breath.

      Sometimes I think all I am is how he made me

      feel:

      sunken,

      small,

      better off

      gone.

      Sometimes Kelly-Anne told me I wasn’t to blame.

      She said, Shit happens, Allie,

      but not much else

      because we didn’t talk about Mum in my house,

      as though exposing the past

      could make stuff

      worse than it was.

      We nudged the truth out of the way with our elbows

      and waded through heavy silence.

      Until the noise came.

      Which it always did.

      A tornado of anger and insults,

      a one-man performance that left me in turtlenecks

      for a week.

      Sometimes I forget I was born to an actual mother

      who loved me enough to knit a jumper

      the colour of Lucozade,

      arms like baby carrots.

      But she left too soon and never finished it.

      She left as soon as I arrived.

      She left because I arrived.

      A Father Too

      Sometimes I forgot my father was the way he was

      and I smiled when I saw him,

      when he gave me dinner money

      or nodded at good grades.

      Some Sundays when my father roasted chicken

      I’d forget whatever had happened on Saturday night

      or think it hadn’t been him at all,

      that I’d made a mistake in my remembering.

      Sometimes I held on to the nice things because the horrible

      seemed impossible.

      Sometimes I forgot my father was the way he was

      and that’s why I loved him.

      I Did Not Kill My Mother Immediately

      It was hours after I arrived that she died.

      Mum carried me home in a hospital blanket,

      a cocooned caterpillar in her arms,

      barely clinging to life.

      She opened all the Babygros we’d been given

      and lay me in a new cot to sleep.

      She watched me,

      and cooed, amazed by her achievement.

      I slept.

      Soundly.

      But when my eyes opened,

      Mum was gone.

      And she never returned,

      though I squealed like a

      banshee.

      She was in an ambulance,

      or back on a hospital ward,

      doctors doing their best to stop her

      disappearing.

      Dad sent in a neighbour to stem the crying.

      But when he returned from St Bart’s the next day,

      ashen and alone,

      a wife down, a newborn heavier,

      he chose to place every sorrow

      in his heart on my head

      and looked at me thinking:

      You did this …

      Dad never realised that hers was the skin I needed,

      the smell and the taste.

      Dad never realised that I loved my mother

      from the

      inside out,

      before I’d ever known her face,

      and that while he might find another wife,

      I would never

      ever

      get another mother.

      Are You My Daughter?

      Are you my daughter?

      Marla is standing in the hallway,


      staring at the wedding band on her fourth finger.

      Sometimes I forget, she says.

      I’m a gobshite.

      I couldn’t even tell you what day it is.

      Is it Friday?

      No, I say. It’s Monday.

      How do you know?

      Umm. Because tomorrow is Tuesday.

      She rolls her eyes.

      I turn on the bathroom light.

      And I’m not your daughter.

      I’m Toffee.

      Do you need anything? I ask.

      She blinks slowly,

      and rubs her hip.

      To sleep. I just need a good old sleep.

      It is three o’clock in the afternoon.

      Giant Rock Dummy

      Lucy buys us both a giant red rock dummy

      from a kiosk on the seafront,

      unwrapping hers and licking the end of it.

      That’s your sugar fix for the month, I say.

      Shh, baby, shh.

      She laughs,

      unwraps mine,

      pushes the dummy

      all the way into my mouth

      so I am completely gagged.

      Do you have a boyfriend? Lucy asks.

      I shake my head no.

      Yeah, I guessed that.

      You totally read as a virgin.

      I keep the dummy in my mouth

      much longer than is necessary.

      It stops me saying the wrong thing –

      telling Lucy the ways

      in which

      I can read her too.

     


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