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    Toffee

    Page 7
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      Screaming

      Screaming and scratching at the bathroom mirror

      with a purple lipstick,

      lines and frantic scribbles.

      No! No! Not me. Who? NO!

      No! Go away! Go AWAY!

      I wrap Marla in my arms,

      drag her on to the landing.

      What’s wrong?

      Her whole body is shivering.

      Hands shaking.

      Someone was in there.

      Someone not me was in there.

      An old lady.

      Not me.

      Get away!

      No.

      Jesus.

      Call Mammy and tell her.

      No one’s here except me, Marla.

      I take the lipstick from her hand

      and without knowing why,

      draw a thick moustache above my top lip.

      Was it Madame Croissant?

      Her breathing slows. I let go.

      You’re a silly fecker.

      And proud of it, I tell her,

      rubbing the moustache with my fingertips.

      Who was in there? she whispers.

      Who was that woman?

      We should go.

      She looked shocking.

      She’s gone, I say.

      Shall we dance?

      Roger expects us to practise.

      We need to be good.

      Don’t want Moira beating us.

      Scrubber.

      Moira, I mean.

      Not you.

      You’re dead classy.

      Mashed Potato

      We are up, moving,

      Marla oozing energy,

      sliding left and right,

      feet smoothing forward, back,

      arms up,

      down,

      twisting, twirling,

      smile so wide

      I can see to the back

      where she has teeth missing.

      I copy her

      dancing to ‘Mashed Potato Time’

      by Dee Dee Sharp and

      smile too,

      wishing we really were rehearsing for something.

      Wishing my life had a purpose.

      Slam

      I’m taking a pee break

      when the front door slams

      and heavy footsteps

      enter the hallway.

      Mum? It’s Donal.

      Where are you?

      Oi, Mum!

      Frozen

      Donal reprimands Marla like a headmaster

      scolding a disobedient student,

      and between rebukes

      he sighs,

      as though conversation itself

      is taxing.

      I know you like cheese, Mum,

      but it doesn’t go in the DVD player.

      And what is this?

      His voice is like a hedge trimmer –

      loud, sharp, dangerous.

      It could cut.

      The downstairs toilet

      is across the hall from the sitting room.

      I crack open the door to see.

      Donal is flourishing our feather boa.

      Marla’s face is stone.

      I’ve told you a hundred times to take it easy.

      Last thing anyone needs is an accident.

      I hope you haven’t been going out.

      He paces the living room,

      fishing for mistakes –

      lifting oddities and jiggling them in her face.

      Marla is as still as glass.

      This is none of the Marlas I know.

      This is someone pulled back

      into herself.

      As good as gone.

      You’re sulking, he says,

      prodding her arm with the remote control.

      Why are you sulking?

      What have I said?

      For God’s sake, here we go.

      A memory slithers back to me

      and I watch, as frozen as she is.

      I’m shattered, Marla mutters.

      I’ve been up late these last nights.

      And you don’t think I’m tired?

      I’ve been at work all week

      and this is my treat.

      A mother who forgets who I am half the time.

      Place a pigsty.

      What are we paying Peggy for?

      Was she even in today?

      Not that you’d remember.

      I know who you are, Donal, she croaks.

      You do?

      Brilliant.

      Here’s a prize, he says,

      and cuffs her on the arm

      with the remote.

      The present and past collide.

      I slide the door shut,

      slip on to the floor

      and put my hands over my ears.

      Should Have

      It is dark when Donal leaves.

      In the sitting room

      Marla is quiet.

      I’m sorry, I say.

      I wanted to stop him

      being mean but –

      Who? she says.

      You wanted to stop who?

      Before I can remind her, she is crying

      and mumbling Mary’s name

      over

      and

      over

      and

      over.

      Two Hours Later

      She looks across at me.

      Are you a friend of Mary’s?

      No, Marla. I’m a friend of yours.

      Planning

      It is hard not knowing when

      people will arrive at Marla’s house,

      trying to be out as much as I can,

      jumping each time the doorbell chimes.

      I find her phone

      and scroll through

      the reminders in her calendar –

      daily, it says Peggy,

      weekly, Donal’s name appears,

      Mary is nowhere.

      And there are other things,

      like reminders for medicine

      and doctor’s visits,

      notes about birthdays and

      bank holidays.

      This helps her, I know.

      I’ve seen her check her phone when it pings

      and find peace in the written words.

      And so I add another.

      Toffee,

      I type,

      a recurring reminder.

      Nothing else.

      It should be enough.

      Make-Up

      Marla has old-fashioned compacts

      and bronzers too, which I use to

      make myself implausibly tanned –

      skin the colour of apricots.

      I look ridiculous.

      Question is:

      do I still look like a scabby virgin?

      Homework

      Lucy punches a page covered in grey smudges.

      Maths is such a waste of my life, she groans,

      casting the pencil aside.

      You look clever. Are you?

      Like, help me.

      She pushes her books

      across the beach-hut table.

      My ex-mate used to be good at this crap.

      I can’t be bothered.

      I study the sums.

      Nothing hard:

      I could finish the page in five minutes

      and we could go to the lighthouse,

      lie on our backs in reach of the sea’s spray.

      Shall I teach you how to do it?

      No. Just do it. I don’t need to know.

      She lights up a joint, starts to smoke.

      After a few minutes

      I slide the exercise book back to her.

      You done? How?

      I don’t know. It’s easy.

      Lucy leans back, taps her chin with her finger.

      Where do you go to school?

      Nowhere. I’m homeschooled.

      Well, that makes sense.

      Why?

      Your clothes for a start.

      You dress like a wife.

      But homeschooled is better actually,

      she says with satisfaction.


      You wanna earn some cash?

      Jobs

      Lucy has three jobs lined up

      before I leave the beach hut:

      a chemistry project,

      some maths,

      a personal statement for a sixth-former.

      If I do the work, I get paid,

      wouldn’t have to scab off Marla any more,

      could stop putting my hand into her purse.

      Lucy gets a cut of course.

      Why don’t they just do the homework themselves?

      They won’t learn anything in the long run.

      Lucy is confused.

      You’re not one of those worthies, are you?

      I think about everything I’m missing from school –

      how I might have had a shot at college before

      I ran away.

      Now I won’t even get to do my exams –

      stuff I could pass

      without much preparation at all.

      I’ll be poor and end up like Kelly-Anne,

      relying on men who make me miserable.

      Lucy passes the joint.

      I shake my head and instead

      help myself to some of her Haribo.

      The little bears are sweet.

      You’re hiding something, she says.

      Hiding

      I am hiding my mother, my father

      and my father’s women.

      I am hiding my old home, my new home,

      my old friends and Marla.

      I am hiding my body, my bruises,

      my scars and my burns.

      I am hiding my whole history,

      hoping I will forget it.

      I am hiding everything from you.

      If only I could hide it from myself.

      I Tell Lucy

      I’m not hiding anything.

      Why would you think that?

      Well Dodge

      As she is locking up the beach hut

      Lucy lays her fingers on my shoulder.

      I know you’ve got that thing on your face.

      But the make-up looks well dodge.

      Like a chav or something. Just saying.

      I nod. I know.

      And I do.

      She nudges me and twinkles a smile

      as though we’ve just had

      the deepest conversation

      ever.

      Your skill is your smarts.

      Normals

      Being smart wasn’t enough to get me noticed

      in a school of fifteen hundred.

      For that you needed beauty,

      had to be someone with even edges and sleek hair.

      Or

      if not,

      a kid with serious psychological problems –

      there were loads of those.

      For a while

      Sophie, Jacq and I called ourselves

      The Normals,

      but it was still a way of trying to

      stand out.

      ’Scuse us, The Normals have arrived, Jacq would say,

      pushing through an army of girls with smooth legs,

      the type of figures

      to make grown men look.

      We were even invisible to the years below,

      although sometimes Sophie

      shouldered them out of the way

      to prove we weren’t nothing.

      Thing was,

      Sophie and Jacq really were normal.

      At home their mums moaned at them.

      At school they got detentions.

      At the park boys offered them cider.

      They let themselves be seen

      and didn’t care about mistakes along the way.

      If you aren’t winning, you’re learning,

      Jacq said when Sophie

      failed a French test, and they high-fived

      before heading into Tesco Express

      for Meal Deals.

      The Normals was a perfect description for them.

      My friends.

      And even though it didn’t quite fit me –

      smart and secretive –

      they let me along for the ride.

      Until finally the ride ended.

      The Beginning of Burns

      Jacq and Sophie didn’t really have a choice.

      Jacq said, Why can’t we come in though?

      Sophie said, You’re being well bitchy.

      Jacq said, We got an Uber, Al. Cost us seven quid.

      Sophie said, I don’t think she cares what we did.

      I said, I’m a bit busy. Can I call you later?

      Jacq said, What are you doing?

      Sophie said, A bloke probably.

      Jacq said, It’s not Peter, is it?

      Sophie said, I bet it is. She totally fancies him.

      I said, Please go away.

      Jacq said, What?

      Sophie said, You what?

      I said, Just fuck off, all right,

      and slammed the door.

      Inside Dad was asleep.

      I went to the bathroom

      and found spirits to clean the cigarette burn.

      It was such a small thing

      on the back of my hand.

      A tiny blistering circle.

      Nothing awful

      compared to what he’d done before.

      But with Kelly-Anne gone he was crueller.

      This was the beginning of something new.

      The beginning of burns.

      Funny Thing Is

      Getting a small circular burn

      on the back of my hand

      wasn’t as bad as the week before

      when I swore –

      Shit! –

      and he heard,

      and marched me to the bathroom,

      made me brush my teeth

      with honeysuckle hand soap

      until it foamed up

      and filled my whole mouth

      with sour froth.

      Hot Bread

      I’d like some … Marla hesitates.

      Bread.

      I stand.

      I bought bread with seeds earlier.

      Got the baker to slice it

      even though it was still slightly warm.

      I want it hot, she says.

      It won’t be hot now.

      Make it hot. She is annoyed.

      She tears at the skin on her arm.

      In the thing. I want it crunchy.

      Put it in the thing that makes it baked.

      Not baked. It’s already baked.

      Grilled.

      Oh, I can do it!

      You’re absolutely useless.

      She tries to get to her feet but is too low

      down in the sofa to jump up easily.

      She reaches for a cushion

      and screams into it.

      I let her,

      and when she is done

      I say,

      You mean toast, Marla?

      She plays with a tassel

      on the corner of the scream-cushion.

      I want some toast.

      She sighs.

      Toast. Yes. Please.

      Out There

      Marla’s phone pings.

      She startles, reads the screen and smiles.

      A reminder,

      or a message maybe,

      someone remembering she exists.

      That must be nice.

      To know that out there

      somewhere

      she is alive in another person’s mind.

      With no phone I can’t know

      whether anyone is thinking of me or not,

      whether Dad and Kelly-Anne

      have inundated me with desperate messages.

      But it would be nice.

      To know that out there

      somewhere

      I am being remembered.

      One Thing

      Lucy is sitting on the beach next to another girl.

      This is my mate Mindy.

      The girl nods,

      gawping into her phone

      and grinning.

      Someone else is behind them,

    &nb
    sp; standing over a mountain bike,

      a cigarette limp between her lips.

      And that’s Jan.

      Lucy points

      but doesn’t turn.

      She’s sort of retro.

      She must mean the cigarette but I don’t know.

      Lucy gives me twelve quid

      for the completed homework plus

      two more maths assignments.

      Can you translate French? Jan asks.

      She sucks on the cigarette

      like someone who hasn’t been

      smoking very long –

      a quick pull,

      hardly inhaling.

      I can do most subjects.

      It sounds arrogant

      but all I mean is that

      studying is the one thing I can do.

      One thing out of a hundred failures.

      My dad is being a right pain

      and it’s parents’ evening next week.

      Jan speaks to my burn.

      I flick my hair to cover it.

      I’ve tried Google Translate but it’s pointless.

      I need to write a description of my family.

      You can make it up.

      All right.

      Another sixth-former needs a personal statement

      for UCAS, Lucy adds.

      I can give you bullet points.

     


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