Читать книгу Child on the Doorstep - Anne Bennett - Страница 9
FOUR
ОглавлениеThey talked about Daniel often over the next few days and Angela wondered if he would return.
‘Why?’ Connie asked.
‘Oh, you know,’ Angela said vaguely. ‘Maybe it would have been better for him not to know. I mean, you could see how it had upset him and his life had been going on fine and dandy till then.’
‘I don’t think it was,’ Connie said. ‘His aunt and uncle seemed to want to control everything he did. You heard him.’
‘You’re right,’ Mary said. ‘And if he had known about his father much sooner he wouldn’t be so upset now. I said so at the time. How would it be if I told you nothing about your parents, Angela, and let you think you were our wee girl? How would you feel if you found out I had been lying all those years?’
‘Granny’s right,’ Connie said. ‘I would hate not knowing who my parents were.’
Connie’s words caused a pang of guilt to slice through Angela’s heart.
Connie had no idea of the huge shame that had lodged in Angela’s heart when she’d been forced to sacrifice her helpless baby to a loveless life of drudgery for the good of everyone else. Even after all these years the self-reproach never completely left her.
She was wrong about Daniel, though, who came that very afternoon before Connie had returned home from school. She was so pleased with the gentle and patient way he had with her mother, who seemed delighted to see him. Sometimes Mary was very slow at conversation, but she never seemed to have a problem with Daniel. Mary had once explained that, though sometimes her mind was perfectly clear, other times it seemed to slip and she had trouble remembering what they had been talking about. It was different with Daniel though, because generally he wanted to know things about his father before that terrible war and her mind was usually crystal clear about events that had happened long before.
In addition, Angela could tell him about the Stan she knew, a great friend of her husband, Barry. She told him about the Christmas of 1913, which Stan had spent at their house.
‘After a stupendous meal, as we couldn’t go out as the weather was foul, he had us all singing carols. Remember that, Mammy?’
‘Oh I do indeed,’ Mary said. ‘Your father had a good voice, Daniel, and your mother too. She was in the choir at the church and they both loved to sing. My lads spoke of it when they stayed there and when Kate was expecting you she used to sing you lullabies. She had a lovely singing voice. She told your father you might possibly remember the songs after you were born and know how much you were loved even before you actually arrived.’
Daniel’s voice was husky as he said, ‘I wish I had got to know her, that she hadn’t died.’
‘Oh so do I, Daniel,’ Angela said earnestly. ‘I had never heard your father’s voice till that Christmas Day, because after your mother died, when I was too much of a child to notice such things, he never sang again. That day he began with “O Little Town of Bethlehem”, which he said was her favourite carol.’
‘I used to like singing too,’ Daniel admitted. ‘My mother used to hate to hear me singing so I never sang at home.’
‘Why did she object?’
‘I never could understand it,’ Daniel said. ‘I must have had some promise because the priest wanted me to be in the church choir and the music master at my grammar school choir, but my mother vetoed it both times. She said that she sent me to school to study not sing, and my father took me to one side and said it wasn’t a very manly pursuit and I wasn’t to keep on about it and risk upsetting my mother. But now I know the truth about my parents I think my mother didn’t want me singing because it would have reminded her of how well they could sing and that I took after them. It would all be a reminder that she was keeping the truth from me – that they were hoodwinking me.’
‘You could be right,’ Angela said. ‘Is that how you see it now, as them hoodwinking you?’
‘Wouldn’t you feel that way?’ Daniel said. ‘You were told all about your parents and your siblings. Though you lived with Mrs McClusky and her family, you knew who your real family had been. If your father had lived I’m sure you would know him – even if he couldn’t look after you full time I’m sure he would have been a presence in your life.’
‘You are right, Daniel,’ Mary said. ‘I often felt bad that Angela had neither parents nor even one of her siblings to survive. We took her into our hearts and loved her as much as we were able and I hope she never felt that lack, but I always felt that pang of regret on her behalf.’
‘I never felt it, Mammy,’ Angela said. ‘You loved me totally and completely and I loved you in return. That’s all a child needs.’
‘Maybe it is,’ Daniel said. ‘But it must be a healthy love.’
‘What d’you mean, healthy love?’
’My mother wanted to share me with no one,’ Daniel said. ‘Not even Roger very often, for she wanted me to love her intensely and only her.’
‘What of Roger?’ Angela asked. ‘Did he love you too?’
‘Yes, I think he did,’ Daniel said after a short pause. ‘He had trouble showing it, but many boys at school had distant fathers so that wasn’t unusual. I never remember him putting his arms around me or holding me in his arms, even as a small child. The nearest he got to touching me was to give me a handshake. I was nervous of him when I was young because I thought I didn’t come up to scratch as the son he wanted. I see why now – because I wasn’t his son. At the time though, I was always trying to please him and failing.’
Despite all the advantages Daniel must have had growing up with the Swanages, Angela saw an unhappy, lonely boy. He had a mother who loved him so much she wanted to share him with no one, and Roger, who was probably aggrieved by his wife’s preoccupation with the child and resented him. How much good it would have done the young, confused child if he had met up with his father who would have taken joy in his company. She thought of Stan and the sacrifice he had made to give his son a good and happy life, better than the one he thought he could give Daniel himself. Angela could see now it was wrong, but there was no point in this. Daniel’s life had not been the bed of roses Stan had thought it would be, but she had to concede many had it far worse; in her mind’s eye she saw the basket left on the workhouse steps.
She was glad to see Connie come in to lighten the atmosphere a little. And with her she had Maggie and Michael who she had met on the road coming home from school. It was hard to keep someone’s appearance secret in the teeming, thin-walled, back-to-back houses, even you wanted to, so there had been great curiosity about Daniel, not least because his clothes were not the kind worn by most people in the area, even to Mass. He looked like some sort of official and, in the neighbours’ opinion, officials arriving at a person’s door usually meant trouble for those inside. Angela and Connie lost no time in telling their neighbours who Daniel was, for Angela agreed with her mother that there had been too much secrecy surrounding Daniel’s whereabouts for too long.
The news spread like wildfire and those who remembered his birth, which had caused the death of his mother, and him being spirited away by the mother’s sister, told the newer neighbours the tale. And most looked at the fine young man they had seen striding down Bell Barn Road going to or from the McCluskys’ and thought it a shame that his true father’s body must have been another left in a foreign field, because he hadn’t returned from the war.
Michael was one of those who knew a lot of it. Living in the same road and being three years older than Angela anyway, he remembered the time better than she did. He said he’d like to see Daniel and maybe give an account of his father’s bravery in the army.
‘It might help,’ said Maggie. ‘It certainly helped Angela, knowing you were there at Barry’s last moments.’
And so when Maggie, returning from shopping on Bristol Street that afternoon, saw Daniel at the McCluskys’ door, she told Michael and the two decided to go down and say hello. Angela was delighted to see them and Daniel did appreciate Michael telling him what he knew of his father, the soldier, and that he must have done something special to earn his sergeant stripes.
‘And the other chaps said he was an understanding sort of man. Sergeant stripes or not, he wasn’t always bawling at the soldiers under his command. As in civvy street, he was known as a kind and understanding boss. He was just naturally considerate.’
‘Thank you,’ Daniel said. ‘I find it really helpful that my father was well thought of.’
‘Daniel, one reason your father went to war was because of you,’ Angela said. ‘He told me he wanted you to be proud of him.’
Daniel nodded. ‘He put that in the letter,’ he said. ‘And I am immensely proud of him and the more I hear the more that pride deepens. I wish he hadn’t died and yet, if he hadn’t, I’d probably not be here, for I don’t know how long my uncle and aunt intended to go on with the farce of not only bringing me up as their own natural son, but denying my father’s existence.’
Michael looked a bit confused. He knew nothing about the aunt’s ban on any contact between Daniel and his father, so they told him the tale, including Betty’s ultimatum that, if Stan didn’t agree to relinquish all rights to Daniel, she would refuse to look after him.
‘He was too anxious not to agree,’ Angela said. ‘He had to work and would have had to find some sort of care for Daniel that he knew wouldn’t be half as good as that Betty and Roger could provide.’
‘I wish he had survived,’ Daniel said wistfully and then asked Michael, ‘Did you see how my father died?’
Michael shook his head. ‘Sorry, I was out of it myself for some time after the shell that killed Barry exploded. We were all having a fag – Barry, another two mates and me. We knew we were destined for the front trench the following day – that’s the one that leads the attack,’ he explained to Daniel. ‘If they hadn’t managed to silence at least some of the guns and pick off any snipers beforehand, those going over the top first would soon be well aware of it. That’s what happened at the Somme. Well, it was a bit nerve-wracking, however many times we’d done it, and we were working out some tactics. One of the chaps had got hold of a crude map and we were working out areas of cover to advance in. Barry suddenly gave a wave and said to us to hang on a minute, he’d seen someone he knew. I had my back to whoever it was and I did turn, but with the mist of the day and the billowing smoke from the guns it was hard to see who it was. Then one of the other chaps pointed out a clump of bushes on the map. It was hard to see how big it was from the rough map, but if we managed to get out of the trench without injury and slither under the wire, we decided to make for there and decide on our next move.
‘I was concentrating on what my mate said and all around us was noise. And there was the stink of cordite in the air and I didn’t see or hear the shell till it was too late. I heard Barry give a frantic yell and only seconds later there was a massive explosion and I was knocked clean out.
‘Days afterwards I came to to find I was minus a leg and my other two mates had copped it. People say Barry launched himself at this chap. No one seemed to know who it was, but I would imagine there was a state of confusion because I was told a barrage of shells followed that first one. One chap said that though it was obvious Barry was dead, the one he tried to save didn’t look in great shape either so he might have died too. That was the war over for me.’
Angela, thinking of the pictures of the Somme she’d seen, could well imagine the scenario, with whining shells exploding all around the frightened soldiers as they desperately searched for cover to save themselves to fight another day. Daniel would probably have no idea of what battlegrounds were like – neither had she before the photographs from the Somme – but he turned to them all and said:
‘I feel I’ve got to thank you all. I came here with some shadowy idea of a father who didn’t care for me at all, a man who would leave me money when he was dead, but nothing of himself when he was alive. I am going away with a fuller picture than I ever imagined and, because of the photograph, I even know what he looked like. I now have a really full picture of the father I will never know.’
‘Doesn’t that make you sort of sad?’ Connie asked.
‘Maybe a little sad that I’ll never get to see him,’ Daniel admitted. ‘But now at least I can think of him. I know he was a real flesh and blood person and he cared for me and he was my father.’
All were moved by Daniel’s words spoken with such sincerity and Angela said, ‘Daniel, I knew and loved your father dearly and I will say with absolute certainty that he would be so proud if he could know the man you have turned out to be.’
Daniel gave a wry smile and said, ‘Don’t know if you’ll be so proud of me when I tell you that I’m starting in the bank on Monday.’
Disappointment flitted across Angela’s eyes, for she thought Daniel needed to break free a little from the dominance of his aunt and uncle. But she betrayed none of it in her voice when she spoke. ‘I thought you wanted to do something else?’
‘I did … I do,’ Daniel said, and then went on, ‘To be honest, both Roger and Betty have been pretty foul to me since I said they should have told me the truth about my father. They made me feel really guilty when they said that that was all the thanks they got for bringing me up without a penny piece of support from my excuse for a father.’
‘But they wouldn’t accept anything!’
‘I know, but they deny that now and my mother claimed he didn’t even offer to give them anything. They financed everything, from the expensive uniform for the private school they sent me to in order for me to get to grammar school where the uniform was equally expensive. They cited the day-to-day expenses of bringing up a child, including Christmas and birthday presents – though they were never lavish – and the fact that they then financed me through university. Anyway, then my uncle said that the gravy train was coming to an end. I had to get a job and quick and pay my way in the world and pay them back for the money they have spent on me. He has a job set up for me at the bank and on Monday morning I am going into the city centre with him on the train. He said he will listen to “no nonsense” about anything I would rather do.’
‘Golly,’ Connie said. ‘Why are they being so mean to you?’
‘Because I am not doing what they want,’ Daniel said. ‘And because I am finding out more about the father they denied me, and they don’t like it. They don’t like me spending so much time here either, at least Betty doesn’t.’
‘What does she want you to do?’
‘Basically, she wants me to keep her company day after boring day, and as I’m not prepared to do that, she’d rather have me at work under my uncle’s watchful eye.’
‘I can see the way they put it. You had no other alternative,’ Maggie said.
‘No,’ said Daniel with a short dry laugh. ‘The way my uncle went on though, I wouldn’t be surprised if he wrote down every blessed thing I’ve ever been bought or caused him to pay in any way and presented me with a bill to be paid off out of my wages.’
‘Doubt it will come to that,’ Angela said. ‘But, talking of money, what are you going to do with the money your father left you?’
‘Oh, that’s already sorted,’ Daniel said. ‘I took the solicitor’s advice and saw the bank manager. I have opened an account and put it in there. Not the bank I will be working in but a new one altogether where my uncle is not known.’
‘In a bank?’ Connie cried and her voice came out like a squeak. ‘Not a post office?’
‘I don’t know much about either,’ Daniel said. ‘Never had enough money to worry about where to put it so I did what the solicitor advised. That money in the end will signify my freedom. From what was said, there will be no financial help from my aunt and uncle, nor should I expect any, they said. They have paid for me to be well-educated and now it’s up to me. I will save as much of my wages as I can and when I have enough I can say goodbye and at least live somewhere else, even if I have to continue working with my uncle for a while.’
‘D’you think you will get to like it in the end?’
‘Oh, I don’t know,’ Daniel said. ‘I have the feeling it will bore me to tears. But jobs are not that easy to get, so I suppose I will stick at it till something better comes along at least.’
‘Well, that’s sensible.’
‘I’m very sensible,’ Daniel smiled. ‘My friends would tease me about it. It was the way I was brought up, but they used to call me Doubtful Daniel. They would suggest something and I would often worry we might get into trouble if we did it.’
‘Did you do it anyway?’ Connie asked.
‘Sometimes,’ Daniel said and laughed, a low rumble of a laugh just like his father, and Angela laughed with him. As she did, she thought what a serious young man he was. She had never heard him laugh before.
‘You can’t be good all the time,’ she said.
‘Good,’ said Connie. ‘I’ll remind you of that.’
‘You watch out,’ Angela told her daughter with mock severity. ‘Or I’ll clip your ears for you.’
‘That’ll be the day,’ Mary said from her chair before the fire, for it was well known Angela had never laid her hand on her daughter. Mary began to laugh her wheezy laugh and it was so infectious that in minutes everyone was joining in.
Daniel was so grateful he had made contact with this warm and happy family, knowing there was another way to live to the way he had been brought up.