even then, I donât know.â
âDo you love me?â I asked, âor donât you? Just tell me, for Godâs sake, so that Iâll know where I stand.â
My sarcasm was mixed with a dash of bile, but she took me dead seriously: âI donât know. Iâm all mixed up. Oh, why did you do it?â
âIâll tell you,â I said, âand I mean it: I couldnât stand working in that office with such a gang of four-eyed ponces for the next four hundred years, getting deader and deader and deader and deader, selling rotten houses to poor drudges who are even worse than dead but who just wanted a rose-painted kennel to die in, or a converted matchbox rabbit-hutch to bring their snotty-nosed kids up in. Iâve had my short sharp dose and thatâs enough to last me all my life. In fact I might die next year and Iâd weep scalding tears if Iâd wasted so much time saying yes-sir and no-sir to that lot of bleeders. Iâd rather work in the blackest factory on earth than go through that again. I might be a fool and a thief but Iâve not yet been brainwashed enough to crawl into that sort of death with a lettuce up my arse.â
âStop it!â she screamed. âDonât swear. Go away. I donât want to see you. Donât follow me.â I stood, watching her get on to a bus that, conveniently for both of us, drew into its stop at that moment. It trundled towards Canning Circus, and for ten minutes I didnât move but leaned against the wall of the cathedral wondering what Iâd done, why I had made Claudine so desperate and unhappy that she had to walk out on me. It was the finish, I knew, because knowing her heart so well, I could see that Iâd split the ground under her feet, and that the absolutely unforgivable had been done and said.
I didnât think the oak and the ash and the bonny rowan tree was the best that the earth had to offer. A man of all colours is a man of the night as well as of the day, and because I acted merely, and hardly thought at all, I eventually began to see that the best the earth could give me was the wherewithal to support myself in bread and books without actually earning it. The nearer I got to my twenty-first birthday the firmer this belief took hold. Fortunately I had no moral teachers except myself. My mother didnât care, as long as I was clothed and fed. By this I donât mean to imply that we didnât love each other and wouldnât have died for each other. We certainly wouldnât. The fact was, I suppose, that I could never have found a moral teacher with whom to agree, certainly not in any of the people I knew both inside and outside the family. In this sense, a lot was put on to my shoulders, namely the task of finding my own moral way in a world where no adults were available to guide me. Of course, there must have been many who would have taken me on, but Iâm sure that their qualifications for doing so would have been down below zero. Being young, I was left alone by moral hypocrites and bullies whoâd only want to deprave or colonize me. A man of many colours can go a long way, as long as he keeps out of their way.
I walked home after leaving Claudine, feeling as if Iâd been cursed, holding a weight of tons on my back. Mother was smoking a fag and reading the evening paper: âYou look as if youâve lost your wages. Whatâs up?â
âI got the sack.â
âThatâs not the end of the world.â
âMy girlfriend packed me in.â
âBecause you got the sack? Sheâs not much of a friend. Youâre well rid of her. Thereâs some ham in the larder. Get a bit of it into your belly.â
I slumped down: âIâm not hungry.â
âCome on, you bleddy fool. Get that light back in your eyes. Itâs down to twenty-five watts and it was a hundred yesterday.â She poured my tea, put out the bread and ham, with
Chelle Bliss, Brenda Rothert