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Robert says...

 

I'm just putting the finishing touches to my first novel, Rebecca’s Secrets – the story of Tommy Angel, an orphan boy growing up in the East End of London in the Fifties, who starts to become curious and opens up a dark box of family secrets. leave me a comment and I’ll let you know when it’s published if you like.

 

Now I'm a bit nervous about this.  It's a first for me. 

But I thought I'd show you a few extracts.

You see I'm still editing and I'd value your comments, criticisms and suggestions.

I've got 2 weeks to make changes before publication.

Don't hold back!

Let me know what you think.

- Robert

 


CHAPTER 1: Out of the Shadows

 

On 1st January 1956. After weeks of snow, sleet and fog, the first sun of the New Year cut across Eric Street, burning light into the cold shadows. It crept inch by inch, probing one dark place, then the next.

I’d just turned eleven. I don’t remember much about the previous year or the three years before that in the Home. That was another life, like a story about someone else.

Until this day I’d lived unaware. I didn’t live my life – it lived me. But I did know I was different from other kids. There was something secret about me and my family.

That morning I became curious.

That day I started asking questions.

That week I opened up a box full of dark family secrets.

That year I found out who I was.

 Rebecca’s Secrets

“Missed me. Hit the lamppost!” I lied.

The ball hit my thigh and bounced straight back to Larry. I rubbed the stinging red ball-print on my leg and hobbled across the street to Viv.

It was freezing cold. The pavement was covered in two inches of hard-packed snow and long icicles hung from the lampposts, smaller ones dripped from the railings.

Eric Street runs south from the Mile End Road – the main artery from the East End to the City of London. That’s where I lived with my Gran, my Granddad (who I called Dad) and Uncle Vinny.

Viv and I huddled together by Mrs. Levy’s railings.

Most of London’s railings had been taken away and melted down for guns for the war, but ours were still intact. Granddad said it was too dangerous to take them from Eric Street because all the drunks would come rolling home from the Wentworth on pay day, and fall down Kutchinski’s airee.

Larry aimed at my legs again and I grabbed the railings and swung my feet into the air. The ball bounced off my bum.

“Hit the railings!” I lied again.

Larry scrabbled for the ball, slipped on the ice and landed on his back. Viv danced over him.

“Can’t catch me – couldn’t catch a flea.”

She was only ten and small for her age, but she was tough and a lot faster than any of the boys.

Larry, still on his back aimed at Viv. He missed. The ball whizzed past her ears and straight at me. I punched it high in the air. We all gaped as it hung for a moment at the top of its flight, and watched it fall straight into Mrs. Levy’s airee. It glanced off her basement windowsill, bounced off the airee wall and hit the lower windowpane dead centre. A crack zipped diagonally across the glass as the ball dropped to the airee floor.

All the terraced houses on the evens side of the street had bay-windowed sitting rooms at ground level and a basement with an open airee protected by the railings.

Our footballs and tennis balls often found their way into neighbours’ airees. Usually we’d ask if we could get the ball and perhaps tidy their airees while we were down there. We knew who would say yes: Mrs. Bresslaw – whose son Bernie was on the telly and Mrs. Kutchinski – who was always smiling and Errol’s mum, Mrs. White.

Mrs. Kutchinski had the biggest grin in the East End. We’d clear the litter passers-by had dropped and she’d give us bread and dripping.

Mrs. Bresslaw liked us to water her basement window boxes. She gave us orange juice and potato latkes. For some reason she called me “Poor Tommy” and while we’d stuff ourselves on her doorstep, she’d mumble “Poor lost babies. Poor lost babies.” and shake her head. We thought she was mad, but anyone who made latkes that good must be harmless.

Mrs. White gave us crispy spicy things that burned your mouth. Larry took one home for his dog Prince. The dog swallowed it whole and charged round the house yelping. We always said “Thanks, Mrs. White – we’ll save them for later.” and then we gave them to kids we didn’t like.

If a ball fell into a grumpy neighbour’s airee, we didn’t ask – we just climbed over for it. Sometimes we got caught, but we usually got away with apologies or lies – like today.

“Quick. Get the ball,” Viv said, “before Old Levy finds out or we’ll be for it! But do it quiet!”

I climbed over Mrs. Levy’s railings, hung down as low as I could, pushed away from the wall and dropped the last two feet. There was just the quietest “pling” as my plimsoles hit the ground.

I heard a loud “whoosh” behind me as Mrs. Levy pushed the window up. It stuck about halfway, like most sash windows in our street. She parted the lace curtains, bent down and stuck her head out.

“Sorry, Mrs. Levy,” I said, “I did knock on your door three times, honest, Mrs. Levy, but there was no answer and I knew Mr. Levy was at the shop and I thought you must’ve had a bad night what with your rheumatism and I didn’t want to wake you up.”

Mrs. Levy squeezed an arm out and waved a skinny finger at me. “You know God sees everything and punishes dirty little boys who get into sin and mischief!”

I looked up at the cracked pane above her head and then at the sky and I held my breath and waited for the window to shatter or for God to strike me down. It was the first blue sky in ages, even bluer against the white of the snowy rooftops. The clouds were small and puffy, flying fast. It made me dizzy to look.

I waited. There was no crash of glass, no thunder and no lightning. He didn’t strike me down. So Mrs. Levy was wrong about God! Perhaps they all were....

 
A Curious Boy

We ran across the road to Gran's – and I threw the ball down the airee. It landed on the huge pile of rubbish that came halfway up the basement window. Larry and Viv climbed down and pretended to search for the ball. Viv, pushed rubbish away with both arms looking like a deep sea diver doing breast stroke, saying “Hummmm ummmmm umm ummm um.”

I jumped up the steps, opened the street door and shouted for Gran. I waited while she slowly negotiated the dark passage, puffing and grumbling. She walked with a stick and her knees were a long way apart so she rocked her whole weight slowly from side to side, like a big ship on a swollen sea.

First to break into the sharp sunlight was her paisley pinafore inflated by an ample belly and bosom. Then the light caught her nose, her glasses, her knitted brows, and her turned-down mouth. She squinted in the glare and shaded her eyes with her free hand.

Now what do you want?” she asked, as if I had made her sail that stormy passage a hundred times already.

Her face was severe, with a fixed frown and a lower lip pushed up in the middle and down at the corners like Churchill’s fight-them-on-the-beaches face. It was a mask of disapproval.

She was called Rebecca, but she wasn’t like Rebecca in the bible who was beautiful and hospitable. No, she seemed to be always grumpy and critical – impossible to please – I had tried for years. Nothing was right. Whatever I did, she would say I was lazy, thoughtless and forgetful. Mostly she called me meshugener – crazy or a luftmensh – a dreamy head-in-the-clouds – that was her favourite word for me.

It wasn’t just me; she had a bad word for everyone in the family – usually in Yiddish. Her children were all ungrateful. Aunt Hannah was stuck up; Aunt Miriam was a klogmuter – a misery; Aunt Stella was conniving; Uncle Samuel was a shmegegi – a clown; Uncle Solomon was a kolboynik – a know-it-all and Vinny was toig ahf kapores – good-for-nothing.

The in-laws were all unworthy; Aunt Marlene was flighty; Aunt Nina was draikop – scatterbrained, Uncle Arthur was grober – an oaf and Aunt Hannah’s Harry was alter kaker – an old fart.

The neighbours didn’t escape her judgment either. Mrs. Bresslaw was toffee-nosed because her boy was on the telly; Mrs. Kutchinski was filthy; Mrs. Levy was yachneh – a load mouthed gossip. Mrs. White merited extra malice because she was a foreigner and a swartzer, and her house was painted daft colours and she left rubbish around and gave the street a bad name. The rest of the street were ganef – rogues, rascals and thieves.

“Well… what do you want, luftmensh?”

As she glared down from the top step, I realized that she looked and sounded just like Gilbert Harding – that grumpy old man on What’s My Line. He always looked like he was about to do a big burp. He did an advertisement “I have indigestion but I don’t suffer from it.”

“Have you got indigestion, Gran?”

“What?” Her frown deepened into a scowl – which was normally enough to shut me up. But not today. Today was different.

“Why do you always look so grumpy, Gran?”

I took a step back. God had let me off this morning for two little lies to Larry and Mrs. Levy’s potential manslaughter, but Gran was more formidable than the Almighty, less forgiving, closer and quicker to anger. She raised her stick and shook it at me.

“I can’t help what I look like. You were born with a smile on your face, Tommy, and you don’t have a care in the world. I was born into hardship and pain and my life has been filled with worry and heartache and that’s what’s written over my face and there’s nothing I can do about it.”

So, I thought, it’s not all my fault then! Gran was born miserable – nothing to do with me. It was… a sickness, like indigestion. She was born grumpy and she got grumpier, so… no matter how I tried – and I did try – I would never-ever be able to do anything right. She told me off all the time, made me feel guilty, ashamed – whatever I said, whatever I did, but I couldn’t possibly be bad all the time.

So, I thought, it can’t be me – it must be her – it’s just her way of being in this world. From that day, although she gave me plenty of headaches with her constant complaints, I never took her so seriously again and I mostly ignored her judgments. I decided God could be my judge, and, as I found out that morning, God was a mate. He didn’t strike me dead down Mrs. Levy’s airee, so He probably liked boys, and if I did anything really bad, He’d let me know. So far He hadn’t complained.

 “Our ball’s down the airee, Gran.” I said.

“So, now you want me to climb down and get it for you?” she shrugged and opened her hands, palms up looking up to God for sympathy.

“No, course not, but we can’t find it in the rubbish. What if we clear the rubbish out?”

“There’s no rubbish down there. I don’t keep rubbish. Its just things that’ll come in handy – one day.” She said.

Gran would win the prize for the most things-that’ll-come-in-handy-one-day in the street. It wasn’t just our stuff – people walking by would throw their rubbish on top of ours – newspapers, old comics, sweet wrappers and fag ends. The mountain of rubbish had been there for years and years and I thought there must be some treasures buried in that pile. I’d often ask if I could clear it, but she always said no.

I told her there were rats in the airee, but she didn’t believe me.

“Honest, Gran, Ronny Needleman saw a rat when he came round the other day. He said it was brown, about a foot long, with a long tail.”

“No,” she said, “We don’t have rats. I keep my house spotless. That boy Ronny exaggerates.”

She was right – Ronny did exaggerate. In fact he told bloody great lies and boasted much of the time, but this time he was telling the truth.

“But Gran, I know there’s rats. I can hear ‘em.”

I slept in the basement and I heard the rats at night, scrabbling in the airee, scratching at the window. They made a different noise to mice.

“You’re just imagining things like you always do. Half your life you live inside your head. There’s nothing in that airee and I don’t want you poking around down there. No. You leave it be.”

She turned to Viv and Larry. “Get your ball and get out.” She said flatly,

“But Gran!”

“Don’t you ‘But Gran’ me. If I let you do it you’ll only fall down, break your leg and I’ll have to take you up the hospital and I’ll be in trouble with the Welfare.”

Now that wasn’t fair. I was a good climber – best in the street. In the Muller I used to climb right to the very top of the tallest trees, way above everything. I was skinny and light and I could lie back on the thinnest branches and look up at the clouds, like I was in heaven and let the wind sway me side to side. I’d stay there for hours, missing meals and lessons, until the teachers noticed and sent a kid to look for me.

“But I’m a good climber.”

“I said no, Tommy and that’s it! Why don’t you listen?  I don’t understand why you want to go digging up old stuff! I don’t want boys digging!”

She turned away grumbling towards the dark passage. “That boy. Won’t leave things alone. Meshugener! Always digging – asking questions. Why, God, did you give me a boy like Tommy? I swear he’ll be the death of me with his digging and his questions, always questions!”

She was right. I was always asking questions – mostly about her and Granddad. Although I lived with them my whole life, I knew nothing about them. I asked her what her life was like when she was young and where she went to school and what lessons she did. I asked about the war and what it was like when Granddad and my uncles went away to fight for Rommel and she was left here alone with the Blitz. But she never answered and if I persisted too long, she would snap and shout at me, “That’s the past. What does it matter?”

I wanted to know about the family. I asked her what her parents were like and where her grandparents and great grandparents parents came from and what they did for a living and why we were called Angels. I asked about my aunts and uncles and my cousins and why they mostly lived far away and only came to visit on Saturdays, when Mrs Kutchinski’s children and grandchildren all lived around Mile End and why I lived with her and Granddad and why I didn’t have a mother and a father and live with them, like all my cousins and most of my friends did. But she never answered. She would just glare at me and shout, “Children! All they bring is heartache.” and she’d turn her head away and if I persisted, she’d shout some more “Stop asking your bloody questions!” and sometimes Granddad would hear her and come into the room and say,

“Steady on, Becky, the boy’s only curious. It’s only natural.”

“Too bloody curious!” she’d say and she’d thunder out of the room.

Eventually I realized I never got answers and I noticed how after Gran blew her top, she would go quiet and look sad for the rest of the day, and I felt bad about that, so I stopped asking questions...
 

 


Robert says...



Image under license from Shutterstock

A pig farmer bought a horse. A beautiful male foal, just old enough to leave its mother. He put the foal in a field with 20 pigs.
 
Surrounded by pigs the foal grew up thinking it was a porker. He wallowed in the mud with the rest of the pigs in the lowest corner of the field. He slept in their muck and competed at their trough for a scrap of rotten swill.

But the foal grew thin and his coat became mangy and he failed to grow. The farmer had an idea. He took a mirror from his wife’s dressing table and held it up to the foal. The foal saw that it was not like the pigs and he wandered away from the herd.

The pigs mocked and said “Who do you think you are, Mr High and Mighty? Are we not good enough for you anymore? Well go if you want, but you’ll be all alone and you’ll starve and die.”


The foal walked to the top of the field and breathed a lungful of fresh clean air and said,  “Mmm I like this – it doesn’t smell of pig poo.” He sniffed the sweet long meadow grass and nibbled at it and said, “Mmm I like this – fresh green food.” He looked around him and noticed he was surrounded by grass – there was more than he could eat in a year and the pigs didn’t want it. He heard a trickling of water and turned to see a stream. He drank the sweet water and he said, “Mmm I like this – it doesn’t taste of pig pee.”
 
He saw a hare racing across the field and he galloped after it, sensing the thrill of speed and feeling the blood coursing through his muscles. He stopped at a tree stump and watched a grasshopper leap into the air and he said, “That looks like fun” and he leaped around the field jumping over mounds of grass, stumps of trees and small bushes.

He saw a butterfly inspecting a meadow flower and he said. “My that’s beautiful.” And he looked around and saw he was surrounded by flowers, and he looked up and he saw the blossom on the trees, heard the wind in the leaves, saw the blue of the sky and he said, “I am surrounded by all this beauty.”
 
A flock of doves landed at his feet and then flew off over the hedge and out of the field and he said. “They are going somewhere else. I can go somewhere else.” And he galloped after the doves, leaped over the hedge to another meadow and galloped and jumped from field to field. And he said, “I am as free as the birds in the air.”

At last he came to a field with a horse. The young mare came running to greet him. She nuzzled his neck, exhaled into his nostrils. They galloped around the field together, drank from the streams, nibbled at the grass, and marvelled together at the beauty surrounding them. And the foal said. “I am a horse.”
 _____
The moral of this story is that you can spend much of your life surrounded by swine who have low standards, no ambition and no appreciation of the finer things in life, but if you remember who you are and have the courage to walk away and explore life for yourself, you will find freedom and fulfilment and you’ll meet friends who will love you for what you are.


Robert says...

Image on license from Shutterstock

RABBITS
All God's rabbits share one bad habit
If you grow a carrot they sneak up grab it
They dig up your turnip, parsnip and spuds
Eat all the good ones and leave you the duds

CATERPILLARS

Caterpillars are stupid
All they do is eat
They’ve got three thousand pairs of legs
And twice as many feet

UNREQUITED LOVE
A woodlouse declared his love for a mouse
But the mouse was not convinced
She ran off with a millipede
And he hasn't seen her since
 
EARWIGS
Earwigs live in old men’s hats
With maggots, slugs and flies
They like the smell of Brylcreem
And dandruff tastes real nice
 
HONEY
If bees make jars of honey
Do wasps make jars of Jam?
Did earwigs make my Marmite?
I’d better ask my Nan.
 
POO
Dog poo is dusgusting
Cat’s poo is much cleaner
Worms poo tiny walnut whips
And maggots?… semolina!
 
COOKING
My Mum puts flies in current pies
And mouse poo on my bread
She fries my eggs in horses’ snot
And brings them up to bed.

OUR NEW YOUNG VET
My Gerbil, Bill, got very very ill
So we sent off for the vet
He said "You gotta feed him dog food
As much as you can get."
Now he wags his tail and barks a lot
And his nose is very very wet