Robin Wrigley
a long and spicy Bloody Mary
“Is he my real dad?” Henry looked up at his mother
visibly shaken after the most recent fight with the man in question. He had just
left, slamming the door so hard it was a miracle it was still on its
hinges.
His mother Jocelyn stopped momentarily from picking up a
chair that had been knocked over in the fracas, to wipe the blood that was
trickling down her chin from a cut on her lip.
“That truly is a good question son, I ‘spose you are of
his blood, (in truth she wasn’t absolutely sure), but if you want to call him
dada, that’s up to you.” She moved over to the sink and wetted a tea towel under
the cold water tap and dabbed cautiously at her cut lip.
“Well, is there anyone else I can choose?” At ten years
old and never living with anyone other than his mother all of his life, the
question was beyond him.
On the one hand Henry didn’t want to choose the man who
periodically bursts in on their lives creating mayhem, but conversely, somewhere
in his undeveloped sense of male loyalty, it seemed wrong to deny him as his
father if in fact he was.
As if to delay answering the question he carried on
where his mother left off, picking up bits and pieces that lay strewn around the
floor.
Jocelyn’s thoughts turned to more immediate problems of
what to feed the boy with before she went on her night shift at the care
home.
“I’ll make you a fried egg sandwich for your tea. You
like them don’t you?” The boy had not eaten since his school dinner at midday
but looking in the fridge she knew there was little choice.
“Yes, that’s okay and anyway I ain’t that hungry ‘cos I
got Abbie’s piece of pizza at school. I dunno why her mum puts her in for school
dinners ‘cos she only ever eats the puds and not always them.”
“That’s ‘cos they’s free boy, that’s why. If she be
payin’ herself she wouldn’t, believe me.” She finished tending her lip and set
about making his sandwich.
Looking up from the egg sizzling in the frying pan she
glanced over at her son. “What you goin’ to be doin’ tonight boy? Did they give
you any homework?”
“No, I was thinking of going along to see Abbie but she
said her dad was a visiting so I might just watch TV for a while, I fink there’s
a football match on later.” He shoved his hands deep into his pockets and
shrugged his shoulders he did his best to smile even though he was still
concerned over the father subject.
“Ain’t you got
no boys to play wiv?
“Yea, but the uvver side of Peckham so we only get
chance at school or sometimes at the weekend. I’m alright mum, really.” He
wasn’t and the truth was he was scared to leave the flat by himself at night.
He’d been threatened more than once for not being a member of any of the
gangs.
She finished the sandwich and put it down on the table
for him along with their last can of Coca Cola.
“There you are, I knows it ain’t much but it should see
you right till I gets paid tomorrow and we can have a real meal. Now, Leroy said
he was coming back later so you’d better keep the door locked. Is that
understood? Lock it and bolt it after I leave for work, you hear me
now?”
“Yea momma okay I will.”
He carried his
plate and can to the sink and went into the other room, flopped into the sofa
and switched on the television with the remote control and started to channel
hop settling on ‘The Simpsons’ halfway through an episode.
His mother came into the room dressed in her care home
blue and white uniform. She had managed to hide some of the cut on her lip with
make up.
“I’m off now Henry, remember what I said about locking
the door now. I’ll see you in the morning before you head off, bye. Oh, I nearly
forgot if you get into any problem you call Mrs. Ayalougu in number 32. I never
thought that we would ever need the help of some Hausa, us bein’ Christian an
all but she’s been good to us and she knows how to deal with the likes of
Leroy.” With that she left.
Henry woke with a start; Leroy had cuffed him around the
head. He had fallen asleep during the football game and had no idea what time it
was. Startled and scared he realised he had forgotten to lock the
door.
“Where is she? Come on look lively you little shit,
where is that bitch? I won’t ask you agin before you get the choice of ‘ospital
or the morgue,” he thrust his tattooed fists one after the other at the boy who
was attempting to shrink away from him to the far end of the
sofa.
Leroy unsteady and the worse for drink leaned over and
grabbed the boy catching hold of him around his slender upper arm. Henry
instinctively bent his head and sunk his teeth into Leroy’s index finger and bit
with all his might.
“Yeow, you little shit you’re goin’ to regret that,” he
snatched his hand away and Henry shot around the room away from him into the
kitchen and out of the main door on to the balcony.
His first thought was to go to number 32 as his mother
instructed but something changed his mind. He knew if he ran he would possibly
escape this once but it would not be permanent.
It seemed as though a red mist took over his fear as he
braced himself against the balcony wall and faced the vision of Leroy lunging
out of the door at him. Instinctively he dropped to his knees grabbing hold of
the big man’s right thigh with both his arms. The combination of Leroy’s mad
rush and completely missing his prey he was already off balance, Henry heaved
himself upright with all his strength sending his assailant clean over the
balcony. With a blood curdling scream Leroy sailed head first into thin air
landing with a loud crash onto the rubbish containers three levels
below.
Everything went eerily silent for several moments. Henry
sat on the floor his legs now outstretched in front of him. His face devoid of
any expression apart from the mildest look of self-satisfaction. Job well done.
Several doors opened and residents ran to look over the balcony first to where
Leroy’s body lay in an ungainly repose over the bins, then to
Henry.
Amongst the gasps and chatter Henry heard the calming
voice of Mrs Ayalougu from 32 who was patting his arm and helping him to get up.
She was smiling a huge grin on her broad face showing the big gap where her
front teeth used to be.
“It be alright now there young Henry. You go on back
inside and I’ll call the law. You and me will have a little talk before they get
here, okay? We’se goin to tell them that pigs can fly ain’t
we?”
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