by David Deanshaw
a glass of milk
Albert Parkes was breathing his
last.
He lay propped up on pillows to assist
his breathing. The emphysema was now taking its toll.
He and Emily had spent close on fifty
years together as man and wife. They had been born in adjacent streets in a
place called Clayton in the old part of east Manchester. Clayton had only two
claims to fame - it had two roads which led to the more fashionable part of east
Lancashire – Ashton under Lyne and the Chemical Company – Clayton Aniline.
They had gone to school together and
later when time came to leave school and go to work they joined the same company
– the Aniline
Not surprisingly the two roads from
Manchester to Ashton were called the Old Road and the New Road. They were
largely parallel and reflected the changes time had wrought in that part of
industrial east Manchester. The air around the factory was acrid with the smell
of spent chemical activity and processes. “It smells like sour milk tastes” is
what visitors to the area would say. Still it’s fifty acres provided jobs for a
thousand people from miles around.
Albert had been a supervisor until
recently. His breathing affliction could not be blamed on the company, it was
the collateral damage caused by forty full strength cigarettes each day for
forty five years.
Emily had worked in the factory
handling the drums of chemical raw materials, mostly imported from West
Africa.
The hours had been long and arduous.
They both worked so late every day that they never seemed to have time to do
anything but work and sleep. Except Sunday of course which was a day for
church.
In fact, so long did they work, that
they seemed to spend so much time together that they never had time to meet
anyone else. Getting married was just a natural way of their lives moving on,
getting away from their respective homes and spending congenial time together.
Clayton was made up of streets of
back-to-back houses, two up, two down, with a scullery at the back of the house.
The lavatory was at the end of the yard. Houses were plentiful and the newly-wed
couple found such a house two streets away from their parents in Kabul Street.
Many of the local streets had been named after battles or skirmishes during the
Second Afghan War. They had been built in the 1880s and 1890s to house the
workers at the chemical factory which had been founded in
1876.
They had been married just three years
when Phoebe was born. She was christened at the old Victorian church of St.
Cross Clayton which they all attended. It was a difficult and painful birth. So
much so that Emily was advised to avoid the prospect of more children.
Consequently Phoebe was much loved, but never spoilt. She was a tall, slender
girl with flowing locks of golden hair, which looked slightly at odds with her
rosy cheeks.
Reports from school suggested that she
was a bright child and her teachers suggested that she could take a secretarial
course. With this diploma she also got a job at the chemical factory – but in
the office – a step up in status from both of her parents.
This gave her the opportunity to meet
the managers of the different departments. This in turn led to her meeting and
marrying Harry Dene who had a degree in dye stuffs. He would prove to be an
ideal candidate for a senior position in the company in due
course.
Seeing dad at work seemed to be a
strange situation for Phoebe at the start. However as time passed it became
clear that her father’s skills were not really being fully utilised. He had
unique experience with the corrosive components of chemicals which he had
learned in the trenches of the Somme during the First World War. Phoebe passed
this information on to her manager who in turn arranged for Albert to be
considered for a new position which would use his skills.
The work had the usual dangers
inherent in any chemical experiment, but Albert had learned caution the hard
way. He never smoked at work of course, which probably explained his constant
use of tobacco when he was not at work. Both his wife and his daughter pleaded
with him to cut down.
“Dad, I really do want you to be able
to see my children grow up and when they are older you can tell them all about
the chemicals you came across during the last war.” Phoebe was convinced that
stooping to emotional blackmail would work. It didn’t. The irony was that the
new responsibility increased the stress he was under and his smoking
increased.
Emily also tried it and would say:-“I
don’t want to live without you. I have known nothing else but love for
you.”
“Look, love, I promise that if I go
first, I will come and collect you when your time comes.”
It was no consolation, but Albert
obviously believed it, so the girls had to put up with it.
When the end came, Albert smiled and
uttered words which his wife would remember all her life, “When your time comes,
Emily, I will come for you.” With that his breathing
stopped.
Phoebe and her mother shed tears of
course. But they knew that they would make the best of it by ensuring that the
children, when they came, would be told stories about the granddad they never
knew. They even told them about granddad’s promise to come and collect their
grandma when the time came. Deep down of course none of them believed
it.
It was some years before Emily, who
was not a smoker or a drinker, began to feel the strain of old age. Still she
spent time with her daughter and the grandchildren Albert had never seen. But
time was taking its toll on her life
Whilst not wealthy in a
20th century sense, by the time she was ailing, she made sure that
there would be no nasty surprises when her will was read. Emily knew that her
mother’s life was ebbing away slowly.
“Oh mum, please don’t go yet” begged
her daughter Phoebe, as she puffed up her mother’s pillows so she was more
comfortable.
“Your dad promised he would come for
me when my time came.”
Phoebe’s husband Harry was reading his
wife carefully. He placed his arm around her shoulder tenderly, gave her a
gentle squeeze and suggested that mum might like some tea when she
awoke.
Emily closed her eyes and lapsed into
a deep sleep.
Phoebe went downstairs to make some
tea; perhaps mum would like a small slice of cake with her cup when she
woke.
Within a few minutes she returned with
the tray and placed it on her mother’s dressing table. Then she turned round to
see her mother’s eyes wide open.
Suddenly, Emily raised her arms,
heaved herself to sit bolt upright, smiled and called aloud “Albert”. With that
she slumped back onto her bed dead.
Albert had kept his
promise.
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