I decided I wouldn't bother trying to teach Dad any more. It was clearly a waste of time.
The next visit Dad was lying prone on his pillows, grey with fatigue, purple circles under his eyes. I thought he'd be extra irritable, but he grabbed hold of my wrist and tears ran down his face, dribbling sideways into his ears. I didn't know if his eyes were watering from exhaustion or whether he was really crying. I felt awkward and embarrassed, but tender too. I sat down beside him on the edge of his bed, trying to reassure him that he'd soon get better, he'd be out of hospital right as rain, ready to teach us and take us out on trips. I reminded him of all the places we'd visited, and Dad made a stab at repeating âNational Gallery', âHampton Court', âWindsor Castle', âBox Hill' and âHastings'. Most of the words sounded weird, but when prompted he could tell me which one had paintings, which was once owned by a Tudor king, which was owned by our current Queen, which was a high hill with a perilous chalk path and which was famous for a long-ago battle.
It was hard putting all this effort into teaching Dad, and then having to go home and do my own homework. I learned which teachers would simply moan a bit but not pursue it if you failed to hand it in, and which would harass and hound you. Mrs Godfrey was Queen Harasser and Hounder. I drew a picture of her like a one-breasted Amazon driving her wheel-spiked chariot while bloodied pupils wailed in her wake.
I didn't have an Iggy-Figgy back-up system like Grace. I had to struggle by myself. Sometimes the English homework seemed ridiculously easy, and the French and history and religious education and PSHE seemed a total doddle most of the time, but I floundered hopelessly with the science and ICT and maths. I
wished
we got art homework. I only had two double lessons of art each week, nowhere near enough.
I worked hard on my still life. I added a few extra favourite books â
The Bell Jar, The Catcher in the Rye, Tess of the D'Urbervilles, Frankenstein
and
The Chrysalids
, shamelessly trying to impress Mr Raxberry.
He nodded at each title, giving me his little smile. âMrs Godfrey would be proud of you,' he said.
âMrs Godfrey
hates
me,' I said.
âNo she doesn't!'
âShe does, she finds me fantastically irritating. She's forever putting me down and punishing me. I don't know why, because I try really hard in English. Well, I did. I can't be bothered now.'
âKeep bothering, Prue. Maybe you disconcert her. She's not used to girls like you.'
âI'm not used to women like her,' I said. I paused. âI wish all the teachers were like you, Mr Raxberry.'
âShameless flattery will probably make you teacher's pet,' he said, laughing. Then he looked at me more seriously. âAre you finding it all a bit of a struggle?'
âA bit,' I said carefully. Understatement of the century!
âAnd someone in the staff room said your dad's not well at the moment?'
âHe's had a stroke. He's getting a bit better now, but still can't move much, or say many words.' My voice went wobbly as I said it.
Mr Raxberry looked at me, his eyes warm and concerned. âIt must be horrible for you,' he said. âIf it gets too much any time, use the art room as a bolt hole. Painting is excellent therapy. Here, this should help you find your way around.'
He tucked a roll of paper into my school bag. I didn't look at it there and then in front of everyone. I waited until I got home, and Grace was in the kitchen having a snack with Mum. The rolled-up paper was fastened with scarlet ribbon. I untied it, smoothed it out against my hot cheek, and then wound it round my finger like a fat silk ring. Then I carefully smoothed out the long rectangle of paper.
It was the map he'd promised me. He'd drawn the school in three dimensions, with the appropriate teacher in their classroom â each a wicked caricature. He'd drawn strange alien creatures lurking in the cloakroom and gnawing pizzas in the canteen. A great tribe of these two-headed claw-footed horned and tailed beings ran amok in the playground. He'd drawn me cowering away from them in my red-and-white tablecloth dress. I was standing at the start of a tiny scarlet pathway. I followed it with my finger, all the way past the playing fields, straight to the art block, where Mr Raxberry was painting at an easel.
I kissed the tip of my finger and then very carefully pressed it down on the tiny figure.
I didn't take my map back to school. I looked at it so often I could still see it written in the air after I'd rolled it up. I tucked it carefully in my drawer with the underwear set I never wanted to wear again.
Oh God, that underwear! The girls must have told the boys. They all seemed incredibly interested in it.
âCome on, Prue, show us your slaggy underwear,' they yelled after me.
They crept up behind me and pinged the elastic of my bra through my dress and tried to pull up my skirt. I hated the feel of their hot scrabbly hands. I knew I should stay calm and disdainful, but I shrieked and slapped at them, making a spectacle of myself. Then they'd mimic me and say stupid things until I was nearly in tears. Rita and her little gang, Aimee, Megan and Jess, would watch, smiling.
Mr Raxberry came along the corridor in the midst of one of these episodes.
âHey, guys, make room for a member of the hallowed staff,' he said, waving them out the way.
They sauntered off, not too bothered whether he'd seen or not, because he was only old Rax.
Mr Raxberry paused, pretending to be looking at messages on the notice board. His back was to me, but when I started creeping away he turned and came over. âWere they giving you a hard time?' he said.
âNo, no!' I said, scarlet.
I couldn't bear the idea of telling him, maybe having to bring my underwear into the conversation. Mr Raxberry knew I was lying, of course, but he simply nodded. He walked along the corridor beside me, changing the subject, talking about an arts programme that evening.
âIt's on cable telly. Do you get it? If not, I could maybe video it for you,' he suggested.
âThat's very kind, Mr Raxberry, but actually. I don't have any kind of television, or a video either,' I said.
I waited for him to shake his head in astonishment and act like I was a creature from a different planet, but he just nodded again.
âSo that's how you find the time to read so much,' he said. âI should get rid of our television. My little boy watches endless horrible cartoons. I'm sure it's not good for him. Maybe that's why he keeps trying to beat up his baby sister.'
âYou've got children,' I said. My voice sounded odd. I felt as if someone was squeezing my throat. It was such a shock. I knew he was probably in his mid-twenties, plenty old enough to have children. I knew he probably had a partner. Well . . . I hadn't actually thought about it too much. He was Mr Raxberry, my art teacher, not Mr Raxberry, family man, with wife and two kids.
âMy little boy's three. He's called Harry. And Lily's six months old. Hang on.' He felt in the back pocket of his jeans for his wallet. âHere they are,' he said, showing me a photo.
I looked at the dark little boy clasping a rolypoly baby a little too tightly. They seemed surprisingly uninteresting, nondescript children, nothing like their father.
âThey're lovely.' I tried to sound enthusiastic. I wondered what his wife looked like. Did I dare ask? âDo you have a photo of your wife too?'
He paused a moment. âYes. Yes, there's one of all of us in here
somewhere
.' He fumbled amongst five-pound notes and travel cards and bunched-up stamps, and eventually found a crumpled holiday snapshot.
It was of the whole family, walking along an esplanade, squinting in the strong sunshine. Mr Raxberry was in denim shorts, a black sleeveless T-shirt and canvas shoes. He looked less like a teacher than ever. He was pushing a little baby Lily in a buggy. Her sunhat had fallen sideways, almost totally obscuring her face, but she was kicking her fat little legs contentedly. The little boy was scowling under his baseball cap, hanging on to his mother's hand, looking as if he was whining to be carried.
I looked at her. She wasn't as pretty as I'd thought she'd be. She was wearing shorts too, baggy ones down to her knees, with a big T-shirt over the top. She was obviously self-conscious about her figure. She wasn't fat, not like Grace, certainly not like poor Mum, but she was a little too curvy, big breasts but also a big tummy and a big bottom. Maybe she simply hadn't got her figure back after having the baby.
I looked at her face. It was difficult to tell what she was really like because she was frowning in the sunlight. The little boy was pestering her too. She wouldn't look happy and relaxed in these circumstances. Her hair was lovely though, soft and shining and fair, in a pageboy bob just brushing her shoulders. So Mr Raxberry liked big, curvy blondes. I wished I wasn't small and thin and dark.
I tried hard to think of something to say. There were a hundred questions I wanted to ask. Why
her
out of all the hundreds of women you must have met? What makes her so special? Do you tell her all your secrets? Does she put her arms round you and soothe you when you're tired or worried? Does she paint too? Does she read? Do you both sketch on holiday and then sit cosily at either end of the sofa, toes touching, reading your books? Do you go shopping together? Do you have the children in bed for a big family cuddle on Sunday mornings? Is she your childhood sweetheart, your one true love?
âWhat's her name?' I asked out loud.
âMarianne.'
âOh. That's nice,' I said lamely. âI wish I had a pretty name like that.'
âWhat's wrong with Prudence?'
âWhat's
right
with it? It's an awful Victorian virtue name. My dad used to be very religious. He really went overboard. I'm Prudence Charity and my sister's Grace Patience, can you believe it?'
âI've got a terrible name too. Keith. How naff is that, especially as I used to have a bit of a lisp as a child. Imagine! “My name's Keef.” Thank God most people called me Rax. No, you're lucky, Prudence and Grace are quaintly beautiful names. They make me think of little Victorian girls in pinafores and button boots.'
âExactly,' I said. âMy clothes are almost as old-fashioned!'
I was still rotating my hideous dresses. Mum had sent me to school with ten pounds. She thought we could be kitted out in second-hand uniform for a fiver each. But the school shop didn't charge jumble-sale prices. Each garment cost a fortune, even the old threadbare stuff. I bought us a shabby blazer which we wore in turns. It was too tight for Grace and it absolutely swamped me, but I was past caring.
Mum was appalled that it was going to be so expensive acquiring a whole uniform. She did question me several times on the exact price of the blouses and skirts and school ties. I heard her asking Grace too, as if she didn't believe me. I suppose she felt she couldn't trust me after I'd spent the maths tuition money.
âI think your clothes kind of suit you, Prudence,' said Mr Raxberry.
âI hate them,' I said. âI can't wait to get the proper school uniform, but it's going to take ages before we can afford it all.'
Mr Raxberry paused. âPerhaps . . . perhaps you could earn a bit yourself?'
âI don't know how. I can't get a Saturday job because I have to help in our bookshop and I don't get paid for that. I'd do a paper round but the shop down our street doesn't do deliveries any more. I can't think of anything else I could do.'
âBabysitting?'
âI don't know anyone with babies.'
âYou know me,' said Mr Raxberry.
I stared at him. âDo you really mean it?'
âWhy not? Marianne and I need to get out more. I don't think we've had one proper evening out since Lily was born. How about it? Maybe Friday? Say seven thirty? We'll be back by eleven and I'll drive you home of course. Do you think your mother would mind?'
âOf course she won't mind!' I said.
Mum
did
mind, terribly.
âWhat do you
mean
, this teacher has asked you to babysit, Prudence? He barely knows you. You've only been at the school five minutes.'
It felt as if I'd known Mr Raxberry all my life, but I knew it might not be wise to say this to Mum.
âIt's Mr Raxberry, Mum,' I said.
âOh, Rax,' said Grace.
She called him by his nickname, even though he didn't even teach her year. I'd never been able to psych myself up to calling him Rax. It seemed too intimate and personal, even though the whole school, teachers, pupils, even the dinner ladies, called him Rax too.
âI don't care who he is, you're not going to a strange man's house,' said Mum.
âHe's
not
a strange man, Mum. You've met him, remember? The teacher with the little beard and the earring.'
âOh. Him! So he's got a
baby
? He didn't look old enough.'
âHe's got a little boy, Harry, and a baby, Lily. And I'm babysitting for them on Friday night.'
âYou are
lucky
, Prue. Can I come too?' Grace begged.
âNo, it's just me. It will look as if we're asking for double the money if you come too, Grace,' I said quickly. âHe only asked me because I was moaning about not being able to afford the school uniform.'
I didn't want Grace tagging along too. I wanted to keep Mr Raxberry and his family all to myself.
âHow dare you tell a teacher we can't afford the uniform!' said Mum.