Authors: James Wheatley
Tags: #debut, #childhood, #friendship, #redemption, #working-class, #learning difficulty, #crime, #prejudice, #hope, #North England
We roll onto the site through a thin, damp mist. It's Monday morning, it's eight thirty, and I've got that cold-start feeling where every joint in my body seems to grate and squeal, and the week hasn't even started yet. I get out of the van and the cold comes through my sweater immediately. I shiver. I reach back in and grab my boots, then trot over to the cabin. Of course, the door is locked.
âWho's got the
key?'
âI have â hold on.' Geoff climbs out of the van, followed by Barry. âBollocks, it's colder now than it was when we left.'
âStop moaning and bring us the
key.'
Geoff wanders over and rummages in his pocket for the key to the cabin. âFucking bastard.' He separates it from the crap, gripping it precariously between two fingers. Flakes of old tissue paper float to the ground, and a packet of tobacco almost follows. Eventually, he fumbles the key into the keyhole and lets us
in.
âPut the fucking kettle on, then,' says Barry, and throws himself into one of the plastic seats. He lights a cigarette immediately and sucks in the smoke with relish.
The cabin is dank from being closed up all weekend, and stinks of the mud that coats the floor. Soon, though, Barry's cigarette smoke cuts through the damp, dirty smell. Geoff has settled into his own seat and is proceeding to roll himself a fag. I presume, therefore, that the command to put the kettle on was directed at me. I fill the kettle in the filthy sink and brew up as the other two tap fag ash onto the floor.
âFuck.' My heart sinks. Last thing I need on a Monday morning.
âWhat?' asks Barry.
âThere's no fucking teabags.'
âThere was a whole fucking packet of PG Tips on Friday.'
âThey were that fitter's. He took them home.'
âStingy cunt.'
We look at each other shiftily. I
sigh.
âYou'd best go and get some,' says Barry.
âMoney.' I hold out my hand. The other two reluctantly cough up a quid
each.
âGet some milk as well.'
â
Fifteen minutes later, I return to the site bearing a plastic bottle of semi-skimmed milk and a box of eighty teabags. As I trudge up the access road, I see a silver 4x4 parked right outside the cabin. It looks quite posh and not very old, and I've never seen it here before. I wonder, glumly, if some kind of manager has come down to check up on things, but as I get closer, I hear Geoff's giggle through the door. Something must have cheered him
up.
As soon as I get inside, I am enveloped by stinking blue cigar smoke, and as I cough, I see something that gives me such a shock I almost choke on my own
spit.
âFucking hell.'
âAll right?' Mac grins at me, grips his cigar in his teeth, and shakes my hand mightily.
âChrist. It's been a while.'
âThree years. Geoff's wedding.'
âWhat are you doing here?'
âWorking.'
âReally?'
âNo, I just travelled two hours for a cup of fucking tea. Yes, really. There's six of us; the rest'll be here in a minute.'
âFucking hell. Well, it's good to see you again.'
Barry grunts and lights another cigarette, but Geoff smiles brightly. âAye, it's going to be just like old times.' Barry shakes his head and looks out of the window.
âAnyroad, are you lads going to show me the ropes or what?' Mac takes a long drag on his cigar and pauses expectantly.
Geoff and Barry look at their cigarettes and continue to smoke without moving from their chairs. Mac keeps looking at
us.
I sigh. âAll right, Mac, I'll give you the fucking tour. Just let me get my boots
on.'
âGood
lad.'
I sit down to change my shoes. Being called âgood lad' by Mac is a bit rum, since he's only a year older than me. On the other hand, he's probably earned the right. He stares down at me from beneath his thick black eyebrows. âBeen keeping yourself busy?'
âNot really. Just the same old shite.' I finish lacing my boots. âYou must be, though, judging by that fancy motor.'
âAye, business is good. I'll need a fucking secretary soon.'
Barry snorts loudly.
Mac grins. âDo you need a tissue, Baz? You should keep one up your sleeve, like your granny used
to.'
âAll right, Mac,' I say. âLet's
go.'
We walk out. The mist is gone, but the sky remains grey. I lead Mac over to the jagged building. âThis isn't my job, but anyway, there it
is.'
Mac stands with his arms folded and takes in the view. Judged solely by his constituent parts â the timeshare tan, the belly, the moustache, the tremendous eyebrows â Mac should look ridiculous, a Mexican bandit gone to seed â but he doesn't. He just looks like Mac, and Mac is solid and reassuring.
âWell, let's see now.' He strides to the hole in the wall that will one day hold the side door and extends his head into the darkness within.
âThe leccy's just inside, to your left,' I say, and Mac is swallowed up. I hear the scraping as he swings his foot over the floor, feeling for the distribution box, and a heavy clunk as he connects with it. There is a brief fumbling and the temporary lights flicker on. I follow him in, but he just stands there amid the dust and assorted mess, looking around him quite casually.
âGeoff and Baz were saying this is a fucking shambles.'
âIt's just the usual bollocks â you know, one thing after another. There were four other brickies to begin with, but they fucked off weeks ago. They found some replacements, but they were coming all the way from Wales and buggered off the minute they got something closer to home. Then it rained for a week and the site flooded.'
âJesus. Well, I'll soon get it shipshape.' He gives me a
wink.
âFucking hell, don't take that attitude with Barry â he'll kick
off.'
âDon't worry. You stick to your walls, my lads'll take mine, and I won't interfere.'
âGood, because you know what he's like when he thinks he's got something to complain about.'
We hear the sound of vehicles drawing onto the
site.
âThat must be my lads,' says Mac. âI'd better go and let them know the score.'
We splash through the mud back to the cabin and find it suddenly a lot more crowded. Mac is true to his word â six men â and though there are enough seats for everyone, the seats in question are small, very close to one another, and bolted to the floor. Things look pretty cosy. I slip onto the seat next to Geoff, opposite Barry.
âFull house now, then,' I say to
them.
âAye.' Geoff smiles. âMebbes they'll liven the place up a bit. It's got to be better than spending all day with you two miserable bastards.'
I give Geoff the benefit of a laugh, but Barry just snorts again and violently shakes open his newspaper.
âWhat's up, Baz?' Geoff
asks.
âNothing,' says Barry without looking up from his paper.
Geoff winks at me and then calls out, âHere, Mac, do you remember that motorcycle we did
up?'
Mac looks over from where he's sitting and smiles broadly. âYes, I bloody do. One of the best summers we ever spent that, wasn't
it?'
âAye, it were.'
âI remember when Baz went over the handlebars. We thought we'd lost you there, until you got up and started staggering around like a drunk.' Mac laughs at the memory. Barry shakes his head and pretends to
read.
Barry doesn't like Mac. There is the inevitable clash of characters, but really it all goes back to the motorcycle. Mac got a couple of weeks' work one summer, helping out on a local farm. All he did was clean out a big barn â hard labour and not in the least exciting. It was the motorcycle that made it worth doing. Under a tarp he found a wretched old C15. It was ancient even then, and in need of serious attention, but in Mac's imagination it gleamed and roared. An agreement was reached that when the job was finished, Mac could take the motorcycle.
It became a shared project, and the four of us worked on it for weeks that summer. Whenever the weather was fine, we'd be in Mac's back yard puzzling over the repairs and arguing about the best way to do things. Sometimes Mac's dad would stand in the doorway, drinking tea and smoking. Usually he just laughed at us, but occasionally he offered advice.
Against the odds, we got the bastard running, and spent the remainder of the summer taking turns to rip around the fields and lanes. Naturally, Mac was the best rider, but at the end of the summer, he sold the bike and took the money.
That's when the recriminations started. Geoff and I had always considered it Mac's bike, and though we were disappointed that he'd got rid of it, we didn't bear any grudges. Barry, on the other hand, was furious: he felt we had a stake in the bike and deserved some of the money. It was ridiculous â Mac had paid for the rebore, and we'd siphoned all the petrol we used out of his dad's car â but Barry remained implacable.
Anyway, by the time I got out of prison, Mac was gone â off in Spain building hotels. âBest place for him,' Barry would say, and from Barry's point of view, that was true: without Mac around he could finally be the boss. A year or so later, however, Mac came home with new skills and big ideas, and hostilities flared again. He went into business for himself, and not just as a self-employed brickie like Barry and Geoff, but a
proper
business with a balance sheet and his name on the van. And then his name on the truck. And then his name on the register of company directors. One day, he knocked on Barry's door and offered us work. Whether Mac did it out of mischief or genuine need I'll never know, but Barry turned him down
flat.
By then, Mac had married and moved away to the countryside of North Yorkshire, so we saw him less, and then hardly ever. Still, Barry couldn't forgive him. âThat fucking John McCluskey, always out for the profit and fuck the rest of us,' was his constant refrain and judgement of the man. Barry would have done the same, though, if he'd had the
wit.
âCould you shift over, mate?' A man stands over Barry with a mug of tea in one hand and a half-eaten egg and bacon McMuffin in the other. Barry looks up and inspects him slowly. His disgust is palpable; the man has fashionable
hair.
âHave you nicked one of our fucking teabags?'
âFuck's sake, Baz, let the lad sit down.' Geoff kicks him under the table, but the man is already lowering himself into the space, leaving Barry with no choice but to move
over.
âCheers, mate,' says the man. âNo, I haven't, actually. We brought our
own.'
âGood.'
âIt's your milk, though.'
Barry slaps his newspaper down on the table.
âOnly joking.'
âHe doesn't have a sense of humour.' Mac, from behind. He places his hand on the man's shoulder. âOur Barry is an iron man, aren't
you?'
Barry just looks out of the window.
âAnyway, lads, this is Lee. He's my right-hand
man.'
âHiya,' says Lee. We're all introducing ourselves when the Irish cunt walks
in.
âThat's the site engineer,' says Geoff in a low voice. âHe's a right bastard.'
âYou new boys, sign these fucking forms,' the Irish cunt brandishes a clipboard at the nearest
man.
âHave you got a
pen?'
âFind your own fucking pen. Which one of you is John McCluskey?'
âOver here,' says Mac slowly.
âI need to see you in the office to go over the plans.'
Mac looks at the Irish cunt, takes a drink of tea, swallows, and then carefully places the mug back on the tabletop. âI'll be right there, once I've finished my brew.'
âWell, I haven't got all day.' With that the Irish cunt turns to us and looks as if he's about to ask why we aren't working when it's gone ten, but from outside comes the deep growl of a truck engine and the hard beep of a reverse signal. âFucking hell,' he mutters, and bustles out of the cabin.
Barry gives Lee a grim smile. âWelcome to our world.'
I don't think I can listen to any more moaning today. I close my ears and look out of the cabin window. Outside, the Irish cunt is involved in a heated argument with the man who delivers our mortar.
â
Van, work, van, home, pub, bed. As Barry pilots us around the long bend that leads into the village, the knowledge that it's only Monday night squats in my thoughts. We left the site early â the mortar was the wrong mix and everyone was thoroughly fed up â but it's October now, so it's already dark. A whole day murdered for nothing, and four more to go. Geoff snoozes in the passenger seat, his left cheek making a wet slap against the window every time we hit a bump. He has farted several times since drifting off, but we are thankful for the fact that he has not started to snore. I'm in the second row of seats, staring at my reflection in the side window. At first, it is solid and lifelike, but is obliterated as we enter the village and the shapes of buildings and parked cars loom up under the streetlights.
I sense a movement and turn to meet it; Barry is looking at me in the rearview mirror. Our gazes lock, briefly, on the glass.
âWhat fucking day is it?' he
asks.
âIt's Monday, Barry.'
âFuck. Four days.'
I grunt some sort of sympathy, some sort of common feeling. There is a sudden discomfort in the realization that I share thoughts with Barry. Somehow it just makes it worse.