Read Tales of Sin & Fury, Part 1 Online
Authors: Sonia Paige
Mandy sees me feeling it. âDon't worry. They'll give you set times for washing and that. Not any time soon.'
I look at my hand. Bits of mud under the nails. Scratches on the fingers. I got the scratches from a rose bush⦠when was that? Working in Mr. Bradford's rose garden. All that seems a long way away. I remember I have clients. They'll be wondering where I am.
I look around across the unmade beds. Sounds of voices and footsteps outside. Down on the floor beside my bed a striped shoulder bag in a heap. That looks familiar. And battered brown boots. My boots. They must have followed me here, I don't remember walking in. The rainbow laces are gone. Boots staring at me with empty lace-holes, vacant as my brain. My body feels like it has been assembled from spare parts that don't match. With vomit as glue. Best keep still. I put my hand down.
Mandy says, âWe didn't think you was ever going to come round, did we Debs?'
âI wish I hadn't.' My voice sounds slurred.
âSee, there you go, you shouldn't say them things. You gotta be positive. You're bad as her, look.' She grabs Debs' wrist and pulls it towards my bed. She pushes the sleeve up, showing rows of red lines in the flesh up to the elbow. âThat was a good arm once. Now it's like them railway tracks outside King's Cross. Never mind the needle marks.'
Debs pulls her hand away and walks off to the window. âDon't show me up.'
âBet you never done any of that stuff, eh⦠Corinne?' says Mandy. âCutting yourself up? You don't look the type.'
I look away and stare at the graffiti on the wall.
What does she know, what type I am or what I've done? What does she know about what I did twenty years ago? That's the last thing I want to think about. I've got enough problems now
.
When I look back, her face is smooth like a well-guarded secret. Her eyes are toughing me up, but there's no malice in them.
I say, âI did cut myself once.'
There, I've said it. What the fuck. I shut my eyes and fiddle with the ring on my little finger.
Just the once and I still have the scar. From the last time life shut the door in my face. No reason for one breath to follow the other. Like now.
âLet's have a look.' Mandy lifts my cardigan sleeve and examines my left arm from elbow to wrist. I watch. I don't have the strength to stop her. When you're that down, you let people handle you how they want. I feel I've forfeited my rights over my body.
âYou ain't done nothing,' says Mandy as she leans over to inspect my right arm. âNothing here neither.' But when she gets down to my right hand she stops and calls out: âWhat the fuck were you trying to do here?'
I snatch my right hand away, clutching the ring on the little finger. Shit. I bury the arm under the sheets.
Mandy looks at Debs: âShe done it all right. Big time. She's been there.'
âLessee,' says Debs, turning back from the window. âLessee what she did, Lady Muck.'
I sink back under the bedclothes. âLeave me alone.' I don't want to carry the can for the sins of my class. Not now. A class that disowns me.
âDon't be shy,' says Mandy. âEvery cut tells a story.'
A story I've never told. The last time, twenty years ago, that I felt like this. The last time I fell through the floor of the world.
I hear keys rattling and a door opening. It's round the corner from my bed, I can't see. Then a brusque voice: âHaynes! Doctor.'
From under the covers of the bed at the far end, a woman with tousled hair emerges fully dressed in tight silver trousers. She puts her feet into a pair of trainers and shuffles past us.
Debs stares after her. âShe ain't said a word since she came in last night. What with her and you lying there it's been like a bloody morgue.'
I hear the door shut behind her with a heavy thud, and keys turning in the lock.
âSo, what, you did that once, and that was it?' Mandy asks me, âJust the once?'
I stare out from the bedclothes. âWhat?'
Drop it, woman. Back off.
âWhat you done to yourself.' Mandy points. âHow come you never finished the job? How come you never done it again? Cat got your tongue? We might learn something.'
âOr not.' I lever myself back up to sitting, keeping my right hand under the sheets.
âPlease yourself.' Mandy sits down on the side of my bed and starts rubbing her toes with chipped ruby-varnished finger tips. Below her jeans she's wearing white party shoes with a single broad strap and no socks: âMy feet are cold. Monday tomorrow, visits. Wish Dave would bring me some socks.'
âWhen did you tell him?' asks Debs.
âI rang my Mum, didn't I? He should know by now.' Mandy turns to me. âSo how d'you end up in here, spending Christmas where Santa don't visit? With us peasants?'
Clouds gather in my head. It's beginning to come back, but I wish it wasn't. âSomething happened to me. Then I hit the bottle. Then I did something I should never have done.'
âMore like the bottle hit you. We can see that.'
âI did something bad and I caused a lot of damage.' That much I know.
âWe all done stuff we don't wanna talk about,' says Mandy. âGotta move on.'
âNow I'm being punished. Some festive season this is going to be.' I close my eyes and I can feel my spine crumpling.
âTake it easy,' says Mandy. âWe're on remand here. Could be out in a week or so. You're lucky you're not coming off heroin. You'll be on your feet before us two. The next ten days ain't gonna be no picnic for us. They put us on methadone, then they start cutting it. All over Christmas. You're lucky, mate.'
I groan.
Some luck
.
âPut it this way,' says Mandy. âThis is the first day of the rest of your life. I know what. Got a pen, Debs?'
Debs peers in a couple of the bedside cupboards and comes up with a blue felt tip pen. The felt's a bit squashed and woolly at the end, but it's still moist and it makes a mark as Mandy writes the number one on the wall beside my bed and rings it with a circle. âDay One,' she announces. âTake it a day at a time. We know. We been here before.'
Debs sits down on the bottom of my bed and twirls her pony tail slowly round her finger. She stares at my forearms below my pale blue cardigan. My right hand's still under the covers. âAin't you skinny. I can't see no scars.'
She's all sharp edges and bloodless inquisitiveness. Her eyes are intelligent and piercing. I feel her long nose wanting to poke into my business. I mumble, âIt's a long story.'
âGo on, then,' says Mandy. âSpill the beans. We got time, here in Her Majesty's Hilton. Debs and I are all talked out, ain't we babes? And Debs needs some tips on how to stop slicing herself up.'
I inch my knees up under the bedclothes and hug them, there's some comfort in that. âSo it's “Tell us a story” time,' I say.
âThat's all we got left in here,' says Mandy. âThey've taken everything else off us, ain't they?'
âHave you been in here long?' I ask.
âA few days,' she says. âYou don't never stay long on this wing. Just to clean you out. Then they move you over to join the rest. Unless you come up in court first.'
I screw up my face and try to make sense of all that's left in my brain of my arrest. The close-up views of blue serge uniforms, the stern voices, the doors closing, and the vomit⦠âThey didn't tell me,' I say. âOr maybe I can't remember.'
âYou was out like a light, mate. “We got a right alky here, chuck her into Detox.” But every alky got a story.'
A spasm zig-zags through my body and I grit my teeth.
I don't know you. You're like faces pressed against the glass. But you don't want to see what's inside.
âSo I'm Lady Muck?' I say, âWhy would you want to hear what happened to me?'
âDon't take no notice of Debs,' says Mandy. âShe's just a kid. With a dirty mouth. She don't mean it. We're all brought down to the same level here, ain't we? Tell you what, Debs'll give you the low down on how she started cutting herself. I heard that one already. Then you tell us how you stopped.'
âWhat?' says Debs.
âGo on, babes,' says Mandy. âIt ain't no secret. You went to see
The Evil Dead
. You told me yesterday, remember?'
âWe got a deal?' asks Debs, narrowing her eyes at me. Her mouth is set hard, not to let anything escape except verbal pellets aimed at other people. A kind of meanness hangs about her like a stale smell. âWe got a deal?'
I shrug. Do I have a choice?
Course of least resistance. Buy time. Perhaps the world will go away. Perhaps I'll lose consciousness and wake up next year when it's all over.
âCome on then,' says Mandy. â“My Life with the Knife”, a true story, by Debs.'
âScissors,' says Debs. âIt was scissors the first time.' She uses the long nail of her little finger to clean her other nails. Then she points her nose at me. I realize this is for my benefit, because Mandy's heard it before. âIt was a Saturday,' she says. âI went to see
The Evil Dead
. With my big sister and her boyfriend. It wasn't for kids, right. I was 12, but I had a new skirt and heels and that, and make-up, and I got in. It's about these people in a cabin in the woods. All demons and people going mad and getting killed. Trees twisting theirselves round you and eyeballs popping out and chainsaws and black slime. You seen it?'
I shake my head. And from the sound of it I don't want to.
Debs stands up, stiffens her body rigid and rolls her eyes up into her head. She twists her mouth into a parody of a smile, â“We're gonna get you! We're gonna get you!” she chants at me in a weird little girl voice. It has a grating edge like a knife scraped across a saucepan. It goes right through my head.
Mandy giggles. âPack it in.'
Debs turns to her, âI thought it was funny too, n'all. But my sister, she's a right big girl's blouse. We got out of the pictures, she was shaking and looking up and down the street. It's only a film, right? When we got back to the flats her bloke went off to talk to some mates, we were going home across the grass. She was limping, she had some stupid shoes she couldn't walk in. I went ahead and hid behind the side of our block. I waited and when she come round the corner I stepped out and like one of them ghouls in the film I grabbed at her sudden like THATâ¦'
At this moment Debs' hand springs towards my throat like an animal unleashed.
It's a shock but I don't flinch. I learnt at school not to react to bullies. Never show fear. And anyway I'm too far gone to care. I sit tight and stare back at her.
â⦠It was a joke,' says Debs. She opens her mouth wide and lets out a roar of demonic laughter.
âSome joke,' says Mandy.
Debs lets her hand drop from my throat and stops laughing. âWell, I didn't know, did I? How she'd go?'
âWhat happened?' I ask.
âMy sister, right,' says Debs, âshe sort of exploded into bits like a balloon. Shrieking and panting like someone having a good time. Shaking. Yelping like a cat that got trod on.'
âSounds like she was having a fit,' I say. I put my hand up to my head again. My left hand. Keep the right hand hidden. I take the weight of my head. Maybe something can stop the spinning.
âA fit, right, that's what my mum said, when I got my sister upstairs to the flat. Hysterics. Going on like that, “WA â WA â WA â WA â WA”.' As she imitates her sister, Debs' arms oscillate and her pony tail judders and her lips vibrate. It would be funny if it wasn't painful. âDaft sod my sister, my Mum slapped her round the face but she didn't stop. “WA â WA â WA⦔' Debs does the shaking again like a crazy kettle over-boiling.
âYour poor fucking sister,' said Mandy, âWhat you done to herâ¦'
âMy sister kept pointing at me,' Debs says, âand they sussed it was all down to me. They were well pissed off. They tried to give her water to drink but she knocked it on the floor.
âMy dad turned on me, “Hope you're pleased with what you done to your sister, you little monster.” She was always his favourite.
âHe took his belt off. “You're not too old to learn the hard way.” He grabbed me and tried to put me over his knee like I was a kid. My mum didn't do nothing to stop him. I fought back. Fuck him. Put his filthy fucking hands on me. I got away, right, and I ran into our bedroom and I locked the fucking door. My sister was still doing her nut, I could hear her. I felt like I was bursting, like I had to do something. I opened my sister's drawer. I found a pair of nail scissors. The first line I made it didn't do nothing. But then I did it again. Nice and slow, so I could see the skin ripping.' Debs holds out an arm to show me. In the criss-cross of thin red scars she directs me to a particular one. Almost with pride.
âSilly cow,' says Mandy. âYou wasn't hurting no-one but yourself.'
Debs strokes her arm. âYou don't get it, do you? When the blood started coming, I felt better. It blotted out the other stuff. That's how it goes. Works every time.'
There is a silence. Like a nasty taste I remember how bad you have to feel about yourself for the sight of your own blood to be a relief. I look at her small tight mouth and there is just a quiver on the upper lip. It hurts, all ways round, but she's not going to let on.
âWorks every time,' she spits out again.
Then Mandy says, âUntil the next time. If you haven't bled to death.'
âI know when to stop.'
âThat's what they all say.'
âYou can talk,' says Debs. âIf you're so know-it-all, how come you're doing heroin?'
âLeave me out of this,' says Mandy. âNow you gonna hear from Corinne here how she stopped all that hanky panky with knives.' She turns to me, âOver to you, babe. Hope you're gonna cheer us up.'