An Unconventional Love. Adeline Harris
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Название: An Unconventional Love

Автор: Adeline Harris

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Биографии и Мемуары

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isbn: 9780007354269

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СКАЧАТЬ quite yet,’ he said. ‘Your Grandfather Harris is very old and he might not live much longer. Don’t you want to see him while you still can?’

      ‘I want to see Clara,’ I wailed.

      ‘She’ll still be there. She’s a young woman. You’ll see her again.’

      He did his best to make me see the bright side of our new home – such a lovely house, and England was the best country in the world – but I was distraught, and I know Mother was the same. I overheard them talking at night when we were supposed to be in bed and always Mother would say, ‘I told you I would not live in England. I told you I wanted to bring up my children in India.’ Dad used the same patient tone he used with me, trying to win her over, but it was a lost cause.

      Mother had never done a stroke of housework in her life, so servants had to be hired: a cleaner and cook called Mrs Barber, a nanny for Harold and me, and a gardener to tend the grounds. Mrs Barber had been a cleaner at one of the hospitals Dad supervised but she’d lost her job and Dad felt sorry for her so he invited her to work for us. She didn’t live in but she came six mornings a week to clean and polish and dust the silver trophies and then she’d pop back in the evening to heat up meat pies and boil potatoes for our dinner. She wasn’t a great cook, but she was infinitely better than Mother. On Mrs Barbour’s day off, Mother would cut tinned corned beef into chunks and heat them up in a tin of vegetable soup, announcing ‘It’s dog’s dinner today.’ It looked for all the world as though someone had thrown up on the plate, and tasted pretty disgusting as well.

      Mother never got the hang of shopping for food. Rationing was still in force in postwar Britain and you had to take coupons to the shops to claim your allowance, but she just couldn’t understand that. She’d turn up at the butcher’s and ask for some lamb chops but he wouldn’t give them to her because she didn’t have the right kind of coupon. She was a real fish out of water.

      Appearances were important to Mother. She’d buy the cheapest kind of jam and put it in a silver jam pot with a little silver spoon. Dad was always complaining: ‘This jam hasn’t seen a raspberry, the seeds look like pieces of wood and it tastes as though there’s sawdust in it.’ She bought cheap whisky and sherry as well, and poured it into cut-crystal decanters.

      Mother wasn’t good at shopping for food and she didn’t wash clothes either. We wore our clothes over and over again until they were so filthy and smelly that they had to be thrown out. Every week she bundled up the larger items, such as sheets and pillowcases, towels and Dad’s shirts, for the Sunlight Laundry van to take away and wash, but she never washed our underwear or pyjamas or shirts or jumpers. To make matters worse, we weren’t big on bathing as a family. If I got my knees muddy in the garden, she’d make me brush the dirt off before I got into bed but I only climbed into the bath for an all-over wash every few weeks, when Dad told me I had to. Personal hygiene wasn’t something that concerned Mother.

      Soon after we arrived at Oaklands in September 1949, I was enrolled at St Mary’s Roman Catholic Mixed School in Crewe, which was the roughest, poorest school in the area, with a big intake of Irish immigrants and local kids whose fathers worked in the car factory or on the railways. I was a skinny little girl with poker-straight dark hair, which was cut in a short bob with a fringe above my eyebrows, while all the other girls seemed to have pretty curly hair. My clothes looked different as well. Mother bought me a woolly muff to keep my hands warm, while all the other kids had gloves. They had hats but I looked terrible in a hat because of my fringe. My skin was darker than theirs, I had different clothes and I spoke with a funny foreign accent so, as Dad had predicted, I was picked on right from the start.

      I didn’t hold back. In response to any teasing, no matter how harmless, I let loose with one of the big punches Dad had taught me while we were on board ship. If someone held their nose as I passed, they’d get thumped. If I overheard someone calling me ‘Red Indibum’ behind my back, I’d turn and swing at them. I punched and I punched and there were black eyes and split lips all round, but nothing stopped me.

      Many a mother came in to complain to the teachers: ‘Adeline Harris has broken my son’s front tooth.’

      I was constantly called up to the headmaster’s office and instructed to hold out my hand. He would raise a cane into the air and bring it down on my outstretched palm and, while it smarted and stung at the time, I didn’t think it was too bad as punishments go. It certainly didn’t deter me from fighting. I went straight back out to the playground and I punched and I punched some more. No one got the better of me in a fight, not even the boys.

      Letters were sent home, and Mother wept to think that a daughter of hers should be reprimanded for fighting, but Dad was secretly proud of me. He whispered: ‘Keep the stiff upper lip and punch them hard.’

      ‘She just needs to get settled,’ he said to Mother. ‘The move has been a big upheaval for her.’

      ‘I told you we’d have trouble with her. I said so on the boat from India.’

      There was only one good thing about that school as far as I could see and that was the school dinners. For the first time, I learned to love English food. There were tasty cottage pies and fish pies and stews served over mashed potato. The very first day there, I got into trouble for picking up my plate and licking it to get the last drop of gravy.

      More firsts came and went: first mass in our new church, first reading lessons, and then along came my first English Christmas. If Mother and Dad had anything to do with it, it was going to be an austere, primarily religious festival, with mass every day and maybe a couple of cheap gifts such as a new pair of socks and a book (preferably religious). However, a few days before Christmas a remarkable thing happened.

      School had finished for the holidays and I was sitting looking out of the window when a big black shiny car pulled up outside our gate.

      ‘That’s a Rolls Royce,’ my cousin Margaret said. ‘Who can it be?’

      A chubby man with a round face and hair combed into a centre parting walked up the path and knocked on the door. Mother came rushing through the hall to answer it then shrieked out loud. Dad was in the drawing room decorating the Christmas tree. As he came out to the hall to see what was going on, I crept onto the landing to spy on them. I wasn’t close enough to hear all that was said, but I gathered that the man was an old friend of Mother’s from before she was married and that Dad didn’t seem too pleased to see him. He wasn’t invited in.

      They chatted for a while, then the man said, ‘I’ve got some Christmas presents for your children. They’re in the car.’ As he headed out towards the Rolls Royce, I scurried downstairs and out into the front garden so I could watch as the chauffeur opened the boot. My eyes widened like saucers as he pulled out two huge packages wrapped in brown paper.

      Mother turned to me. ‘What do you say to the kind gentleman?’ she asked, her tone neutral.

      ‘Thank you very much, sir,’ I said with feeling.

      Dad seemed keen to get rid of him though. ‘So at last we meet,’ he said in a crisp voice, and folded his arms.

      The man took the hint. Goodbyes were said, the car pulled away and I clamoured for answers. ‘Who is he? How do you know him? Can we keep the presents? Please say we can!’

      ‘Let’s see what they are first,’ Dad said. He tore off the paper to reveal a bright blue pedal car with a Rolls Royce badge on it, presumably for Harold, and a Silver Cross pram for me. I had a doll who would fit into it perfectly and wanted to start playing with it straight away.

      ‘We’ll СКАЧАТЬ