By the Waters of Liverpool. Helen Forrester
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу By the Waters of Liverpool - Helen Forrester страница 7

Название: By the Waters of Liverpool

Автор: Helen Forrester

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Биографии и Мемуары

Серия:

isbn: 9780007369300

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ police, of course.’

      ‘Could the police do anything?’

      ‘Oh, yes. It is a serious matter.’

      ‘Oh, Daddy,’ wailed Fiona, ‘if you do tell the police there’ll be such a rumpus in the shop. The men will say I’m a lying troublemaker, and the boss won’t want to give me a reference.’ She rubbed her wet eyes with the backs of her hands. ‘The story will go all round the local shops, and then what will I do? With no reference, I won’t stand a chance.’

      She clung to me and I suddenly leaned limply against her. I was beginning to feel faint with hunger.

       Four

      Fiona’s situation was grave. When fifty youngsters were competing for even the most menial of jobs, lack of a good reference could be crippling.

      ‘You can stay at home and keep house,’ Mother said briskly. ‘You spend all you earn – I never see much of it.’

      ‘Oh, Mother, Fi only gets fifteen shillings a week, and she pays all her expenses – even buys some of her clothes,’ I intervened vehemently.

      Fiona’s hands clutched convulsively against my hips. She, too, feared becoming the family’s forgotten, unpaid maid-of-all-work.

      Mother fumbled in her handbag for a cigarette and lit it from the fire with the aid of a newspaper spill. ‘She would be more use at home,’ she reiterated.

      Father got up from his chair and moved restlessly up and down the narrow space between table and hearth which formed a passage between the front hall and back kitchen. He was very thin, and his grey tweed office suit with its shiny seat and elbows hung loosely on him. He looked haggard, as if this new problem was too much for him, and his face and prematurely bald skull shone pale yellow in the poor light. He took off his bent, gold-rimmed spectacles and rubbed eyes that were red-lidded and bloodshot.

      ‘If I want to leave,’ sobbed Fiona, ‘I have to give a week’s notice on pay day – that’s Friday, and it’s Friday night now. So it means I have to work almost another two weeks. And nobody is going to give a reference to a girl who leaves without notice – and how can I tell the boss the real reason I want to leave? It’s too horrid!’ She continued to dampen my skirt, as I held her.

      Mother looked scornfully at her two daughters, her lips curled in disdain. ‘Really, Fiona! All this fuss, when you could make yourself useful at home for once.’ She turned to Father, and almost shouted, ‘For goodness’ sake, stop prowling.’

      Father flung himself back into his chair, while Fiona cried, ‘No.’

      ‘She cannot mix with such dreadful people any more,’ Father sounded off determinedly. ‘What is the world coming to?’

      ‘They leave me alone most of the time,’ Fiona turned her puffy face towards Father. ‘I sit in the cash desk and lock myself in. It has glass all round it. They tease me but they can’t get in.’ She moved uneasily against me. ‘Only when I go to the loo sometimes...’ Her voice trailed off.

      Father started up. ‘What?’ he exclaimed. ‘What happens then?’

      ‘They chase after me and pinch my bottom,’ she announced baldly.

      ‘Oh, Lord!’ Father was really shaken, as if he himself had never in his life pinched the bottoms of our maids.

      Alan burst out laughing. ‘That’s better than being whacked on your rear with a ruler, like I am.’

      ‘Alan!’ exclaimed Mother. ‘What a lot of louts they must be.’

      Father looked at his pretty daughter, speechless for a moment, and then said firmly, ‘You will stay at home tomorrow, Fiona. Helen can phone from her office to say that you are not well. Then we will say later that you are not fit to go back. You can look for other work.’

      ‘I’m not staying at home.’ Fiona could be as woodenly obstinate as Avril and me, but she never seemed to draw her parents’ wrath as fully as we did. ‘I just have to get through the next two weeks as best I can. Then I’ll leave. After all, I’ve put up with them for nearly a year now.’

      Father looked at her aghast. ‘You mean all this has been going on for a year?’

      ‘Not all the time.’

      ‘How frequently?’

      ‘You mean going to see the – the...?’

      ‘Yes.’

      ‘Oh, they run over every time the undertaker has a nice-looking one.’

      ‘And have they been pinching you all that time, too?’

      ‘No, Daddy, only just recently.’

      ‘You must have encouraged them, Fiona.’ This from Mother.

      ‘Oh, no, Mummy. I suppose they notice me when they’ve nothing much to do. Anyway, how can a derrière encourage anybody?’ she asked innocently.

      This made Father smile, even in the middle of his disquietude. Fiona’s flawless figure, now burgeoning, would in years to come cause many a heart to throb and provide a good deal of temptation.

      Father’s voice was very gentle, as he looked at his younger daughter. ‘I am sure you don’t encourage them, my dear.’ He smiled knowingly at Mother, who did not smile back.

      Alan began to whistle softly to himself and moved restlessly against the table.

      ‘If I had a sheet of the butcher’s notepaper,’ said Mother suddenly, her face brightening, ‘paper with his heading on it, I could write an excellent reference for Fiona.’

      ‘Mother!’ I exclaimed, scandalised. ‘That would be forgery.’

      ‘A new employer might phone the butcher to check it,’ suggested Alan.

      ‘I don’t think so,’ replied Mother, ignoring my outburst. ‘As a demonstrator going from shop to shop, I carry written references – I’ve heaps of them, because all my jobs are short-term ones. I don’t think anybody has ever telephoned to check them.’

      Fiona looked up quickly, and then mopped her eyes agitatedly with my hanky which I had handed to her – it was the only one I owned. ‘Mummy! Could you do it? Really?’

      Mother looked as pleased as a Cheshire cat. ‘I don’t see why not.’

      ‘If I go to work tomorrow, I can get the paper easily. I have some in the cash desk.’ She straightened up, sniffed and rubbed her nose hard with the hanky. ‘I could start looking for a new job on Monday.’

      It took Mother and Fiona some time to convince Father that it was the most sensible way out. But he was genuinely worried about his favourite daughter, and he finally gave in.

      Alan thought it was a huge joke, and asked Mother if she could do anything about СКАЧАТЬ