DEDICATION: To Jenny, for
the beta work and general encouragement.
HISTORICAL NOTES: Prostitution,
including child prostitution was rife in London in the 1800’s. There were some 17,000 people living in
Ratcliff and 30,000 in the parish of Poplar so it was impossible to
police. The story of Dr. Barnardo is
well known and only passing reference is made to it here. The ragged school is still there as a museum
and is worth a visit. The reference
sources for this story include publications by Steve Jones and Wicked
Press. These are great historical
resources.
Chapter 2: I Am a Stable
Waif.
Hello mate! Lurking.
What, am I not allowed? I think
I’m allowed. I think I’ve earned a good
lurk, thank-you.
Now? I’m following you. ‘Cos it bugs you of course.
Know how cute you are when you’re angry? So I’m irritating. You
think I’m WHAT?! Oh that story. Well that’s really more of an, ‘I was’. If this patrol’s boring you we could go
somewhere. I’ll give you my life story
part two. Right here? – You have a
thing about graveyards have you?
Okay. Where was I when I threw
you out? Oh yeah, on the street. Well what’s new?
Actually that was. I’d lived all my life in the workhouse and
now I was lost. I fled down towards the
warehouses and wharfs of Wapping and the river. By the time I felt safe enough to slow down I was a mile or more
from Ratcliff. I moved between the alleys. There were tall buildings, tall cranes and
even taller men. “Oi, you.” I was grabbed by the collar, “What you’s
doing ‘ere, you oik? Don’t come it wiv
me, boy. Thieving in’cha. Peelers gonna lock you away!”
“I ain’t, I ain’t. Le’ me go, I ain’t done nuffin’, you berk.”
Well that was a lot ruder
than it sounded and the bloke was seething, when a lady’s silk purse appeared
and clocked ‘im one on the noggin. Hit
him on the head – sigh.
“Pick on someone yer own
size, Frank. Poor little bleeder, can’t
a kid go for a walk, without being manhandled by a wanker, like what you are?”
He snarled at the whore,
standing as she was, with one hand on her hip and the other ready to swing the
bag at him again. She probably had
rocks in it an’ all ‘cos he fucked off without another word.
“I knows yer dun I?” She said.
“Now remind us Billy or William?”
“I’m Wil’.”
“What you doing out ‘ere all
on your lonesome? Lost your little
friend ‘ave you? You’s ought to be in
class. Needs your learning. Come on, I’ll walk you back to the Highway.”
“NO!” I yelled at her, “Can’t go back, not never.”
And then I started to cry. The
floodgates had opened and I couldn’t stop.
Big blobby tears ran down my face and dripped in dewdrops off the end of
my fireman’s. What? It was poetic until that point. Okay.
Okay. I was inconsolable anyhow.
“There, there. Don’t take on so. See ‘ere ‘ad a nice little earner last night, so’s ‘ow about
you’s an’ me grab us a Shangri and you can tell me all about it?”
Not translating – guess.
We went to a pie shop and
once we were seated and served she said,
“Now tell Carrie-Ann all about it.”
“I can’t.”
“Well it in’t that bad. Things is always better…”
“Not this.”
“Oh Wil’ pet, what ‘ave you
done?”
“Something awful.”
She gave up after that and
busied herself with other stuff until we’d finished. She asked for the bill and paid, leaving tuppence ha’penny in the
plate. She fixed her hair and tied her
bonnet, using the shop window as a glass, and left. I followed, picking up the coins as I went. My tip – Don’t leave money on the table!
I followed her back to her
digs, a small attic atop one of the tall warehouses. Carrie-Ann Douglas never used a pimp. The lodgings were clean with a back bedroom for business. It stunk though – like a tart’s boudoir ha
ha. Talc, sweat and sex.
She said I could stay and
made me up a cot in the corner of the room.
I spent all day there with Carrie-Ann.
She told me how she was saving to go hopping in September. Clients came and went. Joke.
Get it? I calmed down. By the time she tucked me in that evening, I
was fantasising about being there forever.
“Carrie-Ann?”
“Yes Wil’ pet.”
“Are you going to be my
mama?” I was so innocent. She smiled
and kissed me on the forehead.
“No luv, just your friend.”
I went to sleep happy. Why?
‘Cos I’d been kissed. By a girl!
The days rolled into weeks
and took on a kind of rhythm of their own.
Carrie-Ann worked and I studied.
She took on extra clients so that she could buy me books when she caught
me stealing them, and inks, paper, pens and a slate. She cleared a chest ‘o’ draws and bought me clothes and the
like. It was the first time I had ever
owned anything. Even the clothes I
stood up in belonged to the workhouse.
I can’t tell you what that felt like, to be an individual, to be me at
last.
Carrie-Ann took me hopping
in Kent. I’d never ever been outside
the city. The air was so clean I
choked! I dreamed of moving to the
country and living like the children in the books I read.
I even started to teach
Carrie-Ann herself. I said she should
learn to write her name. It wasn’t
right that she always had to make her mark even with me to witness it. “People will think you’re just an ignorant
cockney.”
“But Wil’ pet, I am a
cockney and so are you.”
“No I’m not. I’m better than that.”
“If you say so luv, if you say
so.”
One evening a client came
what I’d never seen before. I let him
in and then went back to my arithmetic exercises. He spoke to briefly to Carrie-Ann and then came right over to me.
“How much for the little
boy?”
Carrie-Ann was furious. “Okay.
That’s it. Out. I don’t need the likes of you.”
“Well if you don’t want to
make money…”
“How much money?” They both turned and stared at me. “How much will you give me?”
“Wil’, NO!”
“I just wants to know how
much?”
He held my chin in his broad
nahday and named his price. It was
three times what we’d have got for Carrie-Ann.
“Done.” I said.
She grabbed me and pulled me
to the sink on the far side of the room.
“You don’t know what you’re doing, petal. Please don’t do this.”
“I do know – I’m not a kid
and you’re not my mama, you said so. We
needs the money and I don’t want to live on handouts. Rather I went up chimneys?”
“Well you listen to me then
and hear me good…”
She laid out her rules. I was not to lock the door. I was not to make any promises and do
nothing I was uncomfortable with. At
the first sign of trouble I was to holler.
“Don’t let him hurt you
Wil’. He’s a big bugg…bloke.”
He was at that and it had
been well over two months since the fiasco with Whittaker, which had resulted
in my leaving the only home I had ever known.
Still I coped. I’d learned to
concentrate on small details, his hair, his veins, his navel and when facing
the wall to find a spot and focus on it.
This chap didn’t take long anyhow and was more than pleased. Fat and greasy had always said I was good.
Carrie-Ann however, was not
pleased. When he’d gone she shook me
‘ard, “What you go and do that for, you stupid little bleeder? Think this is a game do ya? Think I chose this?” She stopped and stared at me as if seeing me
for the first time.
“This was why you left
wasn’t it?”
No reply
“Well wasn’t it?” That was accompanied by another shake.
“Yes.” Was all I could say and that almost in a
whisper. I felt so meek, small, dirty
and ashamed.
Then something amazing to
me, my mother figure began to cry. I
wrapped my arms around her waist. Like
a bizarre tableau of the Madonna and child we huddled there, even though cold jisim
was still oozing from between my cheeks.
She finally told me I could
work but no soliciting on the streets.
She would vet the clients and I had to keep up with my learning. “After all you don’t want to grow up an
ignorant cockney now does ya?”
Her attitude softened. “Let me draw you a tub and find a
salve. Do you need a salve?”
Mummy was back and that was
all that mattered to me.
I worked; she worked. I
studied; she studied. We began to talk
about Christmas. Carrie-Ann liked
Christmas. To me it was just another
day but she made it sound so exciting and new.
We'd decorate and go to Church and have a slap-up tea. Play parlour games, maybe even skate on the
river if the ice held. Never
happened. I hate Christmas now. Everyone avoids me on that day, Dru,
Angelus, and you will too if you've got any grey ones at all, ‘cos less than
two weeks before that, my mother left me.
I was sat on the stairs while she busied herself ready for the
evening's clients. She didn’t want me
in the room while she bathed. I
squinted at the Latin verb tables in front of me. “Amo, amas, amat, amamus, amatis, amant,” close the book. “Amo, amas, amant, shit,” open the
book. “Amo, amas, amat,” I
hardly noticed the gentleman coming up the stairs ‘til he was past me. “She ain’t ready for you’s but I can say
who's calling.” I said.
“No you won't boy.” Another
voice. The two gentlemen eyed me, one
with distaste and one with derision.
The rougher looking of the two, went towards the door. I started to follow but the other grabbed
me. He was well spoken with
glasses. A ‘librarian’ type, not a
little likes our Ripper. Yeah, I know
who he is. What d’you think I am -
stupid? And just as dangerous.
He held me fast. I kicked and
struggled, sliding on paper, my books tumbling down the stairs as we
grappled. I cursed him loudly. “Berk, dratab, wanker, cunt, let go, let go,
CARRIE-ANN.”
He placed his hand over my mouth.
That was it. I became
hysterical. I can't stand that for
obvious reasons. I had a complete panic
attack. I bit him, clawed at his face,
his eyes. Then I began to retch. Still he didn't let go until the other
emerged from the lodgings, wiping his hands as if he'd been touching something
foul. Suddenly I was unrestrained and
slumped unceremoniously to the floor. I
spat bile and venom. “Hadn’t you better
go in and check on your Whore?” Said
the librarian type.
“Isn’t she his mother?” Asked
the bully.
“No.”
“Yes, yes she's my Mama and you’s better not have hurt her or I'll kill
you!”
They laughed. Book man came
right up to me and whispered low, “Tell her she's been a stupid girl and she is
to do the right thing before you both get killed.”
“Am I your errand boy?”
“You, you're nothing.”
And then they were gone. Their
footfalls echoing my books, further down the stairs.
When I entered our rooms I couldn't see Carrie-Ann. I called her softly but she didn't
answer. The nausea began to return in
waves. I opened the bedroom door. There had clearly been a struggle but there
she was, lying on the bed, apparently unhurt.
I said nothing. I just stroked
her hair. Then curled up next to her
and went to sleep.
When I awoke it was late and I was in my own cot. I sat up and watched as the lamp took
Carrie-Ann around the house.
“What yeh doing?”
“Oh Wil’, I thought you'd sleep till morning, pet.”
“What are y’ doing?” Panic was
already rising in my voice.
“Now I don’t want no carry on.”
She said, “You just stay calm and you’ll be all right.”
“You’re packing.”
“Now luv, there’s no need to start.”
“Where are we going?”
“William - please!”
The world stopped turning, just for a second, and I held my
breath. She was leaving, leaving here,
leaving me.
My eyes stung, my vision blurred, I couldn't speak or move or
think. The spell was broken by a knock
at the door. We both looked. Carrie-Ann was the first to move. She began to pick up bags, handing them to
the bloke who was standing there. “What
about me?” I'd never felt so timid and
weak.
“Now listen luv. I can't
explain it and you wouldn't understand if I did, but I gots to go. You'll be safe if you’s ain’t wiv me. Rent’s paid up for the month and Lotty will
look in on you every now and then. I'll
get word when I can. Be brave Wil’ pet,
take care.”
And as she left I thought I heard her say, “I love you.”
Frozen I was, locked, rigid to the bed. Then I shot up and across the floor. I ran down the rickety stairs, my bare feet pattering on the
wood. Trip; crash, over the Latin texts
still lying at the bottom. My knee
instantly spewed blood, my palms stung, my toe throbbed, but I was up and to
the door. Out into the cold,
unforgiving, December night. The
Hackney carriage lights swung in the distance and the clatter of hooves was
already no more than an echo in the pounding of my blood. “Carrie-Ann.” I screamed to the night like my words alone would catch her. “MAMMA.”
I sat in a doorway, at the end of the block, until daylight and all
that day, just waiting for her to come home.
When I finally returned in the evening it was to a bonfire of our stuff. So much for the landlord and the rent, the
whole warehouse was ablaze.
I had nowhere to go and no daisies to go in. Don’t ask – think about it.
For the next few days I wandered, begging what I couldn't blag, filtching what
I couldn’t buy. However, winter draws on
as they say. – Yeah that was a pun – see the English do that. The Big Smoke was getting colder and
smokier. You could have sliced the fog
into chunks and fried it with bacon.
Down in Stepney – like the bells – there were these donkey sheds and you
can get your mind out of that gutter right now, thank you. They was warm ‘cos of the donkeys and kept
clean. Fresh straw an’ all. Costermongers owned them and a number of
boys used to sleep in them.
I had no sooner ingratiated
myself into this clique, than a chap came round with a toff. – Nah, not our
Angel, though Irish all the same.
Didn’t really take a lot of notice, ‘cept he was offering us a little
schooling, at a ragged school in the Mile End.
Well, I enjoyed school. It was
my salvation and ‘sides thought I could find stuff to half inch and flog. Just get a dictionary and keep up! It was warm and the schoolmistress was
pleasant. Had a kind smile. Soon this paddy geezer ‘ad a hostel opened
an’, after this coppernob popped ‘is clogs one night, he said he’d never turn
no one away. I liked it. It was like being back in the workhouse.
After a six-month flirtation
with life on the outside, I was back in the institutionalised setting I felt
safest in. Over the next few years I
learnt a trade and everything. What? Oh, what.
A cook. Didn’t know I could
cook, well I can. Right good too. You should let me cook for you.
Couldn’t last though. Remember me and luck? Not best mates.
In the evenings I used to read to the younger boys. Anything and everything, penny rags, novels,
Greek myths, fairy tales and the Police gazette. Very popular that was.
This lad, Davey something his name was, came to me one day and asked if
I could read for the workers in the factory, where he was doing his
apprenticeship. I hesitated at first on
account of having my own things to do, however he was persuasive and offered
cash. It all started off well enough,
but then I was approached by a fella in the slash house, lavvy, loo, bog, call
it what you please. I think it's called
cottaging now or visiting the tearoom.
He was also very persuasive and offered cash. Caught? Oh yes. By the Irish doctor himself no less, on a
tour of placement sites.
Well he may never turn a boy
away but I was fourteen and no child. I
was also caught in the unspeakable act.
That’s what it was called in law at that time. So out on me ear I was.
It’s getting late
you know, maybe I should walk you home.
‘Cos I’m a gentleman – okay so that’s a lie, but seriously there are
big, bad, scary things in Sunnyhell, and one of them wants to walk you to your
door.
>>> Chapter 3
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