himself for being different, the effect of which was to make him intolerant of everyone else.
CHAPTER FOUR
Rainspots fell as he crossed the yard and made his way between two caravans. The encampment slept, soothed by its futile work of the day, resting from the complex interaction of human relationships that such close living entailed.
He came back and leaned outside the kitchen door. Would he, after recovering his strength, get into the real world again? Having failed at college he not only hadnât âgot onâ but he hadnât even been close to the ladder on which he could begin ascending. By going wrong heâd wounded himself. He couldnât believe anybody else had done it. If he accepted that heâd have been closer to being a Christian, and so wouldnât have fouled his chances at college in any case.
And yet, was he turning into a materialist, one of those narrow-minded, one-dimensional, all guts and no spirit, earth and no sky, lobotomised Neanderthal creatures like Frank Dawley who wallowed in the glory of his few monthsâ fighting in Algeria as if he was the poor manâs Lawrence of Arabia?
It was essential to get things straight in his own mind â unless you wanted to be sucked in by this community so that you didnât know what sort of a person you were anymore.
A drift of fresh air revived him, and reminded him how tired he was. Even the month of May could give you pneumonia if you came out at night in pyjamas and slippers. Eric Bloodaxe the bulldog stirred its bulk by the gate â but a shape moved near the caravans, and he stood for it to come closer, unpleasantly surprised at his fear.
âOn the prowl?â Mandy said.
âCanât my dear sister sleep, either?â
She leaned by the caravan wall. âDoes it look like it, Brother Rat? My bloody husband sleeps like a sack of coal somebodyâs dropped and left behind after nicking it from a railway wagon. He doesnât sleep: he dies â and takes all my sleep with him. Itâs impossible to be in the same bed with the unfeeling swine. Itâs his motherâs fault. No wonder she laughed when he got married. That was the only wedding present we got, and as far as I know it didnât even crack her junk-shop face. I suppose sheâd laugh on the other side though if we got divorced and I sent him creeping back to her.â
âYouâd better have the baby first.â
âThatâs not for another three boring months.â
The moon made its light available again, and he looked at her face. He remembered hauling her as a baby in the pram with Adam and Richard to the village for their sweet ration. Afterwards they roamed fields and woods to see what they could plunder. Their family was in a perpetual state of destitution because Handley did nothing but paint day and night, a lone and frenzied figure up in his attic, wrapped in coats and scarves when the cold got too much of a grip around the windows. They lived on national assistance, sickness benefit, charity, relief, begging letters, the dole, and what they could loot from the surrounding countryside. And now that Handley sold his paintings at prices which made him rich beyond the dreams of his expectations, they thought he was miserly by refusing to hand over the money to which his new-found fortune entitled them.
As children they had done their bit to keep the family going. When chased by farmer or gardener they maintained a compact group around the pram, from which blonde, plump Mandy either joined in the general panic and screamed with fear, or stayed locked in her own private baby-world and laughed divinely at the worst it could do to her. And now she was a pregnant eighteen-year-old slut. âDonât you think of your husband at a time like this?â
She laughed. âIf I was planning to kill him, I suppose I would. But Iâm not â yet. Thereâs a hard stone inside me first thatâs got to