Fur Coats
'What are we doing tomorrow?'
'Going to Emma's in the morning,
school in the afternoon, then Sian is picking you up so you can play with Marcus
after school.'
'What are we doing the next
day?’
'Going to Emma's in the morning,
school in the afternoon, then Marcus is coming over here to play.'
'What are we doing the next
day after that?'
'Going to Emma's in the morning,
school in the afternoon, then Tea and Cakes after school, most likely.'
'What are we doing the next
day after that?'
Will she kill him? Of course
not. But she contemplates it.
In spare moments, Clara thinks
about the past, about the time when she was free, before she bowed down to domestic
servitude. Is that what it is? She isn't at all sure how to describe her present
state. There is one thing that Clara is sure about, though (whisper this, she
thinks): parenthood can be boring.
Back then, in the old days,
Before Baby, Clara lived in a big dingy house with a bunch of artists; she wasn't
an artist, but they didn't seem to mind. The big dingy house was one of a collection
of big dingy houses around a long neglected south London square. No one knew
who owned the buildings, but they moved in anyway, jimmying the locks, climbing
in through the windows, and set about renovating. Clara's house was actually
two houses; once they got themselves established in the first house - electricity,
gas, plumbing - they knocked through the walls at strategic places, mostly stair
landings, and annexed next door. House number two was exactly like house number
one, except in reverse, a mirror-image. It made for a pleasing symmetry. One
of the blokes expanded his room at the top of the house to include the room
next door. His space was enormous and, consequently, perfect for parties.
They had lots of parties.
Her own room was small and
cosy, with a tiny fireplace and enough space for a table and chair and her single
bed. Clara liked the narrow bed, with its worn black and pink blanket; it gave
the room a spartan appearance. She'd stripped the floral wallpaper off the
walls when they moved in, and had left the old plaster bare; she liked the look
of it as well, the meandering cracks, rough and smooth, glazed and dull like
an old leather coat you might find on a skip. The artists would have made the
bare walls an aesthetic choice, but Clara left them untouched out of uncertainty
- what were you supposed to do next? She stuck postcards of her favourite paintings
low on the wall, where she could gaze at them as she lay in bed, but these fell
off within a few days, wedging themselves down between the skirting board and
the wall, leaving tags of bluetack in their place.
She kept the room warm -
warmish - with a parafin heater. It sat in the corner like a pale green metal
chimney pot; it was fumey and unreliable and if she had it on for long she worried
it might explode. But it was better than nothing, better than the unrelenting
cold.
And so Clara and the artists
concerned themselves with the business of living - crappy low-paid jobs in retail
and catering, signing on, eating cheese on toast late at night after the pub,
endless talking. The artists were concerned with Capitalism and its Onward
March through time and space; they were concerned about the World and Politics.
Margaret Thatcher was in Downing Street and they felt a profound unease, casting
around for a foothold against Nicaragua, apartheid, Israel. This was what occupied
the artists at the kitchen table, this was what they discussed at the pub, this
was what they argued about while falling in and out of each other's beds. Clara
listened in; she was like a highly tuned listening device - like a spy, in fact.
Except she wasn't a spy, she was just Clara. She was waiting for it all to
make sense.
He is four years old. Tall,
and getting taller. Very independent, and yet dependant too, traces of babyhood
lingering. Sitting on his mother's lap is still a priority at times. And his
mother's opinion looms large. 'You've hurt my feelings' is his favourite complaint,
along with 'I'm very cross with you,' and 'I'm very upset.'
'What are we doing tomorrow
mummy?'
'Sweetie, we've been through
this. You know what we're doing. You do the same things every week.'
He looks a little crestfallen.
'What are we doing the next
day?'
'I don't know, sweetie.
Where's your bag of dinosaurs? Have they all escaped?' At four, he remains
divertable.
One of the big dingy houses
on the square had its ground floor converted into a café. They took it in turns
to produce big, healthy vegetarian meals - large trays of vegetable crumble,
lasagna, apple bake. Any money raised went toward a cause; there were many
causes, and the causes needed money. Everyone came along, to sit at the stubby
old tables on the wonky chairs in the candlelight, bringing their own beer and
wine, and the conversation wove itself in the air, like a rich and delicate
textile one of the artists had designed.
Clara didn't know anything
about the Iran/Iraq war; she didn't know anything about El Salvador, she'd barely
heard of these places. They were very far away. None of her housemates ate
meat and some of them took this particular tenet as far as not wearing leather.
Clara had a couple of pairs of strappy leather slingbacks stuffed under her
bed; sometimes when she was in town she would buy and eat a Big Mac. One of
the artists had been to Nicaragua and was raising money to go back; another
was dodging the South African Army draft; another had gone to prison for the
ALF, the anti-fur, anti-vivisection brigade. Clara had had a teddy bear childhood
in Teddington, southwest London; the house she grew up in backed onto the Thames.
In summer, Clara and her brothers used to swing out over the water on a rope,
letting go to crash into the silky warm river, carefree dive-bombers with no
known enemy. Church of England, a private girl's school, a Mummy who stayed
home and baked cakes for tea: this childhood was like a basket she carried
around at all times, full of good things. Because of it she would never go
hungry. But it weighed her down as well, with its narrowness, its politeness,
its concern with courtesy. No matter what she wore, no matter what colour she
dyed her hair, it shone through: her parents' affluence, her way of speaking.
She felt a barrier between her self and the rest of the world, not only far-flung
places but the artists, her friends.
This is what he likes to
eat: pasta, sauce free, garnished only with a dab of pesto from a jar and a
sprinkle of cheese. Sausages. Cheese sandwiches. Little baby tomatoes, cucumber.
Mango. Bananas. Broccoli on occasion - unpredictable. Same for fish fingers.
Nothing resembling grown up food, nothing where the flavours are mixed or complicated.
He eats well, providing she does not attempt to spring anything new on him.
And of course he loves sweet things. Every little sweet thing.
Sometimes he can be exceptionally
graceful and charming. One evening as she is getting dressed to go out he points
to an item of her clothing. 'What's that?'
Clara looks. 'A skirt.'
She doesn't get out much these days.
And later as she is putting
him to bed: 'Mummy, you do look lovely.'
She almost cries. 'Thank
you sweetheart. Thank you.'
Their relationship has an
intensity that is heart-breaking. It marginalises everything else. There he
is, so little and sturdy, with his hopes, his dreams. How could he be anything
other than demanding?
Clara didn't have a cause
of her own. She wasn't that way inclined. There was too much choice: what
was it to be, the homeless in London or the disappeared in Chile? It all felt
too pressing, too urgent, too desperate; and besides, she thought, perhaps the
world would be destroyed in a nuclear holocaust anyway. She contemplated joining
CND; she contemplated joining many things.
And sleeping around. Clara
didn't do that either. No particular reason, it just wasn't what she did.
The artists didn't expect it of her. 'You're too earnest,' they would say to
her, as if that alone ruled out sex. 'Isn't it important to be earnest?' she'd
reply. And she'd laugh and the artists would look at her as though she came
from another planet.
And then the miners' strike
started. Up north somewhere. Up there.
As the strike took hold,
the Left mobilized ('The left what?' Clara wanted to ask but did not), and with
it, the artists. In the square activity coalesced around the café; they held
a meeting to discuss how to fundraise. The miners were asking for food and
money. The artists decided they needed someone to lobby the manager of the
local supermarket. Heads turned. Clara swiveled in her chair to see who was
sitting behind her. But there was no one. They were looking at her.
'But,' she said.
'Clara,' they replied.
And so she applied herself.
She wrote a letter to the manager first, and then made an appointment by telephone.
She wore a suit that one of the artists had helped her find at Brick Lane market;
it was older than she was and cost fifty pence. She put on lipstick and when
she looked in the mirror she thought her mother had suddenly appeared. She
put on her strappy leather slingbacks and told herself it was in aid of a good
cause. Then she trudged up the broad gusty road, rubbing grit out of her eyes,
batting away flying crisp packets. Under the rail bridge, to the right and
into the supermarket. She was so nervous she had to remind herself of her own
name.
'We would like to hand out
leaflets at the front entrance to the store,' she said.
The manager nodded and smiled.
'The leaflet will have a
list of products that your customers can buy for the miners and their families.
Food, toiletries, household items.'
He smiled again, encouragingly.
'We will be at the exit to
collect the products as your customers leave.'
The manager remained pleasingly
silent.
'We will be polite and discreet.
Cash donations may also be given.'
At last the manager spoke:
'Sounds fine to me.' He smiled again, his benevolent, managerial smile.
When Clara got outside the
supermarket she screamed.
He can make her angrier than
she'd thought possible. How was she to know that motherhood would make her
so angry?
'I won't!'
'You will.'
'I won't!'
'You will.'
They are discussing the picking
up and tidying of toys.
'I won't!'
'You will.'
He throws himself on the
floor and wails. She struggles to suppress her own rage, like forcing a vengeful
genie back into a tiny bottle. He is four, after all, he no longer bites, kicks,
or pinches, so why should she?
'I'll help you.'
He stops sobbing as abruptly
as he began. 'All right then,' he sighs wearily. 'Come on mummy.'
When he's asleep it is easy
to love him. He sleeps with his arms flung out, blameless, abandoned to it,
so far gone sometimes he rolls right out of bed. She lies awake in the next
room and listens to him when - at two a.m, sometimes three - he gets up and,
standing, drinks from the glass of milk she has left him, puts it down, goes
to the loo, gets back in bed. At these moments she doubts her own perceptions;
is she no longer the person she used to be? Has motherhood, with all its responsibilities,
with its abrupt shifts in way of life - one minute she's party girl, all sheeny
and bright, the next she's in on her own every single night - changed her as
much as she thinks?
The supermarket collection
went well; the supermarket's customers responded with thoughtful generosity,
supplying much more than endless tins of baked beans. And they were well organised
in the square, ferrying the goods to the central collection point on time, constantly
amending and updating the list of requested goods according to instructions
from the NUM strike committee. Clara listened to the radio news reports with
interest, wishing they had a telly. The strike had many factors against it:
the power utilities had enormous reserves of coal, the Nottinghamshire union
did not go out on strike, there was no secondary action. Arthur Scargill had
not balloted the NUM, and the artists debated the wisdom of that night after
night around the kitchen table. And there was Thatcher herself, astride the
country with her pearls and her hairdo and her voice.
Delegations of miners began
to arrive in London. They came down to attend rallies, to help mobilize and
fundraise. There was plenty of room to put up people in the big dingy houses
around the square and so they notified the strike committee. The artists began
to organise a special benefit night in the café, a welcoming party for their
guests. As the day approached the square was buoyant with anticipation; it
was not every day that the Cause came to stay. The delegation was from a small
mining town outside Manchester; none of the artists had ever been anywhere near
the place. As far as Clara was concerned, they could have been coming from
Namibia. She had never met a miner. She had never seen a miner, nor a mine,
nor even a pit village, in fact the closest she had come was reading Zola's
Germinal, a novel set in France during the 19th Century.
Finally, the evening was
upon them. Everyone gathered in the café. At 8:30 they put the food
on the back burners. At 9:00 they started to open bottles of wine. By 10:00
dancing had broken out in the middle of the café. By 10:30 some people could
wait no longer, and the kitchen was raided. By 11:00 they had forgotten why
they were having a party. No one noticed the minibus arrive.
The door of the café opened.
Someone shouted 'shut up' and the music was switched off and everyone stopped
dancing, eating, drinking. Clara stood on a chair to get a better view of the
door, and she gasped in spite of herself.
She had never seen so much fur.
They had been expecting a
dozen miners. What they got was a dozen miner's wives.
They trooped into the café one by one, taking up an
enormous amount of space. No one had anticipated how much space they would
require; every single woman, every single wife, was wearing fur. Fur coats,
brown-red and silky, silver and glossy, black and shimmering; fur hats, bulky
and soviet; one woman was wearing fur gloves. The café's inhabitants took a
collective gulp. And then someone shouted 'Welcome!' The miners' wives smiled.
'Come in,' someone else shouted and, with a laugh, 'can we take your coats?'
The thing about having a
small child, Clara finds, is that it forces you back into your own past, into
your own childhood. It makes your parents into people - people like you, in
fact. It is that negative bind that characterises so much of parenting - at
Clara's worst moments, when she is too tired, too harassed, too not-herself,
she thinks: I'm turning into my mother. And then she thinks: Is that such
a bad thing?
'Mummy?'
'Yes sweetie.'
'What are we doing on Wednesday?'
'Wednesday?' Today is Thursday.
He nods.
'Emma's in the morning, school
in the afternoon.'
'What are we doing on Friday?'
Ah, she thinks, he has moved
on a stage. Is he trying to impress me with his grasp of the days of the week?
'Friday is your swimming
lesson.'
'Oh,' he says, 'that's right.
I'm very good at swimming.'
She doesn't reply, she is
attempting to tune the radio.
'I'm very good at swimming
Mummy.'
The damn thing has a terrible
hiss.
'Mummy, I'm very good at
swimming.'
She can't get it to work.
It's been like this all week.
'Mummy - ' he is getting
louder. 'Mummy - '
She succeeds in her fiddling.
At last she hears what he is saying. 'Yes, sweetheart, you are very good at
swimming. You should put your face in the water next time, shouldn't you.'
He nods, pushing his train
across the carpet. Now he isn't listening to her.
Clara couldn't understand
a thing that the miners' wives said. Their accents - specific to the village
in which they had lived and worked all their lives - were unintelligible to
her. The woman they had staying in their house was called Barbara; whenever
Clara encountered her on the stairs or in the doorway she smiled broadly, said
'Hello Barbara,' and then scuttled away. She got on with her supermarket collecting.
In the evenings Barbara wore her fur coat and held
court in the kitchen. The kitchen had no heating, but Clara and the artists
had grown accustomed to it. When it got too cold to bear, they turned on the
cooker and left the oven door open. While Barbara was staying, the household
undertook to cook a good meal every night. The artist who grew up in Leeds
- Mark - served as unofficial interpreter.
Barbara said something.
'Do we always eat together?' Mark translated. He
also supplied the reply. 'Well, pretty often, I guess, maybe even most nights.
We take it in turns to cook.'
Clara was sitting in the corner, hoping she wouldn't be called upon
to speak.
Barbara said something.
'No, we don't have a cleaning rota as such.' Mark
looked a little shame-faced.
Clara looked around the kitchen. She realised, with
surprise, that it was filthy. On the floor the lino was cracked, missing in
patches. The walls were festooned with ad hoc wiring and the wires were coated
with oily black dust. There was no splashback behind the cooker and the area
was dark with grease; the wall behind the rubbish bin was caked and streaky.
Barbara said something and then laughed warmly.
Mark smiled. 'Yes, we do have big hearts.' Everyone
in the kitchen either guffawed or giggled and Clara smiled in spite of herself.
Another two days and Barbara and the artists were
beginning to comprehend each other more fully. One morning, on her way to a
rally at Westminster, Barbara came into the kitchen while Clara was making toast.
'Would you like a piece?' Clara offered.
'No thank you.'
Clara spread vegemite on the bread, despite not liking
the taste. She thought it might be good for her.
'It is very kind of you to put us up here in the square,' Barbara said.
Clara shrugged, she didn't
know how to reply.
'Things are tough in the
villages now. We are running out of money.' Barbara put her handbag down and
began to button her fur coat. 'No more overtime bonuses. I might even have
to sell this!' She spread her arms wide and laughed, then was abruptly serious
once more. 'I worry that we are running out of time. Our whole way of life
- it's not nice down the pit, but - ' she stopped herself. 'You know all of
this already.' She smiled again. 'You people obviously have nothing.'
Clara put down her toast
and looked around. And then she realised that Barbara thought they lived this
way because they were poor. Nothing to do with choice.
'And yet you have been so
generous. We appreciate it so much. All over England, people have been - fantastic.'
'It shouldn't be happening
like this,' Clara said. She meant the strike, she meant the pit closures, she
meant the violent battles on the coalfields between the miners and the police.
The plexiglass-clad police.
'Ah,' said Barbara, 'but
it is. It's not the young men that I worry about; they'll be all right. It's
the older ones that'll end up on the slagheap - like my Robbie.'
Clara couldn't reply.
'Okay,' said Barbara, breezy
once more, 'I'm off.' And with a soft and furry flourish, she departed.
It has been an awful morning and it looks set to get
worse. It has been raining since they got up - hard, silent rain. He has a
temperature and a runny nose and she's worried he's got conjunctivitis from
rubbing snot into his eyes. He won't lie down and he won't play with his toys.
Instead he follows her around the flat, and whines. She has a cold too, and
a hangover from the three bottles of beer she drank last night, in front of
the telly. All she wants to do is lie down and be very, very quiet.
He whines.
Now she is brittle with tension, close to cracking.
On days like this he's not a little boy but a huge force, a tremendous non-stop
barrage of need.
The phone rings. She leaps up and answers it.
'Hello love,' Barbara says. 'Are you up for a visit
this weekend?'
It is fifteen years since the strike - fifteen years,
Clara reflects, as she listens to Barbara speak. After the strike Barbara's
husband Robbie took redundancy and promptly died. Their kids were grown, so
Barbara went to college on the redundancy money. Now she manages an enormous
supermarket in Manchester.
'I'm thinking of taking the fur coat out of storage.'
Clara laughs.
'No listen - they're back in fashion - they're all the rage.'
'They are not.'
'They are! It says so in my magazine.'
'Oh well then.'
'You're young, you look great whatever you wear.'
'I'm not young anymore.'
'No?' says Barbara. 'I suppose not. How's the lad?'
He is sitting next to Clara on the settee, his head
in her lap. He takes her hand and places it on his temple, so that she'll stroke
his hair. 'He's all right,' Clara says, 'he's okay.'
|