Authors: Stan Barstow
âI should have thought you'd be glad of anybody who could speak for you,' she said in a moment.
âWhat could you say?'
âI could tell 'em what sort of man I think you are. I could tell 'em all you've told me about what kind of a dance she's led you.'
âThat's your own idea, what you think. You never did understand about us.'
She was recovered now and she faced him with the old assurance. âIt doesn't look like it, does it?' she said.
He stood in silence for a time, then shrugged. âIt's no use talking.'
âNo. You should be thinking about what you're going to do.'
âThere's nothing I can do.'
Whatever Mrs Sugden was going to say then was cut off by the sound from upstairs: a cry that trembled on the edge of becoming a scream.
âThat's Gloria.' Brian hurried out. A pair of small metal ornaments danced on the mantelshelf as he pounded up the stairs.
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Joyce was in the hospital corridor when the trolley came through the double doors. The doctor walking beside the trolley took her arm as she moved forward.
âI've got to talk to him.'
âAre you the one who brought him in?'
âI got the ambulance yes.'
âAre you a relative?'
âNo, I work for him. I found him.'
âDo you know what happened?'
âNo, that's why I want to talk to him.'
âHe's in no state to talk to anybody. He's been very severely manhandled.'
He let her forward sufficiently to lean over the trolley and look at Leonard's face. It was heavily swathed in bandages and the eyes were closed.
âIf I waited till he woke up...'
âHe won't talk to you even then,' the man said. âHis jaw's broken.' He nodded to the porter who pushed the trolley on and into a lift. Joyce turned away as the grille was pulled across. âHave you spoken to the police?'
âYes. It wasn't robbery, though. There was nothing missing.'
She had rung the police after calling the ambulance. It was between her putting down the telephone and their arrival a few minutes later that, wondering where Brian and Gloria had got to, she began to connect Brian with what had happened. She telephoned his firm, phrasing her enquiry so that they would have no cause for alarm, and found that he'd not been there since lunchtime.
There was nothing to do now but go home and wait. She had been there for nearly an hour, smoking one cigarette after another in short nervous puffs, her eyes on the television screen but taking in hardly anything, when she remembered that Brian had once written down for her the address and phone number of his lodgings up north.
She found the slip of paper among some letters in the rack on the fireplace and, putting on her coat and counting her loose change, she went out of the house again and walked to the telephone kiosk on the corner.
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Brian got Gloria settled in the cab of the lorry, with the help of the rug and the cushion which Mrs Sugden had loaned him, then went back into the house.
âShe's all right now she knows she's going home.'
âIt's goodbye for a bit, then?' Mrs Sugden said. She grasped his hand. âYou're a good man, Brian. They must see that.'
âI'd better be off,' Brian said. âIf she starts getting upset again...'
âYou won't forget, will you? What I said about friends.
Perhaps it won't be longâ¦' She reached up and kissed him on the mouth then let go of his hand and turned away.
She heard the door close behind him and the engine start. She had gone out and was watching the tail lights of the vehicle moving away along the road when the telephone began to ring in the hall.
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âI thought I'd killed him.'
He had said it before, in the same slow disbelieving way, and the stupid wonderment of it angered her.
âYou bloody fool, Brian, for believing what he said.'
âIt wasn't true, was it?'
âOf course it wasn't true. I've told you it wasn't.'
âWhy should he say a thing like that? Why should he make it up?'
âHow do I know? To cause trouble. Because he's evil-minded. He made a pass at me; said he wanted me. When I turned him down all he could think of was making trouble.'
âAnd I thought I'd killed him.'
You didn't even get that right, did you? Taking Gloria and running away like that, and all for nothing. You're a fool, Brian, a bloody useless fool.'
âDon't keep saying that, you selfish bitch. I spent nearly twelve hours thinking he was dead; thinking I'd have to do ten years for him. And all you can say is “you bloody fool”. Well, you're right: I am a fool, a fool for putting up with your rotten, selfish ways. I did it for her. It was her I was thinking about. If I thought I could keep her he could have you tomorrow.'
âWho the hell do you think you are, talking to me like that?'
He reached out and took her by the wrist, dragging her to her feet. âI know who I am, and you'll listen when I talk â bitch.'
It was the first time he had ever laid a finger on her in anger and for a moment the shock of it took her voice.
âGod! I hate you, you big useless
â
'
âAnd I hate you, so what are you going to do about it?' She swung her free arm, aiming to strike him across the face, but he caught that wrist too and held her there in the grip of both his hands. The glare of outrage in her eyes was akin to that of desire. She was beautiful in her anger. He knew that to bear her down and take her now, on the floor, quickly and without tenderness, would be a greater satisfaction to him than striking her, and a more searing humiliation to her.
The moment held. She stared him out, defying him to do what he liked. Another thought slid into his mind and was expressed before he could decide its wisdom.
âDo you ever think about him?' Brian asked. âThe one who did give you the kid?'
Her eyes narrowed as though she did not instantly understand. Then, âYes,' she said. She threw her head back as she saw his face, and screamed. âYes. Bloody yes!'
He pushed her away from him on to the sofa and went across to where he had left his donkey jacket on a chair. She watched him put it on.
âWhere are you going?'
âI'm taking the lorry back to the yard and leaving a note for the boss.'
âWill you want anything to eat when you come back?'
âNo.'
âAre you going to work today?'
âNo.'
âWhat are we going to do?'
âWhat about?'
âUs.'
âWhat do you want to do?'
âGo on living.'
âThat's all we can do, isn't it?'
He went out, closing the inner door after him. She stared for a long time at the fire and then went upstairs and brought down her clothes, turning on the radio before she left the room. She had undressed once she had known he was on his way back. Now she slowly began to dress again, uncovering and reclothing one part of her body at a time as a voice read the early morning news bulletin...
ââ¦Miss Forrest is one of the most sought-after stars in the film world today. Travelling with Miss Forrest was her husband, Mr Ralph D. Packenheimer, whose business interests in the United States include motels and drive-in cinemas. They were married a month ago and London is their last stop on a round-the-world honeymoon tour which has taken in seven countries. Mr Packenheimer is Miss Forrest's fourth husband.
âArriving on the same flight at London Airport was the Prime Minister of the newly independent African state of Kandaria, Mr Walter Umbala, who is here on an unofficial visit. Our reporter asked Mr Umbala about recent unrest and disturbances in Kandaria. He said that in a nation of mixed races and religions there were bound to be disagreements from time to time, but they only became serious when exploited by outside agencies for their own ends. “We must be ever vigilant and resist these outside elements with all our might,” Mr Umbala said. “Only then shall we go forward, united and strong, to our destiny among the free nations of the worldâ
”
'
Joyce gave a small exclamation of impatience and turned the tuner till she found some music. She lit a cigarette and sat down, looking at the fire and hearing under the sound of the wireless the soft shift of the hot coals, as she waited for Brian to come back.
This Day, Then Tomorrow
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Something out of the ordinary had happened in the Hatton household. Ruth, at twenty-two the youngest of the Hatton girls, had got a novel accepted for publication. The publisher's letter was on the breakfast table when she came down, and the sudden joyful spring of colour to her cheeks as she opened and read it betrayed her to Mrs Hatton, so that she was forced to break the news not at a moment of her own choosing, but there and then.
âTwo hundred and fifty pounds advance on royalties!' Mrs Hatton said. âAnd what's this novel about, ever?'
Ruth made a movement of her hand. âOh...'
âTwo hundred and fifty pounds?' Mr Hatton took the letter in his turn. âI didn't know you were writing a novel, Ruth.'
âShe's been going to that literature class in the evenings for nearly two years,' Mrs Hatton said, as though he were somehow more remiss than herself in. not knowing what their daughter was up to. âAnd she's always scribbled in her room.'
âI thought she was studying people like
Shakespeare and Dickens,' Mr Hatton said, ânot writing books of her own.'
âWhy ever shouldn't Ruth write a novel, Bernard?' Mrs Hatton said. âShe's had a good education.'
Mr Hatton was too used to his wife's instant allotting of their roles in any situation â her own one of perception and concern, his that of a neglectful obtuseness â to become irritated.
âWe study literary composition,' Ruth said, âand we're expected to do some original writing.'
âBut a novel!' Ruth's older sister Celia said. âYou can't deny you've kept it quiet, Ruth. It must have made a fair-sized parcel to put in the post.'
âWell... I didn't know whether it was any good or not, so there was no point in saying anything yet.'
âBut we're here to share your disappointments as well as your successes, surely, Ruth,' her mother said.
Some of them, anyway, Ruth thought. She had prepared herself for their knowing if the manuscript were returned, but she could not have endured the initial waiting period except alone. Once her mother had seized on such an event outside the normal life of the household she would not have let it drop. There would also have been the necessity of letting her read and comment on the book. Now, of course, when it had acquired a cachet of a publisher's acceptance, it was different. Or was it? The contents were still the same, and soon now they would become public property. For the first time Ruth felt a tiny tremor of anxiety.
Her father was more concerned with the business aspects of the matter. âThey say they'll send you a contract to sign,' he said. âPerhaps you ought to get legal advice on that.'
âIt's a standard procedure.'
âYes, but you don't want to sign your rights away.'
âDad, they're among the most reputable publishers in London.'
âYou don't think they're going to cheat the girl, do you, Bernard?' Mrs Hatton said.
âOf course not. But they're businessmen and it's their job to make a profit.'
âPerhaps you can let Mr Astley glance at it, Ruth,' her mother suggested.
Mr Astley had acted for Mr Hatton in the purchase of their house and in a number of other routine matters. Ruth didn't think that he, or any other solicitor in the district, would know much about authors' rights in a literary agreement.
âI'll show it to my tutor at the class,' she said. âHe's had poetry published, and some stories.'
Mrs Hatton's mouth pursed in an expression that was almost a smirk. âWhat a feather in your cap when you walk in and tell them about it!'
Mr Hatton, leaving first, patted Ruth's head and twinkled at her from the doorway. âWell done! It looks as
though we're going to have a celebrity in the house.'
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She was called to the telephone in her free period that morning. The male voice at the other end of the line belonged to a reporter on the local weekly newspaper.
âI understand you've had a novel accepted for publication.'
âWell, yes. How do you know?'
âYour mother rang the editor, I believe.'
Ruth felt a spasm of irritation. She had wanted to savour the good news privately for a while; to ponder this development in her life and come to terms with it before speaking of it to anyone. But already she was being pushed along at someone else's pace.
âI wondered if I could come along and talk to you about it. It'll make a very interesting item for our readers.'
âOur readers.' Everybody. Common knowledge. That Hatton girl's written a book. She suddenly became acutely conscious of how many people who didn't read a novel from one year's end to the next would read this one because she was its author. And how, of course, they would presume to judge it. With that thought came a keen desire to put this man off, to make any excuse to avoid having to talk to him. But wasn't all this part of the process? She had written a book and offered it for publication. So now the public would read it, and what they made of it and her were factors over which she had control. She ought to be flattered and pleased by this instant opportunity of publicity, but instead she felt something more like fright. Oh, Lord! Why had she done it?
âWell, then?' she asked.
âI thought I might call round this evening. We go to press tomorrow.'
âBut it'll be months before the book's published.'
âOh, we can do a follow-up piece nearer the time, but we'd like to be first with the original story.'
First? Who else could be interested?
She said, âAll right. Will seven o'clock be convenient?'
âRighto, seven. I have the address.'
Arthur Debenham, who taught Senior English, passed by as she left the telephone cubicle. He glanced at her and nodded. Ruth turned her head and watched him stroll along the corridor with his long slow stride and curious swing of the shoulders. Debenham was in his fifties and given to occasional caustic denunciations in the staff room of contemporary trends in the arts. What usually provoked him were newspaper reports of a new play or novel by âthe latest back-street genius from Bradford' or âBermondsey'. âWe're living in the age of the literate illiterate,' was Debenham's line. Everybody's writing novels or plays. They've none of them anything to say, and they don't know how to say it anyway, but they're so full of their own insignificant â and usually grubby â feelings, they have to share them with the world.'
What would he make of her adding to the number? Because soon he would know. Everybody would know.
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âA few biographical details first, I think.' The reporter was a young man about Ruth's age. It was raining outside and his gingerish suede boots were darkly wet on the toes, but he had gauchely declined to remove the blue anorak which he wore over a grey roll-neck sweater and Mrs Hatton glanced at him from time to time as though apprehensive that he would lean back and stain with damp the lime-green cover of the chair in which he was sitting. But he remained forward on the edge, a cheap throwaway ballpoint poised over the open notebook on his knee. Beside him on the arm of the chair the cup of tea Mrs Hatton had pressed upon him stood untouched and cooling, with a biscuit soggily absorbing the liquid slopped over into the saucer.
âYou're, er, how old?'
âTwenty-two.'
âYou were educated at the local grammar school?'
âYes.'
âAnd then... ?'
âI went to a training college.'
âAnd now you teach, what, domestic science? Why didn't you study a subject connected with writing?'
âI've always been interested in housecraft and so on. The writing thing's comparatively recent.'
âEven as a little girl Ruth was handy about the house,' Mrs Hatton put in. âOf course I encouraged her and taught her all I could, purely for the sake of it. That kind of ability's never lost.'
âNo, quite... So how did you become interested in writing?'
âI started going to a literary composition class in the evenings, just as a change. We were expected to do some writing of our own.'
âHow long did it take you to write this novel?'
âOh, about a year.'
âThat would be working in the evenings?'
âAnd a few hours at weekends, when I could manage.'
âDid your family encourage you?'
âThey didn't know what I was doing.'
âOh?' The young man looked at Mrs Hatton, who tried an indulgent laugh.
âNo, we had no idea until this morning when the letter came.'
âYou preferred nobody to know?'
âWell, yes. I think when you've never done anything like that before it seems a very personal thing. You become rather self-conscious about it. I mean, it might just be self-indulgence.'
âBut in your case, it seems the novel is good enough for publication.'
âYes. Perhaps I've been lucky.'
âI think you're too modest, Miss Hatton. Publishers have their standards.'
âI think so too,' her mother said. âWe're all very proud of her.'
âBy the way, what's the book called?'
â
This Day, then Tomorrow
.'
The reporter repeated the title after her, putting it in full among the shorthand symbols in his notebook.
âAnd can you give me some idea of what it's about?'
She had expected that question, and thought about it at odd moments in the day, but without much result.
âWell... that's not easy.'
âI don't expect you to tell me the plot. But is it a love story, a thriller, or an historical piece... you know.'
âIt hasn't got much of a plot to tell. It's a love story, I suppose.' Oh yes, it was about love. And innocence. About the necessity for trust and the inevitability of its defencelessness in the face of betrayal.
âA romantic novel.'
âOh no. It doesn't fall into that slot.'
The firmness of her reply quickened his interest. âYou mean it's too outspoken?'
âI'd prefer to say it's honest.'
âWhat about the main characters, and the background?'
âThe main character is a girl who's away from home for the first time, at college.'
âYou mean, like yourself?'
âNo, not exactly.'
âIt's not autobiographical, then?'
âNo, look. A writer uses settings and the kind of life he or she knows well then adds observation and imagination.'
âI see. So you don't expect the reader to identify you with the main character.'
âI hope not. If you'd read the book I don't think you'd ask me that.'
âOh, why not?'
âThe girl in the novel has an abortion.'
And now she had gone too far, revealed much more than at this stage she had ever intended. Her mother's gaze was on her. Did it contain the first flicker of alarm?
Ruth said quickly, âLook, I'd be grateful if you didn't mention that. It sounds so sensational out of context.'
âWell, of course not, if you say so.' The reporter looked disappointed at losing the spicy core of his story as soon as it had been revealed. âBut our readers aren't going to be shocked by the mention of a word like that.'
âI know your readers,' Ruth said. âThey've got the same proportion of the prudish, the hypocritical, the bigoted, and the just plain ignorant as any other community, and I don't think it's fair that either I or my book should be prejudged by mentioning such an emotive subject at this stage. I can justify what I've written in its context, but they'll have to read the book to arrive at a balanced judgement.'
âI think you could be wrong.' The young man frowned. âA little bit of the right kind of publicity can help to sell books.'
âThat's not the kind of publicity I want.'
âCertainly not,' Mrs Hatton said. âWe do have to live in this town.'
âYes, of course. But Ruth could almost hear him thinking: but if that's the case you can't blame me if your daughter writes a book which she finds it embarrassing to talk about.'
She began to bring the interview to a close.
âHave you got as much as you need to be going on with?'
âYes, I suppose so. Just a few more background facts. Your father is Mr Hatton the dentist? And have you any brothers or sisters?'
âRuth has an older sister who works for a firm of estate agents,' Mrs Hatton said, âand my eldest daughter is married to an officer in the army, who's stationed abroad at present.'
âRighto, then. Thank you very much.' The young man stood up, almost dislodging with his elbow the tea-cup beside him. âSorry, I'd forgotten that.' He took the cup and in his eagerness to show that he'd really wanted the tea, drank the lot so quickly that drops spilled down the front of his anorak. The biscuit he left in the saucer.
âIt will be in the paper this weekend?' Mrs Hatton asked.
âAll being well. By the way, do you know when the book's being published?'
âI've no idea.' Ruth gave a little laugh. âIt's all a bit premature, really. I haven't even signed the contract yet.'
âOh, that'll be all right, I'm sure,' the young man said. âI'll look forward to reading it.'
She saw him out then went back into the sitting-room. Her mother was standing on the hearthrug.
âDon't you think it's time you let me read this book?'
âIf you want to.'
âWell, of course I want to. I want to for its own sake; and after this weekend people are bound to stop me and mention it. I ought to know what my daughter's been doing, didn't I?'