Poppy

My dearest friend Zoe has a two year old named Poppy and it was a pleasure to spend the weekend with them recently. Young children don’t really feature in my life so it was a real novelty to play with her and witness her growing (and expansive) imagination. This is dedicated to her.

We stride through parklands of Living Room

Out to where balls can be thrown up, up to the clouds.

And the decking outside is a sandy dune

where we jump from the pier to the sea.

We swim through the treacherous high waves that is grass

and ponder the weeds that are jellyfish.

Dodging crab-like splodges of mud underfoot

We wade our way back to the front,

where rocking horse carriages wait us

so we can travel round roundabout circular roundabouts.

Later at night I sit mindless,

Popped back to reality by phones, crying and diaries,

But in your mind the play still comes like a flooding

Gabbling tales of giants up ladders

and mice sitting on top of your knee.

There’s a dolly that needs fed in her buggy

and a snack that she’d like to be aubergine.

And all of this comes from Poppy’s young head,

I wonder what dreams are like when she’s asleep in her bed!

The Airing Cupboard

mad bunny       It had been exactly fifteen minutes since Matthew Mattison had left the devastating note on his mother’s chest of drawers; next to the blackened used cotton wool and parked upright by a fading photo of a dog she had owned for a short period of time when she had been ten.

It had been an exhausting day. He had been forced to recover from at least two tantrums both of which were not taken as seriously as he would have liked. The first had erupted after he had been made to attend a gym class at 8.30am even though it was a Saturday and he had planned to create a lego house for his new toy car that he had demanded the week before. The second had come to fruition after attending said gym class his heartless mother had refused to buy him a milkshake to make up for the inconvenience of it all.

So that was it. He had written his missive.

He was quite proud of it actually. He had discreetly taken a page from his father’s writing pad in his bureau and borrowed not just a thick envelope that he didn’t have to lick to seal, it came with its own glue but his dad’s best pen – which coincidentally he had decided to keep on his person as a consolation for having to sit in the airing cupboard to make his point.

As Matthew Mattison sat next to the aging boiler that hissed and creaked he rested his head against the soothing warmth of the wall and imagined the best scenario that could come from his letter.

Upon reading it, his mother would throw her hands up and wail, beating her chest as her sobs racked her and brought in his father from garden where he was currently picking out weeds.  He would rush to her aid and tear it from her both reading and comforting her as the words made their inevitable impact upon him:

‘By the time you read this, I will be gone. It is clear you don’t love me and never will. Don’t come after me, you will never find me. Farewell mother and father and may we meet in Heaven someday. I hope you have a child that you truly love one day. M.M’

It was cramped in the cupboard. Matthew Mattison tried to stretch his tiny frame but all too soon met the edge of the airing cupboard where he had decided to hide. His plan was to hide out for as long as possible to shock his parents into realizing how much they loved and missed him and then dramatically turn up – maybe around suppertime, he was pretty sure Saturday night was lasagna night, his favourite –  and then he wouldn’t have to attend gym class ever again and he would get that milkshake because they would be so happy to see him.

Twenty minutes. Why was it so quiet? It was slightly irritating to him that he hadn’t been missed for twenty minutes – what were they doing? To amuse himself he tried to make shadows with his toes using the fractured light that was filtering weakly through the crack between the door and its frame.  That soon became dull and he decided to tap out a tune they had learned in Mr. Darwin’s music class the previous day.

Twenty-five minutes. Droplets of sweat were beginning to congregate at the nape of his neck and tickle his spine. Faint pangs of hunger were starting to cramp his belly and he was just about to wonder whether it was all worth it when he heard voices coming up the stairs. This was it!

Eagerly and with a smile broadening across his face he shifted closer to the door so he could hear their reaction.

‘David, are you finished in the garden yet?’ His mother was saying

‘I think so – my back is aching from all that weeding’ his gruff voice returned.

The door to their bedroom was opened and Matthew Mattison who was in the airing cupboard adjacent to their bedroom rolled to his right and placed his hot ear to the wall so he could hear the moment the letter was discovered.

Drawers were being opened and shut and he could hear his mother shutting the windows and closing the blinds.

The sound of the shower in the en-suite was next, its water pattering against the tiles like tropical rain.

Matthew Mattison sighed with annoyance. When were they going to see his letter?

More shuffling and then he heard the shower curtain being pulled back and forth.

Surely his mother would notice while his father took his shower?

Giggles.

This was unexpected. Matthew Mattison’s heart stopped. What? His parents hated him that much that they had read the letter and found it funny? Shocked and perturbed, Matthew Mattison crawled towards the back of the cupboard where it was dusty. His hands were filthy from the floorboards and as he wiped them on his shorts he was stopped short yet again by a groan. Maybe finally his parents had stopped laughing and realized it wasn’t a joke – their son had actually gone.

More groaning. This was more like it. Devastation.

With complacency he relaxed against the wall, happy and comforted that his plan was working. He had just closed his eyes awaiting a more in-depth conversation when he heard the en-suite door bang as though someone had opened it yet the shower was still running. And then, terrible sounds, horrible sounds. The banging of a headboard against the flock wallpaper, moaning and groaning that got louder and louder. Without really knowing what he was hearing, Matthew Mattison knew that this wasn’t the behavior of two terrified and shocked parents but two people…two people….

Horrified, Matthew Mattison scuttled back to the door of the airing cupboard and tried to open it but couldn’t. The noise from his parent’s bedroom was becoming excessive. They were actually enjoying what they were doing. He’d heard rumours of an act mummies and daddies were supposed to do but had never really equated that with his. His mum and dad were far too angry and annoyed all the time when he was around to do that.

Panicked now he pushed against the door.

The bed next door continued to push again the wallpaper

Again and again he leaned his whole body against the door. To escape, for it all to be over. He tried putting his fingers in his ears but it was no use. He banged against the door with one last almighty push…

His mother screamed just as the door gave way and Matthew Mattison fell out the airing cupboard wet and sweaty like a newborn baby.airing cupboard

Silence

And then…

‘Darling, what’s that on your bedside table?’

Rustling as the envelope was opened and read.

‘Oh so he’s gone has he? Well thank god for that. It means I can have you again my sweet…’

Muffled giggles soared through the door and into the hallway where Matthew Mattison lay still on the carpet his eyes open with shock, his mind replaying and replaying and replaying and replaying…..

Glass Eye

Apologies in advance for the language in this one!

Yeah I know it’s a cliché to be writing letters like this just before I exhale my last breath but I no longer give a shit. There’s some stuff you need to know. Not because you really need to but because I know that that lame arsed nosy bitch of a sister-in-law knows and is probably twitching at home just waiting for me to scuttle off my mortal coil finally so she can get that womble sized ass of hers out of the door as fast as that fucker Usain Bolt to tell you. So I better get in there first.

Here’s the thing. I fecking grew to hate your Ma during that last decade we were together. You had probably already figured that out. Maybe the shredded photos you found all over the carpet like a charity shop rug gave it away, or the punched hole in the garage door after I wanted to hit her so bad I had to take an aim at that instead – I was never that kind of man to hit a woman and you better not be either. Possibly it was the fact those fuckers at social services came round cos some knob end teacher of yours thought we were neglecting you cos your uniform looked a bit dirty. God I could have punched that woman straight in the face; right on the bump of that crone’s nose of hers for that. The only reason you smelled dear boy was cos you never freaking thought to wash unless we told you to and your Ma was too busy messing around with those losers down the club to notice clothes weren’t getting washed. And no it wasn’t my place to do it. I made the money. She made the house run. Or was supposed to. Lazy bitch couldn’t even do that right.

So yea, I guess I’m also writing this an apology. I’m sorry we were lame. I’m sorry we were always screaming at each other and basically forgot you were there. I hope this gets to you in time but I’m not even sure where to send this fucker to – I’m guessing you are still in the same home you ended up in 5 years ago? I’m not sure as I haven’t heard from you for awhile.  Your aunt’ll know though. Yea, she’ll know alright.

So anyway, back to the confessional. Not that I want you to think badly of her but basically your Ma was a whore. If it wasn’t that Dan she was hitching her skirts up for, it was Chris behind the bar, Gary who ran the chippie; I think she even boned the neighbor once and I swear to God he must’ve been about 50 or so at the time and she only in her early 30s.

I used to ask her why but all she would throw back in my face was that I ignored her. Spent too much time with my guys down the pub when I wasn’t working. Wasn’t giving her enough attention. Bull. If she’d made more effort I’d have been home every night but what kinda man wants to come home to a stinking cesspit of a home, a woman who smells of some cheap shit cider and who needs to wax her top lip;  a kid that needs its nappy changing and egg and chips on the table? Well, that fucker Gary clearly liked it and eventually it was Gary she left me for. Yea, so not only had you been taken off her hands but she kicked me out in all.

Thing is, Ben, I’ve never been the type to just walk away from a situation. I can’t do it and I sure in hell hope you’re like that too. So for six months I lived in this shitty little bedsit opposite my actual home. I could see what your Ma and Gary got up to through the window most times. She sure did look a lot happier and that twisted my guts to see. I noticed a bit of a swell to her belly and used to get all fired up at the thought of her having that prick’s baby – but turns out she was putting on the lard, you know what I mean? Some chicks do that when their happy. It’s like they feel they no longer need to make any effort. Just be aware of that Ben. Don’t ever let a girl think you’ve only got the eye for her; she’ll pack on the pounds faster than an addict shoots up.

Anyway, there was this one evening when I was mighty sore at the sight of them coming back late drunk. They couldn’t even wait to get in the front door before she’s pulling at his belt and spreading her legs for him…in the doorway! The freaking doorway!  I hope isn’t too shocking for you Ben but you need to hear it all. Anyway, I’d had a binge with the guys and like they say, that fecking red mist just come down on me all of a sudden. I pushed myself out of that tatty sofa your Gran gave us (you remember it? The one with that shit paisley pattern and covered in fag holes?) and stumbled down the stairs and into the street. I could hear her screaming before I even rolled the first punch but feck me it felt good.

I don’t really remember what I did except I woke up in hospital in cuffs and the fucking pigs all over me like ants. Anyway, you know what I did and I’m sorry, I really am but what’s mine is mine and that fucker Gary had no right, HAD NO RIGHT. She was mine; we hadn’t even got a fucking divorce or nothing. So it turned out, as you know, I did in Gary and your Ma followed him a few days later. The only good thing to come out of this situation, Ben was the fact they asked me if there was anything I wanted from home. So I asked for your Ma’s glass eye. You may not have known this but your Ma was blind on her left side and used this glass monstrosity for reasons of vanity. That thing freaked me out. I once came across it once in a glass in the bathroom. I wasn’t too happy about that Ben so I will admit to teaching your Ma a lesson about that. I only did that now and again when she needed reminding how things were meant to be in the house, you know?

They gave it to me in a box after her funeral. The daft pricks had wrapped it in tissue paper – like it was something precious and fragile! As soon as I got back to my cell, I remember taking out a teddy of yours I brought with me (it kinda smelled of you still…yeah I know…surprising) and ripped out one of the eyes and replaced with your Ma’s. It looked kind a freakish and all but did the trick.

Ben, you need to know that those bastards who keep me in here want to tell you what I used to do with that teddy but I think you need to hear it from me. Some nights I’d stick pencils up its butt and twist until the stuffing started to come out. Other times I scrub the fucking toilet bowl with it until the shit stains looked like a crap hair dye job. Other times they found me smashing it against the wall of my cell.

They want to give you the teddy when I go, but can you do me this one favour? Stick it in my coffin will you? I want to be cremated with that bitch and you.eye

I love you.

Dad

Lemonade

shoes    I think it was my English teacher who told us once that ‘some are born great, some achieve greatness and some have greatness thrust upon them.’ Well, I don’t know about you but I would certainly categorise myself as the second. Which, rather ironically some might say, is why I’m now at this woeful comprehensive school in Northolt, Greater London and not the London Oratory where I embodied greatness…and then promptly lost it.

I can pinpoint exactly what caused this downfall akin to Caesar’s. Lemonade. Bloody lemonade. That saccharine honey dew melon coloured liquid. Nectar of the Gods. Obligatory at parties attended by over excited five year olds. I loved lemonade and for a time it loved me too. It was my business teacher, Miss. Braithwaite who first mooted the idea to my class about a project where we would be in competition with each other – not just to see who made the most money but who had the best business model, the best product and finally, the best marketing strategy. Those who were successful would be rewarded with no homework for a half term and voucher to spend at the local sweet shop. We were twelve and I immediately decided that lemonade would be the answer to the prize.

As was to be expected, people immediately threw themselves at their friends to make their groups; no thought was given to whether those people would actually be useful or make a success of it. At twelve, I already prided myself on the fact I never let my emotions get the better of me, preferring to use logic instead. So when my so called best friend John gleefully headed my way, his freckles attempting to shine through his already pimply skin – he was given short shrift. I have no idea if he looked hurt or not as I sidled my way through the tables and chairs but my thought was on one person only: Mick ‘The Almighty’ Johnson; so called for the size of his johnson which, already at the age of twelve, had the boys in the locker room green with envy. However, the epithet wasn’t just about that – it was like a metaphor for his character too – that boy was magnetic. He oozed charisma and confidence. Girls and boys listened to his opinions. Adults loved him. This was the boy, I had decided 5 minutes previously, who would help my lemonade stand march us deftly to the sweet shop and nights and weekends of freedom.

Fortunately, for me, Mick also knew a good thing when he saw it and as our eyes locked we didn’t even need to nod in acknowledgement; we just sat down, got out our pencil cases and settled to work whilst all around us people were laughing and giggling and generally, as usual, not taking life and work seriously.

Mick agreed that lemonade would be a winner. The summer term was proving humid and lunchtimes long and tedious with football games rewarded with only measly water from the communal fountain (I have never been a fan of those things and also ensured I had a disinfectant wipe handy if I got caught out and needed to use one) so to offer hot and thirsty youngsters cool glasses of lemonade would certainly secure us the prize but as I pointed out to Mick, the lemonade needed to be special – not that 7UP crap, more the ‘old fashioned’ style you could get in Waitrose.

We parted ways at the end of that lesson with not just a business plan but a fire in our bellies and ambition growing rapidly like a virus. I remember the frission of that first night all too well. Latin and R.E. homework was due the next day but I decided to forego it and sit the inevitable detention because I had greater things to focus on – namely a new formula of Lemonade. I’ve always had a flair for science so after firing up my laptop I spent a few hours looking at recipes and thinking about the chemical compounds that would work best. My dad worked in a bank and was never home until late so playing on his career parent guilt I asked for money to buy the ingredients I would need and he handed it over without question, not even looking up from his ‘The Telegraph’ as he sat slumped on the sofa, his suit crumpled and his shoes in disarray beside him.

I won’t go into the details as that would be dull but let’s just say that what followed was one of the most anti-social and delightful weekends of my life. I hid myself away in the garage and within two days had the essence of a new strain of Lemonade. It was delicious. It was refreshing. It was addictive. Mick ‘the almighty’ Johnson thought so too when I walked round the block with just a cup containing the fruit of my endeavours to let him try it. I remember him standing on the steps leading up to his front door savouring his mouthful and swirling it around his mouth like a sommelier before gulping it down.

‘Awesome’ was all he could utter before he was called back inside to wash the dog.

That was all the praise I needed. If Mick liked it, everyone would.

Monday lunchtime could not come around quick enough. Mick and I were first to the playground in order to secure our pitch by the football field and tennis courts. My sister had done a fine job creating our stand (shaped like a lemon no less) and Mick and I had changed into suitably sunshine coloured attire. Our first customer was Melanie. Or Melanie Smellanie as she was known for her inability to realize her teeth were caked in tartar and needed a good scrub. If anyone needed a pick-me-up laced with natural acid, it was Melanie.

‘How much?’ the buck toothed wench enquired.

‘80p’ was the reply.

Silver was exchanged and Melanie supped on the fruits of my weekend. Her facial expressions seemed to go through a myriad of emotions: surprise, delight and finally…relaxation as her thirst was quenched and her senses revived by the copious amounts of sugar she had just ingested.

‘Give me another 3’ she demanded.

Her request met, she sloped away towards the dingy doors that led to the girls’ toilets and we watched as she gave it to her friends; who in turn were clearly happy with the purchase as they too came up, followed by a couple of hapless boys from two years below who clearly didn’t know better than to have a crush on the three most grotesque girls in the school.

Word soon spread and by day three, our stall was swamped with youngsters vying for a taste of my luscious lemonade. The other students in our business studies class would stand glumly by their stalls selling terrible bars of soap or dry muffins to maybe one or two customers if they were lucky. As I expected, Mick and I won the task and were rewarded by being called up to the front of the classroom to receive our sweet shop vouchers and to be informed that we were not expected to hand in any homework for the rest of the term (never mind that was only two weeks). Our success wasn’t exactly met with rapturous applause by the others in the group but the rhythm seemed to match our steps as we slowly made our way back to our desks inspecting the glittering ticket to sugar joy.

The only thing was, I had kind of enjoyed selling the lemonade…and the proceeds it brought us. The task was over but the demand was not. Mick and I took to opening up a bootlegger’s business in one of the toilet stalls in the boys’ toilets – the ones in the PE block, furthest away from the staffroom and prying snooping eyes. As long as a student brought their own bottle we were happy to fill it with the lemon juice as it meant we could continue undetected.

Those were heady days bringing with them the richness of success and popularity but like so many things that one eventually equates to positive feelings, I became addicted to selling the lemonade. It got to me. The power, the monopoly of break and lunchtimes. I became a demon – always after the end result – trying to make it better, particularly when it seemed demand began to dry up as the summer dissolved slowly into Autumn and eventually the frozen wastes of winter. It was at this point I began to play around with my chemical compounds and devised a new form of Lemonade – one that heated up upon the consumer swallowing it and the liquid touching the inside of their throat. It meant people got the refreshing hit of lemons…and the warmth that made it appealing in the chilly breaktimes spent out in the granite netherland of the playground.

Business picked up and both Mick and I enjoyed the money it brought us. We were the envy of our schoolmates, always having the latest phones, trainers and clothes.

But then, as with so many things, our success came to grinding halt in the middle of March. Teachers began to complain openly that the school smelled strongly of lemons – which, although pleasantly welcome after a decade of bleach and B.O. seemed out of place and inexplicable. Then, the local papers seemed to be full of letters from residents complaining that the streetlights weren’t being turned off at night as a strange glow was keeping them awake during the hours of what was meant to be darkness. The council in turn retorted that that wasn’t the case and residents simply needed to buy black-out curtains. Tensions about strange smells and lights continued to escalate slowly for a few weeks until the day Mick ‘the almighty’ Johnson took his dog out for a walk and noticed that when Dave, as he was affectionately known as, marked his territory on trees, the urine appeared to glow ever so slightly. After returning from this particular walk in the park, Mick discovered an empty bottle of lemonade in the garage and realized Dave had drunk it all. That was also the night that Polly Barnes from year 8 got up to visit the toilet at 3am and happened to look at her reflection in the darkened mirror as she settled down onto the toilet seat. Her ensuing screams promptly brought her worried parents scampering out of bed and to their daughter’s aid only to be met with an unholy apparition of what looked to be a glowing effigy having a wee on their brand new toilet.

It quickly transpired that all those who had a lemonade habit of more than 3 drinks a week had in fact started to glow in the dark. We might have got away with it if the International Space Station hadn’t picked up the fact Harrow seemed to glow particularly brightly at night – and then some idiot scientist told the Daily Mail.

The irony wasn’t lost on me as the bitterness of my classmates spewed forth. I watched through slitted eyes and gritted teeth as I left school during those ensuing weeks when one or two of them would be pulled aside to chat to a journalist who eagerly wanted to know how he or she could get their hands on this infamous lemonade, knowing they were no doubt saying all kinds of lies just to get their names in the papers. Of course everyone knew it was me and Mick at the bottom of it all but because the stuff hadn’t been condemned as poisonous nobody could do anything about it. Except the Headteacher who called us in one Friday afternoon.

‘That lemonade is an abberation’ was how he started his tirade. We were warned never to sell it again on school grounds…on pain of exclusion. This was enough to put Mick off having anything more to do with it and I was certainly happy to stop selling it at my private school as I had discovered a new market. Teenagers from the Norwood Estate.lemonade

Never under estimate the lengths some teens will go to for a laugh. I made more in those weeks after my lemonade hit the headlines than at any other point as those over fourteen years of age would dare each other to drink 10 in an evening and then run out in front of cars to scare people or stand in cemeteries pretending to be ghosts. But then, as is always the way, their behavior got out of hand.  Somebody drowned whilst drunk on vodka and lemonade pretending to be a light house and then falling off a cliff and then a group of skinny dipping teens aiming to impersonate bioluminescence were swept away by a rip tide.

There was no escape from those last two. As soon as I saw the stories on BBC Newsnight, I knew that at the tender age of 12 ½ my foray into the world of entrepreneurial business was over. And as I suspected, come the Monday morning after the news of the deaths broke, I was summoned to the Headteacher’s office one last time.

There was no explanation that could help me now. I was told to see out the term and leave the London Oratory for good.