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The gluey smell
The first time I met Wonder Boy, he pissed on me. I suppose he was
trying to warn me off, which was quite prescient when you consider how
things turned out.
One afternoon in late October, somewhere between Stoke Newington and
Highbury, I'd ventured into an unfamiliar street, and came upon the
entrance of a cobbled lane that led in between two high garden walls.
After about fifty metres the lane opened out into a grassy circle and I
found myself standing in front of a big double-fronted house, half
derelict and smothered in iv, so completely tucked away behind the
gardens of the neighbouring houses that you'd never have guessed it was
there, crouching behind a straggly privet hedge amidst a thicket of
self-seeded ash and maple saplings. I assumed it was uninhabited - who
could live in a place like this? Something was carved on the gatepost. I
pulled the ivy aside and read: Canaan House. Canaan - even the name
exuded a musty whiff of holiness. A cloud shifted and a low shaft of
sunshine made the windows light up momentarily like a magic show. Then
the sun slipped away and the flat dusky light exposed the crumbling
stucco, the bare wood where the pain had peeled away, rag-patched
windows, sagging gutters, and a spiny monkey puzzle tree had been
planted too close to the house. Behind me, the gate closed with a clack.
Suddenly a long wailing sob, like the sound of a child crying, uncoiled
in the silence. It seemed to be coming from the thicket. I shivered and
drew back towards the gate, but expecting Christopher Lee to appear with
blood on his fangs. But it was only a cat, a great white bruiser of a
tomcat, with three black socks and an ugly face, who emerged from the
bushes, tail held high, and came towards me with a purposeful glint in
his eye.
'Hello, cat. Do you live here?'
He sidled up, as though to rub himself against my legs, but just as I
reached down to stoke him, his tail went up, his whole body quivered,
and a strong squirt of eau-de-tomcat suffused the air. I aimed a kick,
but he'd already melted into the shadows. As I picked my way back
through the brambled I could smell it on my jeans - it had a pungent,
faintly gluey smell.
Our second encounter was about a week later, and this time I met his
owner, too. One evening at about eleven o'clock, I heard a noise in the
street, a scraping and scuffling followed by a smash of glass. I looked
out of the window. Someone was pulling stuff out of the skip in front of
my house.
At first I thought it was just a boy, a slight sparrowy figure wearing a
cap pulled down low over his face; then he moved into the light and I
saw it was an old woman, scrawny as an alley cat, tugging at some
burgundy velour curtains to get at the box of my husband's old vinyls
half buried under the other junk. I waved from the window. She waved
back gaily and carried on tugging. Suddenly the box came free and she
fell backwards on to the ground, scattering the records all over the
road, smashing a few of them. I opened the door and rushed out to help
her.
'Are you okay?'
Scrambling to her feet, she shook herself like a cat. Her face was half
hidden under the peak of the cap - it was one of those big jaunty baker
boy caps that Twiggy used to war, with a diamante brooch pinned on one
side.
'I don't know what type of persons is throwing away such music. Great
Russian composers.' A rich brown voice, crumbly like fruitcake. I
couldn't place the accent. 'Must be some barbarian types living around
here, isn't it?'
She stood chin out, feet apart, as if sizing me up for a fight.
'Look! Tchaikovsky. Shostakovich. Prokofiev. And they throw all in a
bin!'
'Please take the records,' I said apologetically. 'I don't have a record
player.'
'Thenk you. I adore especially the Prokofiev piano sonatas.'
Now I saw that behind the skip was an old-fashioned pram with big curly
springs into which she'd already loaded some of my husband's books.
'You can have the books, too.'
'You heff read them all?' she asked, as though quizzing me for barbarian
tendencies.
'All of them.'
'Good. Thenk you.'
'My name's Georgie Georgie Sinclair.'
She tipped her head in a stiff nod but said nothing.
'I've not lived here long. We moved down from Leeds a year ago.'
She extended a gloved hand - the gloves were splitting apart on the
thumbs - like a slightly dotty monarch acknowledging a subject.
'Mrs Naomi Shapiro.'
I helped her gather the scattered records and stow them on top of the
books. Poor old thing, I was thinking, one of life's casualties carting
her worldly possessions around in a pram. She pushed it off down the
road, swaying a little on her high heels as she went. Even in the cold
outside air I could smell her, pungent and tangy like ripe cheese. After
she'd gone a few yards I spotted the white tomcat, the same shaggy
bruiser with three black socks, leeching out of the undergrowth of next
door's garden and trailing her down the pavement, ducking for cover from
time to time. Then I saw there was a whole cohort of shadowy cats
slipping off walls and out of bushes, slinking along behind her. I stood
and watched her go until she turned a corner and disappeared from sight,
the Queen of the Cats. And I forgot about her instantly. I had other
things to worry about.
From the pavement I could see the light still on in Ben's bedroom window
and the computer monitor winking away as he surfed the worldwide waves.
Ben, my baby boy, now sixteen, a paid-up citizen of the web-wide world.
'I'm a cyber-child, Mum. I grew up with hypertext,' he'd once told me,
when I complained about the time he was spending online. The square of
light blinked from blue to red to green. What seas was he travelling
tonight? What sights did he see? Up so late. On his own. My
heart-pinched - my gentle, slightly too-serious Ben. How is it that
children of the same parents turn out so differently? His sister Stella,
at twenty, had already grabbed life by the horns, wrestled it to the
ground, and was training it to eat out of the palm of her hand (along
with a changing ménage of hopeful young men) in a shared rented house
near York University which, whenever I phoned, seemed always to have a
party going on or a rock band practising in the background.
In the upstairs window the coloured square winked and disappeared.
Bedtime. I went in and wrote my husband a curt note asking him to come
and remove his junk, and I put it in an envelope with a second-class
stamp. First thing next day, I telephoned the skip hire company.
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