powders sprinkled by Vera, and those that succumbed would be swept up by Seaton before he mashed tea in the morning; or they would run into Seatonâs equally fatal hammerblows and be washed up by his wife when she lifted the rug on the unequal battlefield next day.
The demolition of one condemned block took a novel turn: the Albion Yard area, deserted and cordoned off, was to be the target of bombs from buzzing two-winged aeroplanes, the sideshow of a military tattoo whose full glory lay on the cityâs outskirts. The bombing was to be on a Sunday afternoon, and Seaton hoisted Brian on to his stocky shoulders so that he felt one with the trams that swayed like pleasure-ships before the council house, ferrying crowds to the bombing; he rocked on his fatherâs shoulders, gripping the neck of a dad he hated when he did or said something to make his mam cry. But the grim and miserable emotion was kept to the ground as dad swung him up high, an action that split his hate in two upon such kindness. The first intimation of a good deed to him by dad only brought back his mamâs agonized cries as the blood streamed from her face, but his turning head beheld his mother at this moment happy and saying he would be taken to see the bombing if he was a good lad, passing his father a packet of fags from the mantelpiece for a smoke in case they had to wait long before the aircraft played Punch and Judy with the enclave of slums in which they used to live.
Seatonâs body swung as he walked and Brian was often in danger of falling overboard, pitching head first from his lifeboat-dad into the boiling sea of other heads around. Peril came at the quick switch into an unexpected short-cut, and his flailing arms, finding nothing closer, grabbed the black tufts of dadâs short, strong hair. When dad cried out heâd get a pasting if he didnât stop that bleddy lark, Brianâs instinct was to go forward and bind himself on to dadâs bull neck, a tightened grip that brought forth a half-throttled exclamation from dad below saying that he could bloody-well walk if that was going to be his game; at which a shirt-sleeved tentacle reached up and tried to lift him outwards; but Brian reacted to the danger of his imminent slingdown by clinging tighter in every way so that the well-muscled arm dragged at him in vain. âCome on, my lad, letâs have you down.â And again: âAre you goinâ ter get down or arenât you?â
âIâll fallââhis arms bare and the neck slippy with sweat.
âNo, you wonât.â
âI will, dad, honest.â They were near the lassoed bomb-target, bustled to the kerb by those who wanted to get near the rope, maybe feel the actual blast and pick up a fallen brick for a souvenir. Mounted policemen pushed back those who infiltrated the brick-strewn neutral ground, and Brian, forgetting to struggle, saw white foam around a horseâs mouth. He asked dad if it were soap.
âYes,â Seaton told him. Brian bent his head and enquired of the nearest ear: âWhat do they give it soap for?â
âSoâs itâll bite anybody who tries to get past the coppers.â
âWhy does anybody want to get past the coppers?â he whispered.
âBecause they want to see the bombs closer.â
âBut theyâll get blown up.â
ââAppen they want to. Now come down for a bit, my owd duck, because my showders is aching.â
âNot yet, our dad. Let me stay up some more.â
âNo, come down now, then you can go up again when the bombs start dropping.â
âBut I want to see the horses bite somebody first.â
âThey wonât bite anybody today,â Seaton said. So down he came, jammed among the shoes and trousers of a surging jungle, evading a tiger boot or a lion fist, a random matchstick or hot fagend. Three biplanes dipped their wings from the Trent direction. Brian climbed up to