and by the end of the term, and from then on, I looked at any strange word until the correct spelling went into my brain, or I would reach for the dictionary under my desk if at all unsure.
Mr Smith, the peppery martinet of a headmaster, came into Miss Chanceâs classroom to say he would shortly be sending the monitors around to collect money for the annual Christmas party. âPut your hands up,â he said, âthose who want a party for fourpence, a sum, I might say, which wonât provide anything very lavish.â
A few of us raised our hands. My father was on the dole, and it was doubtful that he would be able to part with even that sum.
âHands up,â Smith went on, âthose who think that sixpence would give a somewhat better style to the festivities.â Most hands indicated agreement, though mine stayed down, as it did when he continued: âBut eightpence would surely give us the best party of all,â to which, after a while, everyone but me assented.
His eyes glittered with amusement. âHands up, once more, those who can only pay fourpence?â
My single hand would have stayed raised for ever, because I was far more comfortable than I would have been after asking my father to give money which he would have felt tormented at not being able to provide. He and my mother were continually nagged by children who wanted, wanted and wanted but could not be given. What we yearned for was usually no more than what we needed, such as shoes or clothes, extra food or even, in our hopeful daydreams, sweets and toys but, except for a modest treat at Christmas, we couldnât have those, either. A Christmas party at school was certainly not considered essential for our well-being and, aware of this to my backbone, it wasnât difficult to hold out against the sarcastic blandishments of Mr Smith who, when he repeated the question, got the same answer.
After he had gone, Miss Chance called me to the front. âYou did well,â she said, turning to the rest of the class. âIf you have something you believe in strongly enough, you must always stick to your guns.â She gave me her personal prayer book as a memento, which was all she could find in her desk to spare. I lost it soon afterwards, but never discarded her advice, which was already as much in my blood as having been put there by circumstance.
Chapter Four
You moved under cover, tactically alert, because rival gangs might be roaming the fields between the railway and allotment gardens. A straggler was in danger, so you maintained all-round vision, noting the nearest escape route to lane or road. You were grown up, and it was serious, everyone an enemy until proved a friend. Unable to stop and find out, friends were few.
The first indication of peril was a stone colliding with your head, and I would go home with a blood-streaked face to terrify and anger my parents, till a wash under the tap showed only a graze. The game was to flee, and hide, and as often as possible make others do the same, to fight openly only when numbers were on your side. Cunning was the policy, and since this was my world I blended in well. You were a scout on the prowl (not a Boy Scout) going from A to B with a heavy stick in one hand and stones ready warmed in the other.
Sometimes, going through the door with more than a graze, my father would laugh as he dabbed at the blood and say there were worse things at sea, and that no matter how badly off you felt there was always somebody worse, which encouragement to stoicism fitted with the general conditions of life.
We lived on a street with houses behind and fields in front. In the alleys of the urban zone I would lose any pursuer. Fields and woods across the stream formed equally versatile territory, where the art of concealment became a habit, and camouflage was a current word: âGet out to that âedge near the âlotments, and Iâll stay âere on the railway. Youâve