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Ingrid sports a black eye; she looks like a panda. She said she walked into a door; she doesn't lie convincingly. I know her old man; I passed him on the stairs of the flats; his beady eyes drinking me in, giving me the cold glare, the cold shoulder. We walk through the Square, off to the shops. What happened to your eye? I ask again, studying the black and slightly green; walking beside her, passing the milkman and his horse drawn cart, the horse wearing a nosebag of food, ignoring us. I walked into the bedroom door, she says, knowing I don't believe her, looking sheepish, knowing I guess the truth. What have you got to get at the shops? I ask. She shows me a list on a scrap of paper, pencil scribbled, in her small right hand a handful of coins. I passed your old man on the stairs yesterday, I tell her, gave him my Wyatt Earp stare,   I say, he didn't care. I note her hair is unbrushed, her green patterned dress unwashed. We cross Rockingham Street into Harper Road. I talked too much, Dad said, she confesses, he said I yak and yak. We pass the paper shop and go on to the grocer shop. I say, if I had your old man in the sights of my six-shooter gun I'd fire a cap up his *** she sniggers; people stare at us as we pass.
0
May 25, 2015
May 25, 2015 at 1:06 AM UTC
CAP GUN ARRANGEMENT 1958.
Ingrid sports a black eye; she looks like a panda. She said she walked into a door; she doesn't lie convincingly. I know her old man; I passed him on the stairs of the flats; his beady eyes drinking me in, giving me the cold glare, the cold shoulder. We walk through the Square, off to the shops. What happened to your eye? I ask again, studying the black and slightly green; walking beside her, passing the milkman and his horse drawn cart, the horse wearing a nosebag of food, ignoring us. I walked into the bedroom door, she says, knowing I don't believe her, looking sheepish, knowing I guess the truth. What have you got to get at the shops? I ask. She shows me a list on a scrap of paper, pencil scribbled, in her small right hand a handful of coins. I passed your old man on the stairs yesterday, I tell her, gave him my Wyatt Earp stare,   I say, he didn't care. I note her hair is unbrushed, her green patterned dress unwashed. We cross Rockingham Street into Harper Road. I talked too much, Dad said, she confesses, he said I yak and yak. We pass the paper shop and go on to the grocer shop. I say, if I had your old man in the sights of my six-shooter gun I'd fire a cap up his *** she sniggers; people stare at us as we pass.
A BOY AND GIRL IN LONDON IN 1958.
terry-collett
Written by
May 25, 2015
May 25, 2015 at 1:06 AM UTC
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