The walk
from Peckham Rye
train station
to my aunt's
is quite a trek,
but Lydia and I
set off along
Rye lane.
Never been here before,
Lydia says.
I been here tons of times;
I was born up the road.
What this road?
No, at the hospital
nearby.
She has a thinness
about her,
her lank hair is caught
by the sunshine.
We pass by shops
and cross side streets;
pass people shopping.
Dad hates shopping,
Lydia says,
he says it's a ****
of a game,
worse than kissing
his boss's backside.
She laughs;
a link of light
brightens up
her eyes;
there's a hint
of beauty
about her.
Your mum
wasn't too keen
on you going with me,
I say.
Anything that hints
of spending money
and she's up in arms;
she wouldn't care
if I went
with the milkman
as long as he paid.
We walk on
and down a street
that leads
to my aunt's place;
the shops have gone now,
just houses and flats.
I heard your old man
singing in the Square
the other night,
I say,
drunk as a lord.
I know, I heard him, too,
Mum wasn't none
too pleased;
she dragged him in
and gave him her tongue;
I couldn't marry
a man like that;
does your father drink?
No, only the odd pint
or port at special times.
We pass a dog peeing
against a wall;
it wags its tail
as it runs off
down the road
leaving a pyramid shape
of wetness behind.
My brother Hem does that,
Lydia says,
***** ***.
There is an aspect
of light
when she's angry,
like a birth
of a new world.
Is your dad Irish?
he seemed to be singing
an Irish song
the other night?
No, he always sounds Irish
when he's drunk,
like he sounds Welsh
when he's sober.
She holds my hand
as we cross a busy road;
it's thin and bony;
I feel it
with my thumb
as we walk along,
her bony knuckles;
I squeeze it gently
and she softly
chuckles.
A NINE YEAR BOY AND GIRL IN LONDON IN 1950S