Today people want to tell each other too much. I've never thought that's right. I don't want everyone knowing what I get up to and what makes me afraid. I'm a great believer in secrets but Vi kept saying I had to have a word with Martin.
âIf you can't be straight with your own son then what's the point?'
We were having a bit of sausage and mash. Martin reminded me he was a vegetarian but I liked to corrupt him now and then. That was the easy part. It was the conversation that proved tricky.
âYou all right, son?'
âI'm fine, Dad. Just a bit preoccupied, that's all.'
I remembered what Vi had said and I didn't want to let her down. âI don't mean to be nosy or anything â¦'
âWell, don't â¦'
âBut if you ask me it looks like you're letting someone get to you.'
âWhat do you mean?'
âYou want me to spell it out? I mean Linda.'
âLook, Dad, I just wanted to see her again. I haven't done anything wrong.'
âNot yet, you haven't.'
âAnyway, how did you know?'
âNever you mind about that.' Vi had seen them getting fish and chips. âYou be careful, son. Claire's a good wife to you.'
âYou don't need to say anything, Dad.'
âI'm not saying anything. You know what I think.'
âI'm not sure I do.'
âI don't want your brain going south.'
âIt's not like that.'
âIt's the truth. You've just got to hang on to what you've got. There isn't such a thing as a one-hundred-per-cent marriage. The best you're going to get is seventy: the very best. Sometimes you might meet someone and you think she can get you up to a hundred but it only lasts an instant and as soon as it's over you're down to ten. Stick to seventy per cent. That's the best you're going to get and I'm telling you, son, it isn't bad.'
âBut what if I aim for seventy and get stuck with forty?'
âYou've got seventy, son â¦'
âIt doesn't feel like it.'
âThat's because it isn't a hundred.'
âYou don't need to worry, Dad. It's under control.'
That's what people say when it isn't
, I thought.
I didn't like my son lying to me. I could tell from his reaction that it had already started up again with Linda. I'd rather not have known.
We almost got used to the night attacks by vigilantes: the rocks that were thrown, the buckets of maggots, the ox blood and the pig shit. Our tents were daubed with paint, trampled and slashed with knives. People started fires to try and smoke us out, hurled firecrackers and shouted that we were either slags, lesbians or fat cows who'd never had a shag. They couldn't make up their minds which. One night I heard an American voice saying, âIf it was up to me I'd pour gasoline over them and torch the lot.'
Newbury District Council revoked bylaws which made Greenham common land and announced that they were now private landlords. Our squatting was illegal. Eighty police and fifty bailiffs came at dawn with warrants and bulldozers to destroy the camp, arrest us for trespass and take our possessions away. A fat man in a black leather jacket that was far too small for him got out a knife and ripped into our tent. Then he started pulling it up from the pegs. Other men began to kick away whatever was in front of them. They weren't so much clearing the site as taking revenge. Some of the women were in tears, others shouted back, but whatever they did to us, and however aggressive they were, we knew that we could not be violent. I saw my friend Cathy pick up a rock but four other women immediately stopped her.
âWe're not doing it that way,' one of them said. âIf we start to behave like them then they have won. We have to remain nonviolent. Then we can stay here for ever.'
âYou're not staying anywhere,' said one of the bailiffs.
We circled the men and Joyce got us singing to show that we weren't afraid.
Which side are you on?
Which side are you on?
Are you on the other side from us?
Which side are you on?
The first dustcart drove off with our tents and belongings to ironic cheers. Black plastic sacks had been filled with personal things the bailiffs couldn't possibly sell on: diaries, quilts and children's toys.
Are you on the side of suicide?
Are you on the side of homicide?
Are you on the side of genocide?
I ask you: âWhich side are you on?'
It rained throughout the day and we still had a few umbrellas to protect the children but the police wouldn't allow us to fix them into the ground because they said it turned them into a structure. Even the Portaloos had been removed. When we asked why, we were told it was to stop people camping in them.
Lucy had had enough. She had been brave not to cry amidst all the destruction but once everyone had gone she let go. âI want to go home, Mummy.'
âSoon, darling, I promise.' If a car had passed and I could have hitched a lift, I would probably have done it there and then.
âCan we only go home when the men behind the fence go?'
âYes, darling.'
âI miss Daddy.'
Joyce had managed to get to Newbury and returned with matches, firelighters and a few blankets from the local charity shop. We still had our sleeping bags but the ground was a soggy mass of grass, mud and heather. We were going to have to live off the donations of well-wishers and build shelters amidst the trees. I wondered if I could sell the idea of a tree house to Lucy to make her stay.
Then the council came back with tons of rocks and rubble and dumped it all by the Yellow Gate so we could not resettle. They said the area was due for âlandscaping'.
As soon as they had gone, we began to rearrange and paint the rocks, making them the perimeter of a new camp. Then we gathered reeds from the side of the River Kennet and formed them into frames for makeshift tents. Friends arrived with cars full of polythene sheets, blankets and booze and we started to build our benders: wigwam-like structures with polythene walls and ground cover, straw and blankets. We decorated the interiors with wildflowers. I told Lucy that we were playing at being Red Indians and she began to holler in the same way that the women keened whenever a vehicle came near the base. Someone gave her a pack of felt-tip pens and a pad of paper so she could do a series of drawings of all our friends, Joyce, Cathy and Julie, and we pinned them up inside the bender along with beads, necklaces and mementoes of home. There was even a photograph of Martin with Lucy in a blue-striped buggy eating her first ice cream, vanilla all round her mouth, father and daughter smiling like they had both done something secretly naughty. It made me remember the first time we had offered Lucy chocolate and she had given us a bemused look of surprise and indignation, as if she was saying to us: âWhy have you denied me this pleasure for so long?'
âIt's cosy here, isn't it?' I said.
âNo, Mummy, it isn't. But I like it for now. Just for now. Then we can go to our proper home.'
In the evenings, we sat and sang and lit candles and fires. We had to be careful with all the straw around us, we didn't want to do the bailiffs' job for them by setting light to the camp, but in a way we were even more comfortable than we had been before they tried to evict us. The men kept coming back, but by then we had learnt not to give our real names and they couldn't work out who lived in which bender. As a result, they had to pin their eviction notices in big brown envelopes on nearby trees and the camp began to look like something out of the Wild West.
Joyce taught Lucy to weave a spider's web out of black wool. She said it was a web to bind us so that when we next did our die-ins or
any direct protest it would be harder to move us because we would all be tied together. To move one of us would mean moving us all.
A few weeks later, a group of workers came to lay the fuel and sewage pipes for the base. Stopping them was our next action and we became a continuous wave of women lying down in front of the JCBs. We webbed ourselves up with Joyce's black wool and it took them a whole day to cut us apart and lift us away. But even then, we returned individually, continually obstructing their progress. As soon as one woman was pulled up, another lay down in her place. We were a revolution of women, turning over and over in front of the trucks.
We are women, we are women,
We are strong, we are strong,
We say no, we say no,
To the bomb, to the bomb
.
The police kept yanking us away, and we kept singing:
We say no-o, we say no-o
.
Still we were determined that whatever happened there would be no violence towards the people moving us. I think I went into a kind of trance in order to avoid the pain of continually lying down in the road and being pulled out and away by the arm sockets. I tried to remain so calm that the protest was almost like an out-of-body experience. Every time I thought,
Why am I doing this?
I heard the reply in my head like a mantra:
Because I have to. Because there is no choice
.
A police officer was shouting, âThese missiles are to protect you. They will be for your own good. Can't you see that?'
âWe would rather die than see that day,' I said.
âI'd rather have missiles than live under the Russians.'
âThis is our land,' I said. âWe don't need to live under anybody. We want to be free of all this evil.' I lay down again in the road.
âHaven't you done enough?' said the policeman. âAren't you tired of all this?'
âYou can't do anything to me. You can't stop me.'
âTry me.' The policeman leant down to pull me away once more.
I turned on to my stomach to make it more difficult for him. âI'd rather die doing the right thing than survive and do nothing.'
âWell, you're a daft bitch. Coming back for more all the time.'
This time he grabbed me by the legs and started to drag me so that my head bounced on the road.
âCareful,' I shouted.
âWhat's there to be careful of? Why should I care about you?'
âOh God, forget it,' I replied. And then, just as I was nearly clear of the crowd, I gave him a playful little kick and added: âNo wonder your wife's unfaithful.'
âRight, that's it, you can say goodbye to your career, smartarse.'
Suddenly there were five of them, one for each limb and a fifth for the hair. I tried to collapse my weight, make myself as heavy as possible.
âWhat are you doing?' I asked.
âYou know what we're doing. We've just told you.'
âLet me go,' I shouted. âMy little girl's here. I must get back. She needs me with her.'
âWell, some mother you are, assaulting a police officer.'
It had just been a little kick and a joke but now I saw the sky wobble and policeman faces all around me: sweat, spit and moustache, steamed-up glasses and toppling helmets. I could hear the women still singing and the sound of bulldozers revving their engines but none of it seemed to have anything to do with me. There was the noise of doors being opened, then of handcuffs, and I felt my wrists go tight before I was swung into the back of a van, the metal floor coming up to meet me, slamming into my side and my shoulder. The door was banged shut and then locked. I couldn't move. My hands were strapped together, the floor was throbbing against my face (or was it the other way round?) and I could smell petrol. The engine was running and women were beating on the sides of the van, whooping and keening, and in the momentary darkness I wondered where I was, and if any of this was part of my life. I couldn't tell whether everything was happening far too quickly for me to understand or if it was all as slow as a dream.
But then my eyes began to adjust to the dim light inside and I
could make out the other people in the van: Sasha, Bridget and Min. They were smiling at me but I could tell that they were tired smiles that couldn't stay up for very long. Kate started a chorus of âShow Me the Prison', trying to make the whole thing sound like an adventure.
The woman next to me was wearing a badge. It said: âPregnant. Handle with care.'
âI'm frightened,' she said.
I kissed Linda on the cheek and I saw her eyes and it was the look that I remembered. I knew that I should not be there, in her flat, and that nothing about it was right. But I couldn't stop, I didn't want to stop.
She was wearing a dark-red T-shirt, jeans and some beaten-up high heels that matched her top. âI haven't done much. It's only pasta.'
âThat's fine,' I said. âI'm not that hungry.'
The living room was painted a dark brown, with raffia blinds out to the street. There was a television with an internal aerial, a three-piece suite that had seen better days, and on the coffee table there was a full ashtray and a bottle of vodka. I looked at the bookshelf:
The Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám, Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, The Prophet
. There were cassette tapes round an Amstrad music system and some old jazz LPs.
âI didn't know you liked this kind of stuff,' I said.
âCharlie Parker or Duran Duran? John Coltrane or Spandau Ballet?'
âBessie Smith or Sade?'
âYou get the idea.'
There were two other rooms, one of which had been turned into her studio. It was the brightest space in the flat, and I could see a series of canvases facing the wall by the open door.
âDrink?' she called. âI've got the vodka.'
âI brought some wine.'
âThe vodka's open.' She came towards me and put a glass into my hands.
âCheers.' She drank, still looking at me, smiled and then kissed me full on the lips. âThere. That's better, isn't it?'
I was about to hold her to me when she turned and went straight back into the kitchen. To the left I could see a dark-red bedroom. On a high shelf were bottles of miniatures from all over the world.