Read The Ten-pound Ticket Online
Authors: Amanda Prowse
âSo, what happens now?' Poppy prompted.
âWe'll assign you an information point of contact that will be in regular touch, keeping you up to date with any
developments
, no matter how small.'
âCan it be Sergeant Gisby?' she interrupted him; once again throwing his rehearsed rhetoric into touch.
âWell, I don't see why not.'
Sergeant Gisby looked at her. He had one of those bushy moustaches that looked like it must be irritating. She decided that the letters âR' and âW' were the most likely to tickle.
âPlease call me Rob. I'd be happy to keep you informed with any news.'
Poppy counted two tickles.
âMrs Cricket, we are here to help you in any way that we can. I only wish that our meeting was under different circumstances.'
She smiled at his comment and thought that if circumstances were different, they would not be meeting in a million years. Their worlds would not have overlapped were it not for this bloody awful situation, and if he had known anything about her he wouldn't be calling her Mrs Cricket. âThank you. Please call me Poppy. Mrs Cricket always makes me think of Martin's mother and she's a right old cow.'
He nodded, not sure how to respond. Logistics and support were discussed before the military men left quietly and quickly.
Rob Gisby drove as the major sat in quiet contemplation on the back seat. Rob figured he was feeling as sad for Poppy's
situation as he was. Anthony was preoccupied with Poppy; her lack of ambition and seeming acceptance of her humble
circumstances
were beyond his comprehension. He wondered if her acceptance was down to low intellect. Thank God he wasn't similarly afflicted or he might still be living under his mam's roof. The thought made him shudder. He ran his fingers over the shiny buttons of his tunic, tangible proof that he was an officer, a fact that still delighted and amazed him. Anthony carried with him a furtive air as if at any moment he might get found out. âFortitude Fortunately Forgives'; he mentally
practised
the sounds that helped eradicate the Geordie accent, banishing it to another time, a different person.
Anthony Helm was wrong. Poppy's expectations
were
small, her horizon within reach and her world navigable by foot; a mere eight hundred metres from her front door in any
direction
. But she was clever. Not Mensa, PhD, rocket science genius, but more able than most and smart enough to know what made people tick.
Poppy left school when she was sixteen as realisation dawned that staying on to get qualifications was pointless for someone like her. The standard question was, âIf she's so clever, how come she didn't go to university and gather an armful of degrees to see her on her merry way?' There was a single response she gave to the teachers, heads of year and careers advisers that she sat in front of on more than one occasion, âThere's absolutely no point!'
They sighed on cue, tapped the rubber-stoppered ends of pencils on their clipboards and looked at her with vexed
expressions
, imploring her to recognise that they knew better, if not best. She stood her ground because actually they did not know what was best for Poppy Day. She did.
Poppy's role in life was to make sure that no one fell out of the net that kept her strange little family snug and safe.
This, she could never have made the academic hierarchy understand. The simple fact that had she gone off to university, there wouldn't have been anyone to collect Dorothea's many and varied prescriptions. No one to make sure she took the daily drugs that stopped her wandering off down the High Street with her knickers on her head. No one to keep the fridge stocked with food and pay the bills. On and on the list went. The demands and responsibilities were endless; Poppy was needed at home several times a day.
Of course the standard argument was âIf she went off and got qualified, think medicine or the law, she could then secure a wonderful future for herself and her family.' This was
probably
true, but still failed to answer Poppy's question of who was going to wash her nan's soiled bed linen, sober her mum up enough to collect her benefit and lock the door every night while she was off securing their future? Poppy was smart enough to know that this was her life and there was naff all she could do about it.
Her sunny disposition meant she wasn't bitter. She did
sometimes
think about a life with a different kind of luck. A life that had seen her born into a circumstance that allowed her the freedom to study and become whatever she wanted! This was not bitterness; try to find one person on the planet who doesn't also ponder some aspect of their life, a different choice, a
different
person, a different career that might have kept their husband safe from harmâ¦
Poppy pulled her knees up under her chin and sat back on the sofa, feeling surprisingly numb. She had expected hysteria or at the very least anger. What she couldn't have predicted was the anaesthesia that now gripped her. She rubbed the back of her wedding ring with the thumb of the same hand and found herself repeating his name, âMart⦠Martâ¦' She tried to invoke his image with the self-soothing mantra. The
room was once again silent, as if the soldiers had never been there.
Is that what it would be like now for Martin? As if he had never been there at all? The flat was now quiet and empty, without the telly on for background noise and without the two men that had filled the small space only a few minutes before. It had been four years since the space had been home to a family; a rather unconventional one, but a family nonetheless. Death and desertion had seen the group eroded, leading up to that moment, when it was just Poppy, alone.
Her mum, Cheryl, had never been cruel, intentionally neglectful or deliberately spiteful. Similarly, she had never been affectionate or proud of her little girl. Never glad to see her or interested to know about her day. Never shared an event with her, told her a secret or cleared her clothes from the end of the sofa so that her child could sit down. Never brushed her daughter's hair if it was ratty or trimmed her nails so she wouldn't have to bite them. Whether Poppy was fed or not, whether she was in bed asleep or sitting alongside her mother on the settee at eleven o'clock on a school night with no clean uniform, none of these were important to Cheryl, so they had to be important to Poppy.
Wally, her grandad, was a professional snoozer. His dozing form fascinated Poppy; she wondered what the point of Wally was. He slept all night in his bed and all day in his chair. His skinny frame permanently concertinaed into a snoring âz' shape, a human onomatopoeia. His slumber took precedence over all other household activity; he sat like a queen bee whose activity and lifestyle is supported by all those around her. Wally held court over his kingdom of Somnolence. In this dreary realm, many restrictions were put in place to curb the behaviour of a growing, inquisitive girl: âKeep the noise down, Poppy Day, your grandad is sleeping'; or âTurn your music off, Poppy Day,
your grandad is sleeping'; or âStop hitting the floor with that bloody yo-yo, your grandad isâ¦'
âYeah, yeah I know⦠he's sleeping!'
Wally's death was a strange non-event in Poppy's life; the most memorable consequence being that there was now an empty chair with an indent of his dead arse in it. She felt no sadness at his passing; figuring that Wally must be delighted to be permanently turning up his toes in readiness for the ultimate snoozeâ¦
The main difference for Poppy was that now when her mum or nan wanted her to be quiet they said, âTurn that bloody racket off, Poppy Day,' or âKeep quiet, Poppy Day!' In her head she heard, â⦠your grandad is sleeping' and had to fight the urge to shout out really loudly, âYes! I know he is sleeping, but my yo-yo banging sure as hell isn't going to wake him up now!'
Poppy's nan, Dorothea, had always been slightly nuts. She watched the tumble dryer instead of the telly, and made jelly with peas in it instead of fruit because it looked nicer; as opposed to now when she was completely crazy, proper
full-blown
bonkers.
Poppy lived with her mum and Nan in the flat until her mum went off to the Canaries with her latest beau. There was no discussion concerning the new domestic arrangements, largely because Cheryl made the decision, packed her bags and was Heathrow-bound within a twenty-four-hour period. It was assumed by all that Poppy would continue in her unofficial role as Dorothea's nursemaid, jailor and confidante. If anything, her life was easier without her mum's drunken presence and the procession of wastrels that followed in her unsteady wake.
Dorothea and Poppy plodded along amicably until the old lady's mental health deteriorated and her behaviour became increasingly odd. Poppy came home one lunchtime to find her sitting on the loo, wearing nearly all of her clothing including
coats, hats, scarves and gloves, clutching a rolling pin as a weapon.
âThe bloke in the flat upstairs has been crawling through a hole in the ceiling and trying to turn our water off, the bastard!'
Poppy tried to hide her disbelief. âWho, Nan, Mr Bennett? The eighty-four-year-old with the double hip replacement and the Zimmer frame?'
âThat's him.'
âLet me get this straight. He's been crawling through a hole in the ceiling and scurrying around the flat while we sleep, trying to turn our water off?' she needed clarification.
âYes, Poppy Day, did you not hear me the first time, girl?'
âI heard you, Nan, and I understood, but what I don't get is why are you sat in the loo wearing all your clothes?'
Dorothea looked at Poppy, shaking her head slightly as if it was her granddaughter without full understanding. She bent forward conspiratorially. âI'm guarding the stopcock.' She winked at Poppy, who smiled in response.
Her nan quickly went from being slightly unsettled to quite frightened; at this point, Poppy found it hard to cope. As her nan's primary carer, it was tough. If Poppy was on top of things, she would find her nan's little adventures or wanderings funny; but when tired, finding Dorothea at three in the morning sitting in the kitchen, with a full packet of flour, a jar of coffee and three pints of milk tipped into a slippery heap on the floor as she âmade the Christmas cake' was very wearing. Especially when it was June, far too early to be thinking about bloody Christmas.
Poppy could have managed her nan's decline were it just about her own ability to cope, but it wasn't, it was about what was best for Dorothea as well. She needed to be somewhere that she could be watched and supported twenty-four hours a day.
Poppy came home from work one wintery evening to find her sitting in the dark crying and bewildered. She had no way of knowing if Dorothea had been in this state of distress for ten hours or ten minutes; it was a moment of realisation. Not that it made what came next any easier; it was the toughest decision of Poppy's life, at that point.
She and Martin found the home after weeks of trawling through brochures and trudging the streets. Some were rejected on price, others on location and one before the front door had even been opened, after hearing expletives bellowed from within.
Poppy considered the major's words and thought that she should cry. She tried pushing some tears out, but none came. For some reason this made her giggle; she pictured someone watching her and saying, âWhat
are
you doing, Poppy? Why are you sat there with your eyes screwed shut, digging your nails into your palms?'
âI'm trying to push some tears out. I thought it might make me feel better because I feel a little bit guilty that I haven't cried yet, despite those two soldiers watching and expecting me to whilst secretly hoping that I wouldn't, especially Major Tony Thingy. It's as if I have read about this story in the paper or seen it on the news. It feels like someone else's life, not mine, not real. Where are those darn tears when you need 'em?'
She was sure that whoever she delivered this monologue to would probably shake their head in a kind of âshe has finally lost the plot, just like her grandma' way.
Read on for the first chapter of