And sometimes, on Saturdays, we got pocket money.
‘You ask him.’
‘I asked last week, you ask him.’
Dad recognising the custom of pocket money was one miracle. Getting it needed another.
‘Have you asked him?’
‘No, he’s in a bad mood.’
Dad in a bad mood was a man to be avoided. It was best to leave it until later, or try again on Sunday.
‘Have you asked him yet?’
‘Yes’
‘What did he say?’
‘He said he’s got no change.’
‘Blast!’
As the eldest I was supposed to get 2s/6d, Dave 2s/3d
and Mike two bob, but as the weekend slipped by our hopes faded and come Sunday
night, we wrote it off. Even when we struck lucky there was still a snag.
Dad worked long hours, including weekends, for his family, his fags and his nightly visit to the Rainham Mark Social Club. Each night he’d disappear at around half past eight but sometimes he’d feel the pinch before payday and we all knew what was coming if he entered the living room in his cap and coat, showing a rare grin.
‘Right men, we’re having a whip
round,’ he’d say. Then he’d come to each of us, in turn, and hold his hand out
for what remained of our pocket money. The greater our generosity, the bigger
Dad’s smile, with scathing condemnation reserved for anyone who had had nothing
to declare.
Footnote: when playing football with Stanley Slaughter and others outside Stan's house in Leeds Square, a boy called Alan Hughes ran rings around us. A friend and neighbour of Stan’s, Alan was a kid I’d once seen playing
football on Beechings Way. He’d impressed me then and he’d impressed me
again. He wasn’t just miles better than us; he was miles better than any kid I
knew. Only Charlie Donahue, who played for Walderslade and once tore our Upbury
side apart, had made that kind of impression on me and it came as no surprise
that Alan and Charlie went on to play for Gillingham's youth team, as
did Upbury's Brian Lack.
2 comments:
I didn't know that Brian went onto play for Gillingham youth!
Though Brian was a dockyard apprentice he must have made quite a few appearances for Gillingham's youth team. A Gillingham programme from December 1971 lists B. Lack as the youth team's top scorer with six goals. (By the way - what a distinguished looking chap you look in that photo!)
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