Long ago, when Crunchies were a more substantial chocolate
bar and you paid for them with copper coins, there was a young lad named
Charlie Cochrane who lived in the Bridgeton area of Glasgow.
Charlie was a normal wee Glasgow boy who got into scrapes
and played football; climbed trees and stole bird’s eggs for fun (although he’d
stopped this after his dad had told him he was stealing the bird’s children).
Being only nine, Charlie thought of girls only as people who generally didn’t
play football, although there was one wee lassie in his class named Donna
McClelland that he had warm feelings for, although he wasn’t quite sure why.
Charlie liked his own company and would spend hours by
himself just exploring. He loved the woods even though he was terrified of
stories of the giant who was reputed to live there. He also spent a lot of time
in the People’s Palace on Glasgow Green. He loved the atmosphere of the place
and was fascinated by the history of his city. The big glass and brick building
also held a palm house and Charlie loved the warmth in there and the smell of
the tropical plants. It smelled like loamy earth and he liked to hear the rain
pattering on the glass. He felt all safe and secure like he was back in his
mother’s womb.
He wondered what to do with the latest ten pound note
nestling in his trouser pocket.
This is how it happened.
Every week his mum, a lovely woman, would ask him to take
the rubbish out to the midden, and this he duly did. Three weeks ago he was
emptying the rubbish into the bin when he spied something unmistakable just
behind the bins. It was a crisp, new ten pound note. Charlie couldn’t believe
his luck. He picked it up and put the note in his pocket and spent the rest of
the day imbued with a little cheer of excitement in his stomach. He knew he
should hand the money over to his parents but there was a strong reluctance to
do this. They were honest people and would only ask around the close to enquire
if someone had lost it. He suspected one of them would lie and acquire the
money and maybe just go out and drink with it, or go to the bingo or bookies
and lose it. He felt strongly that this money was meant for better purposes.
Summer holidays for a boy-child and for all Charlie knew for
girls too, are a magical journey ruined only by its ending, but Charlie was
only two weeks in with a glorious four to go. He played ‘kick the can’ with his
friends, he played ‘heidy-two-touch’ with his father, he went to the pictures
and the shows but always he was aware of the crisp ten-pound-note he’d folded
neatly in his pocket.
You’d think that a nine-year old would be buying sweeties,
crisps and comics by now but. Somehow, Charlie knew that he shouldn’t waste the
money this way. It had a special purpose which he either had to find or should
be prepared for when it came along.
It wasn’t long before it did.
Down by the River Clyde there’s a boatman. His job is to
save lives when possible and pick up remains when he can’t. Charlie would talk
to the boatman a lot and help him with small chores like sweeping out the
boathouse, but the boatman wouldn’t take him out upon the waters. You never
knew when a bloated corpse would appear and he didn’t want the little lad
exposed to such sights. Mr Warner took his job extremely seriously and had been
doing it a long time like his father before him. He had saved a lot of lives
and retrieved a lot of dead folk and he found his work worthy and believed his
God had put him on the earth for precisely this purpose.
He was honest with Charlie when he said that most of his
casualties – alive or sadly dead – were suicides; folk that had come to the end
of their tether for one reason or another and had jumped into the dark,
swirling waters usually at night in the hope of finding an end to their plight.
Charlie thought about this long and hard. He enjoyed life so much that he
couldn’t imagine people who didn’t. Who couldn’t be entranced by the wind in
the trees or the sun on their faces; by a favourite football team and a game of
marbles; by pie beans and chips and the taste of ice cream on a sunny day.
Through Mr Warner he began to understand that people’s lives could go wrong in
a variety of ways and he began to recognise the truth of this by looking around
at the people in his community. There were folk sleeping in shop doorways, folk
drunk and belligerent, separated from their wives or husbands and families.
There were teenagers in gangs with little prospect of lucrative advancement.
Charlie began to look at life in a different way. It didn’t depress him but it
sometimes made him a little sad and he spoke to his mum and dad about it.
“The world’s a complicated place sometimes son. You have to
keep your head up and enjoy your life, then, sometimes you’ll be able to help
those around you if needed”
“You look after yourself son. Like your father says, enjoy
your life and stay healthy”
Even his teacher, Miss Taylor, said;
“Do the right things, Charlie. Follow a straight course to
be who you want to be and your good nature will see you be good for others”
He now had three tenners in his wee back pocket (though he
took them out and put them under his mattress when his mum was doing the
washing). He thought about the suicides on the river at night.
One day he happened to meet his wee mate Eck Charnley’s on the Main Street looking forlornly through the window of Lennox’s sweet shop. He wondered why his little friend looked so unhappy and asked.
“I’ve been sent out to buy sausages for the night’s tea but
I’ve lost the money at the prize bingo”
Many in the area, including housewives, had become addicted
to the prize bingo down at the amusement arcade. It had been reported in the
local paper;
“Housekeeping money lost trying to win fags and booze”
Tins of Tennants and twenty packs of No.6 to be won and the
excitement of the game enticed many away from the boring drudgery of housework,
weans and husbands coming home drunk. Wee Eck had been captured by the allure.
“Dinnae worry wee Eck, I’ll dig ye oot” Charlie went in to
the sweet shop, bought a bag of soor plooms and a couple of Sherbet Fountains
and gave Wee Eck some of the change to compensate for the loss of the sausage
money. His friends face lit up with relief. Charlie watched as he hesitated on
his way to the butchers. He had a quick glance back at Charlie then the
amusement arcade further down the road, he smiled and proceeded to purchase the
sausages for the family tea.
Charlie felt good that he’d helped his friend out and
wondered what other good causes his money could be put to.
The boatman says the weekends are the worst. Folk get drunk
and maudlin and decide to take the final leap. Full of booze and probably pills
they teeter on the parapet of the Dalmarnock Road Bridge then plunge into the
murky waters below. The boatman felt that this tragic act was occurring more
frequently in recent months due to the prize bingo epidemic. He’d been dragging
in the bodies of middle-aged women in pinnies more and more, though he’d saved
a few who’d confirmed his theory.
They’d fell in debt due to their
money-guzzling addiction.
Charlie didn’t dare to actually play the prize bingo but he could stand in the shadows of the giant
fruit machines and watch the action. All the seats seemed to be occupied by
middle-aged wifies. He recognised a
few of them. There was Mrs Chalmers, Big Paddy’s Maw. At the other end was Mrs
Murdoch, whose son Rab was currently ‘up the road in the Bar-L’ for breaking
into folks motors. They all shared the fevered, urgent concentration of
addicts. They would bawl at the wee bloke shouting out the numbers..
“Rummel them up ya plooky wee bastard” and;
“Waitin’ oan wan corner and you’ll no’ shout it ya wee turd.
Does yer mammie know yer oot?”
The prizes were ranged behind the caller in a huge glass
cabinet. They included cigarettes, cans of beer, half bottles of whisky and
cheap sherry-wine. Also; there were tins of beans and ham, corned beef and
boxes of Vesta Curry and Paella, biscuits and packets of Angel Delight. Most of
these women were losing the house-keeping money meant to purchase these items.
It didn’t make any sense, even to a young boy like Charlie. Why didn’t they
just buy these things and be done
with it?
Charlie had yet to appreciate the power of gambling.
His Dad told that these women were bored and addicted to ‘the
buzz of winning Fray Bentos steak pies and a bottle of Old Tawny to wash it
down’. His Dad used to joke that all the horses he backed ended up as Fray
Bentos pie-filling, so hopelessly they’d raced.
Charlie lay in bed at night thinking about all this. He was
particularly concerned about the idea that some of these women had taken to end
it all in the Clyde. He fell asleep wondering what on earth he could do about
it.
This was why he found himself down by the Dalmarnock Bridge
at midnight on a Saturday night. He had sneaked out of his bedroom window and
dreeped down to the pavement below. Charlie was an expert dreeper. Among the
male youths of Glasgow this was no small thing. He watched for anyone on the
bridge but so far there had only been drunk men and the odd stray dog urinating
against the masonry.
All of a sudden Charlie’s fading interest was perked by a
woman walking onto the bridge and peering shiftily about her in the luminescent
gloom. Seeing that she wasn’t being watched (or so she thought) she began
climbing onto the parapet. Charlie couldn’t believe his eyes and instinctively
shouted ‘Heh missus!!’. This outburst startled the woman and she almost fell
river-bound having lost her balance. Charlie rushed onto the bridge until he
was only a few feet from the person he now recognised as Mrs Duncan, the wife
of the school janitor.
“Mrs Duncan, what are you doing?” It was pretty obvious what
she was doing but it was the only thing he could think to ask. Even in such
extreme situations a kid still felt uncomfortable around adults and knew not to
be cheeky.
“
Wee Charlie, what are you doing out at this time of night?”
A question answered with a question and a jolly difficult
one at that.
Mrs Duncan looked at him sternly; as if the fact of his
being out so late was much more serious than the fact that she was planning to
jump off a bridge to her likely death.
“Erm” he stuttered “I was talking to the boatman and he told
me that women were jumping in the Clyde cos they’d lost the housekeeping at the
prize bingo” he had gulped several times during that oration and was now
covered in a muck sweat.
“And you’ve come to watch have you?” Mrs Duncan had begun
her climb again.
Charlie could see he would have to act quick to stop the
impending tragedy.
“No, I’ve come to help”
Mrs Duncan looked down pityingly at him as a mother would to
a child offering to protect her against the bad men.
“Oh Charlie, son, there’s nothing you can do to help me. Ah
cannae go back to that bastard of a man of mine. Ah ken what he’s like wi’ you
children, but he’s ten times worse with his own wife. If I go back with no
house-keeping he’ll beat me black and blue”. She was weeping now and Charlie
could tell she was posturing to leap.
“What if I gave you the money you’ve lost? Then you could
maybe get off Scot-free. Charklie had no idea what the term ‘Scot-free’ meant’
but he’d heard his father use it often to describe ‘the bastard Tory thieves’
and it seemed an appropriately adult thing to say to Mrs Duncan at this
juncture.
Mrs Duncan almost laughed at his generous effrontery and
said;
“Charlie, ah loast the full ten pounds. All of it. Why would
you have ten pounds? Are you the new money-lender in town?”
At this, he pulled one of the notes out of his back pocket.
“Please don’t jump Mrs Duncan. I found this money so it’s no’
even mine, and I’ve a feeling it was meant for something like this. Please take
it”
He held it up toward her hand and she hesitated before
gently plucking it from his fingers.
She climbed down to hold his head in her shaking hands and
stooped to kiss him tenderly on the forehead before walking away into the
gloamy night.
Charlie managed to climb back in his window by dint of an
empty barrel he stood on. He pulled himself up using the strength in his arms
and the scurried grip of his scraping feet.
He lay in bed awhile thinking of the meaning of all this but
he knew with certainty that he’d done the right thing.
He never got to know that the next Saturday there were
around fifty bingo-crazed wifies waiting on the Dalmarnock Bridge waiting for
him to stop them jumping with his ready cash.
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