Josephine Cox 3-Book Collection 2: The Loner, Born Bad, Three Letters. Josephine Cox
Читать онлайн книгу.workmates and some others I didn’t know. A few of his neighbours … Oh, and Ron and Patsy Reynolds.’
‘Ooh, I really fancy that Lenny Reynolds,’ Annie said wistfully, then she rolled her eyes, and gave a coy little grin. ‘D’you know he’s got his own market-stall, and the girls are all over him. He looks like a film star, and I bet he kisses really good.’ She feigned a swoon. ‘I’ll bet me and Lenny could show that Vivien Leigh and Clark Gable pair a thing or two.’
‘Behave yourself.’ Judy couldn’t help but smile. ‘It’s a good thing your mam didn’t hear you say that.’
‘Oh, I know. She would have given me one of her lectures, about not rushing my childhood and thinking of my future. She’d say I was too young to be worrying about boys and such.’ In a temper, she kicked a mound of grass into the canal. ‘I’m not too young! I’m fed up, that’s what I am. D’you know, I’ll be fourteen next year, and I’ve never had a boyfriend.’
Judy shuddered dramatically. ‘Don’t know as I want one.’
‘Liar! I bet you wouldn’t say no if it was Davie.’
With those tactless words echoing in the air, the conversation came to an abrupt end, with Annie wishing she could take back what she had just said, and the other girl feeling quietly bruised.
‘Sorry,’ Annie said awkwardly.
‘It’s all right.’ Judy shrugged her shoulders.
‘You think a lot of Davie, don’t you?’
Judy nodded silently.
‘And I’ve got a big mouth, which I always manage to put my foot in.’
‘I won’t argue with that.’ Judy laughed. Annie was Annie, and she said what she thought.
‘Was he there?’
‘Who?’
‘Davie!’
‘No … well, yes he was, only we didn’t see him at first. He must have sneaked into the back of the church before the service started.’
‘So, what’s happening with him? Has he gone back to his grandad?’
‘No.’ If only he had, Judy thought sadly. If only things could be the same as before, when Davie was never far away.
‘So where is he then?’ Annie doggedly pursued it.
‘Gone away.’
‘Where to?’
‘I don’t know … and neither does his grandad. I’m so worried about him, Annie.’ Her voice fell. ‘May be he won’t ever come back.’
‘Hmh!’ Annie had seen Davie and Judy together a few times and she had sensed the affection between them. She believed it was more than just friendship. Just occasionally, Annie had caught Davie looking at Judy in a certain way. ‘You do know that Davie loves you,’ she said casually. ‘I mean really loves you, and not like a brother neither.’
‘Don’t be daft!’ A warm blush spread over the other girl’s face and down her neck.
‘I’m not being daft.’ Annie turned into the corner shop and Judy followed. After Judy had bought the sweets and crisps, it was her friend’s turn. ‘A bottle of pop and two meat and tatty pies.’ She slapped the coin onto the counter. ‘And if there’s enough left over, we’ll have two ounces of jelly babies.’
‘Hey!’ Leaning forward, the big man spread the palms of his huge hands on the counter. ‘Lost your manners on the way here, did you?’ he asked sharply.
Seeing that he wasn’t about to serve them unless she asked politely, Annie grudgingly added, ‘Please.’
‘Hmh!’ Taking a bottle of pop from the shelf behind him, he placed it on the counter. ‘It really hurt you to say that, didn’t it?’
Ignoring his comment, Annie cheekily reminded him, ‘All I want are two meat and tatty pies – if you please. And some jelly babies.’
Delivering her a scathing glance, he served all of that, and a penny change into the bargain. ‘You’re a sullen little bugger,’ he said. ‘If you were mine you’d not stand for a week!’
‘Oh, yeah? Beat me black and blue, would you?’
‘Teach you a few manners, that’s what.’ He pointed to the door. ‘Go on, be off with you!’
As Judy and Annie went out the door, his wife sidled up behind him. ‘Right little madam, she is.’ His wife was usually the one who served Annie. ‘Such an angry child. I can’t make her out.’
‘She’s no child,’ he grunted. ‘More like a monster in the making.’
‘You’re right, love.’ Tutting and complaining, the little woman scurried away with a parting remark. ‘How that nice Mrs Needham ever gave birth to that one, I never will know.’
‘Why are you always so sharp with people, Annie?’ Carrying the bottle of pop under her arm, Judy followed her friend down the bank to the canal.
‘I’m not!’ Having got to the canal edge, Annie threw off her coat and spread it inside-out on the grass.
‘Yes, you are.’ Taking off her own smart jacket, Judy did the same. ‘Sometimes it’s as if you want to fight the world.’
Annie shrugged it off. ‘I bags first swig of the pop.’
Handing her the bottle of Tizer, Judy asked, ‘Is there anything wrong? ’Cause if there is, you know you can tell me.’
Judy couldn’t imagine there being anything wrong though, because Annie had a good home and a loving family. And as far as she knew, there was no one at school who gave Annie any trouble. In fact, they all seemed to steer clear of her, because of her trouble making antics.
‘There’s nothing wrong!’ Annie snapped, and she took a long drink from the bottle. ‘I’m sorry,’ she said lamely, handing the bottle back. ‘I don’t mean to moan and grumble, only sometimes I feel so trapped, I just want to take off.’
‘But why? And where would you go?’
There was a long pause before Annie answered, and for a moment it seemed as though she was ready to impart something; a secret that haunted her.
‘Annie, I know there’s something you want to tell me,’ Judy urged. ‘If it’s a secret, I won’t tell anyone – you know that.’
Shaking off the dark mood that threatened to envelop her, Annie took hold of Judy’s hand. ‘There is something I need to tell you,’ she said. ‘It’s just that – well, I want you to know that I could never be angry with you,’ she said quietly. ‘You’re the only friend I’ve got.’ Beyond that, she was not forthcoming.
Still convinced that Annie was harbouring something too painful to speak about, Judy made a last attempt to get it out of her. ‘Promise me, Annie,’ she urged. ‘If you’re ever worried about anything, you would tell me, wouldn’t you?’
Instead of giving a straightforward answer, Annie replied disarmingly, ‘What is there for me to worry about?’
Judy gave it a thought. ‘You’re right,’ she said. ‘You’re really lucky, Annie. You’ve got an older brother, and you seem such a close family. I wish I had a sister or brother, but there’s only me, now Davie’s gone. Sometimes it feels really lonely, especially at night when I go up to my bedroom, and there’s nobody to talk to. Oh, I know I’ve got me mam and dad, and I love them madly, but it would be nice to have a sister.’
Annie hugged her. ‘And instead you’ve got me,’ she laughed. ‘A loud-mouthed, miserable sod