Clean Hands, Clear Conscience. Amelia Williams
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The following day after checking to see it was still there, we all played out in the street just waiting and watching to see if she would find it. At long last she came downstairs to do a bit of gardening. We all scattered to strategic hiding places behind lamp posts, up trees or crouched behind parked cars, anywhere as long as we could see what she’d do. We didn’t have to wait long she came out of her yard as fast as her old legs could move and she had a little garden fork in her hand which she stabbed the frenchie with. She carried the offending frenchie at arm’s length and scurried over the road and stood below the Carmelite Monastery fence. To our astonished delight she tossed the fork and frenchie as hard as she could, high up into the air and straight over the fence. The dogs howled their obvious disapproval as we all gathered around absolutely pissing ourselves with delight. Whenever we walked past old mother Stanley’s place after that, we’d always yell out,
‘Ya filthy old bitch, we saw ya throw the frenchie over the Carmelite’s fence.’
Then we’d take off as fast as we could. It wasn’t long after that she removed the glass and barbed wire off her fence and we stopped calling out to her.
Our other neighbours were Professor and Mrs Robinson they had two sons who were studying at University to become Medical Practitioners. Professor Robinson was a Professor of languages and taught at the Queensland University at St Lucia. Both he and his wife were lovely people and spoke with an upper-class English accent. They were the type of people whom you would expect to be stuck up and toffee nosed, but they were the exact opposite. They would always stop and talk to all of the kids and ask us how we were. We all liked the Robinsons and even though they were elderly we could never work out why the Professor carried a walking stick. He didn’t appear to need it to help him walk and he seemed to be quite capable of walking up and down the street without the aid of a cane. We came to the conclusion that it was a hollow stick where he hid millions of pounds worth of diamonds. For ages we’d sit around and plan how we were going to hit him on the head to knock him out and pinch the cane full of diamonds. We figured we’d have had enough money to live happily ever after. I know it sounds as if we were completely nuts, but I guess in the fifties kids had very vivid and wild imaginations.
The Robinson’s sons were as crazy as loons. It was nothing unusual to see them running around the backyard in lap laps beating tom toms as if they were Africans or natives from New Guinea. We’d often sit at our window hiding behind the curtains and watch them. Looking back, I think they must’ve discovered something stronger than marijuana, failing that they really were a couple of basket cases. (they both became Drs.)
I’ve often wondered if their antics were the cause of James telling Edith and I to stay in the kitchen one day because he wanted to show us something. He could draw any painting or cartoon character with extreme accuracy. When I was in the fifth grade Sister Mary Leonard asked the pupils if we knew anyone who could draw. I volunteered James name and before we could blink, she had a canvas backdrop sent to our home which James transformed into an absolute masterpiece. He copied a picture of a Gondolier in a gondola in Venice from a picture in the grade five reader onto the thirty-foot long by eight foot (ten metres by three metres) high canvas. It was absolutely fantastic and it was used as the backdrop in our school concerts. I’ve often wondered whatever became of the painting.
Anyhow Edith and I were waiting in the kitchen expecting to see one of James works of art when he came prancing through the house stark bollocky naked with his penis hidden between his legs. He did a pirouette around the room with his hands above his head like a prima ballerina and said, ‘Do you think I’m too sexy for films?’ Edith and I cried with laughter for about ten minutes. He was about seventeen at the time and I was ten and I thought the sun and moon shone out of him. He was a wonderful brother to Edward and me. Ever since I can remember he called me Fatso because I was always quite plump as a kid when I went down to six and a half stone a few years ago he continued calling me Fatso. Unfortunately, it’s a name I‘ve grown back into. James had charm, personality and the funniest sense of humour. Edward on the other hand was very manipulative and often quite cruel to me. I know I was verbally cruel and abusive to him on many occasions, but his behaviour went beyond being mean and unkind. Edward sexually assaulted me not long after my eighth birthday and for many years I carried the burden of guilt blaming myself. The nuns had taught us that any wrong doing in the first seven years of our lives was not classified as a sin, but any wrong done after our eighth birthday was sinful and if we didn’t confess it to the priest, we would pay for it in hell. I also felt that if I’d told Dad he would be extremely disappointed in me and I didn’t want to lose his love for me. I was convinced he wouldn’t love me anymore. I thought too that he’d kill Edward (I wouldn’t have minded that) but I most certainly didn’t want Dad going to jail for murder. I eventually told my mother five months before she passed away, although she knew I was speaking the truth, I know she had difficulty accepting it because I think she felt that she had failed in her duty to protect me. I’ve lived with a certain amount of self-loathing since. For some inexplicable reason even though I hated Edward for what he did to me, I still felt a certain amount of sympathy for him because he never seemed to be quite right in the head. He was eventually diagnosed with schizophrenia when he was nineteen and I guess in a way I made his illness as his excuse. Since 1999 after Edith passed away, I’ve finally grown to forgive him for what he did. I guess in a way I’ve come to realise that his behaviour is no longer my responsibility regardless of his mentality. I hope by my making this public, others will learn from my mistake of not speaking up all those years ago. Unfortunately, it caused a rift between James and me. I think perhaps James didn’t want to believe it happened or maybe he may have thought the problem will disappear by ignoring it and me.
Most of the girls in my class were nice kids, but there were two or three that needed a good boot up the backside. One of the nicest girls in the class who was extremely popular with everyone, suffered the most tragic episode any child could possibly endure. Her father, a prominent businessman, blew his brains out one night on the front lawn of their beautiful home. I overheard Dad tell Edith the night it happened. I went to school the following day and told most of my classmates. The nuns got wind of me spreading the news and rang Dad and told him that I’d been telling the other kids. He apologised to the nuns, they in turn punished me with the strap and warned me that I was not to spread the story any more. They told the class that I had made the dreadful story up and that the fellow’s death was from a heart attack. It’s a mortal sin for a catholic to suicide so it had to be hushed up and the little Protestant was made out to be a liar, that was my first taste of hypocrisy and I can’t tolerate it now any more than I could then.
As I grew older my face became a horror story on its own, I had gold fillings in my front teeth but even that didn’t improve my looks. One fateful day whilst I was at a football match, I rubbed my tongue over my teeth and to my horror I discovered a hole where my gold filling should have been, I found it had landed in my lap. I was ushered back to one of the cruellest dentists in the world, Dr Rolland. He hated me with every fibre in his body, but not as much as I hated him. Whenever I was in the chair, he would pinch my cheeks hard and lift my mouth open by putting his fingers in my nostrils. He’d force my mouth to open by just pulling my nose back as hard as he could with the tips of his fingers still in my nose. He’d purposely hit my gums with the drill and make them bleed, but only enough to make them really sting there was never any permanent damage. It was pointless telling my parents because let’s face it, he was a grown up and grownups just didn’t do things like that.
So, it was with great trepidation that I went to