The Broken Chariot

The Broken Chariot by Alan Sillitoe Page A

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Authors: Alan Sillitoe
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kind of family. But from now on, hang on to your money. Don’t go throwing it about.’ Isaac put the book he’d been reading back on the shelf. ‘Still, it’s good of you to bring these fish and chips for our supper, though you didn’t need to splash half a week’s rations on me. All the same,’ he fussed, ‘I do like a bit of sugar.’
    Herbert’s feet ached from walking the town all day. ‘You did me a wonderfully good turn.’
    â€˜I don’t want to hear any more about that, but if you really think so, pay me back by doing a good turn to somebody I don’t know. That’s what keeps the world a halfway decent place to live in. Now, enough of such platitudes and attitudes, and let’s get down to supper.’
    Before any money came to him Herbert had, as it were, to work a week for nothing, though his landlady Mrs Denman said she would board him in the meanwhile on condition that he equalized the thirty-five shillings a week out of his four pounds wages the minute it was possible.
    â€˜I’ve got to be practical,’ she said, ‘where young lads like you are concerned,’ putting the kettle on the gas to make him a cup of tea. ‘And I am practical, I allus was. If I hadn’t been, after my Will died, I shouldn’t have been running this place today.’
    Herbert thought of her as Practical Penelope, though she was a bit old, being about forty, and he was to drop the nickname after a while because, for a start, she had no Odysseus to wait for, and no time for weaving. Probably no idea how to. Also, a man who was her suitor came to the house every other evening and, as far as Herbert could tell, stayed the night.
    Her straight black hair was just short enough to make the face seem broader than necessary, but she had, he thought, a nicely shaped nose. A clean apron of sacking served over her white blouse and dark skirt. He also noticed her patent leather shoes which looked a bit tarty, the way they buttoned up.
    â€˜I do all the work on my own, though’ – she pushed her glasses straight – ‘because I never did mind it. Mrs Atkins next door said I should get a man in to help. But no fear, I did have one once, not long after my Will died, and I should have known better because he was an idle devil who only liked being at the bookies or in a pub, so I got rid of him. No more men for me, I said to myself. Well, not like him anyway. I just see Frank when it takes my fancy, and he sees me when it takes his, which suits us both. But as for having a man in the house, not likely.’
    Herbert shared a room with her son Ralph, who turned from trimming a flimsy moustache to hold out a friendly enough hand when his mother showed him in. He spoke with little of the local accent, which made Herbert, already noting the cadence, determined to take more of Isaac’s advice and say as little as possible until he felt easier using it.
    â€˜Hope you’ll be comfortable in the other bed,’ Ralph said.
    â€˜I’m sure I shall.’
    â€˜Mother’s making all the cash she can.’ He was surprised that Herbert had so little to unpack from his scruffy case, and Herbert picked up his embarrassment at having to share a room, which indicated that he had been spoiled. ‘I wouldn’t be surprised if she didn’t let our beds to night workers while we were out during the day,’ Ralph went on. ‘She hopes to get a boarding house at Skegness after the war. Poor mother doesn’t realize it might go on forever.’
    â€˜Who lives in the rest of the house?’
    â€˜Four other lodgers.’
    â€˜What do they do?’
    Ralph pulled a comb through fair wavy hair. ‘A couple, both men, if you know what I mean. They work in a drawing office, very hush-hush, they tell us, though I wouldn’t be surprised if they didn’t design bottle tops. The other two come and go at all hours, and I think

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