Copyright Oggbashan October 2002 The author asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.
This is a work of fiction. The events described here are imaginary; the settings and characters are fictitious and are not intended to represent specific places or living persons.
Version 001 25 October 2002
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The weak winter sunlight seeping through and past the dirty broken glass of the wind shaken window barely lit the room.
Donna lay on the blood soaked mattress shivering with cold and fear. She clutched her grubby nylon housecoat trying to warm herself and her new born son. Her face was grey not just with the all pervading grime but with lack of blood and the despair of final loss of hope. She was tired, exhausted, beyond crying or protesting at her inability to move herself off the mattress.
While vainly waiting for Wayne to return to her she thought back through her recent past to the family home she had left in anger only six months before. In her memory the boring existence of sharing her parents' daily routine seemed an Arabian Nights' fairy tale of love, light and plenty. Her father's repeated platitudes and her mother's nagging complaints had at least recognised her needs and had wanted a secure future for their only daughter. Then the shock of meeting Wayne had at first alienated them from her. They wanted "better" for her than they thought that Wayne could offer. Their first recriminations had soon withered in the face of her determined insistence that she wanted Wayne and no other future. The inescapable fact of her pregnancy had overridden everything.
At the time she could not accept that their concerns were for her. When she left home she had thought that their objections to Wayne were driven by their own fears of "What the neighbours would think". Later their unstinting help had demonstrated their love was for her and their unconcern for society's disapproval.
Wayne "had" a flat that she moved into. She didn't know and wouldn't have cared that he had inherited it from another drifter neither of whom had bothered to pay rent to the landlord. There was a pile of legal looking envelopes in the hallway. What did her love care about paperwork? She was setting up her first home with Wayne. Their love would rise above such petty nuisances.
Donna cleaned and polished that flat with a zeal that she had never had for housework with her parents. She cooked meals with her mobile phone tucked under her chin listening to the instructions her mother had never been able to get her to listen to before. Her father had visited her, but only when Wayne was at work, to put up shelves, mend the wardrobe hinges and do the small repairs that had built up over the years of neglect.
Even in those early days there was a small cloud on her horizon. Wayne never seemed to notice or appreciate the work that had been done to make their flat into a home for them and their baby-to-be. Every night the cloud vanished before his passionate love making.
The insignificant legal envelopes shattered her dream only a month later. As she lay in bed with her arms wrapped round Wayne the heavy pounding on the door announced the arrival of the bailiffs. They saved only those belongings that could be hurriedly packed into Wayne's rusty van. The bailiffs' concern and sympathy for her only inflamed her anger with Wayne who seemed wholly indifferent to the loss of their home.
"We'll find another place, babe. Don't you worry." was Wayne's response.
He couldn't or wouldn't understand that Donna was grieving for the loss of her innocence, the loss of her dreams, their expulsion from their Garden of Eden. As he drove the van away she had screeched her anger at him from the torn passenger seat.
Her anger was unslaked that night when they bedded down on a mattress perched on the lumpy pile in the back of the van. She rejected his advances summarily. He responded with heavy punches, beating her almost senseless before raping her. She screamed in pain and terror but no one heard her from the quiet road in the derelict industrial estate. She sobbed herself to a fitful sleep beside a snoring Wayne.
She should have left him the next morning. "If only" are two of the saddest words in English. The next morning Wayne was apologetic, grovelling. He had been as upset as she was, or so he said. When she had rejected him, he had "lost it". He would never do that again. He loved his babe, didn't he? She could not bear to recall his actual words, his extravagant promises, his declarations of eternal love.