
Artwork by me and Bing AI
“Come on.” Jack dragged her out of the door, pinching her arm as he did so.
“Ow!” Goldie shook him off as they descended the stairs. “What’ll happen to Peter?”
“Get switched. Prob’ly have a meal stopped, too. Shouldna ’ave kept money back. Mr Smith likes switchin’ ’e does. Don’t give ’im any chance to switch you. Do as ’e says, right and proper, and you’ll be a’right.”
Goldie looked around. “What’s this place? Who lives in these rooms?”
Jack shrugged. “Mr Smith lives in one. Annie in another. The rest are Mary and her girls.”
“Mary said she wants me for one of her girls when I’m grown. What do her girls do?”
Jack paused on the stairs. “They’re whores. Know what them is?”
“I think so. A whore lived near us, before mamma died.” She sniffed and ran a hand across her face leaving a dirty smudge. “Lots and lots of men visited her. Mamma said she sold her body to them.” She screwed her face up. “I didn’t understand what she meant.”
They reached the door and Jack led her into the street. Rubbish blew past them, and the wind whipped Goldie’s hair into her eyes. A scrawny cat jumped onto a wall opposite.
Jack turned right along the street. Tall tenement blocks of houses rose on either side, cutting out the sunlight and making a corridor for the wind.
Goldie pulled her threadbare cardigan closely around her as she followed Jack along the familiar streets. As they passed one house, she paused, snuffling back tears. She turned to the boy. “I used to live there.” She pointed at the house. “We lived in a room at the back.”
“Did you have brothers an’ sisters?” Jack took her arm and pulled her away.
Goldie shook her head. “Papa went to heaven when I was very little. Mamma worked in a mill. She said I’d work there soon.” She sniffed. “I don’t want to work in a mill. Some of my friends got hurt real bad. They had to go under the machines to get bits of cotton. They call them sca…scave…scavengers.”
“Did you run away?” Jack asked.
Goldie nodded. “Mamma got poorly. She was being sick all the time and pooing. Our room smelled real bad. Then Mamma went to be with Papa in heaven.” She began to cry.
“Then Annie found me. I was very hungry and cold and she promised me somewhere to sleep and food to eat if I worked for Mr Smith.” Working for Mr Smith would be better than the mill.
Even if Mr Smith were a hard man, and it seemed he was, if she were a good girl and did as she was told, she would not get the cane.
Jack continued to lead her through the streets of the town.
Following, she found herself in a part of the town she did not know. The children sat on the ground opposite a church.
Bells rang from the steeple calling the people to worship.
Goldie noticed the gravestones surrounding the building. Her mother would not have the luxury of such. Goldie did not know what happened to her mother’s body. People came and took it away.
A woman arrived to take her to the orphanage. The little girl had a fear of that place. Her mother had often threatened to send her there when she was angry.
Goldie looked around. This was where the ‘posh’ people lived.
The street was clean. Goldie looked at the houses. Most were tall with three stories above road level, and some had steps leading to a basement. Doors opened and people dressed in their best clothes flocked towards the church.
The men wore black or dark brown suits with white shirts and colourful cravats. High black hats were the height of fashion and every man sported one, removing it before entering the building.They shepherded their wives dressed in more colourful attire, although still fairly sober for church. Most of the dresses had bustles, but a few of the older women still wore the wide, hooped crinolines. Like the men, all wore hats.
They hustled their children into the church, barely looking at the two ragged children sitting opposite.
Goldie’s face fell. “What will happen if we don’t take anything back to Mr Smith? Will he switch us?”
Jack patted her on the back. “Don’t worry, Goldie. When they come out, they’ll feel they should do something for charity and then they’ll give us money. I ain’t never been here on a church day when I got nothing.”
The few passersby sniffed as they walked past, and one or two crossed the road. A couple dropped a few small coins in the children’s hats, but it was a pitifully small amount. Then the church doors opened. The people spilled onto the road. A carriage drawn by a bay horse drew up and a family climbed inside. The carriage trotted away.
People chattered outside the church. Goldie noticed the congregation beginning to disperse and was about to give up hope of anyone giving them alms.
It was then that Jack stood. “Please spare a coin. Me and me sister is ’ungry. We ain’t ’ad nuffin to eat since yesterday morning.” He reached out a hand as a couple passed.
The woman searched in her bag and tossed a penny to the pair.
A little girl looked at Goldie. “Mamma, we can’t let such a pretty little girl starve. Give her something.”
The mother puckered her brow. “How do we know they will spend it on food? You know what these beggars are like.”
The girl looked shocked. “Mamma! You heard what the vicar said. ‘Jesus said when you feed one of these poor people, you are feeding me.’ And he said, ‘Suffer the little children to come unto me.’ Jesus would not have left them begging without giving them something.”
The girl’s father came up to them. “She’s right, you know.” He felt in his pocket and dropped a coin into the hat. Then he shepherded them away.
Jack looked into the hat on the floor. His eyes opened wide. “A shilling! He gave us a whole shilling!”
During the next few hours several more people gave them money, and when the daylight began to fade, they made their way back to the house where Mr Smith lived.
When he saw how much they had gathered, his face almost split with his grin. “I knew you would be good as a beggar, Goldie. Now go and get something to eat.”
I hope you are enjoying this serialisation of my story inspired by Goldilocks and the Three Bears.
I love hearing from you. Please leave your comments in the comments box.
If you would like to read some more of my writing, click on the book cover in the side bar to take you to a page where you can buy from the retailer of your choice.
Discover more from Dragons Rule OK. V.M.Sang (author)
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Another excellent snippet, Viv. I’m looking forward to seeing what happens to them.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I’m glad you’re enjoying the story, Diana.
LikeLiked by 1 person