The skin on the gravy ripples as I pull the slice of lamb from beneath it. I begin to cut away the fat and pack it into a neat pile at the edge of my plate.
âDon't play with your food, Gwenni,' Mam says. âEat it all up. You could do with a bit of fat on you.'
âI don't like the feel of it in my mouth,' I say. âIt's like eating a lump of lard.'
âI'll have it,' says Bethan. âI like the fat.' She leans over and takes the cuttings with her fork and pushes them into her mouth. A dribble of grease shines at one corner of her lips.
Mam looks at Bethan and her tight face turns soft. âI could eat anything I liked when I was your age, too,' she says.
âI can eat anything I like,' I say. âI just don't like the fatty bits.'
âEat up the lean meat, then, there's a good girl,' says Tada. âIt's good for you. Makes you strong.' He puts a forkful of meat into his mouth. âThink of the lion. It doesn't eat anything except meat.' I try not to watch as he pulls a piece of gristle from his mouth and puts it on the side of his plate.
I slice up my meat. The sun breaks through the cloud for a moment and shines through the living room window onto the meat plate and the lump of grey lamb with its leg-bone sticking up. The fat glistens and the bone gleams white beneath the crusted blood. I push the rest of my meat to the side of my plate and eat the carrots.
âLovely bit of lamb,' says Tada. âSweet as honey. Is there any more mint sauce? Pass it over, will you, Gwenni?' The scent of the vinegary mint rises from his meat and gravy as he pours the sauce over them. âSo, no news of Ifan Evans this morning in Chapel, then?'
âNothing in Chapel,' says Mam. Her face has gone tight again, the way it's been all morning. âPlenty after Chapel on the way home, though. You should have heard Nanw Lipstick.'
âYou wouldn't let us stop to listen to her,' says Bethan. âMam just marched us home, Tada.'
âAlwenna's Mam always knows everything,' I say. Like Alwenna.
âPity she doesn't keep it to herself,' says Mam.
âI heard Nanw Lipstick say it was on the cards, Tada,' says Bethan.
âMrs Thomas to you, Bethan,' says Tada.
âI don't know how she knows these things,' says Mam. âI think she makes up most of it.'
âWhat did she mean, Mam?' I ask.
âDon't talk with your mouth full,' says Mam. âMore roast potatoes, Bethan?' She proffers the plate.
âI feel very sorry for Elin Evans,' says Tada. âNice woman.'
âNice is as nice does,' says Mam, and puts the plate down without offering Tada any more potatoes.
âWhat does that mean?' I say.
âNever you mind. Eat your dinner.' Mam's face is red as well as tight. âI haven't slaved over that fire half the morning for you to push the food around your plate. Why can't you eat properly like everyone else?'
Bethan lifts her eyebrows at me. I shrug. We eat without speaking now. The mantelpiece clock tick-tocks in counterpoint to the click-clack of the cutlery. The Toby jugs pretend to be interested in the ceiling but every now and then I see them glance down at us. When the clock strikes one it startles us all.
âThat rice pudding will be done,' says Mam, and stands up. She takes her Sunday apron from the back of the chair and puts it on before opening the oven door. A bitter smell spills into the living room as Mam pulls out the pudding dish.
âIt's burnt again,' says Bethan. The dark brown skin clings to the sides of the dish and stretches over the pudding.
Mam bangs the dish down on the table. âIt wouldn't burn in an electric cooker,' she says.
âI like the skin like that,' says Tada. He smiles at Mam with his bright, white, false teeth. âYou make a beautiful rice pudding, sweetheart.'
Mam ignores him. âTake the dinner plates into the scullery and bring in the pudding bowls,' she says to me.
I scrape the food off my plate onto Tada's bit of gristle, stack the plates and carry them into the scullery. John Morris follows me. He purrs when I put the congealed gravy and scraps of meat into his saucer. I try not to touch them. The faces in the distemper have opened their eyes again and watch everything I do.
I take the bowls to Mam and she dishes up the rice pudding.
âNo skin, please, Mam,' I say when it's my turn.
âEat what you're given,' says Mam. âThere are little yellow children starving in China who would be glad of that.'
âWhen I had rice pudding at Caroline's house,' says Bethan, âit didn't taste like this and it wasn't so thick.'
âRice pudding's got to be thick. Got to have something to get your teeth into. Lovely, this.' Tada speaks through a mouthful of pudding. He smiles at Mam.
âThat Mrs Smythe was advertising for a cook,' says Mam. âWhere does she think she's going to find a cook around here?'
âSmith,' says Bethan. âThey say it Smith and spell it S-m-y-t-h-e.'
âWell,' says Tada. His voice is still stuck in the rice pudding.
âCaroline says they came down in the world when they came here,' says Bethan. âThere isn't any good help to be had. Mrs Smythe wants to move back to England.'
Tada swallows his mouthful of pudding with a gulp. âWell,' he says.
âCaroline's father's rich,' says Bethan. âCaroline's got her own room. You should see it. I'd like my own room.'
âI'd like my own room, too,' I say. I want my own bed so I don't have to land on top of Bethan every time I come back from flying, and a desk like Mrs Evans's to sit at and write Catrin's story with a rocker for the blotter, and a bookshelf instead of the box under the bed.
âThat's enough of that,' says Mam. âWe can't all be rich. Some of us have to scrimp and save for years to afford a house with a bathroom.' She eats a spoonful of rice pudding. âAnd an electric oven.'
âCaroline's brother has got a huge room of his own,' says Bethan. âRichard.'
âYou don't go into boys' rooms,' says Mam, her voice shrill.
âI only looked in, Mam,' says Bethan. âHe wasn't even there.'
âNice-looking boy,' says Tada. âPolite, too.'
Bethan's face turns pink.
I look at her. âYou don't like him, do you?' I say.
âNone of your business who I like, Gwenni Morgan,' says Bethan. âTell her, Mam.'
âNow, now,' says Tada.
âDon't be silly, Gwenni,' says Mam. âBethan's far too young to be liking boys.'
âI'm nearly fourteen,' says Bethan.
âThirteen and a half,' says Mam. âMuch too young.'
âYou do like him,' I say. âYuck.'
âBe quiet, Gwenni,' says Mam.
âShall I make a cup of tea, sweetheart?' says Tada. âCome on, Bethan, take the pudding bowls away.'
Tada swings the kettle onto the fire and when it boils pours the water into the teapot and gives it a stir. âLet it brew a bit,' he says and sits back in his chair.
Mam puts out the Sunday cups and saucers that I like with their pretty blue make-believe flowers and their thin golden rims that catch the light.
I watch Mam pouring the tea and I take a deep breath and I say, âMrs Llywelyn Pugh's dead fox blinked at me in Chapel this morning. With both its eyes. I think it was resurrected.'
The teapot shakes in Mam's hand and the bright golden tea splashes on the Sunday tablecloth and seeps into the embroidered flowers.
âDon't start,' she says. âEmlyn, tell her not to start.'
âListen to your mam, Gwenni,' says Tada. âAnyway, the dead fox has got glass eyes. It can't blink at you.'
âAll you do is encourage her nonsense,' says Mam. âFlying yesterday, dead animals blinking today. What will people think if she goes around saying silly things like that? They'll think she's simple.'
âOf course they won't,' says Tada. âEveryone knows Gwenni's a clever one.'
âClever is as clever does,' says Mam.
âWhat does that mean?' says Bethan.
I know what Mam thinks of clever. She writes it in all my autograph books.
âIf you're clever you'll get on in this old world,' says Tada.
âNo one will think Gwenni's clever if she goes around saying she can fly and dead animals are resurrected,' says Mam.
âI think it wants me to help it,' I say. âI think it wants a decent burial. Like we gave Siani Nanti.'
Mam stands up and leans over the table towards me. âBe quiet,' she shouts. I can see the spittle spray from her lips and I lean right back in my chair so it misses me.
âSit down, sweetheart, and have your cup of tea,' says Tada, and tries to take hold of Mam's hand but misses. âNow, don't worry about what people think. It doesn't matter.'
âYou wouldn't say that if you'd heard Nanw Lipstick this morning,' says Mam. âPoor Ifan missing like this, a lovely man, a real gentleman â I don't care what Nain says â and all Nanw Lipstick can do is tittle-tattle about him.'
âBut everyone was talking about him, Mam,' says Bethan. âAnd about Mrs Evans.'
âTake a deep breath now, Magda, like Dr Edwards said,' says Tada. He manages to take hold of Mam's shaking hand. âOld gossips aren't worth listening to. Ifan is bound to turn up again, large as life, you'll see. Then what will the old gossips do, eh?'
âCaroline says that Mrs Evans is pretty,' says Bethan. âDo you think she's pretty, Tada?'
âWell, yes,' says Tada. âVery pretty. And clever.'
Mam snatches her hand away from Tada and piles the teacups into each other with a clatter and takes them into the scullery.
âI haven't finished drinking my tea,' says Bethan.
âWe'll be late for Sunday School if we don't get cracking,' Mam says, then closes her mouth so tight her lips disappear.
I pull down the sleeves of my best coat to cover my hands; it's always cold in Chapel during Sunday School. Mrs Davies Chapel House turns the heaters off after the morning service to save money; Alwenna says Mrs Davies spends the saved money on silk stockings and black satin suspender belts. When I told Mam she said: That Alwenna has no shame.
I slide into the pew next to Alwenna. She turns sideways to show me the seams in her stockings. âLook at that,' she whispers. âDead straight. Took me a quarter of an hour.' Aneurin and Edwin turn round to bob their quiffs at her from the pew in front of us. They're our bêtes noires; that's French for black beasts. Monsieur Jenkins says it means something you can't abide. But today Alwenna smiles at them.
Mrs Morris stops playing her repertoire on the organ and all the deacons in the Big Seat stand and turn to face the congregation. Tada was wrong; Ifan Evans has not turned up. The Voice of God announces that Young Mr Ellis will look after Mrs Evans's class and welcomes the Beynon family to our Sunday School for the first time. Mam says they have a daughter my age who'll make me a nice friend instead of Alwenna.
âWhy isn't Mrs Evans here?' Aneurin asks Young Mr Ellis when our class is sitting in the dark pews under the gallery overhang.
Young Mr Ellis blushes and his wire-rimmed spectacles slip down his nose. He pushes them back up with his little finger. The fingernail is dirty and Young Mr Ellis smells of the farm where he works. I try not to breathe too deeply.
âNever mind that, Aneurin,' Young Mr Ellis says. âNow, who can tell me what important point the Reverend Roberts was making in his sermon this morning?'
Aneurin stares at Young Mr Ellis, then he starts to snigger. âYou're not as pretty as Mrs Evans,' he says. The quiff balanced on the edge of Aneurin's forehead bobs up and down and a scent of Brylcreem wafts from it.
I narrow my eyes and stare hard at Aneurin's back. He turns around; he always does. âWhat are you staring at, Gwenni Morgan?' he says. âIt's true. He's not as pretty as Mrs Evans.'
âMr Ellis,' I say. âMr Roberts's sermon was about our spirits, wasn't it? And the miracle of the resurrection.'
Young Mr Ellis's dirty little fingernail pushes his spectacles up his nose again. He swallows loudly so that his Adam's apple rises and falls in his throat. âVery good, Gwenni. And what was the point he was making, can you remember?'
Aneurin makes gagging noises that Young Mr Ellis pretends he can't hear.
âDo you think Aneurin's got a spirit, Mr Ellis?' I ask.
âEvery human being has a spirit, Gwenni.'
âBut Aneurin is more of an animal, Mr Ellis. If he's got a spirit it would mean that animals have a spirit, wouldn't it?'
Aneurin launches himself backward out of his pew and tries to grab hold of my hair. âYou're the animal, Gwenni Morgan. You look more like a fox than a fox.'