I can't say that I knew
Mary well. In fact I barely knew her at all. For a while she was one
of our food parcel regulars.
And then she wasn't.
We
stopped seeing her.
When was that? A couple
of years ago I guess.
This is the way of
things at First Base. We see someone for a while. And they disappear
from our radar. Maybe they are in jail. Maybe they have skipped town.
Maybe they have straightened everything out. Or maybe....
Yeah. The big maybe.
The worst maybe. The dead maybe. That all to frequent dead maybe.
Last week Mary was no
longer a maybe. Only dead. Irrevocably dead. Yet another young life
snuffed out decades and decades before she got remotely close to
making it to the new average age.
I know little about
Mary's short and rather blighted life. A conversation with Mary was
always a confusing affair. She would jump from this thing to that
thing with no obvious reason and all the while her eyes would twinkle
with unexplained pleasure.
Rain or shine, wind or
snow, Mary would always come through the door with a smile on her
face. Sadly her smile labelled her for most people. It wasn't the
smile you would expect from a young woman in her twenties. Instead
Mary had the smile of a ninety year old Babuschka from rural Moldova.
A Methadone smile.
Methadone Hyrdochloride. Sweet and thick and green and doled out
once day as the State's answer to all of the lost souls trying to
find comfort in the cotton wool embrace of street opiates. Of heroin.
Of smack.
Ferociously acidic
Methadone Hydrochloride which will eat away the enamel of your teeth
no matter how often you brush and floss and rinse. Which is why so
many who are parked up on the 'Done' make a point of keeping their
lips firmly together when they speak. Stumpy brown Methadone teeth
are not a great look if you are looking to put your life onto a better
track. One smile and expressions harden.
One smile and eyes
glaze. Junkie. Smackhead. Thief. Prosser. Scum.
So best not to smile.
Better instead to mumble and keep the secret.
But not Mary. Mary
always smiled. Somehow she was able to allow the instinctive hatred
of so many of those at the other end of her smile to wash over her.
In some ways Mary's long love affair with heroin was evident at first
glance. The methadone teeth. The stick thin limbs. The air of
inevitable doom.
But in other ways she
bucked the stereotypes the world threw at her. She was always
determinedly smart. She always had something of a twinkle in her
presence. And she always smiled that wrecked smile of hers and the
smile always reached all the way into her eyes.
Sum up Mary in a single
word? I would say nice. Nice can be a damning way of descrbing a
person of course. Not in Mary's case. Nice is just what she was. Oh
of course this might well have been down to her mental health
problems which were considerable. But I think she would have been
nice regardless. She was one of those rare people without a nasty
side.
Had she always ghosted
through life with a brain not quite fit for purpose? Or was her
muddle something new? A consequence of something awful happening? I
have no idea. Mary never became a client. She never came in to wrap
her bony fingers around a mug of coffee to unpack her bag full of
demons. To try and make some kind of sense of them. To dredge up the
horrible memories so long buried deep under the insulation of tenner
bags of heroin.
No. Never that. Mary
was never more than a fleeting presence. Five minutes of smiling and
talking very fast about all kinds of everything. And asking over and
over again how we all were and how everything was going before drifting
away with a bag of food that looked like it weighed more than her.
Thank you, thank you,
thank you...
And out of the door.
Into the cold. Into the rest of her life.
Being so very nice in the
dark world of heroin can't have been good. Mary was a pin up girl for
the word vulnerable. No doubt she provided easy meat for the circling
sharks out there who can smell vulnerability from a mile away.
But she managed to keep
on smiling. And smiling. And being nice.
One day my mobile rang
and the screen told me that the person calling was withholding their
number. It was the local cops. On a Bank Holiday? What on earth...?
Was I the key holder for 6 Buccleuch St? Yes I was. Could I come in?
I could.
When I arrived the
front door was open and two young cops were filling the reception
area with their bulky authority. How had they got in? I checked out
the door for evidence of break in. None. They gave me the story. They
had received a call from a member of the public reporting that our
front door was unlocked even though it was a Bank Holiday. I asked
them for more detail.
It had been one of our
food parcel clients. They hadn't noticed the 'Closed' sign on the
door. They hadn't clocked the fact that all the lights were off.
Instead they had simply walked in and stood at the counter for a while
until eventually they realised the building was empty.
And then they had
called up the cops and stood guard until the cops arrived.
I asked if they could they describe the
client in question to me? They could. They described Mary. To a tee.
Was it Mary I asked? Yes it was
Mary.
I smiled. They looked
mildly confused. “I hope you lads have learned a lesson today?”
They still looked
confused and now a tad annoyed as well. After all I was the idiot who
had forgotten to lock the front door. When all was said and done.
“What do you mean?”
“You know Mary,
right? Had some dealings with her?”
“Aye. We know Mary.”
“So think about it.
Here's the scenario. A long term chaotic heroin addict gets lucky and
discovers that a building is unlocked and empty on a Bank Holiday.
And they have a mobile phone. And the use of a free land line phone.
So they have ample opportunity to live up to all the stereotypes and
call up a bunch of pals to rob everything in sight? Yeah? But Mary
didn't do that, did she? She called up you guys and stood guard until
you arrived. How long did it take you to get here?”
A shrug. “Dunno. Half
an hour or so.”
I grinned at them. “Not
bad. She waited in the cold for a whole half hour to make sure the
place stayed safe. I guess that is the lesson for the day, hey lads?
Never judge a book by the cover. Would you have expected Mary to do
what she did?”
Shaking heads. Vague
embarrassment. Also annoyance. Coppers hate it if you get too
preachy. It was time to endeth the lesson. They left. I locked up.
And the next week we bought a big box of chocolates and kept them at
the counter for the next time Mary came in.
She came a week later.
And when we gave her the chocolates it was the first and only time I
saw her without a smile on her face. The tears were instant and they
engulfed her. For a moment I thought her skeleton legs were about to
give up the ghost. She hung onto the chocolates with an almost
frantic expression on her pale face.
It took a while before
she felt able to speak. And when she eventually did speak it was not
her usual fast gabble. Just a sentence. Just the one.
“Nobody has ever
given me chocolates before.”
She didn't stay for
long. She wasn't at all comfortable with being the hero of the hour.
She left. Out of the door. Into the cold. Into what was left of her
doomed life.
Last week the jungle
drums beat out a familiar message. The death message. Mary was no
more. Mary was gone. How? Rumours. Maybe an overdose. Maybe suicide.
Nobody knew. Yet another lost soul whose chips had been cashed before
they turned thirty. And for the umpteenth time I pictured a memorial
in the centre of the town erected to the memory of all the young
people dead before the age of thirty thanks to heroin and valium and
all the rest.
First Base has been
going for twelve years now. I guess we will have heard those jungle
drums beat at least 200 times. 200 young people dead years and years
before their time. 200 in a town of 50,000. I cannot help compare the
memory of these 200 young people with the 400 or so who lost their
lives fighting in Afghanistan. 400 out of a population of sixty
million. They left a gaping hole in the fabric of the country. But
the loss of the Dumfries 200 has left barely a mark. Quiet death.
Unnoticed death. Unlamented and unremarked. Old primary school
pictures on the mantlepieces of forever broken families. Methadone
files gathering dust. Police records done and dusted.
Gone and forgotten.
Small lives snuffed out leaving nothing more than a wisp of smoke.
And then nothing.
Like Mary's life. A
fading memory of her wrecked smile and twinkling eyes and hundred
mile and hour talk. And a day when she taught two young coppers that
just because someone uses heroin doesn't mean they are a bad person.
So goodbye Mary. It was
a pleasure to know you. It must have been hard to be such a nice
person in such a nasty world. But you pulled it off.