..... at
that moment in time, but I suddenly felt a compelling urge to follow my mother.
So breaking free from my Aunt’s grip I
ran as fast as I could after her. I knew that my Aunt had my baby brother to
mind and she wouldn’t follow me. Besides
as Kate was an old lady in her late eighties she had no chance of catching me.
I
caught up with my mum just at the junction of Cochran Road. She didn’t say anything, she just gripped my
hand tightly and pulled me along with her. There was a deadly earnestness in her stride and her rescue mission took
precedence over returning me back home.
We
hurried along the lower part of Cochran
Road towards the Barrack gateway. At this point
the reader of my narrative has to be aware that the lower half Cochran Road, as it
was then, is a completely different-looking street from what it looks like
today. There were no houses at all on
that part of the street - it was just a long canyon-like road with two high
walls on either side. On the one side
was the high wall bordering Annie Kearns’ garden and over on the other side of
the street stood the Linenhall
Square western perimeter wall.
Towering
up over the west wall was the ghostly edifice of the Barracks’ derelict old
hospital building.
This
was a frightening old building indeed - the sort of place that macabre horror
stories are made of. Its darkened
windows, resembling evil eyes gazed down upon all those in the street below,
and the long-since missing roof exposed an evil looking array of wooden beams
and rafters. The whole structure was
covered in a thick mass of creeping ivy and viewed in the half-light of that
evening the dereliction and spookiness of that place sent a cold shiver down my
young spine.
This
vile edifice of bricks and mortar well deserved its long-standing reputation as
a haunted place and I can tell you now that it scared the life out of me. I began to wish that I had stayed at home with
my Great Aunt Kate.
My
Mother gripped my hand tightly and hurried me onwards, down through that canyon
of fear, onwards towards the looming archway that marked the Barracks’ west
gateway.
That
gateway was as I had never seen it before: it was completely blocked with a
barricade of rubble and wooden beams probably purloined from the old hospital
complex. There was also an assortment of
rusting corrugated iron sheets, tree branches and even a sizeable section of
chain link fencing complete with barbed wire; all-in- all a pretty impressive
and daunting looking structure.
As
we stood facing that barricade the anguished state of my Mother was evident by
the fact that she clasped me ever so tightly with her left hand - so much so in
fact that her wedding ring cut into my fingers . I was too frighten to cry out
so I stayed silent. Voices could be
heard from the other side of the barrier and just as we thought that no one
could see us or know of our presence, a dark haired youth whom I instantly
recognised popped his head over the top of the barricade and said,
“Sorry
Mrs P! You can’t get in this way! Try the Erskine Street gate or the steps”.
My
mum rather agitatedly replied that she wasn’t looking in, that she was looking
for her son David, and she wanted to know was he in there.
Another
lad’s head emerged into our field of vision and informed us of the news that my
Mother was so anxious to hear.
“Aye
wee Davie is
here, do you want him?”
“Of
course I want him! Send him out,” retorted my mum.
………
4 of 5 “Curfew” ……..