They say that schooldays are meant to be the happiest of your life. I wouldn’t know since I rarely went to school. Most days I stayed home looking after my two stepbrothers. Dad would either be out working or drunk in a pub somewhere. I used to dread him coming home – and not just because of what he would do to me.
Every so often the school would ring up and ask where I was. They either left messages for Dad to call them or – occasionally – managed to phone while he was in. I knew that would lead to trouble: Dad would storm off, generally the worse for drink, and go into school. He’d make a nuisance of himself, tell lies, do anything until they stopped asking where I was. And then he’d come back and take it out on me.
I can’t say I ever liked my step-mum. She was rough and coarse. But when I look back it could have been living with my dad that made her that way. He was enough to turn a saint into a devil, my dad.
And in the end I suppose she did me a favour. One night after he’d used her as a punch bag, he sent her upstairs and once again he started on me. But this time – I still don’t know why – she didn’t stay in bed: she sneaked down and sat on the stairs, and heard what was going on. The next morning she confronted me and told me she knew what Dad was doing to me. Like I say, I hated her, but that morning it was such a relief to hear someone else saying they knew my terrible secret. Unfortunately, that was the last bit of good fortune I was going to have for a long time.
These days when someone tells the Social Services about a child being sexually abused at home, it’s the person accused of doing the abuse who has to move out while investigations are made. In 1988 it wasn’t like that.
I was taken into Care and stuck in a big old children’s home outside Gateshead, not far from where the Angel of the North sculpture is now. There were around 20 kids in the home, all of different ages, and all from pretty rough backgrounds. There was an unspoken sense of being in something difficult together – a sort of half-formed camaraderie, I suppose – but we were all cautious about giving much away about our lives: all of us had learned – or been taught – not to talk about what we’d experienced, and were quite confident that even if we did no one would do anything much about it.
I was in the home for four months while they assessed me. No one ever really talked to me about what was going on with my dad. I was just stuck there while some kind of enquiries were made and I was expected to put up with it. I suppose the idea was to keep me safe, to get me out of Dad’s clutches. But if so, it didn’t work. Dad used to hang around outside the children’s home: he was trying to intimidate me, I think – and he certainly succeeded.
I was only 12 but I’d been smoking for a while by the time I was taken into Care. Where I come from we call cigarettes ‘tabs’ and most kids I knew were hooked by the time they went to secondary school. Smoking was against the rules in the children’s home but we all used to sneak outside for a quick puff on a tab and hope we wouldn’t get caught. Mostly we didn’t – except that my dad seemed to be there almost every time I sparked up a ciggie. He would stand and stare at me till I had to go back inside.
Of course he wasn’t supposed to be there. He wasn’t allowed to telephone me either, but that didn’t stop him: he used to get his friends to make the calls and then when I picked up the phone he would come on the line. He just wouldn’t leave me alone. Maybe he couldn’t.
At the end of the four months, I was sent to a smaller family group home. There were three other children, all around my age, being looked after by really caring people. But after the children’s home it felt claustrophobic and oppressive: I couldn’t settle and started running away. In the end the social workers gave in and I was sent back to the children’s home.
Despite Dad’s behaviour I felt safe there. It was the first extended period of time since I was three that I hadn’t been abused. I formed tentative friendships with the other children – though these were always tempered by our mutual determination to appear tough and never to drop our guard. Maybe that’s why I can’t recall the name of a single boy or girl living there.
The staff were kind to us kids: they talked to us calmly – even the times we threw tantrums, slammed doors and generally behaved appallingly. We even went on holidays to Scarborough and once over to France. But my rebellious streak seemed determined to stop me settling down: I smoked openly and defiantly now, challenging the staff to try and confiscate my precious fags. And I would run away every so often, hiding out, waiting and hoping that someone would come looking for me, would care enough to find me and bring me back.
In the end I suppose they decided they’d had enough of this. At the age of 13 I was sent to a much more secure children’s home, miles out in the countryside. What happened there made me question the very idea of this ‘care’ I was supposed to be living in. I’d love to name and shame this place, but there are legal reasons why I’m not allowed to do so. I can, though, describe it – even though doing so brings back horrific nightmares.
It was big, draughty old building in the middle of what seemed like a huge swathe of fields and about a mile away from the nearest village. The furniture was bare, stark and basic: as soon as I walked through the doors I knew this wasn’t going to be a comfortable place to live.
There were about 25 children in the home – both boys and girls – all of us teenagers. There was a sullen, resentful air in the place: no one smiled or welcomed me as I was shown to the little box-room where I was to sleep. It felt like being sent to prison – or at least what I assumed prison must be like.
They took security seriously: as well as the care home staff and teachers there were night watchmen who patrolled the ground with big Doberman dogs. And it was one of the night watchmen who gave me my introduction to the place on the very first night I arrived.
I was in bed and asleep, worn out by the stress of being uprooted once again. I woke up to see a torch light coming towards me through the dark: the man holding it turned slightly and shone it straight in my eyes. I felt a hand grab and drag me from the bed; I knew then what was coming.
What I didn’t know then was that I would be kept in this home for nine long months. Imprisoned in this cold, black hole of a place – a dark, brooding Colditz where kids like me were taken, dumped and forgotten.
I wasn’t only one being sexually abused, of course: there wasn’t anything that special about me. But the fact that some other girl or boy was being touched and groped and hurt didn’t make it any better.
I don’t know if it’s my mind playing tricks on me, but I can’t remember a single night there when I wasn’t molested. I had grown used to the feeling of an erect penis being thrust at me – or in me – and knew what I had to do to get it over and done with as quickly as possible. That’s one of the terrible things about long-term abuse: it makes the child almost complicit in the sex. Not because he or she wants it – God, no – nor that he or she enjoys it; just because being complicit, learning how to please the abuser, ensures that the whole horrific, painful experience finishes quickly.
The home was also a school. The kids in it were deemed to be such a security risk that there was no way we could be allowed to go to a normal school outside the heavily guarded grounds. Instead, teachers came in to give us lessons in the basics of education – reading, writing, maths – with whatever other stuff they reckoned they could ram into our skulls. It was a thankless task, of course: we were all too sullen and resentful to learn anything much. The only thing that kept us in check was the fear of punishment – act up too much and we knew we would be in for a good hiding, or worse.
And so we sat there in those grim and unforgiving classes. And if we didn’t throw too many wobblies, we didn’t exactly get much of an education either. To this day I can’t spell properly and as for arithmetic (much less anything more advanced) – well, let’s just say I’m not what you might call university material. I did learn something there though: I learned about psychology – one dirty little corner of psychology, anyway.
The sexual side of the abuse we endured was one thing, but I began to see that behind