permanent team, rather than for Harkness to hire another solo bricklayer. Like the hod itself, it seemed strange but made sense once you thought about it. The men were accustomed to working with one another and would have their own efficient habits and systems. Hire a gang of brickies and, she supposed, they would work together smoothly from the start.
“Here.” Stubbs stopped by the brick pile. “Hold steady, now.” Mary braced her shoulders as Stubbs loaded three bricks onto the hod. “All right, there?”
“I can take another one.”
He looked at her critically. “Best not. Save your strength, lad; you’ll be doing this for hours.”
It was good advice. The hod itself was not light, and with three bricks on it the combined weight was as much as Mary could manage while dodging through the yard. Stubbs’s directions were approximate but she soon spotted the blond man, Reid, squatting on his haunches, whistling again as he sized up his day’s work. Despite his propensity for fist-fights, he seemed as good-tempered as Keenan was hostile, and this made her all the more grateful not to be working directly under Keenan.
“Three bricks?!” he exclaimed, as she set down the hod.
Mary flushed. “Sorry, sir. I’ll try to bring more next time.”
“Don’t hurt yourself,” he said, amiably enough. “But Lord love me if you ain’t the tiniest hod-carrier I ever seen.”
“Still growing, sir,” she mumbled.
“If you don’t grow no bigger, be something else,” he advised. “A glazier, maybe.”
Mary nodded and fled back to the brick pile. As the morning wore on, she became more skilled at loading bricks onto the hod and carrying them efficiently. Some time later – she couldn’t have said how long, but hours rather than minutes – she became aware of another boy watching her. He stood about twenty yards off, hands in pockets, staring at her openly.
Mary straightened from her task – sweeping up mortar dust and brick rubble – and stared back. After several moments, she nodded a brusque acknowledgement. But instead of responding, the boy merely continued to stare aggressively. Mary kept at her work.
After a few minutes, he finally spoke. “Suppose you’s Quinn.”
Mary looked up again. He was closer, but no less truculent. She nodded once and went on with her sweeping.
“You don’t look so posh.”
So it had come to haunt her already. “I’m not.”
“’F you’s so posh, why’d you steal my job?”
“What – this job?” She was genuinely surprised. “You’ve still got a job, haven’t you?”
“Don’t be stupid – I mean the tea round.”
Ah: the teetotalling tea round. “So you’re Jenkins.”
“Yeah, and you stole my job .”
What was it with building sites and fist-fights? First Reid looked as if he’d been brawling, and now this little fool was clearly frantic for a scrap. She turned her back and kept sweeping.
He circled around and shouted, “Think you’s too good for to talk to me?”
“No.”
“Well, then? What you got to say?”
“Nothing.”
“Nothing except lies.”
There was only one way to end this. She looked straight at him and said, “You calling me a liar?”
“A liar and a thief!”
She snorted. If he wanted a fight, he’d get one. And she would win: her years on the street had taught her this, at least. “Of all the stupid…”
“Don’t you call me stupid!” He marched towards her, stiff with outrage. He was a small boy, no taller than she and scrawny to boot, and he looked utterly ridiculous – a bantam rooster defending his turf. He’d never won a fist-fight in his life, she’d wager. Still, he hurled himself at her, arms windmilling furiously.
Mary dodged his fist with an economical twist to the left and tapped him sharply on the chin, sending him stumbling.
He stopped short of falling, spun about and flew at her again.
She skipped aside and he tripped himself with his own momentum.
Screaming with outrage, he picked