Tony Carling

The rain lashed down and a full moon hung over the Tesco Megastore site at Bermondsey, in the arse end of London, as Marg (The Barge) Carling struggled to stretch the new tyre over the rim of her crippled J.C.B. with her bare hands. She looked down after hearing a noise, like a wellington boot being sucked out of the mud and saw the her new born son scowling up at her from a puddle of diesel oiled water, a nearby labourer quickly severed the cord with his prized half shovel (it took years to wear a shovel down to the point where you were only digging half as much as the next geezer) and Donkey kept the edge of his razor sharp with half an old stock brick he kept hidden in his underpants (you couldn’t be too careful, old stocks go for 60p each round here!) Donkey scooped the new born up and wrapped him in some fibreglass insulation, laying him in a half opened bag of cement feeling pleased with himself (the boy would be secure, while Marg finished blowing up the tyre with her ample lungs and the insulation would help keep the rain off the half open bag of cement..( nothing worse than a lumpy mix in the morning!)

Meanwhile, the whole site gathered round the nipper shaking their heads in denial grunting farting and burping in unison, a ritual often performed by alpha males, partly to mark their territory and ranking in the group and partly due to trying to bend down after a full bloater from Fast Fiona’s burger van washed down with three cans of special brew! Marg named the boy after one of his fathers, not being sure of who it could be, she chose Tony as there were two Tony’s (law of averages) on the site. Tony the spread and Tony the donkey (donkey 'cos he was the best labourer and not because of what he had in his underpants…everyone new about his ‘ol stock brick!) Home was a disused portaloo behind the cement shed and the young Tony cut his teeth on a galvanised butterfly wall tie that Micky the Brickie gave him, the years passed and the young lad grew fit and strong on a diet of special brew dregs, dogends and the occasional Fast Fiona bloater.

Ronnie The Dog, a dodgy mobile phone dealer who often frequented the site introduced young Tony to the world of creative writing, by learning him to read the screwed up parking tickets from the bottom of the loo, and along with his rusty length of fence wire stretched across his bent dumper starting handle the boy couldn’t have wanted for more, until one sunny day at the ripe age of eleven he climbed the scaffolding for the topping out party with some of his dads and saw a world he never knew existed on the other side of the hoarding.......Tony would never be content again!

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Tony Carling standing holding his guitar