So. I've done the binge TV-watching and After Eights for breakfast. Now what?
Well, there's a lot for me to look forward to in 2018. An imminent house-move for one thing. A new place, a fresh start. It will be hard, having lived in the same flat for 24 years, but I feel the time is right. The new flat feels right, too. As soon as we walked in, Patrick and I, it felt like home. We couldn't see the garden because it was dark, but we know it's big and private. I have big plans for the garden. Rose trees for one thing. I always wanted rose trees. I'm picturing a winding path leading from the gate to a little arbour, nestled in the rose bushes. I'm imagining sitting there on a Spring day, watching my two little dogs playing happily, chasing insects and elusive cats, new smells and sounds to keep them busy.
I will find a place to set up a study, a place I can retreat to when I crave solitude. Perhaps my new surroundings will spur me on to write.
There will be drawbacks, perhaps, but the positives will outweigh the negatives.
A new year, a new house and a fresh start.
Happy 2018!
Friday, 29 December 2017
Friday, 25 August 2017
Kyle's diary
Monday
My teacher gave me a diary today.
She said I have to write in it every single day for three weeks! I don’t know
what to write! She said it is better to write in my diary than play computer
games. I hate writing. It’s boring. I got to level 3 of Bubble Fish.
Tuesday
I fell asleep at my desk today. The
teacher shouted something and I woke up. Everyone was laughing at me. If I
didn’t have to write in this stupid diary, then I wouldn’t be so tired.
Wednesday
Mum caught me with my games tablet
under the covers tonight. I tried to pretend I was asleep, but she pulled the
covers back and found it. She said if she finds me with it again she’ll kill
me. She won’t really kill me of course, but she’ll take it away. She’s says
it’s not good for me to always play computer games. She tries to get me to read
books, but I hate books. They’re boring. I didn’t tell her about the diary. I’m
keeping that a secret.
Thursday
I scored 1000 points on Beat the Barbarian.
Hooray! That’s my favourite game at the moment. My friend Lewis could only get
350! Ha ha. That will show him. He always thinks he’s cleverer than me.
Friday
I’m on a new game now. It’s called
Shoot to Kill. It’s for older boys, but Mum will never know. Beat the Barbarian
is for babies.
Saturday
I’ve just woken up from a really
bad dream. Someone was chasing me with a gun. I was trying to hide but they
found me and shot me. I’m not going to play Shoot to Kill anymore.
Sunday
I could hear my mum and dad arguing
tonight. I couldn’t hear what they were saying, just their voices getting
louder and louder. I think Dad is having problems at work or something. Mum is
always worried that we haven’t got enough money. Dad tells her not to worry,
but that seems to make her worse.
Monday
I nearly fell asleep at my desk again
today. No one saw me, thank goodness. I hate it when people laugh at me.
Tuesday
My dad didn’t go to work today. He
didn’t even get out of bed. Mum was screaming at him to get up. I scored 600 on
Smash Kids.
Wednesday
Lewis’s Dad bought him a new
tablet. I’m crying about it now. I hate Lewis.
Thursday
Lewis and I had a fight in the
playground. I told Mum I fell over but she didn’t believe me. She was really
angry and made me go to bed early. Dad got up today but he didn’t get dressed. Mum
goes out every night now, so I can play games all night if I want to. Ha ha!
Friday
Dad looks like a ghost. I don’t
like it – he scares me. I’m on to the next level of Smash Kids. That will show
Lewis. He thinks he’s so great all the time.
Saturday
I heard Mum come into my room tonight.
I pretended to be asleep and hid my tablet under the covers. She leaned down
and kissed me and stroked my forehead. She hasn’t done that since I was a baby.
Sunday
Mum said she’s going away for few
days. I heard her tell Dad that if he didn’t get another job soon she was going
to leave him – forever! I really hope he gets a job soon. I don’t want my mum
to leave. I cried when she left.
Monday
I slept in and was late for school
today. I forgot to set the alarm. I had to get my own breakfast. Dad was still
in bed when I left and he was still there when I came home. Nan came round and
cooked us tea. She took some in for Dad on a tray, but he didn’t eat it. I’m
really worried about him. I wish Mum would come home.
Tuesday
I got to school really late again
and the teacher took me into her office and asked me if everything was all
right. I told her that Dad wasn’t very well. I didn’t tell her about Mum,
though.
Wednesday
When I got home, Dad was asleep on
the sofa in his dressing gown. The TV was on and there were beer cans all over
the place. I tried to get him to wake up, but he was out cold. When Nan came
round she was really angry. She gave me some money for fish and chips and when
I came back, Dad was lying on the sofa with a blanket over him. Nan sent me up
to my room. I ate my fish and chips and went to bed.
Thursday
Mum still hasn’t come home. Dad’s
beard is getting bigger. He hasn’t had a wash for days. I tried to ask him if
he was alright, but he just told me to go away and play my games. I took my
tablet to bed but I couldn’t be bothered with it. What’s the point? I wish Mum
would come home. Computer games are boring. I wish Dad could get a job.
Friday
Lewis was boasting today about his
new tablet that his Dad bought for him. I told him my Dad was going to buy me
an even better one. When I got home from school, Dad was in bed. He was still
wearing his dressing gown and he was lying there moaning. I told him I hated
him for making Mum go away. He said a word that I know is really rude, so I’m
not going to write it here. I’m really angry with him, but I know it’s not his
fault he can’t find a job. I wish Mum would come home.
Saturday
My Nan came over and spent the
whole day with us. I feel safe when Nan is here, even though she shouts a lot.
She shouted at Dad to pull himself together. In the evening, Nan and I watched
a cartoon together. I asked her where Mum was, and she said that she had had to
go away for a few days because she had a few problems she needed to sort out. I
started to cry and Nan said that life isn’t always a bed of roses, whatever
that means. I couldn’t sleep after that because my throat felt tight from
crying.
Sunday
Got up really late today. When I
went downstairs, there was a doctor sitting at the kitchen table. Nan was
biting her nails and she looked really worried. She gave me a hug and said that
Dad would need to go to hospital for a while. She made me go upstairs and pack
a bag, because I was going to be staying at her house. The doctor left and an ambulance
came for Dad. I watched from my bedroom window. Two men had to help him walk to
the ambulance. He was all hunched over and just staring at the ground. I told
him not to worry, Mum would be home soon. He couldn’t hear me of course. Nan
made me sausages and mash for tea.
Monday
It’s a bank holiday today, so I
didn’t have to go to school. I woke up in my Nan’s spare room. There was a
radio on in the kitchen and Nan was frying bacon. I felt very peaceful. I went
to get my games tablet from my bag but it wasn’t there. I must have left it in
my bedroom at home. I felt really sad at first but it doesn’t seem to matter
anymore. I just want my mum and dad back again. Thank goodness I’ve still got
my diary.
Monday, 22 May 2017
The Real Deal
Colin Lipsedge had been fascinated by coins since he was a
child. He couldn’t explain why. He just loved the way they felt, and their
metallic smell. He knew people thought he was strange. He had heard them
talking in the office, but pretended not to notice. He stared at his computer
screen, wishing five o’clock would come, so he could go home and look at his
collection.
The coins gave him a comfort that
nothing else could. He would spend hours sorting them into categories by their
size, colour, date, country and denomination. His dream was to one day own a
gold one. A Victorian sovereign, perhaps.
But there was one old coin in his
collection he couldn’t categorise. It was silver-coloured and the size of a shilling,
but its markings were like nothing he had ever seen before. He would turn it
over and over, peering at it under a magnifying glass, trying to decipher the
date and inscription. He trawled through books about coins and searched the
internet, but without success. There had to be someone out there who knew what
it was.
One evening after work, Colin
decided he was going to find out about the coin once and for all. He took the
coin from its plastic pocket and washed it in warm soapy water, patting it dry
with a towel. He placed it carefully on a blue velvet cushion and photographed
it, first one side, then the other. He uploaded the pictures on to his laptop.
“Can anyone help me identify my
coin?” he typed, on his coin collectors’ forum. “I found it on the beach a year
ago and would love to know what it is and if it’s worth anything.”
The next morning Colin went to
work as usual. By ten o’clock he could stand it no longer. He had to check the
site to see if anyone had replied to his message. His heart leapt when he saw
the posting.
“Hello, Colin,” it said. “Your coin is a
Spanish Felipe Real from the 16th
Century. It probably came from the Juan
de Flores, which sank off the coast of Britain in 1588. It’s a rare find
...”
There was more. Colin scrolled
down.
“ ... if genuine, it could fetch
around £3,000,000 at auction.”
Colin could hardly believe what
he was seeing. £3,000,000! He could feel his palms beginning to sweat.
“All
right there, Colin?” It was Simon Highworthy, the office joker. “You look a bit
flushed. Not coming down with anything are you?”
“Now
you come to mention it, I do feel a bit peaky. Think I might knock off early.”
Colin switched off his computer, pulled his jacket on and
headed straight for the door.
“Something
you said?” said Marcus Hackman, his colleague.
“Not
guilty, yer honour,” said Simon.
As soon as Colin got home he
logged on to his laptop. There it was in black and white on his screen: £3,000,000.
He sat back in his chair and began to daydream about what he could do with all
that money. He pictured himself walking into his boss’s office the next morning
and handing in his notice. He could see the look on Simon’s and Marcus’s faces,
as he told them he wasn’t coming back.
But then a thought occurred to
him: suppose the coin was a fake? He typed in the question. Seconds later a
reply popped up: “I would need to look at it more closely. Can we meet?”
They arranged to meet that evening
at the Hilton. Colin wrapped his coin carefully in tissue paper and put it in
the inside pocket of his jacket, which he zipped up to his neck.
He went into the hotel bar as
arranged and ordered a pint of beer. He settled himself down on a bar stool,
sipped at his beer, and waited.
“Hi,
Colin!” came a voice from behind him. Colin swung round. It was Simon.
“You!”
said Colin. “I might have known.”
“Come
on, mate. That’s no way to greet your favourite colleague!”
“Okay.
You win,” said Colin, draining his glass. “I really fell for it this time.”
“What
are you talking about, mate?”
“You
know very well what I mean.”
“Can’t
a man enjoy a quiet drink after work?”
“Hmmph.”
“Come on, let me buy you another pint. Hey, wait a minute - aren’t you supposed to be
ill? Oh, I get it – you
pulled a sickie, didn’t you?”
“You could say that.”
“Look, Colin. I
know we haven’t always seen eye to eye, but maybe we should call a truce. Half
the time it’s Marcus egging me on.”
“You can’t blame it all on him.”
“No you’re right. Come on, let’s shake hands and put it
all behind us.”
Colin reluctantly agreed. They finished
their drinks and went their separate ways.
On his walk home Colin cursed
himself. How could he have been so stupid? He’d really fallen for it this time.
He decided to take a longer route home. He needed to clear his head. The route
took him over an old bridge, with a river flowing beneath it.
He took the coin from his pocket,
unwrapped it and flung it in the river. No one was ever going to make a fool of
him like that again.
It was getting dark when he
finally got home. He logged on to the coin forum. There was a message waiting
for him.
“Sorry I missed you, Colin,” it
said. “My car broke down, so I never made it to the hotel. I tried to phone but
the battery ran out. Anyway, it doesn’t matter. I asked a collector friend for
a second opinion. He’s an expert in old Spanish coins. He says he can see from
the photo that your coin’s the real deal. You’ve hit the jackpot, my friend.”
Saturday, 8 April 2017
Lesser Mouse-deer
Tiny creature!
Delicate and defenceless
You foraged in the undergrowth
Alert to the sounds of the forest
You quivered with life, and fear of predators
Your tiny hooves tap-tap-tapping on the forest floor,
a warning to others
a warning to others
What chance did you have against them, their teeth and claws?
Minute ruminant!
Captive in your glass prison
A tableau of nature in imitation
With eyes lifeless and unseeing
You captivated me
Saturday, 8 October 2016
Old Thatch - A Memoir
I remember lazy summer holidays at
my grandmother’s house, a seventeenth century thatched cottage nestled deep in
a lush valley in the heart of the Oxfordshire countryside. The cottage was
quaintly lopsided, and so small and squat that my father, not a particularly
tall man, had to bend over to avoid banging his head on the low beams. The
straw eaves drooped over the windows like bushy eyebrows, and among the sheaves
lurked a myriad of creepy crawlies, far bigger and more menacing than anything
I’d ever seen in my comparatively modern Victorian semi on the east coast of
Scotland.
My grandmother
was a stout, robust woman. She had strong forearms made thick from decades of
beating eggs, whipping cream, chopping mint and kneading dough. I only ever saw
her wear one item of clothing, a blue and white nylon housecoat with two deep pockets
on the front where she kept an endless supply of paper tissues for mopping up
tears and spilt tea. Her hair was white with a bluish tint and it hung in large
soft curls around her lined face. She was a fierce woman who believed in hard
work, strong tea and no nonsense. She’d been divorced from my grandfather for
many years, but she wasn’t lonely. She had a constant companion in the form of her
precious corgi Kim, who waddled along faithfully at her feet. The two were
inseparable – she referred to Kim as her ‘little man’ and was always spoiling
him with titbits.
Like many of her
generation, my grandmother was a great admirer of the Royal family. I later
learned that her father, my great grandfather, was a butler at the ‘Big House’
– not Buckingham Palace, but the stately home that stood majestically above the
village, where the ‘Major’, the owner of the land, lived. It was to the Major
and his family whom my grandmother and her family before her paid rent, going
back to the seventeenth century when the cottage was built. As a butler for the
Major, my great grandfather had many stories to tell and the most memorable one
was that when a certain member of the Royal family came to stay at the Major’s
house, ‘she wiped her feet on the doormat and wiped the smile off her face’. So
the story went. It was one of many anecdotes my grandmother loved to tell us
over and over again.
Appearances were
everything to my grandmother. She was fiercely proud of her little house and
she worked hard to tend the immaculate lawns and flower beds. Of course, the
front of the house was the part that everyone could see, so she spent the most
time on it. It had a white front door that was always freshly painted, with a
black door knocker and handle. Pink clematis grew in a pretty arc around the doorway,
and in the summer, rose trees, lupins and tulips stood guard on either side
like colourful soldiers on parade.
To make sure the
facade stayed pristine, my grandmother kept the front door locked and we accessed
the cottage by going around the back, via a white wooden gate at the side. A winding
path led round to the back door, which opened into the kitchen. Inside, the
floors were made of flagstones, worn smooth in places into gentle furrows by
generations of busy feet coming and going over the threshold.
A little way to
the left of the back door was a magnificent weeping willow tree. I remember how
its leafy branches swayed and whispered gently in the breeze. On scorching
summer days we’d strip off and give each other cold showers with a watering can
under its cool canopy of pale green leaves.
The path carried
on past the willow tree and down between two halves of a large pristine lawn
that was mown into neat rows. The path eventually came to a wooden gate under a
magical arch of privet hedge, which led to the vegetable garden. Beyond the abundant
vegetable garden was a trickling brook where we never dared to venture for
reasons that I still can’t fathom. Some sixth sense told us that we mustn’t go
there. We often heard our grandmother tell stories of how the local gentry rode
their horses at full gallop through the land, churning up the vegetable
patches, in pursuit of some unfortunate fox that would be ripped to pieces by
their baying pack of hounds. My mother told us that as a child out playing, she
might be ordered to hold the gate open by the ‘toffs’ on horseback so they
could ride through the garden unhindered, and they’d sometimes throw her a
penny for her trouble.
I remember helping
my grandmother pick and prepare the vegetables for Sunday lunch. My sisters and
I would sit cross-legged on the lawn by the back door, shelling peas and broad
beans into a colander. The temptation to pop the delicious vegetables into our
mouths was impossible to resist. Or we’d have the job of scraping the skins
from baby new potatoes, some as small as marbles, the skins melting away under
our fingers. I remember their fresh, earthy smell. Then we’d pick some fresh
mint and my grandmother would take the aromatic leaves into the kitchen to make
mint-sauce. She would chop vigorously with a large knife on a wooden board with
short, sharp, expert movements, first one way, then the other, before adding
the vinegar. The smell of fresh mint always takes me back to that time and
place.
After that we all
deserved a rest, so we’d go to the dank little shed at the bottom of the garden
where spiders and beetles lurked, and pull out some old faded deck chairs
covered in cobwebs. We’d shake the chairs out and unfold them on the lawn to
dry in the sun, then we’d doze to the sound of bumblebees humming round the
foxgloves and honeysuckle. Then, with a delicious clinking of fine bone china,
my grandmother would bring us a tray of tea and home-made fruit cake, still
warm from the oven. The sudden arrival of bluebottles was a sign there was a
thunderstorm coming, and sure enough the sky would blacken and the heavens
open, so we’d snap up the deck chairs and retreat to the coolness of the
cottage, where we’d flop down in armchairs and doze again to the hollow ticking
of the cuckoo clock.
Sometimes we
would peer through the latticed windows out on to the village green, where
tourists often stopped to take photographs of the cottage’s quaint facade.
Almost half a century later, with my grandmother long gone and someone else
living in the cottage, I stood on that same spot on the village green and took
photographs myself. I still occasionally catch glimpses of the cottage on
calendars, postcards, jigsaw puzzles and birthday cards, and my childhood
memories are stirred once again.
In the evening
after supper, my sisters and I would climb up the tiny spiral staircase to bed,
and lie awake under stiff white sheets, too excited to sleep, alert to every
creak of the floorboards, imagining ghosts coming through the cracks in the
plaster. There was no toilet in the house, so if we needed to go during the
night, we either went in the enamel chamber pot under the bed, or we took a
torch and ventured down to the bottom of the garden for what seemed like miles
to the smelly little shed, where unspeakable horrors lurked in the darkness.
In the morning
we awoke to the sound of a cock crowing, and the smell of bacon and eggs
frying. The bacon came from locally reared pigs. My grandmother would have the ‘wireless’
tuned to Radio 2 and the kitchen door standing open with the sun already streaming
in. A slight haze hanging over the valley was a sure sign it would be another
perfect summer’s day.
Sometimes, with
my mother and father away on some mysterious errand, my grandmother would take
me and my sisters for a picnic on Cow Hill. My grandmother would prepare a
basket and we would skip down to the bottom of the lane and swing on the wooden
gate at the entrance to the field. Then we’d run up to the top of the hill to
find a spot amongst the thistles. We’d spread out a red checked table cloth and
settle down to eat hard boiled eggs, home-grown tomatoes and Melton Mowbray
pork pies, washed down with locally made cider. My mother often told us stories
of how, as a child, her favourite place was Cow Hill, and she would sometimes
go there alone to escape the boredom of village life and dream of getting away
from the countryside and living the life of a Hollywood film star.
Back home in
Scotland, if we ever had trouble sleeping, my sisters and I would conjure up in
our minds an image of our grandmother’s little cottage with its lawns and
flower beds, and the whispering of the breeze in the branches of the willow
tree. The memory was enough to lull us into a deep and blissful sleep.
Saturday, 17 September 2016
Weather Report
I like wet days. No one can see my
tears. The darkness of a stormy sky comforts me beyond words. I welcome it with
open arms and wrap it around myself like a blanket. Sunny days are the worst. On
sunny days, all I can do is look out of the window and watch the kids playing
in the park below, like worry dolls in the distance. Their mothers watch over
them the way I used to with Wee Frankie. Life seemed easier in those days. The
other mums envied me because I had Frank. Everyone loved Frank.
When I first met
Frank he had a kind of glow about him, a charm that no one could resist, and I
fell for his crooked smile hook, line and sinker. But looking back I suppose I
should have seen the signs. I thought it was sweet that he wanted me to stop
seeing my friends after we were married. It proved he cared about me. I had a
husband, and that was all that mattered.
At first,
everything was blissful, just me and Frank in our own little bubble. But then
he started demanding that his dinner was ready the minute he came in from work.
I could understand that – he’d been hard at work all day and he was hungry. But
then he would wolf it down without saying a word. I would try to make
conversation, but I may as well have been invisible. Then when he was finished he’d
go upstairs to wash and change, then go straight back out to the pub.
Later, he’d come
home stinking of smoke and beer. When he stumbled into the bedroom I pretended
to be asleep, but he didn’t care if he disturbed me. He’d put the light on and make
a racket pulling off his boots, letting them fall to the floor with a thud.
Then I would hear him take off his leather belt, coil it around his hand, and place
it carefully on the bedside table next to me. It was a reminder of his power
over me.
When Wee Frankie
came along, Frank’s threats stopped for a while and I kidded myself we were
happy. Frank loved playing with Wee Frankie, bouncing him on his knee, telling
him he’d be a prizefighter one day. Then one evening, Frank came home late from
work. I’d put his dinner on the table as usual but I’d been so busy with Wee
Frankie that I forgot about it and let it go cold. When he took a mouthful and
realised it was cold, he threw his knife and fork down with such a clatter that
it woke Wee Frankie up, and I’d only just got him off to sleep. Frank was
ranting and raving, saying what a useless lump of a wife I was. He said he
should never have married me, that I was a pathetic waste of space. From then
on things just got worse. I was walking on eggshells the whole time, afraid to
say the wrong thing. Sometimes he would put his hands on his belt just to
remind me who was in charge.
So I concocted a
plan. I squirreled away some money and kept it hidden in my bra. He’d never
find it there. I managed to save just enough for the bus fare out of town and a
month’s rent. Then one morning, after he’d left for work, I threw a few things
in a bag, bundled Wee Frankie up in a blanket and made my escape. My heart was
pounding as I waited at the bus stop, praying that no one would see us. At last
the bus came and as we left town I breathed a huge sigh of relief. He’d never
catch us now.
And here is
where we made our home, on the top floor of this tower block, just me and Wee
Frankie in our own little place. It felt like paradise for a while. Then the
lift started breaking down and no one bothered to repair it, or clean off the
graffiti. Then I got arthritis and couldn’t take the stairs anymore. And when Wee
Frankie left school he got in with a bad crowd. He turned out just like his
dad, always spoiling for a fight. In the end it was to be the death of him. But
I’m not alone any more. I have the darkness. And Frank’s belt coiled on the
bedside table.
Saturday, 11 June 2016
The Visitor
This
used to be a good neighbourhood. People knew each other and helped each other
out. But now I look over my shoulder every time I put my key in the door,
afraid there’s someone behind me. Where’s my purse? My hand reaches into my handbag
and checks. Still there. It’s crazy having to live like this.
I push open the door. A young couple rush past me on
their way out. They hardly notice me. They’re only concerned about themselves
and their own plans. They jump into a bashed old car which screeches as it
pulls off, leaving a smell of burning rubber.
Only two flights to go. These stairs get steeper every
time. They haven’t been cleaned in years, not since Mrs Benton died. She used
to clean them every Saturday; now nobody bothers. And it’s too much for me,
with my back the way it is.
The front door slams below. Then heavy footsteps in
the passage. People are always coming and going but I couldn’t tell you who
they are.
At last I reach the door to my apartment. I put the
small key in the Yale lock, turn it once to the right, then unlock the top and
bottom mortise locks. I’m in.
It’s funny – I think to myself, as I push the door
closed behind me – I always dreamed I would live in a pretty cottage in the
country, just like my grandmother’s, with clematis growing round the door and a
garden that stretches as far as you can see. But here I am in a dirty tenement
in a dirty city with dirty streets and a beggar on every corner. Why did it
have to happen like this?
I put down my shopping bags and throw my coat over a
chair. Through the window I can see storm clouds gathering.
Suddenly I hear footsteps on the landing and I
remember I haven’t locked the door. I quickly pull the bolt across and the
footsteps stop. I look in terror as my door handle slowly turns. I grab my
bunch of keys from the worktop and swiftly turn them in the two mortise locks:
first the top, then the bottom. The locks clunk reassuringly. I hold my breath
and pick up the phone, my heart pounding. He’s here again.
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