Saturday, October 08, 2022

Another self teflective navel gazing story by a middle-aged man

There were, George reflected, already far too many stories by middle-aged men about themselves. Lying in bed on a Saturday morning, his wife lying sleeping beside him, he felt his place in the world. The very weight of being a middle-aged man; in a world where middle-aged men wielded the most financial clout it was, of course, only natural that was reflected back culturally in too many stories about middle-aged men.

Kinaston had said so the other day, over an overly expensive coffee at the end of Southport Pier. His words disappearing into the blank, milky sky. The Arts like to pretend they don't follow the money, he said, but at the end of the day everyone's got bills to pay.

Kinaston worked in Life Insurance. He'd wanted to be a poet, once. Now he confined himself to sweeping statements.

His wife's breath was even, she was sleeping well and George was relieved. She'd been unwell of late. He could get back to his navel gazing free from concern or requests for Lemsip. Yes, he thought, there were too many stories about middle-aged men. There were two in this one already, and the only woman hadn't even been granted the distinction of a name, merely a title that, he was dimly aware, was disputed in some quarters as implying ownership. George was aware of the idea that Patriarchy was a bad idea, but he wasn't sure of the whys or how's.

It was hard to feel remarkable, when there were so many like you, a world of middle-aged men, a world of stories of their concerns, their frustrations, their desires, and yet he'd lived his life with the secret conviction that he was. He got up, quietly, not wishing to disturb her sleep. Looking at himself in the mirror there was nothing to suggest difference, hair greying, running to fat, penis still functioning, thank God.

That was another of Kinaston's lines: in all the stories men write about men, it never takes long to get round to cock. 

George dressed quietly, and went downstairs. He had the sense that something momentous was about to happen, but then, he always did. Ever since he'd been a child and secretly convinced that he was marked for greatness., there had always been the idea that, any minute now, something was about to happen. He made a cup of tea while he waited, but nothing did in the time it took to drink it.

Maybe, he thought, if I went for a walk.

It was worth a try.

Sunday, April 10, 2022

Five very very short stories

i

Sometimes it's best if you just talk about it, she said, chasing the last chip round the bowl. I'm not sure it is, he replied, I think that people talk about things too much these days. The waitress brought the bill, on a small china dish. They looked at it for what felt like days.

ii

She never told the girl that the sunbeds had been re-tubed. The girl didn't know that she'd hated her since primary school, the girl didn't even recognise her, and every week she wondered why she came out burnt.

iii

He was well aware that the staff pitied him, night after night on his own, nursing a few pints alone before heading off home. He could imagine the words they would use, lonely, loser, sad. But each night he'd have three or four, fold his coat, pay his bill, smile and leave. They'd never know that he was profoundly untroubled by what they thought, this made him unaccountably happy.

iv

He had resisted moving for years, and she wondered why they still stayed in their first home when they could now afford much better. Eventually she despaired of pursuing it. Moving house is a dangerous past-time, he thought. Every first loft has a box full of letters that are best left unread, photos that are best left unseen. 

v

The day that Prince Philip died, he remembered the day, years before, when Princess Diana had. He'd had a hangover then, too. The sombre music was soothing.


Sunday, September 19, 2021

Vegan sausage rolls

There it was again, its two small dead eyes regarding her through the bakery’s glass front. Head cocked onto a dirty grey sloped shoulder. Feet scratching at the gum on the block paving. The problem was that she knew, and the pigeon knew, that sooner or later the heat would become too much. It was backing up already on the shop floor, the ovens had been pumping it out for a solid three hours, and she could feel the sweat starting to bead, and trickle down beneath the company-issue tabard.

It wasn’t so bad in winter, it was a comfort and a friend, filling the bakery with warmth and a steamy fug. But this was June, half past eight in the morning and already the sun was pitiless. The front would have to be opened, it was only a matter of time. She knew this and she knew that the pigeon knew this. It was there every morning.

A few of them had tried it on for a bit; one which was white and brown, rather than the usual mix of greys, there was a one legged one, too, it got about surprisingly well. But gradually they’d stopped hanging around outside the bakery, she still saw the one legged one hopping round by the bins outside the chippy. Only this one remained. Every morning. Staring at her through the glass.

It was only two nights ago that Shirl had said something about reincarnation over Bacardi and cokes in the Queens’, and she was beginning to think that her sister might have been on to something. That man on the telly, she’d said, the one with the purple shirt. He said there’s only so much energy to go round in the Universe, so you have to come back. Makes sense. Makes sense. Stands to reason.

In a way, the pigeon reminded her of her Ron, two years dead and an inveterate thief of pies, pastries and anything she’d bake at home. She’d taken the job to get her out of the house and away from him, then he’d moved on and she’d stayed put because what else was there to do? Yes, there was something in what Shirl said. The pigeon stared at her, tap-tapped the sheet glass with its beak, scratch-scratched its feet and she was sure that its dead dead eyes were saying come on Carol love, you can spare a steak slice for me, can’t you? How about one of them vegan sausage rolls? I’ve heard they’re nice.

Sunday, September 05, 2021

A series of poor decisions

 

The one leads to the other. It only takes one Poor Decision and a crack appears in the edifice you’ve built for yourself that day. You’ve got up, done your exercise, a Good Decision. The morning is so full of promise.

You’ll crack it today, and if you can crack it today, then there’s a good chance you’ll crack it tomorrow, and if you do that, well, the rest of your life just sorts itself out doesn’t it? Because Good Decisions lead to Good Outcomes.

Golden Futures.

You’ve done your exercise, and you’ve done your improving tasks for the day. You’ve done a little bit of learning a new language, let’s say German, for argument’s sake.  Der Mann, Die Frau, Das Brot. You’ve made time for yourself, like the app says you should, you are clear headed and ready to begin your day.

You can never tell at which point you’ll make a Poor Decision. The one which will ruin everything.  So you guard against it at all times. Think things through. Ask yourself. Is this lunch I’m making a Good Decision? Yes, it is, going out for lunch would be a Bad decision, because if you go out for lunch, then, well, you’re out, aren’t you? And if you’re out you might as well have a glass of wine, and if you do that, well, you’ve had one, the day’s already gone, you’ve done it now, so you might as well have another.

So you have a healthy lunch, and you’re doing pretty well. The middle aged spread’s been piling on in recent years and yes, you might be two stone heavier than you were at thirty, but you’re two pounds lighter than you were last week, and that’s a step in the right direction, right? Maybe that exercise this morning wasn’t as long as it needed to be, but you’re a busy person. You’ve got lots of Good Decisions to make.

The afternoon and evening are busy, but they always are. You can coast through them, there aren’t any opportunities to screw up. This is why you love to work. There are no decisions to make. You simply plough through, happy and secure in the knowledge that a good day’s work is an essential paving slab on the path to the bright future and wonderful life that you know in your heart are just within reach.

If you keep trying your hardest.

All of your efforts have built a day. You can look back on a day full of Good Decisions, where you've done the right thing by yourself, given yourself the best chance to be the best person that you can be because that's what you have to be because that's what everybody else is. Everybody's the best version of themselves and you can be too if you keep making Good Decisions.

And if at the end of that hard day’s work you are tired, and it’s just the one, why, you’ve earned it, and just like that, you’re gone. But once you’ve had one, you might as well have another. And once you’ve had a couple, you’re hungry.

Because it always has to be good decisions. Because after just one poor one, that’s it.

Friday, August 20, 2021

Kiosk wisdom

Sometimes, you just have to start, and see where it leads you.

I was vouchsafed this piece of advice many years ago while working in a kiosk near Southport Pier. We sold vast clouds of candyfloss, beach balls, ice cream in virulent colours and novelty sticks of rock in the shape of male genitalia. 

It's a noble profession, and I will not hear a word against it, but it wasn't quite how I'd imagined things panning out. I was just past thirty at this point, and my long term girlfriend, understandably exasperated, had just left me for a vacuum cleaner salesman from Hereford.

My problem was that I'd always imagined that something would, at some point, turn up. For most of my existence it had, and I saw no reason that this state of affairs should not continue. At times of crisis, something had always turned up, be it a mystery inheritance, a savings account I'd forgotten about from back when my family had money or, on one memorable occasion, a piece of poorly laid municipal ornamental paving which afforded me ten grand in compo.

However, I was on something of a barren run, strokes of fortune wise, and was just about keeping my head above water flogging novelty cocks to hen parties. Not really what you want to stick on Instagram.

It was at this ebb, if not low, then certainly headed that way, that Dafydd came briefly into my life. I recognised him, of course, he was something of a legendary figure on the seafront; in amongst a welter of tat he ran possibly the only high quality kiosk on the front. No sugary bellends for Dafydd, his ice cream was the finest, from a single herd in Clayton le Dale, his postcards were allusive and abstract, and murmured tastefully of delights which were implied only. He even had classy sticks of rock in the shape of the Atkinson Gallery.

I don't know why he had cause to stop by my kiosk that blustery April afternoon, as clouds scudded in, and the wind whipped up with the implicit promise of a little late snow, possibly there was something tortured in my expression, maybe he wished to examine the improbable dimensions of some of our confectionery dildoes, it's impossible to say, for the man was inscrutable.

He had an ageless face which could have been anywhere between forty and seventy, a strong, aquiline nose and a mane of salt and pepper hair which made him resemble no one so much as underachieving Tottenham Hotspur midfielder of the late nineties, David Ginola. And as he perused our knick-knacks, whatnots and odds and sods he asked me a number of searching questions in a soft Welsh lilt, about the sort of person I thought I was, the sort of person I actually was, and the sort of person I wanted to be.

Eventually he left, and I felt as if my soul had been ablated. Torn down to the quick by rocks tumbling in a torrent. He purchased a bubblegum flavour cone, declaring it it "whimsical" and, just as he was out of the door he turned and said the words I've just said to you.

And you know what, it was something of a turning point for me. I still work at the kiosk, three years on, but a while ago I asked for, and received, an extra 50p an hour. So I'm something of a go-getter these days. I expect something will turn up any day now.

Saturday, March 27, 2021

Late spring.

 I'm late on starting the seeds off, this year.

It's not been the easiest winter, all things considered. I remember getting teased for saying that: all things considered. 

What, she said, you've considered all of the things? Like, every eventuality? So, you've considered everything from the unfurling of a leaf to the heat death of the universe before you answered? You've quite the mind.

I discovered later it was a joke from a comedy routine. When she said it though, it wasn't funny as such, more, thoughtful, disbelieving, as if maybe I actually had.

Anyway, as I say, it's not been the easiest winter, and the upshot is that I'm late starting the seeds off. Normally by now I'd have the first load in the cold frame, straining to break out, with their replacements starting to push up through the compost in their little pots on the windowsill in the spare room.

But I'm just sowing the first ones, now. I'm a few weeks behind, what with one thing and another.

What with one thing and another. What thing? These things we say. these odd little placeholders of language.

You plant courgette seeds on their edge, two to a pot. When they appear, you give it a little while before you pinch the weaker one out, and the stronger can grow on. They're easy, courgettes, but I still grow them, there's something reassuring about a plant that looks after itself. One that you don't have to keep too much of an eye on. It frees up time to keep an eye on the more delicate plants, the ones that need a bit more care and attention.

It's important to find the time to look after them properly. Otherwise, don't bother.

Like, some plants needs a good bit of stuff in the soil. Blood and bone. Others need as little as possible. It's taken me ten years to get the meadow I planted for Miriam right, cutting twice a year. You should see it now.

I went into the winter in decent shape, everything nice and neat, good and ready. It had been a decent year, a bit too hot maybe, but all in all I was pleased with how things had gone. A good harvest. Not going to pay the bills, but it gave me bragging rights at the Fleece.

I'm used to bad winters. used to having to wrap the fruit trees in fleece, used to running repairs on the outbuildings. But this one was something else. You needed to be everywhere at once. Eyes in the back of your head, as they say.

Pretty grim if you think about it Dad.

I speak and think in truisms and commonplace phrases, it's how I was raised. No one's ever accused me of being the cleverest. I learned them at my mother's knee, so to speak. I always liked being told how stupid I was being.

Eyes in the back of your head, and an extra pair of arms. Pipes burst, the fuel tank sprang a leak, and every day there was something else to fix, something else to repair, some other damage to limit. Since Miriam died it's been a full-time job looking after the house and the girls. Most of the time I do a good job. Sometimes I take my eye off the ball.

When was the last time you played football? Ah clever miss, I said, it comes from cricket, watching the ball to see it move. When was the last time you played cricket, then?

An answer for everything.

Everything?

No, as it turns out.

Not everything.

Small mistakes. Little disasters. A moment's inattention.

I was in the greenhouse when it happened, Jessie came running out of the house and her eyes were so wide. I will never forget the look on her face. Never Jessie is the one that knows about planting, the one who helps me with repairs, knows where things are kept. Capable, is the word they use, isn't it?

Annie was the one that liked to tease me. Too clever by half, her mother's brains. But it was like she had one layer of skin less than the rest of us. Always took things hard. And, as I say, it was hard winter, what with one thing and another. I think his name was Toby. I've never met a Toby I liked. Posh bastard's name

After Jessie found her, I went and found him. I'm not saying it's right.

So I'm late on the seeds this year. But they'll grow, right enough. I'll see to that. Some plants just need enough in the soil, blood and bone. They'll grow just fine.



Sunday, March 21, 2021

I’m fine, thanks

 

It’s a rank north-westerly and the sea’s whipped into choppy peaks. A striated sky, layers of slate-grey clouds rendering the sunlight between them all the brighter. Ian is closing up for the afternoon. There have been a handful of customers all afternoon, not enough to make it worthwhile opening but enough to keep him busy.

The last few are just finishing up. There’s a bust-up looking sort of a bloke slumped in the corner, a pair of women chatting at the table furthest from the door and a young woman on her own, who’s been staring fixedly at the street for an hour.

Ian’s been keeping an eye on her (without making it obvious) because, well, it’s what you do these days, isn’t it? You hear stories. And then there was that girl who disappeared a couple of years back, the one who lived in the caravan park. And everyone agreed that it was only a matter of time before something happened up there because that’s the sort of thing people say.

He also thinks she’s worth watching because, though he can’t be sure, he thinks that the man in the corner is, too. Even though he’s been doing a crossword, every once in a while his gaze flicks up, and around the room, and over her.

She reminds him of Rachel at that age. Weight of the world on her shoulders. Her Mum’s brains. You want to be thick like me, he always said. You don’t worry so much. She still phones regularly, which is good of her. He looks forward to it.

He empties the glass-washer and gives it a good spray and a scrub, busy work to keep him going until they leave and he can lock the door, pour himself a beer and cash up. Then it’ll be a brisk walk along the front, hopefully not get too wet, home in time for the Antiques Roadshow. He laughs at himself.  Rachel tells him he needs to get back out there, but it just seems so much effort. Besides, who’d look twice at him now? He sucks in his gut, and laughs at himself.

The two women have left, and he realises suddenly how much their chatter had been providing the background music. The silence is uncomfortable, the change clinks on the saucer as he picks it up.

Cath lives in France now. He’s retired already. Very nice. The last thing she said was that he should look after himself. He’d have preferred it if she said sorry. But5 Rachel says it wasn’t her fault.

Ian’s worried now. He wants the girl out of there, he wants her away and safe. He wants whoever she’s waiting for to turn up. But he knows they won’t. he’s already decided not to charge her for the coke she’s been drinking for an hour.  She can just go.

But it’s the other man shifting, he pushes his chair back with an audible scrape, folds his newspaper up and puts it into a canvas bag that’s slung round one shoulder. He walks up to the counter and smiles at Ian. He looks tired, could be anything between forty and sixty, a bit of grey in the stubble.

“What do I owe you?” Southern accent, about five ten. You need to remember these details, don’t you? Just in case. Ian rings the details on his little white orderslip into the till.

“5.75, thanks.” The man nods and fishes a card out of his pocket. Wordlessly, Ian pushes the machine over and he taps it on the screen. The card machine disgorges its receipt with a rattling sound. The man smiles at him, and leaves.

On his way out he passes the table where the girl sits, and leans over, says something Ian doesn’t catch, hands her a piece of paper. Oh Christ, is he giving him her number? Ian is just about to protest, just on the verge of asking him what he thinks he’s doing, the words are lining up in his head but the man’s gone already, out, off up the street, head angled against the wind.

The girl is reading the piece of paper, she’s reading it and she’s smiling, her face is transformed. She gets up suddenly, decisively, and walks towards Ian.

“Can I pay please?” He wonders what just happened, she’s completely different. He waves her away.

“I’ve already cashed up” he lies “it’s on the house.” She looks at him, and nods, as if she’d expected something of the sort. Another sudden, brilliant smile and she’s gone. He watches her walk off, in the opposite direction to the man. He picks the piece of paper up off the table, it says, simply, in neat, flowing handwriting.

“It’ll be OK”

And he thinks it will. He knows it will. He doesn’t know why, but it’s like stepping into a warm shower on a cold day. He feels the worry sluice off him. He’d barely known it was there. He cashes up, he’s taken a bit more than he thought.

He might go out tonight.