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Wednesday 14 October 2020

BROKEN RENDEZVOUS

 

BROKEN RENDEZVOUS

By Peter Woodgate 


How can a clock tick so loudly,

whilst displaying the numbers

to sadden my heart?

How can a storm rage so furiously,

without destroying buildings,

yet tearing my world apart?

And, how can I make that journey home,

knowing my insides will remain

within that hall,

to greet the grinding, hissing train?

 

On my way home,

I open the car window

and throw expectation

into the path of an oncoming vehicle.

I see how easily it is destroyed,

yet, the driver is unaware

of the destruction, they have caused.   

 

Copyright Peter Woodgate

 

I’ve seen the elephant


I’ve seen the elephant

By Janet Baldey                                                 

I sure didn’t mean to break that winder and I stood starin’ at the black hole that had taken its place, my bat droppin’ from my hands.  Daddy would be so mad.  I looked around for a place to hide but I was too late.  I heard a roar and then next minute I was laying in the dirt like a stricken snake, my body whippin’ from side to side trying to dodge the heavy leather belt with its wicked buckle.

‘Daddy, daddy!  Stop you’ll kill him!’ I saw a flash of blue dress as my sister flung herself at his arm.

         With a slurred curse my pa brushed her aside but doing so bought me time and in a flash, I was up and running for my life.  Half blinded by blood from a gash over one eye;  I didn’t care where I was headed. I knew only one thing, I’d never go back.   Sis was right; sooner or later my daddy would ruin me. He’d always been free with his fists, especially after time spent with the brandy bottle and one day I wouldn’t get up from that dirt. 

         As I ran, tears mingled with the blood streaming down my face but I forced myself on until strength left my legs and I lurched from side to side. I stopped, bent and wrapped my arms around my chest until the flames died down.  When I unfolded there was a scattering of stars and I squinted into the darkness realising I’d made it to the edge of town.  The trail leading away was littered with large, dark shapes, scores of them, looming silently under the night sky. They reminded me of elephants I’d seen in picture books.

         I let out my breath, slapping my head as I remembered; of course, they were wagons headed for California where the ground was ankle deep in gold. Their eyes alight, our neighbours had talked of nothing else for months. I stood gazing at the wagon train thinking of all those forty-niners off to make their fortunes and was filled with longing.       

         I walked down the track. There was no one about; I guessed everyone was spending one last night on soft mattresses between clean sheets. Even so, I trod cautiously and when I heard a soft cough, my heart filled my mouth. There was the hoarse sound of heavy breathing and the shadows started to move. A musky stench filled the air and my held breath released. They were only oxen, tethered in a grove of trees.  I grinned at my fright, the movement of my mouth changing instantly into a jaw-breaking yawn.  A single wagon was tantalisingly close. Slightly smaller, it was away from the main group; perhaps used only for storage. I was so weary I didn’t care:  in any case I’d be up and away at first light.

         My body swayed from side to side and there was the faint sound of creaking.   I snuffled and buried myself deeper into my bed.  I didn’t want to leave my dream; it was peaceful on the high seas and when I woke up there’d be decks to swab and canvas to stitch.  My lids snapped open as I remembered and sat up.  This was no ship – it was a wagon and it was moving. It was also hot as an oven and dripping with sweat, I crawled to the end and peered out. The sun was riding high in the sky and through a haze of dust, I saw a long line of similar wagons but no trace of the town.  

My head swivelled and I saw him for the very first time.  He was striding by the side of a couple of oxen, their reins held loosely in his hands. Maybe, he had second sight because all at once he turned and saw me staring.  His face was tanned and deeply seamed, but his eyes were bright and the colour of summer. He showed no emotion, simply looped the reins over the oxen and walked towards me.  

         ‘Here,’ he handed me a water bottle. ‘You best be out and walkin. It gits a trifle warm inside.’

 

         I stopped and took a mouthful of beer; the memory re-kindling my thirst.  Going over to the camp fire, I kicked a smouldering log into life.  As orange sparks spat into the night, my grandson touched my arm.  I smiled at him and carried on.

        

         ‘Back then, his hair was as black as an eagle’s wing but by the time the journey had finished it was streaked with white.  He never spoke much but later I realised he’d known I was there. Not at first, but when I started screamin’ in my sleep and by then, the wagon train was well on its way.

         ‘Your daddy slapped you around some, didn’t he boy?’  He once said to me. 

         I suppose that was why he never made a fuss about me tagging along; together with the loneliness.  He’d had a wife and son once but the cholera had taken them both.’

 

My grandson fidgeted, he wanted more action.   So I told him about our trials along the way; the endless plains with their seas of shifting grasses and the monotony that turned every day into a year.  I told him about the shining deserts whose fiery winds dried your throat making you crave the very water denied to you and the jagged mountains with pitiless granite faces soaring into the sky.  There were things I didn’t mention, things that I prefer to forget.  The crazed screams of men as they whipped their oxen into the ground, deaf to their panicked bellows as they scrabbled through  gullies filled with snow: the starved faces of the children and the lonely graves marking our passage.

 

We were half dead when we arrived at Sutter’s Mill and never saw any gold, but that hardly mattered. Somewhere along that journey, I found what I had been looking for all my life - a father.  Not of my blood and not for very long. The hardships we’d endured had weakened him and he died a couple of years later.  But he didn’t die alone and ever since I’ve kept him alive in my mind.  He taught me something I never learned from my own kin.   Riches are nothing, it’s love that counts.’

 

Copyright Janet Baldry

 

Tuesday 13 October 2020

Two sides of a penny

 

Two sides of a penny

 

By Robert Kingston


I spent a penny today, in a very special way
I dropped it in a bucket, and wished it a good day
I watched as the bucket, wandered along the street
I visualised the faces of the needy ones, with whom it would eventually meet

I spent a penny today, in a very special way
It was given to a stranger, who seldom had a say
I gave thought to how they became a beggar, in a country of such wealth
instantly realising it was created, by governmental stealth

I spent a penny today, in a not so special a way
I gave it to a corporation, whom with this government have so much sway
It put my penny in its till, and took it clean away
It's worth no longer relevant, it's hidden where taxes have no say

I spent a penny today in a not so special way
I gave it to a government who said the people had to pay
inventing many reasons for more and more taxes to be paid
In this country of the free, where money is given to the rich, 
instead of distribution in a much fairer way

 

Copyright Robert Kingston 30.1.16

 

PRIVATE ENTERPRISE

 

PRIVATE ENTERPRISE                                                  

by Richard Banks

Dibbs sits down on his hind legs on the pavement next to Benny and peers eagerly at the steady flow of people coming from the direction of the station. This he senses will be a good day. After a long winter and an insipid Spring, the first warm day of the year has finally arrived.

         The punters are in a good mood, glad to be out, to feel the sunshine on their arms and faces, and although not quite Summer bare shoulders and legs are also to be seen. In the winter they scurry from stall to stall buying what they need before returning to the warm comfort of their homes. Today they are at their ease, unhurried, ready to browse and be generous. The main beneficiaries of their largess will be the market traders there gathered, but those whose only utility is in triggering the altruism of others are also hopeful of turning a profit. In this respect, they have a rival in an elderly lady rattling a tin for the Red Cross. Benny mutters aggressively at her and Dibbs joins in, baring his teeth and barking like he’s about to go for her throat. After holding her ground for a few seconds and finding no one coming to her aid she withdraws several shop fronts to Marks & Sparks.

         Benny isn’t the first con man Diggs has worked with and he’s far from the best but having smeared his face with cement he looks ready for the graveyard. Who can resist him, especially when the nutrition of his doggie friend seems more important to him than his own well-being? To illustrate the point Harry who works in the burger bar at the back of where they sit will come out with a bog-standard burger and give it to Benny who despite his unhealthy appearance insists on feeding most of it to Diggs. In return, the dog makes huge, soulful eyes at Benny full of pathos and unconditional love which Benny in his uninspired way tries to reciprocate. Time this right when people are looking their way the result is likely to be a deluge of coins and the odd fiver or two. Happy days!

         At half-past eleven they give it a go. Cindy buys the burger and on slipping Harry a few quid  he makes a big show of bringing it out and handing it to Benny who pretends to be pathetically grateful.

         “Don’t you worry, mate,” bellows Harry in a voice that can be heard on the other side of the square? “I’m not going to walk by and let you starve. Ex-army are you?”

         Benny nods his head in acknowledgement of his never-was past.

         “Thought so, can always tell. One day a hero and the next you’re on the scrap heap. What sort of people are we that don’t look after our own.” He strides back to the burger bar shaking his head at the shortcomings of his fellow countrymen. He’s really rather good, and few can resist this sudden and unexpected assault on their conscience. Coins are flying from every direction and if Benny and Dibbs don’t keep their eyes tight shut they’re likely to be going legit next week for the white stick brigade. 

         Cindy passes by and smirks. She provides the wheels that gets them to the big events. She’s also the brains of their little enterprise and sets-up the stunts that draw attention to them. Right now she’s off to buy a new dress, she’s off clubbing tonight. At half one she’s back and we do the whole burger thing again. This isn’t just a good day, it’s the best ever. Everyone’s happy except some clod on the far side of the square who passes out, and falls face down on the pavement. Cindy goes over to take a look. An ambulance comes and goes. She returns, via several stalls, and Benny asks her what’s up?

         “Nothing much,” she says, “just that Bosnian woman selling the Big Issue. As thin as a rake, gawd knows when she last had a square meal. It’s her own fault, of course, doesn’t know how to work a crowd, no props, no patter, nothing, not even a mangy dog. No idea at all. Bloody immigrant!”


Copyright Richard Banks

 This is the first response to the challenge I set for the membership.  I was hoping to be surprised and I'm not disappointed.  I now look forward to others taking up the challenge made in:

https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/7173593092252107201/4329758893807458138

        

Monday 12 October 2020

All Hallows


 All Hallows


By Jane Scoggins

A chilly autumn night at the end of October and Laura snuggled under the duvet on the sofa in her sister and brother-in-laws sitting room. It was kind of them to put her up at short notice after arriving back from Spain.

  Annie had laughed and said ‘No problem, that’s what big sisters are for’.

Laura had enjoyed a brilliant time working in a bar near Marbella, and had made so many friends. She had gone out to Spain against her parent’s wishes as a sort of late gap year before she settled down to a sensible job, and also to get over her two year relationship with Max.

  ‘I’ll show him that I can get on with my life without him’ she had thought to herself. She was totally over Max. All she needed now was to find a job, preferably in London, and life would be sweet. Her sister Annie lived in London and Laura was really pleased she had agreed she could stay whilst she was job hunting.

  It was very quiet here in this little old fashioned back street in Southwark, Quite a contrast to what she had been used to for the last months where the bars and clubs came alive with young holiday makers partying in the warm balmy evenings until the sun came up the next morning.

  Laura peered over the duvet and absorbed the silent night air around her. Her sister was married to a London curate and this small upstairs flat was their home. Annie had made it as homely as she could but the old Victorian vicarage was a bit run down and for many years now had been two flats, with the vicar upstairs and the verger at Southwark Cathedral downstairs. All Hallows Vicarage stood large and imposing on the corner of Copperfield St, and no doubt had much historical value and many true life connections with Charles Dickens who lived about these parts as a youngster. In fact, his father was sent to the debtor's prison on the Marshalsea Road a few streets away. Dickens had written his story Little Doritt about his friend Amy Dorrit whose father had also spent time in the Marshalsea due to debt.  Such harsh times. However interesting all that may be to historians it was no compensation on a cold night to a modern young woman when there were drafts seeping in from the ill fitting sash windows.

  During the night Laura drifted back into semi-consciousness from sleep and lay momentarily getting her bearings. She thought she heard a noise and strained her ears to recognise the sound and where it came from. The noise came from below, at the bottom of the stairs to the flat. She knew that her sister and brother in law were in bed and that the verger was away so who could it be? Laura strained her ears. She hears shuffling and then a distinct footstep on the stairs, another step on the creaky stair they all knew well and then silence. Laura felt anxious, The street door was always locked from the inside at night time when everyone was in and Laura remembered locking it herself earlier by sliding the big iron bolts across the top and bottom of the door.  More slow halting steps on the stairs and Laura knew by the proximity that it would not be long before whoever it was reached the top of the stairs and the door to the flat with its partially glass partitioned door. It also had a key and bolt on the inside but had anyone of them remembered to lock it that night. Laura could not remember doing so. Her sister and brother in law were so trusting that they may not have locked it once they knew that Laura had bolted the main door downstairs. Laura felt afraid as she heard another slow shuffling step on the stairs. She got off the sofa and in the pitch dark felt her way around the back of the sofa and lay down out of sight. Trembling from fear and cold and hardly breathing, she lay without movement and strained her ears to listen. Another footstep much closer and then a second’s silence before she heard the brass handle on the door of the flat being turned very slowly. Laura felt a wave of increased anxiety exacerbated by the dark Dickensian surroundings which gave her to imagine Nancy’s fear from the approach of Bill Sykes. The first time the door handle was turned was quiet and cautious,  but when the door did not yield a second more forceful turn of the knob was tried.  Again the door did not yield. Laura felt real terror as she imagined a burglar having made such an effort to come up the stairs so quietly, resorting to breaking the glass and putting his hand inside to turn the key. Seconds passed and then the footsteps could be heard slowly retreating down the stairs in the slow shuffling cautious way that they had ascended. Not a sound from a human voice or breathing was heard in all the time Laura had been listening so she could not guess who the shuffling feet might belong to. And then the clicks of the outside door opening and then closing could be heard before silence once more. Laura let a couple of seconds elapse before she felt able to move and then leapt from her crouching position and ran to the window and peeped out of the curtains. The street was completely empty. Still afraid but galvanised into action Laura ran through to her brother in law and woke him to tell him of the terrible fright she had had. Leaping out of bed and grabbing his dressing gown and stout walking stick from the umbrella stand he ran down the stairs to find the door bolted and no one in sight. When he came back upstairs Laura was weeping in shock in Annie’s arms.

The mystery was never solved but Laura remains certain to this day that this was not a dream, and whoever, or whatever it was that dark night was up to no good at All Hallows, and they had had a lucky escape from something unknown.

 

Copyright Jane Scoggins

 

Escape



Escape

 

By Dawn Van Win

 

A bird in

a cage

 

A door

ajar

 

A feather

dropped

 

Too late

 

 

 



Sunday 11 October 2020

EMMA

EMMA

By Peter Woodgate 

I must have been about fifteen

When I first took an interest in girls

There was one, in particular, Emma her name

Beautiful eyes and soft black curls.

Well, of course, I still played football

And cricket and other such sports

But my game went to pot and I thought I’d been shot

When I spied Emma in the shortest of shorts.

I pretended that I hadn’t noticed,

Play it cool was my uppermost thought,

But I gave it away and to my dismay

My trousers were bulging and taught.

I’d been warned by my brother about pretty girls

And the dangers of fancying them,

I guess that is why he made my dad cry

When he started to go out with men.

But this sight was just heaven to me

Tight shorts and a glimpse of her bra

So later that day, behind the school sheds

We snogged but didn’t go far.

Well of course, as you do, I just bragged

Told the boys that we’d gone all the way,

When Emma found out, I heard her shout

“You pig now your gonna pay.

After school on the following day

Emma came up and kicked me, what pain,

The look on my face as her boot caught “that place”

And I never saw Emma again.

 

Copyright Peter Woodgate