Followers

Wednesday, 11 November 2020

PRETTY COLOURS

 

PRETTY COLOURS

by Rosemary Clarke


Pretty colours we must see
For us to be Covid free
It's not about a huge disease
But how at home and how at ease
We all become with each other
Parent, friend, sister, brother
We must treat each stranger so
If we are to let it go.
Care for EVERYTHING around
ALL LIVING in the sky and ground
Care for one and care for all
Then we'll see the R rate fall
Open the shutters text and phone
Let not one creature be alone.
Make room for all upon this earth
SHOW COVID WHAT WE'RE REALLY WORTH!

Copyright  Rosemary Clarke

 

REUNITED

 

 REUNITED

 by Richard Banks


To John Phillips  <philwell@its.com>

From Trevor Fellows  <Trevfell@global.co.uk>

      Dear John - saw your name on the School pals Reunited site last night. What a surprise!!! Where have you been hiding since we left Hepton High? A few of the guys thought you had moved to Leicester but no-one knew for sure. Your site entry says you’re now working in London; did you move there after Leicester or is Leicester a figment of someone’s imagination?

      I’m still in Hepton, worse luck! The old town doesn’t get any better I can tell you, but at least I now have a half-decent job with PKS Finance. Not before time, I might add. After a string of dead-end jobs, I was going nowhere fast. Finally realised that three GCSEs were never going to get me an executive position, so when PKS started recruiting here I ‘updated’ my CV by adding in two A levels and a fake reference I concocted on the computer. Put on the old charm at the interview and sailed through. Makes you realise what an unnecessary exertion our school days were.

      Still, there were some good laughs. Remember that statue of the school founder, over the entrance, which you dressed up in that kid’s uniform? How you ever climbed up there and down without breaking your neck I’ll never know. Old Frosty, our ‘esteemed’ headmaster, nearly went ballistic next morning at assembly. I’m sure he knew it was us, but he couldn’t prove it, of course. I don’t suppose he would have been too chuffed had he known about the fags and beer we consumed behind the sports pavilion at lunchtimes. What a struggle it was to stay awake in the afternoons.

      Have any of the old guard been in touch? Be great to know how Ricky and Spike are getting on. Email soon and bring me up to date.

 

      Cheers Trev

 

To Trevor Fellows   <Trevfell@global.co.uk>

From John Phillips   <philwell@its.com>     

      I refer to your email received yesterday.

      My recollections are somewhat different from your own. Unsurprising really as I am not the John Phillips you remember. I am the other John Phillips, but then you probably never knew my name. I was one of the boys in the lower school from whom you and your gang regularly extorted money. No wonder you always had plenty of ready cash to spend on cigarettes and beer. At least when you were boozing behind the sports pavilion you weren’t bothering us. Most of us kept our heads down and came through more or less unscathed, others were less fortunate. Remember Roger Jones whose cap and blazer were used to bedeck the founder’s statue? - a schoolboy prank which might have been amusing had it not been for the damage to the school roof. Poor Roger was expelled for that escapade, implicated by the label in his cap which bore his name. None of the other schools nearby would take him - well no-one wants a trouble maker, do they? - and the family ended up moving away to Newheath. Even less fortunate was Andrew Tully. He was another one of your victims. Porky, I think you called him. Andrew never completed his school days, he overdosed on his mother’s sleeping tablets. No doubt you read about it at the time in the local paper. No doubt it never entered your head that you were to blame. Even if you had made the connection, would you have cared?

      I think it goes without saying that I know nothing about the whereabouts of Ricky, Spike and the others. One of the advantages of living and working in London is that I am never likely to meet them again.

      Curiously, our school days are not the only thing we have in common. Like you, I am an employee of PKS. For several months now, I have been working at head office as Assistant Director of Personnel. The setting-up of our Hepton office, a year ago, was handled by my predecessor - obviously not very well. Clearly, there are issues concerning your employment with the company which fall within the disciplinary section of the Staff Manual. In particular, I would draw your attention to para 32(b) of Section 2 which states that ‘any contract or offer of employment will be considered null and void if entered into on the basis of an application for employment found to contain untrue or misleading information’.

      In the circumstances, you may wish to avoid embarrassment by resigning your position within PKS before your, otherwise, inevitable dismissal.

 

Cheers John.

 

Copyright Richard Banks

 

Tuesday, 10 November 2020

THE SOLDIER


 

THE SOLDIER

Peter Woodgate 

Crouched in that small corner of Hell,

Amid the smoke the noise and smell,

And wondering if the next day would arrive.

I thought again of friends now gone,

And those to who death had yet to come,

Not knowing if in fact I was alive.

My head was full of thunder

And in my eyes the light

Of a thousand flashes glowed,

The soil beneath my feet boiled dry

Scorching earth, surrounding trees

Charred and bowed.

Time not to ponder then,

In that far and foreign glen

Thinking, can I ever show my face again,

For during combat long and fierce,

Many a man’s heart by bullets pierce

Yet, it is not my enemy I have slain.

 

         Copyright Peter Woodgate  First Published 1984

 

Abbalar Tales ~ 3

 

Abbalar Tales ~ 3 Corvalen

By Len Morgan

As he climbed the ancient vine, to her casement, adrenaline coursed through his veins, feeding and intensifying his excitement and expectation.    He entered her apartments soundlessly.   Only one small patchouli-scented lamp was lit leaving the rooms in deep shadow.   He moved silently to her bedside.  

“Eldoriel” he called softly, he did not add flowery epithets, or words of endearment, as a precursor to foreplay, as other men might, he knew they were unnecessary.

Carefully he drew back the curtains, leaning over to kiss her lightly on the left cheek.   She felt cold to the touch, she did not respond.   Cupping her face gently between his hands, Ahlendor carefully turned her head to face him; it came away in his hands.

"Aaagh!"   He cried out involuntarily with shock and horror, dropping the thing onto the bed.   His eyes, now accustomed to the gloom, stared fixedly at her severed head; momentarily his mind and limbs froze as he shook uncontrollably.   Then suddenly, the room was alive with people all shouting and yelling at the same time.   Hands grabbed for him.   He tore free, as if in a dream, and headed towards the window.   His way was barred by two hefty but cumbersome eunuchs, the merchant’s personal bodyguard; he dodged past them easily reaching the open casement in an instant.   But almost toppled out, onto the pavement far below, as a large wine flagon shattered against his skull.   Lights flashed before his eyes, and he staggered.   Through the fog in his mind, he retained sufficient presence to grasp the top of the vine and dive through the opening, half climbing, half sliding, twenty feet to the ground.   His landing was mistimed knocking the wind out of him.   He sat in the courtyard dazed, for precious seconds, then without warning another heavy pot dropped from above, smashing loudly close by, bringing him to his senses.    He struggled to his knees but, as he attempted to rise, a third missile struck him rendering him unconscious.

"Wake up!"   Somebody yelled harshly in his ear, slapping his face, shaking him roughly and dousing him with cold water.

He groaned and shook his aching head realising in that instant, his hands were bound behind him.  Opening his eyes he found them watering and puffy, little more than slits.   He tasted blood in his mouth and felt sick to his stomach.   He'd been systematically beaten and every inch of his body was wracked with pain.   As his eyes focused, he recognised Grym-Baal, gesticulating angrily, his voice droning on and on, in a thick scarcely intelligible Huren accent, as if from a great distance.

"Even your lawless heaven forsook nobility must now recognise this flagrant affront to my dignity and accede to my right of redress…” he yelled triumphantly.

"They will consider I have bestowed honour, on the house of Baal, by planting royal Corvalen seed in the belly of your Bellornian concubine!   They may even demand a stud fee!" he added with arrogance.  

"She is dead!   You still have her blood on your hands and clothing, you killed her.   There is no way you can wriggle out of it.   I have rights!"

"I most certainly did not kill her!    She had already been despatched by another before I even entered her chamber.   Though after consideration, and under the circumstances, I am sure they will waive the stud fee…" he said bluffing in an offhand manner, as he again attempted to rise gingerly to his feet.

Grym-Baal launched a ferocious attack, with murder in his eyes, beating Ahlendore to the floor and continuing to kick and beat him where he lay."

"I could seek satisfaction, and kill you in hand to hand combat, but there is always the chance you might triumph and thwart me, I will not risk that!   You caused her infidelity, you brought about her death, and now you are going to pay!"

"Very well," said Ahlendore in a conciliatory manner, "She was from Bellorne and delightfully experienced, which will of course increase her value considerably" he said, still attempting to carry the bluff, "How much do you consider she was worth?"

"Far more than your wastrel life!" he replied his voice ice cold and bitter with anger, “a damned good deal more.”

"But, I did not kill her, I was simply the unlucky cove caught with his finger in the honey pot, so to speak, it could have been anyone.   My family will not permit…"

"Your family?  Your brother, Fazeil himself, informed me of your involvement with my wife and bade me take you with his blessing.   He paid a tidy sum in gold to ensure you are despatched prior to your father’s demise, and before the Kull begins.   Being an honourable man, of course, he could not do so himself but, it has been agreed, I should deal with you as I see fit."

"I do not believe that…" Ahlendore replied.

"Gag him and put him in the wagon," another voice commanded; a course gravely voice.

He kicked and thrashed about "Murder!!!"   He yelled with all the force of his lungs.

He received curses, punctuated with blows, in return for his trouble and landed with bone-jarring force in the back of a wagon.

"You will receive Huren justice boy.   You will wish I had run you through with a rapier, but I am determined your death will be slow and lingering, allowing you time to reflect long and well on your misdeeds.   You will be staked out in the sun, to be eaten alive by ants, scavenger crabs, and birds.   This is the preferred fate for lecherous adulterers who misappropriate the affections of virtuous, married women in the more civilised Huren states."   He salivated, licking his lips with anticipation.   "I seriously considered castration but there is always a risk of the victim dying under the knife, thus cheating the injured party of his vengeance, which in this case has been painstakingly and meticulously planned.   But, who knows, you may get lucky and still find yourself on the wheel of life in time to welcome your father when he passes over…"    His manic laughter rang in Ahlendore's ears, as he removed the gag, "I will allow you to beg for your life now if you've a mind," he sneered.

"Help murder, murder!" he yelled...

He was silenced quickly and efficiently with the now all too familiar tirade of blows.   When next he awoke, they were already out in the western desert, where days are hotter than a kiln hearth and nights as frozen as the far northern reaches.   He found he was still securely bound, frozen to the boards and unable to name a single part of his anatomy that was free from pain.   Every jolt of the wagon brought further misery adding bruises to existing bruises.   He bore it stoically in silence, concentrating his energies on attempting to escape.   He tensed his arms, legs, chest, and any other part of his body that might aid him in loosening the bonds.   He groaned involuntarily realizing it was a fruitless effort and a waste of energy.  

‘What if he didn't get out of this?   He had not yet faced the possibility he might not survive,’ that first niggling thought started to germinate and doubt grew, like a cancer, in his mind.  Another day passed, when he remained trussed and without sustenance, his resolve began to crumble.   Mayhap I will not become Caliph, after all, he thought with genuine regret.   He had plenty of time to think on such matters, as the wagon trundled inexorably onwards.   For a seemingly intelligent man, he’d been incredibly stupid.   Grym was right; he'd acted badly, and openly, without considering the consequences for either himself or for others.   With that realisation came remorse and regret, he'd been a fool, blinded by his own lust and selfish desires!

He knew exactly where he was.   For the last three days, he'd eaten nothing but fine white powdered sand which to his certain knowledge came from one place only, the western desert.

"This will do," he heard Skaa call out, in his now-familiar course abrasive voice.  

Moments later he was thrown unceremoniously from the wagon. 

"Stake him out!"  

Four three-foot stakes were driven into the ground leaving one-third proud of the close-packed powdery sand.

"Its nothing personal," Skaa said conversationally, grinning from ear to ear and speaking just inches from his face, he could smell stale ale and tobacc on the older man's breath.    "I actually quite like you boy, we are kindred spirits, it's just a job you understand?"   He paused to light his pipe.  "Heh Heh!   Stud fee…   That was an inspired touch.   You had him foaming at the mouth he damned nearly killed you with his bare hands then and there…   You could have cost me a fortune if I hadn't acted swiftly and pulled him off."

As he listened, he was conscious that others were tying thick strips of wet leather to his ankles and wrists.   Stretching and securing them firmly to the stakes.  

Skaa patted his cheek, "Best of luck boy.”  He came closer and whispered intimately, "She was good though wasn't she?" he was grinning all the while.   "That should do it," he told his men, as he rose and headed towards his mount.

"You killed her?" Ahlendore said accusingly his voice and eyes betraying his surprise.  

Skaa stopped halfway, turned and leered, "I don't think you’re in a position to do anything about it, do you?   He laughed coldly; do you have any last requests?   Any message for the living?  Some last words of contrition you would like me to pass on to Grym-Baal?"

"Yes!   Tell him in future I will stick to whores.   They are more discriminating in their choice of partners, they are cleaner, and offer less risk of the pox!" 

The man laughed again then, on reaching his horse, he turned reflectively and retraced his steps. "There’s something I forgot, to do," he said, proceeding to urinate in the unfortunate boys face.   He took a step back gesturing encouraging his men to do likewise.    He just stood and watched, grinning.   When Ahlendore thought his humiliation was complete, one of them handed the grizzled veteran a large salt glazed jug.   Removing the cork with his brown tobacc stained teeth he proceeded to pour thick black molasses over the boy’s head, face, arms, legs, and feet, covering every exposed skin surface.  

Ahlendore swallowed as much as he could, licking his lips and face hungrily.

Skaa backed away from him, leaving a thin black trail on the white sand.

"The ants will soon be coming to woo you; they will take you to their nest for a grand feast, piece by piece!   Hahaha!"  He laughed again and the others joined in.   Moments later, without further talk, they mounted and rode off in the direction they had come.

He shuddered inwardly ants, I hate ants, so uncompromising and so bloody efficient.   In his imagination, feeling the vibrations of horses’ hooves long after the sounds had died away, alone, feeling the pangs of hunger and thirst more acutely than ever before.  He shook his head from side to side to encourage the few remaining droplets of molasses to flow in the right direction, towards his mouth. Managing by trial and error to gain a little additional sustenance, and also a measure of protection from the sun, thanks to the coagulating surface layer.   Gradually, the leather straps began to tighten around his wrists and ankles, as the moisture leeched out into the dry atmosphere.   He was losing the feeling in his limbs.  His response was to flex, tense and pull against his bonds.   He succeeded in stretching them, just a little; taking heart from this he redoubled his efforts.

 

(To be Continued)

 

Copyright Len Morgan

Monday, 9 November 2020

THE MILLER'S DAUGHTER

 

THE MILLER'S DAUGHTER

By Jane Scoggins

     Emma sat beside one of the huge millstones and ran her fingers through the pile of grainy flour that had escaped being swept up into the rough hessian sack.  She let it trail through her fingers like she had done a million times before since she was a child, whilst her father busied himself within the thick circular brick walls of Rayleigh windmill. She had grown up in the cottage next door, within sight and sound of the sixty-foot tower mill, with its huge, six-bladed fantail sails, that creaked and groaned when the wind blew. She had never been afraid of the eerie noise of the gigantic wooden sails. Her father had instilled in her and her brothers that the noise was good and what kept them and the community in and around Rayleigh in flour and bread.  He loved the sound of the wind, and often looked to the sky, trying to anticipate the weather and most importantly an oncoming wind. As soon as he knew that a gust was on its way he would get into position to manoeuvre the giant, unwieldy sails. They were very heavy wooden structures and although George Britton was a big and powerful man it took all his strength to reposition them. Emma and her brothers, John and Samuel, would look on in admiration as George put his back against the huge turning bar and pushed with all his might. The boys watched, learnt and waited for the day when they would be strong enough to push that bar and turn the sails. When that day came they were ready and proud to know that they had grown from boy to man. On a warm day, the miller would take the corner of his great white calico apron and wipe the sweat of the exertion from his brow. Emma had always loved her father. He was a good man. He spoke very little whilst he was working. But at the end of the day, he would brush the flour from his hands and apron and swing the young Emma, laughing and squealing, into the air, her petticoats flying and her unbraided hair swinging. Her mother, standing at their cottage door shooing out the cat or the chicken from her kitchen, would smile and shake her head in good humour and beckon them in for their dinner.

     Emma had finished her schooling by the age of fourteen and for some time had been far too big and grown-up for her father to swing her into the air. She was apprenticed to Mrs Elizabeth Stammers, the milliner. Within two years, Emma was competent to prepare and trim the hats of the local ladies, although she was not yet allowed to touch the fine hats of the gentry. That task lay in the experienced hands of Mrs Stammers, whose expertise and skill was known as far afield as Maldon and Burnham. Emma took great pride in showing off her own developing skills, by trimming her own and her mother’s bonnets with any leftover ribbons and trimmings she was allowed to keep. Her mother, a quiet and homely woman was proud of her daughter’s skill and wore her bonnet with pride to the Holy Trinity parish church service every Sunday morning.

     In 1869, just before Emma's seventeenth birthday, life for her and her family changed dramatically and sadness overshadowed her recent engagement to James Lowe. He was developing into a skilled carpenter with good prospects.  He had a kind heart and had been devoted to Emma since her father had called upon him to mend a cracked wooden joist at the mill. The job had taken several days, and he had said a shy hullo to Emma when she came to see her father, on her way home. With her father's approval, they had started walking out together and their relationship blossomed. Their planned wedding day was to be a joyous occasion, with music, dancing, ribbon trimmed bonnets for the ladies and velvet-trimmed waistcoats for the menfolk. It would be a fine celebration. They were to live with James's widowed mother, and until a baby came along, Emma would continue with her millinery work with Mrs Stammers. Emma's parents were happy for her and thought it a good match. George was ready to welcome James into his family and Emma loved them both equally.

     In the midst of all the wedding planning George Britton died suddenly, and unexpectedly. The doctor said it had been his heart. In the weeks following his death, Emma missed him terribly. Her mother, shocked and heartbroken, had needed a lot of support herself to cope with her grief. So Emma had to grieve alone. She tried to capture in her mind the many happy times of fun and laughter she had had with her father growing up in the sight, sound, and dusty grain smell of his windmill. Following his death, George's two sons set too and took over the running of the mill. They had to put into practice earlier than expected, all that they had learned and observed from their father as a  master miller. Neither had the muscle strength that George had developed over the years, but they were determined to carry on their father's work and enable their widowed mother to remain in the mill cottage for as long as possible.

     The people of Rayleigh rallied round and the coffin and burial were mainly paid for by contributions from the local farmers at Down Hall, White House, Wheatley's and Rayleigh Lodge, who had regularly brought their grain to him. Although there were three other mills in the neighbourhood, George, a popular man, had been the miller for over twenty years and the community wanted to support his sons in taking over the mill.    

     The vicar at Holy Trinity Church, the Reverend William Twyne led the service and rallied the ladies of the parish to provide refreshments. The landlords at The White Horse Half Moon and Crown, on the High St, provided the ale. Mrs Stammers the milliner lent Mrs Britton and Emma black silk bonnets with silk trim, which helped them bear their grief with style and dignity.

     Emma married James and they lived happily. Their first child was a boy, and they named him George. From an early age, Emma took him to the windmill to visit her brothers as they worked. When he was old enough they showed him how the quern stone ground the corn, how the sails turned in the wind and how the corn turned from grain into flour. Very importantly, they taught him to take care of, and respect the enormous creaking sails, and not to be afraid of the noise. They told him about his grandfather, George, and after they had brushed the flour from their hands and aprons, they took it in turns to swing the young George, laughing and squealing with delight, up into the air. Emma would look on, smiling and shaking her head in good humour and tell him it was time to go home for dinner.

     So, if you are passing Rayleigh Windmill, Press your ear to the brickwork, and if you listen hard enough, you may well hear the sound of the millstone turning, the creaking of the sails, or the sound of a child’s laughter.

 

Copyright Jane Scoggins



 

 

 

 

 

THE DORMOUSE

 

THE DORMOUSE 

Peter Woodgate 


Throughout the cold dark winter

The ice, the sleet and snow,

Searched endlessly for old and weak

To deal death’s body blow.

And in the fields and woodlands

Small creatures met their fate,

Apart from one small mammal

Who chose to hibernate.

His tiny feet held upward,

His head upon his chest,

The dormouse dreamt, woke up in spring

To clamber from his nest.

Why was this creature spared

From winter’s terrible slaying?

Perhaps it was just Lady Luck,

Or was he really praying?

 

Copyright Peter Woodgate

Sunday, 8 November 2020

Visions from hell

Visions from hell

Robert Kingston

From Amiens upon the Somme

Across the land into the Salient

Our brave men toed the ebbing line.

 

Through wire and mines,

Through mud and blood,

Through many men and horses shred.

Under sun and moon,

Through wet and flake,

Little rest they won as they fought,

The testing yards and inching mile.

 

The scent of death clear in their heads,

Their nostrils burning from hell resent,

Cauterised wounds some munition singed,

A deathly end for some,

Their eyes by night a blazing fired earth,

 Of blues, Oranges, Yellows, Reds.

 

Their ears ringing whistles and drums,

A sense of looming dread

As all around the melee continued,

Death by death, Man by man, Son by son,

Precious sons many in numbers they did succumb

To the battle cry of walk not run.

 

 

 

Blood-curdling in their gas-filled lungs,

Fungi in their rotting boots,

Sweat and tears in itchy suits,

Muscles aching tendons taught,

Nerves for some as they were next

To mount and face the hidden land,

Where fate would deal its dreadful blow,

On to meet the dreaded wall of death.

 

Choice was none, no turning back,

They stood as force,

Though force would guide,

Those of fear or of wisdom stand,

Over, or rest

When shot by those on orders for descent.

                                                                            

 

© Robert Kingston       17.10.14 / 27.3.16