Monday, 4 January 2016

Post Office

Frank hobbled out the house at 8:46 into another January morning, package in hand. His feet slid and glid on the frozen dew which decorated the path to the gate. He kept one hand on the fence for stability. He did not want to sprain the other foot as well.

He finally arrived at the Post Office at 9:03, where he nodded to June washing the windows, which he thought was a silly activity for such a cold morning. She shot him a quizzical grunt. He shuffled to the counter at 9:04 and handed over the package. At 9:05 a gruff lady came up from behind and put a gun to his head. He did not know why. He reacted quickly, out of fear and confusion, and ducked to the side. She fired, but wasn’t quick enough. Frank was fine. Daryl, behind the counter, was not. The gruff woman fled.

Sunday, 3 January 2016

Words

She lowered her pen to the page. The words inside rushed to the nib, excited, expectant. Too many of them. They got stuck, they couldn’t get out. She could hear the squirming and clawing of sentences clambering over phrases, entwining and entangling themselves. “Calm yourselves, little ones,” she said, “play nicely.”

Saturday, 2 January 2016

Orange Peel

There is an old children’s game in which an orange peel is used to find the first initial of your true love. The idea is to remove the peel of the orange —  or clementine, or tangerine, or satsuma, all work equally well, though some are easier to undress than others — in one continuous piece, and to throw it over your shoulder, behind you. Supposedly, the shape formed by the peel on the floor indicates the first initial of your future spouse. I misunderstood this game and married an orange. It was the best mistake I ever made.

Friday, 1 January 2016

A Seamstress

In the morning there are no buses, you walk home. Seven miles, you don’t mind. The morning is quiet and the air is fresh and new, as if a box of it has just been opened. You enter the house to find your mother, sitting at the kitchen table, sorting through a mound of buttons of every flavour, grouping them by colour and shape. You find deep satisfaction and calm in the order and regularity. “What are you going to do with all those buttons?” you ask. She doesn’t know. These things just accumulate, from dead relatives, dead clothing, anyhow, best keep them tidy, she adds. “I know a seamstress” you say. You do.

Thursday, 31 December 2015

Rolls

My grandmother came over for tea last week. I made her sausage rolls and PG Tips. I noticed her shoes. “Those are pretty wild shoes, grandma!” I said. They were neon green and pink Nike Air Max. They went well with her flowered blouse and beige below-the-knee skirt.

“Thanks dear, I bought them on eBay.” I didn’t know she knew about eBay.

“Tell me more about eBay!” I strummed.

“Well, my darling youth, it is an online marketplace. A bit like the Wednesday market but on the computer. Surely you should know that!” Of course I knew that.

“I did Grandma, I was testing you.”

“Well don’t.” She sipped and chewed. “These are good sausage rolls.” She was right.

Wednesday, 30 December 2015

Tuesday, 29 December 2015

Doorknobs

At the weekend, while she was away, her father removed all the doorknobs from all the doors in the house, and put them in a box at the foot of the stairs. “Why did you remove all the doorknobs from all the doors in the house, and put them in a box at the foot of the stairs?” She enquired. He didn’t tell her.

Monday, 28 December 2015

The Pocket Watch

You reach into your pocket to take out your watch, to find that the time is 3:52pm, but also to find that watch’s stopclock has been started in your pocket, and that it’s been running for about forty-five minutes, still counting. You follow the hands as they continue their circuit. You think back to forty-five minutes ago. At that point you were still having lunch with Alice, a long lunch, longer than intended, because there was much to catch up on, and your mutual disinclination to curtail the encounter called for another cake, a second coffee, a chocolate wafer, until eventually she had to leave lest she fail to catch her bus. The watch must have been started accidentally, in your pocket, perhaps as you leant over the table to share your eclair. Maybe that was the start of something, you think: perhaps this is the forty-fifth minute of your future. It would be imprudent to interrupt it. You leave the clock running.

Sunday, 27 December 2015

Tomorrow

I will wait until morning. As the amber glow strokes the dew from the first blades, and the night mists convalesce and rise and lay in wait to fall as rain, and the curlews sing their tributes to the dissipating gloom, and the street lamps flicker as they head once more to bed, I shall crawl from my nest, and sing my own song, not out loud, quietly, to myself. But no, not right now. Only then.

Saturday, 26 December 2015

Birthday

Between the shuffling hooves of ibex, past the kneeling okapi and gemsbok, darted a mouse, late, holding high above her head a foil-wrapped parcel with a bow. She skidded to a stop beside an antelope, who turned to her, and smiled her a sympathetic smile.

“Sorry sorry,” she panted, “sorry!” She scurried to Robert. “Happy birthday!”

“Thank you, little mouse.” He replied.