My lager sat on the windowsill. Behind it traffic buzzed, pedestrians ambled and the ubiquitous riff-raff loitered outside MacDonald’s. It was remarkably engaging. Life is fascinating when viewed through a pint glass. The bubbles danced in time to Radiohead, or perhaps Radiohead were playing in time to the bubbles, but what caught my attention was the chap at the bar.
Coat folded neatly on the bar, hat balanced expertly on top, his usual drinking routine I suspect. Faded t-shirt stretched over his belly. Horizontal stripes never flatter. An unusually prominent bottom lip made him look like a man who is perpetually displeased. A nose like a parrot’s beak, jet black hair that – given his age – had to be dyed. He had all the deportment of a gloomy cockatoo. On his left wrist was the tiniest watch I have ever seen. Anorexic black strap and a minuscule face. Seriously, it was so tiny that I can only suppose he had stolen it from a doll.
He checked his watch repeatedly, his manner was that of a wanted man. He lifted the beer slowly, peered in the top and then slowly rotated the glass as he scrutinised it from the side. Humph, his expression said, the beer clearly disappointed and he glared at it morosely. He put down the glass with a melodramatic sigh, shot a few conspiratorial glances around the pub, grabbed his coat and hat and left in a hurry. But what was behind the suspicious behaviour?
I suspect the infamous Doll Mafia are after him.
A handful of beers, a couple of cuppas, as the TV blares I find myself busting for a wee. Absolutely busting, bladder like a Zeppelin, exquisite discomfort, what have I done? The eternal dilemma, upstairs or downstairs loo? Clatter all the way upstairs and grapple with stair gates, or gamble on the apparent convenience of the downstairs loo (we use it as a cloakroom and a place to stash anything that is a nuisance, which could potentially include small yappy dogs)?
I open the door slowly, fearing an avalanche, and carefully move the buggy out of the doorway. I shift the hoover and wriggle between the coats, inching painfully towards the porcelain and expertly manoeuvre into position. The baby’s car seat is on the toilet, which is rather unhelpful and most inconsiderate. I crouch down and lift the toilet seat, the angled ceiling only allows me to lift it a couple of inches. No worries, I think, a couple of inches gives me plenty of room.
Hunched on the floor like a crumpled ball of paper. Left hand supporting the weight of the car seat, right hand pointing and aiming through the gap. Blimey this is dangerous, I think, and wince uncomfortably. The hoover is boring a hole in my shin, the sink is digging into my back, coats are falling all around me, the end of the world is definitely nigh.
For a brief moment I regret everything. Coats, mops and umbrellas collapsing all around me, left wrist straining under the weight of the car seat (shut yer cakehole critics, it was a difficult angle), pain shooting through my shin and up my back, my life flashing before my eyes…
Considerably disorientated. I’m now in a new job and living in a new home in a strange northern town where it rains like the days before The Great Flood. Absent from the blogosphere for a two weeks (building an ark in my garden). I’ve been missed, right? My soul screams for validation, my self-worth has dropped lower than a rudeboy’s crotch. Actually that’s a lie, the break was rather nice. But Mr Condescending has been pestering me daily, can’t live without my posts apparently. I told him to stop badgering me but he persisted. To make matters worse Rubbish rang me up last night and screamed down the phone, said he’d turdbomb my doorstep if I didn’t get my act together. Kids huh?! Told him I’d retaliate by putting laxative in his cider, but I really can’t be bothered to go to Wales so…
The old man sat on the top desk of the bus. He was staring straight ahead, a pair of thick-lensed black-rimmed glasses clung to his face. For the record I don’t condone the stealing of old men’s glasses. Seriously, why go through all that effort when they are unlikely to fetch you anything on eBay? Besides, old men cause enough trouble in the world when they can see clearly. The last thing any of us need is millions of pensioners stumbling around without their glasses. The world would descend rapidly into bedlam. Pensioners would be seen dragging squirrels about on leads, stuffing cats into letterboxes and waiting outside the pub on Thursday mornings while moaning that the “post office” isn’t open. Come to think about it, stuffing some cats into Rubbish‘s letter box would be pretty damn funny. Or putting a squirrel in his cider.
Take the following situation. In our new street rubbish collection takes place on a Friday. During the week our bins stay in the garden to the rear of the house. The garden is surrounded by a high two-metre fence and accessible either from our back door or from the garden gate, which is also two-metres high and double-locked from the inside. One of the locks is half-way down the gate, i.e. only reachable if you are one of those astronomically tall men from China that occasionally make the news and use their long arms to reach down the throats of dolphins. Last Friday morning my wife asked me to take the bins out. I went into the garden and to my surprise the bins were not there. I went round to the front and there they were, sitting smugly on the pavement, chatting amongst themselves no doubt. The only plausible explanation is that at the crack of dawn an elderly neighbour had broken in and dragged them out front.
Now there are two possibilities here. Either this (uncharacteristically athletic) pensioner vaulted the two-metre fence or they managed to unlock the garden gate using a fishhook on a piece of string. Can you imagine the mayhem if this pensioner was without their glasses? I’d probably be woken at 5am as I am dragged outside with a fishhook through my nose. (This Friday I’m going to get up crazily early and find out how they get in). But anyway…
Danny pressed the buzzer, got up from his seat and started to walk up the aisle. It was cold and wet outside, the bus was packed. He moved slowly, his steps small and determined, carefully keeping his balance as the bus lurched about in a deliberate attempt to send him into the lap of an unsuspecting granny. With each step he grasped the handrails on back of the seats each side of him, he would not be defeated and no grannies would be squashed. Nothing could have prepared him for what happened next.
The middle finger of his right hand hooked under the bridge of an old man’s glasses. In a single movement he gracefully lifted the glasses off the old man’s face and launched them into the air. They sailed over the next five seats, all of which were occupied, their path a beautiful parabolic spectacle (haha, two weeks absent and my wit is still as sharp as a blunt razor). They cleared the passengers and clattered down the stairwell. The speed and trajectory – unimaginably perfect in every way – would have made the Roman army’s lead trebuchet operative sick with jealousy.
The old man whipped his hands up to his eyes. “Someone’s stolen my glasses,” he howled. One moment he had been quietly looking forward to Coronation Street, the next moment his glasses had been whipped from his face.
Funniest moment of his life, Danny tells me. I may have to try this next time I’m on a bus. With a bit of luck I could make a few quid on eBay.
Friends, Romans, sweethearts, gimp-grandchildren and cider drinkers, I’m not here today, I’m over at Calling People Names. I’m gong to be a bit absent this week – spent the last four days moving house and I start a new job today. But I’ll be back next week. Don’t miss me too much…