Monday, February 14, 2005

Home Sweet Home

HOME SWEET HOME

I like the house with those big leafy plants in Seabank Road. The chairs are ever so comfy, so comfy I could nearly nod off. That isn’t part of the plan, but mind you the old toffs that live there are probably so deaf they wouldn’t even hear me snoring if they did land back early. You always know a toff’s house, the walls are covered with oil paintings. Their desks and all that stuff are usually smothered with photographs.
They like velvet curtains, lined so the sun doesn’t damage their ancient furniture. I can’t believe anyone likes that kinda stuff anyway. They’ve got a nice Labrador though, soft as putty, wags and slobbers all the time. He followed me up to the bedroom, when I was having a look. Their old bed doesn’t half dip in the middle, but then they’ve been dipping into its middle for about fifty years by the look of them. They keep a nice little kid’s bedroom, all fluffy toys and books about Peter
Rabbit and Harry Potter. Suppose that’s for the grandchildren when they come. There’s a single bed with a pink cover and bunk beds with racing car covers. Maybe it’s two boys and a girl that come to visit.
I like the big front bedroom, with the twin beds, all done out with paintings of the sea, and there’s a big ornament thing of a blacksmith shoeing a horse. Looks like it’s all been hand made and painted. Must have taken a long time. I don’t think I could be bothered. The beds are covered with cream coloured candlewick bedspreads, with a twirly rosette thing in the middle. I don’t see those anywhere else I go. In the winter I sit in the kitchen. It’s got one of them big cookers that are on all the time, with two big round hot plates. One plate is usually open with a kettle sitting on the side and the other is shut with clothes piled on top, usually a couple of tea towels too.
They never lock their back door, so it’s easy to walk straight in. Bet they don’t even know I’ve been there. I even bring the dog a biscuit now; he likes the ones that look like a sausage roll. He nearly took my fingers off the first time I gave him one, but I’m getting him educated now. Imagine me, educating anyone!
The old lady bakes. Cor, I had one of her scones last week, she leaves them out to cool on a mesh tray, just like my gran. It was wicked!
Funny isn’t it, how those old people have a nice tidy home, even if I don’t like the furniture much, and then you get that Mrs. Adams. She goes posing off every day at lunchtime. Her house is a right old tip. She leaves dishes in the sink, crumbs on the sides, and there’s never anything in the fridge. Wonder what her old man eats when he gets back at night. Probably one of those frozen dinners she’s got stuffed in the freezer. She doesn’t even make the bed before she gets herself all dolled up and off. The bedroom’s a right old state, clothes flung everywhere. Her hairbrush is stuffed with hair, and she used dirty old make up sponges. I read in one of mum’s magazines that it’s important to use clean sponges or you’ll give yourself a skin infection.
She’s messing about with Jackie Tynedrum’s dad. I’ve seen them meeting out the back of Tesco’s. It’s a bit of a shame really. I like Jackie’s mum, she’s always been kind to me. Heard her saying something about my `traumatic childhood`. Anyway, she deserves better than that smarmy old git. She goes out working in the factory at the end of Toppen Road, and her useless man chases Mrs. Adams when he’s supposed to be out fixing washing machines. Wonder if that’s how they met. She jumps in his van and off they go. Do they really think no one knows what’s going on? I saw them coming out of Hillberry Wood one day. How desperate is that? She should concentrate on tidying up that tip of hers. Her cat’s always sitting on the worktops. I wouldn’t want to be eating in her house!
I bet she’s never even noticed that one or two of her videos have walked. She’s so dizzy anyway; I have them back before she’s got time to notice.
Old Grace Dixon is so crippled she can hardly make it down to the shops and the day centre, but her house is like a new pin compared to that lazy cow’s. Just as well I went in there the other day, she hadn’t switched her tap off properly in the kitchen. The water was just dripping on to the floor, when I turned the key in her lock. Fancy keeping keys under the mat. They just don’t get it do they?
She must be lonely after losing old Stan. She keeps a photo of him by her bed, and another one in his naval uniform sits on her sideboard, next to that old wooden biscuit barrel. She keeps all her cash in that biscuit barrel. One of these days she’ll get robbed. She still makes a pot of soup like as if she was feeding Stan; tastes good too. It must be hard when you’ve been together all that time, just like the old codgers in Seabank Road.
Mrs. Munro in Dovecote Place keeps a nice house. There’s never a speck of dust anywhere, and always a lovely smell of polish. She gets her hair done every Friday, and usually leaves at about 1.30 p.m. Her big room at the front of the house is quite something. She has a big bay window with deep orange coloured velvet curtains. The wallpaper is one shade deeper with gold swirls. It looks really good. On the other side of the hallway, she has a dining room with a table that shines so much you can see your face in it. The wallpaper looks like strands of ribbon, a pale shade of lilac. There’s velvet curtains in there too, and a wonderful old radio gramophone with lids that shut themselves slowly. Not like all this new junk, made of plastic. But it’s her back room that is fantastic. She’s got this whole wall covered in wallpaper that makes a mountain scene. It has blue skies, log cabins, snow-capped mountains and a lake in the foreground. I sometimes sit and imagine I live in the cabin way up on the hill. And of course, she’s got this daft cat that rubs himself against me all the time and purrs the loudest purr I’ve ever heard. He’s a beautiful cat, black with a white breast and white paws. There’s a silly little cat house thing outside the back door, but I bet he’s never used it in his life. He likes to sit on the windowsill in the back porch. That’s where I found the key underneath the golf clubs in the corner.
My favourite house is still Fern Cottage. I just love the way it sits so far back off the road. I can climb across the fence from the allotments round the back and even sit in the front room. No one can see. The big plum tree shades the windows. The windows all rattle a bit, but the owner isn’t there half the time, so he doesn’t seem to bother too much. It’s great in the winter. Sandy White checks it every Monday, and does a bit of raking in the garden and then that’s him until the following week. I’ve enjoyed many books from the shelves in the study, while the owner sits in the sun in Spain.
I feel like a little piece of these houses belong tome. After all I’m the one who appreciates them. I’m the one who speaks to the Labrador and the cat. The little bedroom at the back of Fern Cottage is just so nice I wish it was mine. It never looks like it gets used. It’s a funny little room, with its sliding door, white walls and rose-pink curtains. The tiny window pushes out and is held by one of those old fashioned catches. When you lie on your back on the comfy single bed, you can hear the pigeons cooing in the big oak tree. I fell asleep there for hours once. I feel safe there. The bed’s so comfortable. I had to take my shoes off because the bedspread is white lace. Sounds soppy for a boy, but if feels like a bed for a princess.
I don’t suppose they’ll ever notice what I took from under that bed. It’s obviously been there for years, and I just thought it would look good on my wall.
Haven’t got much since the `Social` put me into this bedsit, but it’s still better than watching that drunken sod use Mum as a punchbag.
Children used to make these things years ago, before they all had telly. They used to sit for hours just doing them. Samplers they’re called. There’s even a name embroidered in the bottom right hand corner. Mary Thomas.
Well, Mary Thomas, thank you for your handiwork. I appreciate it even if Fern Cottage didn’t.
Look at that, ` Home Sweet Home` with a little house and roses and all.

Published in Writers News. First Prize Winner D.S.J.T. Trust/Writers News.

Friday, February 11, 2005

The Keeper of The Hour

THE KEEPER OF THE HOUR

A step, a breath
a smile, a tear
each one a pulse of passing time,
beating relentlessly
and drifting like flotsam
on the ocean swell.
Wafting out of sight
and mind only to
return to shore.

Where beachcombers linger
searching for the message
in the bottle that may
change their lives forever.

As grains of sand
whisk stubbornly
into barefoot toes
walking the path of life
leaving footprints in the sand
that becomes the keeper
of the hour.

Prize winner in Freelance Market News.

Innocent Eyes

INNOCENT EYES


What do I say to innocent eyes,
when they look up at me,
asking ‘What do they mean by a nuclear attack,
is it something I can see?’

How do I shield her from evil unknown,
where can we go that is minus,
fanatical groups, filled with venom and hate,
with only her loved ones beside us?

What can I promise to protect her mind,
from worries and fears creeping in?
Help me to make this small girl’s world complete,
Help me to free it from sin.

Innocence nurtures a questioning voice,
Innocence lets her have sleep,
uninterrupted by worrying thoughts,
which I must endeavour to keep.

Far, far away in the pit of my heart,
far, far away from this child,
let us join hands in a prayer for our young,
so that we are reconciled.

If we don’t correct all the bad things around,
what future is there for us all,
why can’t we stop wanting more all the time,
why do we not hear the call.

The call has gone out to protect all our souls,
to listen, and look all around,
for if we don’t heed all the warnings,
there soon won’t be time to compound.

These innocent eyes must not fill with tears,
of sadness for childhood destroyed,
by the whims of greedy and evil mankind,
whose armourments must be deployed.

I cuddle her now in the warmth of my breast,
as she closes her eyes and drifts off,
to a land filled with peace and a bright shining light
and the white gleaming wings of a dove.

Ottakar's Prize winner, Inverness