Good afternoon, dear readers! I've prepared a substantial chapter for you to read today because I've strung you along quite enough and I know you are itching to know the contents of Clive's hobby room. Hold on to your hats...
It was just
over a week later that the phone call Min was expecting arrived. Halliwell sat
at her feet and stared up her, unblinking, as she listened to Audley Runcorn
broach the subject of the fate of Satis House.
'I didn’t
hear from you, Min,’ he began, somewhat tentatively. ‘So I thought I’d call
anyway, see ‘ow you were doing, like.’
‘That’s very
thoughtful of you, Audley,’ said Min, who’d never had the slightest intention
of calling him. ‘But I’m really not ready to talk about this just yet.’
He ploughed on as if he hadn’t
heard her, like one of those scam callers who refuse to be deviated from their
script. ‘It’s just that, well….the C.O.P.S would like to start making t’most of
the bequest as soon as possible. We've lots of plans, y’see, and obviously t’cash
would help get a lot of them off t’ground...'
'Why
'obviously?'' said Min, briskly.
'Well...'
stumbled Audley.
'Because it
isn't obvious to me,' said Min. 'Satis House is my home. I have lived here a
good part of my life. I grew up here, I nursed my mother here. There is a lot
of history here for me, Audley. And I have my own plans for its future. I have
no intention of selling it.'
There was a
brief silence. 'Aye. We thought you’d say as much,' said Audley. 'And
obviously...er...of course, we don't want to see you leave a place that means
so much to you. So what we' re proposing it this - that we're 'appy to wait for
you to raise the equivalent cash value to buy us out of our share.'
Min found
herself focusing on the intently gazing eyes of Halliwell, which seemed to have
a steading effect on her twitching nerves. This spiel did not sound wholly
‘Audley’ to her. There was another voice mixed in there – a scriptwriter’s
voice. Audley, meanwhile, took her silence as a sign of compliance. He
continued, feeling encouraged.
'We'd like
t'arrange for a market valuation. Our tenor, Spider Wilson, is a surveyor
and...'
'Good
heavens!’ said Min. ‘What sort of a name is Spider for a grown man to have?'
'Well,
obviously it's not his real name,' said Audley.
'There you go
again, with your obviously,' snapped Min.
'His real
name is Morris,' said Audley. 'But he's tall as a house and skinny as a whippet
so...'
'I am NOT
interested,' said Min, 'in any of your proposals at this moment in time. My
brother has been dead barely a month. As I have said, I have my own plans for
Satis House and I am not in the habit of changing plans once I make them. There
will be no valuation, especially by tenor surveyors called Spider and if…IF…I
decide to buy you out I shall be employing the services of an independent and
impartial surveyor…’
‘Yes, yes of
course…’ stammered Audley. Min continued.
‘I have made enquiries, Audley,
and whilst I cannot alter the fact that, due to the inexplicable stupidity of
my brother, half my home is now owned by a VERY amateur operatic society, there
will can be no capital release until probate is granted which could take MANY
weeks if I have my way, as no doubt Mr Burroughs has explained. Or until I am
dead. And then you will have to take it up with my new beneficiary.'
And before Audley could draw breath
to make a response and she ran out of breath herself, she said, 'Good day!' and slammed
down the receiver.
Halliwell
blinked. 'Well done,' he seemed to say.
'Thank you,'
said Min.
And she smiled as she patted the
newly decided beneficiary of the Last Will and Testament of Minerva Virginia
Woolf Thing on his soft as velvet head.
Min needed
to get out of the house. It was all bluster, of course, her talk of refusing to
even begin to think about negotiating before
probate was granted. Oh yes, she’d make sure she strung out THAT process for as
long as possible, of course she would. And she fully intended on maintaining
full possession of Satis House until her dying breath – she just needed time to
think how. But the thought of making Halliwell her new and soul beneficiary
tickled her. Clive had been her beneficiary
- she, at least, had been loyal to their sibling Tenants in Common
agreement – but he was gone now and she would need to have her own Will
redrafted. In the meantime, though, she hoped her bluster would gain her some
thinking time. Whatever she did, she would make life as awkward as possible for
the C.O.P.S. Bloody mindedness was a particular talent of hers.
In the tea
room above the bookshop, Min sat and waited whilst Amazing served her queue of
customers. Business was brisk and had become even more so since the news about
the closure of the tea room had spread. A petition was pinned to the community
board by the door, and Min duly added her name to it, although she had come to
the tea room with a potential solution to Amazing's problem which might render
the petition redundant.
Eventually,
Amazing was able to leave counter duties to her assistant, a quiet lad called
Ben. She arrived at Min's table with a
cream tea for two.
'Now, my
friend,' she said, setting out the contents of the tray with all the care
afforded to an intimate afternoon repast in her own sitting room. 'This
telephone call you make to me earlier today was all intrigue and mystery. Tell
me – what is this plan you have?'
Min had
called Amazing as soon as she had finished speaking with Audley because,
suddenly, the solution to both of their immediate problems seemed obvious. 'I
have an idea,' she had said, crushing the phone receiver protectively against
her ear, as if there might be spies in the camp. 'A plan. I'm coming to see you
immediately.'
However,
with Amazing now sitting across the table from her, an encouraging and
expectant smile on her face, Min felt her courage waiver a little. Come on now,
she told herself. This will work. Don't even begin to think Amazing might say
no. She took a deep breath.
'It's like
this,' she said. 'I want to start a business at my home, Satis House. I have a
lot of space and a need to earn a living in a more satisfying way than I do
now, which is sorting out the housing issues of often ungrateful and bad
tempered people. The thing is, Amazing – well, how would you like to move your
tea- room to the drawing room of Satis House? The kitchen will be yours to cook
and bake in, and the gardens will make a lovely outdoor eating area during the
warmer months...and there will be paying guests who need catering for...' Her
voice trailed off as she realised she was babbling.
Amazing
looked at Min. Her forehead creased into the smallest and briefest of frowns
and her eyes narrowed with the intensity of thought. Then she reached across
the table and took Min's hands in hers.
'Yes, Miss
Minerva Thing,’ she said, without blinking. ‘Yes – that is a wonderful plan. We
start now, yes? On this new venture together?' Still holding Min's hands, she
turned her head towards the counter.
'Benjamin!'
she roared. 'Pack up the china and cutlery. The tins and the trays. We are
moving! We are moving onwards and it will be a marvellous thing! All good is
coming to us.' She paused and smiled at Min. 'And Benjamin!' she shouted. 'Get
your hair cut! Your fringe is too dangly in your face. Cut it and stop flicking
it back and forth across your eyes, you silly boy!
Min exhaled
with relief. It was settled. The first step of her new business plan had been instigated.
She felt better already. On her way home, she posted the letter of resignation
from her job as housing officer.
'She said
what?' said Sylvia. Sylvia Path (M.B.E for services to the community) was the
newly elected Treasurer of the C.O.P.S and as such had already made
comprehensive plans based on the generous bequest of Clive Thing. She had big
dreams for the Society. There had been some mention by other, more cautious
members of 'jumping guns' and 'hatching chickens' but Sylvia was very much of
the opinion that life was a slippery fish and needed grabbing by the throat
before it could get away. There was a substantial sum of money heading the
way of the Society which needed ring fencing as quickly as possible. She had already
found a very suitable commercial property to rent, which would make a perfect
performance space. Her plan was to launch the C.O.P.S, and her own career, into
the spotlight of the professional fame it so richly deserved.
Audley
sighed. He could sense the smell of a very uncivil war wafting uncomfortably
close. The last thing he wanted to do was fall out with Minerva Thing. And it
was still early days following Clive’s death; there were legal formalities to
deal with before even a pound dropped into the C.O.P.S’ coffers.
In hindsight, Clive's bequest was
a doubled-edged sword. When Audley had been charged by the Society to represent
them as beneficiaries (having been voted the person least likely to cause an
unpleasant scene) he knew exactly what Min’s reaction to the news of Clive’s
new Will would be. It must have been a huge shock to her, not that she'd shown
a hint of it on her face at the solicitor's office. And for all her
stand-offishness, he quite liked the woman. She had determination and
independence of spirit. She had tolerated living with Clive and all his odd and
sometimes challenging behaviours. She
made excellent cake. So Audley had wanted to wait as long as possible after the
Will reading before re-establishing discussions about the bequest but Sylvia
was both persistent and insistent they should not allow the situation to drift.
'Of course I
am sorry for what has happened,' she said
(she wasn't). 'But the Society needs to move on, too,' (which it didn't,
not really, not with any great urgency anyway) 'and the sooner the matter is
dealt with then the better for all concerned.' And Sylvia had all but glued the
telephone receiver to Audley's hand and stared at him whilst he made the call
from her back bedroom which currently served as the C.O.P.S admin office.
Now she was sitting back in her chair, her
hands folded thoughtfully before her.
'We must contact Mr Burroughs,' she said.
'See what he advises. I’ve searched on-line about probate and it says it can be
granted in less than ten days if there are no complications. There must be some
kind of court order or injunction we can take out to make her comply.'
Audley was
horrified by the suggestion. ‘I don’t think there will be any need for that,’
he said.
'And then
there's the issue of who is to play Nanki-Poo,' said Sylvia, who clearly wasn't
listening because, in her mind, everyone responded with speed and efficiency to her orders. 'Do you think we could persuade Alan to make a
return? He’s very experienced and I did question at the time the wisdom of
Clive taking on such a demanding role for his debut performance…'
'Alan's
emigrated to Portugal...' reminded Audley.
'Oh yes,'
said Sylvia. 'That's unfortunate.' She creased her face in deep thought. 'Do
you have any ideas? Some undiscovered talent in the community we could persuade
to join the company? Not too talented, of course! Some of us mustn’t suffer our
own limelight being dimmed. Ahahahaha!’
Audley
sighed again and got to his feet.
'I have to
go,' he said. 'Things to do.'
‘Only we
don’t want to cancel the show, do we?’ shouted Sylvia after his retreating
back.
The next day
found Amazing standing in the middle of the drawing room at Satis House. She
had said not a word for a good five minutes, just stood there, her eyes closed,
then open, then closed again. She was visualising her new tea-room. It would be
beautiful – different from the one she was leaving, of course, because she was
a firm believer that when the Universe brought you a happy change like this,
then it was only respectful to leave the old behind and embrace the new. Her
grandmother would tell her, when she was a child and fussed over the changes
that occurred naturally in life, 'Why fuss, child? You have been given the gift
of difference already. Difference suits you.'
The gentle
tinkle of bone china nestling against bone china re-opened Amazing's eyes. Min
had entered the room with a tea-tray and was setting it on the table that sat
in the pool of sunlight in the drawing room window.
'What do you
think?' said Min. 'I know it's all very old-fashioned, but I have engaged a
decorator to come in and...'
'Space is
never be old-fashioned,' said Amazing, smiling. 'Space is space is space.'
Min nodded,
although she had no idea what Amazing was saying.
'It has
atmosphere, this space,' said Amazing.
'Oh yes,'
said Min, remembering the arguments her parents used to have in this room, and
wondering if Amazing could sense some kind of sinister ethereal residue. 'It
certainly has that. Nothing that fresh paint and new curtains won't cure,
though. You must have a say in the colours, of course.'
Amazing
laughed. 'I think,' she said, 'our fun shall be great, when we begin this
adventure together. All good things will come to us.'
Min agreed.
She wasn't a massive fan of change, but she could sense a shift in herself – a
shift that said, 'Why not? It’s time to do things your way.' Or was that the
house talking again?
'How many do
you think we could seat in here?' she said, trying to subscribe to Amazing's
space is space is space theory.
Amazing
gazed around her. 'For comfort or for profit?' she said.
'Definitely
for comfort,' said Min, who could not abide crowded eating places with their
elbow restrictions and clashing together of chairs.
'Then I
think twenty,' said Amazing. 'More in the summer time when the weather shows us
kindness.'
Min had already
taken her into the garden to show her the space she envisaged transforming into
a small terrace. Amazing had said nothing, just nodded approval at the trees
and the grass and the herb garden which, Min conceded, was looking a little
past its best.
'We could
build a conservatory,' Min said suddenly. 'An orangery! Like they have in
stately homes, to have the outside inside even during the winter...'
Amazing
placed a gentle hand on Min's arm.
'One step at
a time, my friend,' she said. 'One step at a time.'
Early
evening, and left once more to her own company, Min strode purposefully up the
stairs. The summer evening had drawn out to its fullness and as she glanced
through the landing window, she saw long shadows from the trees stretching
across the lawn like recumbent giants. House martins swooped and darted around
the eaves; a fox slunk along the boundary hedge, trying its scavenging luck for
remnants carelessly dropped by that day's bin collection.
'Right,' Min
said aloud. 'You can sort this out. You have to sort this out.'
Around her
the house nodded agreement. It had grown weary over the years with the drama of
this family, with the arguments and resentments, the selfishness and neglect.
It felt now that its chance to breathe for itself had come at last.
Min’s idea
to turn Satis House into a business had suddenly, she realised, grown legs of
its own and was running ahead of her like an energetic and unruly toddler. Her
own days of potential motherhood had passed her by, no partner had come along
to turn her into wife and mother. And she was thankful for that, yes indeed she
was. Yet, with sudden horror, she knew that at forty eight years old she was
likely to be well over halfway through her life now, if Fate was kind and
allowed her to live to an old age free from accident and disease. Where had
that time gone? What had she actually achieved in those years? She felt tears
prick the corners of her eyes and the gentle thrum of a tension headache
knocked at the spot between her eyebrows. Don’t be so stupid, she told herself,
and rubbed angrily at her face. Halliwell, her constant companion, knocked
against her legs to remind her that love was here. She smiled at him, and
squatted to rub his ears. ‘You’re right,’ she said, as the cat chirruped and rumbled.
‘We have a lot to do and a lot to look forward to.’
Willow would be returning at the beginning of
August to begin her decorating magic on the old and tired walls and ceilings.
Amazing was so excited about moving her tea shop into the drawing room that Min
wouldn't be at all surprised to find her camping on the doorstep in the
morning, surrounded by boxes of china and baking equipment and ready to move
in. Of course, they would have to apply for planning permission, and create a
proper business plan, but Min knew in her bones that time would be absorbed by
the flurry of making dreams real as quickly as sponge absorbs water. Thoughts
of everything that would happen almost made Min forget the spectre of the
C.O.P.S. Almost.
Clive's
hobby room door stood before her. Min breathed hard. Since she had broken down
the door she had avoided dealing with the contents therein. On that day she had
immediately gone to a D.I Y shop and purchased a new lock and handle. It had
taken her a couple of hours and an ancient copy of 'The Reader's Digest
Complete Home Owner Guide to DIY' to hack the old lock from the door frame and
fit the new one, but she had done it and it was with a certain sense of pride
that she stood back and admired her work. The room was once more lockable. She
couldn't risk anyone entering by accident, could she? Not now she knew what was
inside.
She stood
now, with the key in her hand. Too many people were about to have a stake in
Satis House and she needed to deal with the contents of this room now.
'If you're
listening, Clive Neville Chamberlain Thing,' she said, 'then you need to know
that a) you have a lot to answer for and b) you are weirder than I ever gave
you credit.'
She unlocked
the door, but even though she knew what sight would meet her, a sicky gasp
still caught in her throat. Glassy, empty staring eyes swooped in on her from
every angle – some accusingly, some pleadingly, most cold and calculating. Pah –
calculating! As if a dead thing was capable of such emotion. At least, thought
Min, the smell had dissipated from the downright rank to something less offensively
pungent, thanks to her prising open of the window and leaving it ajar ever
since the day of Clive’s death.
Shelf upon
crowded shelf of dead animals stared at her – rabbits, a fox, squirrels, mice,
birds of many kinds, rats, even a wild boar, looking particularly startled,
like it was wondering what on earth had just happened. And there were the jars,
too. When Min had first encountered the room, it was the jars that had repelled
her the most. The jars contained what she could only described as 'bits of
stuff.' Fleshy, discoloured, unidentifiable 'bits of stuff.' It took a lot to
turn Min's stomach – rice pudding, generally, and the thought of eating a
pomegranate – but these bits of stuff in jars had initiated a heave from within
so violent she found herself scanning the room in a panic, seeking out the
nearest convenient receptacle in which to empty her stomach. She could understand,
sort of, the taxidermy element of Clive’s hobby, but why keep all the innards,
the ‘bits of stuff’?
'Good
heavens!'
Min jumped
and turned at the unexpected exclamation behind her.
'What?' she
said, adrenaline-fuelled panic grabbing at her voice. 'Who are you? Why are you
here?'
A woman
stood in the doorway of Clive's hobby room. She looked vaguely familiar.
'Someone's
been having fun,' said the woman.
Min's heart
was pounding like a jack hammer. 'Do I know you?' she said. Then, 'How did you
get in?'
'The cat,'
said the woman, answering the second question first and waving her hand at
Halliwell who was sitting beside her looking particularly smug. 'It opened the
front door. And it's Connie. Remember me? From the hospital?'
Ah yes. The
brisk yet kindly mortuary assistant. Min relaxed a little. 'The cat let you
in?' she said. Really, the creature grew more talented by the day.
'Yes,' said
Connie. 'I did knock. Several times. And then the door swung open to reveal
this magnificent feline specimen. It made me feel like I should follow it. So I
did.'
Min sighed.
'He does that. It's like he owns the place, isn’t it Halliwell?'
'You’ve
trained him very well,' laughed Connie.
'Oh, he’s
not mine,' said Min. 'Well, yes...I suppose he is now... he turned up a few
weeks ago and didn’t leave.'
'Sounds like
my ex-husband,' said Connie, rolling her eyes.
Comments
More please.
Having got over, somehow, the A level Biology requirement to dissect a rat my first job (a very long time ago) was at Guy's Hospital. They had a museum. Lots of jars in which were stored specimens of medical interest. One of my responsibilities was to take new recruits on an induction tour of the hospital. Apparently it was tradition to finish up in the museum and leave them there to peruse.. no wonder staff turnover was so high!
Olly, of course Halliwell can open doors! Do you remember my tuxedo cat, Tybalt? He could open doors. And switch on the bathroom light. And yes, it will have to be next week for the next episode because I can only write so fast, you know!
Mrs Duck, I remember having to dissect a frog and an eyeball which, I think, came from a cow. Yuck. And I can still remember now what every one of the science rooms smelled like in the grammar school I attended. Chemistry was the worst. All gassy. And that is why I am an arty person!
I'm sorry for not leaving a comment sooner.
Really loved the last instalment and looking forward to the next one.
I love to read. I don't own a television. I really hope this is a long book!
Thank you,
Kindest regards,
Maureen x