Hello everyone! I hope you are all keeping safe and well, with chins up, chests forward and buttocks clenched in determination against these testing times? Here is the next (belated) episode of 'Clive and Min.' It's a complicated thing, writing. Hugely enjoyable, but full of endless edits, frustrating rewrites, finding oneself up cul-de-sacs with no escape, fretful plot unscramblings and sometimes completely forgetting where you are and why. And then things like a week of sunshine calls one into the garden, and one becomes involved in one's embroidery course and...well, you know...
Therefore, I hope this episode doesn't feel too unpolished, but I wanted to get something out there, as you've all been so understanding and patient. Forgive me, then, if this falls beneath the usual standard. Here we go...
Min and Willow were standing side by side in the garage of Satis House, staring at Clive’s taxidermy collection which was staring back in a manner that made them feel most uneasy.
Therefore, I hope this episode doesn't feel too unpolished, but I wanted to get something out there, as you've all been so understanding and patient. Forgive me, then, if this falls beneath the usual standard. Here we go...
Min and Willow were standing side by side in the garage of Satis House, staring at Clive’s taxidermy collection which was staring back in a manner that made them feel most uneasy.
‘An offer for the wild boar?’ said Min.
‘Yes,’ said Willow. ‘Strange as that might seem.’
‘No accounting for taste,’ said Min, who had long ago decided
that of all the creatures unfortunate enough to have been submitted to the
ministrations of the amateur taxidermy attempts of her brother, the wild boar
had come off worst. In life they weren’t the most attractive of creatures, but
in death…well, this one was something else.
‘I’ve just been out to
do a quote for a new pub opening just outside Chelwood. ‘The Wild and Woolly…’
said Willow. She was using her phone to take photos of the offending creature,
just to make sure her potential client knew exactly what they were buying.
‘Stupid name for a pub,’ sniffed Min, who much preferred her
inns to be called The Red Lion or The Crown. You knew where you
were with a name like that. ‘The Wild and Woolly indeed.’
‘Anyway,’ continued Willow, who knew by now that the best way
to communicate with Minerva Thing was to plough on in a fixed and determined
manner, ‘whilst I was pricing up the painting job they want, I heard the owners
discussing getting in some ornaments of a wild and woolly nature. You know, as
signature pieces for their brand. So I suggested taxidermy. They are
interested, especially when I mentioned the wild boar.’
‘My collection is NOT to be disbanded!’ shouted Clive, who
had discovered that although he could not gain access to any part of Satis
House, he could make himself heard from doorways if they were left open.
Willow startled and winced. Not him again. In her head, she started
to sing the little song she’d made up in an attempt to block out Clive’s voice
when it appeared. It was a simple song which ran along the lines of, ‘Leave me
alone, you weirdo, because I know you don’t exist,’ only with considerably more
swearing. The tune manifested itself as hum of increasing persistence.
‘I know you can hear me!’ shouted Clive. ‘Singing and humming
won’t switch me off, you know. Turn around and talk to me. That collection is
NOT to be sold off, do you understand?’
‘Sold?’ said Willow, her patience breaking with the
ear-splitting ‘thwang’ of a violin string snapping. ‘You think people will
actually want to pay good money for that tat? We’ll be lucky if we can PAY
people to take it away.’
‘Rude!’ shouted Clive. ‘Okay, the first efforts might be a
bit…rustic…but that boar is a work of art!’
‘Ha!’ said Willow. ‘It’s worthless, moth-eaten, rubbish!’
Min started at the sudden outburst. ‘Well yes, probably,’ she
agreed. ‘Although it would be nice to get a few pounds if we could. Do you
think your pub people would pay a little bit for it? If only to cover the cost
of transport?’
‘Sorry?’ said Willow, and then realised Min was talking. ‘Oh,
yes – yes, maybe…’
‘Tell Min you can hear me,’ demanded Clive. ‘Tell her I am
here and I need to talk to her.’ In life he had been a mild and introverted
sort of person. In death he had discovered boldness and belligerence and wished
he’d had the skills as his weaponry when he was being bullied at school.
‘I will not,’ hissed Willow, making a sterling effort to moderate
her volume.
‘Will not what?’ said Min.
‘Sorry, not you,’ said Willow. ‘Just…you know, talking to
myself…’
‘First sign of madness,’ said Min.
‘Ahahahahahaha!’ said Willow.
Minerva tilted her head to one side and looked at Willow with
mild concern. ‘I think you should take a break before you start your next job
of work,’ she said, not unkindly. ‘You’ve been working relentlessly here,
transforming Satis House…’
‘I am fine!’ snapped Willow. ‘It’s just HIM. He needs to stop
getting in my head and pestering me…’
‘Who?’ said Min, startled. ‘Who has been pestering you?’
‘Me!’ shouted Clive.
‘Him!’ said Willow, turning and pointing at the garage door
where Clive stood, waving his arms in the air and being watched with disdain by
Halliwell.
‘Halliwell?’ said Min. Really, the girl had taken leave of
her senses.
‘No, not the cat. HIM!’ said Willow. ‘Your brother.’
Min allowed her eyes to boggle for a moment whilst she took
in the announcement. ‘Clive?’ she said.
‘YES!’ shouted Willow and Clive in unison.
‘But he’s dead…’ said Min.
‘I KNOW!’ shouted Willow and Clive. The shouting proved too
much for the delicate sensibilities of Halliwell, who stood, stretched and
walked away with controlled nonchalance.
Willow was standing with her hands pressed firmly against her
ears and her eyes screwed shut. ‘Just SHUT UP!’ she shouted.
‘NO!’ shouted Clive. At last, he thought, we are getting
somewhere. ‘You shut up! Tell Min I am here and I need to speak to her.’
‘GO AWAY!’ shouted Willow, and Min watched in amazement as the
young woman ran from the garage, making a sudden swerving movement as she
reached the door as if she was avoiding something, or someone, standing there.
Min folded her arms and allowed her right foot to tap against the garage floor.
‘Well,’ she said. ‘And still you continue to cause trouble,
Clive Neville Chamberlain Thing. That poor girl…’
‘You can see me, Min?’ said Clive.
But of course Min couldn’t. She took a deep breath and
marched from the garage, straight through the space in which Clive stood, which
made him feel most peculiar – a sort of nauseous feeling one experiences after
eating one too many doughnuts. He took a moment to recover himself and then looked at the wild boar.
‘What now?’ he said.
The wild boar rolled its eyes and yawned.
* * *
Min found Willow sitting at the table in the kitchen of Satis
House. She looked pale and shaky and was being administered healing in the form
of a mug of tea and an unhealthily large cheese scone by Amazing.
Amazing looked at Min with a face that was glowing with warmth,
light and the magic of belief. ‘This child has the gift,’ she said,
reverentially.
‘The what?’ said Min.
‘The gift,’ said Amazing. ‘She can converse with the Other Side…’
‘Nope,’ said Minerva. ‘You’ve lost me.’
Amazing sighed and sat down next to Willow, enveloping the
girl’s hand in both her own. ‘Willow has been talking with your dead brother
Clive.’
‘I haven’t really been talking with him,’ said Willow. ‘He
has been talking at me and I’ve been trying to ignore him.’
Min snorted. ‘I don’t understand. I talk to Clive all the
time. Swearing mostly, but there’s rarely a day goes by when I haven’t muttered
at him for some reason or another. Honestly, he’s been more trouble since he
died than when he was still here…’
Amazing held up one hand. ‘No, no, no. You are not
understanding. Willow can talk to Clive, and hear him, too. She has the ability
to communicate through the spiritual veil that divides our world from the next.
It is a wonderful thing! A gift!’
‘It doesn’t feel like a gift,’ said Willow. ‘It feels like I
am going bonkers.’ But quietly she was glad she had finally told someone.
Min sat down at the kitchen table. ‘Please pour me a tea,
Amazing,’ she said. ‘And butter me a scone.’ She turned to Willow. ‘Right, I am
willing to suspend my disbelief. Tell me
everything. Because, to be quite honest, I am finding that nothing surprises me
at the moment.’
And so Minerva and Amazing sat with ever-widening eyes as
Willow re-told the events of the past few days – how she found Clive sitting on
top of her van, how he followed her home, waited at the gate of Satis House,
chatted away about all sorts of seemingly inane things, and now, just now, had
told her that the wild boar was not to be taken from the collection, that Clive
was determined the collection was to stay together.
‘Did he say why?’ said Min, taking a cautious sip of tea and
not noticing that Amazing had added extra sugar.
Willow shook her head. ‘I’m sorry. I didn’t ask. Just sort of
snapped instead. And I know this all sounds very weird. But I promise you I can
see him and hear him. I’m not making this up.’
‘Of course you can, dear Willow,’ said Amazing, whose eyes
had shone throughout the whole recapping of events because she was a firm believer
of all things spiritual and to be cast into the middle of these events was
beyond excitement for her.
‘Can you hear him now?’ said Min, still erring on the side of
sceptical, even though she had no reason to believe Willow would be fabricating
this whole story. Why would she? ‘Ask him what I said when he forgot to get the
turkey out to defrost the Christmas before last…’
‘I can’t hear him at this moment in time,’ said Willow.
‘Aaah,’ said Min. ‘Selective hearing, eh?’
‘No,’ said Willow. ‘I can’t hear him at this moment in time
because, for some reason, Satis House isn’t letting him inside. It’s the only
place I ever get any peace and quiet from him.’ And she gazed around the
kitchen, a look of grateful thanks on her face.
‘So where is he now?’ said Min, looking around too, as if she
expected Clive to suddenly manifest himself like Marley’s Ghost, rattling chains
of cigarettes and waving jars of formaldehyde.
Willow stood up and looked through the kitchen window. Clive
waved at her from where he was sitting on the low wall that edged the herb bed.
‘There,’ she said. ‘On the wall by the herbs. He’s waving at me.’
Min stood up and peered through the window. Clive waved at
Min.
‘And now he’s waving at you,’ said Willow.
‘One finger or two?’ said Min.
Willow allowed herself a laugh. She could feel small waves of
relief rippling through her now she’d spoken out about this weirdness, especially
as Amazing seemed to believe in her unconditionally, even if Min wasn’t yet
convinced.
Min turned her back on the window. ‘I know what we’ll do,’
she said. ‘We’ll go and see my friend Florence. She has experience of these
things. She’ll know what to do.’
Comments
Well done for this new episode though. Vx
The garden is looking rather smart, though I do say so myself. The sun is sparse today, and it is noticeably cooler, but still dry. Andy had a bonfire yesterday in an attempt to get rid of my piles of debris! Hope you are keeping safe and well? x
Thank you, Vera. As a fellow writer, you know the stodge we can get ourselves into sometimes. I hope your mind is able to find some quietness soon, in all this uncertainty. x