Sorry I'm a bit late posting today - busy, busy, busy here. Lots happening this week and lots happening next week. I've had to make lists, for goodness sake, just to keep on top of all the progress and excitement! Anyway, here we go...thanks for waiting...
‘Well, that went well,’ said Harriet, carrying a pile of plates
into the kitchen to where Audley was standing at the sink washing up.
‘It certainly weren’t what I expected,’ Audley agreed.
‘Sylvia wasn’t happy,’ said Harriet.
‘That she definitely weren’t,’ said Audley. He took the
plates, scattered with crumbs of mince pies and Battenburg, from his wife and
put them in the washing up bowl. ‘Never in a million years did I see that
coming.’
Harriet laughed. ‘Worth it, though, to see the look on
Sylvia’s face.’
The meeting of the C.O.P.S had started well enough. The
members were in good spirits, most having recently returned from summer breaks
and all raring to commence the new performance season. Harriet handed around
the mince pies and everyone spoke in hushed and reverent tones about Clive
Thing and the generosity of his unexpected bequest. They shared fond memories
of the man – of his quiet presence, his artistic talents with the scenery, his
excitement at being cast in his first performance role.
And then Sylvia had started. Her annoyance still piqued at
the phone call with Minerva Thing, she was seething and boiling within, and her
outburst was ill-timed. She ranted about the difficulties being imposed on the
situation by Minerva Thing and it soon became clear to the gathered company
that the situation was, in fact, all about Sylvia. When Harriet had tried to
calm her, the atmosphere grew more heated.
‘No!’ shouted Sylvia. ‘I shall NOT calm down! The future of
the C.O.P.S is at stake here. We have been given the opportunity to expand our
company, to take on our own premises and put on productions the like of which
Chelwood has never before seen. I propose we go to the courts immediately and
challenge this caveat. Put a stop to the deliberate machinations of this
awkward woman at once!’
A quiet had settled on the room. A dread quiet. A foreboding
quiet. Several of the company knew Minerva Thing and although they agreed she
could be insular and prickly, a Machiavellian type she certainly was not.
Voices began to share sympathies that the woman was newly bereaved, that she
was in shock at the unexpected turn of events regarding the Will. How must she
be feeling, they said, that she faced losing her family home so soon after
losing her last living relative? What was all the rush, anyway? And then
Audley, who until this point had been quiet on the subject, heard himself
saying, ‘Perhaps, mebbe, we should consider suspending the C.O.P.S for six
months? I don’t know ‘ow everyone else feels, but we’re on a sticky wicket
already, ‘aving to come up with another performance in the space of ten weeks
now ‘The Mikado’ isn’t ‘appening. P’raps, in light of….well, matters…we ought
tek a break. Let dust settle, as it were.’
And, it turned out, everyone else, with the exception of an
apoplectic Sylvia, agreed!
Harriet let out a delayed sigh of relief, one, no doubt,
representative of the whole company. ‘It were best decision,’ she said,
wrapping her arms around her husband’s waist and feeling the fruits of
friskiness rise in her, because there is nothing like the sight of a man in
Marigolds and pinny to excite the sensibilities of a Yorkshire woman.
Audley nodded. ‘Come next Spring, everything will ‘ave
settled and we can re-launch the C.O.P.S anew.’
It seemed the sensible solution to an awkward set of
circumstances. Putting space between problem and outcome.
Clive was beginning to lose faith in ever being able to
communicate with Min. He’d tried leaving messages, he’d tried talking to
everyone who went into Satis House – the woman in the uniform, the other woman
who dressed in colourful attire and spent a lot of time carrying cakes. The cat
was proving less than useless. And so his last hope was the young woman who had
been spending the last month or more redecorating his childhood home. The one
who had helped Min carry his collection of taxidermy pieces into the garage.
Clive had been informed by Halliwell that this young woman had almost
finished her work in the house so if he
was to try and use her as a conduit between himself and Min, then he had better
get a move on. So he took a seat on top of her van, and pondered how he was going
to try and break the veil.
As it transpired, he needn’t have worried. The young woman
approached the van and immediately looked at its roof upon which he sat waiting.
She looked at him. Direct eye contact.
Uncertain though, Clive glanced behind him. Maybe her eye had
been caught by something across the road, or in the sky. But when he looked
back, she was still staring directly at him, her eyes narrowed, her hands
folded across her chest.
‘What do you think you are you doing?’ she said.
Clive felt a rush of heat flood across his chest, neck and
face. ‘You can see me,’ he said.
‘Of course I can see you,’ said the woman. ‘Do you want to
tell me what you are doing on top of my van? You’d better not be causing any
damage up there, because if you are…’
‘You can hear me!’ said Clive. ‘Oh my days! You can actually
hear me.’
Willow sighed. ‘’Look,’ she said. ‘It’s been a long day. It’s
hot and I am tired. I just want to get into my van and go home. Please get
down…’
But Clive had already jumped from the van and was standing in
front of her.
‘This is brilliant!’ he said. ‘I was beginning to give up
hope that I could communicate with anyone…’
Willow took a small step back and raised her hands, palms
outwards, in front of her. ‘Look,’ she began, glancing back to Satis House and
wondering if she could shout loud enough for Min, Connie and Amazing to hear
because if anyone could rescue her from this lunatic, it would be that team of
three. ‘Look, I don’t know who you are or what you want, but I don’t want any
trouble and, I think I have to warn you that I am a….a… black belt in Tae
Kwondo….’
‘Are you?’ said Clive. ‘Really? I’ve always been interested
in martial arts…’
‘Yes,’ said Willow, firmly. (She wasn’t. But she adopted a
stance, anyway.)
Clive shook his head. ‘And how rude of me. I should introduce
myself. I’m Clive. Clive Thing.’
Willow opened her mouth, and closed it again. Clive tried
again.
‘Clive,’ he said. ‘Minerva’s brother. And you are..?’ He held
out a hand because even though he knew instinctively that they would be
unlikely to make physical contact, old habits die hard.
Willow took another step back. ‘But you can’t be,’ she
stammered. ‘You’re…’
‘…dead,’ said Clive. ‘Yes, I know. It’s, well….complicated.
But you can see me and…’
He didn’t get any further with his introduction. Willow
suddenly found her feet and she was inside the van and driving away up the road
with remarkable speed. Halliwell appeared at Clive’s feet and delivered him a
withering stare.
‘Buggeration,’ said Clive.
The next day, Clive was waiting at the gate of Satis House
when Willow arrived for work. He had tried following Willow home, Pa having
shown him that astral travel was far quicker, cheaper and more efficient than
any travel system known to the physical plane. Yet despite his best and calmest
efforts, every time he tried to speak with Willow her fingers went into her
ears and she would sing very loudly a selection of hits of the Eighties. She
had done everything in her power to convince herself she could neither hear nor
see Clive Thing, finally putting his presence down to having spent so much time
decorating Satis House and immersing herself in the life of Minerva Thing that
it must all be some weird, stress-related hallucination and she was jolly glad
the job was coming to an end and she could go back to doing ordinary, normal
painting and decorating jobs for ordinary, normal people.
‘Never mind, son,’ said Pa, who had eventually persuaded
Clive to give up for the evening. ‘You’ve got a few days left to try and get
through to her. It can take a while. What you need to do is supply her with
proof of existence. Find a dead relative of hers and pass evidence over that
will convince her that she really is communicating with you.’
‘That easy, eh?’ said Clive, not even attempting to hide his
sarcasm.
‘Yes,’ said Hector, missing the sarcasm completely.
Comments
Kindest regards,
Maureen x
Aileen, I do like a list. I love ticking them off at the end of the day. It gives one a sense of achievement, don’t you think?