by David Barry
Title Page
CARELESS TALK
Secrets And Lies In A Small Town Near London
By
David Barry
Publisher Information
Careless Talk Published in 2012 by
Andrews UK Limited
www.andrewsuk.com
This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior written consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published, and without a similar condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
The characters and situations in this book are entirely imaginary and bear no relation to any real person or actual happening.
Copyright © David Barry 2012
The right of David Barry to be identified as author of this book has been asserted in accordance with section 77 and 78 of the Copyrights Designs and Patents Act 1988.
Dedication
For Michael and Susan
One
Marjorie Blackburn grabbed the spoon from her husband’s hand as it travelled uncertainly towards his mouth. ‘Have you finished?’ she snapped.
Drops of milk spattered onto the table as she slammed the spoon into the cereal bowl. This made her angrier and she stormed over to the sink and dropped the half-eaten breakfast into the murky water of the washing-up bowl.
‘I have now,’ her husband answered rather daringly.
Marjorie watched the soggy cornflakes rising to the surface of the bowl. ‘Why d’you have to spoil everything?’ she demanded.
‘Me?’ Ted Blackburn’s eyebrows rose with genuine surprise. This was the closest his usually inscrutable face ever came to an expression. According to his wife’s family he was a dark horse and never let his feelings show.
‘You know how much this house means to me,’ she said, turning to glare at him. ‘It’s me what’s inherited it. Not my brother Sid - nor my twin sister. Because I was the one what looked after Nan all those years. No one else. I was the one what helped her onto the toilet and washed and changed her, year in and year out.’
Ted refrained from saying it was difficult for her sister Pam, seeing as she lived in Australia and had done for the past twenty-five years. Sighing, he rose from the table and reached for the sports bag containing his railway guard’s uniform.
Marjorie squeezed the water out of a filthy dishcloth and furiously wiped the drops of milk from the table. Ted stood at the door and watched her.
‘When we lived on the Ramslye estate,’ he said, ‘you didn’t mind me being seen in my uniform then.’
‘That was Ramslye. This is Molyneux Park Road, and I’m not having you coming and going in that uniform. It lowers the tone of the neighbourhood.’
‘I hate going to work in civvies,’ he moaned. ‘It’s awkward having to change at work.’
It was a token protest. He knew it was useless to argue.
‘Civvies!’ she shouted as he shuffled off down the hall. ‘Anyone’d think you were in the Services - not a guard on the railway.’
He stood by the Victorian hallstand, listening in case she followed him to the front door. He was reassured by the clatter of crockery in the sink, quickly slid his hand behind the hallstand, withdrew a paperback book from its hiding place and transferred it to his sports bag.
‘See you tonight,’ he called as he zipped up his anorak.
It was cold outside, but at least it was dry and sunny, and he welcomed the brisk walk across the common to the station. And more than anything he looked forward to the few precious moments he could spend alone with his secret.
***
Mike Longridge brushed the hairs away from his client’s neck and offered up the mirror.
‘How’s that?’ he asked.
His client, the once-famous Dave Whitby, comedian and impressionist, nodded gloomily. Life was not so very funny these days.
‘Thanks for dropping by at short notice,’ he said, standing up and brushing the hairs off his lap onto the kitchen floor.
‘You got some work on?’ Mike asked.
‘Not so’s you’d notice. Masonic night in Folkestone. By the time I’ve paid the petrol...’
He shook his head gloomily and dug into his pocket for change. Mike packed his combs, scissors, mirror and hairdryer into his Gladstone bag and checked his watch.
‘I’ve got to shoot over to Molyneux Park Road. I’ve got a client there who lives next door to a woman whose husband works on the railway. She won’t let him leave the house or come home in his uniform in case the neighbours notice. What she doesn’t realise is, her next door neighbour’s had his ticket clipped by her husband on the train to Charing Cross.’
Dave Whitby managed a small chuckle. ‘There’s nowt so queer as folk,’ he said, slipping easily into his native Yorkshire dialect. He handed Mike a crumpled five pound note and four pound coins. ‘Sorry I can’t make it any more.’
Mike pocketed the money without looking at it. ‘No, that’s fine. I hope it goes well in Folkestone.’
‘Huh!’ exclaimed the comedian bitterly. ‘I’ll see you to the door.’
‘If only you could get back on the telly again,’ Mike said.
Dave Whitby’s face suddenly broke into a broad grin. ‘You never know. I’ve got a great publicity stunt coming up. The tabloids’ll be swarming all over High Brooms, and I’ll be back in the public eye with a vengeance.’
Mike waited for him to elaborate but the comedian shook his head emphatically.
‘Sorry: if I tell you, Mike, it’ll be all round Tunbridge Wells. But I will tell you one thing: the bloke who lives opposite me’ll be livid. And you know what they say. Revenge is sweet.’
Two
Andrew stared defiantly at his mother. It was a look full of hostility and hatred, guaranteed to wind her up.
‘Don’t be so damn selfish,’ snapped Claire Longridge, angrily straightening her son’s duvet. ‘You know I’ve got work to do on the computer.’
‘Which happens to be in my room.’
‘It won’t take long. Just a few hundred words.’
Andrew sneered. ‘The computer still happens to be in my room.’
Claire lost her temper and began yelling. ‘Which you never ever tidy. Look at this room. It’s a tip.’
Ignoring his mother’s outburst, Andrew stared into a mirror plastered with stickers, and began squeezing a spot on his chin. This total disregard for his mother’s presence made her feel worthless and she gestured dismissively at the computer games strewn untidily across his desk.
‘Stupid moronic games, that’s all you ever use the computer for.’
As soon as she said it, she regretted it. She saw his vulnerable, wounded expression in the mirror before he bent down to retrieve his hooded top from an untidy heap of clothes on the floor.
‘Chloe’s twice as untidy as I am. You never say anything to her.’
‘How can I? She’s gone back to university.’
He stopped at the door and gave her the sulky, contemptuous expression. ‘God! You’re pathetic.’
She fought back the tears and tried to think of a reply. But he had already gone. There was a tremor in her voice as she called after him: ‘Where’re you going?’
‘Does it matter?’ He stamped angrily downstairs. ‘The only thing that seems to matter in this house is your brilliant daughter’s education.’
She started to reply but stopped herself. What was the point? The times they had argued like this, going round in circles. And
it always left her feeling drained.
The front door slammed and the house shook as if a gust of wind had attacked it. She crossed to the window and watched her son, his shapeless but fashionably baggy clothes billowing in the icy wind as he shuffled along the road, no doubt heading towards the town centre. She remembered him as he was aged six. The sweet smell of his hair when she cuddled him; the cheeky grin and sparkling eyes.
***
Like the Terminator throwing off an assailant, Dave Whitby hurled open his neighbour’s gate, marched up to the front door and rang the bell. He saw the movement of the net curtain at the window and he knew it was deliberate. There was no way anyone could hem in his car like that without meaning to.
‘I know you’re in there,’ he yelled through the letterbox. ‘I saw you peering through the curtains.’
He rang the bell and waited. No sound came from within the house.
‘Right!’ he shouted. ‘You want to play games? Here’s a good game. It’s called keeping your finger on the bell until the battery runs down. And I bet you get tired of it before I do.’
After two minutes of continuous ringing, the door was flung open.
‘You see,’ gloated the comedian, ‘I said you’d get fed up before I did.’
His neighbour towered over him and was shaking with anger. Dave began to have doubts about the car parking war. The neighbour was also well-built. If it came to the crunch, he didn’t fancy his chances.
‘What the hell d’you think you’re doing?’ yelled the neighbour.
Dave took his finger off the bell and jabbed it angrily towards the street. ‘Your car is blocking me in. Move it!’
‘Don’t park outside my house then.’
‘When you bought the deeds to your house, it didn’t include parking space in the street. So move your car before I move it for you.’
‘You touch that car and...’
Having ascertained that his neighbour must be at least seventy five, maybe even older, Dave became fearless. The finger that had been used for the doorbell was now turned on his neighbour.
‘Shall I tell you what I’m going to do? he began. He was stopped by the sudden appearance of his neighbour’s wife, small, wizened and grey, like a stage granny.
‘Oh move it, Stan,’ she pleaded. ‘We don’t want trouble.’
Her husband glared at her. ‘Okay,’ he said, as if it was all her fault. ‘If that’s what you want.’
Dave returned to his car. After a few minutes his neighbour appeared, determined to have the last word.
‘I’m warning you,’ he said. ‘Don’t park here again. Stick to your own side of the street.’
The comedian brought his finger into play again.
‘And I’m warning you: next week you’ll come crawling on bended knees, begging me for forgiveness. What I’ve got planned for you, mate, is nobody’s business.’
As he drove away, he chuckled to himself, and did a mental action replay of the incident, but this time slightly altered by the witty ripostes he made to floor his opponent.
***
Marjorie knew Ted had a secret. He was a dark horse, that one. Furtive. And recently his behaviour had been more furtive than usual. Especially since they had moved from their Ramslye council house to their house in Molyneux Park Road.
Suddenly she made the connection. At Ramslye he had his workshop at the bottom of the garden, and was never bothered by her. But here in Molyneux Park Road, from the large kitchen window, she could see clearly into the garden shed which was close to the house. Whatever Ted was hiding, she felt, it must be here in the house. And she was determined to find it.
Starting upstairs, she searched every possible hiding place. And it didn’t take her long to find one of his books, cleverly concealed in the bottom of the sponge bag he always took on holiday.
She opened the book, which had been disguised with a brown paper cover, and turned the pages slowly. As her eyes scanned the words, her anger bubbled and boiled, and she hated him as she had never hated him before. But at least now she had the evidence to destroy his pathetic little secret.
She would show him that she knew. She placed the book face up on the kitchen table and looked forward to watching him squirm.
Three
Nigel Pooley caught Mike looking pointedly at his watch and hastily ended his telephone conversation.
‘Sorry about that,’ he said. ‘The phone just hasn’t stopped all day. I’ll put it on answer. No more interruptions.’
Mike moved a chair close to the computer workstation.
Nigel tutted. ‘It’s a bit close to the computer. I’m thinking of all those little hairs. I know you’ve got to plug in your hairdryer but....’
‘Don’t you have a cover for it?’ asked Mike, running short on patience.
‘I don’t know what Betty’s done with it. Betty’s my new secretary. Two days a week. Nice lady. Very well spoken. Lives in Cranbrook, so I have to give her petrol money as well. But she’s worth it. A very tidy person. I can’t bear clutter...’
Mike sighed audibly. ‘Look, I don’t want to rush you....’
Nigel looked aggrieved, until he realised he’d kept Mike waiting throughout three telephone conversations.
‘I’m sorry to keep you. It won’t take a minute to change out of my suit and rinse my hair.’
As he was leaving the room, Nigel was distracted by a newspaper cutting on top of a filing cabinet.
‘Have a look at that,’ he said, handing Mike the cutting. ‘And let me know what you think.’
Left alone in the office, Mike studied the cutting. Sales Executive, it said. Early fifties. Interests include travel and music. Would like to meet mature and attractive lady with similar interests, with a view to marriage. Must be a non-smoker and committed Christian.
Mike flung it with disgust onto the desktop. ‘Sales executive,’ he thought. ‘Selling garden tools from his spare bedroom in Crowborough. Who’s he trying to kid?’
Nigel returned, wearing a towelling bathrobe. He looked a bit sheepish. Mike wondered why he had been given the cutting to read.
After an awkward silence, while Mike prepared to cut his client’s hair, Nigel asked him what he thought.
‘About the newspaper ad? I suppose it’s as good a way as any to meet someone.’
‘Exactly! And it’s a short cut to finding someone with the same Christian beliefs as yours truly.’
Mike remembered being given an ear-bashing the last time he’d cut Nigel’s hair, and quickly changed the subject.
‘You still selling unusual garden tools?’
‘That was only ever a sideline. I’m concentrating all my energies on what I do best - selling telephone systems. And it’s still a vertical market. I was speaking to a client only today....’
Mike thought it was time for another change of subject.
‘What sort of music you interested in?’
‘I don’t really know,’ replied the salesman with an apologetic tone. ‘You see, I had to put something in the advert. I don’t have any interests outside of work. I don’t watch TV; I don’t read - other than my Bible. So I had to put something interesting about myself. I suppose I quite like Country and Western music. Something with a nice tune. I know what I like when I hear it.’
Mike was becoming depressed. He couldn’t wait to get to his bolthole, drive across Ashdown Forest to a pub in Rusthall, where he could sink a few beers and forget about customers like Nigel Pooley.
The salesman chuckled suddenly. ‘I’ve already had some response to the ad. Very attractive she looks in the photo. I’m taking her out to dinner on Saturday night.’
You poor bitch, thought Mike. Little do you know what you’re letting yourself in for.
***
As soon as he had
finished his shift, Ted fancied a pint in the Bedford Arms, opposite the station, and was relieved to find it was quiet at the pub. He bought himself a pint of lager and sank into a comfortable seat. He took a couple of sips of beer, then opened the sports bag containing his uniform and took out the paperback book. He turned to the last page and began to read, his lips delicately miming the words: ‘If we shadows have offended, Think but this, and all is mended - ’
‘Good book, is it?’
Ted was startled at the intrusion. He hadn’t paid much attention to the man at the table next to his. He was a middle-aged man with thinning grey hair, wearing an expensive-looking brown leather jacket. He smiled pleasantly at Ted.
‘Covering it in plain paper’s a dead giveaway,’ he said.
Ted felt himself blushing. ‘No,’ he protested. ‘It’s Shakespeare. A Midsummer Night’s Dream.’
‘And here was I thinking you had something to hide.’
‘No ... I....’
‘This is a coincidence, our meeting like this. I’m also extremely fond of Shakespeare. I suppose you’d call me a bit of a buff, really. And I just happen to have a couple of tickets for the Royal Shakespeare Company season at the Albery next Saturday. Would you like to come with me?’
Ted shook is head nervously. ‘I start the next shift on Saturday. I’m a guard on South Eastern Trains, you see.’
‘Well how about Friday then?’
Ted eyed him suspiciously. ‘I thought the tickets were for Saturday.’
The man grinned. ‘Would you like to come or not?’
‘Yes,’ said Ted, making the most spontaneous decision of his life. ‘Yes, I would.’
Four
‘This is what I call good timing,’ said Mike as he entered the White Hart, making sure his mobile was switched on now that he’d finished work. ‘Cheers, Brian!’
Brian raised his eyes towards the ceiling and said, ‘We don’t see him for weeks, then he walks in just as I’m paying.’ He pointed towards the Harvey’s pump, and called to the landlord: ‘Give him a pint of the real stuff, Ken.’