Read Complete New Tales of Para Handy Online
Authors: Stuart Donald
Thus by-standers and passers-by on Rothesay pier, and on the esplanade itself, were treated to the remarkable spectacle of one adult male, body locked into a kind of inverted L-shape, being pushed along the pavement standing in a small wheelbarrow propelled by one, young, man while two older men, one at either ï¬ank of the barrow, held the stooped man by the arms to stop him from falling out of the conveyance to one side or another.
In due course, and not a moment too soon for any of those involved in it, the little tableau reached the chemist's in Montague Street.
Para Handy held the shop door open, and Sunny Jim heaved the barrow over the shallow lip of the step into the narrow gas-lit interior of the pharmacy. A low counter displayed a range of toiletries of every description and a stock of speciï¬cs for virtually every known ailment, real or imagined, which might afflict the citizenry of Bute. The wall behind the counter was lined with rows of small mahogany-fronted drawers to shoulder height, each with a lettered and gilded glass plate proclaiming its contents. The wall on the other side of the pharmacy was shelved from ï¬oor to ceiling and the light glinted on porcelain canisters and ribbed specie jars and bottles lettered in Latin and in gilt.
“Well, well, it's yourself then Mr Maxwell,” said the Captain as the white-jacketed ï¬gure of the pharmacist appeared from behind the frosted-glass screen which concealed the dispensary at the far end of the shop. “You're keepin' weel, I hope?”
“Can't complain, Captain,” said Maxwell genially, pushing his horn-rimmed spectacles up onto his high forehead: “and yourself too, I hope. What can I do for you all?”
Sunny Jim pushed forward past the barrow and its teetering occupant. “Ah'll hae twa pennyworth o' cinnamon,” he asked, ï¬shing in his trouser pocket for the coppers. The chemist opened one of the drawers behind him, took out half-a-dozen of the brittle brown sticks and wrapped them in a screw of paper.
“And I'll have chust a smaal bottle of Bay Rum,” said the mate, “seein' ass we're aal here onyway,” and handed his sixpence to the proprietor.
A croak of protest from behind them suddenly reminded the crew of the real reason for their presence in the pharmacy.
“Well,” said Para Handy, “we have got ourselves chust a wee bit of a problem wi' the enchineer here.”
“It's no' you that's got the problem, you eejit,” protested Macphail through clenched teeth. “It's me that's got it, for peety's sake, and if it wis you staundin' where Ah'm staundin' ye'd no' be callin' it a wee problem either.”
“Whateffer,” said Para Handy, “but we wass efter wonderin', Mr Maxwell, if you have onythin' for a sore beck. The poor man can scarcely move.”
“An' there's a lot of coals needin' shuvvled afore this day's oot,” interrupted Sunny Jim pointedly, “an' Ah'm no' gaun tae shuvvle them, that's for sure.”
“There's not really a lot I can give him for a bad back,” said the chemist, “except maybe some laudanum if he's in pain. Are you in pain?” he asked, turning to Macphail.
“Naw, naw,” said the Engineer with heavy sarcasm. “Ah dae this for the fun o' the whole thing: ye can surely see jist hoo mich Ah'm enjoyin' masel'?
“Pain? Of course Ah'm in pain! Or in purgatory, mair like!”
“Have you tried ironing it?” Maxwell enquired of the Captain. “Often a hot iron will simply lift the cramps out of the pulled muscles, or ease any twisted tendons back into place⦔
“There's nane o' this lot comin' near me wi' an iron, hot or cauld!” spluttered Macphail. “Ah wudna trust ony wan o' them for it. They'd be sure to scar me for life, or maybe drap it on my ï¬t forbye, or whatever.
“See's yer laudanum, an' let's get oot o' here!”
“If you would just try to straighten up, Mr Macphail,” said the Doctor, “I think you would ï¬nd that once you'd done so, your problems would be over.”
The Engineer, his shirt pushed up to his neck and his back laid bare as he clung to the top of the examination couch in the High Street surgery, said nothing.
“You've pulled a tendon,” the Doctor continued, “just below the right shoulder-blade here⦔ he scarcely touched the spot with the tip of his ï¬nger but Macphail let out a yell which made the hairs on the back of the necks of his audience stand up to be counted. The crew jumped but the Doctor carried on just as if there had been no interruption “â¦but if you could force yourself to jerk upright, I am certain it would slip back and you would be right as ninepence.”
Macphail turned his head slowly, cautiously, as if fearful of putting any sort of strain on neck or back, and favoured the Doctor with the sort of look that an early martyr might have reserved for his persecutors.
“We can only thank you for your time, Doctor,” said the Captain apologetically, as they manhandled Macphail back onto the barrow with the sort of level of difficulty that might have been expected had rigor mortis already set in, “but I'm afraid Dan is thrawn, thrawn when it comes to his health.”
“I am getting chust sick and tired of aal this,” complained the Captain an hour later as he, Dougie and Sunny Jim leaned reï¬ectively on the bar counter of the Harbour Inn. Macphail they had left outside, despite his protests, the wheelbarrow leant up against the Inn wall alongside a couple of push-bikes, a knifegrinder's hand-cart and a (sold out) stop-me-and-buy-one trike, the owners of all of which were now playing four-handed cribbage at a corner table.
Since leaving the Surgery they had been along to the Glenburn Hydropathic in a vain attempt to have Macphail admitted to its salt-water hot spa baths (they had been unceremoniously ejected from the hotel foyer by an outraged duty manager) and then spent 20 fruitless minutes trying to persuade the Engineer that a donkey-ride along the sands of the west bay might just shoogle the twisted tendon back into place.
Ignoring the occasional calls of protest from their shipmate in the street outside, and the now less-frequent and, it must be said, rather less-convincing howls of anguish as well, Para Handy called for beer and scratched his head in some perplexity.
“What in bleezes are we goin' to do wi' the man?” he enquired of nobody in particular. “I am thinkin' the Doctor iss probably right, if we could chust persuade him to move his beck, then it wud aal fall into place. But he'll no' do it, the duvvle.”
His voice tailed off in mid-sentence and a sudden gleam came into his eye.
“Lads!” he cried: “I think I see the light! Drink up, and we shall see what we can do⦔
“We will chust have to take you back to the shup, Dan,” said the Captain two minutes later as they wheeled their ungainly cargo down towards the quayside.
At the Square beside the Esplanade the barrow dunted across the cobblestones and the gleaming metal rails of the double-track of the Rothesay tramway, each such tremor producing a croak of protest from the Engineer.
Then, at a signal from the Captain, Sunny Jim lowered the handles at the rear of the barrow and let it stand, supported by its front wheel and rear legs, right between the rails of one of the tramway tracks at the very corner where the trams came hurtling round from the Esplanade and into the terminus.
The three men backed away, leaving Macphail teetering on the barrow, gazing after them beseechingly. From the near-distance and getting nearer all the time could be heard the distinctive and imperious clang of the bell of a fast-approaching tram.
“The Doctor said somethin' had to mak' you move, Dan, for your ain good!” shouted Para Handy. “And if you don't look lively and chump oot o' that barrow like a good laad, I think that wan o' the skoosh-caurs is goin' to fetch you a right dunt â ony meenit noo!”
There was the teeth-gritting screech of metal on metal as the still-unseen tram ï¬ung itself into the turn and the wheels bit at the rails in protest as it took the 90 degree curve. Just as the blunt nose of the speeding vehicle appeared round the corner, Macphail gave an agonised yell, an agonised leap â and threw himself out of the barrow in a desperate ï¬urry of limbs and sprinted for the safety of the pavement, as swift and as supple as an athlete.
Within seconds he was at the side of his fellows, all his back problems forgotten, heaving with rage.
“Ye left me to dee!” he roared, wagging an accusing ï¬nger.
“Not really, Dan,” said the skipper. “For a start I knew ï¬ne that hearin' the skoosh-caur comin' wud mak' you leap for your life, if you were ï¬t. And if you weren't ï¬t then I knew what you obviously don't â that the wee bitty track we left you on hasn't been used for years, ever since they brought in the electric caurs to replace the auld horse yins! It's as deid as the dodo! They only use a single-track nooa-days, no' the two, and the caur wud have passed ye on the ither side!”
F
ACTNOTE
It was only after I had ï¬nished writing this story that I recalled an episode in the TV series with Roddy MacMillan as Para Handy in which Macphail had a back problem (in Arran) and rolled off the pier on a luggage trolley. I remember no other details. I apologise for any unconscious plagiarism but I have kept this story in as I think it is sufficiently different, and above all since there is too much personal nostalgia in it for me to abandon it.
If there are any old-fashioned pharmacies left, I would be glad to hear of them. My father was a chemist with his own business in the village of Kilmacolm, Renfrewshire. He died very suddenly in 1962 and at that time the premises had been little altered since the turn of the century: certainly after he acquired the business as a young man in the 1930s he changed nothing. The interior was much as I have described the Rothesay pharmacy. Though not gas-lit, it had a small gas jet, used to melt the scarlet wax by which every prescription he dispensed, each wrapped meticulously in shining white paper, was sealed using a metal monogram stamp. He was pleasingly old-fashioned in other ways too, sported a watch-and-chain daily and was most probably one of the last men in Scotland to wear spats â which he did, in winter at least, till the day he died.