Authors: Trevor Hoyle
âTesting?' I said stupidly.
âEye tests. You want lenses, don't you?'
âI already have the lenses.'
She laughed in a scathing way. âHow do you know they'll fit? Anyway,
you
can't fit them, it's done on a special machine.'
âIf they're not right I'll bring them back and change them. That's all right, isn't it?' She stared at me. I could feel myself getting angry, which was a mistake. I wanted to stamp the frames into the floor and snatch the note out of her hand and run away. I said, âWrap them up and let me worry about it. Or is the customer always in the wrong in this establishment?'
It was satisfying to have said it but a bad mistake. She would remember me, the silly rude man who purchased spectacle frames without lenses. Anger does that to me, and I never seem to learn.
I went out, knowing the old hag was watching with cold, brilliant eyes. What should be simple is always complicated. And then I thought, My God, the £20 note I'd given her. Newly minted, smelling of ink. The bank would have the numbers of all new notes issued. They would have the number of every note in my pocket. Every shopkeeper in town would be watching out for a stranger handing out crisp £20 notes. The hard brick of money tucked comfortingly in my
inside pocket was just so much waste paper.
I had four pounds and a few coins in real money and £4980 I might just as well have scattered in the street for all the good it would do me.
Working my way through cobbled alleys and back entries, past jerry-built extensions writhing with green plastic pipework, I approached the shop from the rear and hammered on the back door until Mr Patundi heard me and let me in. His yellow eyes rolled in the gloom of the passage. âDid you tell Councillor Benson for me? I am most obliging to youâ'
âTell him what?' Then I remembered Mr Patundi's troubles with the local youth. I pushed past a wooden crate, the lid open, giving off a reek that you could grab with both hands. I said shortly, âI didn't see him. He's away at the moment on business.'
He jerked his head. âCome â come. You will have some tea?' He flapped ahead of me.
âI'd like some hot water,' I said, following him along the passage. âTo wash with.' He nodded and beckoned me into a room opposite the stairs.
The room was like a cave. A grimy striped blanket was tacked across the window so that the only light came second-hand from the passage. There were two very cheap-looking plastic chairs, a white sink with brown stains, and a gas-ring. On a metal tray commemorating the wedding of the Prince and Princess of Wales were two chipped mugs, a packet of tea bags, a large bag of white sugar, a tin of powdered milk. Thick curling wads of invoices were nailed to the walls with six-inch nails, as if Mr Patundi had exorcised his rage by proxy on all those who demanded payment. As my eyes grew accustomed to the light, I saw in the corner, almost hidden behind a crinkled velvet drape, an antique safe, squat and black, with a gleaming brass handle and a well-worn brass keyhole.
Mr Patundi stood in the cramped space, swaying to and fro, while I sat drinking the tea he had made me which was weak and too milky, served in a beaker with a spoon in it. My stomach shrank and recoiled
as the hot liquid sloshed around in it.
I kept wondering about the large key that must fit the brass keyhole. If I were Mr Patundi it would be tied round my neck on a double loop of string, flat and warm against my chest, under the collarless smock and vest, if Indians wore vests.
For something to say I asked him if he had any children.
âI have two children,' Mr Patundi replied, as if this was the correct answer to an examination question.
âI never hear them. Do they go to school?'
âMy son â Rajiv â went to school for two months, but he cried every day. He was struck every day. These blue marks â here, on his arms and legs â¦' He indicated where while he fumbled for the right word
âBruises.'
âVery good, yes. Bruises. Now my wife shows him books with pictures about Janet and her friend John going to the post office. He learn very quick. He can read almost.'
âYour wife speaks good English?'
Mr Patundi hooked his finger inside the frayed edge of his smock, scratching his neck. He shook his head. âShe doesn't speak at all â no English. Rajiv, he sees the picture, he tells the word to her. Very quick. Very good.'
It was a different approach to education.
âMy other son, the younger one, Kamal â he is very sick,' Mr Patundi said gravely.
âI'm sorry. What does the doctor say?'
I had been watching Mr Patundi's finger scratching his neck: no sign of a chain or loops of string.
He shrugged. âThe doctor knows nothing. He said to me, Kamal's blood is weak. That is all I have to tell you. He has weak blood. I ask him why he has weak blood because my other son, Rajiv, has strong blood, and he says nothing. He gives tablets for Kamal â three times in one day, after he eats â but he eats nothing so how can I give tablets when I have to give them when he eats and he eats nothing?' He wiped both eyes with heel of his hand. âNow my wife will not eat because Kamal is sick. She does not sleep.'
âThat's a shame,' I said, glancing round, but there was nothing
handy to hit him with. I could hit him with my fist, I supposed, though what if somebody came into the shop in the middle of it? Or his wife heard the noise of the struggle and crept up from the basement? It was better to wait for another time, late at night perhaps. I calmed down and drank my tea. I have found that anger â controlled, tight, held in check â brings with it a great lucidity, a clarity of purpose.
I put the mug on the tray and got up. As I did so the shop bell tinkled. âAbout the hot water â can I take a kettleful upstairs?'
He waved his hand on his way out. I filled the kettle at the stained sink and set it to boil on the gas-ring. I listened at the door for a moment and then knelt in front of the safe. There were fresh scratches round the brass keyhole. I tried the handle, which was firm. A week's takings would see me through. I pondered how to get the key off Mr Patundi and lay the blame on the prowling yobboes in the streets. But getting the key, that was the first obstacle.
Upstairs in my room I put the spectacle frames and bottle of hair dye on the washstand and poured hot water into the bowl. I added cold water from the plastic jug, stripped off my jacket and shirt, and read the instructions on the bottle. It seemed simple enough.
The comic side of the situation suddenly struck me. Presumably the theft had been reported and by now the police would be looking for a man with £5000 (less £20) he couldn't spend. That was funny. I bared my teeth at the image in the mirror. A quirky item you might come across as a space-filler in a tabloid newspaper. Hilarious.
I combed my wet hair back. The transformation was startling. My grey temples and the streaks in my hair were gone, and even with the glasses and growth of beard I looked younger, less haggard.
I lay down on the bed and pulled the blanket over me. The light was dying rapidly. It was nearly dark. Later, that same evening, at the town hall, I would see Benson for the first time. I fell asleep and immediately began to dream that SÂ â and the bitch in the chemist's were whispering together, conspiring to do away with me, for the heinous crime of wearing spectacle frames with no glass in them.
Somebody was breathing close by, hoarse and ragged. I woke up in a sweating panic, thinking it was SÂ â closing in, only to find it was me. A streetlight's slanting beam made a moon map of the ceiling. Had I cried out? My throat felt as if I had.
I rolled off the bed, tangled in the blanket, stricken with fear that I had slept too long. My hair was damp and sticky. Perhaps the dye had run and I was the same chestnut shade as Mr Patundi. Now the local yobs would jeer and spit at me in the street, telling me to bugger off back to Bongo-Bongo Land.
The same endless, circular dream as before. Dr Morduch and the narrow needle bearing down, the shrill sliding pain, piercing to the marrow. Then the dream shifted, as dreams do, to Susan standing with Dr Morduch in the corridor, his lean figure stooping over her, his large bony hands sharply outlined in the pockets of his white coat. Dr Morduch was speaking gravely to her about my âcondition'. I could see every line of his long austere face, the pouchy eyes, the waxy pallor; and yet Susan's face remained stubbornly blank, like a blurred splodge of white on a faultily developed photograph. I tried my hardest to remember her face, and always at that point the blankness swirled in, dense as moorland mist, obscuring my vision.
Somewhere in that mist SÂ â was lurking (as always) up to his usual gleeful tricks and stratagems. I knew he was there in my dream, lurking, waiting, because I could hear his hoarse breathing and his stifled giggles.
Just as he had giggled when he told me how he had committed the Perfect Murder.
I pulled on my overcoat and buttoned it to the neck, slipped the spectacle frames into my pocket. With my hat on Mr Patundi would never know of the miraculous youthful transformation that had taken place since we drank tea together.
The solid block of money was still oddly comforting despite its worthlessness. Dare I risk spending it? All of a sudden it seemed ridiculous that I couldn't or shouldn't. I got the sudden, uncontrollable urge for fish and chips. Vinegar soaking into newsprint. The sharp tang of salt on my tongue. Batter crunching between my teeth â¦
I went down the stairs, the fish sizzling in my ears. Mr Patundi showed me the time on his fat Rolex, studded with buttons. It was 7.45. I went out through the shop and walked quickly past the tattoo parlour with my collar turned up. It was in darkness. The fat boy Wayne's night off: sticking the needle into a junkie's arse in a public lavatory somewhere.
It was bright and cold under the sodium-yellow glare of the streetlights now that the mist had cleared, and I walked briskly down the hill to the Town Hall.
The entrance was lit up. Inside, behind the swing doors, small groups mingled amongst marble busts on stone pedestals. A man with white hair, cut short and square so that it stuck up like porcupine quills, passed importantly from group to group, wearing his mayor's chain of office over his dark business suit, a large medallion dangling down onto his sloping beer-belly like a golden dinner plate propped on a shelf.
Before crossing the street I altered my appearance, squashed the hat in my pocket, smoothed back my hair and straightened my collar. I felt awkward in the empty spectacle frames but kept them on all the same.
A small mob shuffled outside between the stone columns. Placards were being waved â mainly by women in woven skirts and flat shoes, not wearing make-up. There were a few young men, pale, lank-haired, eyes glittering with zealotry. Some of the women had babies strapped to them. One of these scrutinised me closely as I came up the steps.
âHe's not a councillor,' she said dismissively, turning her woolly cap away.
âCome and join us,' another woman sang. âJoin S.O.C. and protect our future.' She waved a placard in my face:
Save Our Children
.
âAre you a journalist?' A young man thrust his neck out, Adam's apple bobbing, unsure whether to be deferential or belligerent.
Someone started to sing âWe shall overcome' and a few strained voices took it up. I was jostled to one side as the crowd pushed forward into the entrance hall. Chaddie, the doorkeeper, halted the invasion, stemming it with two thin raised palms as if holding back a dam-burst. âYou're blocking the doorway. Please move aside. Fire regulations stipulate we must allow free access at all times. Thank you. Thank-yewww-very-much.'
His gaze swept over me without recognition. The mob fell back and became a polite English crowd, muttering and indignant, protesting by the rules. The revolution wasn't about to start in Brickton; or anywhere else, probably.
The confusion helped, got me inside the entrance hall without Chaddie or anyone else noticing. A few stragglers were drifting off to committee rooms. At the bottom of a wide curved staircase with lions, coats of arms and
fleur-de-lis
incorporated in the wrought ironwork, varnished wooden signposts shaped to resemble pointing fingers indicated the way. Committee room E14 was down a corridor to the left. Gloomy portraits in gilt frames of elderly men in magenta robes gazing stoically into the middle distance were arranged on flock wallpaper. A motto in gold-leaf proclaimed, âIndustry without Art is Brutality.'
Here you might believe that you were back in the days when things were made and sold in the town, when fishing fleets set sail and people walked in the streets without the glazed vacuous look of shell-shock victims. When the Job Centre was known as the Labour Exchange and there were actually jobs on offer.
The committee room doors began to close as the hour struck.
Inside E14 the Rec. & Ents. Sub-Com, was already assembled at a long baize-covered table set with blotters, sharpened pencils and jugs of dead water with listless bubbles. They were mostly middle-aged and elderly men, one of the only two women present clutching a shorthand pad to her chest. At this end of the room, separated from the
main table by a respectable width of polished parquet floor, were two rows of hard upright chairs, with two people sitting some distance apart in the front row. Edging in, I sat behind one of them, a man with a bald head balancing a pad on his shiny knee, threads trailing from his trouser bottoms.
Somebody rapped a gavel and a voice intoned lugubriously, âI bring this meeting of the Recreation and Entertainments Sub-Committee to order. Do we take the minutes as read?'
âAye, Mr Chairman.'
âObjections?'
No one stirred.
âLet the record show no objections.'