Authors: Alan Sillitoe
âI've seen them dead,' I said, âso I suppose they were happy enough. But I've been happy from time to time.'
âThere should be a happy medium, don't you think?'
âA happy tedium, more like it,' I said.
The smell of soot was in the air, the delectable breath of the north, which partly made up for the gloom descending on the car. It was impossible to throw him out. Nor did I want to. I was neither dead nor happy. There was a stage in between which he didn't know about, and that was his trouble. I thanked God first, and Moggerhanger second, and myself a close third, for including me in on it.
âIf you had given me a lift right from the beginning,' he said, âI wouldn't have had this black eye.'
âThis is my employer's car,' I said wearily. âI'm not supposed to give lifts. In my own car I always do. But not in this one. Do you understand?'
âAnd you switched off the music.'
âIt was driving me crazy.'
A beautiful cream Mercedes passed us, and I glanced at it.
âYou signalled to that car,' he said.
âYou're off your head.' If he wasn't, I was â or would be soon.
âIt must mean something â what you do.'
âIt does if you want it to.'
âEverything means something.'
I'd never been so glad to see the Bawtry signpost, because it meant I would be back on the twisting arterial lanes and have to pay closer attention to driving. It also began to rain, big splashes coming at the windscreen, so I put on the wipers and hoped their rhythm would hypnotise him into sleep.
âIt means something whether you want it to or not,' he said.
âOh, bollocks.'
âSwearing reminds me of that horrible transport café.'
âI'll swear if I like.' I overtook a coal lorry, so that we missed dying by inches. That would have meant something, but he was in no condition to notice. I could see the faces of drivers who were coming to pass me on the other side of the road. Those with their mouths open hadn't yet learned to drink properly. The nipple still shaped them. One chap wearing a cap drove with a look of horror, as if death by fire could strike at any instant. Another man drove with so little of his face showing, he must have been three feet tall. Often the mouth was a circular hole in the middle of a plate of lard, just distinguishable between the dangling good luck charms and the India-rubber Alsatian behind. Most faces seemed angry, as if belonging to a body taking part in a bayonet charge, and set to kill every oncoming driver â unless it was the expression they put on at the sight of a Rolls-Royce. It was too common not to mean something, though I was inclined to think it their normal state. Those faces that didn't look rabid were gritted tight in concentration. A fair proportion of phizzogs sported a benign idiot smile, looking about ten years of age and as if delighted to be at the wheel of a lethal machine. I didn't know why, but most of the women's expressions seemed more or less normal. I wondered with a smile what my face looked like to those able to take it in â and immediately took the smile off it and assumed a mature sternness befitting the captain of a ship.
âWhat are you laughing at me for?' Percy Blemish said sharply.
There were pools of water in the fields, pylons crossing the road and colliery headstocks in the distance. I was too tired to give him a run-through of what I'd been thinking. âThere was something stuck in my teeth.'
âI'm sorry to have to insist, but you were laughing.'
If I ignored him I could expect a savage blow at the back of the head. If the car hit a pylon and exploded he would be laughing â for a split second. It was unjust that so many advantages should be on his side, and even more that he saw them as being only on mine. âWould you like to tell me in what way you consider me to have been laughing?' If talk wouldn't calm him, nothing would.
âIt wasn't so much your face, as the gesture of your body.'
I had met such people before, often worse than him, as well as a few marginally better (like myself), but in no case had I been imprisoned with one in a motorcar that wasn't my own and travelling along a road by whose side it was forbidden to stop, a road so narrow and winding that if you did stop a fully laden coal lorry would crush you within half a minute. I could drop him at the cop shop in Bawtry, double yellow lines in front of it or not, yet I was reluctant to because putting up with him till the end of the journey was a test of character I ought to be able to pass. If I had been old enough to fight in the War I don't suppose I would have survived with such sentiments. I decided that a little sharp talking-to was the only fitting response. âYou'd better be quiet, or I'll black your other eye. If I want to laugh I'll laugh, and if I want to cry I'll cry. It's fuck-all to do with you.'
He was offended by bad language, as I'd hoped he would be, so kept quiet till we were past Bawtry. On the other hand I was offended by the moral tone of
his
silence. He looked on me not as the personal agent of Lord Moggerhanger, but as a common chauffeur for someone whom he, with his superfine sensibility, was bound to scorn, in spite of the fact that he had hardly got two ha'pennies for a penny.
The country was flat, desolate, newborn, as if it had no right to be land at all. I thought that if I lived there I'd be suffering in no time from Backwater Fever. I got nervous if I didn't see rising ground, even if only a slagheap or a pimple with a tree on top in the distance. I had crossed some kind of frontier, and it didn't seem the right type of country for me.
Percy slept, or at least dozed, and I envied his ability to turn himself on and off like a well-oiled spigot, though even with closed eyes he didn't look peaceful. Tremors over the lids and flickers at the left corner of his downturning lips told of torments I would never have to put up with. But then I wasn't Percy Blemish, and I wasn't fifty-eight years old. I hoped I never would be, though when a souped-up black Mini with four young men inside, hooter going and headlights full on, came screaming around a bend, I took sufficient evasive action to suggest that my subconscious, such as it was, might have other ideas about that. Blemish stirred. âYou may set me down soon. I'll have only a short walk.'
I thought he was going to be with me forever. âIs your wife expecting you?'
His laugh didn't seem quite real. âShe always is, though she hopes I'll never arrive. When I'm not there she sits by the telephone waiting for the police to call and say I've been killed. Or that I've been found by the roadside with a heart attack. It's understandable. I don't know what I'd do without her.'
âWhy don't you get a divorce? Maybe it would make things more exciting.'
âWe'd only marry again.'
âAt least you'd have another date to remember. You can't have too many. The more you have, the longer your life will be. After all, you've only got one. You might as well make it as long as possible.'
The line of his lips straightened. A half-second glance in the mirror gave me a fully developed snapshot image to add to my vast store of underground photographic material, many of them taken from as far back as I could remember. His eyes were glazed, and as he stroked his olive-drab cheek they became sadder. âYou make me sick.'
It was as if he had hit me. My foot accidentally slid off the clutch. I recovered, said nothing, and maintained my harmony with the bends of the road. Rain stopped, so I switched off the windscreen wipers.
âThey were getting on my nerves,' he said. âI suppose I'll sleep when I get home. Anyway, it was good of you to give me a lift. You see that house just ahead? Set me down there, if you would be so considerate.'
He could be charming when he liked, and I was sorry for him. I wondered which of the two cottages in the distance he would head for. âI hope you go on all right.'
There was a bit of cinder-ground for me to park in, so I got out and opened the door as if he was Edward VII. He walked along an unpaved lane, while I sat in the car and looked at my map before driving the last few miles to Goole. This took almost as much time as doing fifty miles on the A1 because a car in front pottered along at twenty and it was impossible to overtake with so many lorries coming from the opposite direction. But as soon as we got to the outskirts of Goole, and past a thirty mile an hour speed limit, he increased his rate to fifty and left me behind, a phenomenon I'd often come across.
Caught in the usual scrag-end outskirts at a red light I watched a woman with grey hair and a blue overall-coat flicking a yellow duster at her door knob. She looked at me as if I ought to be at work instead of driving a Rolls-Royce. That's how they are around here, I thought. Then I got caught in a gaggle of Volvo lorries going over a wide bridge by the docks. Before I knew where I was I was across the river into Old Goole. Then I had to turn back, whereat a similar gaggle of Volvos swept me west again.
I turned right into the centre and pulled up not far from the town hall, where I oriented myself from the map and got to an unprepossessing thoroughfare on the outskirts called Muggleton Lane, on which I was to wait. It was nine thirty, so I set my alarm clock for five to ten, then put my head back and dozed. The sun shone on me, and I faded from the world, but after what seemed a few seconds the gentle pipping brought me back to life. Following instructions, I got out of the car, opened the boot and sat in the rear left seat reading a newspaper with the headline âTerrorists state terms'.
Two minutes after ten o'clock (bad marks for being late) a powder blue Mini-van with a coat of arms on the side drew parallel. To my surprise Eric Brighteyes (otherwise Alport) who I had met a few days ago on the train into Liverpool Street, got out and opened the van door. He wore a blue boiler suit and a yachting cap, and gave no sign that he knew who I was, though I would have recognised him anywhere. âGive me some assistance with these dog powders,' he said.
We took ten square packages, done up in brown paper and post office string, and laid them in a double row in the boot of the Roller. As I was signing the form on his clipboard he rubbed an open hand down over his face â once. âForget you've seen me. Right?'
I slammed the boot. âNo problem.'
We'd been together for two minutes, and he drove away in a cloud of blue smoke. All I had to do was exit from Goole the same way I had come, and though I anticipated getting lost in the maze of waterways and lorry routes, I was soon in the clear and on my way towards Doncaster.
Eight
Relieved at the completion of phase one, I lit a cigarette. The staff work had been exemplary, otherwise it might not have been such a skive. I was obviously working for a good firm. It was hard to believe that the British economy was in such a parlous situation with talent like that around. There was more of it in the country than was needed to compensate for the bone-idle, happy-go-lucky, feckless, come-what-may, jaunty, fuck-you-jack, how's-your-father, let's-have-a-lovely-strike sort of person which I had been up to a few days ago, and with which this country at any rate will always be overrun and no doubt affectionately remembered, at least according to the newspapers.
Fortunately the situation is generally saved by those with flair, improvisation, creative ability, hard work, love of money, flexibility, lack of panic in a tricky situation, luck (of course), a refusal to regard long hours as anathema and imaginative attention to detail when drawing up a plan or programme â which I hoped was the sort of person I was fast becoming.
Then of course there was the third type, which no country could afford but which England had somehow learned to tolerate, the one (he or she) who mixed up these qualities but was only held in check by a job that cradled them from start to pension and kept them out of harm's way. It certainly made it a cosy and exciting country to live in, I thought, wondering which category I fell into and not really caring as I set out on an intelligently planned route to south-central Shropshire where I was to offload Moggerhanger's batch of packages from abroad.
I saw someone standing close to where I had put down Percy Blemish, and my spine turned to ice at the idea that it might be him again, this time heading south. I didn't want any more hitch-hikers in the car. Moggerhanger and I were now absolutely in one mind on the matter, though in my old Home Rule banger I gave plenty of lifts, which was no great sacrifice since I was never going very far. However, I decided to make an exception for an elderly woman of about sixty, because by the time I got close I hadn't the heart to shoot off and leave her, especially as a sudden squall of icy rain from Siberia clattered against the car. âWhere are you going?'
I hoped it would be to the next village.
âLondon.'
âI can take you as far as Doncaster.'
âIt's very generous of you.'
âGet in the back.'
I glided on my way.
âIt's a very uncertain kind of day to be out on the road,' I said.
She had lovely features, but her face was haggard and lined. I'd never seen anyone who looked less like a hitchhiker. She wore a travelling cape and carried a good leather shoulder-bag. âI suppose the bus services around here are lousy.' Silence between two people seemed more and more difficult to maintain. âIt doesn't seem a very convenient area to me.'
âIt's not London, I agree,' she answered, âbut I've lived here for some years, and I don't think I have much reason to complain about the amenities. There's a certain starkness in the scenery, but it can be very beautiful at times.' It pained her to speak, as if she was made for better things than talking to someone from whom she had begged a lift.
âDo you have family in London?'
âFriends. At least I hope I have. I haven't seen them for a long while. Maybe they don't live there anymore. I also have a daughter, but she won't want to see me. Nor do I want to see her. The last time I heard, she was working in a vegetarian restaurant near Covent Garden.'