Read Tollesbury Time Forever Online
Authors: Stuart Ayris,Kath Middleton,Rebecca Ayris
Part of me began to think that everyone, every fucking person that knew me or worked with me or passed me in the street, knew what I was up to yet I still could not stop. I thought often of killing myself but the devil wouldn’t allow it. I had lost the power to end my own life from the time that bastard American GI cripple put his empty cock up my seven year old arse. It was just the devil now in control of me. I lived in form only. And I thank the lord that my brother and his wife took Simon to the back of fucking beyond to go and live in the country.
I got myself a bed-sit and held myself in contempt the remainder of my life. I never did what I did to Simon to any other kid. Not that that makes me in any way deserving. Death is the best thing that ever happened to me and that’s the fucking truth of it. At least instead of all that oil and grease I now have flowers upon me."
Well that’s what I heard anyway. It could have been the whispering of the cemetery grass or the conjoined spirits of the corpses beneath me or maybe it was just in the air that only I breathe. I uncrossed my aching, ageing knees and stood as best I could. As I did so I felt for a moment that I would be taken away by the breeze so light did I feel. I was a balloon, the head of a dandelion, a bubble ubble, a breath of warm mist. I was upon this earth but floating all the same. I leaned forward and stroked the top of Uncle Len’s gravestone.
May he rest in peace.
Forgiven.
Beauty, beauty, beauty.
There have been times in my life when I have glimpsed beauty, when it has sought me out for a brief moment, only to flitter away into the world that only others inhabit. I once heard a regular in The King’s Head exclaim to one of the barmaids that beauty is in the eye of the beer-holder and that as she must hold more beer than most during the course of an evening, she must therefore be the most beautiful woman in the world.
She had promptly dropped the pint she was passing to him, and for which he had just paid.
“And how beautiful do you think I am now?” she had asked.
Beauty, beauty, beauty.
Beauty isn’t a face or a painting or a meal or a house. Beauty is the wonderful coming together of all senses at once in a specific, undeniable, unrepeatable moment. And moments, as I was beginning to learn, are all we really have.
Beauty is nothing but that which is beyond the shadows of this mortal life.
And so it was that I came to write a letter to my wife.
Juuliaa
Juuuuuuuliaaaaaaa
Juuulia
Half of what I say is meaningless
But I say it just to reach you…
I know it’s been twenty years or so that I last saw you and Robbie, but I need to see you both as soon as I can. If we could meet up, that would be so great. I would understand if you didn’t want to.
I’m not sure if you are still at this address. I do hope so. That means, not only will you get this note, but you might be
able to meet me at Mo’s Café in Tiptree any time on Saturday 30th August. I will be there all day.
A change has come upon me, Julia. It’s a long story.
Simon
PS I Love You
You
You
Yoooouuu…
The Post Office in Tollesbury is at the top of Station Road, opposite The King’s Head. It consists of a counter at the back of the Corner Shop. The Corner Shop itself is best described as an off-licence which sells some other general goods. It was taken over recently by a chain of shops and the sign ‘Boozebusters’ was erected big and bold. The people of Tollesbury have a Parish Council that represents them who decided that such a sign was not in keeping with the village ethos and it was thus quickly removed to be replaced by the name of the chain itself.
Imagine driving into a lovely country village and seeing The Hope Inn on one side, the King’s Head on the other and opposite that a quaint old fashioned shop called Boozebusters. What a scandal! The fact that if you go further into the village you will find The British Legion Club (selling beer), The Sailing Club (selling beer) and The Cruising Club (selling beer) could perhaps make the casual visitor think that perhaps Boozebusters is not the name of a shop but of the village itself!
Ah Tollesbury - I raise a glass to thee!
I had learned from experience that Mr Postman does not come and collect letters that need posting no matter how much you say please, yet he will at times deliver unwanted correspondence unbidden. He won’t stop to make me feel better once he’s delivered a card or a letter, not even for a minute. There was nothing for it but to go to the post office with my Julia note, buy a stamp and post it. I owed my wife that much, at least; and a walk in Tollesbury can only bring
you closer to beauty - even if it’s just up to the corner shop and back.
The heat hit me like a cartoon spade the second I stepped out of the house. Tollesbury seems to have a weather system independent of all others. When it’s warm elsewhere, it is sweltering here. It’s pointless listening to the weather man, you just have to go out and experience it. And I can think of no finer pleasure.
So, envelope in hand, I intended just to go to the Post Office and post my letter to my wife; but there was more required of me than that. It was my task to recognise beauty wherever it be and that is what I did. The result humbled me. I will explain it as I felt it, for that is all I can do.
Stepping out my side door front door concrete ground in plinkle colours
of stones and chips and pebble heads
all hard unblinking despite the sun
- and shadows fall just where they ought -
My plastic glass door clicks so shut unlocked
Enter thee who feel the need
no need to plead just click and enter
don’t break it open
mine is yours
and you are welcome to it.
From dark to light the flight is flit
I’m in the world now
not my houseworld but yourworld
that opens up to me like the hollow black mouth of a leering creature
Yet
I SEE ONLY LIGHT -
could be the glinting of the teeth
or perhaps
I have been in the gurglebelly
and am in fact
on my way to heaven!
Neighbour's brick wall faces me all crazy shapes of deep design
yet sturdy strong unfurling
so unique in every aspect of divine mish-mash
holding up the slates that
but for its own robustitude
would scramble down to meet my feet and bury me deep in a clattering curvy crish crash
pile.
The dits and dots of weather tracks
that have impaled the mighty brick
strike me now as but tattoos
upon the human form;
marks of mystery rent by Gods
part now of the majestic whole.
I tell myself it’s just a wall
but I’m learning now it’s
Much
More
Than
That.
And now the gate that squeaks and creaks
to me goodbye hello
depending upon which way
I deign to go.
This fine day I, the unhinged,
unhinge the hinge
and turn and pat it on the head,
latching back the naked latch
back into its cosy bed.
So all is safe at my castle home -
the door is closed,
the gate is shut and there I am
Exposed
to the waiting world.
East Street is before me now left and right
one way down towards the sea
the other to the
very edge
of Tollesbury
where all my sense of safety stops
where far beyond in little towns
that you may feel are rather quaint
but
to certain ones like me are nothing
but barbarity where looks and stares
and wayward glares
bang like nails into the lid
that houses both my heart and soul;
the very thought doth make me shake
with trimble tremors and pimple goosings
that mark me out as a man who is
at mercy to the strong straight lines
of every single machination.
I don’t mean to decry the earth for I find it wonderful
It’s just that my experience
Has led me to a criss cross road
Where all the traffic
Moves
So
Fast.
So I do a right eyes to the ground
my shuffle legs and schoosh schoosh shoes
softly schoosh schoosh as I move
like a jazzy drummer with his sch-toom-sch-toom brushes
backbeat to the light and heat
shuffle feet
shuffle feet.
And there I am in a wild west town,
the green print shop next to the razor‘s edge then onto the grave graveyard
- paper, scissors and stone if ever I saw it
all in a row upstanding and
just
there.
Then the old congregational church
on the other side
demure and aloof
with trees for ultimate protection
of
the ultimate perfection.
But this is not the wild wild west,
not even the wild west end,
‘tis Tollesburyville
and that is all.
The smell of baking bread is with me now
it is all of me
consuming me
I breathe it in and I breathe it out.
Past the corner shop I am drawn,
The King's Head gasps as by I slip
and there into the bakery
through its tiny door I bend myself
and enter.
I have no money in my pocketsses
but am just content to stand in that tiny corner
close my eyes
and get high
Not a soul asks me to leave;
Unlike the baker, I have nothing to prove…
And I floated down from the low ceiling
in perfect silence and
merged into the day.
And that is what I did.
My feet sighed so soft and most unneeded
for
the scent and beauty of the village whole was what carried me
back
home.
So there I was, in my haven-heaven
Sanctuary
relieved.
And the letter
Well
that was still in my hand.
Bugger.
That’s a problem I have you see. The wayward meanderings of my mind will at times, and indeed more often than not, inhibit my ability to complete even the most simple and necessary of daily tasks. Some may call that a symptom for which medication could be the answer. I prefer to see it as just one of those things.
I was standing in my kitchen, a little bemused when a shadow knocked.
It was the Postman.
“Hello Mr Anthony”
“Hello”
“I was just passing and wondered if you had anything you wanted me to deliver today?”
“Just this letter here. Well it’s more of a note really.”
“Do you have a stamp for it?”
“Sorry. No.”
“Not to worry. I just happen to have one right here.”
“Oh. Ok.”
“So if you would like to hand me your mail?”
“There you go.”
A pause.
“You know what, Mr Anthony?”
I shook my head - for so many reasons.