Petham Green, Twydall: I put the phone
down feeling very pleased with myself. At twelve years old I’d worked out the
complexities of button A and button B, and made my first ever phone call, to
Peter Burtenshaw. We agreed when school broke up that I’d visit him during the
holidays and now that we’d arranged it, I only needed to cadge the bus fare off
my mam.
Burty and I had clicked
from the off and I looked forward to see his big grin again. For someone on the
small side he had a sizeable head and an enormous jaw, for which I
likened him to Griswald, a dog under the control of Officer Dibble in an
episode of Top Cat.
Home for Burty was the Anglo Saxon pub on
the corner of Saxton
Street and Lock Street where he lived with his mum, dad and big sister. Outside of licensing hours, the run of the
pub was a normal everyday thing for him but for me, it was a step into
another world.
I’d never seen a bar billiard table before.
Though I grasped what was required and tried my best, a gift for knocking
pegs over gave Hotshot Burtenshaw multiple opportunities to demonstrate how
it’s done.
In the pub’s back yard Burty suggested we
have a game of French cricket.
‘What's that?’
‘It’s like ordinary cricket ‘cept your
legs are the stumps. Pass me the bat and I’ll show you. Right, you bowl the
ball at my legs.’
So I bowled the ball at his legs… and Burty
batted it away, as he did again and again.
‘Right, it’s your turn to bat. You need
thirty seven to win. Are you ready?’
‘Yes’
‘Out!’
‘Git!’
Four
losses in a row taught me that people with long lanky legs should not play
French cricket with sly little short arses.
When he wasn’t beating me at one game or
another, Burty kept me supplied with crisps and bottles of Pepsi. And when we went for a stroll up the High
Street, he treated me to a milkshake at the snack
bar. I’d had Nesquik before and liked it, but the milkshake they made in that
snack bar was extra special.
Burty spotted an
Alf Garnett paperback on our way out. He took a copy from the shelf, just to check
the price. ‘Three and six… not bad,’ he said. Though he put it back on the
shelf, he was still thinking about it when we'd left. ‘I think I’ll get
it;' he said. 'And when I do, you can read it after me.’
Not surprisingly, I was back at Burty’s
the following weekend.
‘What
the heck’s that?’
‘It’s
a greyhound. It belongs to one of the regulars. We’re looking after it while
he’s on holiday. It fell out of a window and broke its leg. Now it’s getting
better he wants me to give it some exercise.’
So it
came to pass that me and Burty should cross Marlborough Road and wander onto The
Lines with a recovering greyhound. After turning it loose and letting it run
free for a while, Burty suggested we set up a chase. ‘You can be the rabbit,’
he said.
While he held the dog, I strode up the track that veered left of the memorial. At
around 500 yards the cry went up. Burty turned the dog loose and I started
running.
For an
animal still on the mend, it closed the gap rapidly. Each time I glanced over my
shoulder it seemed to have doubled its size and that was alarming, because
until then I hadn’t considered what might happen when the bloody thing caught
me. Passing the memorial I shot over the rise and hit the downward slope, where
a huge expanse of nettles loomed that I couldn’t avoid. Propelled by momentum
and gravity I went straight through the lot, yelping all the way till I burst
clear on the other side and applied the brake with a self inflicted trip that
sent me tumbling. Shaken, breathless and stinging, I’d no sooner sat up when
the dog, having circled around the nettles, appeared at my side and started
licking my face.
We went to the Odeon that afternoon.
The
film was very good. So too, were the hot dogs and the Pepsis we bought. And
after seeing the trailer for the film the following week, we agreed we’d have
to see that too.
Once
again we enjoyed the film… and the hot dogs… and the Pepsi Cola. And once again
the film advertised for the following week looked too good to miss.
I spent a lot of time at Burty’s that summer. Between strolling around the High Street, going to the pictures, and watching The Golden Shot on Sunday afternoons, we wandered the Lines.
A leisurely stroll around the grounds of the
memorial became competitive when we started counting Burtenshaws and Lynch’s.
There were few of either, but that didn’t stop us scanning every plate.
Elsewhere on the
Lines… thin branches stripped of leaves made excellent swishing sticks, perfect
for wading into long grass and decapitating enormous weeds. We just had to watch out for
bees. Then Burty found an empty bottle and a new challenge arose – catching a
bee in the bottle. He succeeded too, but then he needed something to seal the
bottle.
‘Done it!’
‘Have you? Let me
see. What did you use?’
‘A bit of dog shit.’
‘Urgh, you dirty sod!’
Those
carefree days with Burty were amongst the happiest of my life, but behind them
lay a shameful secret; a secret that came out when Mam asked outright if I’d taken
money from her purse. I couldn't deny that on successive Friday nights I’d stolen up to three half crowns to fund my weekend adventures. Tears of
shame turned to tears of terror when I thought about the consequences. I begged her
not to tell Dad. If stealing
from her purse didn’t get me murdered, it’d surely get me half murdered and
cast out with my meagre possessions wrapped in a spotted hankie on the end of a
stick.
‘I’ll
see,’ she said.
Twenty
four nerve jangling hours passed before the red alert subsided and even then, I
was subdued for days. I never touched Mam’s purse again. Just the sight of it
filled me with dread.
2 comments:
Gerard. You mean these - http://www.action-transfers.com/
God, I totally forgot.
Hello Paul. Thanks for the link. Yes, they're the ones. I eventually got Letraset's Custer's Last Stand. (For the best part of an hour I was in another world). It's a pity we couldn't peel the transfers off and have another go as once the last transfer had been stuck on the panorama, the satisfaction of completing it soon gave way to a bit of sadness. The fun was over. That was it, finished.
I've got a question for you, in regard to a forthcoming story. Cast your mind back... in our second year at Upbury when I was still living at Crundale Road, you inspired me to work out a proper fixture list for a table football game I played. I know I got the idea from you (I was highly impressed that you'd compiled a working fixure list) but I can't recall the game you applied it to. Did you simply throw a dice to decide the scores, and amend your league table accordingly, or was there more to it?
Post a Comment