On the telly…
Spain won the Eurovision Song
Contest with a catchy number called La La La. Cliff Richard came second with
Congratulations.
At school…
Clive
Perry had settled well since his arrival at Upbury in January. He’d grown in
confidence and made a friend of Matthew Hewison, a sandy haired kid with
freckles. As good mates do they sat together and talked a lot, even when they weren't supposed to.
Mister
Hedges was explaining something in our English lesson when he broke off in mid
sentence.
‘Hewison!’
he shouted.
All
eyes turned to Matthew on the back row.
‘What
were we talking about?’ asked Mister Hedges.
Matthew
was speechless.
‘Stand
up, Hewison. What were we talking about?’
Matthew
stood up.
‘Come
on boy, what have we just been talking about?
Matthew
squirmed. Clearly, he hadn’t been paying attention.
‘Well?
I’m waiting.’
The
tension rose as the seconds ticked by. Then, with sudden and inexplicable confidence Matthew replied ‘Dogs, Sir!’
The
class roared with laughter.
‘Dogs…
dogs?!’ exclaimed Mister Hedges. ‘Have you gone completely mad boy?’
The class
were in hysterics.
When the laughter
died down, Mister Hedges took pity on Matthew. A mischievous prompt from Clive
Perry had gone unnoticed by me and many others, but it hadn’t escaped the
attention of the astute Mister Hedges.
‘You
thought Perry was your friend, didn’t you Hewison?’ he said.
‘Yes
Sir’ said a chastened Matthew.
‘Sit
down Hewison.’
That
was the end of the matter. The lesson resumed with everyone paying attention. No
ranting, no histrionics, just calm control. Such was the style of Mister
Hedges.
Also in school…
On a
beautiful spring day I was sitting near the back of the classroom. In
front of me, Jennifer Sanders, like a lot of kids that day, had discarded her
jumper and in bright sunlight, her white shirt had become semi-transparent. Entranced,
I gazed at her bra straps.
‘Bloody hell, Jennifer’s got
tits.’
A sly
look around the room revealed more surprises. Most of our girls were at an
advanced stage of physical development. Blimey, and I hadn’t even noticed. Not
until then, anyway.
At home… mirrors were handy for making sure I'd
wiped a tide mark off my neck before being allowed back downstairs, or for
admiring an outbreak of measles. Other than that, I had little use for them.
Likewise, reflections in shop windows were useful for doing Harry Worths and
nothing else. At thirteen I had no vanity but I was growing up and curious enough to look at my face in the bathroom mirror; I saw not a handsome kid, nor
an ugly one. I only saw an unknowing kid.
At home... I
went for a ride on the old bike I shared with my brothers. I’d seen older kids
ride one handed, no handed and even arms folded, and now it was my turn. So it
came to pass that I pedalled up Crundale
Road, untroubled that the back brake was worn and
useless. Braking wasn’t a problem if the front brake wasn’t applied too
sharply.
After turning right onto Minster Road, I tentatively took my left hand from the handlebars and rested it on my lap, just like the big kids did. Yes! For the next few seconds I was Cool Hand Luke with his head in the clouds, immersed in the achievement and concentrating only on getting the pose right. I didn’t see the back end of a parked milk float until the last second. Instinctively, I grabbed the brakes. Sure enough, the front wheel locked and I shot over the handlebars, landing inches short of the milk float. Lying in the street with scraped hands is not cool, but it was a stinging sensation in the trouser department that bothered me most. I picked myself up and pedalled home as fast as I could, fearing terrible damage from the handlebars. With great anxiety I ran to the bathroom and dropped my pants…
After turning right onto Minster Road, I tentatively took my left hand from the handlebars and rested it on my lap, just like the big kids did. Yes! For the next few seconds I was Cool Hand Luke with his head in the clouds, immersed in the achievement and concentrating only on getting the pose right. I didn’t see the back end of a parked milk float until the last second. Instinctively, I grabbed the brakes. Sure enough, the front wheel locked and I shot over the handlebars, landing inches short of the milk float. Lying in the street with scraped hands is not cool, but it was a stinging sensation in the trouser department that bothered me most. I picked myself up and pedalled home as fast as I could, fearing terrible damage from the handlebars. With great anxiety I ran to the bathroom and dropped my pants…
Of all the places to get a
blood blister… Ouch!