Relationships

Open Brackets

by Enormous on September 7, 2009

‘Morning, Reg. What you got there?’

‘Brackets, Davy-me-lad. Putting some shelves up in Nigel’s room.’

‘He’s settling in, then?’

‘Looks like he’ll be with me for some time. His wife’s playing silly buggers.’

I felt obliged to ask for an explanation but did not. I think my eyes betrayed my disinterest because Reg just sighed.

I was about to take my leave of him when he suddenly hissed: ‘Look out! That’s her. Coming up the hill. My God, what a sight. Les alert! Les alert!’

I found speech. ‘She looks all right.’

He put his hands behind his back, and bobbing slightly up and down on his knees like a comedy policeman, began to whistle tunelessly.

‘She looks friendly enough, Reg. I think we’re safe.’

His whistling grew louder as she approached.

‘I know where he is, Reg. And I don’t give a monkey’s arse.’

She wore the same variety of beige anorak I had seen Nigel wearing a few days ago and seemed to be a fan of the same style of short, greasy hair. Although she was obviously angry about something, she seemed benign enough. I can’t say she actually looked like a lesbian. What does one of those look like, anyway? Fat? Tattoos? (That would mean that most women who live in the village are lesbians.) I really have no idea. She did, however, have a face like an underdone suet pudding and an unpleasantly husky voice that sounded like she had ingrowing tonsils.

‘Who the hell are you?’

That scared me.

‘Nobody. I’m just – ‘

‘He’s just . . . leaving. Aren’t you Davy-lad?’

‘Yes. I’m just leaving. Come on, Audrey. Goodbye, Mrs . . . erm . . .’ I nearly said “Lesbian”. ‘Lovely to meet you. Goodbye.’

Turning into Victoria Street, I told my little hairy companion: ‘I think she wanted to fall out with us for some reason, Audrey. Never mind. Let’s get back and have a nice cup of Earl Grey.’

And with that end in mind, we repaired to the house.

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What Goes Around

by Enormous on February 26, 2009

‘Stop that, Keanu! That’s not what noses are for. Now, gerroff ‘ome to yer dad!’

After Audrey and I had negotiated our way around the mothers and mephitic children and various other odious morons blocking the pavement outside the Brigg School for Filthy Infants yesterday afternoon, we bumped into Reg on the park – and he was not a happy man.

He was sitting, looking thoroughly dejected, amongst the broken beer and cider bottles on the vandalised kiddies’ roundabout, quietly watching Hercules who was doing his best to urinate on every vertical object within a fifty-feet radius of his master.

He told me that his Italian girlfriend Maria had broken off their engagement and moved out of his house.

I had no idea how to console him. ‘I hope it was nothing to do with me,’ was all I could manage.

‘Don’t worry, Davy,’ he sighed, ‘She was bound to leave me, anyway. I’m not rich enough for her.’

Again I was lost for words. I tried one of my usual clichés: ‘Women.’

Walking back to the house, I bent down to give my little dog a pat on her hairy head. ‘You know, Audrey,’ I told her softly, ‘you and I are very wealthy, actually; the only thing we haven’t got is money.’

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Male Possessive

by Enormous on December 5, 2008

‘The wife does all that for me, Steve.’

‘What, even when you haven’t washed it for a few weeks?’

‘Especially then.’ He pointed to his jeans and laughed. ‘I made her get out of bed at four o’clock this morning to iron these before I opened the shop.’

‘You don’t iron jeans, surely.’

‘No, she does.’ Mr Mishri pointed to a small woman in a gold and orange sari who was cleaning the sign on the pavement outside his shop. ‘That’s her.’

‘Do you ever tell her you love her?’ I asked him.

He gave me my change and groaned. ‘She wouldn’t believe me if I did.’

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Crash Landings

by Enormous on September 20, 2007

Nelson rang last night. He asked how I was.
‘I’m feeling lonely,’ I told him.

‘Think yourself lucky,’ he said. ‘At least you got rid of that mad French woman you were married to. She was anybody’s for a tin of beans and a Martini. Small price to pay, being lonesome, if you ask me. You got off extremely lightly, bailing out when you did.’

‘I didn’t bail out, Nelson. I crashed. She left me,’ I said.

I thought for a second about what he had just said to me, and I realised something quite profound: I miss being married.

If I were being cynical, I would say that matrimony marks the onset of a life of domestic toil. But feeling slightly vulnerable at the moment, I cannot deny how much I wish I had someone to share my life with – a loving partner who would hold my hand from time to time and tell me good things like, ‘I love you’ and ‘Everything’s alright.’

‘Anyway, thanks for displaying your usual objective and brotherly compassion, Nel.’ I said. ‘What are you doing tonight, you off out on the town?’

‘Nope,’ he said. ‘I’m really busy,’

‘What are you doing?’ I asked, vaguely intrigued.

‘Inventing,’ he replied.

Inventing? Inventing what?’

‘A weapon against evil,’ he said. ‘Well, it’s more a sort of humane killer, actually.’

A humane killer?’ I asked. ‘What for?’

‘Spiders,’ he said.

‘Nelson, have you been taking drugs?’ I asked him. ‘How does this invention – this humane killer – of yours work?’

‘Well, it’s sort of a tiny little box, really. I put the spider in it and then throw it out of the window,’ he said.

At that, I bade him farewell. I ran a bath and opened a bottle of wine. I planned on drinking myself into Bolivia but only managed a single glass before I fell asleep on the sofa. I dreamed of spiders and of aeroplanes. I awoke at 3am, shivering and covered in dribble. Audrey had gone to bed without me.

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Final Reminders

by Enormous on August 9, 2007

I am very divorced now, but looking for some old photographs to throw away last night, I was reminded of my marriage ceremony.

My wedding day was a gas.

True to form, I was completely drunk when I took my wife up the aisle, so to speak.

Months later, she revealed to me that she was ‘a bit of a lesbian.’ ‘Which bit?’ I asked her.

‘The bit that counts, darling’ she replied. Bless her.

She giggled demonstrably all the way through the actual ceremony. For some capricious and quite probably, continental reason, she couldn’t bring herself to actually look at me in the registry office, let alone kiss me sweetly.

Later, at the reception, I found myself indulging in a vicious fist-fight with my brother. He had delivered to me a shocking revelation the evening before when we were out supposedly celebrating my stag night. I think he did it that way by means of an ironic protest against the sanctity of marriage, or something.

When the celebrations were in full swing, with a ripped shirt and a bloody nose, I stepped outside into the street to find my mother sitting alone in her car, weeping. ‘I’m fine,’ she told me. ‘I’m just so happy.’ I left her to her tears.

On returning to the house, I was informed that the fat guitarist of the band that I was in at the time had left unexpectedly. He had, however, rather thoughtfully elected to take with him the entire enormous, creamy and elaborately constructed wedding cake that had been lovingly and skilfully prepared in advance by my ‘happy’ mum. I’m glad he did that. It saved the rest of us from having to enjoy it.

There were various other ridiculous and pathetically death-defying feats of weakness on my part that day, but the high point was me trying to sleep on the sofa downstairs when everyone had left, while my beautiful new wife was alone in our bed, crying and wringing her hands.

I was eventually coaxed into going upstairs to join her at 3am by my formidable French mother-in-law. She gave me an ultimatum, the precise details of which I cannot quite recall; but if you were in my shoes lying there as I was in a pool of dribble with a sore head and a guilty conscience, you would not have wanted to argue with her.

She was half French, half German and half Italian. ‘That’s three halves,’ I hear you say.
Well let me tell you this: she was a big woman.

On the Fantastic hi-fi today:
Merle Haggard – Live In Austin, TX

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Drag Racing

by Enormous on February 16, 2007

It was my birthday yesterday, and this morning, I am ashamed to say, I am decidedly overhung.

I was joined early in the evening by my good friend (and nascent transvestite pop star) Nelson Galaxy, who brought with him several bottles of frosty champagne, a crate of cold Budweiser and a brace of Beaujolais Nouveaux, all of which are now terrorising my head, heart and lungs and, I suspect, have convened a protest meeting in my bowels for around two o’clock this afternoon. (Ah, alcohol: the answer to, and the reason for, all of life’s problems.)

These facts, and my embarrassing crapulence aside, however, I am happy to report that the four of us – I, Nelson, Audrey and the booze – enjoyed a very agreeable night of celebration indeed.

Unlike my usual commemorative occasions with Nelson, this one was slightly more sophisticated as it was conducted, by and large, in a very self-possessed and mature manner – for us, anyway.

He talked me into visiting several of the local hostelries, something I am not that keen on doing as I don’t generally take pleasure in being around tipsy strangers at times like these. Lately, I have developed an acute case of that well-known complaint, Anti-Social Behaviour Disorder, a condition apparently quite common around these parts.
“Last one there is a Muppet!” yelled Nelson as he forcibly ejected himself from the house. I had to laugh as he propelled himself clumsily along the rain-soaked streets, tottering precariously on his high-heeled boots, his quavering falsetto echoing in the night while his heavy, black, eye make-up made him look like a tall, skinny panda as he lurched forwards in the direction of the deserted market place.

The worst part of the evening was bumping into an old acquaintance in the Royal Oak. I’m rather disappointed to say that we have become enemies over the past few years. A sad state of affairs that evolved out of some tiresome and absurd argument, the exact details of which I can no longer recall – or would wish to. It is a shame, though, as we used to enjoy each other’s company. I had heard recently with a satisfying sense of schadenfreude that this person had made a couple of dubious business decisions and had consequently fallen on hard times. Last night, he seemed to have been determinedly drowning his sorrows in Brandy as he was clearly very inebriated and was expertly slurring his words, a condition I found to be a very unedifying one to be presented with on my birthday. He wasn’t endearing himself to anybody, especially me, as, constantly pushing his face into mine and annoyingly standing on my toes, his brain kept writing cheques that his mouth couldn’t cash. After enduring his loud, spittle-filled rants for half an hour or so, Nelson and I decided to move on, just as his features were beginning to resemble those of a gurning, medieval witch, who in a more credulous age, would perhaps have been man-handled out of the building and tied to the nearest stake, basted liberally, and generally made ready for an early morning public burning.

I should point out here that I am not a great judge of character when I first meet someone. It has happened again, recently. I have an innate tendency to subjectivity and weak bourgeois sentimentalism. I do truly wish that I could learn to develop more detachment in all my personal relations. I’m sure it would save a lot of time and energy in the long run.

Later on, two very attractive and highly desirable young women came to chat to us and that made my night really. One of them even gave me her telephone number – true! I’m looking at it right now.

The best part of the evening, however, was when Nelson and I returned home – to Audrey’s eager delight – and picked up the two acoustic guitars. We entertained her into the early hours by excitedly bashing out our drunken renditions of several Motown classics like Baby Love (Diana Ross and The Supremes), Uptight (Stevie Wonder) and of course, Smokey Robinson and The Miracles’ the Tracks of My Tears (my all-time number one motor city favourite.)

Around 3am things got a little intense and at the same time confusingly out of focus. The last thing I remember is a burly neighbour banging on the door. He was so ugly and his face was so contorted with anger that he looked like he had spent the whole evening chewing bees. He was happily threatening Nelson with his heavy fists. His warlike gestures and barrage of colourful, murderous invective seemed to not even slightly disturb our Mr Galaxy however, who was just nodding his head and cooing musically. I remember that my friend had the biggest smile on his face that I had ever seen. It seemed, by way of his drunken reasoning, that as if by causing the irate man’s agitated arousal, Nelson and I had achieved some kind of magical reward.

I cannot remember what happened after that, but Nelson’s charm must have won over in the end and finally appeased the severely disgruntled objector, as this morning we are both still in one piece and apart from the inevitable sore heads, we remain – in Audrey’s case at least – undeniably good-looking.

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Au Revoir, Paris

by Enormous on January 24, 2007

Until recently, I was thinking of approaching celebrity heiress Paris Hilton and asking her if she would like to be my girlfriend. But after hearing of her recent arrest for drink-driving, I’ve changed my mind.

A Los Angeles court has fined her $1,150 and sentenced her to three years probation after she pleaded no contest to the charge. The attractive socialite and enormously talented singer was also ordered to attend an alcohol education programme.

Well done Los Angeles, I say. I have always been appalled by people who drink and drive especially rich and famous ones who think that they are above the law.

I know the poor girl is contrite and very embarrassed about the whole episode – ‘I’m so happy that the matter is over,’ she told me – but I will no longer be pursuing her romantically.

Forgive me, Paris, it’s over between us. You won’t be hearing from me anymore. I know it’s hard but you’ll get over me in time. C’est finis, ma cherie, au revoir. Try to forget about ‘us’.

And if the phone doesn’t ring, it’s probably me.

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