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Authors: Tony Hawks,Prefers to remain anonymous

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BOOK: 2006 - A Piano in The Pyrenees
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I smiled. Another joke from Monique. She was beginning to warm up. However, a look at her face revealed that she was deadly serious. It seemed that she was caught in some kind of time warp and believed that the two of us were characters from a Jane Austen novel.

“Right,” I said, more than a little taken aback. “Well, how about you come round for tea at my place one afternoon? We won’t be alone because Brad will be there, and so will Ron the builder.”

“I am not sure about this,” she said with a shake of the head. “Perhaps I should know you better before I visit your house.”

“Right,” I said, trying to disguise my sigh and growing frustration. “Are you sure you want us to meet again?”

“Oh yes, I’m sure,” she replied. “It would be nice.”

“Well, in that case, what about this as an idea? Since you like to lead when dancing a polka, why don’t you lead when it comes to deciding when and how we meet next?”

Another shake of the head.

“No, Tony, I do not think that this would be right.”

Monique wasn’t exactly leaving that many options open.

She seemed to be one or all of three things: incredibly mixed up, extraordinarily old-fashioned and amazingly naive. I looked at her. She wasn’t giving anything away. Her polka face.

“Listen,” I said, “it’s late and we’re both tired from the dancing. Let’s talk again soon.”

“Oh,” she said, seemingly surprised that I was bringing this rather uninspired conversation to a conclusion. “You are going to go now?”

“Yes,” I said, even more confused by her apparent disappointment. “I think I need to rescue Brad. A Dutchman appears to be dancing with him rather too eagerly and he looks a little uncomfortable.”

“OK, Tony, goodnight.”

“Goodnight.”

As Monique turned to leave, I began to wonder what had just happened here. Had I misunderstood the French way of doing things? Or was Monique, as I suspected, a little more complicated than I would have preferred. Should I call her again? The answer, I decided, was no. The trouble was that, although I had all the time in the world, somehow I didn’t have time for all this.

A few mornings later, I was woken by the sound of a huge lorry manoeuvring in the area where Kevin’s wood sculpture had once stood. I looked out of the window and saw pictures that matched the sounds, prompting me to run downstairs and out onto the balcony.

“Ron!” I called in the general direction of the woodshed, almost in panic. “The concrete has arrived!”

There was a beat, no doubt whilst Ron came to terms with who he was, where he was and what he was doing. These things established, he was ready to respond.

“Shit!” he said. “I’d better get my trousers on.”

All three of us had to get our trousers on. We’d forgotten about this delivery and it marked a crucial stage in the swimming pool’s construction. The concrete base was going to be laid on top of the ballast and the steel mesh that we’d put down in the last few days.

“Get your wellies on!” shouted Ron. “And get ready for the hardest morning’s work that you’ve done in a long time.”

I winced. I’d been helping Ron and Brad with the labour but I can’t pretend I’d been working anywhere near as hard as them. There’d been days when I’d wanted to, but they hadn’t let me. The problem was that whenever I volunteered to do something, they explained that I would only get in the way. Given just how much work there was to do in the construction of this pool, it was difficult to take this remark in a positive light.

I wondered how often this had been said to first-rate workers on building sites. I remembered the stunning scene in the film
Witness
when the Amish community toiled tirelessly together to build a huge barn in just a couple of days. I couldn’t recall seeing one desolate figure sitting around on a nearby bench, occasionally offering assistance only to be stopped by a raised hand:

“It’s all right—you’ll only get in the way.”

The problem was that Brad and Ron had become a team. They just didn’t need someone like me hanging round them with endless questions, and with the potential to hit the wrong nail into the wrong hole at the wrong time, topping it all by using the wrong tool. Unlike me, Brad was a practical man and a quick learner, so it was never long before he was carrying out a task as speedily and as efficiently as his foreman. Brad brought out the best in Ron, too, mainly because he enjoyed the work so much and demonstrated an almost child-like zeal in each task he took on. Around Brad, Ron’s urge to ‘go and have a bit of a lie-down’ diminished by about 40 per cent. There were even moments when one could see a hint of enthusiasm, although it rarely developed much beyond a twinkle in the eye.

Much as I longed to get my hands dirty and become one of the workers, I remained a reluctant executive who was called upon to place orders with the builders’ merchants, liaise with the pool manufacturers and, most important of all, translate from the pool’s instruction manual. When it came to physical work, I was only really called upon to assist with mindless tasks.

Mindless tasks like spreading glutinous concrete around the bottom of a large hole in the ground.

“What do I do?” I asked Ron.

I was trying to look nonchalant as I wheeled my wheelbarrow down to the pool. My adrenalin was pumping. At the bottom of my drive, at the edge of ‘Serges’s hole’, there was one of those big concrete lorries that have those swirly things on the back. I could remember seeing these strange contraptions as a kid, but I never imagined that I would ever be at such close quarters with one, let alone be on the receiving end of what lay within.

“Your job is to be in the bottom of the pool with the wheelbarrow,” said Ron. “All you do is stick it underneath the chute that comes out of the back of the lorry and the driver will open the sluice and let the concrete spill down and fill up your barrow. Then you walk it up the other end and dump it on the ground.”

It sounded straightforward enough and I felt momentarily confident. It didn’t last long. When I arrived at the required spot with my empty wheelbarrow, I looked up to the driver who was poised and waiting to release the first dollop of his enormous load. He was a strong man in bright green dungarees and with a huge moustache, one end of which he was twiddling between his fingers. Our eyes met for the first time. Immediately I was aware that he knew. He knew that I wasn’t a labourer. He knew that my clean clothes, my rigidity, my hesitancy and my general aura of anxiety meant that I was a concrete virgin. And if you’re worth your salt as a concrete deliverer, what do you do with concrete virgins? You fill their wheelbarrows to the very brim, that’s what you do.

I could have managed perfectly well with a three-quarters-full barrow, but as the last dollop plopped out of the chute and into my replete vessel, I could feel the muscles in my arms tense. Shifting this barrow was going to be tough. I bent from the knees and hoisted the wheelbarrow upwards, breathing out as I did so, much like a weightlifter completing the first stage of a lift. The moustachioed driver looked on with a keen interest, along with Brad and Ron. They were all clearly disappointed that this first part of my wheelbarrow manoeuvre had been a success. They weren’t to be disappointed for long. The moment I attempted to turn the barrow in order to move off, it began to tip. I fought hard to keep it upright, and soon every muscle in my arms and legs was straining to its limit. To no avail. The weight of the concrete proved too much, and over the barrow went, spilling concrete over my legs and wellies.

“Dammit!” I exclaimed. “Sorry, everyone!”

I looked up to see Ron and Brad laughing heartily and the concrete delivery man smirking. He had reason to smirk. He had done well, after all.

“There’s a knack to it,” said Ron, as he wheeled his wheelbarrow into receiving position.

Seconds later he was wheeling his barrow off in the direction of the other end of the pool where he would tip it and leave it to be levelled off by the attendant Brad. The ‘knack’, it seemed, involved being stronger than me, knowing how much to tip the barrow when starting to move off and, most importantly of all—not having a full barrow to deal with. There was no question that smirking delivery man had not filled Ron’s barrow as full as mine. He had done this deliberately, I was sure of it. He recognised Ron as being one of his gang, and not a namby-pamby white-collar type as he clearly perceived me to be. He was making it easier for Ron, just so that he could have a good old smirk at my expense.

Fortunately he didn’t continue with his mischievous ways and the next few loads that he gave me were smaller and more manageable. However, the moment that I started to look confident and at ease with my work, he would splodge out an extra large portion of concrete onto my barrow, humbling me once more as I struggled and wobbled with indignity.


Bâtard!
” I said under my breath in my best French.

“What does that mean?” asked a smiling Brad, who had overheard it.

“It’s French for someone who’s born just outside a Cornish village.”

“Which one?”

“Wedlock.”

“Oh, I see.”

15

All Change

The next day I elected to hire a van, having decided that the 300 euros I’d been quoted to have the pool’s polystyrene blocks delivered seemed a little excessive. The cost was closer to 50 euros if I collected the blocks myself by hiring a van from a place that offered a bargain ‘half-day rental’.

“Is it wise to hire a van?” asked Brad.

“What do you mean?”

“Well, have you thought about the curse?” said Ron.

“What curse?”

“Well,” said Brad, “Ron and I were discussing your journey down here the other night, and we decided that you’re definitely a victim of the ‘Curse of the White Van’.”

“Nonsense.”

“You are,” insisted Ron. “And you’d be a fool to hire a van.”

The two men, I could tell from their smirks, were enjoying winding me up.

“Look, it’ll be fine,” I said.

“I don’t know how you can go near another white van,” said Ron.

“Superstitious nonsense,” I said. “Anyway, it’ll be all right. I’ll ask for a blue one, or something.”

The lady at the hire shop thought I was a little odd, colour not being something normal people sought to specify when renting a commercial vehicle. However, she assured me over the phone that they had several green vans and one would be available. Pleasingly, there seemed to be no extra cost.

However, when I arrived at the van-hire reception, a different lady told me that they only had white vans and that the green ones were already being used. I protested that another lady had told me over the phone that green ones were available, whilst a young couple eyed me with suspicion. The lady behind the desk asked me why the colour mattered and I struggled to find a reply. It wasn’t that I couldn’t find the French words, I was just hopelessly short on logic. But why had one lady told me there’d be green vans a-plenty when half an hour later it was clear that this was not the case?

I guess it had been my fault for being a slow learner. I was only now beginning to grasp that in this part of the world when people said things, they were often motivated by a desire to please rather than any great urge to deliver a reliable statement backed by solid facts. My Anglo-Saxon Protestant yearnings for efficiency, facts and frankness were always going to be thwarted.

I went ahead with the hire, though. There was no such thing as the curse and I damn well knew it. The only reason Ron and Brad had come up with the concept in the first place was that our lives at the house had become so gratifyingly uncluttered by other stuff. Clearly, the ‘Curse of the White Van’ had been the product of a conversation that had taken place while the two men had stared out at the crossroads across the valley one evening.

§

When I got to the swimming-pool showroom, Fabrice was on great form.


Ah, c’est Monsieur Tonny!
” he exclaimed, in mock awe. “How are you? How are things going with Sophie?”

“Shut up, Fabrice.”

But he didn’t shut up. He was in cheeky mood, and made continuous jokes (about half of which I understood) as he helped me pack the polystyrene blocks into the back of my new van. It still felt a little absurd to build a swimming pool out of polystyrene, but my reasons were sound enough. Fabrice had been the jolliest, brightest and friendliest salesman I’d spoken to, and, for me, this put his product ahead of the others. Anyway, Fabrice was my friend now, so even if the pool did end up being a disaster, at least the bloke who had sold it to me would be able to come round and lament along with me.

An hour later I was back at the house. Ron and Brad were busy bending steel rods in preparation for the polystyrene blocks that would slot over them. The two men were wet through, the summer heat making manual labour more of a strain than usual. They mocked me for doing the cushy driving job, and teased me about how I always managed to dodge the heavy work. I was struck by how well Ron and Brad were getting along. After all, they made an unlikely pairing—Ron, fifty-six, a lifetime in the building trade, and Brad, forty-one, an actor⁄musician who in recent years had set up his own project-management company. There was no reason on earth why they should get on particularly, but get on they did, their playful banter invariably rendering me the butt of the joke.

“You’ll never get that van back by twelve-thirty, you tart,” said Ron, disparagingly.

“I will if I leave right now,” I replied.

I was keen to get the van back before lunch because, if I did so, I could get away with the cost of only a morning’s hire.

“You reckon?”

“Yes, I reckon.”

It would involve me driving a tad faster than was my wont, but there was still plenty of time to make the 12.30 deadline.

Unfortunately I hadn’t counted on the midday traffic. By having a two-hour lunch break, during which most employees liked to get back home, the locals had created the absurdity of four rush hours a day. The midday version I was currently experiencing wasn’t that bad, but nonetheless it could still create enough delay to force me into shelling out for the full day’s hire.

BOOK: 2006 - A Piano in The Pyrenees
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