Read No! I Don’t Need Reading Glasses! Online
Authors: Virginia Ironside
How wrong he was.
He gave us what he called a âsnapshot presentation' with slides and photographs, and drawings which made our triangle of green at the top of the road look like a naturalist's paradise, the blue skies teeming with birds, huge bushes surrounding the hotel, dogs jumping about â I wouldn't have been surprised to see he'd featured the odd rare rhino just to emphasise the thorough eco-ness of the plan â and he swore it would âraise the tone of the neighbourhood', a phrase that made Sheila the Dealer's hackles rise at once.
âBollocks!' she yelled, through a cloud of smoke at the end of the table. âWhat's bleedin' wrong with the neighbourhood as it is now, might I ask, Mr Shitterton or wha'ever your name is?'
Ross gave what he thought was a charming laugh and looked around at all of us as if to say, âI know this woman's mad, we all do, but we're just humouring her.' We all stared stony-faced at him. Even Marion's smile was fast fading. He was on his own.
âWhat I mean is,' he stammered, âthat it could raise the tone of the neighbourhood even
higher
. And if anyone of you are worried about parking â¦'
âWe certainly are,' said Tim, in a loud voice. âWe can barely get a space in this, our own street, as it is.'
âWell, we have plans to build an underground car park
to house fifty cars. And as members of the Residents' Association committee we would of course be very happy to allocate you free places if that would make your lives easier â¦'
âYou tryin' to bribe us?' screamed Sheila the Dealer. âBecause it don't cut no ice with me. 'Arf the street don't even 'ave a car, so don't pull that one!'
âNo, no ⦠but I think you will like the design of the building. The interior will be entirely of marble, and it will only have forty rooms. It's more of a
boutique
hotel â¦'
âForty double rooms,' corrected James. âIn other words eighty people. That's a hell of a lot. By the way, you will accept gay couples, won't you?'
âWell of course,' said Ross. âThat is the law â¦'
âGay couples?' muttered Father Emmanuel to himself. âHomosexuals?' He shook his head in a way that seemed to imply that all gays were doomed and damned.
In the end Ross greasily told us what a pleasure it was meeting us and gave us his mobile number so that, âif any of you have any concerns you can be in touch with me twenty-four seven!' and took his âsnapshot presentation' kit, his portfolios and his entourage of assistants off to âanother meeting.'
He left the committee even more determined to make a stand against the hotel than before.
âTwenty-four-seven! I like that!' said Sheila the Dealer, lighting a fag from the burning stub of another. âWhat the 'ell does that mean? I'll try ringin' 'im at four in the mornin'
to ask 'ow late the knees-ups will go on for and wevver they'll be servin' pie and mash in their fuckin' dinin' rooms! Heehee!' And she started coughing and wheezing.
Just starting the front of Gene's jersey. Hope the elephants look better on the front than they did on the back. They seemed to have trunks coming out of their bottoms.
Rather a sad Skype with Gene. He said his classmates are laughing at his accent.
âThey keep asking me to say Harry Potter, Granny,' he said. âI don't like it. And when I say I don't want to say Harry Potter they say, “Listen to the way he says I don't want â isn't it cute?” I don't want to be cute.'
âYou're not at all cute, darling,' I said, indignantly. âYou're the least cute person I know.'
This of course was a great lie. Gene is the cutest, cleverest and kindest child in the universe. Really.
Gene smiled. âIt'll be great when you come over, won't it?'
It certainly will.
After Sylvie had reserved a place for Archie at Eventide, we had to wait for someone to die before he could move in. It does all seem utterly macabre, despite the fact that the decision
is totally rational. Luckily, a place became vacant almost at once (in a darkly curious way I couldn't help wondering who it was), and we're moving him in next week. We've talked about it with him for a couple of weeks now, and he seems to understand, but of course you never know. One minute he's quite accepting and stoical about it, the next he says he's perfectly okay and doesn't need to move, but sometimes he's pitifully begging us to let him stay at home, and saying he'll try to be better. It's agony.
Just back from staying a couple of days with Penny at her bungalow in Suffolk. On Saturday, I said I was going to pop down to the shops â the high street is packed with all kinds of places you don't find in London, like a shop that only sells pet food, and the store which is stuffed with racks of practical jokes â packets of Itching Powder and Sneezing Powder and Floating Sugar Lumps. I always stock up for Gene. I'm keen, too, on the Cats' Rescue Centre which has offered up, in its time, a wonderful set of Victorian dinner plates and even a rock'n'roll skirt, complete with netted petticoats. Not to mention the famous Cats' Rescue jacket that I bought all those years ago, which still comes in useful on a nippy day.
Penny had said she had to do some cooking and then she'd pop out when I came back, leaving the door on the latch, but as I'd been so long browsing and shopping in the
town I wasn't surprised to find her gone when I returned. I called and called, but no reply. After such a lengthy shopping spree, I staggered to my room, unpacked my enormous pile of loot, hopped into bed for a quick afternoon doze and fell asleep.
When I woke an hour later, I looked around the house and was very disturbed to find Penny still not back. Clearly, she had gone out and died. She'd had a heart attack in the vegetable shop and died. She'd fallen, foaming at the mouth, outside the grocers and died. What on earth was I to do? I had a vague memory that I'd kept her brother's phone number somewhere in case of emergency ⦠at what point should I phone him? Or, even, the police? And how would I get my car out of the drive since hers was blocking mine in?
Shaking, I returned to my room to look for my address book and as I stumbled out into the hall again, I heard a noise. There was someone in the sitting room â obviously a concerned young policeman come to tell me the bad news. He'd been trained for such moments. It was the bit of his job he liked least. Bracing myself for this frightful confrontation, I opened the door and was astonished to see not a policeman standing with his helmet in his hand and a serious but compassionate expression on his face, but Penny, white-faced and trembling on the sofa.
She stared at me as if she'd seen a ghost. âBut I thought you'd died!' she said, as she rose, shakily, to her feet. âYou never came back from the shops and I was so worried! Where have you been?'
It turned out she'd had a brief kip in a hammock at the side of the house, and was out for the count when I returned. Finding no one in the house when she woke, she'd assumed exactly the same about me as I'd assumed about her.
âBut I was just going to phone Jack! And then I remembered he's in New York and I don't have his number, and I didn't know what to do â¦' she said. âAnd I'd already in my mind told him it was fine, that I'd pay for the transportation costs of your body back to London and he could pay me back later!'
We roared with laughter and opened a bottle of wine.
I've just got back from one of the most draining days of my entire life.
I drove down to Archie's in the morning, and then Sylvie, Harry and me went round Archie's bedroom while he was in the shower, collecting things we thought he'd like in his new home. We'd decided to take all his precious objects â his favourite chair (and get rid of the one in Eventide), and we gathered up a pile of dictionaries, the full set of Anthony Trollopes and the photograph albums. Harry had already gone through his drawers on the sly, selecting bits and pieces. We can, of course, always return to get anything he particularly wants.
When Archie was dressed, Sylvie said, âCome on, Daddy. We're going to take you for a nice stay at this special hotel.'
Archie looked pleased and was quite cooperative in packing. We'd decided that that was the best approach, to pretend it was only temporary and hope that by the time he'd settled in, he'd have forgotten about his old home. We dithered about the loden coat, but then Sylvie remarked that as he'd probably insist on wearing it just to go out of the house, there was no way we could leave it behind, tempting as it was.
Everything went swimmingly until the last minute, in the porch.
âI'm not going,' he said, firmly. âI've changed my mind.'
He stood there in the sun, so brave and bold on the steps of his home, still, as Sylvie had predicted, in his strange loden coat â even though it's August he insists on wearing it, like a child with a security blanket. His hand was on one of the lions by the front door and he looked so noble and so like the old Archie, I thought my heart would break. To make it worse, Hardy was whimpering and cowering, looking at all of us accusingly and occasionally breaking into an anxious bark. He obviously sensed something disconcerting was about to happen.
âNonsense,' said Harry, efficiently, taking his arm firmly. âNo going back now, old chap. It's all organised. All booked, and sorted. All done and dusted. Roger and out.'
Archie looked uncertain. It was a battle of wills. At first, it seemed as if he was going to hold on there and make a final stand when, before my eyes, you could see everything crumbling. Suddenly he turned from being a brave old
home-owner to a frail old man, almost child-like. He almost seemed to lose height as I looked at him. His lower lip quivered and he allowed Harry to help him down the steps. âI don't want to go,' he kept saying, muttering. âBut if you say I have to ⦠I don't want to go ⦠please don't make me go ⦠Where's Philippa?'
This agonising talk went on until we got to Eventide, when Archie flatly refused to get out of the car.
âWhere are we?' he said. âI don't know this place! I want to go home!'
But again, Harry managed to cajole him out of the car and I took Archie for a cup of tea in the dining room, keeping up an endless patter of jokes and nonsense, while Sylvie and Harry did all the paperwork and sorted out his room to make it look as much like home as possible.
It was still light when they finally reappeared at supper time, and some sort of kindly carer figure, who had obviously seen all this hundreds of times before, led Archie to his room and settled him in. We looked in to say goodbye. Archie was sitting, already changed into pyjamas and dressing gown, even though it was only six o'clock, clutching a mug of tea.
He looked utterly confused.
âWhen am I having my operation?' he asked. âWhere is the doctor?'
âYou're not having an operation,' said Harry. âDon't worry.'
âWe'll come to see you tomorrow,' said Sylvie. âHave a lovely time.'
âWhere are you going?' called Archie. âDon't leave me! I want to come with you! Please don't leave me!'
But the kindly carer figure ushered us out, winking â which seemed horrifying in a way, though obviously it was only meant to reassure us. âHe'll be fine. You ring up in a couple of hours and you'll find he's settled in nicely. Lots of them are far worse. Don't worry about a thing.'
And we all drove off, feeling like murderers.
Oh God, I hope this never happens to me! I couldn't bear Jack to have to go through what I went through today. I think I shall have to check up that I still have my stash of sleeping pills to take the minute I feel as if I'm going off my head.
I feel such a mixture of relief and betrayal and satisfaction. It's so hard when you have all these conflicting feelings rushing around you at the same time, all competing for attention. First you feel relieved, and are just sinking into a chair with all the warmth of the emotion of feeling you've Done the Right Thing washing over you, and then Guilt comes stomping in like an uninvited guest, asking how you can possibly be sitting back and having a cup of tea when you should be scourging yourself with birch rods for being so cruel and deceitful to a poor old man. Then Sense bangs on the window and insists on joining the party saying, âBut you couldn't have done anything else, could you? He'd have done the same to you if it had been the other way round,' then a Warm Glow starts creeping in telling you what a wonderful person you are and you start to feel relieved again and are about to sink
back in the chair, but unfortunately Guilt's already sat itself down and is sitting there with a bed of sharp nails on its lap waiting for you to plonk yourself down on it.
Anyway, we did it.
I went to the kitchen, poured myself a huge glass of wine, gulped it down in one, standing up, and then poured myself a second one. Booze. What would we do without it?
Thank God Sylvie rang last night and said that Archie was fine. She'd even spoken to him on the phone and he'd sounded absolutely normal. He said the service was excellent and he'd just had a very good meal, and he didn't mention his old home once. Curiously, although this is very reassuring, it's acutely sad that he is able to forget in such a little time. A few hours of agony â and then his past is completely obliterated. Oh, I do hope it is. I couldn't bear him to go on suffering.
Spent the morning working on the August painting of the trees â a bit difficult this one because it's pretty much the same as July, so I've done them from a completely different angle. I must say the false acacia, with its yellowish leaves, is one of the prettiest trees in the world. Wish I had one in the garden.