P E NGUIN B OOK S UP A ND DOW N IN T HE DA LE S P rais e for Up and Dow n in the Dales and Gervas e P hinn: 'If you enj...
345 downloads
1010 Views
1MB Size
Report
This content was uploaded by our users and we assume good faith they have the permission to share this book. If you own the copyright to this book and it is wrongfully on our website, we offer a simple DMCA procedure to remove your content from our site. Start by pressing the button below!
Report copyright / DMCA form
P E NGUIN B OOK S UP A ND DOW N IN T HE DA LE S P rais e for Up and Dow n in the Dales and Gervas e P hinn: 'If you enjoyed his earlier books you will c ertainly like this one... a light, frothy, entertaining read with a plot that twis ts and bends to link the m any funny s tories the author has gathered over the years ' The Times E duc ational S upplement 'Hilarious and touc hing' Daily M ail 'Y ou have heard it before. Y ou m ay hear it again. For the P hinneas ts am ongs t us , having relis hed this fourth book, will as s uredly c lam our for the fifth' Y ork s hire P os t 'Gervas e P hinn has a unique unders tanding and love of c hildren, and a wonderful gift for s torytelling... a real s tar' E s ther Rantzen 'Gervas e P hinn has bec om e one of B ritain's bes t-loved c om ic writers . Dubbed the J am es Herriot of s c hools , he writes with enorm ous warm th and wit about his rom antic adventures , c areer s truggles , and - above all - the c hildren in the s c hools he vis its , with unc anny ability to c harm and em barras s him in equal m eas ure... Uproarious and touc hing by turns , it is perfec t B ank Holiday reading' Daily M ail 'Gervas e P hinn writes warm ly and with great wit, about the c hildren and adults he m eets in Y orks hire's s c hools . A n enc hanting m ontage of experienc es . Colourful, funny, hones t' E x pres s on S unday 'Gervas e P hinn's m em oirs have m ade him a hero in s c hool s taff-room s ' Daily Telegraph 'Gervas e P hinn is a natural s tory teller... He has a m arvellous ear for one-liners and a c ons tant flow of anec dotes about the things c hildren s ay' Y ork s hire P os t
About the Author Gervas e P hinn leads a very full and bus y life: he is a teac her, freelanc e lec turer, author, poet, s c hool ins pec tor, educ ational c ons ultant, vis iting profes s or of educ ation - but none of thes e is m ore im portant to him than his fam ily. For fourteen years he taught in a range of s c hools until, in 1984, he bec am e General A dvis er for Language Developm ent in Rotherham . Four years later he m oved to North Y orks hire, where he s pent ten years as a s c hool ins pec tor, tim e that has provided s o m uc h s ourc e m aterial for his books ; he was s ubs equently appointed P rinc ipal A dvis er for the c ounty. He is a Fellow of the Royal S oc iety of A rts . Gervas e P hinn is now a freelanc e lec turer and advis er and is in c ons tant dem and both as a s oc ial after-dinner s peaker and at educ ational level. He s peaks and lec tures throughout the c ountry. In 1998 he was one of the s tars of E s ther Rantzen's s how, E s ther, being invited to appear three m ore tim es due to public dem and. Rights in his firs t three books have been s old to televis ion: The Other S ide of the Dale, Ov er Hill and Dale and Head Ov er Heels in the Dales . He has als o written three books of poem s for P uffin.
Up and Down in the Dales Gervase Phinn
P E NGUIN B OOK S
P E NGUIN B OOK S P ublis hed by the P enguin Group P enguin B ooks Ltd, 80 S trand, London W C2R 0RL, E ngland P enguin Group (US A ) Inc ., 375 Huds on S treet, New Y ork, New Y ork 10014, US A P enguin Group (Canada), 10 A lc orn A venue, T oronto, Ontario, Canada M4V 3B 2 (a divis ion of P ears on P enguin Canada Inc .) P enguin Ireland, 25 S t S tephen's Green, Dublin 2, Ireland (a divis ion of P enguin B ooks Ltd) P enguin Group (A us tralia), 250 Cam berwell Road, Cam berwell, V ic toria 3124, A us tralia (a divis ion of P ears on A us tralia Group P ty Ltd) P enguin B ooks India P vt Ltd, 11 Com m unity Centre, P anc hs heel P ark, New Delhi - 110 017, India P enguin Group (NZ), c nr A irborne and Ros edale Roads , A lbany, A uc kland 1310, New Zealand (a divis ion of P ears on New Zealand Ltd) P enguin B ooks (S outh A fric a) (P ty) Ltd, 24 S turdee A venue, Ros ebank 2196, S outh A fric a P enguin B ooks Ltd, Regis tered Offic es : 80 S trand, London W C2R 0RL, E ngland www.penguin.c om Firs t publis hed by Mic hael J os eph 2004 P ublis hed in P enguin B ooks 2005 16 Copyright (c ) Gervas e P hiinn, 2004 A ll rights res erved T he m oral right of the author has been as s erted E xc ept in the United S tates of A m eric a, this book is s old s ubjec t to the c ondition that it s hall not, by way of trade or otherwis e, be lent, re-s old, hired out, or otherwis e c irc ulated without the publis her's prior c ons ent in any form of binding or c over other than that in whic h it is publis hed and without a s im ilar c ondition inc luding this c ondition being im pos ed on the s ubs equent purc has er IS B N: 978-0-14-192458-8
Dedic ated to Tony S torey , Headmas ter of The Hay field S c hool, Donc as ter. For me, he s ets the s tandard by w hic h headteac hers are judged.
Acknowledgements I s hould like to thank Ric hard 'Fairy' Fairc lough for s ugges ting the title; m y ever-patient editor and dear friend J enny Dereham for her c ontinued enc ouragem ent and advic e; and m y wife and fam ily for their forbearanc e. 'A P arent's P ray er' on page 342 is taken from The Day Our Teac her W ent B atty (P uffin 2002).
S o There! Our E nglis h teac her, Mr S m art, S ays writing E nglis h is an art, T hat we s hould always take great c are W hen s pelling words like w ear and w here, W itc h and w hic h and fair and fare, K ey and quay and air and heir, W het and w et and flair and flare, W ring and ring and s tair and s tare, Him and hy mn and their and there, W hine and w ine and pear and pare, Chec k and c heque and tare and tear, Crew s and c ruis e and hare and hair, M eet and meat and bear and bare, K not and not and lay er and lair, Loot and lute and may or and mare. W ell, frankly, s ir, I jus t don't c are S o there!
1 I s tared with dis belief at the objec t in the dis play c abinet. It took pride of plac e am ids t the s hells , pebbles , fronds of dried s eaweed, piec es of c oloured glas s , bits of driftwood and other detritus c ollec ted from the beac h. 'W hat do you think?' as ked the nun with a great s m ile on her round, innoc ent fac e. 'It's ... er... well... er... interes ting,' was all I c ould m anage to s plutter out. I was at Our Lady of Lourdes Rom an Catholic P rim ary S c hool, the s ec ond week of the new s c hool term , to ins pec t the E nglis h teac hing. I had been a s c hool ins pec tor now in the great c ounty ofYorks hire for three years and eac h week brought s om ething new and unexpec ted. A nd I was c ertainly not expec ting what I s aw in the dis play c abinet that c old S eptem ber m orning. 'Y ou s ee,' explained S is ter Marie-T heres e, the headm is tres s , 'I like to m ount a c olourful dis play in the firs t week.' 'I'm s orry?' I s aid, m y eyes s till glued to a c ertain objec t. 'Mount a dis play,' s he s aid, 'to m ake the entranc e hall that little bit brighter and m ore c heerful. T his year, I have dec ided it would be about the s eas hore. A t the end of las t term we took the junior c hildren, Mrs Mc P hee and I, on a s c hool trip to the E as t Coas t. W e vis ited W hitby, c lim bed all the s teps up to the abbey, c alled in at the Captain Cook Mus eum and had s om e lovely long walks along the beac h. I as ked the c hildren to pic k up anything of interes t whic h they found on the s eas hore - s hells and pebbles , of c ours e, but als o any unus ual or interes ting item s whic h m ight have been was hed up. No old bottles , though, I had to put m y foot down about bottles .' 'I s ee,' I s aid, s till s taring inc redulous ly at the objec t res ting in the c entre of the dis play c abinet. 'A nd they c am e bac k with s o m any fas c inating things .' 'S o I s ee,' I m urm ured. 'Y ou'd be s urpris ed what gets was hed up on a beac h.' No I wouldn't, I thought to m ys elf. 'W e've got all m anner of different s hells and s trangely s haped pebbles , polis hed glas s and s om e am azingly c oloured s eaweed. Mrs Mc P hee found s om e piec es of jet on the beac h. It's fos s ilis ed Monkey P uzzle T ree, you know. It's quite rare, I'm told. T hey s till m ake jewellery out of jet. Not that I wear jewellery, of c ours e! ' I c ontinued to s tare at the dis play as the nun c hattered away. W ords failed m e. 'It was all the rage in V ic torian tim es .' 'I'm s orry?' 'J et. I think Queen V ic toria took to wearing it after the death of P rinc e A lbert and it s tarted a trend. Of c ours e, it's not s o popular today. Oh, and one c hild found s om e fos s ils near the c liffs and another a dried s tarfis h and there's a little s eahors e there, s ee. A ll s orts of flots am and jets am that was was hed as hore. S uc h intriguing bits and bobs . S o we have a nic e little c ollec tion to s tim ulate the c hildren's dis c us s ion and their writing.' 'S is ter,' I s aid, 'about the flots am and jets am , the... er... bits and bobs .' 'A nd do you know what that is ?' s he s aid pointing to the c entre of the dis play. 'W hat?' I as ked, with a s inking heart. 'T hat little s hiny orange pebble, at the front.' I s ighed with relief. 'No, I'm afraid, I don't.' 'T hat's am ber. S om etim es little piec es of am ber are was hed up on the beac h but only along c ertain parts of the c oas t and it's very diffic ult to find. It's fos s ilis ed res in from trees , you know, m illions of years old and quite valuable, I believe. It s tarts off in the B altic and is was hed ac ros s the oc ean and ends up on the E as t Coas t. T hat's us ed for jewellery too,' the nun burbled on. 'S om etim es you find little ins ec ts fos s ilis ed ins ide. Mrs Mc P hee - s he's m y deputy by the way - m et a delightful m an on the beac h, us ed to be the c urator at the m us eum at York, I believe, who lived jus t along the c oas t at Runs wic k B ay, and he s howed her -' 'S is ter,' I began. 'Y es , Mr P hinn?' S he looked direc tly at m e, s m iling. 'A bout the dis play.' 'Y es ?' S he s tared up with a wide and innoc ent expres s ion. 'W ell, S is ter, there is -' I opened m y m outh to c ontinue but los t c ourage. 'Oh, nothing.' S om eone was going to have to tell her, I thought, but it c ertainly was n't going to be m e. 'Las t week,' s he babbled on, 'the older c hildren wrote s om e delightful little poem s and des c riptions , whic h I've m ounted on the wall around the dis play. Don't you think it looks wonderful?' 'Y es , indeed, wonderful,' I m urm ured, m y eyes s till riveted on the offending objec t in the c abinet. 'I want the s c hool to look really nic e for when the bis hop vis its on Monday.' 'T he bis hop's c om ing on Monday?' I as ked in a doom -laden voic e. 'Y es , he's c om ing to talk to the c hildren about their Firs t Holy Com m union. Las t year he brought his c ros ier to s how them . One c hild wrote to him afterwards : "T hank you for c om ing to s ee us , B is hop Mic hael. I now know jus t what a real c rook looks like." W e did laugh, Mrs Mc P hee and m e.' J us t then a s m all boy approac hed the headm is tres s and tugged on her c loak. A t las t the nun s topped her babbling, and bent down to hear what the c hild wanted to tell her. I grabbed at m y c hanc e to get help. 'S is ter,' I s aid quic kly, 'I've forgotten to s ign in. I'll go and do it now.' 'Oh, don't worry about that now, Mr P hinn,' s aid the nun. 'Y ou c an do it at m orning break.' 'No, no, I had better do it now,' I ins is ted. 'I'll jus t pop into the offic e.' W ithout waiting for a reply, I s hot ac ros s the hall and into the s c hool offic e, m aking the s c hool s ec retary jum p with s urpris e. 'Quic k! ' I his s ed. 'Can you c om e with m e?' 'P ardon?' s he replied. 'Can you c om e with m e now, it's urgent! ' 'I'm in the m iddle of c hec king the dinner m oney,' s he told m e. 'It's extrem ely inc onvenient.' 'It really is v ery im portant,' I told her. 'B ut I'm halfway through -' 'P leas e,' I begged. 'Oh very well,' s he s aid, s haking her head, 'but I don't know what c an be s o urgent.' 'Y ou'll s ee in a m inute,' I s aid, and popped m y head out of the offic e to s ee where S is ter Marie-T heres e was . Fortunately the headm is tres s had m oved down the c orridor with the s m all boy who was s howing her a pic ture on the wall. 'Look,' I whis pered, pointing to the m anifes tation in the dis play c abinet. T here was a s harp intake of breath. 'Oh dear,' groaned the s c hool s ec retary, rais ing her hand to her nec k and winc ing vis ibly. 'Do you s ee what I m ean?' 'I do,' s he m um bled. 'However did that get in there?' 'I s uppos e S is ter m us t have put it in, without realis ing what it is . P erhaps you ought to tell her.' 'T ell her?' s he his s ed. 'W hat it is .' 'Me?' s he exc laim ed. 'W hy m e? Y ou're the E nglis h ins pec tor, you're the one who's s uppos ed to be good with words .' 'No, no, I c ouldn't pos s ibly do it. It would be m uc h better c om ing from you.' 'Mr P hinn,' s he s aid, looking m e s traight in the eyes , 'I am prepared to do m os t things as a s c hool s ec retary but explaining to a nun what a c ondom is , is not one of them .' 'W ell, I c ertainly c an't,' I s aid. 'A nd what are you two talking about?' c am e a c heerful voic e from behind us . T he s c hool s ec retary and I s wung round together to find S is ter Marie-T heres e, with that s weet innoc ent expres s ion on her round fac e. 'W e were jus t looking at your lovely dis play, S is ter,' I replied feebly. 'I'm very pleas ed with it,' trilled the nun. 'I am s ure B is hop Mic hael will get quite a s urpris e when he c om es on Monday.' 'I bet he will,' I s aid s otto v oc e. 'It's very nic e, S is ter,' s aid the s c hool s ec retary, giving a watery s m ile. T here was a nervous red ras h c reeping up her nec k. T hen s he turned to m e and gave m e a c ons piratorial look. 'I'll s ee to it,' s he whis pered. 'J us t keep her oc c upied.' 'P erhaps we s hould m ake a s tart, S is ter,' I s aid pleas antly. 'Y es , yes , of c ours e, Mr P hinn,' s aid the nun. 'T he c hildren are all very exc ited about m eeting you.' I followed the headm is tres s as s he headed for the junior departm ent with a veritable s pring in her s tep. W hen I glanc ed bac k, I s aw the s c hool s ec retary s till s taring at the dis play c abinet like a hungry c at watc hing a tank full of goldfis h. A t the end of the c orridor was a large plas ter s tatue of Our Lady of Lourdes . S he had a pale, gentle fac e with downc as t eyes , a golden halo, and her hands were pres s ed together in prayer. In the long blue veil and white c loak and with an innoc ent expres s ion, the figure did not look dis s im ilar to S is ter MarieT heres e. I was brought up s hort and gas ped out loud. On a plinth, beneath the s tatue, was the ins truc tion: A s you pas s Our Lady, S ay an ejac ulatory prayer. 'W hatever is an ejac ulatory prayer, S is ter?' I as ked the nun, who had turned bac k to m e when s he heard m y gas p. ' "Our Lady of Lourdes pray for us ." ' 'I'm s orry?' 'T hat's an ejac ulatory prayer, Mr P hinn,' s aid the nun. 'J us t a s m all appeal for Our Lady to watc h over us and keep us s afe.' 'I s ee,' I s aid, m y m ind whirling bac k to the objec t in the dis play c abinet. T he junior c las s room was warm and welc om ing. T he c hildren, aged between nine and eleven, looked up eagerly as we entered. 'Good m orning, c hildren,' s aid the headm is tres s with jovial earnes tnes s . 'Good m orning, S is ter Marie-T heres e. Good m orning, everybody,' c horus ed the c hildren. 'Have they been good, Mrs Mc P hee?' the nun as ked the teac her. 'Need you as k, S is ter?' replied her c olleague, s c anning the s ea of fac es before her, with an expres s ion whic h defied c ontradic tion. Mrs Mc P hee was a plum p wom an with a thic k fuzz of white hair and the pale eyes of a piranha. S he wore a tight-fitting, wheat-c oloured turtlenec k s weater, heavy brown tweed pleated s kirt, thic k woollen s toc kings the c olour of m ud and s ubs tantial brogues . A round her nec k hung a s ingle rope of large blue beads . I c ould tell s he was the 'I-s tand-no-nons ens e' s ort of teac her. 'T his is m y indis pens able deputy headteac her, Mr P hinn,' s aid the nun, giving her c olleague the fulles t and m os t c harm ing of s m iles . 'S he's worth her weight in gold.' 'Oh, S is ter, really! ' s aid Mrs Mc P hee, laughing in an enthus ias tic , hors y s ort of way. 'Now, c hildren,' s aid the headm is tres s , 'I told you that we would be having a very s pec ial vis itor this m orning and here he is . Mr P hinn is a s c hool ins pec tor, here to look at all the lovely work you have been doing.' T he nun turned in m y direc tion, res ted a s m all hand on m y arm and s aid, in a lower voic e, 'T his group, Mr P hinn, is one of the junior c las s es . T here's quite a range of age and ability, as you will s ee. T he c hildren have been bus y c om pos ing prayers and when B is hop Mic hael c om es on Monday, we s hall have a very s pec ial as s em bly when s om e of them will read out their efforts .' 'T hat s ounds s plendid,' I s aid, wondering what s ort of m ood the bis hop would be in if he had s een what I had s een in the dis play in the entranc e hall. 'Now, Mr P hinn,' c ontinued S is ter, 'would you like to have a little look around the c las s room , perhaps lis ten to s om e of the c hildren read and exam ine the work they have been doing and then -' 'T here's not m uc h written work in their books ,' interrupted Mrs Mc P hee in one of thos e deep, loud voic es pos s es s ed by m arket traders . 'B ut you will not be expec ting to s ee a lot, will you, Mr P hinn, this being the s tart of term ?' S he gave m e a look whic h s aid: 'Dis agree with m e, if you dare! ' 'No,' I as s ured her. 'I s hall not be expec ting to s ee a lot.' 'W ell, that's jus t as well,' s aid Mrs Mc P hee, her fac e relaxing, 'bec aus e they haven't done m uc h yet - jus t the prayers they are working on.' 'I'll leave you to it then,' s im pered S is ter. 'I have paperwork to attend to.' A s s he headed for the door, the headm is tres s s topped in her trac ks and peered out of the window. I followed her gaze to s ee the s c hool s ec retary c reeping pas t in the direc tion of the dus tbins . S he was wearing bright yellow rubber gloves and a pained expres s ion and s he was c arrying s om ething, at arm 's length, on a s hovel. 'W hatever is Mrs S anders up to?' s aid S is ter to Mrs Mc P hee. 'P erhaps the s c hool c at has ...' and s he m outhed 'm ous e' to her c olleague before leaving the room . T he firs t pupil I approac hed was very keen to tell m e about the books he liked to read. He was a s m all boy with s hiny blond hair, c lear blue eyes and a fac e full of frec kles . He told m e his nam e was A lexander. 'I expec t all your pals c all you A lex,' I s aid to him . 'No they don't, ac tually,' he told m e s erious ly. 'T hey c all m e A lexander. I don't like m y nam e s hortened.' 'No,' I s aid s m iling, 'neither do I.' Connie, the c aretaker at the S taff Developm ent Centre, s om etim es referred to m e as 'Gerv'. It s ounded like a brand of c heap petrol. 'A nd how are you today, A lexander?' I as ked. 'W ell, I'm not a hundred per c ent,' he told m e. 'B ut I don't like to m is s s c hool.' 'A nd what is your reading book about?' 'Dinos aurs . I'm really into dinos aurs ,' the boy explained s olem nly. 'A re you?' 'Oh yes . T hey're inc redible c reatures . I know quite a lot about dinos aurs . Do you know m uc h about dinos aurs , Mr P hinn?' 'No, not a lot.' 'Do you know whic h was the longes t?' as ked the boy, looking m e c onfidently in the eye. 'I'm not entirely s ure,' I s aid and I was n't. 'Is it the brontos aurus ?' 'No. It's the diplodoc us . A s long as two double-dec ker bus es , end to end. Do you know whic h was the bigges t?' 'W as that the brontos aurus ?' 'W rong again. It was the brac hios aurus . It was taller than two giraffes and as heavy as eight full-grown elephants . Mind-blowing is n't it? T hey weighed about thirty tonnes . Do you know whic h was the s m alles t?' 'I've no idea,' I told him . 'Com ps ognathus . It was about the s ize of a c hic ken. Y ou'll not know whic h was the fas tes t, then?' 'No, I'm afraid not.' 'Gallim im us ,' s aid the boy. 'It was a bit like an os tric h and c ould run over thirty m iles an hour.' 'Really. I do know whic h was the fierc es t, though,' I s aid. 'W hic h one?' T he boy looked up at m e intently with the c lear blue eyes . 'T he tyrannos aurus rex.' T he boy s m iled and s hook his head. 'W rong again, I'm afraid. It was the deinonyc hus . It had huge s las hing c laws on eac h bac k foot and a s et of killer teeth.' He m ade a gnas hing m ovem ent, then c lac ked his teeth together to em phas is e his point. 'T hey hunted in pac ks . Its nam e m eans "terrible c law". A lot of people think the tyrannos aurus rex was the fierc es t,' he s aid leaning bac k in his c hair, 'but they're wrong.' 'W hic h was the las t dinos aur to live on E arth?' I as ked him . I was genuinely interes ted. V ery often the ques tions I as ked pupils were ps eudo ques tions . I already knew the ans wers and was m erely s eeing if the c hildren did. It was very refres hing to as k ques tions for whic h I did not know the ans wers . 'Now that's a tric ky one, Mr P hinn.' He s uc ked in his breath and thought for a m om ent. 'Mos t people would s ay it was the tric eratops , but we c an't be s ure. T hey lived about s ixty-five m illion years ago, give or take a m illion. S hall I read you a bit from m y book?' 'Y es , I think that's a very good idea,' I s aid. S o the boy read with great gus to from a thic k tom e. He s topped at intervals to tell m e additional fas c inating fac ts about the great c reatures and to point out interes ting features in the pic tures . 'Y ou're a very good reader as well as being s o knowledgeable, A lexander,' I told him .
'Y es , I know,' he s aid in a m atter-of-fac t voic e. 'A nd you're a very good lis tener.' I s m iled and s hook m y head. I have m et m any a prec oc ious c hild in m y tim e but A lexander took the bis c uit. 'A nd when you leave s c hool, I expec t you want to work in the Natural His tory Mus eum in London, don't you, and be the world expert on dinos aurs ?' 'Oh no, Mr P hinn, I want to be a s olic itor, like m y father. T here's not m uc h of a future in dinos aurs .' T he next c hild, although younger than A lexander, was a large girl with s auc er eyes and thic k blac k hair tied in great bunc hes . Her thum b was s tuc k in her m outh. I had intended as king her to read m e a few s entenc es from her book but this turned out to be not m uc h m ore than a pic ture book. Clearly s he had s om e s pec ial needs and experienc ed diffic ulty with her reading. T he page s he was looking at depic ted a large blac k hors e galloping ac ros s a river. B eneath it was written: 'T he hors e is in the water.' W hen I as ked her what it s aid, s he looked at m e for a m om ent, regarded m e as if I were s im ple-m inded, rem oved the thum b and inform ed m e bluntly, 'It s ez: "T 'nag's in t'bec k! "' W hile I was lis tening to another c hild read, I heard Mrs Mc P hee's threateningly low voic e s om ewhere behind us . 'No, A lexander, I s aid a prayer.' 'B ut, m is s , I want to write about m y holidays ,' appealed the c hild. 'W ell, you are not going to,' s aid the teac her s harply., 'Y ou are to write a prayer like everyone els e and that is that.' 'B ut, Mrs Mc P hee,' pers is ted the c hild, 'I really don't want to write a prayer.' 'A lexander,' s napped the teac her, 'everyone is writing a prayer. W e have looked at prayers , lis tened to prayers and read prayers . I have s pent a full les s on telling you how to write a prayer. W e are not writing about your holidays . W hen the bis hop c om es in on Monday and we are in as s em bly reading out our prayers s tarting "T hank you, God" - it would s ound rather s trange your reading about your holidays , "Las t s um m er we went to B lac kpool", wouldn't it?' 'A c tually, we didn't go to B lac kpool, m is s ,' the c hild told her. 'W e went in a gite in Franc e.' 'I'm not in the s lightes t bit interes ted where you went, A lexander,' interrupted the teac her s harply. 'Now get on with your prayer. Chop! Chop! ' 'B ut, m is s -' began the boy, in a wheedling tone of voic e. Mrs Mc P hee drew a deep exas perated breath. 'No buts , A lexander, off you go. "T hank you, God! "' B ut the c hild wouldn't let it lie. 'Y ou s ee, Mrs Mc P hee, I don't know whether I believe in God.' 'Not believe in God! ' exc laim ed the teac her, heaving her am ple bos om , her pale eyes now ablaze. 'I think I believe in the "B ig B ang" theory like m y father,' s aid the c hild, quite undaunted by the teac her's dram atic dis play of outrage. 'A lexander Maxwell-S m ith,' s aid Mrs Mc P hee, s lowly and in a hus hed and s lightly s inis ter voic e, 'if you do not s tart your prayer "T hank you, God" in the next few s ec onds , there w ill be a "B ig B ang! "' I turned round to look at A lexander. T he boy, s houlders drooping and with a weary expres s ion on his s m all fac e, s louc hed in his c hair, s ighed and took up his pen. Mrs Mc P hee gave m e an exas perated look and s hook her head. 'Not believe in God, indeed,' s he m outhed. A little while later, having heard m ore c hildren read and looked at s om e of the prayers , I arrived bac k at A lexander's des k. His prayer was written in large neat handwriting. 'T hank you, God,' it s tarted. Good, I thought, he had dec ided to do as he was told. T hen I read on: 'T hank you, God, for m y holidays . T his year we s tayed in a gite in V enc e (that's in the s outh of Franc e) and had a m os t enjoyable tim e.' He had followed this with an ac c ount of his holiday whic h s ounded anything but 'm os t enjoyable'. His m other, he wrote, had got s unburnt and looked like a c ooked lobs ter, his father had been ill for three days with his head down the lav, his brother had fallen over and s prained his wris t and his little s is ter had got los t and they had all ended up at the polic e s tation. His eventful ac c ount c onc luded with: 'B ut in s pite of all the problem s , I had a good tim e and thank you God, for m y holidays . A m en.' I left before the 'B ig B ang' whic h would s urely oc c ur when his teac her read A lexander's prayer, and headed for the infant departm ent. I had a vis ion of the boy garrotted by the blue beads or s uffoc ated in the heaving bos om of the form idable Mrs Mc P hee. P as s ing through the entranc e hall, I s topped by the dis play and, m uc h to m y relief, s aw it was bereft of the offending artic le. In the next c las s , I dis c overed Mis s Reec e, a young wom an with s andy-c oloured hair tied bac k in a pony tail and wearing a bright yellow m ohair jum per and pale c ream s lac ks . S he s at with the c hildren c lus tered around her and was reading them a s tory from a large c oloured pic ture book whic h was dis played on an eas el bes ide her. One s m all girl s at on her knee. I c rept to the bac k of the c las s room , perc hed on a s m all m elam ine c hair and lis tened. 'I c an s ee the little lam b bleating in the m eadow,' read the teac her s lowly and dram atic ally. S he pointed at the pic ture. 'Can you s ee the little lam b, c hildren? Is n't he lovely and woolly?' T he c hildren nodded vigorous ly. Mis s Reec e c ontinued, 'I c an s ee the little c alf m ooing for his m other.' 'He's blac k and white, m is s ,' volunteered the c hild s itting on the teac her's knee. 'He is , is n't he, Chloe.' T he teac her read on. 'I c an s ee the little foal fris king in the field. "Fris king" is an unus ual word, is n't it, c hildren?' 'It m eans kic king up its legs , Mis s Reec e,' c alled out a c hild s itting c ros s -legged in front of her. 'W ell done, Martin. It does m ean that.' A nother c hild rais ed a hand. 'Mis s ! Mis s ! ' s he c ried. 'In a m om ent, Caitlin. W e will be able to talk about the anim als when I've finis hed reading the book.' 'He's s weet, is n't he, m is s ?' s aid the little girl s itting on the teac her's knee. 'He is very s weet, Chloe,' agreed the teac her, 'but jus t lis ten, dear, there's a good girl, otherwis e we will never get to the end.' S he turned the page. 'I c an s ee the little piglet grunting in the gras s .' A s m all boy, with a s hoc k of red hair and a runny nos e, who was s itting direc tly in front of m e, began s norting and grunting like a pig. 'W e don't need the anim al nois es , J ohn-P aul, thank you very m uc h,' s aid the teac her with a s light edge to her voic e. 'J us t look at the pic tures and lis ten to the words .' S he turned the page. 'Mis s ! Mis s ! ' c ried little Caitlin again. 'W hat did I s ay, Caitlin?' as ked the teac her. 'J us t be patient, you c an tell m e in a m inute.' S he read on. 'I c an s ee the little c hic ks c hirping in the farm yard.' T he s m all c hild s itting on the teac her's knee leaned forward and looked intently at the pic ture of the bright yellow c hic ks in the pic ture. 'T hey look as if they have jus t hatc hed out of their eggs , don't they, c hildren?' s aid the teac her. 'A ll s oft and fluffy and golden.' Chloe looked at the pic ture and then at the teac her and then bac k at the pic ture. A fter a m om ent s he began s troking the teac her's bright yellow m ohair jum per. 'Do you know, m is s ,' s he s aid in that loud, c onfident voic e only pos s es s ed by young c hildren, 'you look as if you've jus t been laid.' Mis s Reec e turned c rim s on and I nearly fell off the c hair, laughing. 'Mis s ! Mis s ! ' Caitlin's voic e now s ounded des perate. 'W hat is it?' as ked the teac her, attem pting to gain her c om pos ure. 'Mis s ,' m oaned the c hild, 'I've been s ic k in m y jum per. I've been trying to tell you.' I watc hed Mis s Reec e with great adm iration as s he produc ed a blac k bin-liner from her des k drawer, s tripped the c hild of her jum per like a poac her s kinning a rabbit and depos ited the s oiled artic le of c lothing ins ide without s o m uc h as an iota of vom it touc hing anything or anybody. T he teac her then expertly tied a tight knot in the bin liner and dropped it next to her des k. 'W e'll let your m um m y take that hom e after s c hool, s hall we, Caitlin?' s he s aid pleas antly. Mis s Reec e then took the c hild's hand and as ked m e, 'W ill you be all right on your own for a few m inutes , Mr P hinn? I'm jus t going to take Caitlin to the s c hool offic e. S om etim es one c hild being s ic k s tarts all the others off. T here are plenty of bin liners in m y top drawer, if you need them .' Later that m orning, while the c hildren were bus y writing s hort poem s and des c riptions about the anim als , I lis tened to a s eries of very c om petent little readers who had a great deal to s ay for them s elves . One little girl, with apple-red c heeks , was partic ularly c hatty. 'A re you a good s peller, Mr P hinn?' s he as ked. 'I am a very, very good s peller,' I teas ed. 'I c an s pell any word.' 'A ny word?' s he gas ped. 'A ny word at all. I'm the world's bes t s peller. W ould you like to tell m e a word and I will s pell it for you?' 'Y es , but you're a grown-up,' s he s aid, folding her s m all arm s ac ros s her c hes t. 'Grown-ups c an s pell words .' S he thought for a m om ent. 'Can you s pell m y nam e?' 'Of c ours e, I c an,' I replied, but knew that this m ight prove tric ky. I have m et c hildren with a range of unus ual, not to s ay bizarre nam es , as well as nam es whic h were not s pelt as they s ound. T here was K ris tofer, Curs ton, Mykell, Charleen, K aylee, Heyleigh, K ylee, B arby, B las e (pronounc ed B laze), Gooey (s pelt Guy) and a c hild c alled P ortia but s pelt P ors c he for, as the teac her explained to m e with a wry s m ile, the girl's father had always wanted a P ors c he c ar. In one s c hool there were two s ets of twins from the s am e fam ily, aged ten and eleven res pec tively, nam ed after great tragic heroines : Cleopatra and Cas s andra, Des dem ona and Dido. T hen there were the brother and s is ter, S am and E lla whic h, when s aid at s peed, s ounded like food pois oning. 'My nam e is Rois in,' s aid the little girl bringing m e bac k to the pres ent. 'It's Iris h. It m eans "little ros e".' How very apt, I thought, looking at the ros y c heeks . I s pelled it c orrec tly and pulled a s m ug expres s ion. 'A nd m y brother's nam e's Niall.' I got that one right, as well. 'My s is ters are c alled S iobhaun and Nuala.' I was doing really well now and obvious ly im pres s ing m y little interrogator who was n't to know about m y Iris h bac kground. 'A nd there's m y brother, Rory and rem em ber, Mr P hinn, he has eight letters in his nam e. A nd m y c ous in, Orlah, who has nine in hers .' I buried m y head in m y hands in m oc k helples s nes s and heard the c hild giggle unc ontrollably. T hen Rois in s pelt the nam es for m e, s peaking the letters loudly and s lowly as if I was hard of hearing. 'R-u-a-r-a-i-d-h and O-r-f-h-l-a-i-t-h,' s he told m e. 'E as y-peas y! ' I s tood with S is ter Marie-T heres e in the entranc e hall at the end of the m orning. 'W ell thank you, S is ter,' I s aid. 'I s hall s end in m y report in a few days ' tim e, but everything appears to be fine. T he c hildren read extrem ely well, the writing is above average, the atm os phere in the s c hool is pos itive and the teac hing very good.' I looked in the direc tion of the dis play c abinet. 'A nd the dis play... is wonderful.' ' "How beautiful upon the m ountains are the feet of him who bringeth good tidings ," ' s aid the nun. My attention, however, had been c aught by the s c hool s ec retary s tanding in the doorway of the offic e. S he gave m e a vigorous thum bs -up s ign. 'I'm s orry, what did you s ay, S is ter?' 'Is aiah, Mr P hinn.' 'W ho?' 'From the B ible. Is aiah,' s aid the nun.' "How beautiful upon the m ountains are the feet of him who bringeth good tidings ." ' 'Y es , of c ours e, S is ter.' 'Now, that's m os t odd,' s aid the headm is tres s , res ting a s m all hand on m y arm . 'I think I am either going m ad or we have a ghos t.' 'A ghos t?' I repeated. 'W ell, I'm s ure I put a little c oloured balloon whic h one of the c hildren found on the beac h in W hitby in m y dis play and it's jus t dis appeared into thin air.' 'A balloon?' I s ounded like an ec ho. 'Don't you rec all s eeing a pink balloon in m y dis play this m orning?' as ked the nun with a puzzled expres s ion. 'No, S is ter,' I s aid firm ly, 'there was no balloon in your dis play. I would have rem em bered. No, no, there was definitely no balloon.'
2 I was s till s m iling later that afternoon as I began to draft the report on Our Lady of Lourdes . T he offic e was unus ually peac eful for that tim e of day, for m y three c olleagues , with whom I s hared the c ram ped and c luttered room , had not yet returned from their s c hool vis its . I was grateful for a bit of peac e and quiet. T here would be prec ious little of it when S idney and David arrived. S idney Clam p, the larger-than-life ins pec tor for Creative and V is ual A rts , and David P ritc hard, the Mathem atic s , P E and Gam es ins pec tor who c ould talk for W ales (and frequently did), were witty, warm , c lever and generous people but it was quite im pos s ible to c onc entrate on anything if they were together in the offic e. T hey had worked together for m any years and were good friends , but when they s tarted bounc ing ins ults off eac h other, s c oring points , bem oaning, arguing, philos ophis ing and regaling anyone within ears hot with anec dotes and opinions , nothing c ould be done. S idney and David were like a c om edy duo. T he final m em ber of our team , who put us to s ham e with her razor-s harp intelligenc e, s uperhum an effic ienc y and the tidines s of her des k, was Dr Geraldine Mullarkey, in c harge of S c ienc e and Tec hnology. Gerry liked to keep hers elf to hers elf and s pent as little tim e as pos s ible in the offic e. S he was a s ingle parent with a young c hild and tended to hide hers elf away at the S taff Developm ent Centre at lunc htim es to write her reports and letters , and c atc h up with all the other paper work at hom e in the evenings . Down the c orridor was our team leader, Dr Harold Yeats , the S enior Ins pec tor, and next to his room was the s m all offic e where J ulie, our s ec retary, pres ided. I turned bac k to m y report and read m y firs t s entenc e: 'T he s c hool is a bright, welc om ing and c heerful building, enhanc ed by interes ting and c olourful dis plays .' Im m ediately m y m ind went bac k to the m orning's dram a and I wondered again jus t what B is hop Mic hael would have s aid and done if he had c aught s ight of the c ondom nes tling am ongs t the dis play whic h S is ter Marie-T heres e m os t s urely would have s hown him as s he had m e. It would probably have s et his m itre as kew. I threw bac k m y head and began to laugh out loud. A voic e interrupted m y reverie. 'S om eone's in a good m ood.' J ulie tottered in, c radling a large m ug of c offee in her hands . I watc hed her as s he c arefully s et down the m ug in front of m e and then perc hed on the end of m y des k. S he looked as if s he was off to a dis c o in her bright red top, inc redibly s hort, tight-fitting blac k s kirt, long, dangling m etallic earrings and the ridic ulous ly high-heeled patent leather s hoes s he was s o fond of wearing. J ulie, with her bubbly blonde hair, c heerful good hum our and inc es s ant c hatter, was guaranteed to brighten up the dulles t of days . S he had left s c hool at s ixteen with few qualific ations and had s ec ured a pos ition in the pos t room at County Hall doing general and largely undem anding jobs : franking letters , filing, photoc opying, taking m es s ages . T hen, when a flu epidem ic had hit County Hall and half the anc illary s taff had been off ill, J ulie had been dragooned in tem porarily to m an the telephones and take on s om e extra duties . T hat was when s he had c om e to the attention of Harold Yeats . Harold had been greatly im pres s ed by the young wom an's verve, energy and c heerful good nature, and by her willingnes s to tac kle whatever c am e her way. S he was funny, forthright and s trong-m inded. J us t the s ort of pers on, Harold had thought, to c ope with the s c hool ins pec tors who were reputedly not the eas ies t of people with whom to work. T his was a c ouple of years before I had c om e to County Hall and the ins pec tors ' s ec retary at the tim e, I had been told, was the rather s erious and nervous Mis s - 'a m artyr to m y joints ' - P ruitt. S he was due to retire (and not before tim e from what m y c olleagues in the offic e had s aid) and Harold had pers uaded Dr Gore, the Chief E duc ation Offic er, to as s ign J ulie to our offic e as the c leric al as s is tant to learn the ropes . J ulie had enrolled on a s ec retarial c ours e, s urpris ed everyone, inc luding hers elf, by ac hieving high grades and when Mis s P ruitt had retired s he had s tepped into her s hoes , m etaphoric ally s peaking, of c ours e. T here was no pos s ibility whats oever of J ulie ever wearing a pair of Mis s P 's s ens ible c ourt s hoes . S he was m uc h m ore at hom e in her red s tilettos . Not only was J ulie c heerful, hard working and effic ient, s he was als o extrem ely loyal and highly dis c reet. Nothing s he read in the s c hool reports s he had to type, or anything s he heard c onfided over the telephone, ever went outs ide the offic e. Her telephone m anner s om etim es left a little to be des ired - s he c ould be as blunt as a s ledgeham m er but we all thought the world of J ulie and valued the work s he did. 'S o c om e on, then,' s he s aid now, res ting her hands behind her on the des k and leaning bac k like a m odel pos ing for a photograph. 'W hat's tic kled you?' W hen I had told her the s aga of the nun and the c ondom s he looked at m e quizzic ally. S he c learly did not feel it was quite as funny as I. 'Y ou would have thought, in this day and age, s he'd have known what a c ondom was .' 'J ulie, s he's a nun, for goodnes s s ake! ' I exc laim ed. 'W hen would a nun c om e ac ros s a c ondom ?' 'I thought everybody knew what one was . You c an't get away from them . I m ean, m y little nephew, K enny, is only nine and he knows what one is . I overheard him and his friend las t week in the garden. T he other little boy was telling our K enny that he'd found a c ondom on the patio. Our K enny as ked him what a "patio" was . I s uppos e it's all this s ex educ ation at s c hool. W e were never told anything.' S he s tood up and s traightened her s kirt. 'W e were very naive.' T hat, I thought to m ys elf, was a trifle diffic ult to believe. 'W e had to find out the fac ts of life in the c orner of the playground and then m os t of what we learnt was n't true. W e thought you got babies through kis s ing. W hat are you s taring at?' 'Nothing,' I c huc kled. 'Y ou s ee, J ulie, nuns are very innoc ent and unworldly. T hey're not like other people.' 'W ell, that S is ter B rendan at S t B artholom ew's is about as innoc ent and unworldly as A l Capone. I bet s he knows what a c ondom is .' 'Yes , I think S is ter B rendan would, but s he's a rather different kettle of fis h. S he's worked in the s lum s of S outh A m eric a and the inner c ities and has s een m ore of life than m os t of us . I have an idea the nun at Our Lady of Lourdes has s pent all of her c hildhood in rural Ireland and all her adult life in a c onvent, s o s he is s till one of life's innoc ents . Her lac k of worldly knowledge is quite endearing.' 'I onc e went as a nun to a fanc y dres s party,' J ulie told m e. 'B ut that long habit got in the way.' 'Got in the way of what?' I as ked, dreading what s he m ight ans wer. 'My danc ing. I had to take it off in the end. It was really hot as well and m ade m e itc h.' 'W ell, I s uppos e S is ter Marie-T heres e has got us ed to it by now,' I s aid. 'A nd I s houldn't im agine s he will be doing m uc h danc ing.' 'I c ouldn't be a nun,' s aid J ulie, exam ining her long nails . 'No,' I replied, looking at the vis ion in red and blac k, 'you c ouldn't. W ell, not in that outfit anyway.' 'W hat's wrong with this outfit?' 'Oh nothing. It looks ... er... very bec om ing.' 'It's m y power-dres s ing c om bination, if you m us t know. Red and blac k are s trong prim ary c olours , you s ee. I've jus t read this m agazine artic le all about it. T he c lothes you wear s ay a lot about you and the different c olours give off different m es s ages . Red warns of potential danger. B lac k m eans s trength. It s ays to people: "Don't you m es s with m e, m ate, or you'll get a s m ac k in the fac e." If you want to appear really nic e, you wear pas tel c olours , light browns and greens and pale yellows . I've not got any outfits like that.' S uc h an as s ertion really didn't hold water when one thought of the im pregnable Mrs Mc P hee in her tight-fitting wheat-c oloured turtlenec k s weater, heavy brown s kirt, dark woollen s toc kings and s ubs tantial s hoes . 'S o, why do you want to be power-dres s ed this afternoon?' I as ked. 'Is there s om ething s pec ial on?' 'Y es , there is , as a m atter of fac t. I need to be as s ertive when I m eet Lady Mac beth s hortly.' 'Mrs S avage,' I s ighed. 'T he very s am e.' Mrs B renda S avage, P ers onal A s s is tant to Dr Gore, was the bane of J ulie's , the ins pec tors ' and m os t other people's lives . S he was a s trikingly elegant looking wom an of an indeterm inate age but c ould be extrem ely pric kly and unpredic table, and had her long nails in every pie around. W e all felt s he had been prom oted way beyond her intelligenc e and c apabilities . Mrs S avage had a fears om e reputation, an ac erbic m anner, and c ould c urdle m ilk with one of her s our s tares . 'W hy are you s eeing Mrs S avage?' I as ked. 'W e've got a m eeting on "Health and S afety in the W ork-plac e" and s he's been put in c harge. Goodnes s knows why. S he's a danger to everyone's health, the s tres s s he c aus es . A nyway, no s ooner has s he been given the job, but s he's produc ed this s et of wretc hed guidelines and all the offic e and anc illary s taff are going to have to s it and lis ten to her giving us one of her endles s lec tures . S he's only been on a one-day c ours e, for goodnes s s ake, and now s he thinks s he knows everything there is to know about health and s afety in the workplac e. It'll be the s c hool ins pec tors ' turn next, s o you c an take that c hees y s m ile off your fac e. S he s ounds like Mus s olini in knic kers when s he gets s tarted, s tic king out her c hin, s tabbing the air with thos e s harp witc h's nails and laying down the law. A nyway, I m us t be off. T he m eeting will have s tarted. I'm going to m ake a dram atic entranc e and I'm determ ined to be really as s ertive. S he's not treating m e like s om ething s he's dis c overed on the s ole of her des igner s hoes .' 'I'm s urpris ed you're not in c om bat trous ers and arm y boots ,' I told her, s till s m iling. 'Y ou s ound m ore aggres s ive than as s ertive.' 'W ell, that wom an brings out the wors t in m e, s he really does ,' s aid J ulie. 'W hen you've finis hed that report, pop it on m y des k and I'll get on with it tom orrow. Oh, and you've had a lot of telephone c alls , and I m ean a lot. A ll the details are on the pad in m y offic e. Mos tly from people you know but there was a c all from a really loud m an, nearly deafened m e s houting down the phone, wanting to s peak to you urgently but he wouldn't leave his nam e or num ber. S aid he'd c all bac k. S ee you tom orrow.' W ith that J ulie tottered for the door. I returned to the report. 'T he s c hool is a bright, welc om ing and c heerful building, enhanc ed by interes ting and c olourful dis plays ,' I re-read but got no further. T he s ound of argum entative voic es wafting up from the bottom of the s tairs s ignalled the im m inent arrival of two of m y c olleagues . I threw down m y pen. A m om ent later S idney breezed in followed by David. You would be hard pres s ed to find two people s o entirely different in appearanc e: the one a burly, bearded figure with a thic k head of woolly hair, rather like a friendly old lion, the other a s m all, dark-c om plexioned m an with a c los e-s haven fac e and blac k eyebrows whic h s eem ed to fly outwards like wings . A s us ual, they were in the m iddle of an anim ated dis c us s ion. 'I m ight have predic ted that you would take a c ontrary view,' S idney was s aying irritably. He dropped his briefc as e on the neares t des k, flopped in a c hair and leaned bac k. 'Good after-noon, Gervas e. David is being pervers e again.' 'Good afternoon,' I s aid. 'Y es , good afternoon, Gervas e,' s aid David, hanging up his c oat. 'I am not taking a c ontrary view, S idney. I have a great deal of s ym pathy with what you s ay. I am m erely attem pting to put things into s om e s ort of pers pec tive.' 'A bout what?' I as ked. 'A bout art, what els e?' s ighed David, s ettling behind his des k. He turned his attention to m e. 'He's m iffed bec aus e the headm as ter of W es t Challerton High S c hool has dec ided to reduc e the am ount of tim e on the c urric ulum for c reative and vis ual arts .' 'I hardly think "m iffed" is the m os t appropriate des c ription,' s aid S idney angrily. ' "Irate", "inc ens ed", "enraged", "furious ", m ight be m ore fitting to des c ribe how I feel, but hardly "m iffed".' S idney s wivelled around in his c hair to fac e m e. 'I arrived at W es t Challerton to find that ins ufferable new headm as ter Mr doublebarrelled S m ith outrageous ly rude and dis m is s ive. He kept m e waiting for half an hour and then s aid he c ould only s pare m e a few m inutes . I then dis c over, when I s peak to the head of the A rt and Des ign Departm ent, that Mr double-barrelled S m ith has c as trated c reative and vis ual arts to give m ore tim e to m athem atic s and s c ienc e! ' 'He's a great one for c hanges is Mr P ennington-S m ith,' I s aid. I rec alled when the m an in ques tion had bec om e headm as ter the previous year. One of his firs t innovations had been to produc e a s howy s c hool broc hure pac ked with glos s y c olour photographs , am bitious aim s and long lis ts of exam ination s uc c es s es and s porting ac hievem ents . His predec es s or, Mr B lunt ('B lunt by nam e and blunt by nature') had not been one for anything fanc y but he ran a very good s c hool. A great m any c hanges took plac e at W es t Challerton when Mr P ennington-S m ith arrived and few had been for the better. 'T he m an is a philis tine and a poltroon,' s aid S idney. His voic e was now s queaky and petulant, like a c hild who is s uddenly forbidden an ic e-c ream . 'He is the Dr Goebbels of the educ ational world.' 'W hat's Dr Goebbels got to do with it?' as ked David. 'It was Goebbels who s aid: "W hen I hear the word c ulture, I reac h for m y gun." If I had had a gun I would have reac hed for it when he dropped the bom bs hell. T he headm as ter of W es t Challerton High S c hool is the s elf-opinionated, pros aic and c ultureles s Dr Goebbels of the educ ational world, and the s avaging of the c reative and vis ual arts is quite frankly s c andalous .' 'I take it you had a run in with Mr P ennington-S m ith?' I obs erved. 'S om ething of an unders tatem ent, Gervas e,' S idney told m e angrily. 'A s I s aid, I vis ited W es t Challerton this afternoon on a routine vis it to look at the A rt and Des ign Departm ent to find the headm as ter had "realigned his priorities ", as he put it, for this ac adem ic year. I felt like "realigning his priorities ", I c an tell you! No c ons ultation with the head of departm ent or m ys elf. He jus t m ade "an exec utive dec is ion" as he term ed it. W hen I dem anded to s ee him at the end of the afternoon, do you know what he s aid?' 'No,' I replied, 'but I c an hazard a gues s .' 'He s aid he had no tim e to dis c us s it with m e and, in any c as e, it had been dec ided. None of the m ore able pupils would be s tudying art in the future and the res t, the les s ac adem ic , would only have two periods a week. T wo periods , I as k you! He then had the bras s nec k to tell m e that, in his c ons idered opinion, art dec orated the m argins of the m ore s erious bus ines s of s tudy, that it was not a proper ac adem ic dis c ipline anyway and that it had very little relevanc e in the m odern world of s c ienc e and tec hnology. I'm jus t bereft of words . S peec hles s .' 'W ell, there's a firs t! ' rem arked David, rem oving his s pec tac les and polis hing them with the end of his tie. 'Don't you think you are rather over-reac ting, S idney?' I s aid. 'Y ou m ake it s ound as if A rm ageddon is on us .' S idney s lam m ed his fis t on his des k. 'No, I am not over-reac ting, as you put it. How would you feel if E nglis h were des c ribed as "dec orating the m argins of the m ore s erious bus ines s of s tudy" and reduc ed to a m ere two periods a week?' 'B ut E nglis h, like m athem atic s , is a c ore s ubjec t,' I s aid. 'T here is a differenc e.' 'S o E nglis h and m aths are m ore im portant? W ell, I c an s ee I'm to get prec ious little s upport from m y c olleagues ,' blus tered S idney, ris ing from his c hair. 'W e will s ee what Harold has to s ay about it.' 'Leave the poor m an alone,' s aid David. 'Y ou know how bus y he is at the m om ent.' 'Not at all! ' s aid S idney, heading for the door. 'I s hall have a few well-c hos en words to s ay to Harold, I c an tell you.' 'A nd what will they be?' I as ked. 'I don't know. I haven't c hos en them yet,' replied S idney, m aking a grand exit. 'Y ou get wors e, S idney,' I s houted after him . W ith S idney's dram atic departure, peac e des c ended on the offic e. W hen the c loc k on the County Hall tower s truc k s ix o'c loc k, I s urveyed m y em pty des k with great s atis fac tion. T he report on Our Lady of Lourdes S c hool was finis hed and ready for J ulie to type up, the batc h of letters I had rec eived that day had all been ans wered, the ques tionnaire from the Minis try of E duc ation on boys ' under-ac hievem ent in E nglis h had been c om pleted and I had even m ade a good s tart at planning next m onth's E nglis h c ours e. I had m anaged to deal with all the telephone m es s ages s ave for the one from the very loud individual who wis hed to s peak to m e urgently but who had not left a num ber. I s at bac k in m y c hair and s ighed with c ontentm ent. Life was good. 'Y ou appear rem arkably pleas ed with yours elf,' s aid David, looking up and s taring over the top of his s pec tac les . 'Y ou look like the Ches hire c at that has got the c ream .' 'W ell, I am pretty pleas ed with m ys elf, if truth be told,' I replied. 'T his term has s tarted off really well. T he s c hool vis its have gone s m oothly and I have all m y paperwork under c ontrol.' 'W ell, long m ay it c ontinue,' s aid David, 'but be warned. In m y experienc e, there is always s om ething or s om ebody who m anages to s poil one's equilibrium when things s eem to be going really well. E verything appears to be perfec t and then dis as ter! You are c yc ling along a c ountry lane on a bright s um m er's day without a c are in the world. T he birds are s inging, the s un is s hining, the fres h wind is blowing through your hair and s uddenly s om ebody pus hes a thundering great s tic k through your s pokes and you're over the handlebars and flat on your fac e.' T his was one of David's favourite aphoris m s . 'A h, well,' I s aid s m iling, 'I think it is highly rem ote that anyone will pus h a s tic k though m y s pokes at the m om ent. Only one m ore s c hool vis it this week, and then a c onferenc e on Friday.' 'A nd where are you tom orrow?' as ked David. 'K ing Henry's College,' I replied. 'It's jus t a routine vis it. I s hould have been before now really but from what I've read about the s c hool, things in the E nglis h departm ent s eem to be fine.' 'A h, your firs t introduc tion to the A dm iral.' 'W ho?' 'Mr Nels on, the headm as ter. K nown as the A dm iral. Y ou know, Horatio Nels on.' 'Do I detec t a c ertain om inous tone to your voic e?' I as ked. 'Not at all,' s aid David. 'T he headm as ter of K ing Henry's is an am iable enough s ort of c hap, eas y going, a little c om plac ent perhaps . B ut try and get him to m ake a dec is ion, give an opinion or take a s tand on anything and you will wait until the proverbial c ows c om e hom e. He's the s ort of pers on who nails his c olours firm ly to the fenc e. He's all for a quiet life is Mr Nels on and, like his nam es ake, is a great one for turning a blind eye when it s uits him .' 'W ell, I c an't s ay he was over-keen on m y vis iting, that's for s ure,' I s aid. 'He didn't s ound partic ularly eas y going and c om plac ent to m e. I wrote inform ing him that I would be s pending a day with the E nglis h departm ent and he tried his hardes t to put m e off. I c an't think why bec aus e, as I explained to him , it's jus t a routine vis it, not part of a full ins pec tion. From the details I as ked him to s end, the E nglis h departm ent s eem s to be in a healthy s tate. T he exam ination res ults are good and -' 'S o they s hould be,' interrupted David. 'It's a highly s elec tive s c hool. You have to have a P hD to pas s the entranc e exam ination at K ing Henry's . If the teac hers c annot get good res ults from that c alibre of s tudent, they m ight as well pac k their bags and go hom e. A nd s peaking of going hom e, it's about tim e we m ade trac ks . I really don't want to be here when S idney returns . I c ouldn't bear another diatribe about Mr P ennington-S m ith and the s tate of the art at W es t Challerton High S c hool.' 'He did rather over-reac t, don't you think?' I s aid. 'Rus hing off to s ee Harold like that.' 'A h well, to be fair,' s aid David, 'there was rather m ore to it than jus t having the art reduc ed. E vidently P ennington-S m ith refus ed to dis c us s the s ituation and when S idney s aid he would m ake a return vis it to ins pec t the departm ent in a c ouple of weeks ' tim e, he told him it was pointles s and he need not bother. He virtually ordered him off the prem is es . I'm afraid that that partic ular headm as ter has to learn that he c annot jus t s uddenly c hange the c urric ulum on a whim . E very s tudent is entitled to a broad and balanc ed range of s ubjec ts . W hat's m ore, he c an't prevent s c hool ins pec tors from vis iting his s c hool. T he law s ays we have rights of entry. I think S idney is hoping Harold will c onvey this fac t to Mr P ennington-S m ith in no unc ertain term s .' 'Do you think he will?' I as ked. 'I'm s ure he will,' s aid David. 'A s you know, when Harold is rous ed it is not a pleas ant s ight.' 'I feel a bit guilty now, for being in s uc h a good m ood,' I s aid. 'I was n't the m os t s ym pathetic of lis teners .' 'Oh, S idney will get over it. He does tend to m ake a dram a out of things . I wonder where on earth he has got to? He has been gone for over two hours .' 'P robably s torm ed off in a huff,' I. s ugges ted. 'P oor S idney,' s aid David, s c rewing the top bac k on his pen. 'He does get into a s tate but it s oon blows over. W ell, I'm off hom e and if I don't s ee you tom orrow, Gervas e, enjoy your weekend with that lovely wife of yours . How is Chris tine inc identally?' 'S he's fine,' I told him . 'Y ou are a very luc ky m an, Gervas e,' s aid David, ris ing from his c hair and s tretc hing. 'Y es , I know,' I replied. A s I drove hom e, I pondered on David's words . Yes , I was indeed a very luc ky m an. T he E as ter before, on a bright, c loudles s s pring m orning, I had m arried the m os t beautiful, talented and gentle wom an in the world, Mis s Chris tine B entley, headteac her of W innery Nook Nurs ery and Infant S c hool. I had m et her a few weeks after s tarting in m y pos t as c ounty E nglis h ins pec tor and for m e it had been love at firs t s ight. W e had honeym ooned in the Lake Dis tric t and had returned to our dream y P eewit Cottage in the village of Hawks rill in the Dales . T he dream c ottage, in fac t, had wood-worm , dry rot, ris ing dam p, c rac ked walls , broken guttering and nearly every c onc eivable problem but we had fallen in love with the m agnific ent views and after s pending m os t of our s pare tim e renovating and refurbis hing, it was beginning to take s hape. A t the end of the previous s um m er term Chris tine had told m e the m os t wonderful news - that I was to be a father the following s pring. S o everything in the world s eem ed right: hom e, fam ily, friends and job. I was c yc ling along that c ountry lane of David's on a bright s um m er's day without a c are in the world. T he birds were s inging, the s un was s hining, the fres h wind was blowing through m y hair and nothing and nobody c ould pos s ibly s poil the s ens e of elation I felt. Little did I know that there was s om eone lurking in the bus hes ready to pus h the thundering great s tic k through m y s pokes .
3 T he fros ted glas s at the rec eption des k at K ing Henry's College s lid bac k s harply and I was c onfronted by a tall, thin, hawk-fac ed s c hool s ec retary with s m all, c old blue eyes behind unfas hionable horn-rim m ed s pec tac les . S he gave m e a s tony s tare. T he feeling of pleas ant antic ipation I had felt as I had s trolled up the long drive to the im pos ing s c hool building im m ediately dis s ipated. 'W ould you m ind not tapping on the glas s ,' s he told m e in a s uperior voic e. 'T here is a buzzer, you know.' 'W here?' I enquired innoc ently, giving her an exaggerated s m ile and looking into the pale blue eyes . S he poked her head through the hatc h like a tortois e em erging from its s hell, and tutted nois ily. 'T he buzzer is under thos e regis ters , whic h s hould not have been left there,' s he announc ed, giving m e an ac c us atory glare as though I were the c ulprit. S he s natc hed up the regis ters and pulled them through the window and into the offic e. T here was a great in-drawing of breath. 'T he num ber of tim es I tell the s tudents not to leave the regis ters there,' s he s aid to no one in partic ular. 'I m ight jus t as well talk to m ys elf for all the notic e they take.' I c ontinued to s m ile and await the apology but it s oon bec am e apparent that none would be forthc om ing. 'Now,' s he s aid, 'm ay I help you?' Her fac e rem ained dram atic ally tight-lipped and s tern, and her voic e retained its weary c ondes c ens ion. 'I hope s o,' I s aid pleas antly. 'I have an appointm ent.' 'W ith whom ?' 'T he headm as ter.' S he began flic king through a large blac k book. 'A t what tim e?' 'A t a quarter to nine.' S he glanc ed up at the c loc k on the offic e wall. 'Y ou're rather early.' 'I often am .' S he c ontinued to turn the pages . 'A nd you are?' I pas s ed through the brown envelope that I had rec eived from the s c hool the week before. It was addres s ed to: 'Mr Gervas e R. P his s , Ins pec tor of S c hools , T he Ins pec tors ' Divis ion, E duc ation Offic e, County Hall, Fettles ham , Yorks hire.' Had m y welc om e been rather warm er, I would have pointed out that the nam e was P hinn and not P his s , but after the rec eption I had jus t rec eived, I did not feel quite s o c haritable, s o I s aid nothing. Having s c rutinis ed the envelope, the s ec retary's m anner c hanged ins tantly. 'Oh, oh, yes , the s c hool ins pec tor.' S he allowed hers elf a s m all, thin-lipped s m ile. 'I'm s o s orry, I thought you were a parent or a book s ales m an. It's always very hec tic here. I never s eem to have a m inute to m ys elf. It's like E us ton S tation at rus h hour. Do pleas e take a s eat in the waiting-room , Mr P his s . I s hall inform Mr Nels on that you have arrived.' In the s m all room a rather haras s ed-looking wom an with wis py greying hair s at s traight-bac ked with her hands c las ped tightly together on her lap. W ith her was an equally haras s ed-looking boy of about eleven. T hey both s hifted uneas ily on their c hairs . T he boy, who had a pale fac e, looked up when he s aw m e approac hing and began twiddling his hair nervous ly. T he wom an s tood and extended a hand. 'Mr Nels on?' 'No, no,' I replied, 'I'm not the headm as ter. I'm jus t a vis itor.' 'Oh, I'm s orry, I thought you were Mr Nels on.' S he s at down and s wept away a s tray s trand of hair from her fac e. 'Nerve-rac king, is n't it?' s he s aid. 'W hat is ?' I as ked, s itting next to her. 'Meeting the headm as ter. I know I s houldn't get into this s tate but I always have had a dread of headteac hers ' offic es . It brings bac k unhappy m em ories .' I s m iled. 'W e've an appointm ent at nine. It's J ohn's firs t day, you s ee.' S he turned to the boy and gave a weak s m ile. 'He s hould have s tarted with all the other boys las t week but he's jus t got over glandular fever. He's a bit nervous , s o I thought I'd c om e along with him .' A boy of eleven is quite c apable of m aking his own way to s c hool, I thought to m ys elf, but I s aid nothing. 'He's worried that all the other boys will have m ade friends by now and he'll be left out.' S he lowered her voic e. 'A nd he's a bit on the s ens itive s ide.' 'Oh, I wouldn't worry too m uc h,' I as s ured the boy. 'Y ou'll s oon s ettle in and m ake friends .' 'I do hope s o.' T he wom an s ounded unc onvinc ed. 'He's got as thm a, as well, you know.' 'Really?' 'I wanted to s ee the headm as ter, to tell him . He's not the m os t c onfident c hild.' T he boy c ontinued to twiddle his hair. 'He's an only one. My hus band thinks I'm a bit over-protec tive, to be hones t.' Her hus band was right. 'W e arrived early jus t to be on the s afe s ide. You s ee, we had to c atc h two bus es . I thought I'd c om e with him on his firs t day. S how him how to get here and m ake s ure he's all right.' 'Y ou'll be fine, J ohn,' I told the boy. T he boy pulled a tragic fac e but: rem ained res olutely s ilent. His m other prodded him . 'S it up, J ohn, and s top fiddling with your hair, for goodnes s s ake. If you do that in front of Mr Nels on, he won't be very im pres s ed.' S he turned her attention bac k to m e. 'Of c ours e, he did very well to get in at K ing Henry's . V ery good res ults . E xc ellent s porting fac ilities . Mus ic 's very good too. T here's a waiting lis t as long as m y arm for plac es .' S he began wringing her hands . 'Y es , it's a very good s c hool.' T he boy looked up glum ly. 'T here were only three in his prim ary s c hool who pas s ed the entranc e exam ination, you know.' 'Good,' I s aid to the boy. 'W ell done.' T he boy c ontinued to s tare into the m iddle dis tanc e, a glum expres s ion on his fac e. 'He had a private tutor,' his m other told m e. 'Cos t an arm and a leg, but you do the bes t you c an, don't you?' 'A re you looking forward to s tarting, J ohn?' I as ked the boy. 'It's the bes t s c hool in the area,' the wom an told m e proudly before the boy c ould reply. I would res erve m y judgem ent on that one, I thought to m ys elf. If the ic y rec eption was anything to go by, things did not bode well. I had vis ited m any s c hools during the relatively s hort tim e I had been a s c hool ins pec tor and was always intrigued and often am us ed by the rec eption I rec eived. On s om e oc c as ions I would be welc om ed like a long los t relative, all s m iles and hands hakes , at other tim es it was as if the Ges tapo had turned up. On one oc c as ion I was m is taken for a Mr Davies . T he headteac her had been devas tated to learn that I was a s c hool ins pec tor, there to look at les s ons and not the plum ber to fix the s m ell in the boys ' lavatories . Us ually the s c hool s ec retary greeted m e with c ourtes y and good hum our. It was rare, however, to be addres s ed with s uc h polar hos tility as I had been that m orning. T he c old blue eyes of the s c hool s ec retary at K ing Henry's c ould freeze s oup in kitc hen pans . T he wom an in ques tion appeared before m e. Her m anner was dis tinc tly different now. 'Mr P his s ,' s he s aid, allowing hers elf another thin-lipped s m ile, 'the headm as ter will s ee you, if you would c are to follow m e.' S he ignored the wom an and her s on who looked up expec tantly on her arrival. 'Good luc k,' I s aid to the boy, getting to m y feet. 'S ay thank you to the m an,' prom pted his m other. He s tared up m oros ely and s hrugged. T he s ec retary s trode ahead of m e, her heels c lic king on the hard floor. T here was the s am e s m ell in the air I rec alled from m y s c hool days : s tale c abbage, dis infec tant and floor polis h. T here was the s am e long, c old c orridor I rem em bered too, the wooden bloc k floor, the high c eilings , the quadrangle, the heavy oak doors to the c las s room s . It was like going bac k in tim e. A t the s c hool s ec retary's approac h the hubbub of nois e in the c orridors s ubs ided and the pupils opened their c rowded ranks to allow her to s weep through. 'It's a m os t unus ual nam e, P his s ,' s he s aid over her s houlder. 'Y es ,' I replied. 'Is it foreign?' 'A c tually -' I began, about to enlighten her. 'I c an't s ay I've ever heard the nam e P his s before,' s he c ontinued. 'W e have a boy here c alled P hipps , a P hillips , and another c alled P hillpots . Oh yes , and there's a P hillim ore, but I have never heard the nam e P his s .' 'It's Frenc h Huguenot,' I told her, keeping a s traight fac e. 'Really?' 'My anc es tors c am e over with the weavers in the s eventeenth c entury after s evere pers ec ution at the hands of Henry of Navarre. My m other's s till not quite got over it.' 'Oh, I am s orry,' s he s aid, in a m atter-of-fac t voic e. 'A c tually, it's not pronounc ed P his s .' 'Is it not?' 'No,' I s aid m is c hievous ly, 'it has a s ilent "aitc h".' W e arrived at the headm as ter's s tudy. Mr Nels on ros e from his des k to greet m e. 'Headm as ter,' s aid the s c hool s ec retary, her fac e as s olem n as ever. 'T his is the ins pec tor of s c hools , Mr... er... P ic e.' Mr Nels on was a gaunt, m iddle-aged m an with grizzled grey hair and a pained expres s ion. A blac k ac adem ic gown, with long dangling s leeves , enveloped his lean fram e, giving him the appearanc e of a giant s pider. T hrough s m all, rim les s s pec tac les he s urveyed m e c ritic ally like a doc tor m ight a patient, before extending a long, c old hand. 'Mr... er...' he began. 'P hinn,' I s aid. 'T here was a m is s pelling on your letter.' 'Y ou m ight have s aid! ' s napped the s c hool s ec retary, her fac e white with dis pleas ure and a fierc e light in the s m all blue eyes . 'T hank you, Mrs W interton,' s aid Mr Nels on with elaborate c ourtes y. T he s c hool s ec retary had not rem ained for his ins truc tion to depart and was already heading for the door at high s peed, tut-tutting as s he went. W hen s he had gone the headm as ter s at down, tapped his long fingers edgily on the des k and c onfided in a low voic e, 'Mrs W interton c an be a trifle s harp at tim es , but s he is quite indis pens able. W orth her weight in the proverbial.' More like a pain in the proverbial, I thought to m ys elf. 'I'm s ure s he is ,' I replied. 'I did try and tell her that there was a m is print on the letter.' T he headm as ter s tared at m e blankly. ' "P his s " ins tead of "P hinn",' I elaborated. 'Quite. I have m entioned about her typing,' s aid the headm as ter, 'but s he c an be very touc hy.' 'Y es , I'm s ure s he c an.' 'W ell, Mr P hinn, do take a s eat.' He indic ated an unc om fortable-looking, ladderbac k c hair plac ed to the front of his des k. 'S o, you are to s pend a day in the s c hool ins pec ting the E nglis h Departm ent?' 'Y es , that's right,' I replied. T he headm as ter rais ed his head s lowly, rubbed his c hin and s ighed. He res em bled a wounded adm iral watc hing the return of his defeated fleet. 'Not the bes t tim e, I have to s ay, the beginning of term , for a s c hool ins pec tion, when things are es pec ially bus y. I did point this out in m y reply to you when you inform ed m e of this propos ed vis itation. No, not the bes t tim e at all. T he new s c hool year has barely s tarted, teac hers are jus t bec om ing ac quainted with their c las s es , getting to grips with the tim etables , s orting out their room s , et c etera. Indeed, I have an exc eptionally bus y day ahead of m e with a Managem ent m eeting and then the Governors ' Financ e S ub-c om m ittee and num erous other pres s ing c om m itm ents . T his m orning I have to s ee s everal parents , inc luding one who is c ontes ting our dec is ion not to ac c ept his s on at the s c hool. A ll very trying. A s you will no doubt be aware, we are very heavily overs ubs c ribed here at K ing Henry's . A nd it's s uc h a tedious and tim e-c ons um ing bus ines s this interviewing, and is not without its s tres s es .' He paus ed. 'B ut, of c ours e, the E duc ation Departm ent, in its infinite wis dom , does ins is t on thes e appeals being heard.' I felt it politic not to enter this partic ular debate and rem ained s ilent. 'S o, as I s aid, Mr P hinn, your vis it has c om e at a m os t inc onvenient tim e.' I looked direc tly at him and he returned m y gaze. 'I s hould im agine there is never a c onvenient tim e for a s c hool ins pec tion, Mr Nels on,' I told him am iably. 'A s I explained in m y letter, however, I do have a very bus y program m e of vis its to s c hools this term and I m us t s tart s om ewhere. K ing Henry's is high on m y lis t.' 'High on your lis t,' repeated the headm as ter, twis ting his m outh to one s ide and c oc king his head. 'My goodnes s ! T hat does s ound om inous .' 'Not at all,' I as s ured him , 'it's jus t a s hort day's vis it to look at the E nglis h teac hing in the s c hool. A c c ording to m y rec ords , it's been quite s om e tim e s inc e you have had an ins pec tor in the E nglis h Departm ent. Indeed, I have not been in the s c hool before and I have been working for the E duc ation Departm ent for three years . I thought it high tim e that I paid you a vis it. A s you are aware, the las t ins pec tion was c arried out by m y predec es s or, Mrs Y oung, s hortly before I s tarted.' He looked at m e s c eptic ally. 'It is quite routine. I am s ure everything will be fine.' Mr Nels on took a s low, deep breath. His fac e was noble in its pallor. 'I did s ay in m y letter to you, Mr P hinn, that I would have preferred a m ore s uitable tim e.' He s at in thoughtful s ilenc e for a m om ent, drum m ing his long fingers on the des k top, no doubt awaiting a res pons e. P erhaps he expec ted m e to agree with him , arrange a vis it for a future date and depart forthwith. W hen I rem ained firm ly tight-lipped, he nodded and c ontinued, his voic e hardening a frac tion. 'W ell, if you are to join us for the day, I am s ure you will find things in order. A s you will have s urm is ed from the details you as ked m e to s end to you, our exam ination res ults are outs tanding.' T hey were c ertainly good, I thought, but not outs tanding. T he girls ' high s c hool ac hieved m uc h better res ults . A nyway, K ing Henry's was a gram m ar s c hool for whic h only the brightes t pupils in the area were s elec ted by exam ination and pers onal interview. A s David had rightly pointed out to m e, the s c hool s hould indeed attain good res ults . 'A nd I have to s ay,' c ontinued the headm as ter, 'Mr Frobis her, the head of the E nglis h Fac ulty, is not entirely enthus ias tic about the vis it. You will find him a s om ewhat form al and traditional teac her, one of the "old s c hool", and he does have his s hare of -' T here was a s harp knoc k on the door, interrupting the flow. 'A h, that m us t be him now. I as ked him to join us before les s ons c om m enc e. Com e! ' Mr Frobis her bore an unnerving res em blanc e to the headm as ter. He was als o a lean, s allow-c om plexioned m an with heavy-lidded eyes and a pained expres s ion. T he only differenc e was the hair. W hereas Mr Nels on's was grizzled, Mr Frobis her's hair was s traight and blac k and c arefully parted down one s ide. He too wore rim les s s pec tac les and a c apac ious blac k gown. 'Good m orning,' he intoned, giving m e a c alc ulating s tare. Oh dear, oh dear, I thought to m ys elf, another c hilly rec eption. I took a deep breath, s tood and s m iled. 'Good m orning.' 'T his is Mr P hinn,' the headm as ter told him . 'T he s c hool ins pec tor.' 'I thought it was Mr Fis h.' 'T here was a m is print on the letter,' explained the headm as ter. 'Mrs W interton again, I'm afraid.' 'Oh,' s aid the head of E nglis h. 'W ell, I have to s ay, today is a very inopportune tim e for your vis it, Mr P hinn.' 'T he headm as ter has pointed this out to m e, Mr Frobis her,' I explained, not wis hing to rehears e the whole c onvers ation again. 'I apprec iate that the beginning of term is not the bes t of tim es , but I do have a heavy s c hedule of vis its over the next few weeks .' B efore he c ould ans wer I looked theatric ally at m y watc h and c ontinued. 'I s ee the les s ons are about to begin. P erhaps we s hould m ake a s tart?' My attem pt to c hange the s ubjec t fell on s tony ground for Mr Frobis her c ontinued regardles s . 'T he beginning of term is always rather fraught and T hurs day is always an inc onvenient day for m e for I am on c orridor patrol at m orning and afternoon breaks , I s upervis e a detention at lunc h-tim e and I am on bus duty after s c hool.' He looked at m e as if antic ipating a reply. 'S o -' I s tood firm . 'I would s till like to s tay,' I told him . 'P erhaps we c ould m ake a s tart?' 'V ery well,' s aid Mr Frobis her loftily, glanc ing in the direc tion of the headm as ter, as if to enlis t his s upport, before turning his attention bac k to m e. 'I trus t you rec eived the various details you reques ted - exam ination res ults , s c hem es of work, s yllabus es , s taffing c om plem ent, et c etera. I hope the program m e I have devis ed for you to follow is ac c eptable.' He did not await an ans wer. 'I think you are to s tart with Mr P oppleton, the s ec ond-in-c harge of the departm ent, and his fifth year form .' 'I did rec eive them , thank you, Mr Frobis her,' I replied am ic ably, 'but I have planned a program m e for the day. I do prefer to work from one of m y own.' 'One of your own?' he repeated, bris tling like an angry c at. 'Y ou m ean you roam freely between c las s es ?' 'Y es , that is the us ual prac tic e. I try to vis it all the teac hers and s ee as wide a range of les s ons as pos s ible, taking the opportunity of talking to the s tudents and looking at their work.' 'W ell, it s eem s quite irregular to m e. Do you m ean the teac hers will not know when you are vis iting their les s ons to obs erve them ?' He turned again to fac e the headm as ter, obvious ly hoping this tim e he would c om e to his defenc e. W hen this was not forthc om ing, he s wivelled bac k to fac e m e. 'I generally s tart with the head of departm ent,' I s aid. 'I notic ed you did not inc lude yours elf on the program m e you s ent m e, Mr Frobis her.' 'S urely, you do not wis h to s ee me teac h?' He looked appalled. 'I am the head of fac ulty.' 'Y es , I am aware of that,' I s aid pleas antly. T he headm as ter s ighed wearily. 'I really m us t as k you gentlem en to exc us e m e. I have a waiting-room full of expec tant parents to s ee m e. Mr Frobis her, if you wouldn't m ind s howing our vis itor where the E nglis h room s are. I look forward to s eeing you at the end of the day, Mr P hinn, for you to s hare your deliberations with us . A nd now if you wouldn't m ind.' * Mr Frobis her's c las s room had an uninterrupted view over the playing fields . It was a s pac ious and very warm room with a highly polis hed floor of patterned wooden bloc ks , long elegant s as h windows and a high c eiling with ornam ental plas ter c oving. A t the front of the room , on a dais , was a s turdy teac her's des k m ade of pine and a high-bac ked c hair, while at the s ide was a bookc as e c ontaining neatly s tac ked books and folders , a s et of dic tionaries and s om e referenc e texts . S ave for a few dog-eared and faded pos ters c onc erned with the rules of gram m ar, the walls were bare. T he s tudents ' des ks were of the s m all, lidded variety with holes for inkwells , entirely uns uitable for large adoles c ent boys . T he c las s of thirty or s o fourth-year s tudents , s om e in s m art blazers , a c ouple in white s hirts , s tood when we entered. 'S it down,' ordered the teac her, s weeping to his des k, gown a-fluttering. He s urveyed the c las s before him and his eyes s ettled on two gangly boys at the bac k. 'I was not aware, Lis ter, that I had given perm is s ion for the rem oval of blazers .' 'It's really hot in here, s ir,' replied the boy. 'Neither did I reques t a weather forec as t. Y ou know the s c hool rules as well as I. P ut on your blazer and that goes for you too, W ils don.' 'Can I open a window then, s ir?' pers is ted the boy. 'Y ou c an indeed open a window, Lis ter, but whether or not you may is an entirely different m atter.' 'W hat, s ir?' 'I s aid you c an open a window. Obvious ly m y les s on on the auxiliary verb las t term has had very little im pac t.' He pic ked up a s tic k of c halk and wrote the word CA N in c apitals on the board. 'T he word "c an" is an auxiliary verb expres s ing an ability or knowledge of how to do s om ething as in the s entenc e, "I c an throw this c halk." 'He twirled the c halk around between finger and thum b and s m iled at his own wittic is m . 'T he verb "m ay" is als o an auxiliary verb expres s ing the pos s ibility or the perm is s ion to do s om ething as in the s entenc e, "Y ou m ay open the window."' 'S o, c an I open it then, s ir?' as ked the boy, looking puzzled. 'No, you may not! ' s napped the teac her. 'Now, it will not have es c aped your notic e that we have with us a vis itor today. Mr P hinn is from the E duc ation Offic e and he will be joining our les s on.' He ges tured to an em pty c hair at the s ide of the room . 'Good m orning,' I s aid c heerfully, as I headed for the c hair.
'Good m orning, s ir,' c horus ed the boys . 'I was not im pres s ed, not im pres s ed at all with your hom ework this week,' s aid Mr Frobis her, reac hing for the neat pile of exerc is e books on his des k. 'T here was a great deal of inac c urate, untidy and s lip-s hod writing. A nd in s om e books we s eem to have had an epidem ic of the greengroc er's dis eas e. A pos trophes everywhere.' He flic ked open a book. 'I do not know how m any tim es I have told you that, in general, in the s ingular the apos trophe appears before the letter s , and in the plural after the letter s when the plural ends in the letter s and before the letter s when the plural does not end in the letter s . It is quite s im ple.' T he pupils obvious ly did not agree s inc e they were s taring at him , entirely perplexed. 'Rutter, here,' and Mr Frobis her held up an exerc is e book, 's c atters apos trophes ac ros s the page like pepperc orns . I don't know about you, Mr P hinn,' s aid the teac her, turning his attention to m e, 'but I find it s o irritating to s ee the flagrant m is us e of the E nglis h language wherever I go. One pas s es the loc al fruiterer who s ells "bananas " and "potatoes ", or the s uperm arket prom is ing "hundreds of produc ts " at half pric e, all with redundant apos trophes before the s .' A s he s poke, Mr Frobis her wrote the erroneous words on the board: banana's potatoe's 100's of produc ts 'I had a politic al leaflet through m y door only las t week,' he c ontinued, 'whic h wrote about rais ing s tandards in educ ation, but that als o, inc redibly, c ontained s uperfluous punc tuation. T here were phras es like "the loc al MP s are c onc erned" and "the Governm ent are keeping to its m anifes to", the latter c ontaining not only the errant apos trophe but a blatant m is applic ation of the verb.' Onto the board went: the loc al M P 's to it's manifes to T he teac her now pic ked up a red c halk from his des k and with flam boyant s trokes c ros s ed out the offending apos trophes on the board. He turned his attention bac k to the c las s . 'S om e people think that every tim e there is a letter s at the end of a word there needs to be an apos trophe.' He fac ed the s tudents who s tared at him with expres s ionles s fac es . 'A s you have heard m e s ay on c ountles s oc c as ions , defec tive punc tuation leads to c onfus ion. S o, the only us e of the apos trophe is to denote pos s es s ion or om is s ion. Now -' 'E xc us e m e, s ir.' T he s peaker was a gangly boy with lanky brown hair and angry ac ne ac ros s his forehead and c heeks . 'W hat about in this s entenc e: "T he word 'Mis s is s ippi' c ontains four i's and four s 's but only two p's ." S urely apos trophes are needed here, otherwis e the reader will be left very c onfus ed.' Mr Frobis her rem oved his glas s es and s tared heavenwards . 'Yes indeed, S m ith,' he replied. 'W hether the apos trophe s hould be us ed to denote the plural of a word that does not ordinarily m ake a plural depends on whether the plural is eas ily rec ognis able as s uc h. Unles s the reader needs as s is tanc e in unders tanding, whic h is the c as e with your exam ple, one s hould not us e the apos trophe. Now, we m us t get -' 'B ut didn't you jus t s ay, s ir, that the apos trophe is only us ed to denote pos s es s ion or om is s ion?' enquired the boy in an overly polite tone of voic e. T he teac her s ighed. I c ould s ee he wis hed he had never entered this m inefield. 'Y es , I did, but this is an exc eption. It is c learly jus tifiable with s ingle letters as in your Mis s is s ippi s entenc e, or in m ine, "W ell-behaved, polite and attentive s tudents watc h their p's and q's ." Does that c larify the m atter for you?' 'Oh yes , s ir,' replied the boy, s m iling. 'T hank you, s ir.' 'Now -' began the teac her again, replac ing his s pec tac les and fixing the boy with a rattles nake look. 'E xc us e m e, s ir.' 'Y es , S m ith, what is it now?' s ighed the teac her. 'In the s entenc e that you quoted, "T he Governm ent is keeping to its m anifes to", you s aid there is no apos trophe in the word "its ".' 'T hat is c orrec t,' s aid Mr Frobis her, taking off his glas s es again and pointing with them to the board. 'A ll pronouns dis pens e with the apos trophe in their pos s es s ive c as e - hers , yours , theirs , ours and its . It's with an apos trophe is not the pos s es s ive of "it" but a c ontrac tion of "it is ". T he apos trophe is perform ing its norm al duty of s howing that a letter has been om itted. Y ou s houldn't need to think twic e about thos e any m ore. Now -' 'W hat about the pronoun "one" then, s ir?' s aid the boy. 'S urely an apos trophe is needed in the s entenc e: "One is taking one's tim e in explaining ones elf."' T he teac her eyed the boy m om entarily, wondering if he were being im pertinent. 'T hat is the one exc eption,' he finally replied in a dis m is s ive m anner. 'It is all very c onfus ing, s ir,' s ighed the boy, leaning bac k on his c hair. 'T here s eem s o m any exc eptions to the rule.' 'It is a quite s im ple c onc ept, S m ith - that is if you lis ten and learn the rules .' 'Do you not think, s ir, that the apos trophe has jus t about had its day?' 'No, I do not! ' 'A nd that the greengroc er perhaps deliberately m is us es the apos trophe to draw attention to his fruit and vegetables .' 'No, I do not! It is jus t plain ignoranc e.' 'I don't s uppos e that in the great s c hem e of things , it's that im portant,' s aid the boy, turning to addres s the c las s as a whole. 'I don't im agine that people buy les s of the greengroc er's produc e bec aus e he dec ides to ins ert an apos trophe here and there. I s hould think it's the quality of his fruit and vegetables and the pric es that c ount with his c us tom ers .' 'It is im portant to m e, S m ith! ' s napped the teac her. 'A nd it is als o im portant to thos e who m ark your exam ination papers .' 'B ut is it not the c as e, s ir,' c ontinued the boy, 'that m any ins titutions , like B arc lays B ank, for exam ple, have dropped the apos trophe and this has not led to wholes ale c onfus ion?' 'W ell if B arc lays B ank has , S m ith,' the teac her told him in a dis paraging voic e, whic h expres s ed both im patienc e and anger, 'then it is wrong.' 'A nd is it not the c as e, s ir,' c ontinued the boy, s taring the teac her full in the fac e, not ins olently nor with the trac e of a s m ile, but with an intens e gaze, 'that in S hakes peare's tim e it was quite c om m on to find plural nouns with apos trophes ?' 'S m ith,' s aid the teac her, his forehead now unpleas antly s hining, 'm uc h as I would like to debate the rights and wrongs of us ing the apos trophe, we do have to pres s on.' T his rem arkable exc hange, s om ething whic h I had rarely obs erved in a c las s room before, was like a battle of wits between a c lever barris ter and a vulnerable defendant, the s tudent purs uing the teac her like a terrier with a rat, but doing s o in the m os t c ourteous of ways . Mr Frobis her was c learly dis c onc erted by the boy's c ons tant interruptions and his earlier s elf-as s uranc e s eem ed to be dis appearing fas t. He turned and vigorous ly c leared the board of the lis t of c rim inal apos trophes . 'E xc us e m e, s ir,' began the boy again. S om e of his c las s m ates s niggered quietly. 'S m ith,' s aid the teac her, attem pting to c ontrol his dis pleas ure, 'you are bec om ing wearis om e in the extrem e. E nough is enough. Now, I s hall write on the board s om e s entenc es in whic h the apos trophes have been om itted. In your exerc is e books I would like you to c opy out the s entenc es and -' 'T ell you where to s tic k them ,' s aid S m ith, jus t loud enough for m e to hear. However, Mr Frobis her als o heard. 'I think a quiet word with you is in order, S m ith,' s aid the teac her. 'S ee m e at lunc htim e.' W hile the c las s c om pleted the exerc is e, I took the opportunity to walk round the des ks , and look at s om e of the work. In due c ours e, I reac hed the young m an who had pres s ed the teac her with s o m any c hallenging ques tions . It s oon bec am e m y turn to be interrogated. 'May I look at your book?' I as ked pleas antly. 'W ho exac tly are you?' he s aid, looking m e s traight in the eyes . 'A s c hool ins pec tor.' 'Really?' 'Y es .' 'A nd what is it that you do exac tly?' 'W atc h les s ons , exam ine books , talk to pupils , s tudy exam ination res ults ,' I explained. 'B it of a c us hy num ber that, is n't it?' 'S om e would s ay s o.' 'A nd how long are you here for?' 'J us t the day.' 'Y ou'll not s ee m uc h in a day.' 'Y ou'd be s urpris ed.' 'A nd pres um ably you write a report at the end of your vis it?' 'Y es , I do.' 'A nd what will be in your report of this les s on?' he as ked bluntly. Now it was m y turn to be in the witnes s box and fac e the tric ky ques tions . 'I haven't quite dec ided yet.' 'B ut you m us t have form ed s om e im pres s ion.' 'It is us ually m e who as ks the ques tions , you know.' T he boy was not going to let m e off the hook s o lightly. 'B ut s urely in a good s c hool,' he s aid, 'the pupils are enc ouraged to as k ques tions , are they not?' 'T hey are,' I replied, 'but with s om e ques tions it would be inappropriate for m e to ans wer.' 'S ounds a bit of a c op-out to m e.' 'S o, m ay I look at your book?' He would not be dis trac ted. 'I rec kon you are here to dis c over whether the s tandard of educ ation is s atis fac tory or not, that the les s ons are up to s c ratc h. Is that right?' 'Y es , that is part of m y job.' 'A nd that being the c as e, s urely it is we, the c lients , who would be m os t interes ted to know.' 'My report is given to the headm as ter. I never dis c us s partic ular les s ons or individual teac hers with s tudents .' 'S o m uc h for freedom of inform ation,' he s aid. I c hanged the s ubjec t. 'Do you like E nglis h?' 'I like the language. I c an't s ay that I like the les s ons .' He waited for a res pons e. 'I'm afraid I c an't get too exc ited about where to put the apos trophe, c an you? In fac t, I c ouldn't really c are les s . It s eem s to m e to be a very outdated c onc ept and wants s c rapping. It is s uc h a deeply uninteres ting topic , don't you think? W hen S hakes peare or Dic kens or J ane A us ten or E m ily B ronte put pen to paper, I am s ure that the las t thing on their m inds was where to s tic k their apos trophes .' 'Y our book, pleas e,' I s aid. He s lid his open book c as ually ac ros s the des k for m e to exam ine. T he book c ontained work of quite exc eptional quality. 'I am s ure you do not need m e to tell you that this work is exc ellent,' I told him . 'No, I don't really.' I c ould s ee that dealing with this young m an was no eas y m atter. He s m iled. 'W hat I m ean is , I don't need you to tell m e, but it is always nic e to be told.' 'A nd what do you hope to s tudy at univers ity?' I as ked. 'W hat m akes you think I wis h to go to univers ity?' he as ked. 'I as s um e you will be.' 'Maybe I will,' he s aid. 'A nd if you do, will you s tudy E nglis h?' 'Law,' he replied. 'Like m y father.' I c los ed his book and pas s ed it bac k to him . It was then that I s aw the nam e on the c over: Hugo Maxwell-S m ith. 'Do you have any brothers or s is ters ?' I as ked. 'Y es , a younger brother and s is ter. My brother is n't at this s c hool yet.' 'A h, s o that would be A lexander, a pupil at Our Lady of Lourdes ?' T hat did s urpris e the young m an, but he didn't have a c hanc e to ques tion m e bec aus e the bell s ignalling the end of the les s on rang s hrilly. 'W hen you have handed your books in,' s aid Mr Frobis her, 'you c an go.' 'Y ou may go,' m urm ured Hugo Maxwell-S m ith, ris ing from his s eat and giving m e the fulles t and m os t c harm ing of s m iles .
4 For the s ec ond period of the day, I joined a gentle-m annered if s om ewhat nervous young teac her c alled Mr A dam s . T he les s on had been well planned, the teac hing was c om petent and foc us ed and the work the s tudents undertook was interes ting and appropriate. It was a vas t im provem ent on the las t les s on that I had obs erved. T he s tudents , aged twelve and put into groups of four, were as ked to dis c us s a news paper artic le with a num ber of ques tion prom pts provided by the teac her. T hey then had the tas k of writing a letter in res pons e, rebutting s om e of the c ritic is m s and s etting out their own views . T he artic le bem oaned the youth of today as largely rude and s elfis h, with little pers everanc e or inc lination for hard work. A c c ording to the writer, young people had far too m uc h m oney at their dis pos al, s pent m any a was ted hour glued in front of the televis ion s et, lac ked res pec t for their elders and had parents and teac hers who did not exerc is e s uffic ient dis c ipline. It harked bac k to a 'golden age' when s m iling bobbies walked the beat, pavem ents were litter-free and there were no teenage m uggers , football hooligans or lager louts . S uc h was the enthus ias m of the pupils to c ontribute their views that I found little opportunity of as king any ques tions , s o m oved from group to group m erely lis tening to the anim ated debate. J us t before the bell s ignalled m orning break, I did m anage to as k one of the s tudents a ques tion. 'W ould you agree that the differenc es between the younger and older generations today are greater than they were when your parents were young?' T he boy thought for a m om ent, c hewing the end of his penc il and nodding his head up and down s lowly. 'Now, that really is a very interes ting ques tion,' he s aid, 'but I have no idea of the ans wer.' A t the m orning break I went in s earc h of Mr P oppleton who, I was inform ed by a helpful pupil, taught in a tem porary c las s room . I dis c overed an ugly s hed balanc ed on s ix rais ed c onc rete bloc ks behind the m ain s c hool building. T he exterior of this m ournful s truc ture res em bled a P OW hut: wooden walls the c olour of the s lim e whic h form s on s tagnant ponds , grey as phalt roof, s m all s quare windows and a s et of dirty brown s teps leading up to a plywood door. It was a far c ry from Mr Frobis her's elegant room . A s I headed for the hut, the door opened and there appeared, like an ac tor s tepping onto the s tage, a s m all, s pheric al individual with a s m ile vis ible from fifty yards . Mr P oppleton c ould have walked s traight out of the pages of a Dic kens ' novel. His c heeks were as wrinkled as an overripe rus s et apple and his nos e, of a m os t dis tinc tive c laret c olour, was as round and heavy as a turnip. Fluffy outc rops of unnaturally bright gingery-red hair s prouted from around his im pres s ive ears . Mr P oppleton was dres s ed in a loud c hec ked s uit (whic h was a s ize too s m all for him ), a rus t-c oloured wais tc oat (whic h had s een better days ) and an enorm ous s potted bow tie. He s ported a diam ond ring on one fat little finger and a heavy s ilver c hain s tretc hed ac ros s his s tom ac h. Mr P oppleton looked m ore like a c irc us perform er or a m us ic hall c om edian than an E nglis h m as ter in a pres tigious boys ' s c hool. 'Mr P oppleton?' I inquired, approac hing the rotund little figure who rem ained s tanding by the c las s room door, like a huge egg on legs . 'Indeed, it is I,' he s aid, beam ing. 'V ernon P oppleton at your s ervic e. A nd you m us t be the expec ted Ins pec tor Fis h.' 'P hinn,' I s aid. 'It was a m is print.' 'W hat was a m is print?' 'My nam e.' 'Y ou were a m is print? How very unfortunate.' 'On the letter.' 'W hic h letter?' 'I rec eived a letter from the s c hool,' I explained, 'with the nam e of "Gervas e P his s " ins tead of "Gervas e P hinn" on the envelope.' Mr P oppleton rais ed a ginger eyebrow. 'A h, the inim itable Mrs W interton,' he s aid knowingly. 'S he is not the m os t profic ient of typis ts but few would hazard to tell her as m uc h. I rec all onc e s he s ent a letter out to parents from "T he Dead-m as ter".' T hen he added in an undertone, 'Not entirely inappropriate if you have m et our es teem ed leader. I m us tn't be unkind, but dear Mr Nels on does have the touc h of death about him . He's a phys ic is t, you know. On another oc c as ion, when the pipes burs t in the outs ide toilets and the floors were awas h, a notic e appeared from Mrs W interton ins truc ting s tudents "not to s lide on the frozen water unles s pas s ed by the headm as ter". T his tim e, s he did, at leas t, m anage to s pell the word "pas s ed" c orrec tly but her ins truc tion was s till rather unfortunate in its phras ing, don't you think?' 'W ell, it is eas ily done,' I s aid, s m iling. 'Indeed it is ,' he agreed. 'Language is a tric ky and troubles om e thing or, as Hom er onc e obs erved, "as twis ty as a s nake". T hat is why one s houldn't be pedantic when the young m ake m is takes . T here, for the grac e of God, et c etera' Obvious ly this opinion c arried little weight with his head of departm ent, I thought to m ys elf, c as ting m y m ind bac k to the firs t les s on. Mr P oppleton produc ed a s m all s ilver heart-s haped box from a wais tc oat poc ket, flipped open the top and took a generous pinc h of s nuff whic h he s niffed up his nos tril with a flouris h. 'Dirty habit, I know,' he told m e, before a tum ultuous s neeze. I c lim bed up the s teps and, when he had returned the s ilver s nuff box to his poc ket and s neezed again, loud enough to wake the dead, I s hook the s oft, fles hy hand whic h was extended. 'Onc e, when I was left to m y own devic es ,' I told him , 'and had to type a letter to a s c hool, I wrote, "Dear Headam s ter". Fortunately, the pers on in ques tion had a s ens e of hum our and replied, "Dear Gerbil".' 'Ho, ho,' he c huc kled, 'very droll! W ould that our es teem ed leader had been endowed with a s ens e of hum our. He s eem s to c arry the troubles of the world on his s houlders . Mr Nels on is m os t indus trious and well m eaning but he is a m an of very s erious , s ober and s om bre dis pos ition. I s uppos e one has to be like that to as c end to the dizzy heights of heads hip. I don't s uppos e I s hould be telling a s c hool ins pec tor s uc h things , s hould I?' He looked about him abs ent-m indedly. 'I do think it is an attribute of c ons iderable im portanc e in teac hing, don't you think?' 'W hat is ?' I as ked. 'W hy, a s ens e of hum our. S adly, educ ation for s om e is s uc h a deadly s erious bus ines s , and yet young people are naturally very funny and do enjoy s haring a joke or lis tening to an am us ing s tory. Hum our, in m y opinion, is highly related to learning and adds ines tim ably to our quality of life.' Obvious ly this opinion, too, c arried little weight with his head of departm ent. 'I do apologis e for pontific ating on the s teps like a preac her of old. Do c om e along in, Mr P hinn. My little kingdom is not the m os t tas teful, arc hitec turally s peaking, but it is hom e and I c an m ake as m uc h nois e as I like without dis turbing others . Of c ours e, it heats up like the Gobi Des ert in s um m er and c ools down like the polar ic e c ap in winter s o I s inc erely hope you are going to be warm enough. I am therm ally ins ulated and, as you m ay obs erve, wear a s uit like a s hag-pile c arpet. I get m y s uits from Fritters of Fettles ham .' I had to s m ile. I had a s uit, not dis s im ilar, from that anc ient em porium , bought in the J anuary s ales at an inc redibly knoc kdown pric e. It was a s ort of m us tardy-brown with a dog-tooth pattern in dark red; it had unfas hionable wide c urved lapels and large leather buttons . I had joined the interview panel at a gram m ar s c hool in a c ram ped room as hot as a s auna. T he heavy s uit had s tuc k to m y body and I had nearly fainted with the heat. I vowed never to wear the wretc hed garm ent again. In fac t, I didn't have a c hanc e s inc e Chris tine had given the jac ket to a loc al farm er for his s heepdog to lie on, and had c ut up the trous ers for polis hing c loths . A s I followed him into the room , Mr P oppleton rem arked, 'I was under the im pres s ion that you were to join m e for the firs t les s on.' 'Y es , but as I explained to Mr Frobis her,' I told him , 'I prefer to work to m y own program m e.' 'A nd wander whither and whenc e you wis h.' 'Indeed. In fac t, I joined the head of departm ent and the fourth form for the firs t period,' I s aid. 'Ho, ho! ' c hortled Mr P oppleton, again rais ing a ginger eyebrow. 'He would not have been bes t pleas ed with that little ploy.' 'No, I don't think he was ,' I s aid. 'I s hould im agine you put the very fear of the A lm ighty into him . I know that when we had a vis itation a few years bac k from an HMI c alled B all - a very s ingular m an, as I rem em ber - he did not endear him s elf to Mr Frobis her. A c tually, Mr B all and I got on rather well. In his report he des c ribed m e as "a s uc c es s ful deviant". I took it as a c om plim ent.' 'I'm s ure it was intended to be s o,' I told him . 'However, you are now here to watc h m e and it is m y turn to feel the frenzied flutter of fright. T he firs t period, whic h I was told you would be obs erving, was rigorous ly planned, c arefully prepared and enthus ias tic ally taught and, though I s ay s o m ys elf, it was quite a tour de forc e. T his next les s on will, I fear, be rather lac klus tre by c om paris on.' 'I'm not really interes ted, Mr P oppleton,' I told him , 'in c arefully planned les s ons or rehears ed perform anc es . T he reas on I don't tell teac hers when I am vis iting their c las s room s is to try and ens ure that nothing s pec ial is prepared. I jus t want to s ee a typic al les s on.' 'You c ertainly won't find m y les s ons typic al, Mr P hinn,' replied the teac her with m oc k horror. 'E very les s on of m ine is a unique experienc e. Now, this m orning, m y "little ones " -thes e are the firs t-year pupils who have jus t joined us from the junior and preparatory s c hools - are c om pleting a poem . I do hope you like poetry.' 'Y es , I do,' I replied. 'A c tually, it's an es s ential c om ponent of the E nglis h c urric ulum .' 'T hat s ounds dreadfully pom pous ,' he obs erved. 'I didn't m ean it to s ound like that,' I replied quic kly. 'I jus t m eant it was im portant to teac h.' 'I fear that Mr Nels on would take is s ue with you on that one. He has a m uc h m ore utilitarian view of language.' T hen, as if hurling an ins ult, he s aid, 'He's a s c ientis t, you know.' 'Y es , you did s ay.' 'W ell, I am s o glad you enjoy poetry,' c ontinued Mr P oppleton. 'I am always deeply s us pic ious of thos e who do not enjoy it. P oetry is not m erely "an es s ential c om ponent of the E nglis h c urric ulum ", as you put it, poetry, in a s ens e, defines the world, it deals with the deepes t em otions , it is language at its m os t prec is e, c reative and vivid, don't you think?' 'Y es , indeed,' I replied. 'I was a s tudent at Univers ity College, Oxford, you know, and every day I would pas s the m arble s c ulpture of S helley rec lining naked on his plinth. I am a great fan of S helley. T he s c ulpture was des tined for the P rotes tant Cem etery in Rom e but it was too big s o they gave it to his old c ollege. Mind you, he very nearly got m e rus tic ated, did S helley.' 'I'm s orry?' 'S ent down. One night, a little wors e for drink, I s c ram bled over the iron grill protec ting the m aus oleum and painted part of dear old S helley a delightful s hade of red.' I was about to res pond but was not quite fas t enough. 'A nd do you write poetry yours elf, Mr P hinn?' 'Y es , I do.' 'S plendid,' he s aid. 'P erhaps you m ight s hare one of your poem s with us .' 'I think not,' I s aid. 'P ity. W ell, do feel free to look around.' Mr P oppleton's room was as c olourful, unus ual and overpowering as the m an him s elf. E very c onc eivable wall s pac e was c overed with pos ters , prints , portraits , paintings , photographs , artic les , letters and pupils ' work. It was a riot of s hape and c olour. From the c eiling dangled m ultic oloured m obiles - s quares , c irc les , diam onds , triangles - with a few vers es written on eac h. T he windows ills were c ram m ed with plants , s om e of whic h had given up the ghos t weeks ago, feathers in jars , c lay figures , c arved boxes , anim al s kulls , fragm ents of pottery and glas s and all m anner of s trange objec ts and artefac ts . Dom inating the room was an anc ient oak des k of c ons iderable proportions and rem arkable uglines s with heavy bras s fittings and num erous drawers . T he top was entirely c overed with a c lutter of dog-eared folders and files , exerc is e books , teac hing texts , thic k dic tionaries and num erous books of poem s . Fac ing the m ons tros ity were rows of tables and hard-bac ked c hairs for the pupils . A s the teac her bus ied him s elf rum m aging through the volum es on the des k, I m ade m y way to a s habby but c om fortable-looking arm c hair pos itioned in the c orner of the room . I pres um ed this was for m e to s it in and obs erve the les s on. To the ac c om panim ent of c reaking wood and twanging s prings , I lowered m ys elf c harily into its s agging s eat, c reating a s m all c loud of dus t in the proc es s . P res ently the pupils entered the room , went quietly to their des ks and plac ed their bags and s atc hels bes ide them on the floor and s tood fac ing the front. 'Good m orning, boys ! ' trum peted Mr P oppleton, with a theatric al wave of his hand. 'Good m orning, s ir,' they replied. 'Y ou s ound pos itively funereal this m orning,' s aid the teac her. 'A repris e, pleas e, with a great deal m ore gus to. Good m orning, boys ! ' T he res pons e was m uc h louder and m ore good-hum oured. 'Muc h better. Do s it down, pleas e.' B y the door s tood the boy I had m et with his m other earlier that m orning. He s tared with wide dis believing eyes and an open m outh at the s m all fat figure before him . He looked like a c hild who had jus t had his lollipop s natc hed from his s tic ky little hand. 'A h,' s aid Mr P oppleton, dis playing a s et of im pres s ive teeth. 'A new boy. A nd what is your nam e, young m an?' 'J ohn B ... B ... B rown, s ir,' s tuttered the boy, twiddling his hair nervous ly. 'J ohn B rown, eh? A nam e in a m illion. W ell, J ohn B rown, you are very welc om e, but you are late, nine days late to be prec is e.' 'I w... w... was ill, s ir,' replied the boy. 'I had gl... glandular fever.' 'How very inc onvenient for you, and not a little painful, I s hould im agine. W ell, you are here now, J ohn B rown, and glad we are to have you with us .' He ges tured to an em pty s eat. 'Take a pew and S im on Morgan, who will be your neighbour from now on, will explain all there is to know about K HC. I will be with you in a m om ent to tell you what work we are undertaking. Now, boys ,' s aid the teac her, addres s ing the entire c las s , 'we have another new fac e in the c las s room this m orning. T he gentlem an in the c orner is Mr P hinn, a s c hool ins pec tor, here to s ee how well we are doing. I hope he leaves us with a good im pres s ion, boys . Do you think he will?' 'Y es , s ir,' they replied. 'S hall we s ay a hearty good m orning to Mr P hinn?' 'Good m orning, Mr P hinn,' c horus ed the c las s . 'Good m orning,' I replied, s inking lower in the arm c hair. 'Now, you know what you have to do, boys ,' c ontinued Mr P oppleton. 'T oday I would like you to c ontinue with the poem s you s tarted las t les s on. Mr P hinn is an afic ionado of poetry, as I am , and m ight c are to tour the c las s room , talk with you about your poem s and read s om e of them .' S o while Mr P oppleton furnis hed the new boy with the nec es s ary books and equipm ent and explained the work he was to c om plete, I levered m ys elf out of the arm c hair to look at the pupils ' books . T he boys were keen to s how m e what they had written and talk about their work. 'W hen we arrived,' s aid the firs t pupil I s poke to, 'we had to write a s hort autobiography s o "P oppo" - I m ean, Mr P oppleton - c ould learn a bit about us .' He opened his book to reveal a neat and inform ative ac c ount of his s hort life, together with illus trations and photographs . T he work had been c arefully and c ons truc tively m arked in penc il. A t the bottom was a long us eful c om m ent from the teac her with ideas for im provem ent. 'A nd how do you like E nglis h?' I as ked. 'It's great. A t prep s c hool, I didn't enjoy it m uc h. W e did lots of boring exerc is es and c opying but here it's really good. Mr P oppleton's a bit out of the ordinary but he's a really good teac her.' T he boy thought for a m om ent before adding. 'He didn't tell m e to s ay that, you know.' 'I'm s ure he didn't,' I s aid, s m iling. 'S o what is your poem about?' 'W e've been as ked to write about s om ebody who is very s pec ial in our lives . It c ould be a parent or a friend, a brother or s is ter. I c hos e m y Gran.' 'W hy your Gran?' 'W ell, grandparents are different from parents , aren't they? T hey're m ore fun, they don't tell you off as m uc h as parents and they give you m oney. Do you want to read m y poem ?' 'W hy don't you read it to m e,' I s aid. T he boy turned a page, took a breath and read : I like m y Gran. S he's round and wrinkly and powdery A nd s m ells of flowers and s oap. S he's as c om fy as a c us hion to s it on. W hen m y m um s houts at m e, I go to m y Gran, A nd s he s ays , 'Never you m ind, love, Y our m um was like that when s he was your age, A real grum pybum ! B eneath the poem was a s m all s ketc h in blac k ink of a s m iling old lady with s parkling eyes and c urly hair. T here were tiny dots s c attered on her upper lip. 'S he has a lot of s pots , your Gran,' I obs erved. 'No, they're not s pots , Mr P hinn,' the boy told m e. 'S he's got a m ous tac he.' T he next pupil, a bright-eyed Indian boy with a ready s m ile, s hook m y hand form ally. 'Good m orning, Mr P hinn,' he s aid. 'My nam e is K irit P atel.' 'I'm pleas ed to m eet you, K irit,' I replied. I talked to the boy for a while about his reading interes ts , tes ted him on s om e s pellings and his knowledge of gram m ar and punc tuation and was m os t im pres s ed. 'May I look at your poem ?' I as ked finally. 'Of c ours e,' he s aid, opening his book and then waiting expec tantly for m e to c om m ent. His poem , entitled 'S hruti', was about his m is c hievous younger s is ter and was delightfully des c riptive and am us ing. 'Is it all right, s ir?' he as ked eventually. 'It's s plendid,' I s aid. 'I've tried to put in s om e c olourful words ,' he told m e s erious ly. 'I think it m akes it m ore interes ting, don't you? A nd there's s om e alliteration - that's when words in a s entenc e begin with the s am e letter. Mr P oppleton is very keen on alliteration.' 'Y es , I know,' I s aid, grinning. I eventually found m y way to the bac k c orner des k where a s m all boy was putting the final touc hes to a poem about his father. 'Finis hed,' he s aid, with a s igh of s atis fac tion. 'May I look?' I as ked. He pas s ed ac ros s his book, c arefully bac ked in s hiny brown paper and with his nam e, 'Rus s ell Davis , Clas s 1A ', written in large, neat letters on the front. I read the firs t few pages of his book - the potted autobiography. It was an im m ens ely poignant ac c ount about his young life. He inform ed the reader in a m atter-of-fac t way that he was an only c hild and lived with his father in a 'pretty ordinary' redbric k terrac ed hous e c los e to the town c entre. T here was a s m all bedroom where he s lept, a larger one for his father, a kitc hen and living room , and a bac k yard with a s hed where he kept his bic yc le. T here was not a great deal of m oney and they rarely went on holiday. T hen his des c ription bec am e m uc h m ore thoughtful and pers onal. His m other, he wrote, had left when he was s m all and he s aw her infrequently. He s aw nothing of his m aternal grandparents . He felt s ad about this and found it diffic ult to unders tand. However, he s aid he was happy living with a father who was as m uc h a friend as a parent. T he poem whic h followed was about a father whom he des c ribed as 'an ordinary-looking s ort of m an, a bit bald and overweight, the kind of m an who wears s hiny trous ers , baggy c ardigans and old s lippers ', but it went on to tell how s pec ial he was and how m uc h he loved him .
'Y our autobiography is a very hones t ac c ount, Rus s ell,' I told him . 'Do you not m ind s haring s uc h pers onal details with other people?' 'W hy s hould I, s ir?' he replied. 'It's the truth. I'm not as ham ed of it. My father s ays it is always bes t to be hones t.' 'He s ounds a rem arkable m an, your father.' 'He is , s ir. He works hard, he takes m e to the c inem a, football m atc hes , onc e we went to the theatre. W e like to go for long walks and we talk about things a lot. W e c an talk about anything. He's jus t... well, s pec ial, you know.' 'A nd what quality do you adm ire m os t in this very s pec ial father of yours ?' I as ked. T he boy thought for a m om ent, s taring at his book and biting his bottom lip. T hen he looked up and into m y eyes . 'W hen he m akes a m is take, m y father s ays he's s orry. Grown-ups don't tend to do that. If m y father gets it wrong, he s ays s o. He s ays it's not being weak to adm it you don't always get things right or that you don't know s om ething.' I thought of the s trident news paper artic le the previous c las s had been as ked to c ons ider. T he tub-thum ping journalis t who had little good to s ay about the younger generation ought to m eet this polite, m ature for his age, young s tudent. T here are m any, m any c hildren who c om e from loving hom es and are in the hands of hard-working and dedic ated teac hers but they are not the ones who appear on the front pages of news papers . B oys like Rus s ell do not m ake news . 'S ir?' T he boy's voic e broke into m y thoughts . 'Oh, I'm s orry! ' I exc laim ed. 'I was m iles away. I was jus t thinking about what you s aid. W ell, Rus s ell, I hope that if I have a s on, he will s peak about m e in the s am e way as you s peak about your father.' 'T hat's really up to you, is n't it, s ir?' replied the boy, s m iling broadly. 'Y es , I s uppos e it is ,' I s aid. W hen the bell s ounded, the boys pac ked their bags , s tood behind their des ks and waited to be dis m is s ed. 'P leas e c om plete your poem for hom ework,' the teac her told the c las s , 'learn the s pellings I gave you yes terday and rem em ber half an hour's reading every night. I tell them frequently, Mr P hinn, that they c annot bec om e great writers unles s they are great readers , for on the bac k of reading is writing. Good advic e, eh?' 'Y es , indeed,' I s aid. 'Good m orning, boys ,' trum peted Mr P oppleton. 'Good m orning, s ir, good m orning, Mr P hinn,' they ans wered and filed out of the room . 'Y ou have s om e talented pupils , Mr P oppleton,' I told him as we headed ac ros s the s c hool yard. 'T he work I have s een this m orning was of an extrem ely high s tandard.' 'Y es , they are very good, but you would expec t no les s in a s elec tive s c hool. A nd I c annot really take c redit for the s tandard of their work. T he boys have only been at the s c hool for les s than two weeks and therefore any talent they have or good work they produc e is down to their previous s c hools .' 'Y es , of c ours e,' I s aid. 'P upils of this c alibre are s om etim es a little daunting, I have to s ay,' he c ontinued, 'but I have always been of the opinion that teac hers s hould s how c hildren the ropes and not be at all s urpris ed if they m anage to c lim b higher than they. I'm s ure s om ebody fam ous s aid that. Indeed s om e, like K irit and Rus s ell, will be m aking ropes of their own before long. Now, Mr P hinn, would you c are to partake of a pre-prandial c up of tea prior to braving the s c hool dining room and a plate of Mrs P ayne's c hic ken nuggets and c hips ? Had Napoleon us ed Mrs P ayne's c hic ken nuggets in his c annons at W aterloo ins tead of balls , the unfortunate em peror would, without a doubt, have won the day. T hey are like grapes hot, but few would hazard to tell her s o.' 'T hat's kind, Mr P oppleton, but I want to look in at the library and s ee what is the extent and range of the s toc k. I need to report on the available res ourc es , as well as on the teac hing.' 'Ho, ho,' he c huc kled. 'I s hall await your obs ervations on our c ollege library with great interes t.' W e had now arrived at the bic yc le s heds where a knot of boys were in loud and intens e dis c us s ion about a partic ularly im pres s ive-looking m ac hine with a s hiny blac k fram e and s ilver handlebars . 'W hat have we here?' as ked Mr P oppleton. 'A little c onv ers az ione?' 'Oh no, s ir,' s aid one of the boys , patting the bic yc le they were dis c us s ing. 'It's a Raleigh Mus tang.' W ith a res ounding laugh, the am azing Mr P oppleton s c urried off in the direc tion of the s c hool dining room for his c hic ken nuggets .
5 A s s oon as I entered through the heavy doors of the s c hool library, I knew exac tly what Mr P oppleton m eant by his enigm atic obs ervation. It was a c old, gloom y room with wall-to-wall s helving in dark oak. T here was not a s tudent in s ight, whic h was hardly s urpris ing given the tem perature and the inhos pitable atm os phere. A s I had told Mr P oppleton, I always tried to find the tim e to c hec k the s c hool library even if it m eant I had to do it during lunc h - not that I had m uc h appetite for c hic ken nuggets . I had c om e ac ros s s om e weird and wonderful titles in m y tim e, m os t of whic h s hould have been thrown out onto the bonfire years ago. I m ade a habit of jotting down s om e of the wors t into a notebook. T hey often c am e in handy when I was invited to give after-dinner talks . I s c anned the dull green and grey c overs of the books on the s helves , and knew im m ediately I would be able to add to m y c ollec tion: Trav els in S outhern Rhodes ia, Harmles s S c ientific E x periments for B oy s (I had onc e found the equivalent book for girls ), The S tately Hous es of S c otland (five volum es ), The Collec ted S ermons of B is hop Franc is Feas by . I pris ed a dus ty volum e entitled B ritannia's E mpire from the s helf. I opened the book at random and read: 'P ygm ies are s avage little blac k m en but all loyal s ubjec ts of George V .' T he library of K ing Henry's College appeared not to have been updated for m any years . I found S c outs in B ondage by Henry P rout, The S k ull of S w ift by S ir S hane Les lie, E x hibition P oultry by George R. S c ott, The W alk ing S tic k M ethod of S elf Defenc e by an Offic er of the Indian A rm y, Leaders hip S ec rets of A ttila the Hun by W es s Roberts P hD and, perhaps m os t bizarre of all, Flas hes from the W els h P ulpit by the Rev G. Davies . T hes e were for the c ollec tor of the weird and wonderful but not of any interes t to teenagers . I looked in vain for the bright glos s y-bac ked paperbac ks and s ports m agazines that appeal to adoles c ent boys but found none. I dis c overed a s elec tion of m ore m odern books in the fic tion s ec tion but the non-fic tion s toc k was lam entably out-of-date and inappropriate. I s at at a s olid s quare table s o typic al of thos e found in old-fas hioned libraries and began writing up s om e c om m ents and rec om m endations about the les s ons I had s een that m orning, but found m y m ind kept wandering bac k to the c onvers ation with young Rus s ell. W hat would m y s ons or daughters s ay of m e when they were teenagers , I thought. W ould I be s o loved and res pec ted like Rus s ell's father? W ould I be as s pec ial to them as his father c learly was to him ? I had been ins pired in Mr P oppleton's c las s room , by the m an him s elf, by his infec tious enthus ias m and by the poem s the pupils had written. I pus hed the notes away and began to s c ribble a poem of m y own, dedic ated to s om eone very s pec ial to m e - m y unborn c hild. A lways believe in yours elf. P rom is e always to be c om pas s ionate. A pprec iate that you m ake m is takes , Rec ognis e that I do, too. E ntrus t m e with -I s uddenly s ens ed a pres enc e and, looking up, found a gangly boy with lanky brown hair and angry ac ne ac ros s his forehead and c heeks peering over m y s houlder. It was Mas ter Hugo Maxwell-S m ith. 'W riting up your report?' he as ked, eyeing the papers in front of m e. I quic kly c overed the poem . 'Y es , I am .' 'S hould m ake interes ting reading.' I c hanged the s ubjec t. 'Is the library well us ed?' I as ked, looking around the em pty room . It was , of c ours e, an inane ques tion to as k. 'No, s ir,' replied the boy s im ply. 'A s you c an s ee, there's nobody here exc ept you and m e. I hope your report will inc lude s om e m ention of the library. It needs a c om plete overhaul.' 'Y es , it will. S o why are y ou here?' I as ked. 'Doing a little res earc h on the apos trophe, ac tually,' he replied. 'Really? I gathered it was n't one of your favourite topic s .' 'It is n't,' replied the boy, 'but I have been c hec king up on the rules .' No doubt to c hallenge poor Mr Frobis her again, I thought. 'It is interes ting that the great writers didn't think m uc h of the apos trophe. George B ernard S haw, for exam ple. T he playwright, you know.' 'Y es , I do know,' I s aid. 'I found the following during the m orning break,' he s aid, c ons ulting a notepad. 'He s ays that he never us ed the apos trophe in any of his writing unles s the om is s ion would s ugges t another word. T his is what he s aid. "T here is not the faintes t reas on for pers is ting in the ugly and s illy tric k of peppering pages with thes e unc outh bac illi." T hat's what he wrote bac k in 1902. I c ouldn't have put it better m ys elf. I thought Mr Frobis her m ight find that interes ting.' Infuriating, m ore like, I thought to m ys elf. 'W ell, I'll let you get bac k to your report,' he s aid, before dis appearing behind a books helf. T he firs t les s on of the afternoon was with Mrs T odd, a form er E nglis h m is tres s who had rec ently retired from the loc al c om prehens ive s c hool but who had been prevailed upon to return to the c las s room to c over for a teac her who was away ill. S he was a dim inutive wom an, s m artly dres s ed in an expens ive dark blue s uit, a c ream blous e and s m all blac k lac e-up boots . S he had neatly perm ed, tinted hair and an as s ortm ent of gold jewellery. T here was not the s lightes t pos s ibility of c halk dus t c om ing into c ontac t with Mrs T odd, I thought to m ys elf. T he les s on, in whic h s he revis ed s om e rules of s pelling with a group of fifteen-year-olds , was lively and interes ting. S he was c learly a very knowledgeable teac her and s he m aintained order with a quiet s elf-as s uranc e and good hum our. I was interes ted to obs erve how s he dealt with a c onfident, s om ewhat s potty-fac ed young m an, in appearanc e and m anner not unlike the rather unnerving Maxwell-S m ith of Mr Frobis her's c las s . T he boy was at pains to dem ons trate what he thought was his s trong c om m and of the E nglis h s pelling s ys tem . He rais ed his hand on a num ber of oc c as ions to c hallenge the teac her but s he retained her affable m anner and c om pos ure. I am s ure that the s ec ret of dealing with s uc h s m art-A lec s is to keep c alm and not let their c lever c om m ents affec t you. Mrs T odd was c ons um m ate in dealing with s uc h s tudents . Having c om pleted her revis ion of the general rules , s he wrote a lis t of awkwardly s pelt words on the board, s om e c orrec tly s pelt, others not. T hen, banning the us e of all dic tionaries , s he told the s tudents to write down in their exerc is e books the inc orrec t words c orrec tly s pelt. W hen they had c om pleted the exerc is e, s he wrote the c orrec t s pellings agains t the inc orrec t words , and as ked eac h s tudent to s ay how m any he had am ended c orrec tly. 'B ut, Mrs T odd,' s aid the s potty boy when he dis c overed he was not as good as he thought, 'I'm c ertain "Inoc ulate" is s pelt with two n's ."I-n-n-o-c -u-l-a-t-e".' 'No, Mic hael, with jus t the one,' replied the teac her. 'Oh, I thought it was with two,' he s aid frowning. 'I'v e always s pelt it with two.' 'Have you really? W ell, you were wrong to do s o, I'm afraid,' replied the teac her pleas antly. ' "Innoc uous " has two n's ,' he s aid. 'T hat is c orrec t,' s aid Mrs T odd am iably. 'B ut "inoc ulate" has only the one.' 'W ell, I'm pretty c ertain "des ic c ate" has two s 's ,' he pers is ted and reac hed for his poc ket dic tionary. 'T here are few c ertainties in life, Mic hael, but one of them is that "des ic c ate" has jus t the one s . T he next tim e you are m aking a c ake, have a look on the pac ket and you will s ee "des ic c ated c oc onut".' T he pic ture of the s erious -fac ed but s potty young m an baking a c ake brought a s m ile to m y lips . 'It's rather like the word whic h m eans "obs tinate",' s aid the teac her, throwing m e a knowing look. 'It is often thought that the word "as inine" has two s 's , too.' T he boy, having looked up the words in the dic tionary and dis c overed that the teac her was , in fac t, perfec tly c orrec t, rem ained in brooding s ilenc e for the res t of the les s on. 'You know, Mr P hinn,' Mrs Todd told m e later, 'adoles c enc e is a s trange tim e in one's life, is n't it? A ll thos e c hanges . S om e young people bec om e s o s hy and s elf-c ons c ious that to get them to talk is like getting blood out of a s tone. Others , like Mic hael, do s o enjoy s howing off a little, and like to kic k agains t authority. I have found that the very bright s tudent c an be as troubles om e and c hallenging as the lazy and dis affec ted one. W e have quite a few like Mic hael in the s c hool. T hey jus t want to be notic ed, be a little individual, flex their m us c les . It's all part of growing up. I s hould know, I have four s ons .' 'W hat a hous eful you m us t have had,' I obs erved. 'Y es , indeed! A nd they all went on what felt like twenty-s ix-year long c ours es at univers ity: m edic ine, arc hitec ture, Frenc h, fine art. T hat's why I need to do a bit of s upply work, to put s om e m oney bac k into the bank ac c ount. It was an expens ive bus ines s bringing up c hildren.' 'Y ou m us t be very proud of them ,' I s aid. 'I am . Have you c hildren, Mr P hinn?' 'No, not yet,' I replied. 'One on the way though.' 'W ell, I expec t your c hild will have all the advantages of life, as I hope m y boys have had. S om e c hildren get s o little s upport and enc ouragem ent at hom e, prec ious little love and attention. I us ed to work in an inner c ity s c hool and, m y goodnes s , s om e of thos e young people had des perate lives .' 'Did your boys c om e to K ing Henry's ?' I as ked. 'Good grac ious , no! ' s he exc laim ed. 'T hey attended S t Ignatius , the Catholic Gram m ar. T hey would not have liked it here and, quite frankly, I don't intend to s tay here for m uc h longer. I've been as ked to c over a m aternity leave later this term at a girls ' high s c hool--T he Lady Cavendis h High S c hool for Girls . S ounds frightfully pos h, does n't it? Do you know the s c hool at all?' 'I do,' I replied. 'It's an exc ellent s c hool and the head of the E nglis h Departm ent is one of the bes t teac hers I have obs erved.' Mrs T odd thought for a m om ent, as if c ons idering whether or not to s peak. 'T his m ight s ound a little unprofes s ional, Mr P hinn,' s he s aid finally, 'but I do find the head of the E nglis h departm ent at this s c hool a very diffic ult m an to relate to and his m anner with the s tudents is , at tim es , unfortunate.' 'I s ee.' I quic kly c hanged the s ubjec t. I c ertainly did not wis h to dis c us s Mr Frobis her with a m em ber of his departm ent. T hat w ould have been unprofes s ional. 'Mic hael s eem s quite a c lever boy, does n't he?' 'He is ,' s he agreed. 'A lthough he c an be a little too c lever for his own good. He's a very bright young m an and he knows it. He jus t needs to exerc is e a little hum ility now and again. B ut I c an handle Mic hael.' 'Y es , you c ertainly c an,' I agreed. I had no doubt about that. T he las t les s on of the day was with the s ixth form and a newly qualified teac her. I arrived at the rather nois y c las s room to find twenty or s o s tudents , all of whom I noted were in s hirts leeves , s itting around tables in anim ated dis c us s ion. 'Is there a teac her here?' I as ked one young m an s itting near the door, rais ing m y voic e above the hubbub. 'I'm the teac her,' he replied, giving m e a broad s m ile. 'S im on P urdey.' 'Oh, I'm s orry, Mr P urdey,' I s aid, 'I thought you were one of the s tudents .' 'W ell, there are only a few years between us and I have been told that I look young for m y age. Y ou m us t be Mr Fis h, the ins pec tor.' 'P hinn,' I c orrec ted. 'Oh, I did wonder when we were told it was Fis h. S ounded a bit s us pic ious .' 'W hat are the s tudents doing this afternoon?' I inquired. 'W e're s tudying Hamlet as our "A " level text and I've as ked the s tudents to read through A c t 1 and re-write it in a different genre: as a m odern radio play, the opening c hapter of a detec tive novel, a horror s tory, thriller, rom anc e, m onologue, doc um entary dram a, that s ort of thing. E ac h group has a different genre to c ons ider.' 'S ounds interes ting,' I s aid. 'W ell, I thought it would get them s traight into the play and als o be a bit of fun before we s tart the m ore s erious bus ines s of looking at the ac tual text. I think it's a better way than wading drearily through S hakes peare as I did at s c hool. Do you know, we were m ade to write out pas s ages of S hakes peare as a punis hm ent? W ould you c redit that? T he greates t words in the E nglis h language and they were s et as a punis hm ent! I only really c am e to apprec iate S hakes peare when I was in the s ixth form and a new teac her arrived. S he jus t turned m e on.' 'Y es ,' I s aid. 'I had a rem arkable E nglis h teac her in the s ixth form , too.' 'A nyway,' c ontinued the young m an, 'I thought that by writing the opening of the play in another form , the s tudents would have to read the firs t ac t c arefully and c ritic ally and then trans pos e it, m aking dec is ions about what to inc lude and what to om it. Later we will look at the ac tual text its elf and ac t it out. Do you want to s ee how far they have got?' 'Y es , I would,' I replied. A s I watc hed the s eries of highly original openings being ac ted out in front of the res t of the c las s , I rec alled m y s ixth-form years when I too s tudied S hakes peare's m os t fam ous play. I was taught by a Mis s W ainwright, a s m all, s oftly s poken wom an who invariably wore a pris tine white blous e buttoned up at the nec k and a long dark s kirt. T he s m all lac e handkerc hief that s he s ec reted up her s leeve would be oc c as ionally pluc ked out to dab her m outh. S ave for the large c am eo brooc h plac ed at her throat, s he wore no jewellery and there was no ves tige of m ake-up. W hat was s o m em orable about this rem arkable teac her was her eyes . T hey s hone with intens ity, es pec ially when s he was dis c us s ing her favourite s ubjec t, S hakes peare. S he had taken us to s ee a produc tion of K ing Lear at the Rotherham Civic T heatre. I realis e now that the ac ting had been wooden and the c os tum es bizarre, but the beauty and poignanc y of the language had c om e through. K ing Lear had entered with his dead daughter draped in his arm s and he howling to the heavens : 'S he is gone forever! ' T o m y horror, Mis s W ainwright - s itting one away from m e in the row had begun to c ry, and I s oon followed s uit. S he had indeed been an am azing teac her. W henever I s aw an outs tanding E nglis h teac her, I often thought of Mis s Mary W ainwright and thanked God for the good fortune of having been taught by her. S he brought S hakes peare to life, and developed in m e a love of literature for whic h I s hall be forever grateful. My thoughts were interrupted when I heard m y nam e m entioned by the teac her. 'A nd the las t vers ion is one that Mr P hinn, as a Y orks hirem an, will apprec iate. It's the Y orks hire vers ion of Hamlet.' T wo boys , am bled towards eac h other at the front of the room , hands thrus t deep in their poc kets . 'Hey up, 'A m let.' 'Hey up, 'Oratio, what's tha doin' 'ere?' 'Nowt m uc h. 'Ow abaat thee then, 'A m let? I 'ant s een thee for a bit.' 'Nay, I'm not that c ham pion, 'Oratio, if t'truth be towld.' 'W hay, 'A m let, what's oop?' 'Mi dad's deead, m i m am 's m arried m i unc le and m i girl friend does nowt but nag, nag, nag. I tell thee 'Oratio, I'm weary wi' it. ' 'A ye, tha's not far wrong theer, 'A m let. S he's gor a reight gob on 'er, that Hophilia. T eks after 'er owld m an.' 'A nyroad, 'Oratio, what's tha doin' 'ere in Hels inor?' 'I've c om e for thee dad's funeral.' 'More like m i m am 's wedding.' 'A ye, s he dint let t'gras s grow under 'er feet, did s he?' 'I don't know what m i owld m an 'ud m ek of it, 'Oratio, I really don't.' 'W ell, tha c an as k 'im thees elf, 'A m let.' ''Ow's tha m ean?' ''E 's been walkin' on t'battlem ents every neet this week, a-m ooanin' and a-grooanin' and purrin' t'wind up iverybody. W e're s ic k to deeath on it, 'A m let, we really are.' 'Ger on! ' 'It's reight, 'A m let. 'E won't s hurrup. A -m ooanin' and a-grooanin' an' a-c lankin' abaat like there's no tom orra.' 'I wonder wor 'e wants ?' 'W ell, tha c an as k 'im thas elf, 'c os 'ere 'e c om es now.' A third boy entered. ''E y up, our 'A m let.' ''E y up, dad. How's it gooin'?' ''Ow's it gooin'? How's it gooin'? W hat's tha m ean, how's it gooin'? I'm deead, 'A m let, and I'm not that c huffed abaat it.' 'Oh, aye, I forgot.' 'I was done in, 'A m let, m urdered, killed, s layed, bum ped off, has s as s inated.' 'E e, that were a rotten tric k.' 'Rotten tric k! Rotten tric k! It were bloody c rim inal, that's what it were.' 'W ho did it, dad?' 'Mi kid brother.' 'Mi Unc le Claudius ?' 'A ye, 'im what's nic ked m i c rown and m arried thee m am .' 'W hat's to do, then, dad?' 'W hat's tha m ean, what's to do?' 'W hat's tha c om e bac k fer?' 'I wants thee to s ooart thy unc le out, that's what I wants thee to do. I wants thee to do to 'im what 'e did to m e, our 'A m let. Now I 'ope tha's got t'gum ption for it. Com e on, 'Oratio, let's let t'lad get c rac kin'. ' A s I watc hed and laughed along with the teac her and s tudents , I thought of Mr P oppleton's words that young people are naturally very funny. He was right: hum our is highly related to learning and adds ines tim ably to our quality of life. T here are few things m ore pleas urable to hear in life than young people laughing uns elfc ons c ious ly. Following the perform anc e, there was loud and s pontaneous applaus e and c heering whic h died s uddenly when the door opened and there s tood Mr Frobis her, like 'T he Ghos t of Chris tm as P as t'. 'T here is a great deal of nois e c om ing from this room ,' he s aid. 'I c ould hear it at the end of the c orridor.' 'W e're s tudying Hamlet,' explained Mr P urdey, s eem ingly unperturbed by the interruption. 'Really? I was n't aware, Mr P urdey, that Hamlet was quite s o am us ing.' Mr Frobis her then c aught s ight of m e and gave a watery s m ile. 'A h, Mr P hinn, I didn't s ee you s itting there. I was wondering where you had got to. I s hall be on bus duty after s c hool, s o will join you and Mr Nels on at about half pas t four, if that is c onvenient.' 'Y es , that's fine,' I s aid. He peered around the room . 'A nd you boys will be aware of the s c hool rules on the wearing of blazers . W ell, do c arry on, Mr P urdey,' s aid the head of E nglis h, leaving the room . 'W hat a day,' s aid Mr Nels on, breathing out heavily. 'I've barely had c hanc e to get a c up of tea, it's been s o bus y.' I s at before the headm as ter at the end of the s c hool day, on the unc om fortable ladderbac k c hair, thinking that a c up of tea would indeed be m os t ac c eptable. Clearly one was not forthc om ing and, anyway, if it had been, the s c hool s ec retary m ight well have added m ore than m ilk to it. 'Mr Frobis her will not be long,' s aid Mr Nels on. 'I s ugges t, to s ave your repeating yours elf, we wait for him to join us .'
'A c tually, Mr Nels on,' I replied, dec iding to get the diffic ult bit over with as quic kly as pos s ible, 'I would prefer to have a private word with you before Mr Frobis her arrives .' T he headm as ter turned to fac e m e, his brow furrowing. 'Oh.' 'I think it m ight be better.' 'T his s ounds rather om inous , Mr P hinn,' he s aid. 'Do I take it you are not entirely s atis fied with what you have s een today?' 'Not entirely,' I told him . 'On the whole, the les s ons I obs erved were very good. Indeed, s om e were exc ellent. Generally, the teac hing in the departm ent is highly c om petent and at tim es m os t innovative and im aginative, but there is one exc eption, I am afraid to s ay.' 'A h,' s ighed the headteac her, 'Mr P oppleton. It has to be s aid, he is rather ec c entric and individualis tic , but he has been at the s c hool for m ore years than I c an rem em ber and the boys do s o enjoy his teac hing. Indeed, his exam ination res ults are m os t c reditable. I have m entioned the s nuff -' 'It's not Mr P oppleton,' I interrupted. 'His les s on was exc ellent.' 'Is it Mr P urdy? Mr A dam s ? I am s ure you are aware that they have jus t s tarted their teac hing c areers and it is to be expec ted that -' 'No, their les s ons were fine.' 'S urely, it's not Mrs T odd. I am aware that s he has not taught in a gram m ar s c hool before, but s he c am e highly rec om m ended by the headteac her of the c om prehens ive where s he taught and has had extens ive teac hing experienc e. Indeed -' 'Mr Nels on, it is none of thes e teac hers ,' I told him . T he headm as ter began rubbing his tem ples . 'T hen, by a proc es s of elim ination, it m us t be the head of departm ent. Y ou know, I had a feeling it would be Mr Frobis her.' 'It is Mr Frobis her,' I s aid. 'A nd you felt his les s on to be uns atis fac tory?' 'I apprec iate that Mr Frobis her has one partic ularly diffic ult boy in his c las s -' 'A h, yes , Maxwell-S m ith. He c an indeed be a thorn in the s ide, that young m an. His father is quite a handful too and often c ontac ts the s c hool with one c om plaint or another.' 'Y es , the boy was a diffic ult and very dem anding s tudent. I am aware that I have only obs erved the one les s on, but I did judge it to be les s than s atis fac tory.' 'W hat was the les s on about?' as ked the headm as ter. 'It was an extrem ely dreary les s on on the us e of the apos trophe.' 'I was under the im pres s ion, Mr P hinn,' s aid Mr Nels on, 'that the apos trophe is a dreary s ubjec t.' 'More im portantly,' I s aid, 'Mr Frobis her has not the bes t relations hip with the s tudents and the work that I m anaged to s ee was extrem ely narrow in range.' Mr Nels on thought for a m om ent before replying. 'Mr Frobis her, it has to be adm itted, is not the m os t dynam ic and enthus ias tic of teac hers and I have notic ed that he found teac hing rather m ore exac ting las t year but he is very loyal to the s c hool, has not had a day's abs enc e as long as I c an rem em ber and, with regard to his duties , is punc tilious . B ut -' 'B ut as a teac her?' I inquired. 'He is , how does one put this , not as good as he was . In fac t, he bec am e rather dis illus ioned s everal years ago. He applied for deputy heads hips a num ber of tim es but was uns uc c es s ful, des pite his exc ellent ac adem ic qualific ations . I im agine he thought he would end his c areer as a headm as ter. He finds the s tudents thes e days rather m ore outs poken and les s attentive. He harks bac k to a golden age, I'm afraid, when pupils did what they were told without ques tion, a tim e when there was the c ane. Young people thes e days do tend to be m ore forthright and, of c ours e, we have s om e very exigent s tudents here. MaxwellS m ith is not alone. I realis e Mr Frobis her is not the bes t teac her in the world, but he is s ound enough, don't you think? Certainly his c las s room s are quiet, the s tudents always appear to be in a workm anlike atm os phere and he m arks his books thoroughly. A nd he has only a c ouple m ore years to go. Of c ours e, when he retires , it is m y intention to appoint s om eone with greater energy and enthus ias m .' T his m onologue s ounded to m e as if the headm as ter was trying to c onvinc e him s elf. 'A s I s aid, I have only obs erved one les s on,' I replied, 'and it would be unreas onable to judge a teac her on the evidenc e of one les s on but I am s uffic iently c onc erned to m ake a return vis it and s pend m ore tim e in the departm ent obs erving him .' 'I don't think that will be very well rec eived,' s ighed the headm as ter. 'Y our predec es s or, Mrs Y oung, did s pend s om e tim e a few years ago doing jus t that but with little effec t.' 'I was n't aware of that,' I s aid, s itting up on the hard wooden c hair. 'I am s ure her report will be filed at the E duc ation Offic e. Did you not read through it prior to your vis it?' 'No, I didn't,' I replied, feeling rather guilty. 'W ell, Mrs Y oung felt very m uc h the s am e way as you do. Following her vis it, Mr Frobis her agreed to relinquis h the s ixth form teac hing whic h he was finding the m os t irks om e. He als o attended one or two c ours es on the developm ent of c om m unic ation s kills but it is very diffic ult to c hange the habits of a lifetim e.' 'S o, there have been res ervations expres s ed about his c om petenc e before?' I as ked. 'W ell, yes , but I never c ons idered them s erious enough to ins titute any kind of dis c iplinary proc eedings . Mr B all, one of Her Majes ty's Ins pec tors , who vis ited us s om e years ago, was not im pres s ed but, as I s aid to him at the tim e, I've s een far wors e teac hers than Mr Frobis her in m y c areer. It is true I have rec eived one or two parental c om plaints about him but not enough to take things further. In any c as e, as you will be well aware, it is very diffic ult to do anything about a teac her in term s of dis c iplinary ac tion unles s he runs off with a s ixth-form girl or s teals the dinner m oney. I have, it is fair to s ay,' s aid Mr Nels on, s taring out of the window like the great adm iral him s elf looking for his los t fleet, 'tended to turn a bit of a blind eye. A s I intim ated, Mr Frobis her is near the end of his c areer. Is it really worth all the tim e and trouble, quite apart from the effec t it will have upon the m an him s elf and on the s c hool, to purs ue this further?' 'Children des erve the bes t, Mr Nels on,' I s aid. A t that very m om ent there was a rap on the door and the m an him s elf entered. 'May I c om e in?' s aid Mr Frobis her.
6 T hat evening I arrived hom e to find a note from Chris tine. S he had a governors ' m eeting after s c hool that afternoon, followed by a parents ' m eeting in the evening, s o would not be in until late. I was pleas ed in a way bec aus e I c ould s ettle down without any dis turbanc e and try to put together the report on K ing Henry's - a report I knew would be the m os t diffic ult I had ever written. It was after ten o'c loc k when I finally put down m y pen and plac ed the c om pleted report in m y briefc as e, jus t at the very m om ent when Chris tine walked in. 'Hello,' s he s aid brightly, c om ing over and pec king m e on the c heek. 'How did it go?' I as ked. 'Fine. I c ouldn't as k for better governors , and the parents ' evening went like a dream . It's s o good to have s upportive c olleagues and parents . It m akes s uc h a differenc e.' 'T hat's good,' I s aid. 'A nd did you have a good day?' s he as ked. 'How long have you got?' 'Oh dear,' s he s aid, 'that bad? Do you want to talk about it?' 'No,' I s aid, 'not now, anyway. I'm bus hed. I think I'll turn in.' 'A re you s ure you don't want to talk about it?' Chris tine as ked, s lipping her arm through m ine. 'W e c ould have a glas s of wine, s nuggle up in front of the fire and you c ould tell m e all about it.' 'Not now, love,' I replied. 'I've had a really tiring day. I'm s orry I'm s uc h a m is ery. I'll s nap out of it this weekend, I prom is e.' T he next day, on m y way to a c onferenc e in York, I dropped the report off at the offic e for J ulie to type. I s pent the m orning in lec tures , the c ontent of whic h, I fear, pas s ed c lean over m y head, and the afternoon in dis c us s ion groups . I c ontributed nothing, s itting there in brooding s ilenc e. My m ind was full of the events of the previous day at K ing Henry's College. I arrived bac k at the offic e at the end of the afternoon to find J ulie had typed out the report, plac ed a c opy on m y des k and s ent another to Dr Gore's offic e. T his would be des patc hed to the s c hool. I read through what I had written. In the c old light of day, it s ounded extrem ely c ritic al. A t that m om ent S idney and David breezed in. 'Friday! ' exc laim ed S idney. 'T hank God it's Friday! ' 'Do keep it down, S idney,' s aid David. 'Y ou know the ps yc hologis ts on the bottom floor have c om plained about your boom ing voic e and Gervas e is trying to work. Hello, Gervas e.' 'Hello,' I replied wearily. 'Oh dear,' s aid S idney, dropping his briefc as e on his des k with a thum p and flopping into his c hair. 'Our young c olleague does look down in the dum ps . W hatever's the m atter?' 'I've got things on m y m ind,' I told him with the voic e of a peevis h c hild. 'W e've all got things on our m inds ,' s aid S idney uns ym pathetic ally, s tretc hing bac k and obs erving the c rac ks on the c eiling. 'W ell, you don't look as if you have,' I retorted. 'I've never s een you s o c heerful.' 'T hat is bec aus e,' s aid David, 'Harold has laid down the law to the headm as ter of W es t Challerton High S c hool and S idney is to m ake his trium phant return next week.' 'Y es , indeed,' c hortled S idney. 'Harold was quite s uperb. It was a bravura perform anc e on the phone. I heard it all. He's going in with m e next week to s ee Mr P ennington-S m ith.' 'I'm glad s om ebody's happy,' I s aid. 'Gervas e,' s aid David, peering over the top of his s pec tac les , 'if I had pulled an expres s ion like that when I was a lad, m y old W els h grandm other would have told m e I had a fac e like a s m ac ked bottom .' 'Yes , for goodnes s s ake, c heer up,' s aid S idney, throwing a ball of s c rewed up paper in m y direc tion. 'You are about as m uc h fun as an inc ontinent trapeze artis t. T here's the weekend ahead of you. No m ore reports , s c hool vis its or paperwork, no s hrill telephones ringing every five m inutes . A bove all, a bles s ed res t from the hom ely words of wis dom of David's old W els h grandm other whom , if I c ould get hold of her, I would c heerfully throttle.' 'I don't feel like c heering up, S idney,' I s aid. 'I've told you, I've got things on m y m ind.' 'W hat, pray,' as ked S idney, 'c ould a healthy young m an like you, with a beautiful wife, a youngs ter on the way, a pic ture-pos tc ard c ottage in the Dales and a rewarding and relatively well-paid profes s ion, have to worry about?' 'Y es , do tell us ,' s aid David. 'Y ou were in s uc h high s pirits a c ouple of days ago. W hatever's happened?' 'A s Connie would s ay,' s aid S idney, '"A trouble s hared is a trouble doubled." Do tell.' Connie, the c aretaker of the S taff Developm ent Centre, was a m is tres s of m alapropis m s and non s equiturs . S o I told them about m y vis it to K ing Henry's College the previous day and the verbal report I had given after s c hool. 'A nd how did the head of departm ent reac t,' as ked S idney, s itting up, 'when you inform ed him that he was us eles s ?' 'S idney! ' I s napped. 'I did not s ay he was us eles s . I s aid that his les s on was les s than s atis fac tory.' 'It's m uc h the s am e thing. Y ou're jus t c ouc hing it in euphem is tic language. "Les s than s atis fac tory" m eans "uns atis fac tory" whic h m eans "weak" or "poor", "below s tandard", "inadequate", "inc om petent", ergo "us eles s ". I rec all onc e when I had a s im ilar tric ky s ituation -' 'Look, S idney,' interrupted David, holding up a res training hand, 'let the poor m an finis h. Now, Gervas e, what happened when you told the head of E nglis h that his les s on was n't up to m uc h?' 'Les s than s atis fac tory,' I c orrec ted him . 'Y es , yes , les s than s atis fac tory,' David repeated. I related the whole dreadful epis ode: how Mr Frobis her had turned a ghas tly white, s hot bolt upright in his c hair and had begun to trem ble with anger; how he had told m e that he had never had his profes s ional c om petenc e c hallenged like that in all his forty years of teac hing and that he intended to take m atters further with his union repres entative. 'T hen he upped and walked out,' I told m y c olleagues . 'High dram a, indeed,' s aid S idney. 'A nd what was old Horatio doing while all this was going on?' as ked David. 'W ho?' 'Nels on.' 'T urning a blind eye,' I s aid glum ly. 'He never opened his m outh.' 'T ypic al,' s aid David. 'A nything for a quiet life. He is not a m an of dec is ive ac tion, Mr Nels on. It's a c as e of the c aptain having los t c ontrol of the s hip at K HC or perhaps , m ore appropriately, the adm iral having los t c ontrol of the fleet.' 'W ell, to be frank, I think you c ould have handled it rather better,' s aid S idney unhelpfully. 'Really?' I replied, with c lear irritation in m y voic e. 'How?' 'B y bottling out, like S idney would have done,' m urm ured David. 'Not at all,' s aid S idney. 'B y em ploying greater tac t and diplom ac y.' 'Ha! ' s norted David.' "T ac t" and "diplom ac y" are not words in your voc abulary.' 'Had it been m e,' c ontinued S idney, 'I would have told the headm as ter, prior to the head of E nglis h arriving on the s c ene, that I had an urgent m eeting after s c hool s o c ould not s tay to dis c us s the day. I would have told him that I would be s ubm itting a full and detailed written report of m y vis it and that I would m ake another appointm ent with the head of E nglis h, s hould he wis h to dis c us s it. Of c ours e, it would be very unlikely, given the c irc um s tanc es , that this Mr Frobis her would wis h to s ee m e again. I s hould then have left the s c hool before the arrival of the head of departm ent. I really think it was neither the tim e nor plac e to give s uc h c ritic al feedbac k to the m an, partic ularly in front of the headm as ter.' 'T hat's only putting it off,' I replied. 'No, it is n't,' s aid S idney, 'bec aus e, after s ending the report, I would have plac ed the m atter firm ly in Harold's in-tray. Firs tly, he has vas t experienc e in c oping with awkward is s ues and s ec ondly, as the S enior Ins pec tor, he is paid to deal with s uc h diffic ult s ituations . Harold would then go into the s c hool and talk with the headm as ter and the head of E nglis h and I s hould be free to get on with m y other work.' 'In other words ,' s aid David s m ugly, 'you would bottle out and get s om ebody els e to fire your bullets for you. T hat is s o typic al of you, S idney! ' 'W ell, c om e on then, fount of all wis dom , what would you have done?' as ked his c olleague. 'W ell,' s aid David, rem oving his s pec tac les , 'I do think it was perhaps a little unfortunate, Gervas e, that you c ritic is ed the head of departm ent in front of the headm as ter. You m ight have gues s ed, from s eeing him teac h and his m anner, that he would be a pric kly c us tom er. Had it been m e, I s hould have arranged to s ee the head of E nglis h privately next week and held off writing the report. I would have dis c us s ed the les s on with him in detail and given him the opportunity of res ponding. A fter all, it was jus t one les s on and it was with the older pupils who tend to be m ore diffic ult to handle. T his les s on m ight not have been at all typic al.' 'T hen what?' I as ked. 'I would have written the report, s hown it to Harold and s ought his advic e. I would then have returned to the s c hool to dis c us s it with the headm as ter, arranging further vis its to obs erve a s eries of les s ons and to offer advic e and s upport.' 'He was n't the s ort of m an to readily ac c ept any advic e and s upport,' I s aid glum ly. 'A nyway, it's eas y with hinds ight. It's too late to do any of that now. I've already s ent the report in.' 'My goodnes s , how expeditious ! ' exc laim ed S idney. 'T here are s om e people in life who like to get things done quic kly,' David told him , s taring at the pile of papers on S idney's des k. 'Of c ours e, there are others who do not.' 'I wanted it out of the way,' I s aid. 'I finis hed it las t night and J ulie typed it up and took it over to County Hall this m orning.' 'Have you got a c opy to hand?' as ked David. I reac hed over to m y out-tray and pas s ed the doc um ent ac ros s the des k. David read it without c om m ent then pas s ed it to S idney who huffed and puffed and grim ac ed his way through it. 'Y ou don't m inc e your words ,' s aid S idney. 'T alk about "going for the juggler", as Connie would s ay.' 'W ell, I was irritated by the m an,' I s aid defens ively. 'He was quite offhand with m e and his les s on was uns atis fac tory. Furtherm ore, one of the E nglis h s taff told m e he was a diffic ult m an to work with and was n't good with the s tudents .' 'A bit unprofes s ional that, Gervas e, if I m ay s ay s o,' s aid S idney, 'dis c us s ing the head of departm ent with a c olleague. He m ight have an axe to grind.' 'It was a wom an, ac tually, and I didn't dis c us s him with her. T he inform ation was volunteered. A nd s he didn't have an axe to grind either. S he was the s upply teac her. I have s trong res ervations about Mr Frobis her and that is what I have put in m y report.' 'B ut it was only one les s on,' s aid David quietly. 'I know.' 'A nd you s peak in all thes e glowing term s about his c olleagues ,' s aid S idney. 'He s tands out like the proverbial wic ked fairy at the c hris tening. I m ean, to be told everyone in your departm ent is brilliant and you are us eles s c ould finis h the poor old bloke off.' 'S idney! How m any m ore tim es ! I did not s ay he was us eles s and if you had m et him the las t des c ription you would us e of the m an is "poor old bloke".' 'W ell, if I rec eived a report like that,' s aid S idney, 'I would c ontem plate throwing m ys elf head firs t down a pothole in Gras s ington.' 'W hy a pothole in Gras s ington?' as ked David. 'Y ou know what I m ean,' replied S idney. 'A report like that one would m ake m e feel pos itively s uic idal.' I felt c ons iderably wors e now. P erhaps the report was , after all, too c ritic al. 'Does it s ound that bad?' I as ked. 'I'm afraid it does ,' s aid David. 'B ut all is not los t. T he c ounty m ail into s c hools does n't go out until next T ues day afternoon. If you retrieve the report, m oderate the tone a little, let Harold have a glanc e through it and get his advic e on the m atter, all is not los t. Of c ours e, it will have to be Monday m orning now. T hey will have all left by this tim e.' 'A n exc ellent idea,' s aid S idney, jus t as the c loc k on the County Hall c loc k s truc k s ix. 'A nd that's hom e-tim e, I think. Oh, and J ulie s aid there was that loud m an on the phone to s peak to you again. I hope it is n't another problem , old boy.' Chris tine had obvious ly taken c ons iderable trouble to prepare a nic e s upper that evening but I jus t did not feel like eating. I poked the potatoes around the plate and m ade a half-hearted attem pt to eat the m eat. 'Don't you like it?' s he as ked. 'I thought fillet s teak with garlic butter was one of your favourites .' 'It's fine,' I s aid, 'it's jus t that I'm not that hungry.' 'W hat's wrong?' s he as ked, s liding a hand ac ros s the table and taking m ine. 'Y ou were ups et about s om ething las t night. W hat is it?' 'I think I really m is handled a s ituation in a s c hool yes terday,' I told her gloom ily. 'T here was a head of departm ent whom I c ritic is ed in front of the headm as ter and he jus t s torm ed out of the room . I feel quite bad about it now.' 'I'm s ure you're over-reac ting,' s aid Chris tine. 'Did you have a word with Harold about it?' 'No, I s hould have done,' I replied. 'I did tell David and S idney today and as ked what they thought.' 'A nd?' 'T alk about J ob's c om forters . T hey think I c ould have handled it better.' I told her what they had s aid. 'T his head of departm ent, is he any good?' 'W ell, the les s on I obs erved was c ertainly rather poor. It was n't dis as trous . T he pupils weren't s houting and running about or anything like that, but he had quite an unpleas ant m anner with the s tudents , the work in their books was narrow and he'd gone m ad with the red pen. It looked as if s om eone had bled over the pages . A nd he was very brus que with m e.' 'W ere the pupils m aking m uc h progres s in their work, do you think?' 'No, not really.' 'Do you think they were enjoying the s ubjec t?' 'No, I don't think that they were.' 'How long has he been teac hing, this head of departm ent?' as ked Chris tine. 'Nearly forty years .' 'Forty years ? A nd nobody's ever s aid anything about him before?' 'W ell, they have as a m atter of fac t. I believe an HMI, a m an c alled B all, was c ritic al of him and I dug out the report that m y predec es s or, Mrs Y oung, had written about him .' 'A nd?' 'S he was not that im pres s ed and tried to get him on s om e c ours es but it does n't s eem to have done m uc h good.' 'W ell, things don't s eem to have im proved by the s ound of it,' s aid Chris tine, 'and he's gone on teac hing c las s after c las s , year after year. It s eem s to m e that the headm as ter has a lot to ans wer for and, for that m atter, the ins pec tors who have s een him teac h and not really taken any ac tion.' 'It's not quite as eas y as that, Chris tine,' I told her. 'A s the headm as ter was at pains to point out, and he's right, it's really hard to dis m is s a teac her unles s he s teals the dinner m oney or runs off with a s ixth-form girl. T his m an's les s ons are not s o bad as to lead to his being s ac ked. I m ean, the s tudents don't riot, he s ets hom ework and m arks their books .' 'Look, Gervas e, you are always going on about c hildren des erving the bes t that teac hers c an give, how they only have the one c hanc e at educ ation, that they need to be taught by enthus ias tic , c om m itted, good-hum oured and hard-working people.' Chris tine was throwing m y own words bac k in m y fac e. 'Y es , I know,' I s aid. 'B e hones t, would you want this m an teac hing our c hild?' 'No, I wouldn't.' 'W as he enthus ias tic , c om m itted, good-hum oured and hardworking?' s he as ked. 'Not when I s aw him , he was n't.' 'T hen you had to s ay s o. Your job is not going round s c hools telling poor teac hers that they are fine, that everything in the garden is ros y. If there were a m em ber of m y s taff who was not up to s c ratc h, they would be told and I would help them to im prove. If they didn't im prove then they would have to go. It's as s im ple as that. Is n't your job to tell the truth as you s ee it, whic h s om etim es m eans being c ritic al? Of c ours e, you have to c elebrate what is good in a s c hool, tell teac hers who are doing a good job that they are doing a good job and tell thos e who aren't, that they need to im prove.' 'Y es , I know you're right,' I s aid. 'It's jus t that it was pretty unpleas ant and for s om e reas on I feel very down about the whole s ituation. A nyway, onc e I've got the report bac k and m ade it les s trenc hant, I'm s ure I'll feel better.' 'Y ou're c hanging the report?' s he as ked. 'Y es .' 'Do you think that's a good idea?' 'W hat?' 'Changing the report jus t bec aus e S idney and David s aid you were too hard on this teac her. I think you have to s tic k to what you believe, gras p the nettle and fac e the c ons equenc es .' 'Chris tine! ' I s napped irritably. 'I wis h I had never brought the wretc hed m atter up. I'm feeling even wors e about it now.' 'OK ! OK ! Y ou do what you think bes t,' s he s aid, beginning to c lear the plates away. I laps ed into a m oody s ilenc e. W hen Chris tine began was hing the dis hes , I c rept up behind her and put m y arm s around her wais t. 'I'm s orry I was s harp with you,' I s aid. 'It's jus t that I was really looking forward to a break from work. T his thing is like a blac k c loud. B ut you're probably right. I do need to gras p this partic ular nettle. A nyway, I'm not going to think about it any m ore. Let's jus t enjoy the weekend.' Chris tine turned and kis s ed m e on the c heek. 'It will be a taboo s ubjec t,' s he s aid. 'Oh, and s peaking of nettles , tom orrow you prom is ed to s ort out the garden. Half the village s eem s to be out in their gardens , and there are bonfires everywhere.' On the following Monday m orning I m ade m y way along the neat gravel footpath bordering the well-tended lawns in front of County Hall to retrieve the report on K ing Henry's College. Des pite m y prom is e, I had thought about it a great deal over the weekend and had dec ided to take David's advic e and m ake the
c om m entary on Mr Frobis her's les s on les s forthright and c ritic al. I did not tell Chris tine. E ac h tim e I took this route ac ros s the form al gardens to the front of County Hall, I rec alled the firs t oc c as ion, over three years earlier, when I had arrived for interview for the pos t of Ins pec tor for E nglis h and Dram a. T he huge, grey-s tone edific e had overawed m e then, as it did now. T he interior of the building was als o daunting: endles s c old, ec hoey c orridors , high ornate c eilings , polis hed wooden floors , huge m arble s tatues , endles s rows of oil paintings of s tern-looking dignitaries and s epia photographs of form er m ayors and alderm en. It was like a m aus oleum . Mrs S avage's offic e was in the A nnexe, a bright, m odern bloc k whic h c lung to the older darker building like s om e pale brown paras ite. On her door, em blazoned in large blac k letters , it s tated 'MRS B RE NDA S AVA GE , P ers onal A s s is tant to the Chief E duc ation Offic er'. S inc e m y las t vis it, at the end of the previous term , there had been an addition. A s m all box had been fas tened to the fram e of the door enc as ing what appeared to be a s et of m iniature traffic lights - three c irc les in red, am ber and green. A bove were the ins truc tions to pres s the buzzer beneath and then wait. J ulie had warned m e about this c ontraption whic h I had, in fac t, already s een in operation at one of the s c hools I had vis ited the previous year. T he idea behind the ingenious devic e was for the vis itor to pres s the buzzer to gain the attention of the pers on ins ide the offic e. T he headm as ter, or whoever was within the offic e, then had three options from whic h to c hoos e. He would pres s a button and one of the options would light up. It was only when the c irc les were illum inated that the ins truc tions c ould be s een: 'E ngaged', 'P leas e W ait' or 'P leas e E nter'. A ll very c lever, but I had to s m ile. In the s c hool where I had s een this before, it had worked well for the firs t few weeks , but then the headteac her bec am e c onc erned that s o few people s ought to s ee him . T he reas on s oon bec am e c lear when the c aretaker, wis hing to s ee the headteac her one day, duly pres s ed the buzzer and a few s ec onds later one of the c irc les had lit up. T he c aretaker, being a forthright fellow, thought he s hould draw the headm as ter's attention to the m es s age. It turned out that one rather inventive pupil, who had been s ent to the headm as ter for m is behaviour jus t after the ins tallation of the devic e, had waited outs ide the room . Having nothing better to oc c upy his tim e, the m is c reant had, with a penknife, c arefully eras ed the blac k lettering whic h s tated 'P leas e W ait' and s ubs tituted a phras e of his own by writing on the plas tic with a blac k felt-tip pen, his alternative only being s een when the panel lit up. V is itors arriving at the headteac her's door, duly pres s ed the buzzer and the little c irc le lit up with the ins truc tion to 'P is s Off! ' W hat had am azed the headm as ter was that not one pupil, parent or m em ber of s taff had s een fit to inform him prior to the c aretaker's fortuitous arrival. I pres s ed the buzzer on Mrs S avage's door and, m uc h to m y am us em ent, every light lit up. I knoc ked and entered. Mrs S avage s tood bes ide her des k, a c lutc h of papers in her hand. S he was , as us ual, im m ac ulately dres s ed. T hat m orning s he wore a c alf-length pleated blue s uit with diam ante buttons , c as hm ere jum per and s m art, im pres s ively pointed blac k s hoes . Her long nails were painted a pale pink and her fac e was heavily m ade up. T here was the fragranc e of expens ive perfum e in the air. One had to adm it it, the wom an looked s tylis h. S he glanc ed at m e im perious ly as I entered. 'I did as k you to wait, Mr P hinn,' s he s aid irritably. 'I've not quite finis hed reading though this "Health and S afety" doc um ent for Dr Gore yet. He is in urgent need of it this m orning before his m eeting.' 'A ll your lights lit up, Mrs S avage,' I told her. 'I beg your pardon?' s he as ked witheringly. 'On your door. A ll your little lights , they lit up at the s am e tim e.' 'W ell, that is m os t s trange,' s he s aid. S he looked down at her des k and s c rutinis ed a s m all box-like affair with buttons on the top. 'Not to s ay very c onfus ing,' I added. 'P ardon?' 'A ll your little lights , illum inating together.' 'I hope you were not heavy-handed with m y buzzer,' s he s aid. W hen I jus t s m iled, s he s at down and c ontinued. 'I s hall as k the janitor to take a look at it. Now then, Mr P hinn, as I s aid, you will have to wait a m om ent while I finis h reading this report. You m ay s it there,' s he s aid, indic ating the c hair whic h was plac ed s trategic ally in front of her des k. I did as I was bid, and gazed around m e. Her offic e was plus h, warm , fully c arpeted and equipped with c om fortable s tate-of-the-art furniture. T hrough the windows was a fine view of Fettles ham and beyond to the m oors and dis tant purple peaks . Mrs S avage put as ide the report, and s aid bris kly, 'Now, Mr P hinn, is there s om ething you want?' W hat a s tupid ques tion to as k, I thought. W ould I be there in front of her if I didn't want anything? 'Yes , there is s om ething I want,' I replied. T he c hair on whic h I was s itting was lower than her huge s wivel c hair, s o I found m ys elf s taring up into her eyes . 'I would like to have bac k a report whic h I s ent over on Friday, pleas e.' 'Like it bac k! ' s he exc laim ed, as if I had m ade s om e s ort of im proper s ugges tion. 'T hat is out of the ques tion.' I don't s ee why,' I s aid. 'It has n't been s ent out to the s c hool yet, has it?' 'A s a m atter of fac t, it has n't,' s he replied c urtly. 'County m ail, as I am s ure you are well aware, is des patc hed to s c hools on T ues day afternoons .' 'S o there s hould be no problem in m y having bac k the report then,' I s aid. 'A h, but there is , Mr P hinn,' s he s aid, c arefully folding her hands before her on the des k and pres enting m e with the all-too-fam iliar unpleas ant s m ile. 'Onc e I have rec eived the reports they c annot be returned.' 'W hy?' 'B ec aus e they c an't! ' s he s napped, a defens ive defianc e blazing in her eyes . 'B ut I c an't s ee why there s hould be a problem in m y as king for m y report bac k. I need to am end it and m ake c ertain im portant additions .' 'Mr P hinn,' s he s aid in an exaggeratedly patient tone of voic e, 'onc e a report is rec eived in this offic e, it is duplic ated. One c opy goes in Dr Gore's in-tray and then plac ed on file and the top c opy is des patc hed to the relevant s c hool. T here is no proc edure for the return of reports . If ins pec tors s tarted dem anding their reports bac k as s oon as they had c om pleted them , we would des c end into c haos and c onfus ion in no tim e. S o, it is quite out of the ques tion for m e to return your report.' 'In the three years I have been working as an ins pec tor, Mrs S avage,' I told her, trying to keep c alm , 'I have never reques ted the return of a s ingle report and I very m uc h doubt whether there will be another oc c as ion for a very long tim e. However, it is extrem ely im portant that I get this partic ular one bac k.' S he gave m e a look of flat finality. 'I am s orry, Mr P hinn, but there is not the s lightes t pos s ibility of m y s urrendering that report.' I drew a deep and exas perated breath. 'Is Dr Gore in?' I as ked. 'I don't s ee how pertinent that is ,' s he s aid. 'I would like to as k him if he would authoris e the return of the report.' 'Dr Gore is not available. He is extrem ely bus y, partic ularly on Mondays , and without an appointm ent -' 'T om orrow m orning?' 'I'm s orry?' 'Could I m ake an appointm ent to s ee him firs t thing tom orrow m orning?' Mrs S avage gave a s light s m ile and her eyes narrowed in trium ph. 'He is in London at a c onferenc e tom orrow m orning.' 'Mrs S avage,' I s aid, gripping the edge of her des k, 'are you going to let m e have that report bac k?' 'No, Mr P hinn,' s he s aid c alm ly. 'I am not. P roc edures m us t be followed and -' W ithout waiting to hear her out, I jum ped to m y feet and s trode for the door. I s lam m ed it behind m e, s etting off all three little lights in the proc es s . 'Dreadful wom an! ' I m uttered to m ys elf between gritted teeth, as I m arc hed down the c orridor. 'Dreadful wom an! ' B ac k in the ins pec tors ' offic e I im m ediately telephoned K ing Henry's College. I had dec ided to have a word with Mr Frobis her prior to his reading the dam ning report and was planning to s ugges t that I c all in at the s c hool to dis c us s it with him later that week. 'Good m orning, K ing Henry's College,' c am e a form al voic e down the line. 'Mrs W interton, s c hool s ec retary s peaking.' 'Oh, good m orning,' I replied, with a s inking feeling in m y s tom ac h. 'T his is Gervas e P hinn from the S c hool Ins pec tors ' Divis ion at County Hall.' 'Mr P hinn?' T here was a s harp intake of breath. 'Y es ,' I replied. 'May I s peak with Mr Frobis her, pleas e?' 'I am afraid not. Mr Frobis her is away today.' 'Have you any idea when he will be bac k?' 'No, I haven't.' 'W hat's wrong?' I as ked. 'Is he ill?' 'He would hardly be off s c hool if he were not ill,' c am e bac k the reply. 'It's the firs t oc c as ion in m y tim e at K ing Henry's that he has had tim e off. I believe he felt unwell after your vis it las t Friday.' 'Oh, I s ee.' My heart s ank down into m y s hoes . 'P erhaps when he does return, you would as k him to c ontac t m e at the E duc ation Offic e on extens ion 8989.' 'Y es , I c an do that, Mr P hinn. I s hall pas s on your m es s age to Mr Frobis her when he returns to s c hool.' 'T hank you,' I s aid, plac ing the telephone down on the rec eiver with a dull em pty ac he in the pit of m y s tom ac h. Now what was I going to do?
7 T he week ahead was s o bus y I did not have tim e to dwell on the fate of Mr Frobis her. T ues day found m e bright and early for a s hort ins pec tion of B utterthwaite, a s m all rural s c hool s et in the m os t m agnific ent c ountrys ide. T he two-room s c hoolhous e, s heltered by s yc am ores and anc ient oaks , s tood s quare and s olid at the head of the dale. From the c las s room window pale green pas tures , dotted with grazing s heep and c ris s -c ros s ed by grey s tone walls , rolled upwards to the great whalebac k hills and gloom y grey c louds in the dis tanc e. T he s c ene had a c old and eerie beauty about it. T he s c hool had no m ajor problem s and I was able to give the headteac her a pos itive evaluation. It was at the end of the day when I joined a s turdy-looking little boy with a healthy c om plexion who was s tanding at the c las s room window, hands deep in his poc kets , s urveying the vas t panoram a whic h s tretc hed out before him . He was about s ix or s even years old. 'J us t waiting for m i m am to c om e,' he told m e. 'S he's offen a bit late. S he 'as a lot to do on t'farm .' 'W ell, I'm s ure s he'll not be long,' I s aid. 'A ye, well, I'm not goin' anyweer.' 'B eautiful view,' I s aid. 'It's not bad, in't?' He dug his hands deeper into his poc kets . 'A utum n's c om in' on,' obs erved the c hild like a little old m an. 'Not be long afoor t'leaves s tart to fall and t'brac ken turns gowld. Looks like it's gunna be a bad winter an' all. W e 'ad a lot o's now las t year. Mi dad c an't be doin' wi' s now.' 'I'm not over keen,' I s aid. 'A nd what's your nam e?' 'A ndrew.' 'W ell, it's c ertainly a beautiful view, A ndrew,' I s aid. 'Y ou're a luc ky boy to live up here.' 'A ye, as I s aid, it's all reight. B etter in t's um m er than winter though, when tha c an get out and about. S tarts about this tim e o' year, does winter, when it gets c owld and wet and windy.' 'A nd what do you like bes t at s c hool?' I as ked. 'I likes to read and I likes num ber work. I'm good at s um s .' 'A re you?' I thought I'd tes t him on his arithm etic . 'How m any s heep c an you s ee in that field?' I as ked him . 'E h?' 'Can you tell m e how m any s heep you c an s ee in the field?' 'A ye, I c an.' 'W ell, how m any c an you s ee?' 'I c an s ee all on 'em ,' he replied. I c huc kled. 'No, I m eant how m any altogether. Could you c ount them for m e.' 'A ye, I s uppos e I c ould. I'm good at c ountin'.' 'P erhaps you'd like to s how m e,' I pers is ted. 'W ell, there's five S waledales and s ix Texels , three hybrids and four hoggits .' He paus ed for a m om ent. 'T hat m akes eighteen in total, dunt it? A nd don't as k m e to c ount t'rabbits bec aus e they waint s tay s till long enough for m e to tot 'em up.' A large and rus ty old Land-Rover pulled up outs ide the s c hool gate. 'Hey up, m i m am 's 'ere.' W ith a wave he s c urried off. 'T arra! ' I s aw him c lam ber up bes ide his m other, a large and c heerful-looking wom an with ruddy c heeks . S he gave him a great hug, s trapped him in his s eat and drove off. On the W ednes day I vis ited a very different kind of s c hool. It has always am azed m e how I c an be in a s m all idyllic plac e like B utterthwaite, nes tling in c lean gras s y fells , and an hour later be in the m iddle of urban Yorks hire, s taring up at the fores t of fac tory c him neys and breathing in the ac rid s m ell of indus try. Crom pton P rim ary S c hool was an enorm ous proliferating s truc ture on three levels . T he s c hool had originally been built in the late nineteenth c entury as a B oard s c hool to m eet the educ ational needs of c hildren of all ages : infants on the ground floor, juniors on the s ec ond and s eniors on the top. It now c atered for a large population of prim ary-aged c hildren who lived in the dark and brooding northern indus trial town of Crom pton. W ith its s hiny bric k walls , greas y grey s late roof, s m all s quare windows , towers and turrets and enveloping high blac k iron fenc e, it res em bled m ore of a pris on or a workhous e than a s c hool. It was a depres s ing s ight: this huge, ugly s truc ture s urrounded by row upon row of m ean bac k-to-bac k terrac ed hous ing, featureles s warehous es , rubbis h-s trewn was teland and walls defac ed with graffiti. T he teac hing s taff had endeavoured to m ake the interior of the m ons tros ity as c olourful and friendly as pos s ible and had dec orated the walls in the gloom y entranc e hall with pic tures of dram atic s eas c apes and idyllic rural lands c apes , vivid pos ters , well-m ounted c hildren's poem s and s tories and vas es of bright flowers but the plac e s till felt unpleas antly c old and daunting. P erhaps it was the high, flaking c eilings , the hard s hiny green tiles on the walls or the unpleas ant s m ell of s c hool dinners and c heap dis infec tant. W hatever it was , the plac e felt unwelc om ing. Mrs Gardiner, the headteac her, was a s tout wom an in her late fifties with a large bus t and rem arkably narrow wais t. S he wore a long blue s kirt and a plain white blous e buttoned up at the throat, and around her nec k hung a pair of gold half-m oon s pec tac les on a thin gold c hain. S he would not have appeared out of plac e in the s c hool when it had been built for s he looked for all the world like a V ic torian s c hoolm a'am . A fter a tour of the building, I joined Mrs Gardiner in her room to dis c us s the day's itinerary. I was there to watc h a range of les s ons , as s es s the c hildren on their reading, exam ine their writing and s tudy the tes t s c ores . For the firs t hour, I s at in the s taff room s c rutinis ing the s c hem es of work, the teac hers ' les s on plans and a s am ple of c hildren's work and after m orning break re-joined the headteac her in her room . Our c onvers ation about the deprivation and neglec t endem ic in Crom pton was interrupted by the nois e of exc ited c hatter. T hat s ignalled the pas s ing in the c orridor of an infant c las s on its way to the hall for P E . Mrs Gardiner ros e from her c hair in queenly fas hion, popped her s pec tac les on the end of her nos e, c las ped her hands in front and s tationed hers elf at the door. I joined her to watc h the c hildren's progres s . 'Quietly and quic kly, pleas e, c hildren,' c om m anded the headteac her, peering s everely over the top of her s pec tac les . 'Les s nois e and m ore has te.' One little s traggler in grubby white s horts and ves t lim ped into view. His head was held down s o far his c hin res ted on his c hes t. I notic ed the c hild's s kin looked unhealthily pale and his untidy, greas y hair was c learly unwas hed. 'In m y room , pleas e, Matty,' ordered Mrs Gardiner. 'W hat, m is s ?' as ked the c hild, looking up and produc ing an exaggeratedly innoc ent expres s ion. 'Y ou know what.' T he boy puffed out his c heeks and exhaled nois ily. 'I don't, m is s .' 'Y es , you do, and les s of the s ound effec ts ,' s aid the headteac her, s tanding bac k s o he c ould enter her room . W hen he was s tanding there and s taring up at her with large s ad eyes , s he held out the flat of her hand. 'Now c om e along, Matty, give it to m e.' 'W hat, m is s ?' 'Y ou know very well what. In your plim s oll.' 'T here's nothing in m y plim s oll,' the boy told her and looked down s heepis hly. 'Matthew Dic kins on,' s ighed the headteac her, 'rem ove your plim s oll now. Com e along. I haven't got all day.' T he c hild thought for a m om ent and then reluc tantly took off his s hoe to reveal a pound c oin s andwic hed between his big toe and the next. His feet c ould have done with a good s c rub. 'Give it to m e, pleas e,' the headteac her s aid. T he boy pluc ked the c oin from his toes and pas s ed it up gingerly to Mrs Gardiner who s c owled and tut-tutted. 'S o you had it after all? Do you know, Mr P hinn,' s he s aid, turning in m y direc tion, 'we have been s earc hing everywhere this m orning for this pound c oin.' 'I didn't m ean to take it, m is s ,' m oaned the c hild, his eyes brim m ing with tears and his bottom lip beginning to trem ble. 'Of c ours e you m eant to take it! ' exc laim ed Mrs Gardiner. 'It didn't fly into your plim s oll by m agic , did it?' 'I didn't m ean to take it,' pers is ted the c hild. 'I didn't m ean to take it.' 'Matty, how m any tim es have I heard that phras e: "I didn't m ean to"? I didn't m ean to hit him , I didn't m ean to break it, I didn't m ean to c all her thos e nam es , I didn't m ean to us e thos e naughty words . Y ou never m ean to, but you always s eem to do it, don't you?' 'I won't do it again, m is s .' 'A nd how m any tim es have I heard that phras e as well?' as ked the headteac her. T he boy, his head down again, began to s ob pathetic ally, his little s houlders heaving. He looked a pitiable s ight. 'W hat do we c all s om ebody who takes s om ething that does not belong to him ?' 'A m ugger, m is s ,' m oaned the c hild. 'A nd?' 'A burglar, m is s .' 'A nd?' 'A robber, m is s .' Mrs Gardiner s hot m e a knowing glanc e whic h s aid: 'He knows all the words .' T he headteac her fixed him with a s tony look. 'I was thinking of the word "thief". T hat's what s om ebody is c alled who takes s om ething that does not belong to him . A thief! ' 'I'm not a thief, m is s ,' wailed the c hild. 'Don't c all m e a thief, pleas e -' 'I'm afraid that is what you are, Matty, a thief. You c annot keep your hands off other people's property. You are always taking things whic h aren't yours . A ll m orning we've been looking for that c oin and all the tim e it was tuc ked away in your s hoe.' T he c hild s niffed dram atic ally. 'A nd you s ee this gentlem an here?' c ontinued Mrs Gardiner, turning again in m y direc tion. T he boy looked up, wiped away his tears with a grubby fis t, s niffed again nois ily and s tared like a frightened anim al in the headlight's glare. 'T his is Mr P hinn and he is a very, very im portant pers on. Mr P hinn is an ins pec tor.' T he boy howled pathetic ally. 'I won't do it again, m is s , I won't. I prom is e I won't do it again.' 'Fortunately for you,' s aid Mrs Gardiner, 'Mr P hinn is not a polic e ins pec tor. He's a s c hool ins pec tor. A nd when Mr P hinn c am e into our s c hool this m orning, he s aid what a lovely s c hool it was - c us hions in the Reading Corner and pic tures , double m ounted, on the walls . I wonder what Mr P hinn is thinking now.' 'I don't know,' wailed the c hild. 'No, neither do I,' s aid the headteac her. Mr P hinn was in ac tual fac t thinking: I do hope this interrogation will s top otherwis e Mr P hinn will be in floods of tears along with little Matty. 'A nd what have you got to s ay to Mr P hinn?' s aid the headteac her, looking down s everely on the little figure before her. 'W hat have you to s ay to him ?' T he c hild looked m e s traight in the eyes before replying: 'T ough s hit! ' 'Matty, Matty, Matty,' s ighed Mrs Gardiner later. 'W hatever am I going to do with him ? He s pends m ore tim e with Mis s P erc ival, the s oc ial worker, and Ms K invara, the educ ational ps yc hologis t, than he does with his m other. He's s uc h a s ad little boy. Can you im agine a c hild of his age having to get him s elf up in the m orning, c om e to s c hool without any breakfas t, unwas hed, in the s am e c oat he has had for two years and whic h is now far too s m all for him . A c hild s o s m elly that none of the other c hildren will s it near him or play with him , a c hild who watc hes all the other m um m ies c ollec t their c hildren from s c hool but who has to walk his lonely way hom e alone to a c old, em pty hous e. P oor c hild has n't a c hanc e, has he? Is it any wonder he s teals and s pits and gets into fights . He's never been s hown any different. Y ou know, Mr P hinn, s om e c hildren c om e from hom es where there is ac c eptable behaviour, pos itive attitudes to others , where there's laughter and love and lots of books . A nd then there are s om e c hildren, like Matty, who get nothing. Of c ours e, it's the s am e old s tory: teenage unm arried m um , poverty, inadequate parenting, abs entee father, s tring of s tepfathers . T here are drugs , of c ours e, and, I s us pec t, violenc e.' A s s he s poke, I thought of the words of Mrs Todd and her four boys , about how s om e c hildren have every advantage in life and others none at all, and I thought of A ndrew's m um , ros y-c heeked and s m iling, greeting him after s c hool with a hug. 'W hatever does one do about the Mattys of this world?' as ked the headteac her, s ighing. 'If I had a m agic wand, I'd wave it, Mrs Gardiner,' I told her, 'but I haven't. I s uppos e you jus t have to keep on trying.' T he headteac her s m iled and s hook her head. 'Do you know, on his firs t day here, when he was not m uc h m ore than five years old, I found Matty outs ide m y door with his pants around his ankles . He was jus t s tanding there as bold as bras s . "W ho wipes the ars es around here?" he as ked m e.' 'Oh, dear,' I s aid, attem pting to s uppres s a s m ile. 'In as s em bly one day, a c hild dropped a c oin whic h rolled down to the front of the hall and s pun round and round. Matty s hot out like a c has ed rabbit and s tam ped on it. "Foot off! " I s houted. "I s aw it firs t! " he s houted bac k, s natc hing it up and popping it in his poc ket. I dare not think what he im agined I s aid to him .' I was unable to prevent m ys elf from c huc kling out loud. 'T hen there was the tim e a s quirrel appeared in the tree outs ide his c las s room window. Mrs P rentic e, his teac her, was near enough to hear the c onvers ation he had with another c hild. "Oh look," s aid the other c hild to Matty, "there's a s quirrel up that tree. Let's tell Mrs P rentic e." "S hut yer gob," Matty had replied, "s he'll m ake us write about the bugger! " You know, Mr P hinn,' c ontinued Mrs Gardiner, 'if you didn't laugh, you'd weep. One day he c lim bed on top of the bus s helter and would not c om e down. W hen the s c hool c ros s ing patrol warden attem pted to get him down he urinated on him . I m ean, he's a full-tim e job. I've had to s us pend him from s c hool three tim es now. I hated having to do it, but I had no c hoic e. T he las t tim e was when Mrs P rentic e brought a s nail in from her garden. S he was getting the c hildren to think of words beginning with the letters "s qu" s o they c ould write a little poem together. T he c hildren s ugges ted "s quis hy" and "s quelc hy", "s quiggly" and "s quirm y". Matty c om es out to the front of the c las s room and brings the flat of his hand down on the poor c reature. "S quas hy," he announc es . W hatever will bec om e of him ?' W ell, I thought to m ys elf, there's little c hanc e of his bec om ing a doc tor, an arc hitec t, a linguis t or a fine artis t like Mrs T odd's talented s ons . P oor Matty will probably end up in pris on. 'I expec t you've tried to get through to his m other?' I s aid. 'Oh yes , of c ours e. S he's a s ad c as e, too. S he's a s im ple s oul and c an't c ope. I s uppos e s he tries her lim ited bes t but s he s eem s to attrac t the wors t s ort of m an, that's why Matty reac ts to m en as he does , in that aggres s ive, s us pic ious way. He's had s om e very rough treatm ent at the hands of his m other's boyfriends , I c an tell you. A nd, of c ours e, all the bad language he's heard c om es from them . I rem em ber when I helped his m other fill in the details on the form when Matty s tarted s c hool. S he's illiterate, you s ee. W hen we got to the s ec tion whic h as ked about the c hild's parents , s he told m e, "Father not yet known".' 'S oc ial s ervic es ?' 'Mis s P erc ival, the s oc ial worker, tries her bes t, of c ours e, but s he's over-s tretc hed and, believe it or not, there are c hildren wors e off than Matty. A nyway, we pers evere, Mr P hinn, we try our bes t and we c an't do m ore than that, c an we?' 'No,' I replied feebly, 'you c an't.' I did not m eet Matty again until after lunc h when I joined the infant c las s . S om etim es when I vis ited s c hools I would read the c hildren a s tory. T his was a good opportunity for m e to as s es s the c hildren's c onfidenc e and profic ienc y as s peakers and how attentive they were as lis teners . I c ould als o tes t them on their knowledge of words and s pellings . I gathered the s m all c hildren in a half c irc le around m e in the Reading Corner, the grandios e nam e for a s quare of c arpet, a c ouple of large c oloured c us hions and an eas y c hair. T he infants ' teac her, Mrs P rentic e, s at at the bac k. My s tory was about Lazy T om , a fat ginger c at with green eyes who s lept for m os t of the day but got up to all s orts of adventures by night. I had jus t s tarted the lively ac c ount when a large c hild with a plum p fac e, frizzy hair in huge bunc hes and great wide eyes interrupted loudly. 'W e 'ad a c at! ' s he s houted out. 'Did you?' I replied. "E were really, really 'orrible. 'E e killed birds .' 'I'm afraid all c ats do that,' I told her. I then endeavoured to c ontinue with the s tory. "Now, one bright s unny s um m er's day, Lazy T om --"' 'A nd 'e killed m ic e, an' all! ' the c hild s houted out. "E us ed to bring 'em in t'hous e and play wi' em on t'c arpet and then ett 'em up. 'E us ed to bite their 'eads off an' all and -' 'W hat's your nam e?' I as ked the c hild. 'T equila,' s he replied. 'I'm nam ed after a drink.' 'T equila S unris e,' I m urm ured. 'No,' pouted the c hild. 'T equila B raithwaite.' 'W ell, T equila,' I s aid, 'I want you to lis ten to the s tory very, very quietly. Y ou are s poiling it for everyone els e. Y ou c an tell m e all about -' 'B ut I were tellin' you about m i c at,' interrupted the girl. 'W ell tell m e later,' I s aid rather m ore s harply. 'Can't I tell you now?' 'No,' I replied, fixing her with the look only teac hers us e. I m anaged to c ontinue for a c ouple of pages , aware of Mrs P rentic e, with the folded arm s , s itting s m ugly at the bac k of the c las s room and c learly enjoying m y dis c om fiture. A nyone who thinks that a c las s of thirty lively infants is eas y to handle, I thought to m ys elf at that m om ent, s hould try reading them a s tory. T here is always a T equila. It was n't long before the c hild was s houting out again. 'Our c at were c alled Max and 'e were really, really s m elly and 'e s c ratc hed and his s ed an' all.' 'W ell, Lazy T om was not like that,' I told her. 'He was a nic e c at. "Now, one c old, dark night Lazy T om c rept down the garden path --" ' ''E were run ovver by a bus ,' announc ed T equila. 'W ho was ?' I as ked. 'Max.' 'W ell, I am very s orry to hear it. "Now, Lazy T om --" ' 'My granny was n't s orry,' s aid the c hild. 'S he s aid it were good riddanc e. My granny dribbles in 'er knic kers .' T he teac her c am e to m y aid. 'T equila! ' s he s napped. 'Lis ten to the s tory! ' I m anaged to finis h the ac c ount of Lazy T om . T he c hildren lis tened, even T equila, with m ouths open and eyes (as we s ay in Y orks hire) like c hapel hat pegs . Matty was the exc eption. He s at a little away from the other c hildren, a s m all pathetic figure with his head down. 'A nd here's a pic ture of Lazy T om ,' I s aid, turning the pic ture book around s o the c hildren c ould s ee the fat c at with the bright ginger fur and large green eyes . Matty glanc ed up. 'My gran's gorra fur c oat jus t like that,' rem arked T equila. 'B ut it 'ant gorra an 'ead on it.' 'Now c hildren,' I s aid, dec iding to ignore T equila's lates t s nippet, 'I would like to as k you a few ques tions about the s tory.' 'A s k m e! A s k m e! ' c ried T equila waving her hand in the air like a daffodil in the wind. 'I like ques tions .' 'No, I'm going to give s om eone els e a c hanc e,' I told her firm ly. 'You've had quite a lot to s ay this afternoon, Tequila, and now it's s om ebody els e's turn to s peak to m e. Now, jus t lis ten.' I s m iled in the direc tion of a s m all girl with long plaits and a s erious fac e who had lis tened to the s tory without a s ound or a m ovem ent. 'W hat about you?' I s aid. 'S he's s hy,' T equila told m e. 'S he dunt s ay owt.' 'S he m ight, given the c hanc e,' I s aid, breathing out heavily in exas peration. 'S he won't, s he's dead s hy.' 'W ell, s hall we as k her?' I as ked. 'I'm tellin' you, s he never s ays owt. S he never does ,' pers is ted the c hild. 'T equila! ' exhorted Mrs P rentic e. T he little girl at the c entre of the dis c us s ion looked down c oyly. 'W hat's your nam e?' I as ked her gently. ''E r nam e's E leanor,' T equila told m e, 'and s he's dead s hy. S he never s ays owt. I'll tell you about 'er.' 'No, you won't! ' I c ried.
'B ut s he won't s ay owt,' retorted the girl. T hen a loud and angry voic e c am e from the s ide of the room . It was Matty. 'For God's s ake, wom an, s hut yer gob! ' T equila looked s tartled and never s aid another word that les s on. W hen the bell rang for afternoon break, the c hildren c hanged into their outdoor s hoes , put on their c oats and gloves . Tequila, I notic ed, had rec overed and was regaling the teac her with a s tory about her m other hoovering up a m ous e the day before and then flus hing it down the toilet. S he wrapped hers elf up in a bright red c oat with m atc hing ac c es s ories . It looked as if butter wouldn't m elt in her m outh. W hen s he s aw m e s he m ade a beeline in m y direc tion. 'My teac her tells better s tories than you,' s he told m e bluntly. 'I din't like that s tory of yours about that c at.' 'I think it's playtim e, T equila,' I told her. 'W hy don't you go outs ide and get s om e fres h air.' 'I like m y teac her,' s he s aid. 'I heard 'er tellin' Mrs Gardiner I was "a right little m adam ".' W ith that s he s kipped off in the direc tion of the playground. Matty took off his s oiled plim s olls wearily and pulled on a pair of s c uffed s hoes and an old anorak with a ripped s leeve. P oor s ad little s c rap, I thought. A s I was heading for the s taff room with the teac her, I notic ed little E leanor hovering outs ide the c las s room door. 'Hello, E leanor,' I s aid c heerfully. 'Can I tell you s om ething?' s he whis pered. 'Of c ours e. W hat do you want to tell m e?' I as ked, bending down and looking into the s m all dark eyes . 'My A untie Rac hel's got s ixty-five ros es .' 'S ixty-five ros es ?' I s aid. 'S he's very luc ky your A untie Rac hel, is n't s he?' T he c hild s hook her head. 'No, s he's not. It's not nic e having s ixty-five ros es .' 'I thought your auntie would really like s o m any beautiful c oloured flowers with their lovely s m ell.' 'It's not nic e having s ixty-five ros es ,' s he pers is ted quietly. A nd then it dawned upon m e. Her auntie had jus t died. T hes e were the flowers at her funeral. 'Has your auntie died?' I as ked gently. 'No,' s aid the c hild in a voic e deep with indignation. 'S he's got s ixty-five ros es ! ' Mrs P rentic e, hearing the exc hange, and s eeing m y puzzlem ent and the c hild's , explained with a wry s m ile, 'S he m eans c ys tic fibros is , Mr P hinn.' Driving bac k to the offic e that afternoon, I began to think of the c hildren I had m et during the las t c ouple of weeks : J ohn and Rus s ell, Hugo and A lexander, K irit and Rois in. A ll of them , I gues s ed, c am e from hom es where there was jus tic e and hones ty, joy and grac e, c om pas s ion and love. A nd then there was Matty, that s ad little boy with the grubby fac e and the tight little m outh. I thought about our own unborn c hild, and prom is ed m ys elf that I would m ake him or her as happy a c hild as pos s ible. Chris tine and I had dis c us s ed nam es for our baby. If it were a boy, we thought we m ight c all him Matthew. T he nam e m eans Gift of God.
8 I arrived at the offic e one lunc htim e a week later in rather a s om bre m ood. I s till had little Matty on m y m ind and Mrs Gardiner's words 'W hatever will bec om e of him ?' kept interrupting m y thoughts . J us t what future lay in s tore for that s ad little boy? Mr Frobis her had als o reared his head again and the whole s orry bus ines s at K ing Henry's was s till preying on m y m ind. T he very las t thing I wanted to hear was J ulie's res ounding laughter c om ing down the s tairs . 'S om eone's in a good m ood,' I s aid gloom ily, as I entered the room . 'A nd s om eone's obvious ly not,' c am e bac k J ulie's quic k ripos te. S he was perc hed on the end of a des k in a ridic ulous ly s hort denim s kirt and tight-fitting pink jum per, s haring s om ething pres um ably very am us ing with Geraldine. 'W hy aren't you at W es t Challerton?' s he as ked bluntly. 'You're s uppos ed to be running a c ours e there this afternoon, aren't you?' 'Not until four o'c loc k,' I told her, heading for m y des k. 'It's an after-s c hool s es s ion. In any c as e, I'm not running the c ours e until next m onth. T his is a planning m eeting and it's the las t thing I want today, I c an tell you. Mr P ennington-S m ith is not m y favourite headteac her.' 'I s ym pathis e,' s aid Geraldine. It was a rare oc c urrenc e for the s uper-effic ient Dr Mullarkey to be in the offic e. S he would write up her reports at hom e, having put her young s on, J am ie, to bed, and s he tended to hide hers elf away in the S taff Developm ent Centre at lunc htim es in order to c atc h up with the offic e paperwork without interruptions . S he was a bit of a m ys tery was this pretty, s lender young wom an with raven-blac k hair and great blue eyes . W e knew very little about her pas t and I had to adm it that I, along with m y c olleagues , was intrigued to know who was the father of her c hild. S idney - of c ours e it had to be S idney - had onc e brought up the m atter of her little boy's parentage and rec eived s hort s hrift. 'My private life is m y private life, S idney,' Geraldine had told him s harply. 'I do not wis h to dis c us s it.' A nd that was the end of the m atter, but we s till longed to know. 'S o, what is your c ours e about?' Gerry now as ked m e. 'Language and learning,' I told her, pulling a fac e, 'and I am not looking forward to it at all.' 'I never feel c om fortable in Mr P ennington-S m ith's c om pany,' s he s aid. 'He's forever blowing his own trum pet and c ritic is ing the form er headteac her. Y ou s hould be flattered he's as ked you to run a c ours e for him , Gervas e. He does n't s trike m e as the s ort of m an to lis ten to advic e.' 'T ell S idney about it,' I s aid, rec alling his differenc e with the headm as ter about the plac e of art and des ign in the c urric ulum . 'W hat happened with S idney?' as ked Geraldine. 'Don't as k,' s aid J ulie. 'Get Mr Clam p on to that partic ular s ubjec t and you'll be here till the c ows c om e hom e.' 'J ulie's right, it's a long, long s tory,' I told her. 'A nyway, it's not Mr P ennington-S m ith who has as ked m e. It's a newly-appointed E nglis h teac her who has been given the res pons ibility of arranging s om e training for the s taff.' 'From what I have s een of the s c ienc e departm ent,' s aid Gerry, 'they need it. T o des c ribe them as m oribund would be an unders tatem ent. Mind you, Mr P ennington-S m ith is giving m ore tim e on the tim etable for the s c ienc es this year. T hat's one good thing.' I c ould have des c ribed S idney's reac tion to this initiative but I had a lot to do s o res is ted the tem ptation. 'W ell, I'd better get on with this little lot.' I pic ked up the heap of papers in m y in-tray. 'Oh, by the way, J ulie, I was hoping to have a word with Harold, if he's in.' I needed to talk to him about the Frobis her s ituation. 'He's been in s inc e s even this m orning,'J ulie inform ed m e. 'B ut he's not to be dis turbed this afternoon for at leas t another hour. He's had Dr Gore, Counc illor P eters on, Lord Marric k, various governors , everyone bar the Queen, on his phone all day. S om ething's going on at County Hall by the s ound of it. A ll very hus h-hus h.' 'S ounds intriguing,' I s aid. 'T here's been c om ings and goings all week,' s aid J ulie c on-s piratorially. 'I've never s een County Hall s o bus y. It's been a beehive of ac tivity. P eople buzzing about all over the plac e. T he las t tim e it was s o hec tic was when that headteac her ran off to S c arborough with the s c hool s ec retary and the s c hool fund. I was over in the P os t Room early yes terday m orning pic king up your m ail and that Derek - you know, the gangly lad with the s pec tac les and big ears - s aid he'd heard a real barny going on in Com m ittee Room T wo, Monday afternoon. Rais ed voic es , s lam m ing doors and banging on tables . A nd then Marlene on the s witc hboard s aid her hands were red raw putting c alls through to Dr Gore. Of c ours e, s he wouldn't tell us what about, but s om ething's afoot, you m ark m y words . T hen I s aw the S avage wom an - the Queen B ee hers elf - buzzing about like s om ebody not right in the head, s wirling about in her fanc y outfit, jangling her jewellery and pretending to be s om ebody im portant.' 'I gues s we'll hear s oon enough,' I s ighed, s tarting to s ort through the papers . 'A re you all right, Gervas e?' as ked Geraldine. 'Y es , I'm fine,' I replied. 'J us t a bit preoc c upied at the m om ent. W hat's this ?' I had c om e upon a bright yellow s heet of paper with 'URGE NT ' printed in large blac k bloc k c apitals at the top. 'T hat's what we were laughing at,' s aid Geraldine. 'It's Mrs S avage's lates t m em orandum . Y ou know s he's been nam ed as the 'Health and S afety' c ontac t in the E duc ation Departm ent?' 'Huh! ' grunted J ulie. 'W ell, s he s eem s to be taking her new role very s erious ly,' s aid Geraldine. 'S he'll be in c om bat outfit next,' added J ulie, 'going on c ours es for bom b dis pos al.' 'Lis ten to this .' Geraldine c leared her throat and read from her c opy of the yellow piec e of paper: '"Urgent! Health and S afety Circ ular Num ber 1: S us pic ious P ac kages . S hould you dis c over a pac kage, parc el, box, bundle, envelope, c ontainer or any other s us pec t rec eptac le" - Mrs S avage never us es one word when five will s uffic e - "with protruding wires and/or s tains and/or powdery s ubs tanc es and/or res idues whic h m ight be em itting unus ual nois es and/or has a s trange odour, do not attem pt to touc h, loos en, open, m ove, s hake or interfere with it, and under no c irc um s tanc es m us t it be im m ers ed in water. T his c ons titutes a s us pic ious pac kage." ' 'Y ou don't s ay,' s aid J ulie s arc as tic ally. 'I would never have gues s ed.' Geraldine read on. '"S hould you find s uc h an item , c ontac t the County Counc il Civil P rotec tion Unit (the CCCP U) im m ediately on extens ion 2222 and inform the des ignated Heath and S afety E duc ation Liais on Offic er, Mrs B . S avage, on extens ion 6666."' 'S he m us t think our brains are m ade of porridge,' s aid J ulie. S he turned to Gerry. 'I m ean, who in their right m ind is going to pic k up a tic king box that s m ells and s tart s haking it? J us t read him the next lot.' 'W ell,' s aid Gerry, 's he then has a s eries of other im portant piec es of inform ation. Lis ten to this . "T he County now has its own nuc lear fall-out s helter at Collington. T he fac ility, for us e by s enior c ounty c ounc il m em bers " - that pres um ably does n't inc lude us - "in the c as e of nuc lear holoc aus t or a national em ergenc y, is s ituated to the rear of Roper's S ales room , Furnival's Funeral P arlour and K wik Cutz Hairdres s ing S alon. T he offic ial opening by Counc illor George P eters on, Chair of the P lanning and Developm ent Control Com m ittee, s c heduled for Dec em ber, has been pos tponed for the tim e being due to vandals dam aging the s helter." It c ould s urvive a nuc lear attac k,' c huc kled Gerry, 'but not the ac tivities of the Collington vandals .' 'I rem em ber onc e,' s aid J ulie, laughing, 'when Mrs S avage s ent a s taffing bulletin round County Hall with an advert in it for a c hildren's c ros s ing patrol warden and added that applic ation form s were als o available in B raille.' S he looked pointedly in m y direc tion. 'A nd s peaking of s taffing bulletins , I notic e that Dr Y eats 's job is in the S taff V ac anc y B ulletin this week.' 'S o I believe,' I s aid c as ually. T he previous ac adem ic year Harold had inform ed the team of his intention to retire early. He had had enough, he told us . T he pres s ures of the job, the late nights , the inc reas ing workload were getting him down s o he had tendered his res ignation. S purred by m y c olleagues in the offic e, but not by Chris tine who thought I had quite enough on m y plate with a new wife and a new hous e, I had applied. I had not even been s hort-lis ted, never m ind interviewed. I had, of c ours e, been dis appointed but had been reas s ured by both Harold and Dr Gore that they would look favourably on an applic ation s om e tim e in the future when I had had m ore experienc e. A new S enior Ins pec tor, one S im on Carter, had been appointed. E ven before he had taken up the pos t he had m anaged to alienate everyone at County Hall with whom he c am e in c ontac t. T he initial m eetings ('to get to know eac h other') c onvinc ed us that he was a s ys tem s freak, a know-all and a s ingularly unpleas ant piec e of work. Mrs S avage, who initially had taken quite a s hine to him , very s oon c hanged her m ind when s he c am e under his s potlight and he began ques tioning her role, c ritic is ing her c orres pondenc e to s c hools and indic ating that he would be reviewing all her work. He als o inform ed her that s he would, if he had his way, be m oving out of her plus h offic e. T he c onfrontation between the two advers aries had reac hed a wonderfully dram atic c lim ax in the top c orridor of County Hall. E veryone was greatly relieved when Mr S im on Carter gave bac k-word and dec ided to take his c ons iderable expertis e and extens ive experienc e els ewhere. Harold had been prevailed upon to rem ain in pos t until his replac em ent, s till to be appointed, took up his pos ition whic h would be at the beginning of the S um m er term . T he advertis em ent for the pos ition was now in County Hall's S taff Vac anc y B ulletin and would be plac ed in the educ ational journals and news papers the following week. I therefore had a dec is ion to m ake and it was not an eas y one, not an eas y one at all. 'Y ou are going to apply, aren't you?' as ked J ulie, breaking into m y thoughts . 'I've not dec ided yet,' I replied. 'Y ou ought to,' s aid Gerry. 'I rec kon you'd have a really good c hanc e this tim e round.' 'W ell, we'll s ee,' I told her, s tarting to open m y letters . 'My, you are in a glum m ood this afternoon, aren't you,' obs erved J ulie. 'A s m y grandm a would s ay, you've got a fac e like a pan of fat.' 'J ulie,' I s aid s harply, 'I really do have to get on. I c am e in the offic e to reply to m y m ail, deal with the telephone m es s ages and finis h a report, not to dis c us s m y c areer.' 'Ooo, pardon m e! ' s he s aid, s liding off the des k. 'Look, I'm s orry if I s napped but I really do have a great deal to do this afternoon and I have to s ee Harold before I s et off for W es t Challerton.' 'W ell, don't take him any problem s ,'J ulie told m e. 'He's got enough of thos e on his plate to keep him oc c upied all term . T hurs day is his day for dealing with c om plaints . A s I s aid, he's been in s inc e s even and hard at it for m os t of the m orning with hardly tim e for a c up of c offee. He was s uppos ed to be s lowing down but s inc e he was as ked to s tay on it's as if he has another leas e of life. W ell, I'm going to the c anteen for m y lunc h and will try and find out what's going on from Doris . S he's s ure to have heard s om ething. S he hears everything from behind that s erving hatc h.' J ulie s traightened her m eagre s kirt, s tretc hed and headed for the door. 'Have there been any c alls for m e?' I as ked her before s he dis appeared. 'I was hoping that a Mr Frobis her from K ing Henry's m ight have got bac k to m e.' 'No, he has n't c alled. T here are about s ix or s even but only one urgent one,' s he told m e. 'Nothing from K ing Henry's , then?' 'No, but will you pleas e, pleas e ring that m an with the loud voic e. He keeps on c alling and he's nearly s ent m e dem ented bellowing down the line. I never got a word in, s o I don't know what his nam e is or what it was about. His telephone num ber is on your pad.' W ith that s he departed for the c anteen. 'Is there s om ething wrong?' as ked Geraldine when J ulie had c lattered down the s tairs on the abs urdly high-heeled s tiletto s hoes s he was fond of wearing. 'Y ou're not your us ual c heerful s elf today.' I told her about little Matty. 'T here are s om e c hildren,' I s aid, 'who will have every opportunity and advantage in life. T hey will be c heris hed, enc ouraged, s upported and loved as they grow up and there are others , like that little boy at Crom pton P rim ary S c hool, who has and will have prec ious little. I jus t find it s o very s ad and depres s ing, that's all. I've m et quite a few neglec ted c hildren in m y tim e. I jus t don't know why it's getting to m e now.' 'P erhaps it's bec aus e you're to be a father,' s aid Geraldine. 'B ec om ing a parent c hanges your whole outlook. It really does . T he things in life you thought were im portant - m oney, pos ition, job, s tatus - jus t pale into ins ignific anc e when you have a c hild. He or s he bec om es the c entre of your world.' 'For s om e parents , m aybe,' I s aid. 'I gues s not for Matty's . A s his headteac her pointed out, it's the s am e old s tory: unm arried m um , inadequate parenting, abs entee father -' I s topped m id-s entenc e and wis hed that the floor would open and s wallow m e up. 'I'm s orry, Geraldine, I didn't m ean -' S he laughed. 'Don't worry,' s he s aid. 'I'm us ed to it. In an ideal world a c hild s hould have a m other and a father, but s om etim es things don't work out. T hey didn't for m e.' 'Does J am ie s ee his father at all?' I as ked. 'No. Let's c hange the s ubjec t, s hall we?' s he replied quic kly. 'S o, what about Harold's job then? A re you going in for it?' 'P art of m e s ays , "Y es , it will be a trem endous c hallenge" and another part s ays , "Don't touc h it with a barge pole."' 'W ell, it's a dec is ion only you c an m ake,' s he s aid. 'Y es , I know.' W e both got on quietly with our work for the next hour or s o, whic h was thankfully c lear of interruptions . A t three o'c loc k I dec ided to s ee if Harold was free. I wanted to get his advic e about K ing Henry's College and have a c hat about the job at the s am e tim e. Harold's offic e was large but always appeared c luttered and c ram ped. A row of ugly olive-green m etal filing c abinets s tretc hed along one wall, a s et of heavy bookc as es , c ram m ed with box files , bulging folders , heavy tom es and thic k reports from the Minis try of E duc ation, filled the other. T here was a s quare of c arpet on the polis hed wooden floor and two hard-bac ked c hairs . Harold's anc ient oak des k, buried beneath a m ountain of paper, fac ed a s as h window through whic h one had an unins piring view of the rear of County Hall. It was a world away from the plus h offic e of Mrs S avage. 'Com e in! Com e in! ' exc laim ed Harold when I knoc ked and poked m y head around his door. 'Could I have a quic k word, Harold?' I as ked. 'Of c ours e, c om e in,' he replied, 'I wanted to s peak to you anyway. P ull up a c hair.' 'Y ou look bus y,' I s aid, nodding in the direc tion of his des k. 'A lways am , dear boy. E very T hurs day I s et the afternoon as ide to try and deal with all the problem s , c ontentious is s ues and c om plaints whic h dear Dr Gore, in his wis dom , s ends m y way. He has an unc anny habit of pas s ing the m os t awkward things on to m e to deal with.' Harold ges tured to a bright red folder before him . 'S till, I s houldn't c om plain. I s han't have this for m uc h longer.' 'S o there are a lot of c om plaints and problem s ?' I as ked. 'Oh yes , but that's part of the territory of the S enior Ins pec tor. For exam ple, there's a letter here from an irate parent c laim ing c om pens ation. A pparently his c hild's teac her s im ulated a volc anic eruption in c las s .' 'I'm s orry?' 'S he us ed health s alts , yellow powder paint and vinegar, and evidently c reated quite an im pres s ive dis play. Unfortunately, s he rather overdid the health s alts and powder paint and one c hild arrived hom e like the Gingerbread Man, a bright golden c olour from head to foot. T he father wants to know who is paying for the c leaning of the c hild's c lothes and what c om pens ation will be forthc om ing for the dis tres s c aus ed.' 'S illy m an,' I s aid. 'Maybe, but I have to deal with it. It s tarts as a s m all c om plaint, then the loc al news papers get hold of it and it's blown out of all proportion. T hen I've rec eived s everal letters about bullying whic h, of c ours e, have to be taken very s erious ly, a c ouple c onc erning exc luded pupils , and a letter from S is ter Clare of the S ac red Heart Convent, c om plaining, in no unc ertain term s , about the opening of a s ex s hop oppos ite the gates of the s c hool.' 'I never realis ed you had all this to do.' 'A nd there's m ore. T here's the headteac her who is c onvinc ed the head of the infant departm ent is a witc h and has put a c urs e on him and the Frenc h as s is tante who allegedly as s aulted a s ixth form s tudent with a banana.' 'A banana?' I repeated. 'S he was us ing s om e plas tic fruit as vis ual aids to get her c las s to prac tis e their Frenc h when a boy m ade s om e c lever c om m ent. T he as s is tante, who c an't have been m uc h older than the boy him s elf, evidently threw this banana at him whic h unfortunately hit the boy s m ac k between the eyes , knoc king off his glas s es , before rebounding to the teac her like a boom erang. From what the Chair of Governors s ays in his letter, Madem ois elle Regine c aught the m is s ile and rec eived a s tanding ovation from the c las s .' I s hook m y head and s m iled. 'I'm afraid the boy's parents did not s ee the funny s ide and have c ontac ted a s olic itor. I've jus t been s peaking to the headteac her.' 'I c an't s ee it s tanding up in c ourt,' I s aid. ' "A nd what was the offens ive weapon?" as ks the judge. "It was a banana, m y lord." ' 'It m ay s ound bizarre,' s aid Harold, 'but it has to be dealt with nevertheles s . T he hours I s pend dealing with s uc h is s ues .' He gave a great toothy s m ile. 'B ut not for m uc h longer. I s hall pas s on all s uc h m atters , with a light heart, to m y s uc c es s or.' 'I s ee,' I s aid thoughtfully. Harold as s um ed a grave expres s ion. 'Now, I'm pleas ed you popped in, Gervas e, bec aus e m y bigges t and m os t urgent problem this week c onc erns Hawks rill P rim ary S c hool.' 'Hawks rill's a s plendid s c hool,' I s aid. 'W hat's the problem ?' 'Y es , I am told it's a very good s c hool,' replied Harold, 'and the reports I have read bear that out. W ell, the fac t of the m atter is , it's c los ing.' 'Clos ing! ' I exc laim ed. 'I'm afraid s o. T here was an E duc ation S ub-Com m ittee m eeting earlier this week - went on until after eight in the evening. I had to s it outs ide in that draughty top c orridor of County Hall for nearly an hour waiting to be c alled. It was a terribly c ontentious m eeting, interm inable argum ents , ac rim onious exc hanges . A nyway, the long and s hort of it is that the S ub-Com m ittee has dec ided, reluc tantly I have to s ay, to c los e the s c hool next year.' 'W hy, for heaven's s ake?' 'W ell, I am s ure you are aware that there have to be big c uts in the educ ational budget. S m all s c hools like Hawks rill are not really viable. It's m uc h m ore c os t effec tive to have larger s c hools and c los e the ones in s om e of the very s m all villages . Hawks rill's building needs quite a deal of work on it. T he roof's leaking, the toilets require s om e refurbis hing and the perim eter fenc e needs repairing. T he headteac her, Mrs B eighton, and her as s is tant, Mrs B rown, have both indic ated that they are looking to retire in the near future s o there would be no redundanc ies or redeploym ents . A ll in all, it's quite fortuitous .' 'It's not fortuitous for the c hildren at the s c hool,' I protes ted. 'P erhaps not,' s aid Harold, rubbing his c hin, 'but they c an be bus s ed the few m iles to the neighbouring s c hool. Y ou s ee, Hawks rill only has about thirty c hildren and the village has an ageing and dec lining population.' 'Hang on, I live in Hawks rill,' I rem inded him . 'Y es , yes , I know, and that is why I wanted to have a quiet word with you prior to the news getting out.' 'I don't like the idea of this at all, Harold,' I s aid. 'I'm not at all keen on any c hild of m ine being bus s ed in and out of the village every day, partic ularly in winter along thos e twis ting, narrow roads . One of the reas ons Chris tine and I dec ided to live in Hawks rill was its lovely s c hool.' 'Y es , I quite unders tand that, but there is really no alternative. Counc illor P eters on and the E duc ation S ub-Com m ittee -' 'I m ight have gues s ed Counc illor P eters on would have a hand in it,' I interrupted. 'He and the S ub-Com m ittee,' c ontinued Harold, 'c ons idered all the options and reluc tantly dec ided that five s m all s c hools , inc luding Hawks rill, will be c los ed in the next ac adem ic year. I do s ee his point. It's jus t not ec onom ic to keep s uc h s m all village s c hools open with dwindling pupil populations and the ris ing c os ts of repair and m aintenanc e. I'm s orry, but there it is . T he headteac her and the Chair of Governors will be inform ing the parents by letter next Friday. T hen, no doubt, there will be a m eeting with the governors , parents and other interes ted parties , whic h is likely to be a very lively affair if previous m eetings of this nature are anything to go by. T his will be followed by the appeals proc edures , various further m eetings and pos s ibly a tribunal.' Harold s m iled. 'Your c hild m ight very well be at s ec ondary s c hool by the tim e Hawks rill ac tually c los es .' I didn't s m ile. I was feeling s hell-s hoc ked. 'A nyway, Gervas e, I jus t wanted you to know before it hits the papers . Now, was there s om ething you wanted to have a word with m e about?' 'No, nothing,' I s aid, getting up. 'Nothing at all.' I returned to the offic e even m ore depres s ed than before. Geraldine had gone but J ulie was there, plac ing m y typed letters on m y des k along with a m ug of c offee. I had to hand it to her. S he was an exc ellent s ec retary, and - des pite always being overworked - s he was highly effic ient and very organis ed. S he had had, for a few weeks the previous year, a c leric al as s is tant c alled Frank, a hard-working and good-natured young m an, but when he had been prom oted to work in Financ ial S ervic es , he had not been replac ed and s he was bac k holding the fort s ingle-handed. 'Have you rung that m an with the loud voic e yet?' J ulie as ked now. 'P ardon?' I as ked. 'T he m an with the loud voic e, who wants to s peak to you urgently. Have you phoned him ?' 'No.' 'P leas e would you do it? I'm s ic k of his bellowing down the phone at m e.' I s ighed heavily. 'A ll right. I'll do it now,' I s aid. I s tared at the notepad on m y des k. It's am azing, I thought to m ys elf, how life c an s uddenly c hange. One m inute everything is right with the world and the next it has all turned s our. Firs t Mr Frobis her, now Hawks rill s c hool c los ing. 'S o are you going to phone him ?' as ked J ulie. 'Y es , yes ,' I s napped. 'In a m inute.' 'Right,' s he s aid and left the offic e.
I dialled the num ber on the pad. 'Hello, m y nam e is Gervas e P hinn,' I s aid wearily when I heard the phone being pic ked up at the other end. 'I believe s om eone on this num ber wis hes to s peak to m e.' "E llo! 'E llo! Is that Mes ter P hinn?' c am e a thunderous voic e down the line. 'It is ,' I s aid, before holding the rec eiver at arm 's length. 'J ac ob B annis ter, 'ere. T ha m ight 'ave 'eard of us . "J B B 's Quality A nim al Feeds ".' 'No, I'm afraid not, Mr B annis ter,' I replied, before s tretc hing the rec eiver away from m y ear again. 'W e're very big in thes e parts ! ' he s houted. 'Y ou m ight 'ave c om e ac ros s our vans with the s logan "Rearing is as eas y as A B C, when you buy your feeds from J B B ".' 'W ell, I don't have m uc h c all for anim al feeds in m y line of work,' I told him . 'E h?' he bellowed. 'I s aid, I don't have - W hat c an I do for you, Mr B annis ter?' 'T ha're like t'S c arlet bloody P im pernel. I've been trying to s peak to you for a c ouple of weeks . "T hey s eek 'im 'ere, they s eek 'im theer." T ha're never in.' 'No, I s pend m os t of m y tim e in s c hools , Mr B annis ter,' I replied, rather piqued. 'T hat's what I do for a living.' 'E h?' 'I'm a s c hool ins pec tor. I try to get into s c hools as m uc h as pos s ible. Now, what c an I do for you?' 'I 'ear you do talks .' I s hould have gues s ed. He wanted m e to s peak at s om e dinner or other. S hortly after bec om ing a s c hool ins pec tor I had been dragooned into s peaking at a c harity event. T he very pers uas ive nun, S is ter B rendan, headteac her of S t B artholom ew's S c hool, had invited m e to give a light-hearted talk at the s c hool one evening to rais e m oney for dis advantaged c hildren. I had been delighted, and not a little s urpris ed, to dis c over that m y talk had been warm ly rec eived. S om e weeks later I had rec eived an invitation from the wonderfully nam ed and very form idable Mrs Cleaver-Canning - or, rather, the Honourable Mrs Cleaver-Canning - to s peak at her golf c lub Ladies ' Night dinner. I had been rec om m ended by a friend of hers who had heard m e s peak at s om e c harity evening. T hings had then s nowballed and I was s oon rec eiving invitations from Rotary Clubs and W om en's Ins titutes , S oroptom is t groups and Towns wom en's Guilds , and all m anner of lunc heon c lubs . T hes e organis ations generous ly s upplem ented the funds of s everal c hildren's c harities and m y rec eption had been, without exc eption, very pos itive. 'Y es , I do s peak at different func tions ,' I told Mr B annis ter. 'B ut at the m om ent -' 'A fter dinner talks like t'one m y brother's wife's 'eard you at, at t'Countrywom en's A s s oc iation Dinner in Ribs dyke a c ouple o'm onths bac k? S he s aid tha were a funny m an.' I was not feeling partic ularly 'funny' that afternoon. 'I've been c alled m any things , Mr B annis ter, but -' 'E h?' 'I am rather bus y at the m om ent,' I told him . 'E h?' 'I s aid I am bus y at the m om ent.' 'I don't want tha to s peak this very m inute, Mes ter P hinn,' he s aid. I s ighed. 'S o would you like m e to s peak at a func tion?' I as ked. 'E h?' 'I s aid, would you like m e to s peak at a dinner?' I was rais ing m y voic e an oc tave higher. 'A ye that's t'idea. A t Fettles ham Farm ers ' Club Dinner, Dec em ber the firs t. W e're rais in' m oney for T 'Children's S oc iety. For them kiddies what don't have m uc h goin' for 'em .' 'Y es , I know T he Children's S oc iety,' I s aid. 'It's a very worthy c harity.' 'W ell,' s houted the s peaker down the line, 'I know it's a fair bit off but I wants to get things s oarted. T o tell you t'truth we was let down by t's peaker we booked, c ric keter for Y orks hire in t'dim and dis tant pas t. Never 'eard of 'im m i's en. I'm a rugby union m an. A nyroad, how're tha fixed?' 'I s hould explain, Mr B annis ter -' 'J ac ob! ' 'I s hould explain, J ac ob, that I am not a c om edian. I don't tell blue jokes or anything like that.' 'Coours e tha dunt. W e don't want owt like that. W e want s om m at funny wi'out being m uc ky. A nd m y brother's s is ter s aid tha'd fit t'bill a treat.' 'It's Dec em ber the firs t, you s ay.' I flic ked through m y diary. I was free but felt like s aying no, s uc h was the m ood I was in. T hen I thought of Matty. He was the kind of c hild T he Children's S oc iety helped. 'A re tha s till theer?' roared the voic e down the line. 'Y es , I'm s till here,' I told him . 'S o, tha'll do it?' 'Y es ,' I replied, 'I'll do it.' 'Cham pion! ' he roared, nearly burs ting m y eardrum . 'W e m eet at T 'Marric k A rm s in Chapelwaters thwaite at s even prom pt. It's a bit diffic ult to find. Does tha know it?' 'Oh, yes , I know Chapelwaters thwaite,' I told him . 'I know it well.' T he very firs t s c hool I had vis ited when I had bec om e a s c hool ins pec tor had been at B ac kwaters thwaite in the neighbouring village. It had been the devil's own job to find and I had m otored at a s nail's s peed up hill and down dale, along twis ting narrow roads and through c ountles s villages whic h all looked the s am e, until I had finally arrived at T he Marric k A rm s in Chapelwaters thwaite. I had got to know the pub pretty well in the next half hour - I m us t have pas s ed it a good few tim es before I had finally found the right road to B ac kwaters thwaite. S o, yes , I knew well the venue for the farm ers ' dinner. 'Now, it's nowt fanc y,' s houted the s peaker down the line. 'T ha dunt need no "penguin s uit" or owt o' that s ooart.' 'Right,' I s aid. 'E e, I'm reight glad tha c an do it, Mes ter P hinn. My brother's wife, 'er what's in t' Ribs dyke Countrywom en's A s s oc iation, s aid tha were a real barrel of laughs .' 'Really,' I s ighed.
9 'I am not happy, Mr Clam p,' c om plained Connie. 'I'm not happy at all, having harem s of naked wom en c avorting about the plac e.' 'Connie,' replied S idney, his beard bris tling and his eyes flas hing wildly, 'there will be no harem s of naked wom en. T here will be one wom an, a s ingle pers on, an individual, and s he will be doing no c avorting, I c an as s ure you of that.' 'I don't c are how m any of them there are,' retorted the c aretaker of the S taff Developm ent Centre, 'I jus t do not like that s ort of thing going on on m y prem is es .' Connie, with her round, florid fac e, bright c opper-c oloured perm , brilliant pink nylon overall and the large m ultic oloured feather dus ter, whic h s he invariably wielded like a field m ars hal's baton, res em bled a huge, s avage and exotic bird of prey. S he was a blunt, hard-working and down-to-earth Y orks hire wom an and s he kept the prem is es s potles s but s he ruled the plac e with a rod of iron. Like m any Yorks hire folk, s he had s trong and unwavering views whic h s he was not afraid of expres s ing. S he was , as they s ay in Yorks hire 'not bac kwards in c om ing forwards '. S he had no c onc eption of rank or s tatus and treated everyone who entered her em pire exac tly the s am e, be he the exalted Minis ter of E duc ation or a m an to c lear the bloc ked drains . S he c ould be obs tinate, diffic ult and outs poken but Connie pos s es s ed a great im puls e for generos ity and an intens e pride in the work s he undertook. It was a warm Friday afternoon towards the end of S eptem ber and I was at the S taff Developm ent Centre, where all the teac hers ' c ours es were held, to direc t a c onferenc e on the teac hing of S hakes peare. I had arrived jus t after lunc h to find Connie and S idney in heated dis c us s ion in the entranc e hall. 'Look here, Connie,' s aid S idney, c hanging tac k and forc ing a s m ile, 'there will be nothing going on here. T he pers on, in the s ingular, is not a s tripteas e artis te, s he is a m odel, a profes s ional m odel, one who pos es tas tefully for artis ts to s ketc h, draw and paint.' 'B ut s he'll have nothing on,' pers is ted Connie. 'Of c ours e s he'll have nothing on,' s aid S idney, trying to c ontain his anger. 'S he is a nude. Nude m odels do not generally get wrapped up as if they're going on an A ntarc tic expedition. T hey pos e nude s o artis ts c an draw them . T he whole point is for the artis t to s ee them au naturel.' 'S ee them what?' as ked Connie. 'In the natural form , unenc um bered.' 'W ith nothing on,' pers is ted Connie. 'Y es , with nothing on.' 'W ell, I don't like it.' 'A nd as for c avorting about the plac e,' S idney explained, 's he will be s tatic , s tationary, im m obile, m otionles s , inert, s itting on a c hair.' 'S he c ould be s itting on top of the E iffel Tower for all I c are, Mr Clam p,' s aid Connie, flouris hing the feather dus ter like a wand. 'S he s till won't have a s titc h of c lothing on. S he'll be dis playing everything s he's got to the world and his wife. W ell, I think it's quite dis gus ting, grown m en ogling a young wom an and c alling it artific ated. I'm as broad-m inded as the next pers on and I like nic e pic tures but they have to leave s om ething to the im agination. Nobody c an ac c us e m e of being a P haris ee.' 'P hilis tine,' m urm ured S idney. 'A what?' 'It's P hilis tine, not P haris ee.' 'W hat is ?' 'Oh, never m ind,' s ighed S idney. 'A s I was s aying,' s aid Connie, 'I'm not one of thes e P haris ees , but I draw the line at naked wom en.' 'Y ou m ake it s ound like S odom and Gom orrah,' m um bled S idney. 'T here's no c all for that s ort of language, Mr Clam p, thank you very m uc h! ' S idney appealed to m e. 'Gervas e, pleas e try and enlighten Connie. I have an art c ours e c om ing up next week and I have a fem ale m odel for the teac hers to s ketc h as part of the figure-drawing works hop. Can you im pres s upon Connie here that I am not opening a S oho s trip joint, a bordello or a night c lub for lap danc ers ?' 'Connie,' 1 s aid, c om ing to S idney's defenc e, 'all the great artis ts painted and drew the naked fem ale form - P ic as s o, Matis s e, Goya, Leonardo da V inc i, Mic helangelo -' 'A ll foreigners ,' Connie interrupted. 'W ell, of c ours e, that does n't s urpris e m e one jot. B ut what I am s urpris ed at, Mr P hinn, is you taking Mr Clam p's s ide. Y ou, a newly m arried m an with a baby on the way and liking that s ort of thing.' 'W hat I'm trying to s ay,' I pers evered, 'is that there's really nothing dis gus ting about it.' 'W ell, you would s ay that,' replied Connie, in no way m ollified. 'You're a m an. You're all the s am e when it c om es to naked wom en. I've s een them on the bus es gawping at all thos e news paper pic tures of half-dres s ed wom en and looking at the top s helf in the news agents . I've s een m y Ted at it. You c an c all it tas teful if you like, Mr Clam p, and try to talk m e round until the c ows c om e hom e. I think a young wom an taking off all her c lothes for m en to have a good gander at is dis gus ting. Now, I'm broad-m inded to the point of obs c enity, but I draw the line at naked girls .' 'S he is not a girl,' groaned S idney. 'Miriam is getting on for s ixty, for goodnes s s ake.' 'Getting on for s ixty! ' gas ped Connie. 'W ell, s he ought to be as ham ed of hers elf, s tripping off for people at her age. S he ought to be going ballroom danc ing or flower arranging at her tim e of life, not taking her c lothes off for m en.' I left the two c om batants and headed for the room where m y c onferenc e was to take plac e. I wanted to c hec k that everything was ready. I had thirty s ec ondary s c hool E nglis h teac hers s igned up for the afternoon and had as ked the widely-publis hed S hakes pearean s c holar, Lawrenc e P arry-W ils on, to give a keynote talk to be followed by ques tions . It had taken s om e pers uading on m y part for P rofes s or P arry-W ils on to s peak bec aus e, as he had explained to m e, he was m as s ively bus y. I had felt pretty pleas ed with m ys elf when he had finally agreed. T hat feeling of elation s oon dis appeared when he opened his m outh. To s ay the lec ture was dry and unins piring would be an unders tatem ent. P rofes s or P arry-W ils on's books were c hallenging, inform ative and readable but his s kills as a public s peaker were c learly very lim ited. He m um bled his way through a prepared text in wearis om e detail, s huffling and s c ratc hing, grunting and grim ac ing. S om etim es he would s top, s tare vac antly out of the window and then nod as if s om e uns een pres enc e were s peaking to him . I c ould s ee the teac hers getting inc reas ingly res tles s . W hen it c am e to the ques tions , I was the only one who rais ed a hand and, before ans wering, the profes s or s c ratc hed his beard, grunted and nodded thoughtfully, before finally launc hing into an alm os t inc om prehens ible s erm on. I had allowed an hour for ques tions , hoping that a lively debate would ens ue, but by three-thirty it was c lear things were not going to im prove, s o I thanked the profes s or and c los ed the c ours e. I dreaded what the teac hers ' evaluation s heets would reveal. It would have been m uc h better, I thought to m ys elf as I headed for the kitc hen for a c up of tea, to have had Mr P urdey of K ing Henry's College s peaking to the teac hers about how he taught S hakes peare. It would have been m ore interes ting and a whole lot m ore us eful. 'Y ou've finis hed early,' s aid Connie, poking her head through the s erving hatc h in the kitc hen. 'I thought your c onferenc e was due to finis h at four.' 'It was , but we finis hed early.' 'I had to tell that m an with the fuzzy hair and the goatee beard, him what did the talk for you, not to bloc k m y entranc e at the front. He parked right in front of the red and yellow c ones . It's a health and s afety hazard parking there, as I'm always telling people. I m ight as well talk to m ys elf all the notic e they take. You would think that thes e c lever people c ould read a s im ple notic e, wouldn't you?' 'I'm afraid that was m y fault, Connie,' I told her, c om ing into the kitc hen. 'T he c ar park was full and I s aid it would be all right for him to leave his c ar there.' 'W ell, pleas e don't in future, Mr P hinn. If there was a fire in the c entre, a c ar parked there would be an im pedim ent.' I c hanged the s ubjec t. 'Has Mr Clam p gone?' 'He has , and I c an't s ay that I'm s orry either. Naked wom en indeed! ' Connie s hook her head and took two m ugs out of the c upboard. 'I'm going to have a word with Dr Yeats about this . It's not part of m y job des c ription, c atering for that s ort of thing. I m ean I've got all s orts of people in the Centre. T here's a W om en's Ins titute m eeting here next week on that day. It's enough to give the poor ladies heart attac ks , c onfronted with a naked wom an.' S he s pooned c offee into the m ugs and c lic ked on the kettle. 'In m y experienc e the W I are pretty broad-m inded, Connie,' I s aid. 'How would you know?' 'My m other was in the W I. It's not all jam and J erus alem you know.' 'W ell, the W I are not that broad-m inded, I c an tell you. You wouldn't get them taking their c lothes off and pos ing for anyone, not at their age anyway. A nd then there's that nun who's always in here on c ours es , that S is ter B renda. S uppos e s he's here when this m odel is s tripping off and s wanning around the plac e in her altogether.' 'I don't think an artis ts ' m odel is likely to be s wanning about the plac e in her birthday s uit, Connie,' I s aid. 'I gues s s he'll s tay put in the room .' 'Y es , well I don't like it and I've warned Mrs Os baldis ton already about Mr Clam p's s henanigans .' 'W ho's Mrs Os baldis ton?' I as ked. 'Didn't I s ay? S he's m y neighbour is Mrs Os baldis ton and I've as ked her to hold the fort while I'm off next week. S he c leans at the High S c hool. I've as ked her to c om e in. I s hall be away next T ues day for three days .' S he poured hot water into the two m ugs and reac hed for the m ilk jug. 'You don't have s ugar, do you?' 'No, thank you. Y ou're away next week, did you s ay?' 'Y es , I'll not be in for a few days .' 'S o you'll not be here for Mr Clam p's c ours e?' I as ked, pic king up a m ug. 'No, I won't and I'm glad I won't as well.' I c hanged the s ubjec t. 'A re you going on holiday?' 'Not at this tim e of year, I'm not,' s he told m e. 'I'm taking m y father's as hes to Dunkirk. It's s om ething I prom is ed him I would do, s c atter his as hes where s om e of his pals had been killed, but I've jus t not got around to doing it.' Connie's father had died the previous year. 'He lived in a c ellar for a week at Dunkirk, you know, with nothing but a pound of s ugar and rain water until he m anaged to get out on one of thos e little boats . Do you want a Garibaldi bis c uit?' 'No, thank you.' 'T hat's what brought his s tutter on, you know. He always s aid he wanted to res t with thos e pals of his who never m ade the journey hom e. He was a Dunkirk V eteran. I'm going with m y T ed to s c atter his as hes .' Connie s niffed and took a s ip of c offee. 'Oh, look at m e now, I'm getting all weepy.' 'He was a brave m an, Connie,' I s aid. 'He was the bes t father you c ould hope for, was Dad. Never rais ed a hand to m e, never us ed a bad word. He was always there for m e, he was . W hen you're growing up you s pend m os t of your tim e trying to get away from your parents , don't you? You always think you know better. You always think they're forever nagging you and not letting you do this , that and the other. W hen I was a girl, I had to tell Dad where I was going and who I was m eeting. I had to be in by a c ertain tim e and woe betide if I c am e in late. I c ouldn't wear this s kirt or that m ake-up.' S he took a s ip of c offee and s ighed. 'You never really apprec iate your parents when you're young. It's only when they're dead do you realis e you never c an get away from them . T hey're always going to be with you in your thoughts and in your m em ories . A nd when they're dead, you s top being a c hild, don't you?' S om etim es Connie uttered the m os t profound thoughts . 'Oh, I nearly forgot, you have a m es s age.' 'From whom ?' 'T hat Mrs S avage at County Hall. T he one who s ounds as if s he's got a potato s tuc k in her m outh. S he s aid to phone her im m ediately.' 'Now what does s he want?' I s ighed. 'I don't know, but s he s aid it was urgent. S he's got a tongue as s harp as a butc her's knife, that one, and a look as c old as a c em etery. I've had c onfrontations with that wom an before now, parking that fanc y red s ports c ar s o it bloc ks m y entranc e, flouting health and s afety regulations .' 'S he's been put in c harge of that at County Hall,' I told Connie. 'Of what?' 'Health and s afety.' 'W ell, s he's the las t one to tell people about health and s afety. Mind you, it does n't s urpris e m e at all. P eople without m uc h s ubs tanc e always ris e to the top like froth on the top of c offee.' S he s tared for a m om ent at the m ug s he was holding. 'I think this m ilk's off. A nyway, I wouldn't bother phoning now. Let her wait until Monday.' W hat an end to the week! It had been full of trials and tribulations and it would, no doubt, end on an ac rim onious note. Ignoring Connie's advic e, I headed for the offic e with a s inking heart to telephone Mrs S avage. 'Y ou wanted to s peak to m e, Mrs S avage?' I s aid rather form ally when I finally got through. 'Y es , I did,' s he replied ic ily. 'Dr Gore wis hes to s ee you.' 'W hen?' 'A t onc e.' 'I s ee.' I res is ted the urge to as k what about but I had a s hrewd idea it c onc erned the wretc hed report on K ing Henry's . 'W ell, I'll be there pres ently.' 'May I im pres s on you, Mr P hinn,' c ontinued Mrs S avage, 'that it is a m atter of utm os t urgenc y. I take it the c ours e you have pres um ably been direc ting has now finis hed?' 'Y es , it has .' 'W ell, in that c as e, c ould you return to County Hall A S A P ?' W ithout waiting for a reply s he c ontinued. 'I will inform Dr Gore that you are on your way.' W ith that s he thum ped down the phone. I s at bac k on the c hair, s ighed and s hook m y head. 'S he gets wors e,' I m urm ured to m ys elf. Connie appeared at the door with m y m ug of c offee. 'It's getting c old, this ,' s he s aid. 'S orry Connie,' I told her. 'I've got to go. I've got an appointm ent.' Dr Gore, Chief E duc ation Offic er for the County of Y orks hire, peered over the top of his s m all, gold-fram ed s pec tac les and then, res ting his hands on the large m ahogany des k in front of him , s m iled like a c ontented c at. 'A nd how are you, Gervas e?' he purred, s teepling his long fingers in front of him like a judge about to pas s s entenc e. 'I'm very well, Dr Gore, thank you,' I replied, attem pting to hide m y nervous nes s . 'Good, good,' the CE O m urm ured. He s tared for a m om ent and nodded thoughtfully. 'A nd how is that lovely wife of yours ? Is s he keeping well?' 'V ery well, thank you, Dr Gore,' I replied. 'A nd when is the baby due?' 'T he end of Marc h.' ' "W han that A prill with his s houres s oote, T he droghte of Marc h hath perc ed to the roote." ' 'E r, yes .' 'Chauc er.' 'Y es ,' I replied, wis hing he would get on with it and put m e out of m y m is ery. 'W ell,' he s aid after a weighty paus e, 'I'm s ure you are wondering why I s ent for you.' 'Y es , I w as wondering,' I replied, getting m ore and m ore tens e. 'I was s peaking to Mr Nels on las t week,' he s aid c as ually. Here we go, I thought. 'He's in the s am e Rotary Club as I am , you know. He's next year's Dis tric t Governor, as a m atter of fac t. Y ou're not a Rotarian are you, Gervas e?' 'No, no, I'm not.' 'W onderful organis ation is Rotary. "S ervic e before S elf" - that's our m otto. Do you know, we rais ed a thous and pounds las t year for a s ens ory garden at S t Catherine's S pec ial S c hool?' 'Really?' 'A nyway, Mr Nels on m entioned you had paid a vis it to K ing Henry's College rec ently.' 'Y es , I did,' I s aid. 'T ook a bit of a look at the E nglis h departm ent, I believe.' 'I did, yes .' 'I gather you were not im pres s ed with one partic ular teac her?' 'A bout the report, Dr Gore -' I s tarted to s ay. 'A h yes , the report,' s aid the CE O, res ting his elbows on the des k and peering at m e over the top of his s m all, gold-fram ed s pec tac les . 'Mr Nels on s aid that he had never read a report quite like it.' 'Oh dear,' I m um bled. 'I m us t s ay that when I read it, it was , how s hall we put it, rather direc t and to the point. Y ou c ertainly didn't pull any punc hes .' 'I would like to s ay, Dr Gore -' I began again. He leaned bac k in his c hair. 'B ut, of c ours e, that's as it s hould be.' I s tared at him . 'I beg your pardon?' 'I s aid, that's how it s hould be.' 'It is ?' 'W hy, yes . I want m y s c hool ins pec tors to give c lear, hones t and objec tive as s es s m ents of what they s ee. To tell m e how it is . You wouldn't be doing your job if all you did was s ay that everything was fine. I have to s ay that s om etim es the reports whic h land on m y des k are very bland. I rec all Mr Carter, who was to have taken over from Dr Y eats , was very c ritic al of the lac k of foc us and c lear is s ues for ac tion in s om e of the ins pec tors ' reports . Y es , I too thought your report on K ing Henry's was exc ellent. W ell done.' 'Mr Nels on thought it was an exc ellent report?' I as ked, dum bfounded. 'Y es , indeed. W e didn't, of c ours e, dis c us s the report at our Rotary m eeting. T hat would have been entirely inappropriate. Mr Nels on m erely m entioned it was extrem ely well written and to the point. J us t wanted to put in a good word on your behalf 'I s ee.' 'I did read through the report with the others this m orning and I m us t s ay you c ertainly have got to the nub of the problem in the E nglis h departm ent. I rang up Mr Nels on to have a word and from what I gather the head of departm ent at K ing Henry's , Mr Frobis her I believe his nam e is , has bec om e rather tired and a little c ynic al over the pas t few years , not inc om petent or anything like that but, to us e c om m on parlanc e, pas t his s ell-by-date. He c an, I believe, be quite diffic ult at tim es . W hen Mr Frobis her returned to s c hool las t week - evidently he had been away ill for the firs t tim e in living m em ory - the headm as ter as ked to s ee
him and it was not a very good-hum oured m eeting, by all ac c ounts . Mr Nels on was quite taken abac k with Mr Frobis her's reac tion but rather pleas ed with the outc om e. T he teac her c onc erned has dec ided to take early retirem ent whic h c ertainly s uits Mr Nels on. He c an now appoint s om eone m ore dynam ic and enthus ias tic .' 'I s ee,' I m um bled, hardly able to take in what I was hearing. 'S o, your report was extrem ely effec tive.' Dr Gore paus ed and s tared again over his glas s es . 'You know, Gervas e, when you applied for the S enior Ins pec tor's pos t las t year, one res ervation I did have about you was that you m ight not have the m ettle to be quite as c ritic al as s om etim es it is nec es s ary to be. You're an enthus ias tic enough young m an, you get on with people, have a pleas ant m anner, you are hard-working et c etera but I had that nagging doubt whether or not you c ould be forc eful enough to gras p the nettle. S om etim es one has to have a c ritic al word, s ay the unpalatable. I think you have proved that you c an.' 'T hank you, Dr Gore,' I s aid. I s uppos e I s hould have felt happy and relieved but for s om e reas on I felt even m ore depres s ed. My report had been the m eans to end a teac her's c areer. 'A nyhow,' c ontinued the CE O am iably and s m iling widely, 'it was n't about K ing Henry's that I wanted to s ee you.' 'No?' 'No,' he repeated. 'I have a little job for you.' 'Oh,' was all I c ould m us ter up to s ay. I was well ac quainted with Dr Gore's 'little jobs ', having been given quite a num ber of them in m y tim e with the E duc ation Departm ent, and they were never 'little'. 'Y ou are, no doubt, aware that I s it on s everal m ajor national c om m ittees and working parties . One is the "E uropean Interm ediary E duc ation Initiative" - the E IE I.' 'Oh,' I s aid. 'E IE I enables teac hers and ins pec tors to vis it other E uropean c ountries to s tudy and c om pare the educ ation s ys tem s there.' T his didn't s ound too bad, I thought to m ys elf and I quite c heered up. A week in S weden or S pain or a few days touring the s c hools in Germ any or Franc e s ounded a 'little job' I c ould very m uc h enjoy. 'Next term ,' c ontinued Dr Gore, 'there will be a s m all group of ins pec tors from various E uropean c ountries vis iting the c ounty to look at the educ ation we provide. It is all funded by the E IE I.' 'Oh,' I s aid again. It was beginning to s ound like the c horus to 'Old Mac donald had a Farm '. 'I would like you to arrange for our foreign c olleagues to vis it a num ber of different s c hools s o they m ay obs erve s om e les s ons and talk with teac hers .' My hopes of a c ontinental expedition were das hed. 'In addition, you c ould perhaps s et up a c ouple of m eetings at the S taff Developm ent Centre with invited headteac hers and governors to talk about the educ ation s ys tem over here and m aybe organis e an inform al evening rec eption. T hat s ort of thing. You c an enlis t the help of your c olleagues and, of c ours e, Mrs S avage will liais e with you and be on hand to deal with all the adm inis tration. T he E uropean ins pec tors will only be with us for a few days and s houldn't num ber m ore than three or four, s o it's not a m as s ive undertaking. Does that s ound reas onable?' 'Fine,' I replied, thinking of all the extra work it would involve jus t when I knew m y m ind would be on the forthc om ing happy event. Chris tine would need all the s upport and help I c ould give her in the m onths running up to the birth of the baby. 'Good, good,' m urm ured Dr Gore. 'W ell, thank you for c om ing to s ee m e.' Mrs S avage was waiting for m e in the outer offic e. S he had a s m ug expres s ion on her fac e. 'It's jus t as well you didn't get the report bac k after all, is n't it?' s he drawled, with ill-c onc ealed s atis fac tion. I arrived bac k at the ins pec tors ' offic e to find S idney regaling Gerry about Connie, the S taff Developm ent Centre and the nude m odel. His c olleague s at trapped behind her des k trying to look interes ted, her head c upped in her hands . No wonder Gerry avoided the offic e. S idney s tood before her waving his arm s about him , s pluttering and s haking his head, as if perform ing on a s tage. 'I intend to s peak to Harold about this ,' he was s aying. 'T he wom an is a c leaner, for goodnes s s ake, not a direc tor of s tudies . S he's there to polis h pipes , s c rub floors , dus t s helves , c lean toilets , not dic tate what goes on in the Centre or who vis its . S he's a m egalom aniac . S he's like Hitler in pink.' He paus ed in his diatribe to greet m e. 'Oh hello, Gervas e. You will, of c ours e, vouc h for what I s ay. I was telling Gerry here about the frac as at the S taff Developm ent Centre earlier this afternoon. I m erely as ked Connie to ens ure the heating was on next week. A s you know, s he us ually does n't s tart the boiler until m id-Novem ber and the firs t fros t. It was s o c old there las t year I c ould hear m y bones c lic king. I c ertainly don't want Miriam - s he's m y m odel by the way - turning blue. A nd what do I get? "Of c ours e, Mr Clam p. I'll m ake s ure it's nic e and warm for you. No problem at all." Do I hec k! I get ac c us ed of opening a brothel.' 'Oh c om e on, S idney,' I s aid, 'you know perfec tly well what Connie's like.' 'Y es , I do indeed know what Connie is like and I don't like it. It's about tim e s om ebody told the wom an what's what.' 'W hat?' as ked Gerry. 'W hat's what, that's what! ' exc laim ed S idney. 'S he needs hum ouring, that's all,' I s aid. 'Y ou jus t s eem to wind her up.' 'I wind her up,' he c ried. 'T he wom an does not need hum ouring, as you put it. S he needs s ac king, that's what s he needs ,' retorted S idney. 'S idney,' s aid Gerry gently, 'don't get in s uc h a s tate about it. T ry and keep c alm and don't get all worked up -' 'K eep c alm ! ' he exploded. 'I am inc apable of keeping c alm in the fac e of s uc h naked aggres s ion, if you will exc us e the unintended pun. I s hall s ee Harold about this . He needs to have a s trong word with her and rem ind her of her role. He needs to put the c ards on the table. S he either toes the line or s he goes . S he's getting far above her s tation. A u des s us de s a gare, as one m ight s ay.' 'I think poor Harold has quite enough on his plate at the m om ent,' I obs erved thoughtfully, 'without another problem winging its way. T he new term had barely s tarted and you began bom barding him with a problem . Firs t W es t Challerton High S c hool -' 'W hat's been the problem there?' as ked Gerry. 'I wis h s om eone would tell m e.' 'Don't as k! ' s napped S idney. 'T he s c ienc e and tec hnology departm ents c ertainly need s orting out,' s he s aid, 'but one thing I am pleas ed about is that the headm as ter has , at las t, agreed to alloc ate m ore tim e for phys ic s and c hem is try.' 'Don't get m e s tarted on that,' warned S idney. 'P leas e don't get m e s tarted on that.' 'Having s orted out the problem at W es t Challerton,' I c ontinued, 'you now want Harold to s ort out Connie. No wonder he's ready to retire.' 'Gervas e,' s aid S idney petulantly, 'that is Harold's job. He is , after all, the S enior Ins pec tor. He is paid m ore than we - pittanc e that it is - to deal with thes e problem s . It is his role to s ort things out. A s David's old W els h grandm other would no doubt be m oved to s ay: "He who c ollec ts the honey and the ros es m us t bear the s tings and the thorns ." S hould you take over from him , then you will be in the hot s eat, fire-fighting for us .' 'T hat's if I apply,' I s aid. 'Of c ours e you're going to apply. J us t bec aus e you were uns uc c es s ful before and didn't even get on the s hortlis t does n't m ean they'll rejec t you again.' S idney was nothing, if not blunt. 'T hey're probably thinking "better the devil you know" after the las t fias c o.' 'T hanks , S idney,' I s aid. 'Y ou have s uc h a way of m aking people feel better.' 'I agree with S idney,' s aid Gerry. 'I think you have a fair c hanc e of getting the job this tim e.' 'T hat's if I want it, this tim e,' I replied.
10 I s pent a fairly unc om fortable weekend with the knowledge that Hawks rill S c hool m ight be c los ing but dec ided I was not in a pos ition to pas s on the news whic h Harold had given m e in c onfidenc e. Chris tine and the village would know s oon enough. On the following T ues day, I arrived at the S taff Developm ent Centre early. I had rec eived a m em orandum from Mrs S avage the day before as king m e to m eet her to dis c us s the E IE I initiative. 'It is im perative,' s he had written, 'that we put our heads together A S A P s o that wheels c an be put in m otion.' S he had noted, having looked though m y engagem ent s heet for the week, that I was to vis it S t Helen's Churc h of E ngland P rim ary that m orning, a s c hool jus t a few m iles from the S DC and therefore, 'it would not greatly inc onvenienc e you to m eet m e at 0815'. S uc h was the tone of s harp c om m and in the m em o that I was m inded to ignore it or reply that I was far too bus y, but then I thought that it would be better to get the m eeting over and done with. In any c as e, I wanted to m ake a s tart on this 'little job'. T here was a lot to do. I replied, therefore, that I would be at the S DC at the des ignated tim e. It was a partic ularly c old m orning with what they c all in Yorks hire 'a c heeky wind' as I drove along the twis ting road from Hawks rill in the direc tion of Fettles ham . I s tared in wonderm ent at the endles s green and grey lands c ape wrinkled with roc ks whic h s tretc hed ahead of m e. T he views in the Dales are s tunning and never c eas e to fill m e with awe. I love travelling in this vas t s prawling c ounty with its s oft green valleys and s oaring fells , s tately c athedrals and dram atic ruins , dark pine fores ts and vas t, em pty m oors , flooded with bright purple heather in autum n. E very journey is different and every s c ene has a unique beauty. I s lowed down to watc h a form ation of gees e flying overhead, honking nois ily as they went. Off to their wintering grounds , no doubt. W hat a plac e to work, I thought. T he S taff Developm ent Centre was eerily quiet that m orning. I was us ed to Connie s tanding s entinel in the entranc e hall. S he would arrive well before anyone els e and watc h from her vantage point in the kitc hen, eagle-eyed and s tony-fac ed. T hen, at the s ight of vis itors , s he would s c urry down the c orridor to greet them . P erhaps 'greet' was not the m os t appropriate word to us e, for Connie would s tand there, s tatues que, feather dus ter pois ed, a s him m ering pink apparition with a fac ial expres s ion whic h c ould c urdle m ilk. I dis c overed Mrs Os baldis ton in the kitc hen s c rutinis ing a wodge of papers and s haking her head thoughtfully. S he was a lean, elderly wom an with tightly c urled, s ilver-white hair, a s m all thin-lipped m outh and an am azingly wrinkled in-drawn fac e. A m ulti-c oloured apron, depic ting s om e large and gaudy flowers , enveloped her s m all fram e. S he was wearing s lippers . A s I approac hed I detec ted a c urious ly pervas ive s m ell of m othballs . 'Good m orning,' I s aid c heerfully. 'Y ou m us t be Mrs Os baldis ton.' S he looked up from the papers and m aintained a c arefully blank expres s ion. 'A re you Mr Cam p?' 'No, I'm Gervas e P hinn, the E nglis h ins pec tor,' I replied. 'Oh, I was expec ting Mr Cam p, the art m an.' 'It's Clam p.' 'W hat is ?' 'T he nam e of the art m an. It's Clam p, not Cam p. He'll be along later.' 'I thought he was Cam p.' 'No, no, Clam p, as in c las p, vic e, fas tener.' 'A nd who did you s ay you were?' s he as ked, s c rewing up her eyes . 'Mr P hinn,' I replied, extending a hand. S he rais ed a s m all c old hand and plac ed it in m ine as a queen m ight to a c ourtier. 'Good m orning,' s he s aid, with an anxious look. 'T here's been telephone c alls for you this m orning. I arrived well before eight o'c loc k and that phone s tarted ringing as s oon as I'd got through the door and it's never s topped. I thought I was here to c lean, not ans wer c alls .' I explained to Mrs Os baldis ton that J ulie, the ins pec tors ' s ec retary, would phone through the num bers if there was anything urgent or as k c allers to get in touc h with m e direc tly at the Centre. 'I've m ade a note of them on a pad in the offic e. I've not touc hed a thing yet, and it's already five m inutes pas t.' 'W ell, I'll go and m ake the c alls and leave you to it. Have you everything you need?' I s hould not have as ked. T he old lady huffed, tutted and then s hook her head. 'E e, what I need, young m an, is a c up of s trong s weet tea and a long s it down, that's what I need.' T he poor wom an looked as if the troubles of the world had been heaped on her s m all round s houlders . T hen s he turned her attention to the papers . 'T here's nothing on this lis t what Connie left m e about ans wering telephone c alls or about any E nglis h c ours es here today. S he never s aid you was to be in this m orning, jus t that Mr Cam p. I don't think I c ould c ope with anything els e, I really don't.' 'No, there is n't an E nglis h c ours e on today,' I reas s ured her. 'I'm here to m eet s om eone.' 'Connie's left this lis t of ins truc tions as long as m y arm ,' Mrs Os baldis ton told m e, with the expres s ion of one s uffering from c hronic c ons tipation. 'I jus t don't know where to begin, I really don't. T here's s o m uc h to do. I m ean, I only s aid I'd do a bit of dus ting and wiping and keep things tidy and s hip-s hape to help out, but m y goodnes s jus t look what s he's left m e.' S he prodded the papers . 'I c lean at the High S c hool but I'm not expec ted to do all this . It'd take an arm y of c leaners to do this little lot that Connie's left m e.' S he flouris hed the lis t. 'I c an't s tretc h, what with m y bad bac k. T here's no ques tion of m y bending what with the legs , and I c an't over-exert m ys elf what with m y angina. Connie knows I'm allergic to bleac h, and floor polis h brings m e out in a ras h.' P erhaps s he is in the wrong line of work, I thought to m ys elf. 'I really wouldn't worry, Mrs Os baldis ton,' I told her, 'Connie's a perfec tionis t.' 'Tell m e about it,' s he s aid. 'I lives next door to her. Ins ide her hous e is like B uc kingham P alac e and her garden, you s hould s ee her garden! T he lawn's like a billiard table. T here's not a flower out of plac e and s he us es s c is s ors on the V irginia c reeper.' Mrs Os baldis ton c learly looked dis tres s ed. 'T hen there's this Mr Cam p. Connie's warned m e about him and his goings -on. S he s aid he wants watc hing.' 'Oh, he's not that bad.' 'Connie s ays he leaves a trail of debris and des truc tion wherever he goes and now he's got thes e naked wom en c om ing in. I really wis h I hadn't agreed to do this but Connie's s o... what's the word?' 'P ers uas ive,' I s ugges ted. 'E xac tly.' 'W ell, there are no naked ladies , jus t one artis ts ' m odel and when Mr Clam p arrives , whic h s houldn't be too long now, he will deal with that.' I s m iled and patted her arm . 'S o don't worry, Mrs Os baldis ton. Y ou m ake yours elf that nic e s trong c up of tea.' T his propos al res ulted in a rem arkable trans form ation, as I gues s ed it would. T he old lady vis ibly m ellowed and a s m all s m ile c am e to her thin lips . It is a known fac t that in Yorks hire, whatever the problem , the pros pec t of a c up of tea s eem s to have a rem arkably c alm ing effec t. One m ight be dragged out from under the wheels of a ten-ton juggernaut, em erge half-drowned from a flas h flood, s tagger s m ouldering from a burning building, and a c up of tea is the firs t thing s ugges ted. 'T hat would be very ac c eptable,' s aid Mrs Os baldis ton, s ounding a whole lot happier. 'I think I m ight jus t do that.' 'B y the way, have you put the water urn on yet?' I as ked. 'No, I haven't.' S he glanc ed at the papers in her hand. 'Oh dear, here it is , look, at the top of Connie's "T o Do Lis t". I s hould have put the water on at eight. S he s ays here that people will be wanting a c up of tea or c offee when they arrive. Firs t thing s he as ks m e to do and I gets it wrong.' 'W ell, you put out the c ups and s auc ers in the lounge area and I'll s ee to the water before I m ake the c alls and don't worry, Mrs Os baldis ton, everything will be fine.' S he left the kitc hen, m um bling to hers elf, to arrange the c roc kery in the lounge. I filled the huge m etal urn with water, s witc hed it on and headed for the offic e. On the des k was a lis t of s c rawled num bers : no nam e, no m es s age, jus t the num bers . Connie's prac tic e was to write neatly and legibly in the 'Mes s ages ' book the date, the tim e of the c all, the num ber, the s peaker's nam e, the s ubjec t of the c all and any other relevant details . S he was m etic ulous . A ll I had before m e now was a lis t of five or s ix s c ribbled num bers , s om e of whic h were indec ipherable. I s ighed. Com e bac k Connie, I s aid to m ys elf as I rang the firs t num ber. 'Hello,' c am e a voic e down the line. 'Oh hello, m y nam e is Gervas e P hinn. I believe s om eone on your num ber has telephoned to s peak to m e this m orning.' 'Do you know who?' 'I don't, I'm afraid.' 'W as it Mis s P rec ious , the headteac her?' 'A h, is that B arton Moor P aroc hial S c hool?' I as ked. 'It is .' 'Y es , it m us t have been Mis s P rec ious .' A m om ent later the headteac her's voic e c am e on the line. 'Hello, Mr P hinn. T his is a pleas ant s urpris e.' 'Did you not c all m e this m orning, Mis s P rec ious ?' 'No, I've only jus t arrived.' 'I think s om eone c alled m e from your num ber,' I told her. 'T here's a m ys tery,' s he s aid. 'I wonder if it was Mrs Durdon.' I doubted very m uc h if it would be Mis s P rec ious 's as s is tant, a s m all m ous y, nervous little wom an into whom I s eem ed, for s om e reas on, to put the fear of God. It would be hardly likely that s he would be c ontac ting m e early in the m orning. 'I'll as k her if you like,' s aid Mis s P rec ious . 'S he's only down the c orridor.' 'No, no, don't bother her, Mis s P rec ious . I'm s ure the pers on will ring bac k.' 'No trouble at all, Mr P hinn,' s aid the headteac her, and I heard the line go dead. A m om ent later Mrs Durdon was on the phone. 'Hello, Mr P hinn,' s he s aid in a hus hed voic e. 'I did as k the rec eptionis t who ans wered the phone at your end to tell you to as k for m e pers onally. I didn't want Mis s P rec ious to know.' 'Oh, I'm s orry,' I tried to explain, 'but -' 'It's jus t that Mis s P rec ious retires at the end of the term and I wanted to invite you to a s urpris e party. I hope s he does n't s us pec t. Y ou m ight have let the c at out of the bag. I s hall have to think of s om e good exc us e for you ringing m e.' 'W ell, I'd love to c om e, Mrs Durdon, if I am not bus y.' 'B es t thing for m e to do is put it in a letter. It was m os t unfortunate Mis s P rec ious ans wering the phone. I don't think your rec eptionis t s ounded very "with it" this m orning.' T he tell-tale c lic k-c lac k of high heels on the hard c orridor floor outs ide the offic e heralded the arrival of m y unwelc om e vis itor. 'I m us t go, Mrs Durdon,' I s aid. 'I look forward to hearing from you.' 'Good m orning,' I heard Mrs S avage s ay beyond the offic e door. T hen I heard the m oros e tones of Mrs Os baldis ton reply, 'Mornin'.' T hen s he added, 'Y ou're early, aren't you?' I was tem pted to s how m ys elf at this point but res is ted the tem ptation, dec iding ins tead to eaves drop. T his was going to prove interes ting. 'I beg your pardon,' replied Mrs S avage c urtly. 'I s aid you're early,' s aid Mrs O. 'No, I am not,' c am e another c urt reply. 'In fac t, I am prom pt. I am always prom pt. I s aid I would be here at eight-fifteen and if I am not m is taken that is the exac t tim e on the c loc k in the c orridor.' Mrs Os baldis ton did not s ound in the leas t daunted by the c old and s uperior voic e. 'W ell, I was told you'd be here at nine. I've got it on m y lis t.' 'A nd who are you, m ay I as k?' T he s harp, authoritative tone was c learly los t on Connie's loc um . 'Mrs Os baldis ton.' 'A nd?' 'A nd what?' 'W hat is your func tion here?' 'My func tion?' 'W hat exac tly do you do?' 'W hat do I do?' 'A m I in an ec ho c ham ber?' as ked Mrs S avage. 'Y ou're in the S taff Developm ent Centre,' Mrs Os baldis ton inform ed her. 'A nd for your inform ation, I'm filling in for Connie, the c aretaker. S he's in Franc e s c attering her father's as hes at Dunkirk.' 'Really,' s aid Mrs S avage wearily. 'I'm holding the fort, s o to s peak, doing a bit of c leaning and that.' 'I s ee.' 'A nd, as I s aid, I have it on m y lis t that you'd be arriving at nine. A nyway, now you're here, do you want to s ee where you'll be? Y ou're in the end room where it's warm er and m ore private. I've pulled the c urtains as well. I'm s ure you don't want people gawping at you through the window. I'll put a c us hion on your c hair before you s tart pos ing. I s uppos e being s at on a hard wooden c hair for any length of tim e m us t be unc om fortable on the nether regions , s pec ially if you have no c lothes on.' 'No c lothes on! ' s napped Mrs S avage. 'W hatever are you talking about?' I nearly betrayed m y pres enc e with a burs t of laughter but s m ac ked m y hand over m y m outh. Mrs Os baldis ton had m is taken Mrs S avage for the nude m odel. I c ould vis ualis e the s c arlet lips purs ing in dis approval and the dark eyes flas hing. 'W ell, I was told you'd be taking your c lothes off for Mr Cam p,' c ontinued Mrs Os baldis ton blithely. 'T aking m y c lothes off for Mr Cam p! ' repeated Mrs S avage. 'W hat are you talking about? Have I entered B edlam ?' 'No, I've jus t told you, this is the S taff Developm ent Centre,' replied Mrs Os baldis ton c alm ly. 'Do you know who I am ?' as ked Mrs S avage. 'T he nude m odel, aren't you?' 'T he w hat?' s pluttered Mrs S avage. I am Mrs S avage, P ers onal A s s is tant to Dr Gore.' 'W ho's he?' 'Dr Gore is the Chief E duc ation Offic er.' 'Can't s ay I've heard of him ,' replied the old lady. 'A ny road up, I thought you was the nude m odel.' 'Do I look like a nude m odel?' as ked an exas perated Mrs S avage. 'I don't really know,' s aid Mrs Os baldis ton s tubbornly, 'I've never s een one.' A t this point I dec ided to enter the fray and em erged from the offic e, attem pting to keep a s traight fac e. 'Good m orning, Mrs S avage,' I s aid s erious ly. Mrs S avage was attired in a s c arlet jac ket with s ilver buttons , tight-fitting blac k s kirt, long dangling s ilver earrings and high-heeled patent leather s hoes . It was very like the ens em ble J ulie had worn s om e weeks earlier when s he had attended the Health and S afety m eeting. I told m ys elf not to s m irk. 'Mr P hinn,' s aid Mrs S avage, drawing her lips together into a thin line. 'T his ... this pers on here, was under the m is apprehens ion that I was s om e s ort of... of m odel.' 'Really?' I s aid innoc ently. 'I thought I had entered B edlam .' T he eyes in the s tony vis age glowed with anger, the m outh rem ained s m all and tight. 'I told her it was the S taff Developm ent Centre,' s aid Mrs Os baldis ton blithely, m ore to hers elf than to m e. 'I don't know where s he wants to be. A nyway, you'll have to deal with her, Mr Flynn. I've got lots to do.' W ith that s he waddled off, m um bling to hers elf, 'A nd I never did get that c up of tea.' T he m eeting with Mrs S avage was s hort but not very s weet. I agreed to nom inate c ertain s c hools for the foreign ins pec tors to vis it, prepare s om e briefing papers and devis e a program m e, and Mrs S avage announc ed that s he would organis e the travel and ac c om m odation, and deal with the adm inis tration. 'A nd do keep m e up to s peed, Mr P hinn,' s he s aid in a hec toring tone, as s he ros e to leave. 'I will arrange a further m utually-c onvenient m eeting to tie up any loos e ends jus t prior to their vis it.' 'V ery well,' I replied, wis hing s he would high-tail it off bac k to County Hall. 'A nd I s hall be having a word with Dr Gore about nude m odels at the S taff Developm ent Centre,' s he told m e. 'I as s um e it is Mr Clam p who has organis ed this . T he m an gets wors e.' I did not reply. 'I am afraid that partic ular c olleague of yours s ails very c los e to the wind at tim es . B y the way, I s inc erely hope that the c aretaker - that Connie wom an - has c leared things before having tim e off to vis it Franc e. S he c an't jus t take leave when s he wants to and it is up to the offic e to arrange replac em ents , not her. P ers onnel will be inform ed of this as s oon as I get bac k to County Hall. I s hall als o be having words with Dr Gore about that other c leaning wom an whom I enc ountered this m orning.' S he s troked out the c reas es in her s kirt. 'Now, I m us t return to the offic e,' s he c ontinued, as if I were deliberately detaining her. 'Dr Gore is finalis ing arrangem ents for the appointm ent of Dr Yeats 's s uc c es s or this m orning, s pec ific ally organis ing the interview panel...' S he paus ed, as if awaiting s om e s ort of res pons e, but I rem ained tight-lipped. 'T he advertis em ent for the pos t of S enior Ins pec tor has gone into the S taff V ac anc y B ulletin and will appear in the educ ational journals and national news papers later this week.' 'Y es , I believe s o,' I s aid. W hen Mrs S avage had departed, I bade m y farewell to a haras s ed-looking Mrs O. and headed for the door. In the c ar park I dis c overed a lean wom an c lim bing from an extrem ely old and rus ty c ar. S he c ould have been Mrs Os baldis ton's twin s is ter: tightly c urled greying hair, s m all down-turned m outh and an am azingly wrinkled in-drawn fac e. 'E xc us e m e,' s he s aid, 'is this the S taff Developm ent Centre?' 'It is ,' I replied. 'I'm here to s ee Mr Clam p,' s he told m e. 'I'm the artis ts ' m odel.' * S t Helen's Churc h of E ngland P rim ary S c hool was a s quare, grey-s tone building with s m all m ullioned windows , a very im pres s ive heavy oak door and a high s hiny s late roof. It had been built in the latter part of the eighteenth c entury following the beques t of a wealthy landowner for the educ ation of his es tate workers . It was s till c ontinuing to s erve the two villages of K irby Crighton and K irby Rus ton and a few c hildren from the nearby United S tates A ir Forc e B as e at Ribbon B ank. It was s ituated in a very advantaged area, and hous es in the vic inity were am ongs t the m os t expens ive in this part of the c ounty. I had vis ited the s c hool during m y firs t year on s uc h a nippy day as this when the trees were beginning to turn golden. Mrs S m ith, the headteac her, greeted m e at the door and us hered m e into a s m all entranc e area. On the wall was a large photograph of all the teac hers , governors and anc illary s taff and another of all the c hildren, s itting up s m artly and s m iling. T here were als o pic tures and prints , potted plants and a large driedflower arrangem ent. It looked a c heerful and welc om ing plac e. 'It's very nic e to s ee you again, Mr P hinn,' s aid Mrs S m ith. 'Y ou'll find we've grown quite a bit s inc e your las t vis it to us .' I had given the s c hool a very good report on the las t oc c as ion and this vis it was to s ee if s tandards in E nglis h had rem ained high. 'A vic tim of your own s uc c es s , eh, Mrs S m ith?' I s ugges ted. 'One would like to think s o,' s aid the headteac her, c learly pleas ed with the flattering obs ervation, 'but it is rather the res ult of m ore A m eric an c hildren attending from the bas e. A nd there are s om e real c harac ters , as you'll s ee.'
On the way to the infant c las s room , the headteac her told m e about E s ther. 'S he's a rem arkable little reader and has the voc abulary of an eleven-year-old. I've never c om e ac ros s a c hild like this in all m y teac hing c areer. S he's jus t s ix and c an read virtually anything. Her m other's a lec turer at York, her father a c olonel in the United S tates A ir Forc e whic h, of c ours e, explains a lot. E s ther is an am azingly fluent reader. S he s im ply devours books . I s hould s ay s he is gifted.' 'W hat do her parents s ay?' I as ked. 'Oh, they s eem to take it in their s tride. T hey c ertainly don't want her pres s uris ed or anything like that, no s pec ial provis ion or extra work and, I m us t s ay, I have to agree with them . Y oung c hildren s hould enjoy their c hildhood. I do, however, need s om e advic e on s uitable reading m aterial for s uc h a gifted infant.' I have, on m y vis its to s c hools , very often been told by a teac her that a partic ular c hild is 'gifted' or 'talented' or 'exc eptionally able'. It generally turns out that the c hild is bright or intelligent but it is rare to find a c hild of really outs tanding ability. E ins teins are extrem ely rare. I s m iled at Mrs S m ith and s aid I would s peak to the c hild and hear her read. I dis c overed little E s ther at a table s plas hing paint on a large s heet of pale yellow paper. T here were three egg-s haped, bright-pink figures c om plete with long s pindly arm s , fingers like twigs and great beam ing s m iles . T hey all had tum m y buttons . 'Hello,' I s aid. 'Oh, hi! ' the c hild replied, looking up and s m iling. 'How are you?' 'I'm fine,' I s aid, leaning over and s c rutinis ing her pic ture. 'Now, who are thes e interes ting people in your painting?' I as ked. 'T here's Daddy,' E s ther told m e, ges turing with the brus h. 'He's the large one. T here's Mom m y in a bikini and the little one is m e. W e're on the beac h in Franc e. Have you been to Franc e?' 'Y es , I have.' 'It's c ool, is n't it?' 'It is . Now, Mrs S m ith tells m e you are a very good reader,' I s aid. 'Y eah, that's m e! ' s he replied. 'W ould you like to read to m e?' 'I don't m ind,' s he s aid. 'I like reading. I've got lots and lots of books at hom e. I have m y own library in m y bedroom .' 'I'm s ure you have,' I s aid, 'and I bet you have a bedtim e s tory every night, as well.' 'I s ure do. Daddy and Mom m y take it in turns . I have a c uddle and a bedtim e s tory every night. Daddy s ays s tories are very good for c hildren.' 'Y our daddy's right,' I told her. 'Daddies always are,' s he told m e pertly. 'S hall I get m y reading book?' 'No,' I s aid, 'perhaps you would read one of m ine.' I c arry around with m e in m y briefc as e various doc um ents and books : s tandardis ed reading tes ts , non-verbal as s es s m ent s heets , word rec ognition lis ts and als o a few books of varying diffic ulty to tes t c hildren's reading ability. T he reading s c hem e books , with whic h the c hildren learn to read, have fam iliar c harac ters and s ettings , repeated words and phras es to give c hildren c onfidenc e and s ec urity but the good reader is able to be c onfronted with an unknown text and read and unders tand it. I pres ented little E s ther with a book s uitable for a s even-year-old. 'Gee, this looks too eas y,' s he told m e, exam ining the c over and flic king through the pages . 'E as y?' I repeated. 'I'll be very s urpris ed if you m anage to read it.' T he c hild gave m e the kind of m elanc holy s m ile a Mother S uperior m ight bes tow upon an erring novic e. 'May I have a harder book, pleas e?' 'OK ,' I s aid, reac hing into m y briefc as e, 'let's try another one.' I s elec ted a book s uitable for a nine-year-old. 'Now, if you find this a bit hard, don't worry. It's a book for older c hildren.' S he s tared at the c over for a m om ent. 'S hall I s tart from the beginning?' s he as ked. 'Y es pleas e.' 'From the very beginning?' 'From the very beginning,' I repeated. T he c hild tilted her head, s tared at the large blac k s tam ped box at the very top of the c over page and then s he read: 'P roperty of Y orks hire County Counc il, E duc ation Departm ent, S c hools Ins pec torate.' I s hook m y head and s m iled. Later that m orning in the nurs ery, I m et Im ogen. S he looked like a c hina doll: golden c urls , huge blue eyes and a flawles s c om plexion. T he c hild was c as ually turning the pages of an early reader. E ac h page dis played an objec t: hous e, bus , c hurc h, m an, wom an, dog, c ar and s o on, beneath whic h was the word in large blac k letters . 'W ill you read it to m e, pleas e?' s he as ked. 'Of c ours e,' I replied, am us ed by s uc h a c onfident little thing. 'I know s om e words ,' s he told m e, 'but I c an't read all of them .' W hen I had finis hed reading the book, I wrote the word 'c ar' on a piec e of paper. 'Now,' I s aid, 'c an you read this word for m e?' 'No, I c an't,' s he replied. 'It begins with a c urly "c ". W ould you like to have a gues s ?' 'No, I c an't read it.' 'Let m e give you a c lue,' I s aid. 'Y our daddy or m um m y m ight drive you to s c hool in it in the m orning.' 'Oh yes ! ' s he c ried. 'Y ou m ean W olls W oyc e.' T he older c hildren were in the m iddle of a dis c us s ion when I joined them after m orning break. T heir teac her, a round, jolly wom an in an orange s kirt, white blous e and green c ardigan, greeted m e warm ly and us hered m e to a c hair at the front of the c las s room . S he looked like a walking flag of Ireland. 'Now, this is Mr P hinn,' s he told the c hildren. 'S om e of you m ight rem em ber him . He vis ited us before, didn't you Mr P hinn?' 'Y es . I did,' I s aid. 'A nd Mr P hinn is very interes ted in c hildren's reading and writing, aren't you, Mr P hinn?' 'Y es , I am ,' I s aid. 'A nd today we are writing a c autionary tale. W e've been reading a s tory about c hildren who did not do as they were told and as a res ult they all c am e to a s tic ky end.' 'Oh dear,' I s aid. 'T here's the dis obedient boy who did not lis ten to his father and played with fire, des pite being warned of the danger, and ended up burnt to a c ris p. It's not as grues om e as it s ounds ,' s he s aid in an undertone. 'Nothing gratuitous . A nd the girl who ignored her m other's c autions and played near the river bank. S he c am e to a watery end. T hen there was the boy who went near the railway line, ignoring all the s igns that warned him of danger. T hat had a very unfortunate outc om e. Now, before they write their own c autionary tales , Mr P hinn, the c hildren are des c ribing an ac c ident they have had bec aus e they have not taken s uffic ient c are. Let m e s ee. K aty, would you like to tell our im portant vis itor what you are going to be writing about?' 'Mis s ,' s aid the girl enthus ias tic ally, 'when I was little we went to a pizza parlour and I s niffed s om e pepper up m y nos e.' T here was a ripple of laughter. 'It's not funny, c hildren,' s aid the teac her s erious ly. 'T he pepper m ight have gone right down into K aty's lungs . It c ould have been very s erious , c ouldn't it, Mr P hinn?' 'It c ould,' I agreed. 'A nd I c ouldn't s top s neezing and c oughing,' c ontinued the c hild. 'My m um went bananas -' 'I think a better phras e to us e would be "bec am e very angry", K aty,' interrupted the teac her. 'S he bec am e very angry and s aid what a s tupid thing to do. W e had to go hom e and m y dad s aid I would not do that in a hurry again.' 'I think your father was right, K aty,' s aid the teac her. 'Don't you, Mr P hinn?' 'Y es , I do,' I agreed. 'David, what about your ac c ident?' as ked the teac her, looking at a s m all boy near the front. 'Mis s , I s wallowed a m arble,' s aid the boy. T here was another ripple of laughter. 'Good grac ious ! ' exc laim ed the teac her. 'T hat was a very s illy thing to do and c ould have been very dangerous . Y ou c ould have c hoked to death, c ouldn't he, Mr P hinn?' 'Y es , indeed,' I s aid. 'Mis s , I was pretending it was a s weet,' c ontinued the boy, 'and I popped it in m y m outh and s wallowed it by m is take. I s tarted to c ough and m y m um had to s m as h m e on the bac k really really hard and -' 'I think a better phras e to us e would be "s trike firm ly" or "s lap heavily", David,' interrupted the teac her. 'S o, m y m um had to s trike m e firm ly on the bac k but it wouldn't c om e up, s o I had to go to hos pital. T he doc tor gave m y m um this paper to get s om e m edic ine -' 'P res c ription,' interpos ed the teac her. 'Gave m um this pres c ription to get s om e m edic ine and it was thic k and pink and had a horrible tas te and -' 'T as ted unpleas ant,' prom pted the teac her. 'A nd it c am e in a big brown bottle and I had to take it for a c ouple of days and then one m orning I was s itting on the toilet and there was a "c lunk" and I s houted down the s tairs , "I've got m y m arble bac k! " and m y dad s aid, "Leave it alone! " and -' 'My goodnes s , David,' s aid the teac her hurriedly, 'what a to-do. I think we've heard quite enough about your unfortunate ac c ident, haven't we, Mr P hinn?' 'Y es ,' I s aid, wis hing that the teac her would not c ons tantly keep referring to m e for an opinion. 'J us t one m ore, before we get on with our writing,' s aid the teac her, turning to a large, friendly-looking boy with c ropped hair and large ears . 'S c ott's from A m eric a, Mr P hinn. A ll the way from T ennes s ee. Com e along then, S c ott, what was your ac c ident?' 'W ell, I gues s the wors t ac c ident I had was when I was riding m y bike on the s idewalk -' 'W e c all it "pavem ent" over here, S c ott,' interrupted the teac her. 'Oh yeah, pavem ent, and I c am e to this s lope. I was pedalling s o fas t I jus t c ould not s top. I put on m y brakes but I c arried on s kidding and s liding until I hit one of thos e great white things in the m iddle of the road -' 'B ollards ,' s aid the teac her. 'S traight up, m is s ,' s aid the boy. 'I really did.'
11 One of the great joys of being a s c hool ins pec tor is the opportunity of m eeting s o m any interes ting, unus ual and s om etim es truly bizarre people. A nd Mr Mauric e Hinderwell was c ertainly out of the ordinary. I arrived at S c arthorpe P rim ary S c hool one bright Oc tober m orning to undertake a half-day's follow-up ins pec tion. T he s m all s c hool was a s quat, dark, s tone building, tuc ked away behind the anc ient Norm an c hurc h of S t Mary the V irgin and partially hidden by a towering oak tree with branc hes reac hing s kywards like huge arm s . It had been in the s pring of the previous year when I had vis ited S c arthorpe, to take a look at the s tandards in reading and writing, and I had found it to be well m anaged and held in high regard by the parents . T here had been a few rec om m endations for im provem ent and I was here that m orning to s ee that they had been im plem ented. A s I approac hed the building now, I rec alled the firs t oc c as ion, eighteen m onths before, when I had driven up that twis ting ribbon of road. B ehind m e, in the valley bottom , rolling green pas tureland dotted with ewes and their lam bs c ontentedly c ropping the lus h gras s had s tretc hed into the dis tanc e. B efore m e an oc ean of bright green young brac ken had s wept upwards to a belt of dark pines and beyond to the roc ky tops . A bove, the s ky had been a vas t c anopy of pale blue. It had taken m y breath away. W hat a glorious plac e to live, I had thought. It was a very different s c ene now, but equally m agnific ent in its autum nal beauty. T hrough the winds c reen appeared a s ea of fading c rim s on heather, the brac ken on the s lopes was beginning to turn and the dis tant felltops were now a pale purple in the early m orning light. I had been driving behind a trac tor for s om e tim e along the narrowes t of winding roads s o arrived a little later than expec ted. T he bell had jus t gone for the s tart of the s c hool day s o, not wis hing to interrupt the headteac her's as s em bly, I headed for the s taff room . T here I dis c overed, s itting in the c orner of the room , a s m all m an in an inc redibly c reas ed grey s uit, loud s potted bow tie and s m all s hiny boots . He was balanc ing a c up of s team ing c offee on the arm of the c hair with one hand and holding a c hoc olate bis c uit in the other. 'Nic e m orning,' he s aid jovially as I entered. 'Y es , indeed,' I replied. 'It's beautiful.' T o m y am azem ent, the little m an pos ted the whole of the c hoc olate bis c uit into his m outh and c runc hed nois ily. Clearly he was not a m em ber of s taff or he would have been at as s em bly. I dec ided he was a governor or a book repres entative or, m ore likely, here to s ee about the plum bing or elec tric s . 'I'm here to ins pec t the s c hool,' I told him . 'I'm a s c hool ins pec tor.' 'Oh, yes ?' he s aid, s pitting bits of bis c uit in m y direc tion. I s at in the c hair the furthes t away. He m ade no effort to introduc e him s elf. 'I wouldn't like that job m ys elf, s c hool ins pec tor,' he told m e, poking a bit of irritating bis c uit from his teeth. 'Too m uc h like hard work. A ll thos e reports to write. A nd I don't s uppos e you're very popular either. Having you in m us t be like a vis it from the K GB .' He took a great gulp of c offee and s m ac ked his lips nois ily. 'No, it c an't be the m os t rewarding line of work, s c hool ins pec ting.' B efore I c ould enlighten him , he c ontinued. 'Mos t im portant thing for m e is job s atis fac tion, not m oney or s tatus or long holidays or fanc y perks . It's job s atis fac tion, knowing that you're doing s om ething worthwhile and c hallenging, a s ervic e to the c om m unity. T hat's s om ething I'v e got - job s atis fac tion. I love m y work. I get up every m orning raring to go. Y es , it's a very s atis fying job, is m ine.' I jus t had to as k: 'A nd what exac tly do you do?' 'Have a gues s .' 'I haven't a c lue.' 'I'm the County P es t Control Offic er.' 'Indeed - I s ee.' 'I deal with pes ts : c oc kroac hes , bed bugs , rabbits , m oles , bats , was ps , ants , beetles , fleas , every pes t im aginable. You nam e it, I kill it. You'll be pleas ed to hear we don't inc lude hum an pes ts like VAT offic ers , traffic wardens , tax inves tigators and' - he paus ed for effec t - 's c hool ins pec tors are not on the lis t either.' He c huc kled at his own wittic is m . 'S o the s c hool has a problem with pes ts , has it?' I as ked. 'Rats .' 'I beg your pardon?' 'T he s c hool. T hey've got rats . Quite a c olony by all ac c ounts .' I s huddered and pulled a fac e. 'Got a c all las t week from Mrs Fox, the headteac her. Now there's a nam e to c onjure with. I do foxes as well, you know. A nyway, s he was in a right old s tate. Got her knic kers in a real twis t. T eac hers were in a panic , dinner ladies hys teric al, governors c om plaining, c aretaker a nervous wrec k and parents up in arm s . Rats have this effec t on people, you know. K iddies weren't worried, to be hones t. Quite took to the rats they did, watc hing their antic s . T hey were running up and down the c lim bing fram e in the playground, s c uttling ac ros s the wall, burrowing behind the bic yc le s heds , paddling in the was te near the dus tbins . T he rats , I m ean, not the kiddies .' 'It s ounds frightful,' I s aid. I m us t have looked horrified. 'No, no, as I s aid to Mrs Fox, I'll s oon have the little buggers - pardon m y Frenc h. Mind you, s om e of them aren't s o little. T hey c an grow to the s ize of s m all rabbits , you know. I do rabbits as well. Your average rat grows to about a foot long and weighs about a pound, but you c an get them m uc h bigger. B ut I'll get them , oh yes , I'll get them .' He took another gulp of c offee before adding philos ophic ally, 'I always do.' 'W ell, good luc k,' I s aid. 'It's not a m atter of luc k,' m y s harp-fac ed c om panion inform ed m e. 'It's m ore a m atter of s kill, intuition and know-how. You have to apprec iate how rats think, you s ee.' He s ipped the rem ains of his c offee and then lic ked his lips . W ith his dark inquis itive eyes , s m all pointed nos e, protuberant white teeth and glos s y blac k hair bris tling on his s c alp, he did not look s o dis s im ilar to the c reatures he had c om e to exterm inate. 'I think of all the pes ts I have to deal with, the rat is m y favourite. He's a m uc h greater c hallenge than your average c oc kroac h or your bed bug.' 'Really?' 'A ye, it's a fac t. Intelligent c reatures are rats , but I have to exterm inate them . It's a fac t of life. T hey're walking death traps ,' he told m e, his s m all eyes flas hing. 'One in ten rats c arries Leptos pira whic h c an lead to a whole hos t of very unpleas ant dis eas es , you know.' 'Y ou don't s ay.' 'Oh, but I do,' he c huc kled to him s elf. 'P enic illin and other antibiotic s have little effec t agains t c aus al organis m s like leptos piros is . One of the varieties of leptos piros is is c alled W eil's dis eas e, you know. V ery unpleas ant that. V ery unpleas ant indeed. It's c ontrac ted through rats ' urine, often found in c ontam inated water, and is fatal m ore often than not. T hey urinate eighty tim es a day, do rats . Did you know that?' 'No, I didn't,' I replied weakly. 'A nd one in ten rats c arries Lis teria and Cry ptos poridium, both of whic h c an c aus e very nas ty gas troenteritis . You c ould be ill for weeks with a dos e of that, on and off the lavatory, diarrhoea, vom iting, s pitting blood. Of c ours e, hum ans are very s us c eptible to all thes e horrible dis eas es that this partic ular rodent c an c arry. Rat urine and faec es get everywhere. T hey like to live near kitc hens where there's lots of c ooked food and was te. I don't eat out m uc h m ys elf. I s ay, is there another c hoc olate diges tive going?' 'Oh dear,' I s ighed. T he m orning had s tarted off s o well. I was beginning to feel quite ill. 'One in twenty-five rats has the Hantavirus antibody,' he c ontinued blithely, 'whic h c an lead to haem orrhagic fever. T hat's a killer. Onc e you've got that, m ate, you're danc ing with death.' I quic kly pas s ed over the pac ket of bis c uits . I was by now fas c inated by the grues om e ac c ount. 'It's fortunate then,' I s aid, 'that there aren't s o m any rats about.' 'Not s o m any about! ' he s queaked deris ively. 'Not s o m any about! T here's s eventy m illion in this c ountry alone, that's how m any. T here are m ore rats than hum ans on this planet, over s ix billion of the buggers - pardon m y Frenc h. Rats have s ex twenty tim es a day and c an give birth every four weeks . One in twenty dom es tic prem is es are infes ted with rats and that's a c ons ervative es tim ate, s o I'm kept pretty bus y, I c an tell you. You think there aren't s o m any bec aus e you don't s ee them . T hey're elus ive c reatures . B ut they're there all right. W atc hing, waiting, breeding and s preading dis eas e wherever they go. You s ee, your rat is very c lever, he's devious , quic k-witted and adaptable. You're never m ore than fifteen feet away from a rat. Rats ' teeth are harder than alum inium or c opper. T hey c an gnaw through c ables , c lim b bric kwork, get into c avity walls and s wim up toilet U-bends . You c ould be s itting there, reading your paper, m inding your own bus ines s - if you'll exc us e the pun -and up he pops .' I s hifted unc om fortably in m y c hair. 'T hey c an s queeze through a hole no larger than m y thum b and will eat alm os t anything.' He took a s izeable bite out of the bis c uit he had pluc ked from the pac ket and c runc hed nois ily. 'V ery nic e diges tives , thes e. W ill you have one?' I s hook m y head. He polis hed off the bis c uit. 'T hen there's what we c all in the bus ines s your "interm ediate vec tors ", like fleas .' He bec am e s uddenly quite anim ated. 'Now your flea is a fas c inating c reature. T he dis tanc es they c an s pring is quite m ind-boggling. T he danger is that they feed off the rat, s uc king its blood, and then pas s on the rat's dis eas e to you. T hat's how the B lac k Death s tarted.' I s uddenly began to feel rather itc hy. 'How will you dis pos e of the rats ?' I as ked, s c ratc hing m y s c alp. 'T raps and pois on, s im ple but effec tive. Y ou know, I have a c ertain res pec t for Rattus . He's quite am azing. B ody like a c oiled s pring, c alibrated s ens es , razor s harp inc is ors , jaws of s teel, s uperb night vis ion, fas t m over, brilliant s wim m er and agile c lim ber. I alm os t adm ire him in a funny s ort of way.' 'W ell, you c ertainly s eem to enjoy your work,' I s aid. 'I love it. E very day is different, every day has its s hare of exc iting c hallenges .' T hankfully, the bell for the end of as s em bly s ounded. My c om panion ros e to his feet, brus hing the c rum bs from his trous ers . He plac ed the em pty m ug on the s ide and s tretc hed his arm s widely. 'W ell, I s hall have to m ake a s tart, I s uppos e. I need to rec onnoitre, find the right plac e to lay m y pois on and s et m y traps . Mrs Fox has been explaining things to the c hildren in as s em bly. S he felt it would be bes t c om ing from her. S he thought m y explaining things m ight frighten the kiddies .' Having heard him , I c ould well s ee her point. 'Now, I know you ins pec tors like to look into everything in a s c hool but a word of advic e. Don't go poking about in the undergrowth, pus hing your fingers into holes or lifting anything s us pic ious -looking. T here'll probably be a trap or pois on in there.' 'I won't,' I as s ured him . 'A nyway, nic e m eeting you, and if ever you do need anything dis pos ing of - and I don't inc lude your m other-in-law in that lis t - then phone Mauric e Hinderwell at the County P es t Control Unit in Crom pton. S ervic e with a s m ile, that's m e.' I little thought that m orning at S c arthorpe S c hool that I would one day quite s oon be requiring the s ervic es of Mr Hinderwell. T he Mrs Fox I rem em bered from m y las t vis it was a large, c heerful wom an with a foghorn voic e. On this m orning, however, s he was very different. S he appeared s o c areworn and s ubdued that I s ugges ted to her that I c anc el m y vis it and return at a later date when the problem with the rats had been res olved. S he s ighed with relief and readily agreed to m y s ugges tion. 'Oh yes , that would s uit very well, Mr P hinn,' s he s aid. 'W as it not Ham let who s aid that "troubles c om e not in s ingle s pies , but in battalions "?' I knew exac tly how s he felt. 'Firs t we had the bloc ked drains , then the leaking roof, then an outbreak of s c abies and an infes tation of head lic e. A nd then' - s he took a deep breath - 'the rats arrived. P arents are beginning to think this s c hool is c urs ed. A s c hool ins pec tion would jus t about finis h us off.' 'I'm very happy to fix another date, Mrs Fox,' I told her, 'and return when the rats have gone. I have plenty of paperwork to c atc h up with bac k at the offic e and I'm running a c ours e this afternoon s o that will give m e the c hanc e to go through m y notes .' 'It's ironic , really,' s he s ighed. 'W e were about to s tart rehears als for the Chris tm as play next week. W ell, that will have to be c anc elled. T here's no way I'm s taging that partic ular piec e of dram a.' 'W hat was it to have been?' I as ked. 'The P ied P iper,' s he replied, giving m e a weak s m ile. S o I departed, m y m ind full of the frightening fac ts about dis eas e-ridden rodents , giant blood-s uc king bed bugs and ac robatic fleas . I was not in the m os t pos itive fram e of m ind as I walked into the entranc e of W es t Challerton High S c hool later that day to direc t the s taff-training c ours e. T he previous year, one of Dr Gore's 'little jobs ' had been for m e to take part in a Minis try of E duc ation initiative c alled 'Language and Literac y for Learning'. E nglis h ins pec tors from s elec ted educ ation authorities had been given the tas k of obs erving a range of les s ons in a s am ple of s ec ondary s c hools , to as s es s how effec tive teac hers in different s ubjec t areas were in us ing ques tions , developing reading c om petenc e, organis ing group work, enc ouraging dis c us s ion and teac hing writing s kills s uc h as s um m ary and note-taking. T he ins pec tors were als o ins truc ted to exam ine how teac hers evaluated pupils ' work. From this 'pilot' s urvey, it was found that the ques tions as ked and the written work s et in the c las s room c ould very well ac t as barriers to c om m unic ation between teac hers and their s tudents . A fully-blown national projec t had em erged and eac h s ec ondary s c hool in the c ountry was now as ked to devis e a 'Language and Literac y for Learning' polic y. A ll teac hers were required to explore the is s ues in the Minis try of E duc ation's detailed report through c ours es , s ubjec t-bas ed works hops and working parties in order that an unders tanding of the theory c ould be trans lated into prac tic e. T he s ec ond-in-c harge in the E nglis h departm ent was a dynam ic young teac her c alled Mis s Mullane. S he had been as ked by the headm as ter to lead on this projec t, produc e guidelines and organis e training s es s ions and it was s he who had as ked m e to addres s the s taff. I had obs erved Mis s Mullane a c ouple of years before, when s he had taught at the ill-nam ed S unny Grove S ec ondary Modern S c hool, a dark, grim building s et in a wretc hedly depres s ed inner-c ity environm ent, s c arred with graffiti and ankle-deep in litter. T he atm os phere in her c las s room had been s uc h a c ontras t. It had been bright and warm and the pupils had res ponded well to her outs tanding teac hing. I had kept in touc h with her and had been pleas ed when s he had been put in c harge of the 'Language and Literac y' initiative and been only too happy to ac c ept her invitation to s peak to the s taff. W hen I s aw Mr P ennington-S m ith s weeping down the c orridor towards m e in his blac k ac adem ic gown, I had a pres entim ent that m y c ours e would not go all that well. I c ould quite unders tand the headm as ter wearing his gown for a s peec h day or when the pupils were in s c hool but wondered why he s till had his s ym bol of authority draped around him . It was not really c onduc ive to a training c ours e for teac hers . 'A aaahhh, Mr P hinn,' he intoned, 'you've arrived. T he s taff are waiting for you in the s c hool hall.' He gave a weak s m ile. 'It's never eas y delivering thes e training c ours es , is it?' he s aid as we walked together down the c orridor. 'Mos t of the s taff feel they c ould be better oc c upied than s itting in a draughty s c hool hall at the end of the day, lis tening to a lec ture on language and learning. Mos t of them do not s ee the relevanc e for their s ubjec t areas . I have to s ay, I have a deal of s ym pathy with that view. T he Minis try of E duc ation, in its wis dom , s eem s to invent thes e initiatives , c hurning out dis c us s ion papers , fram eworks , guidelines and unwieldy reports that rarely get read. T hes e people in their ivory towers in London have not the firs t idea of the am ount of work that goes on in s c hools .' 'I have to adm it, Mr P ennington-S m ith,' I s aid, 'that when I was as ked to take part in the pilot projec t, I too felt very s c eptic al but I have c hanged m y m ind. I think this initiative is worthwhile and well overdue. I am c onvinc ed that s c hool failure begins with the inability of young people to m as ter s poken and written E nglis h. T eac hers of all s ubjec ts need to be aware of the proc es s by whic h their s tudents ac quire inform ation and know s om ething about the reading dem ands of their own s ubjec ts .' 'T here is none s o zealous as a c onvert,' rem arked the headm as ter. W e s topped at the entranc e to the hall and he res ted his hand on m y arm . 'If I m ay proffer a little advic e,' he whis pered in m y ear. 'W e don't want thought-s howers , brains torm ing, bullet point pres entations , group work and plenary s es s ions and c ould you m ake your talk am us ing and entertaining?' 'Make it am us ing and entertaining?' I repeated. 'W e don't want anything heavy or rigorous .' T his was going to be s uc h an ordeal, I thought to m ys elf. A t this m om ent, Mr P ennington-S m ith was waylaid by a teac her, no doubt attem pting to give his exc us es for not s taying for m y talk, s o I had a m inute or two to rec all S idney's rem inis c enc es whic h he had im parted that afternoon in the offic e prior to m y departure for W es t Challerton. 'You will find, Gervas e,' he had s aid, 'that there are s om e teac hers who derive a pervers e s atis fac tion from trying to wind up anyone who attem pts to train them . T here's the very nois y one who arrives jus t after you've s tarted your lec ture, who bus tles into the room , apologis ing profus ely for being late, drops his papers , m akes a real fus s finding a s eat and finally dec ides on a c hair at the very front right under your nos e. He will then s huffle and yawn and grunt and s igh deeply during your pres entation and m ake frequent c om m ents behind his hand to the pers on s itting next to him . Oc c as ionally, he will dis trac t others who are attem pting to lis ten by pas s ing little notes along the row, c huc kling and watc hing for their reac tion. T hen there's the one who, when as ked if there are any ques tions , enquires when we are breaking for lunc h or who as ks if anyone has a s pare penc il, and the one with verbal diarrhoea whom you c an't s hut up and ram bles endles s ly off the s ubjec t to everyone's annoyanc e.' A t this point in S idney's outpourings , I had pus hed away the notes I had been attem pting to read through, and gave m ys elf up to lis tening to him until he ran out of s team . 'T here's the one who looks as if he's in a c om a, who s tares at you unnervingly, without the trac e of a s m ile, and who, when you explain the exerc is e you wis h them to tac kle, inform s everybody in a loud weary voic e that he has done it before and it does n't work. Of c ours e, there's the one who falls as leep and the one who ignores the "No S m oking" s ign and the one who has a digital watc h whic h goes off at regular intervals . T hen there's the downright rude pers on. Onc e I was half way through m aking a point when s om e individual from the bac k s houted out "B ulls hit! " I had the pres enc e of m ind to reply, "Y es , I got the nam e, but what was the ques tion?" Oh yes ,' S idney had told m e, 'I've s een them all.' Not all, as I was s oon to find out. Mr P ennington-S m ith, having finis hed his c onvers ation with the teac her, m otioned m e forward to the door of the s c hool hall. Ins ide, I was greeted by Mis s Mullane. 'It is really good of you to c om e,' s he s aid brightly. 'W e're all s o m uc h looking forward to your talk.' From a quic k look at the as s em bled teac hers , nothing c ould have been further from the truth. T hey appeared about as interes ted as waxwork exhibits and s at in rows fac ing the s tage, arm s folded and fac es like death m as ks . I predic ted that m y talk would not be rapturous ly well rec eived. T he headm as ter c alled for attention and introduc ed m e. In the front row was a wom an s ipping nois ily from a large m ug and wearing a T -s hirt on the front of whic h was em blazoned in large red letters the s logan: 'Give a m an an inc h and he thinks he's a ruler! ' Her neighbour was knitting furious ly and looking at m e as s he m ight her form er hus band who had des erted her for another wom an, leaving her to bring up the ten c hildren. My introduc tion was followed im m ediately by a few whis pers , as s orted s ighs and a s ea of ic y s tares from the as s em bled s taff. T hen, in a feeble attem pt to s tart the proc eedings off on a light-hearted note, the headm as ter s tarted with a joke. 'W hat's the differenc e between an ins pec tor and a s perm ?' he as ked no one in partic ular. None, leas t of all m ys elf, bothered to res pond, s o he provided the ans wer. 'A s perm has a two m illion to one c hanc e of being hum an.' T here was not a titter. A t this point, a m an in a trac ks uit c overed in bright badges opened a news paper with a flouris h and s om eone s itting at the end of a row s lithered out. It was tim e for m e to s tart whic h I did as c heerfully as I c ould, outlining what I intended doing during the hour-long s es s ion. T he c lac king of the knitting needles , the s ipping of the tea and the rus tling of s om eone's news paper were s oon ac c om panied by further s ighs and tuttings . 'E duc ation thes e days ,' I began enthus ias tic ally, 'is rather akin to the opening lines of a favourite novel of m ine: "It was the bes t of tim es , it was the wors t of tim es ." T hes e are the opening words of the novel, A Tale of Tw o Cities by Charles Dic kens .' I s tared pointedly at Madam e Defarge in the front row but s he c lac ked on regardles s . T he afternoon, needles s to s ay, was not a great s uc c es s . I had felt like a Chris tian in an arena full of lions . I dec lined the headm as ter's invitation to join the few rem aining s taff for a c up of tea and prepared to depart. 'Our s peaker next week is a Mis s de la Mare,' Mr P ennington-S m ith inform ed m e as he es c orted m e down the c orridor to the exit. 'S he's one of her Majes ty's Ins pec tors , you know. V ery high up at the Minis try of E duc ation, I'm reliably inform ed.' 'Y es , I do know her,' I s aid. 'S he's an exc ellent s peaker and has a form idable intellec t. I am s ure s he will go down a bom b.' 'S he's addres s ing the s taff on the topic "Creating a V ibrant Curric ulum ".' 'T hat s hould be fun,' I replied, pitying the poor wom an. 'I hope s o,' replied the headm as ter, s m iling widely and s howing m e to the door. 'I do hope s o.' I arrived hom e later that evening, after a partic ularly tires om e governors ' m eeting, tired, hungry and not in the bes t of m oods . I found Chris tine s itting at the kitc hen table, s eem ingly awaiting m y arrival. B efore I c ould even s ay hello s he flouris hed a news paper and as ked, 'Have you s een this ?' I c ould s ee it was a c opy of the Fettles ham Gaz ette s o gues s ed at the c ontents . 'No,' I replied, taking off m y c oat and throwing m y briefc as e on the table. 'I need a whis ky.' 'T hey're c los ing the village s c hool.' I took a deep breath, poured m ys elf a generous m eas ure of whis ky, took a gulp and replied. 'Y es , I know.' 'Y ou k now !' s he gas ped. 'Y es .' 'How long have you known?' 'A bout a week,' I told her, taking a s ip from the glas s . 'W hy didn't you s ay anything?' 'Chris tine, you know I c an't dis c us s offic e m atters at hom e.' 'E ven when it affec ts us s o pers onally?' 'Look, Chris ,' I s ighed, 'I didn't s ay anything bec aus e, well it was s aid to m e in c onfidenc e and, anyway, I knew how you would reac t. I felt exac tly the s am e when Harold dropped the bom bs hell but, as he explained, there's got to be real s avings in the educ ation budget next year and Hawks rill is one of the c ounty's s m alles t and m os t unec onom ic s c hools and -' 'I don't believe I'm hearing s uc h c laptrap.' I had never s een her quite s o angry. 'I felt exac tly the s am e as you, and I told Harold that, but there is really nothing we c an do. B oth Mrs B eighton and Mrs B rown are retiring s oon, s o c los ing Hawks rill m eans they will not have to pay redundanc ies or re-deploy anyone.' I c ould hear m ys elf ec hoing Harold's words . 'Hell's teeth! A ll you governm ent people c an think of are your c os ts . S aving redundanc y here, killing off jobs there. W hat about the c hildren? W hat about our c hild? How c an you jus t s it bac k and let them c los e the s c hool? T he s c hool your c hild would go to?' 'T here's nothing I c an do,' I s aid, draining the glas s . 'If I c ould wave a m agic wand and keep the s c hool open, I would, but the dec is ion has been m ade and that's that.' 'T hat's a defeatis t attitude if ever I heard one,' Chris tine s aid angrily. 'W ell, I do not intend to let a bunc h of m is erable c ounc illors , pathetic educ ation offic ers and petty offic ials at County Hall c los e the s c hool without a fight.' S he thum ped the kitc hen table s o hard m y glas s fell over. 'T here are s uc h things as appeals , protes ts , dem ons trations , s it-ins and pres s ure groups .' 'I c an't be part of any pres s ure group,' I told her, pic king up m y glas s and pouring m ys elf another whis ky. 'W hy?' 'B ec aus e I'm on the other s ide of the fenc e, that's why.' 'It s eem s to m e that you're s itting on the fenc e, not the other s ide of it.' 'Look, I'm one of thos e pathetic educ ation offic ers and petty offic ials at County Hall to whom you've jus t referred. I'm an offic er of the County. T here's no way I c an be part of a pres s ure group, c an I?'
'E ven if your c hild's future is at s take?' 'T hat's not very fair, Chris tine. If there were anything I c ould do -' 'W ell, there's no point in dis c us s ing it any further. I think you've m ade your feelings perfec tly c lear. T here's the rem ains of a c ottage pie in the oven. I'm going to bed.' 'Chris tine,' I s ighed, 'c an't we talk about this ?' 'T here's nothing to talk about. B y the way, Harry Cotton c alled earlier.' Harry was our neares t neighbour and c ould be a real pain in the nec k. 'W hat did he want?' 'Rats .' 'Rats ?' I repeated. 'W e've got rats at the bac k of the hous e. He's s een them running along the fenc e. Good night.' * Chris tine had been as leep when I went to bed, and we had got up in s ilenc e. Now, at breakfas t, we s tared at eac h other s heepis hly ac ros s the table. 'I'm s orry,' Chris tine s aid, 'I was jus t s o s hoc ked. I did rather overreac t.' 'I s hould have told you,' I replied. 'Y ou were right.' 'No, y ou were right. If s om ething is told to you in c onfidenc e you s houldn't be dis c us s ing it. I don't talk about the c hildren at m y s c hool with you s o why s hould I expec t you to talk about c onfidential m atters with m e. A nd it was unfair of m e to s ay you were s itting on the fenc e. I've had tim e to s leep on it and you are quite right. Y ou c an't be s een to be favouring one s c hool jus t bec aus e your c hild is to attend it. T hat would be unfair on the others . No, you have to keep well and truly out of it.' 'I'm glad you s ee that, Chris tine,' I s aid. 'Y ou s ee, if Hawks rill were the only one to be reprieved, it would s m ac k of m y pulling a few s trings , us ing m y influenc e for pers onal advantage.' 'I know that,' s he told m e. 'I'm agreeing with you. Y ou really don't need to jus tify yours elf 'W ell, I'm glad that's s orted out,' I s aid. 'Of c ours e, that does n't s top me from getting involved, does it?' s aid m y dear wife, looking at m e direc tly with her large blue eyes . 'I really m eant what I s aid las t night. I do not intend to let them c los e the s c hool without a fight.' T here was nothing I c ould s ay, but I s ens ed dark s torm c louds form ing on the horizon.
12 T he following S aturday m orning found m e at the S taff Developm ent Centre. Chris tine hadn't m entioned the propos ed c los ure of the s c hool in Hawks rill s inc e we had talked ac ros s the breakfas t table but I knew, from what m y c olleagues in the offic e had s aid, that things were m oving forward at a dram atic pac e. I c ould hear Connie c lunking and c lanking behind the hatc h in the kitc hen. T he volum e was s uc h that I knew s he was not in the bes t of tem pers . I took a deep breath, popped m y head c harily around the door and s aid, 'Morning, Connie.' 'Oh, it's you,' s he replied, looking up glum ly before returning to her furious attac k on the dis hes in the s ink. 'W hy are y ou here today?' s he as ked. 'It's S aturday. I thought I had the plac e to m ys elf for onc e.' 'I wanted to s ort out the room for next week's c ours e,' I told her, 'and put up a book dis play while the plac e is quiet. A nyway, you're a one to talk. W hat are you doing here? You s hould be in your c aravan at Mablethorpe this weekend, not s laving away on a S aturday. I would have thought you s ee enough of this plac e.' 'You're right. You wouldn't get m e in here on a weekend norm ally but you s hould have s een the s tate of this building when I c am e in yes terday. T hree days away from the plac e and it's like a tip. Do you know, I'm having to was h all thes e c ups and s auc ers again. Filthy they were. T hey c ouldn't have s een a drop of hot water. J us t rins ed and put bac k in the c upboard, they were. Dried s ugar in the bottom , tea and c offee s tains round the rim s . A nd the s tate of m y floors and toilets ! S he was les s than us eles s , Mrs Os baldis ton. I s hould never have as ked her to fill in for m e. W hen I walked through that door yes terday I thought a tornado had hit the plac e. I've had to work all day Friday to get the floors and toilets s hips hape. T oday is the kitc hen's turn. I want everything right for Monday.' I quic kly c hanged the s ubjec t. 'How was Franc e?' S he drew her lips together into a tight thin line and glared at m e. 'Don't as k,' s he s aid. 'Oh dear,' I s aid. 'Not too good then?' 'Not too good?' s he repeated. 'Not too good? It was a nightm are from beginning to end.' S he withdrew her hands from the s oaps uds and wiped them vigorous ly on a towel. 'W e got on the ferry at Dover and the s ea s tarted to heave. Up and down, up and down, like a rollerc oas ter. Mountainous it was . I thought I was going to die. If I vom ited onc e, I vom ited ten tim es . It was wors e than that trip to Ireland a c ouple of years bac k. It was awful. W hen we finally arrived in Calais , you would not believe what happened.' 'W ouldn't I?' 'No, you would not.' 'W hat did happen?' I as ked, intrigued. 'I was interc epted, that's what.' 'Interc epted?' 'Interc epted by this little Frenc h c us tom s offic ial. Ignoranus he was . Out of all the people going through, he pic ks on m e. I m ean, I as k you, do I look like a terroris t or gun-runner? Rootles through m y bag, he did, probing and prying, laying everything out without a by-your-leave. A ll m y pers onal ac c outrem ents expos ed to the world. "A nd what's this ?" he as ks m e, holding up the urn. "T hat is m y father," I told him . Cours e he didn't unders tand, did he? W ell, they don't thes e foreigners . "W hat is in the pot?" he as ks . "It is not a pot, it's an urn, and it c ontains the rem ains of m y dear departed father," I tells him . He takes the lid off, looks ins ide, pokes his big nos e in and s tarts to s niff. "W hat is in this pot?" he as ks again. "It is m y father," I tells him , "and kindly s top s niffing him , he's not that pope puree s tuff." "I s hall have to take a s am ple," he s ays . "Over m y dead body," I tells him . A t this point a nic e old pries t in a blac k has s oc k c om es to m y as s is tanc e. He was leading s om e s ort of pilgrim age to a weeping virgin in B rittany with a group of old ladies in tow. A nyway, he s tarts jabbering on in the lingo to the horrible little m an in the blac k uniform . "He thinks it m ight be an illegal s ubs tanc e," he tells m e at las t. "T hat's no illegal s ubs tanc e," I s ays , "it's m y father in there and kindly as k him to s top interfering with him ." "He thinks it m ight be drugs ," s ays the pries t. "Drugs ! " I s ays . "Do I look like a drug-runner?" "He wants to take a s pec im en," s ays the pries t, and I s ays , "Tell him that if he lays s o m uc h as a finger on m y father, I'll be ac ros s that c ounter. A nd tell him I'm here to s c atter m y father's as hes at Dunkirk. A nd," I adds , "tell him if it was n't for the likes of m en like m y father defending his c ountry from the Nazis in the las t war, extinguis hing him s elf on the battlefields of E urope, A dolf's lot would be goos e-s tepping up and down Calais , ins tead of him ." ' 'Oh dear,' I s ighed. 'I don't think the pries t told him that though.' 'I gues s not,' I m urm ured. 'T he pries t s aid not to m ake the horrid little m an angry or be obs truc tive or he m ight ins is t on a s trip-s earc h. W ell, that was the las t s traw. I as ked the pries t to tell him to hand bac k m y father or there would be fireworks .' 'S o what happened?' I as ked. 'He jus t s ort of s m iled did the pries t, the way that they do. A nyroad, he gets m y father off of the Frenc hm an. T hey're very pers uas ive are c leric s , aren't they? He bles s es m y father, whic h was very nic e of him , and m e and T ed go on our way - and not before tim e.' 'S o you m anaged to s c atter your father's as hes after all,' I s aid. 'No, I didn't. I was s o hot and flus hed after that run-in with the c us tom s m an and loaded down as I was with bags and duty free and I don't know what els e, I only dropped the urn, didn't I?' 'Oh no, Connie! ' I gas ped. 'J us t s lipped c lean out of m y hands on the s ea-front, s m as hed to s m ithereens before m y eyes and Dad was blown out to s ea. He was there one m inute, gone the next. S o I never did get to leave him with his pals at Dunkirk after all. W as ted journey, it was .' 'W ell, if it's any c ons olation,' I told her, 'there are m any people who as k for their as hes to be s c attered on the water, to be was hed out by the s ea, c arried forever in the c urrents of tim e.' It was c lear from her expres s ion that Connie was far from reas s ured. 'W ell, it is n't any c ons olation. I didn't want Dad flus hed out to s ea on the c urrents of tim e. It wouldn't have s uited m y father at all. He hated water, c ouldn't s wim and was s ic k on the boating lake at S c arborough.' 'W ell, you're bac k now, Connie.' 'Oh, I'm bac k all right! ' s he exc laim ed. 'A nd what do I c om e bac k to? S c uffs on m y floor, c hips out of m y plates , dirty c ups , dus t on m y s helves , m arks on m y walls and m y toilets - well, I c ould have wept. S he was about as m uc h us e as a c hoc olate teapot, Mrs Os baldis ton. Didn't do a hand's turn, as far as I c ould tell, all the tim e I was away.' 'W ell, s he is getting on a bit, Connie,' I told her, 'and s he does have a lot of ailm ents .' 'T he only ailm ent Mrs Os baldis ton has is a dos e of idleitis . S he never lifted a m op. Of c ours e, it's like the old s aying: "W hen the c at's away --" ' 'How do you m ean?' 'Mr Clam p's filled all the walls with rude pic tures of his nudes and very ugly and off-putting they are as well. A nd then I had the s hoc k of m y life.' Connie s uc ked and blew and purs ed her lips . 'Near the art room , s taring at m e from the wall, s m iling like a Ches ter c at is Mrs Os baldis ton. He only us ed her as a m odel as well. Mrs Os baldis ton! No wonder s he got no work done. S itting there s he is , like the Queen of S heba.' 'Mrs Os baldis ton, a nude m odel?' I exc laim ed. 'No, no, s he's a P rim itive Methodis t. S he wouldn't do anything like that. No, s he was fully c om pos t m entis in a floral overall and holding m y feather dus ter, as large as life.' Connie plunged her hands bac k into the s oaps uds . 'A nyway, I took her down and put her in the ladies ' toilets . B es t plac e for her.' 'W ell, you c an have a res t tom orrow,' I s aid. Out of the s oaps uds c am e the hands and Connie dried them on the towel. 'Chanc e'd be a fine thing. Las t S unday I was in the m iddle of putting the Yorks hire puddings in and there was a knoc k at the door. I've had a lot of thes e J ehovah's W itnes s es round rec ently on a S unday, ever s inc e they opened a c hurc h near us . Nic e enough people - very polite, s m artly dres s ed, very friendly - but they always appear when I'm in the m iddle of doing s om ething. A nyway, on the doors tep there were thes e two m en in grey s uits with blac k briefc as es . Here we go again, I thought. "I'm s orry," I s ays , "I c an't s peak to you at the m om ent, I'm very bus y." "Can we jus t have a m om ent of your tim e," s aid one of the m en, "to tell you what we believe?" "No, you c an't," I s ays , "I don't want to be unprepos s es s ing, but I've got a pan of hot fat in the oven. I'm jus t about to put m y Yorks hire puddings in." Cours e, they wouldn't take no for an ans wer. "It'll only take a m inute," s ays one of them . T hey're very... what's the word?' 'P ers is tent.' 'P ers is tent, that's it. "Look," I s ays to him , "I've heard what you've got to s ay before and I've read the booklet you pus hed through the door and the only thing you and m e have in c om m on is God. Nothing els e." W ell that took the wind out of his s ails , I c an tell you. "Oh," s ays he, looking all taken abac k, "you'll not be voting Liberal Dem oc rat then?" I felt s uc h a fool.' Connie brus hed down the front of her pink nylon overall. 'W ell, I c an't s top here talking all day. I've got the floor to do in here yet.' A fter I had s et up the book dis play and before leaving, I popped into the ladies ' c loakroom . I c ould not res is t having a quic k look at the portrait of Mrs Os baldis ton. On the far wall, between the c ubic les and the bas ins , was a large pic ture of a s tooping little wom an of raddled appearanc e, arrayed in a bright m ultic oloured overall and looking im perious ly from the c anvas . I had to s m ile. K nowing Connie as I did, that is where Mrs O. would s tay, overs eeing the ladies ' ablutions . I left the S taff Developm ent Centre that m orning in a m uc h better fram e of m ind. T hat afternoon I dec ided to tac kle the garden at the bac k of the c ottage. Harry Cotton, m y neares t neighbour, had already been ac ros s to s ee m e to offer his us ual uns olic ited advic e, this tim e on the pruning that needed to be done to the s hrubs and trees , how I m ight im prove the m os s y, weed-infes ted lawn, what I s hould do about the overgrown bus hes and with num erous other hortic ultural s ugges tions nec es s ary before winter s et in. T he rats , of c ours e, had aris en in the c ours e of our c onvers ation. 'Mus t have been about four or five of 'em runnin' along that fenc e o' yourn as large as life. B ig as babby badgers they were,' he had told m e, alm os t gleefully. 'It's all very well you gettin' this 'ere 'inderwell c happie out to s et traps and put down pois on and t'like, but rats are very res ilient c reatures . T hey'll be bac k. Make no m is take about that. I know all abaat rats . I were brought up wi' 'em . T here's nowt I don't know abaat rats . T ha wants a dog or a c ouple o' c ats . T hey'll s ort your rat problem out. Take m y B us ter, for exam ple. B order terrier s he is , and as tough as owld boots . I was only talkin' to George Hem m ings a week bac k and 'e s ays 'is P atterdale bitc h is ready to whelp. I c ould get you one o' thos e pups , if tha likes . Can't beat a terrier. My B us ter's a rare little ratter. B y, s he c an't 'alf s hift if s he s ees a rat or a rabbit. S he brings m e a rat into t'kitc hen every day. J us t nips t'bac k of its nec k as s oon as it s hows its s c abby little fac e.' Harry had banged his s tic k on the ground as though knoc king a rat on the head. He was an old m an with a wide-boned, pitted fac e the c olour and texture of an uns c rubbed potato, a s harp nos e with flared nos trils and a s hoc k of white hair. 'W ell, I don't think Chris tine would be all that keen about having a dead rat brought into the kitc hen every day, Harry,' I had replied. 'B etter a deead rat in your kitc hen, than an arm y of live ones infes tin' your garden,' he had s aid. 'T hat's what I always s ays .' I was n't s ure I agreed with that. 'I'll think about it,' I had told him . 'Mr Hinderwell, the P es t Control Offic er, is c om ing out to have a look. I'll s ee what he s ays .' 'S uit yours elf,' Harry had s aid. 'B ut I'll tell thee this . He c an put all t'traps and pois on down in t'world but they'll be bac k. Mark m y words , they'll be bac k. T ha wants a dog or a c ouple of c ats , that's what tha wants . T ed P os kitt's c at's jus t had kittens . I c ould get you a c ouple o' them , if tha prefers c ats .' 'T hat's really good of you, Harry,' I had s aid, 'but I'll s ee what Mr Hinderwell s ugges ts .' 'Mebbe it's jus t as well. Old Mrs P os kitt probably wouldn't let you have one anyroad. S he's not kindly dis pos ed to thee at t'm om ent.' 'W hy?' I'd then as ked. 'W hat have I done to ups et Mrs P os kitt?' 'Her granddaughter, little B ethany, goes to t's c hool what you're c los ing.' Oh, don't let's get onto that s ubjec t, I'd thought to m ys elf, but Harry, true to form , had refus ed to let it lie. He was as tenac ious as his B order terrier. 'A ye, it's a rum do about t's hutting a s c hool what's been 'ere in 'awks rill for c ountles s c enturies .' 'It's a V ic torian s c hool, Harry,' I had told him , 's o it's not m uc h m ore than a hundred years old and I s hould point out that I am not pers onally res pons ible for c los ing it. It's the County Counc il and I'm as angry about it as anyone. Have a word with your loc al c ounc illor and get him or her to c om plain.' 'Loc al c ounc illor! ' m y c om panion had s norted. 'Loc al c ounc illor! You m ean Horac e W ithers poon. I was at s c hool with Horac e. He were a two-fac ed little bugger then and he an't c hanged. I don't have owt to do wi' politic ians , never 'ad and never will. T hey're all t'bloody s am e. My owld dad us ed to s ay politic ians are like bananas . T hey s tart off green, then they turn yella and end up bent.' 'Y es , well I don't have any influenc e,' I had told him . 'T hat's as m ay be, but people in t'village are up in arm s abaat it.' 'S o I hear,' I had s ighed. A lthough Chris tine had kept deliberately very quiet about the whole m atter, I had heard from Harold that there had already been a great deal of ac tivity from the res idents of the village. It was als o c lear to m e that Chris tine's s tated intention to take the m atter further was not an idle threat. 'W ell, I'll get on,' Harry had s aid and he had am bled off to give s om eone els e the benefit of his unc alled-for advic e and words of wis dom . Mauric e Hinderwell had been very helpful but he had agreed with Harry that the rats would return, without a s hadow of doubt. 'Y ou have to des troy their habitat,' he had advis ed, nodding s agely. 'T ake that derelic t building you've got at the bottom of your garden. T hat's where they'll likely be, out of s ight, breeding and s preading dis eas e. T here'll be nes ts of them in there, where it's dry and dark. P lenty of food for them as well by the looks of it. P utting out a bird table full of nuts and bread is inviting rats . My advic e to you is knoc k it down and lawn it over. B arn, I m ean, not the bird table. T hen your rats will m ove s om ewhere els e. T hat old building takes up half your garden anyway and it's an eyes ore.' S o, on this S aturday afternoon I m ade a s tart on dem olis hing the old building. It was not big enough to be c alled a barn, and it was bigger than a s hed. It m us t have been s om e s ort of outhous e, a s tore perhaps . One wall had c om pletely c ollaps ed and another was dangerous ly tilted. T he expos ed beam s were rotten and little rem ained of the grey s late roof. It was a pec uliar oblong building of dark s tone with oddly narrow windows not like any of the outbuildings I had s een in the area, whic h were m os tly built of lim es tone with red tiled roofs and had plain s quare windows . I worked all afternoon and s oon all that rem ained was a pile of rubble. I was s urveying m y handiwork when Chris tine appeared with a m ug of tea. 'For the worker,' s he s aid. 'T hanks .' 'My goodnes s , it's all gone,' s he s aid, c learly im pres s ed. 'T he garden looks a lot bigger, does n't it?' 'Y es , and m uc h better without that old building.' 'W hat are you going to do with all the s tone?' s he as ked. 'T he garden's too s m all for a roc kery, is n't it?' 'I have an idea,' I told her. 'I thought we m ight have a wall ac ros s the bac k. Rem em ber las t year when thos e two s heep got through the fenc e and into the garden. You c ertainly weren't too pleas ed with what they did to your plants . W ell, I thought a drys tone wall with flowering s hrubs and c reepers , s weet peas perhaps , agains t it would be ideal there.' 'Good idea,' s he s aid. 'Now, I'm off to the S c hool A c tion Group m eeting,' s he s aid. 'I'll s ee you later.' W e had been as s iduous ly avoiding the s ubjec t of the s c hool c los ure thus far, but s he had s pent m os t of the m orning on the telephone s o I was n't s urpris ed about the m eeting. It was later that evening when m y knee began to hurt. One of the rotten beam s from the old building had s uddenly fallen and, in an attem pt to avoid it c ras hing down on top m e, I had leapt s m artly to the s ide and fallen heavily, c rac king m y knee in the proc es s . Later that evening the knee had s wollen to the s ize of a pom egranate. 'I really don't know why you had to do the dem olition yours elf,' c hided Chris tine, exam ining the knee. 'W e s hould have got a builder in to do it.' 'T hink of the expens e,' I s aid. 'I'm jus t about c apable of knoc king a c ouple of walls down.' Chris tine gave a wry s m ile. 'A re you?' s he as ked. 'It looks dreadful. Y ou had better s ee the doc tor about that.' 'I had wors e bangs than that when I played rugby. It's not nearly as bad as it looks .' W ould that that had been the c as e. * Tom Fields , the drys tone-waller, arrived bright and early the following S aturday. Chris tine had m et him at the m eeting of the S c hool A c tion Group the previous week. S he had arrived hom e with two bits of news . Firs t, that s he had been m ade c hairm an of the village's ac tion c om m ittee to fight the s c hool c los ure and, following a brief but s om ewhat heated argum ent, we had agreed that there would be no further dis c us s ion of the s ubjec t between us . S ec ondly, s he had m et Tom Fields and onc e s he had c onvinc ed him that I was not the dem onic ins pec tor intent on dem olis hing his c hild's s c hool he had agreed to build our wall. He had been let down over a job when s om e s tone hadn't arrived, and we were fortuitous ly able to take the s lot. I found him s taring beyond the s m all garden taking in the s pec tac ular view: the dark and dis tant fells , the bronze belt of the dead brac ken, the rolling green fields s weeping down to the river, the lim es tone outc rops gleam ing bone-white in the early s unlight, the s c attering of grey farm hous es and hills ide barns , and the endles s ly c ris s -c ros s ing drys tone walls . 'T ha's a grand view 'ere and no m is take, Mes ter P hinn,' he told m e. I had rather expec ted an anc ient, grizzled c harac ter in s om e s ort of traditional outfit - flat c ap, c orduroy trous ers tied at the knee with s tring, thic k tweed jac ket and s potted nec kerc hief-but Tom Fields was a young m an dres s ed in a bright blue overall. He had a ready s m ile and long blond hair tied bac k in a ponytail. He didn't look old enough to be the father of a c hild of s c hool age. He turned his attention to the rem ains of the old outhous e. 'A nd tha's got a grand bit o' s tone 'ere, an' all.' He plac ed his hands on his hips and s urveyed the s m all m ountain of rubble. 'Cos t a pretty penny this would to buy and o' c oours e then tha'd 'ave t'added expens e of 'aving it brought in. S om e on it will want a bit o' dres s ing but there's plenty 'ere for what I've got to do. A wall ac ros s t'bac k will look c ham pion, it really will. J us t as it us ed to do.' 'W hat do you m ean by that?' I as ked. 'Oh, there'd 'ave been a wall 'ere afore. A ll t'fields were walled at one tim e. B ut when they fell down, s om e of 'em newer farm ers jus t replac ed t'wall wi' fenc ing, s om etim es us ing t'bits of t'old wall to patc h s om eweer els e. T hat's what's happened 'ere, tha s ees .' 'W ell, I'm glad to be putting it bac k, then.' 'A ye, and tha's got m ore than enough s tone 'ere to m ek a reight c ham pion wall, not too 'igh as it'll s poil tha view, not s o low as it'll let t's heep in.' 'It's the rem ains of the derelic t building whic h us ed to be in the c orner of the garden,' I told him . 'Oh aye?' 'S o how big will the wall be?' I as ked. He looked at m e as if I were s om e s ort of s im pleton. 'W hat I've jus t s aid - 'igh enough to keep t's heep out and low enough not to s poil tha view. Like them what were built in owlden days . My walls are a touc h higher but not a deal different - not m uc h m ore than four foot high. T hey'll be t's am e arrangem ent of throughs , fillings and top-s tones as there 'as been for c enturies - abaat a yard wide at t'bottom les s ening to a touc h ovver a foot at t'top.' 'A nd how long will it take you to do?' I as ked. 'S am e tim e as it did for wallers two or three 'undred year ago, abaat s even yards a day. I'll 'ave yours finis hed within t'week.' 'T hat's exc ellent,' I s aid. B y the following S unday, the s m all garden at the bac k of P eewit Cottage was trans form ed. T om Fields had finis hed as he'd prom is ed the previous day and the wall was m agnific ent. S traight and s olid, it looked as if it had been there for c enturies . I had pruned the trees and s hrubs , c ut down the dead flowers , dug up the weeds , turned over the s oil, burnt the rubbis h and prepared the ground where the building had been. I would s ow gras s s eed there next year. I heard the garden gate c lic k and a m om ent later Harry Cotton appeared around the s ide of the c ottage. He was ac c om panied by his bris tly little dog with large blac k eyes and a very hairy fac e. 'Hello, Harry. Hello, B us ter,' I s aid. 'Have you had a nic e tim e away?' Harry had told m e he was going to s pend a few days at his s is ter's and had as ked m e to keep a neighbourly eye on his c ottage. 'A ye. It were reight enough wi' our B ertha, but it's allus better in yer own 'om e, in't it? S he dunt s hurrup, that's 'er trouble and there's nowt s he dunt know abaat.' T wo peas in a pod, I thought, s m iling. 'S he 'as a view on everything, our B ertha and it's all nowt abaat owt. It's like 'aving a c onvers ation wi' a bloody Gatling gun.' He poked into s om e s hrubs with his gnarled walking s tic k. 'Got rid o' your rats then, 'ave you?' he as ked, regarding m e balefully. 'Y es , I think s o,' I replied. 'Mauric e Hinderwell c aught about s ix in his traps and has put s om e pois on down, s o keep B us ter well away. I s hould think that that will be the las t of them . He rec koned that they were breeding underneath the old outbuilding.' 'Oh aye,' s aid Harry, approac hing m y new drys tone wall whic h he patted as he m ight a pet anim al. 'Nic e bit of work this . V ery nic e.' His terrier nos ed along the bas e of the wall. 'I rec kon s he c an s m ell a rat. Got a nos e for 'em .' 'I doubt it very m uc h, Harry,' I s aid. 'A ye, well we'll s ee,' he s aid, as ever the prophet of doom . 'S o, m y wall m eets with your approval, does it?' I s aid, not wis hing to s tart up a dis c us s ion about rats . 'W ho did it for thee?' he as ked.
'T om Fields .' 'Oh well, 'is fam ily's been building drys tone walls s inc e tim e o' V ikings . I thought it were one of 'is .' 'He's m ade a s plendid job of it.' Harry rem ained s taring at the wall for a good long tim e before s aying, 'I'm s urpris ed they let you pull that owld c hapel down, tha knaas .' 'W hat old c hapel?' I as ked. 'T hat what were in t'c orner o' your plot.' 'Y ou m ean the old outhous e?' 'Nay, it were no outhous e. It were t'owld W es ley an c hapel. B uilt s eventeen 'undred and s um m at. One o' oldes t c hapels in t'c ounty, s o they s ay.' 'It was a c hapel?' I s aid, m y m outh dropping open and m y heart s inking into m y boots . 'I thought it was jus t s om e s ort of outbuilding.' 'Nay, not that 'un,' Harry told m e, rubbing the whis kers on his c hin. 'It was a c hapel?' I repeated. 'Did nob'dy tell thee?' 'No, they didn't,' I s aid in a s hoc ked whis per. 'I don't s uppos e there would o' been m uc h point in T om telling thee, if tha'd already knoc ked it down.' 'Did he know?' I as ked. 'I rec kon he did. B ut he's a drys tone waller not a c hurc h builder. He c ouldn't 'ave put it bac k together ageean, if that's what tha's thinkin'.' 'W hat do you m ean, put it bac k together?' I s aid. 'T here was hardly anything s tanding. I had no idea it us ed to be a c hapel. T his is terrible.' 'A ye, it is ,' agreed Harry. 'P robably got s om e s ort of pres ervation order on it. Could 'ave been a lis ted building, tha knaas .' 'I don't believe it,' I s aid. 'I jus t don't believe it.' T his was like a re-enac tm ent of an epis ode whic h had oc c urred when we had firs t m oved into the village. I had taken over an overgrown allotm ent, s pent m any a S aturday c learing it of the thic k briars and twis ting bram bles , overgrown bus hes and ram pant weeds , only to find that I had c leared the wrong plot, one that was rented by A lbert T atters all, a friend of Harry Cotton's . 'Y ou s ee, owld A lbert kept it on for t'goos eberries ,' Harry had been quic k to point out to m e as he had s urveyed m y handiwork, 'and, of c ours e, the blac kc urrants ?' 'Goos eberries ? B lac kc urrants ?' I had c ried. 'W hat goos eberries and blac kc urrants ?' 'T hem what would 'ave been growin' on them bus hes whic h you dug up and are now burnin' on tha bonfire,' Harry had obs erved. I had eventually pers uaded A lbert, after a good few beers in the loc al pub, the Golden B all, and the prom is e of s om e fres h vegetables , to let m e take over the allotm ent. Now, here I was again with Harry, the J ob's c om forter par ex c ellenc e, des c ribing how onc e again I had put m y foot well and truly in it. 'T ha's probably jus t pulled down a building of gret 'is toric al hinteres t,' he rem arked c as ually. 'It was derelic t,' I s aid feebly. 'S om etim es we get A m eric an Methodis ts dropping in to t'village to have a look at it. I don't s uppos e they'll be c alling in to view a wall even though it us ed to be an 'is toric al s hrine.' I was s peec hles s . T hen Harry rubbed m ore s alt in the wound. 'On t'annivers ary of W es ley's death, t'loc al m inis ter, Reverend J es s op, held a s ervic e up here, as I rec all. Old Mrs Ollerans haw, who 'ad c ottage afoor thee, was very big in t'c hapel and as ked t'm inis ter to c om e out and c onduc t a s pec ial s ervic e. T hey do s ay that W es ley him s elf preac hed 'ere and that -' 'Mary Queen of S c ots s lept here on the way down to her exec ution and Guy Fawkes hid in the c ellar! ' I c ried in des peration. 'I don't know owt about that,' s aid Harry, looking puzzled. 'B ut I s 'pos e they m ight 'ave.' 'P leas e, Harry,' I pleaded, 'don't go on.' 'I rec kon you'll be having a vis it from George Hem m ings . He's on t'P aris h Counc il tha knaas and is very keen on pres ervation. T hen I expec t 'is toric al people from York will be up to s ee thee. A nd it won't be long afore Horac e W ither-s poon s tarts tekkin up t'c as e, pokin' his fat nos e in and c aus in' trouble. I s houldn't be at all s urpris ed if tha were pros ec uted and fined.' 'Harry! ' I s napped. 'P leas e do not go on about it. I'm feeling pretty bad about this as it is .' 'I won't s ay another word,' he s aid, 'but I rec kon tha'll be even m ore unpopular in t'village when they 'ears abaat this .' 'Y es , I s uppos e I will,' I s ighed. 'T hey'll be thinking that tha wants t's c hool c los ed s o tha c an knoc k it down to us e t'bric ks for an extens ion to t'c ottage.'
13 'W ell, I m us t s ay, you m ight have done your hom ework, old boy.' It was Monday m orning in the offic e and I had jus t told S idney and David about m y dis as trous weekend and the dem olition of the Methodis t c hapel. S idney was his us ual uns ym pathetic s elf and I s oon wis hed I had kept the whole s orry bus ines s to m ys elf. 'T his c ounty is c ram m ed full of old ruins ,' he announc ed, leaning bac k on his c hair and plac ing his hands behind his head. 'Y ou c an't turn a c orner without finding an abbey or priory or c as tle or s om e m edieval c hurc h or other. It's not Milton K eynes , you know. Y ou s hould have gues s ed this c harm ing and antiquated little c ons truc tion would be of his toric interes t.' 'It was a ruin, S idney,' I told him , 'not a c harm ing and antiquated little c ons truc tion, as you put it. It was a broken-down ram s hac kle building with two walls and no roof. I've looked through the deeds of the c ottage and there is nothing about any Methodis t c hapel on m y property.' I was trying to c onvinc e m ys elf that I was blowing things out of all proportion. 'It's c alled an outbuilding and if it were a lis ted building it would s ay s o - wouldn't it?' 'It's in the National P ark, your c ottage, is n't it?' rem arked S idney, leaning even further bac k in his c hair. 'Y es , it is . W hy?' S idney s uc ked in his breath dram atic ally. 'W ell, they s lap pres ervation orders on everything from a pigs ty to a c es s pit in the National P ark. You c an't c hange a tile on your roof without perm is s ion. You know, I did warn you, Gervas e, before you bought that c rum bling pile that you would be far better off in a s m art rivers ide apartm ent or a m odern town hous e in Fettles ham , within walking dis tanc e of the offic e. Now, I'm no expert on the m atter -' 'W ell, there's a firs t,' rem arked David, looking up from his papers and over the top of his s pec tac les . 'Y ou're an expert on every other bles s ed thing.' 'B ut, what I will s ay,' c ontinued S idney blithely, 'is that I well rec all the hoo-hah when they knoc ked down thos e derelic t outs ide toilets at the little s c hool at Tarnc liffe. You know the s c hool, Gervas e, next door to the rather attrac tive little grey-s tone P rim itive Methodis t c hapel where J ohn W es ley was reputed to have preac hed. T hey were pre-V ic torian, by all ac c ounts , thes e privvies , and the only exam ples of their kind in Yorks hire, pos s ibly in the c ountry. E veryone thought they were an eyes ore - the headteac her, Mis s Drayton, her as s is tant, that rather fus s y Mrs S tandis h, all the governors and parents . T hey were s m all, s m elly, dam p and dis gus ting and they harboured rats , jus t like your old building. W ell, no s ooner were they down than up jum ps the loc al his toric al s oc iety and c laim s they were unique and had been us ed by m any a fam ous pers on pas s ing through, if you will exc us e the unintended pun, on their way to York and were of unim aginable his toric al im portanc e. T hey were hoping to put up one of thos e blue plaques s aying, "E m ily B ronte s at here".' 'Take no notic e, Gervas e,' David reas s ured m e. 'Nothing will c om e of it, m ark m y words . He's jus t winding you up. You m ight give old P erkins in the County A rc hitec ts ' Departm ent a ring, though, to be on the s afe s ide. He's a very good-hearted s ort is old P erkins . B een in the c ounty for ever. He's big on old ruins , Fellow of the Royal His toric al S oc iety and he's a Methodis t lay preac her. If anyone will know about this c hapel, he will.' 'I would advis e you to keep very quiet,' s aid S idney. 'Mentioning it to s om eone like old P erkins is inviting trouble. If I were you, I would adm it nothing or blam e vandals . T hey've m anaged to inc apac itate the nuc lear fall-out s helter in Colling-ton, from what I hear. A c hapel would be a piec e of c ake for them after that. I would jus t plead ignoranc e.' 'I don't know what has got into you today, S idney,' s aid David, s m iling. 'Y ou freely adm it you are not an expert and then you s tart pleading ignoranc e. A re you on s om e s ort of m edic ation?' S idney didn't deign to ans wer. 'I s eem to be having a real run of bad luc k at the m om ent,' I told m y c olleagues . It was true: firs t it was K ing Henry's , then the Hawks rill s c hool c los ure, then the rats , then the c hapel and m y knee was no better either. W hatever next? I hadn't long to wait. T he firs t vis it of the week was to Mans ton Churc h of E ngland P aroc hial S c hool, a quaint, two-s torey s tone building whic h nes tled in a s m all village on the extens ive es tate of Lord Marric k. V alentine Courtnay-Cunningham e, 9th E arl Marric k, V is c ount Mans ton, B aron B rafferton, MC, DL, was one of the m os t c olourful and unus ual c harac ters it had been m y pleas ure to m eet; a delightfully c heerful, good-natured and s om ewhat ec c entric peer who loved the Dales as pas s ionately as any farm er. T his portly, red-c heeked c harac ter with his bom bas tic walrus m ous tac he and thic k hair s hooting up from a s quare head looked as if he had walked s traight out of the pages of an his toric al novel. T he las t tim e I had vis ited the s c hool I had ac c om panied Lord Marric k, who was the Chairm an of the Governing B ody. T he c hildren had been fas c inated when this outlandis h-looking figure had m arc hed through the c las s room door, m ous tac he bris tling, and thundered, 'Morning, c hildren! ' W e had s at together beneath a s m all m arble plaque bearing the nam e of one of his dis tinguis hed forebears - the Dowager Countes s Marric k - who had endowed the s m all s c hool a c entury or s o earlier. A s I s at in the c orner of the s am e c las s room now, beneath the s am e m arble plaque, m aking a few prelim inary notes on the s tate of the building and the dis play of work, I bec am e c ons c ious of a s m all boy, aged about s even or eight, obs erving m e from a little way away. I c ould feel his eyes taking in every detail of m y appearanc e. E ventually he approac hed m e. 'May I as k you what you are doing?' he inquired. 'I'm writing about your s c hool,' I replied, looking up and s m iling. 'I s ee.' 'I'm a s c hool ins pec tor.' 'Y es , I know. Our teac her told us you would be vis iting us today and that you would be looking at our books and lis tening to us read.' 'I'm Mr P hinn,' I told him . 'Oh, I'm B enedic t,' he replied, holding out a s m all hand whic h I s hook form ally. 'W ell, B enedic t, s houldn't you be getting on with your work?' 'I've done it. W hen we've finis hed our writing, we're allowed to s elec t a book from the Reading Corner. I was on m y way there when I thought I'd s top and s ay hello.' His m anner and s peec h were am us ingly old-fas hioned for one s o young. 'W ell, that's very nic e of you, B enedic t,' I s aid. 'Mrs Mc Guire - s he's our teac her, but you probably know that already - well, Mrs Mc Guire s ays there are m uc h better words to us e than "nic e".' 'I'm s ure s he's right,' I s aid, c huc kling. 'I'll try to rem em ber in future.' 'A nd that there are m uc h m ore interes ting words to us e in our s tories than "s aid". Do you like s tories , Mr P hinn?' 'I do,' I replied. 'W ould you like to s ee s om e of m ine?' 'P erhaps later, B enedic t,' I told him . 'I'm a little bus y at the m om ent.' 'Righto, I'll get along then and c hoos e a book. I like poetry, you know. I love the rhym es .' He thought for a m om ent and then s aid, 'Do you know, Mr P hinn, we've had a very interes ting c onvers ation, haven't we?' 'W e have, B enedic t,' I replied, 'indeed we have.' He then patted m e gently on the arm and s aid, before departing for the B ook Corner, 'W e m us t do lunc h s om etim e.' * One reas on for m y vis it that m orning was to s ee the rec ent c hanges whic h had been m ade to the building to ac c om m odate a dis abled pupil who had rec ently s tarted at the s c hool. Ram ps had been built, doors had been widened to allow the wheelc hair to pas s through, c las s room s had been re-arranged and a dis abled toilet and a s tair lift had been ins talled. It all looked very im pres s ive and the headteac her and her as s is tant were well pleas ed. I m et the c hild in ques tion over lunc h. S he was a s m all girl of about s even or eight, a c heerful, c hattery little thing with c urly red hair and a wide s m ile. I s oon dis c overed that s he was as bright as a button. 'Mr P hinn, are you very im portant?' s he as ked between m outhfuls of las agne. 'No, not very,' I replied. 'Mrs Mc Guire told us that you were a very im portant pers on.' 'I think s he was exaggerating, jus t a little bit.' 'My grandpa's a very im portant pers on,' the c hild told m e. 'Is he?' 'He wears a wig, you know, and a long red dres s .' 'Does he?' 'A nd s hiny s hoes with high heels and big s ilver buc kles on the front.' 'I s ee.' I had vis ions of a drag queen but I s us pec ted I knew what her grandfather did. 'He's a judge, you know,' s he inform ed m e. 'Y es , I thought he m ight be.' 'A nd he loc ks naughty people up.' S he took a gulp of water from the plas tic beaker. 'My daddy's not a judge, but he's very im portant.' 'Is he?' 'He c uts people up,' the little girl s aid, nodding gravely. 'I s ee.' Now I had vis ions of J ac k the Ripper but I gues s ed her father was probably a s urgeon. 'He's a s ort of doc tor, you know,' s he told m e. 'Y es , I thought he m ight be. B ut what about you?' 'Oh, I'm not very im portant,' s he s aid, in a m atter-of-fac t voic e. 'W ell, I think you are and I bet your teac hers and your parents think you are too and that grandpa of yours . I rec kon he thinks you are very s pec ial as well.' 'My firs t nam e is India and I'm nam ed after a c ountry,' s he told m e. I leaned ac ros s the table and whis pered c onfidentially, 'W ell, m y firs t nam e is Gervas e and I'm nam ed after a yoghurt.' T he c hild giggled. 'Y ou're not really nam ed after a yoghurt, are you? P eople aren't nam ed after yoghurts .' 'W hen m y m other was expec ting m e, India,' I told her, putting on a very s erious expres s ion, 's he had a pas s ion for a partic ular Frenc h yoghurt c alled "Gervais ", and for broc c oli. I think I did pretty well with the nam e s he pic ked, don't you?' 'I know what you are, Mr P hinn,' s aid India, giggling and pointing a little finger at m e. 'Do you?' 'You're like m y grandpa, Mr P hinn. You're a teas e. He takes m e for long walks and tells m e about all s orts of things , m y grandpa, and s om etim es he teas es m e, like when he s aid he was s wallowed by a whale and it took him to the S outh S eas and he was s tranded on a des ert is land and m et thes e pirates . He's a lot of fun, m y grandpa.' I bet he's not a lot of fun in the c ourtroom , I thought to m ys elf, in his wig, long red dres s and buc kled s hoes . T here would be no teas ing then. 'A nd do you like to be teas ed, India?' 'Y es , I do rather, it's fun. T hat's if it's not c ruel. Grandpa s ays you s houldn't teas e people about the way they look.' 'No, it's not nic e to teas e s om ebody in that way,' I agreed. 'Mrs Mc Guire s ays there are m uc h better words to us e than "nic e", Mr P hinn.' 'S o I believe,' I replied. 'B enedic t's already had a word with m e about that.' 'A nd grandpa s ays that we're all different and that's why the world is s uc h a wonderful plac e. "B ig or s m all, s hort or tall, blac k or white, dark or light, God loves us all." T hat's what grandpa s ays .' 'He's a very wis e m an, your grandpa, India,' I told her. 'T hey've put s pec ial ram ps in the s c hool for m e, you know,' s aid the little girl proudly. 'Y es , I know.' 'A nd a s pec ial toilet and a s tair lift.' 'A nd are you m anaging to us e them all right?' I as ked. 'Oh yes , they're fine, but the toilet is a bit of a nuis anc e. You s ee, they've m ade the toilet s eat about as high as the s eat on m y wheelc hair. W ell, m y wheelc hair has foot-res ts whic h are quite high off the ground. T hat m eans when I'm s itting on the toilet m y legs s ort of dangle down. It's quite unc om fortable. T hen the was hbas in is on the wall oppos ite to the towel. I was h m y hands and then have to wheel over the other s ide to dry m y hands . I think it would have been a good idea for the builders to have had a word with m e before they put the toilet in.' S he thought for a m om ent. 'B ut, I'm very pleas ed really and everybody's very nic e here - whoops ! I m ean very friendly. It's people outs ide s c hool that get on m y nerves a bit.' 'In what way?' I as ked. 'I jus t wis h they would believe m e when I tell them things .' 'W hat do you m ean, India?' I as ked. 'If I'm in m y wheelc hair in a s hop and s om eone c om es along, a grown-up that is , and s ays , "A re you all right?" and I s ay, "Y es , I'm fine, thank you," then they always s ay, "A re you s ure?" and I s ay, "Y es . I'm s ure." T hen I s tart to wheel m ys elf along and they s ay, "Here, let m e help you," and I s ay, "I'm all right, really. I c an m anage." A nd then they s ay, "It's no bother," and then they pus h m e along.' 'W ell, India,' I told her, 'you've given m e quite a lot to think about.' A nd indeed s he had. I have m et a num ber of dis abled youngs ters over the years and, without exc eption, they have been good-hum oured and extrem ely pos itive. T he problem s fac ed by India, of c ours e, are not unus ual. A c c es s is often denied to thos e with dis abilities and they fac e a whole raft of c hallenges and hurdles , in partic ular ac hieving the independenc e they s o des ire. T he diffic ulties fac ed by the dis abled are not of their own m aking; they are the res ult of the way they are treated by the able-bodied. In m y firs t year of teac hing, I rem em ber m eeting J ohn, a s eventeen-year-old with c erebral pals y. J ohn's c ondition m ade it hard for him to c ontrol his m us c les and m ovem ents and s om etim es he would s hout out involuntarily. He was a highly intelligent boy with a wic ked s ens e of hum our and a perm anent s m ile. He would c areer down the c orridors of the s c hool like a c harioteer at the Rom an gam es , totally fearles s and at a frightening s peed. He took part in as m any s ports as he c ould, ac ted in the s c hool dram a produc tions , s ang in the c hoir and annihilated anyone foolis h enough take him on at c hes s . He des pis ed the word "s pas tic " with all its negative c onnotations . I rec all one m em orable oc c as ion, in a General S tudies les s on, when we were debating the depic tion of people on the televis ion and in film s . J ohn, as always , brought a fres h pers pec tive to our dis c us s ions . 'How m any dis abled people,' he had as ked, 'do you s ee on the s c reen? A nd if they do appear, how m any are different from the s tereotypic al long-s uffering, perm anently c heerful invalid in the wheelc hair who s hows everyone els e what c ourage and s uffering are really like? A nd,' he had c ontinued, 'how m any of thes e roles are ac tually played by dis abled ac tors ?' B efore going on to univers ity, J ohn rec eived the prize at the s c hool's S peec h Day, for the bes t exam ination res ults in his year. He s ped ac ros s the s c hool s tage, exec uted a perfec t turn in his wheelc hair and c am e to a s kidding halt in front of a s tartled Lord Mayor who was pres enting the awards . J ohn rec eived the s ilver c up, his c ertific ates and a book token for his outs tanding ac adem ic ac hievem ent. 'W hile I have this opportunity, your wors hipful,' he had s aid, 'm ay I as k you to us e your influenc e to get a better ram p fitted in the public library.' T he headm as ter later rem arked that the Cam bridge dons did not know what they were letting them s elves in for. During the afternoon break, I wandered around the playground with Mrs Mc Guire. T he c hildren, well wrapped up agains t the c old, were c learly enjoying the fifteen m inutes of freedom from their s tudies . 'It's s o good to s ee the c hildren s kipping and playing hops c otc h and other traditional gam es ,' I told her. 'S o m any have dis appeared.' 'Indeed,' replied Mrs Mc Guire. W e paus ed at the edge of the playground. 'E very tim e I look at that view,' s he s aid, 'I tell m ys elf how very luc ky I am to be teac hing here. It's s o fres h and c lean and peac eful.' W e s tared together at the pale green fields with grazing s heep, s tretc hing away beneath a c loudles s blue s ky. Later that afternoon I s at with the headteac her to talk about the day I had s pent in the s c hool and India, of c ours e, c ropped up. 'My goodnes s ,' s ighed Mrs Mc Guire, 'you would not believe the diffic ulties we had getting the powers that be to agree to the alterations to ac c om m odate that one little girl. T he s c hool was only built a little m ore than a c entury ago and it's not lis ted or anything but you'd think it was York Mins ter or S kipton Cas tle, the trouble we had obtaining perm is s ion to m ake the m inor c hanges to the s truc ture, to ins tall the s tair lift, widen the doors , things like that. I m ean, it was n't as if we were taking a s ledge-ham m er to s om e religious s hrine and knoc king down s om ething irreplac eable.' S he m us t have s een the expres s ion on m y fac e. 'A re you all right, Mr P hinn?' s he as ked. 'Y ou've gone quite pale.' I dec ided to take David's advic e and when I got bac k to the offic e that afternoon I went in s earc h of old P erkins - or J as per P erkins , to be c orrec t - in the A rc hitec ts ' Departm ent. Mr P erkins was a delightful and erudite gentlem an whom I dis c overed poring over a large m ap in a s m all offic e tuc ked away at the very rear of County Hall. I explained about the c hapel and waited in trepidation for his c ons idered opinion. 'Do you like to be teas ed, Mr P hinn?' he as ked, ec hoing m y words to India earlier that day. 'I'm s orry, Mr P erkins ?' 'Teas ed. Do you like your leg pulled?' He c huc kled. 'I think you've got friends with very vivid im aginations or ones that enjoy a little rus e. Firs tly, s peaking as a lay preac her of s om e thirty years , I know of no Methodis t c hapel on your property. T here are two c hapels in Hawks rill, if m y m em ory s erves m e aright. I've preac hed at both. T here's the P rim itive Methodis t on S hire Lane and then the W es leyan Methodis t on S nig Hill. A s for the Reverend J es s op c onduc ting s om e s ort of s ervic e up where you live, I think it extrem ely unlikely. He's not in the bes t of health and he's got quite enough on, m anaging the two c hapels in the village, without taking on a third. He did attem pt to am algam ate the two c hapels , you know, but traditions die hard and both c ongregations dug their heels in. B ut, that's another m atter. A nyway, Mr P hinn, I am pretty c ertain that there was no third Methodis t c hapel in Hawks rill. Now, s peaking as an arc hitec t, you would have been m ade fully aware when you purc has ed the property that this was a lis ted building or a s ite of partic ular his toric al interes t. T here have been a few oc c as ions when s om e buildings have been dem olis hed by ac c ident and one or two that have s lipped through the net, but they are very few and far between. I think you c an res t as s ured that you won't be loc ked up for the des ec ration of a c hurc h.' 'T hank you s o m uc h, Mr P erkins ,' I s aid, s haking his hand vigorous ly. 'Y ou don't know what a weight you have lifted off m y s houlders . I owe you a drink.' Mr P erkins rais ed an eyebrow and gave a wry little s m ile. 'I'm a Methodis t, Mr P hinn, rem em ber.' T here would have been a veritable s pring in m y s tep as I m ade m y way down the top c orridor of County Hall that afternoon had it not been for the s wollen knee whic h was s till extraordinarily painful. I had ignored Chris tine's advic e about going to the doc tor but now determ ined to m ake an appointm ent jus t as s oon as I got bac k to the offic e. I s topped in m y trac ks , however, when I turned a c orner. Outs ide Com m ittee Room One, a group of c ounc illors was huddled around a loud ges tic ulating individual in a baggy tweed s uit. A lthough he had his bac k to m e, I rec ognis ed ins tantly the bull nec k whic h overlapped the c ollar, the m op of unnaturally jet blac k hair and the bom bas tic voic e. It was Counc illor George P eters on. I had c om e ac ros s Counc illor P eters on a good few tim es before and he always m anaged to m ake m y hac kles ris e with his c lever c om m ents and tas teles s obs ervations . T here s eem ed no way that I c ould avoid him but I was going to m ake a determ ined effort anyway. S o I quic kly c ontinued down the c orridor, lim ping but walking on the balls of m y feet s o m y heels would not betray m y pres enc e and looking down as if I were preoc c upied in s om e knotty problem . I s ailed pas t the c abal and thought that I had not been s een, but as I reac hed the top of the long c urved s tairc as e, a voic e ec hoed down the c orridor. 'Hey! Hey! Mr P hinn. Not tryin' to avoid m e, are you?' I turned round to fac e the group and gave a watery s m ile. 'Counc illor P eters on.'
'You were goin' at a fair lic k. I'll walk ac ros s to t'ins pec tors ' offic e wi' you. I've got a m eetin' with Dr Yeats .' He turned to his c om panions . 'W e'll rais e it at t'next m eetin', Horac e,' he s aid to one of his fellow c ounc illors , before s triding towards m e. 'T his is a right c arry-on about thes e s c hool c los ures , in't it?' he s aid as we des c ended the s tairs together. 'Y es , it's very unfortunate,' I replied, negotiating the s teps . 'W hat's up wi' yer leg?' he as ked. 'Oh, I had an ac c ident,' I told him . 'I banged it. Nothing s erious .' 'A ye, well, I was jus t s ayin', it's a right c arry-on about thes e s c hool c los ures .' T he leas t I s aid the better, I thought. 'Y es , it is .' 'W e've jus t 'ad an hextrahordinary m eeting of the S ub-Com m ittee about it. It's a right c an of worm s and no m is take.' He m ade no attem pt to hide his anger. He puffed out his c heeks , s hook his head and grim ac ed theatric ally. 'Feelings are running very high,' I rem arked, looking into the red m eaty fac e. 'T oo right, they are, and I'll tell you what s c hool is t'fly in t'ointm ent. It's Hawks rill. E verybody bar the c at and its m other is gettin' in its two pennyworth about t'c los ure of that partic ular s c hool and it's turning very nas ty.' 'I'm s orry to hear that.' 'W e've 'ad c ountles s late m eetings of t'S ub-Com m ittee, letters of protes t, pic tures in t'paper of people wi' plac ards . T hat Chairm an of Governors , Reverend B raybrook, has put it on t'agenda of t'full E duc ation Com m ittee and when 'e gets s tarted there's no s toppin' 'im . 'E thinks 'e's in 'is pulpit.' T hos e in glas s hous es , I thought. 'W e've 'ad t'loc al m em ber of parliam ent writin' m e notes and Lord Marric k grum bling at m e down t'phone and next week, blow m e, if one of thes e HMIs is n't c om in' up from London to s ee m e about it - wom an with a funny nam e and a very s harp m anner.' 'Mis s de la Mare?' 'A ye, that's 'er. A nybody'd think I was doin' this to be awkward. A nyroad, I don't s uppos e I s hould be tellin' you all this .' 'A nd why is that Counc illor P eters on?' I enquired. W e s topped at the bottom of the s tairs . 'B ec aus e it m ight get bac k to t'oppos ition.' 'Meaning?' 'Meanin' that that wife of yours and 'er protes t group are c aus in' all t'trouble, s tirrin' things up.' My hac kles began to ris e but I kept c alm , breathed out s lowly and looked him in the eye. 'I c an as s ure you, Counc illor P eters on, I have not dis c us s ed the s ituation with m y wife or anyone els e, for that m atter. Like you, I gues s , I keep County Counc il bus ines s to m ys elf and do not talk to her about s uc h things .' 'T hat's as m ay be, but that wife of yours gave m e a real grillin' at t'public m eetin' and you don't even 'ave kiddies at t's c hool.' 'No, but we will have or would have had, I s hould s ay. P eople in the village feel very s trongly about the s c hool c los ing. It's at the very heart of the c om m unity and it's us ed for all m anner of ac tivities and events . More im portantly, Hawks rill is an exc ellent s c hool as all the reports s how. In fac t, it's one of the bes t s c hools I have vis ited.' 'Yes , yes , I know all that, but it's s m all, very s m all and it's too unec onom ic al to keep it goin'. W hat your wife and thes e protes tors don't s eem to realis e is that we 'ave to c ut c os ts . I don't want to c los e a s c hool any m ore than you do, but we 'ave to s ave m oney s om ehow and that's t'top and bottom of it. You s hould per'aps 'ave a quiet word with your wife and tell 'er to go eas y.' 'Counc illor, gone are the days when a hus band tells his wife what to do.' I was c ertain that the c ounc illor him s elf did not go around giving orders to Mrs P eters on. S he was the headteac her of Highc ops e County P rim ary S c hool and a fierc e and form idable wom an. 'I am s ure you realis e, Mr P hinn, that s hould s he keep up this pres s ure, it c ould m ake it tric ky for you.' 'In what way?' 'W ell, if you were to get Dr Y eats 's job, you'll be t'one that 'as to deal wi' t'c los ures . 'A s that c ros s ed your m ind?' 'Y es , it has ,' I replied. 'I m ean, you c an't be on t's ide of t'angels and drink wi' t'devil and it's not goin' to do m uc h for m arital harm ony, you at loggerheads with your wife about Hawks rill S c hool, is it?' 'T hat s ituation will not aris e,' I as s ured him . 'Oh, but it c ould. A fter the las t fias c o when we appointed that Mr Carter who gave bac k-word - and I never really took to 'im - then you m ight find yours elf t'new S enior Ins pec tor and that m eans that you'll 'ave to deal with all this . It'll be you who's in c harge of c los in' t's c hool.' 'I repeat, that s ituation won't aris e,' I told him . I looked him in the fac e. 'Y ou s ee, I don't intend applying for Dr Y eats 's job. Good afternoon, Counc illor P eters on.' W ith that I lim ped off towards the c ar park.
14 'A re you doing anything this S aturday?' T he ques tion, from the Head of the E nglis h Fac ulty at T he Lady Cavendis h High S c hool for Girls , took m e rather by s urpris e. I had obs erved Mis s B ridges 's les s ons the previous year and judged them to be s om e of the bes t I had ever s een. I had rather expec ted this dim inutive s c hoolm a'am with the pale, indrawn fac e, dark eyes and thic k iron-grey hair s c raped bac k into a tight little bun, to be a rather dry and c rus ty individual and that her les s ons would be dull in the extrem e. A ppearanc es c an, of c ours e, be dec eptive, and the talented Mis s B ridges turned out to be lively, am us ing and im m ens ely enthus ias tic . S he was quite c learly idolis ed by the s tudents s he taught and their exam ination res ults were outs tanding. Now, here s he was on the phone as king m e out. 'S aturday?' I s aid. 'T hat's right. A re you free this S aturday? Let m e explain. I am taking a party of s enior girls to s ee the Royal S hakes peare Com pany's m atinee perform anc e of K ing Lear at S tratford-upon-A von and I have a c ouple of s pare tic kets . T wo s tudents c an't c om e at the las t m om ent. It's s uc h a pity to let the tic kets go to was te and I thought, s inc e you are s om ething of a S hakes peare afic ionado, you and your wife m ight c are to join us . I did s o enjoy m eeting you when you vis ited LCHS las t year. A ls o, it would be good to have s om e m ore adults with us . Our girls are extrem ely s ens ible, of c ours e, but one never knows when em ergenc ies m ight aris e and it's always good to have another pair of hands .' 'W ell, that's very kind of you, Mis s B ridges ,' I s aid, flic king though the pages in m y des k diary. 'A c tually, Chris tine and I don't have anything on this S aturday. I'm s ure s he would love to c om e. I c ertainly would. I haven't s een a S hakes peare play for s om e tim e. It will be a real treat.' 'S plendid! ' c ried Mis s B ridges . 'W ell, that's s ettled then. If you c ould be at the s c hool for eight of the c loc k prom pt, that will give us am ple tim e to travel down to S tratford in tim e for the m atinee perform anc e.' Chris tine was dis tinc tly lukewarm when I m entioned it to her that evening. 'It's not a barrel of laughs , K ing Lear, is it?' s he s aid gloom ily. 'W e c ould both do with being c heered up this weekend, not thoroughly depres s ed. It's all doom , gloom , treac hery and m urder, is n't it?' 'W ell, no, it's far from a c om edy,' I agreed, 'but it's s ure to be a s uperb perform anc e and a day out, away from s c hool c los ures and reports and lis ted c hapels , will buc k us both up. A nyway, it will take a lot to depres s m e at the m om ent. Dec iding not to apply for Harold's job has m ade m e alm os t light-headed. I feel like c elebrating.' I had thought long and hard about applying for the S enior Ins pec tor's pos t. I was flattered, of c ours e, that m y three c olleagues in the offic e were keen for m e to try m y hand again, and Dr Gore's c om m ents , when we dis c us s ed the K ing Henry's College report, had led m e to believe that I would be in with a s erious c hanc e this tim e. B ut then I had s een Harold's des k whic h overflowed with reports , letters of c om plaint and all m anner of offic ial doc um ents . I rem em bered his talking about the num erous problem s he had to s olve - 'S om etim es ,' he had s aid, 'I feel like a glorified agony aunt' - and, of c ours e, the endles s late night m eetings . I had s een how wearied he had bec om e by all the pres s ure and s tres s , and how m uc h he was looking forward to his retirem ent. T his tim e, I had not taken long to c om e to the c onc lus ion that Chris tine was right and that I s hould not apply. I had quite enough on m y plate with a new wife, new hous e, and a baby on the way. Maybe another opportunity would aris e one day, when things were m ore s ettled. 'I really am pleas ed about you not going for the job,' s aid Chris tine now, giving m e a pec k on the c heek. 'S o, are we on for S tratford?' I as ked. 'W ould you m ind awfully if I didn't go?' Chris tine s aid. 'It's jus t that B aby P hinn is a bit tiring at tim es and m y bladder is a bit unpredic table in m y pres ent c ondition. I need to be in c los e proxim ity to a loo. I really c ouldn't fac e a long c oac h journey at the m om ent.' 'Of c ours e! ' I c ried, 'I never thought. I'm s orry, darling. I'll ring Mis s B ridges and tell her we c an't go.' 'I'm the one who's pregnant,' s aid Chris tine. 'Y ou go. I've got lots to do. It will take you out of yours elf. Y ou des erve a bit of a break. A c tually, I thought I m ight do a bit of early Chris tm as s hopping in Fettles ham this weekend before all the c rowds s tart.' 'A re you s ure you don't m ind m e going?' 'Of c ours e I don't m ind.' S o, early on the S aturday m orning, I duly arrived at the c ar park of the vas t, m oc k-Gothic edific e with its ugly redbric k towers and turrets , whic h was T he Lady Cavendis h High S c hool for Girls . I had c ontac ted Mis s B ridges , as king her to find s om eone to take Chris tine's plac e. T he Head of the E nglis h Fac ulty, wrapped up like an A rc tic explorer, greeted m e warm ly and introduc ed m e to her c olleagues , Mis s P ike and Mrs Roac he. 'Quite a fis hy c ollec tion of teac hers ,' s he s aid, c huc kling, 'and now we have Mr P hinn. V ery apt. W e're jus t waiting for Mrs Todd, who's gone to powder her nos e, then we c an be on our way. Mrs Todd us ed to teac h at the big c om prehens ive and is c overing for a teac her on m aternity leave. I thought s he m ight like to s tep into the breac h and join our party. I believe you m et her when you ins pec ted K ing Henry's in S eptem ber.' 'Y es , I did,' I replied. 'Y ou c aus ed quite a s tir, I hear,' s aid Mis s B ridges , a wry s m ile on the s m all lips . 'I don't know about that.' 'W ell, whatever they s aid about you,' s aid Mis s B ridges , 'I found you very agreeable.' W hic h m ade m e wonder jus t exac tly what they had s aid about m e. I gues s the s taff thought I was s om ething of a 'hatc het m an'. 'Mrs Todd's hus band's a s urgeon at Fettles ham Royal Infirm ary, you know,' c ontinued the teac her, 'and s he has four very c lever s ons .' 'S o I believe,' I s aid. 'A h, here s he is now! ' c ried Mis s B ridges . 'S hall we get on the c oac h? T he girls are aboard already and are exc ited to get going.' S he looked for a m om ent at the c raggy-fac ed individual with an enorm ous protruding s tom ac h and greas y blac k hair s lic ked bac k on his head, who was leaning by the door of the c oac h and puffing m ightily on a large pipe. Clouds of evil-s m elling s m oke filled the air. 'I do hope the driver will be all right,' s he added s otto v oc e.'A ll our regular drivers were already booked - s om e im portant football gam e, I believe.' 'I'm s ure he'll be fine,' I s aid. 'A re we all s et then?' the driver s houted as Mis s B ridges , her c olleagues and I approac hed him . 'A ll pres ent and c orrec t, Mr Mitc hell,' the teac her told him , waving her hand in front of her fac e to diffus e the s m og. 'A nd 'ave all t'girls paid a vis it before they got on? I don't want to 'ave toilet s tops all t'way down. Las t s c hool party I took, they were on and off t'c oac h like a fiddler's elbow. T hey were jum ping on t's eats , running up and down t'ais le, dropping litter, pulling fac es out o' t'winder, m ekkin an 'ell of a rac ket. I tell you, s c hool parties are not m y idea of fun. OA P s , now, they're t'bes t.' 'I have m ade c ertain that the girls have all done what is nec es s ary, Mr Mitc hell,' Mis s B ridges as s ured him . 'A nd you c an be c ertain there will be no jum ping up and down or unnec es s ary nois e.' 'A nd you've m entioned t'litter?' 'I've m entioned the litter.' 'A nd told 'em not to s tand up and bloc k m i view?' 'T hey are well aware of that, too.' 'A nd there's no s m oking on t'c oac h,' he s aid, exhaling a c loud of pungent s m oke. 'No s m oking,' repeated the teac her. 'V ery s ens ible. It's s uc h an unpleas ant habit.' T he pointed rem ark was los t on him and he blew out another c loud of s m oke. 'A nd they know where t's ic k buc ket is ?' 'A ll has been explained,' s aid Mis s B ridges im patiently, 's o c ould we m ake a m ove, do you think?' 'B ec aus e c leaning vom it off s eats is not s om ething I take kindly to and t'las t s c hool party I 'ad on 'ere -' 'S hall we get going?' I c ould s ee by Mis s B ridges 's twitc hy m anner and inc reas ingly exas perated c ountenanc e that s he was getting irritated. T he driver looked to be in no great hurry. He blew out his c heeks , tapped his pipe on the s ide of the c oac h and looked at the s ky with a m artyred expres s ion on his fac e. 'Looks like rain,' he s aid grim ly. I c lim bed up the s teps of the c oac h and fac ed rows of young wom en all in identic al c lean white blous es and yellow ties , dark green pinafore dres s es and m atc hing berets whic h dis played, in gold, the Lady Cavendis h s c hool badge. A hus h des c ended, and as I m ade m y way down the ais le to s it in m y des ignated s eat on the bac k row next to Mrs T odd, I felt thirty pairs of eyes trained on m e. Mis s B ridges was the las t on the c oac h. S he did a quic k head c ount, s m iled widely and s aid, 'W ell, girls , I think we are all s et. A s you will have obs erved, we have a gentlem an with us for the trip, in addition to our driver, of c ours e. S om e of you m ight rec all s eeing Mr P hinn when he vis ited the s c hool las t year to c arry out an ins pec tion. Do m ake him feel welc om e, won't you? He's s om ething of an expert on the bard s o you m ay like to as k him about the play we are to s ee. I am s ure he is a m ine of inform ation.' S he turned to the driver. 'Lead on, Mac duff.' 'E h?' 'W e c an go now, Mr Mitc hell, when you are quite ready.' A s the c oac h wound its way in an autum n drizzle down the long gravel drive and through the ornate wrought-iron s c hool gates , I s at bac k, s ighed c ontentedly and looked forward to a relaxing journey. W e pas s ed the enorm ous ly vulgar s tatue of the founder of the s c hool, S ir Cos m o Cavendis h, s tanding, legs apart on his plinth, glowering at the world. A pigeon s at on his fat head. It was n't long before Mrs T odd rais ed the s pec tre of Mr Frobis her. 'He was not the eas ies t m an to get along with, you know,' s he told m e. 'I'm s ure you m us t have found him diffic ult?' 'W ell, I only m et him the onc e and, to be frank, ins pec tors are rarely rec eived with open arm s .' I thought it bes t to be very guarded in what I s aid to Mrs T odd. Dis c us s ing a teac her with another, des pite the fac t that he had left the s c hool, s eem ed to m e to be highly unprofes s ional. I therefore c ontented m ys elf with nodding and grunting. 'I think the bottom line was that the m an lac ked a s ens e of hum our, whic h to m e is perhaps the m os t im portant c harac teris tic in a good teac her. He found diffic ulty in relating to the m em bers of his departm ent and to the older s tudents . S om e of the older boys ribbed him unm erc ifully.' I began to feel quite s orry for the m an. 'He took everything s o very s erious ly. Of c ours e, his hom e life is n't at all happy, I gather. His wife is n't a well wom an and I think s he is rather dem anding and pos s es s ive. I only m et her the onc e, at a m us ic rec ital, and I had to endure a diatribe about how dis appointed s he was that her hus band never m ade it to heads hip, how he c ould have been m ore am bitious and how undervalued he was . S he told m e that all he ever s eem ed to think about thes e days was his c loc ks .' 'Cloc ks ?' 'He c ollec ts c loc ks ,' Mrs T odd told m e. 'He has quite a c ollec tion I believe.' I felt even m ore s orry for Mr Frobis her as the s tory unfolded. I thought of Chris tine and all her s upport and enc ouragem ent. How luc ky I was . 'Y our vis it c ertainly threw the c at am ongs t the pigeons , I c an tell you,' c ontinued m y c om panion, 'but it had the des ired effec t. Mr Frobis her upped and res igned. T hey've jus t advertis ed for the head of departm ent pos ition.' 'S o I hear,' I s aid. I attem pted to c hange the s ubjec t. 'T eenage boys c an be diffic ult to handle,' I obs erved. 'A nd girls ,' s he added. 'Y es , and girls .' 'My philos ophy with regard to adoles c ents going through that problem atic s tage in their lives ,' Mrs Todd inform ed m e, 'is to bac k off, lighten up and c alm down. It's always worked with m y four boys . Life is too s hort to get all worked up about an untidy bedroom , the oc c as ional bac kc hat and the odd drunken night out. It's a phas e they go through, a young pers on's reac h towards adulthood.' A ppearanc es c an indeed be dec eptive, I thought. Mrs Todd, elegant, m iddle-aged, im m ac ulately dres s ed, s om eone who would not have looked out of plac e at a Mothers ' Union m eeting, did not look at all like the eas y-going and unflappable pers on I was now hearing. 'W ell, you c ertainly handled your s tudents well,' I told her. 'Y our c las s was extrem ely well-behaved.' 'I have had a lot of experienc e,' s he told m e. 'I s tarted m y teac hing c areer in a very tough inner-c ity boys ' s c hool. It was a baptis m of fire. T he s tories I c ould tell! T he boys were always at great pains to s hoc k m e, a young wom an teac her s traight out of c ollege, and were rather dis appointed and not a little s urpris ed when I didn't ris e to their little gam es . I rec all onc e, a boy nam ed appropriately Duane P ratt, arriving at m y room with a c ondom over his head.' 'A c ondom ! ' I exc laim ed. T he two girls in front turned round and gave m e a very s trange look. 'Yes ,' s aid Mrs Todd, without the s lightes t trac e of em barras s m ent. 'He was a s m all, s illy little boy and I gues s s om eone had put him up to it. He was n't c lever enough to think of it him s elf. A nyhow, he walked in with this bright-pink c ondom s tretc hed tightly over his head like a c ap. He looked like Noddy s itting there at the front des k grinning inanely at m e.' 'W hatever did you do?' 'Nothing.' 'Nothing?' 'Nothing,' s he repeated. 'T he c las s all waited for m y outraged reac tion but I jus t ignored him , gave out the books and s tarted the les s on.' 'Y ou jus t ignored him ?' 'I m os t c ertainly did. I c ould s ee it was not the m os t c om fortable of headgear and it was n't long before he began to find it s om ewhat c ons tric ting. His fac e took on a s ort of red tinge, I rem em ber. I s hould think a c ondom on one's head would be quite painful after a while. T he s illy boy s at it out, right through to the end of the les s on. He didn't want to los e fac e with his pals , you s ee. W hen the bell went and he headed for the door, I c alled him over. "Duane," I s aid, "do you know, you have given a whole new m eaning to the term 'dic khead'." 'I s pluttered with laughter and the girls in the s eats in front of us giggled. 'I am a teac her, Mr P hinn, who does like to have the las t laugh.' A fter a c ouple of hours we s topped at a s ervic e s tation on the Mi for us all to s tretc h our legs . T he girls and s taff dis pers ed in the direc tion of the Ladies , the c oac h driver dis appeared, pres um ably for a s m oke s om ewhere, and I headed for the telephones bec aus e I was anxious to know that Chris tine was all right. I felt a bit guilty about leaving her at hom e while I was out 'gallivanting', as m y m other would have s aid. I was the las t bac k on the c oac h bec aus e I had had to wait behind a long queue of people at the telephone kios ks , and it was only when the c oac h was s peeding along the m otorway that I realis ed that I wanted to go to the lavatory. A s the c oac h s teadily c loc ked up the m iles , I bec am e inc reas ingly unc om fortable and kept c ros s ing and unc ros s ing m y legs to try and eas e the pain in m y c om plaining bladder. 'A re you not c om fortable there, Mr P hinn?' as ked Mrs T odd, after witnes s ing m y c ontortions . 'Y es , yes , I'm fine,' I s aid, giving a pained s m ile. 'I've got a bit of a knee problem , s ort of twinges . A n old rugby ac c ident. Cartilage trouble.' 'Y ou s hould get it s een to. My hus band's a s urgeon at the hos pital. He's always telling m e that torn c artilages are one of his s pec ialities .' 'Y es , I intend to,' I s aid. T he dis c om fort got wors e and wors e. I jus t had to go to the lavatory or I would burs t. 'I s uppos e we'll be s topping for lunc h s oon,' I s aid c as ually to Mrs T odd. 'Oh no,' s he replied. 'W e s han't be s topping now until we get to S tratford. W e'll eat our s andwic hes there on the lawn in front of the theatre, jus t by the river. I love the waters of the A von, don't you?' 'Y es , indeed,' I m outhed. T he pain in m y bladder was bec om ing unbearable. I jus t had to go to the lavatory. T hen I thought of the m os t horrendous s c enario: m e s tanding by the s ide of the road doing what I had to do with thirty girls and four wom en teac hers s taring out of the c oac h window in am azem ent. T he em barras s m ent, the indignity, the s ham e! No, I would have to think of s om ething. I teetered down to the front of the c oac h until I was on the s tep next to the driver. 'Oi! ' he c ried. 'Nobody's s uppos ed to c om e beyond that point bac k there. T here's a notic e. "Don't dis trac t the driver when the vehic le is in m otion." It's a s afety hazard.' 'T his is an em ergenc y,' I whis pered. 'Oh, bloody 'ell! ' he exc laim ed, beginning to brake. "A s s om eone been s ic k?' 'No, no. I have to go to the toilet.' 'T oilet! ' he exc laim ed loudly. 'I have to go,' I whis pered in his ear. 'I'm des perate.' 'Didn't you 'ear what I s aid when we was s etting off? I s aid m ake s ure -' 'Y es , yes , I know, and I'm truly s orry but I'm fit to burs ting.' 'W ell, I c an't jus t s top 'ere and there's no s ervic es on this s tretc h of m otorway. Y ou'll jus t 'ave to c ros s your legs and wait till I get to a c aff' 'I c an't wait,' I s aid between gritted teeth. 'W ell, I'm not s topping on t'hard s houlder. I'd get done for that.' 'Look, I really am des perate.' T here was a pathetic pleading in m y voic e. 'P leas e.' 'W ell, I'll tell you what I c an do. I'll get off and go via Coventry. T here's a c ar park and toilets in t' c athedral prec inc ts .' 'Oh, thank you, thank you,' I s aid. 'B ut you'll 'ave to c lear it with t'm is s us bac k there.' I tiptoed down the ais le until I arrived at Mis s B ridges . 'I was jus t talking to the driver, Mis s B ridges ,' I s aid c as ually, 's inc e I thought it m ight be a good idea to break our journey at Coventry and s ee the wonderful c athedral.' 'Oh, I don't know. It's not on the program m e,' s aid the teac her. 'I know, but this is an opportunity not to be m is s ed. Have you been to Coventry Cathedral, Mis s B ridges ?' 'W ell, no, I haven't.' 'T he c athedral is quite s tunning and we have plenty of tim e.' 'I don't think we have, Mr P hinn,' s aid the teac her, looking at her watc h. 'Mis s B ridges , I really do think we s hould break our journey at Coventry. It would only take half an hour and it really is well worth a vis it.' S he looked a little daunted. P erhaps the tone of m y voic e was a trifle threatening. 'W ell, if you really think s o.' 'Oh, I do, I do! ' I exc laim ed. Ten m inutes later, the longes t ten m inutes in m y life, we pulled into the c ar park by the c athedral. I nearly c ried when I s aw the GE NT S s ign. A s s oon as the c oac h c am e to a halt, I leapt down the s teps and s hot off like a m an purs ued by a c harging rhinoc eros . To m y dis m ay, I heard Mis s B ridges ' voic e behind m e. 'Follow Mr P hinn, girls . Follow Mr P hinn. He's heading for the c athedral.' I turned and to m y horror s aw thirty girls in green uniform s running ac ros s the c ar park in m y direc tion. It was on the journey hom e that I m ade a fool of m ys elf again. W e had s topped at another s ervic e s tation for a s hort break and what Mr Mitc hell des c ribed as a 'toilet s top'. I did not like the way the bus driver, em phas is ing the phras e 'toilet s top', looked pointedly at m e. I was heading bac k to the c oac h when I was approac hed by a very dis tres s ed-looking young wom an. 'E xc us e m e,' s he s aid, 'I'm m os t terribly s orry to trouble you, but I wonder c ould you as s is t m e?'
'Y es , of c ours e,' I s aid. 'How c an I help?' 'W ell,' explained the wom an. 'I've been really, really s illy. I'm in a terrible fix. I jus t c an't get into m y c ar. T he key won't work in the loc k. I've tried and tried but it jus t won't open the door. A re you any good with keys ?' 'Oh, it's probably frozen up,' I told her, s m iling reas s uringly. 'B ut it's not that c old, is it?' 'Loc ks c an be tem peram ental,' I told her. 'Don't worry, I'm s ure with a bit of m anipulating I'll get the door open for you.' 'T hank you s o m uc h,' s he s aid. Her c ar, a s m all red T oyota, was parked near the c oac h. I took the key from her, twis ted and turned, pus hed and pulled, but to no avail. 'It jus t does n't s eem to work,' I s aid. 'T his is awful,' m oaned the wom an. 'I'm off to s ee m y m other in Nottingham and s he worries s o. S he's not on the phone, you s ee. A nd all m y work papers and handbag and everything are in the c ar.' Her eyes began to fill up. 'I don't know what to do.' 'Don't worry,' I s aid. 'W e'll get it open.' I tried another door, again twis ting and turning, pus hing and pulling. T hen there was a s nap. 'Das h it! ' I exc laim ed. 'I've broken the key off in the loc k.' 'Oh no,' groaned the wom an. 'Now what do I do?' 'Look,' I s aid, 'there's an RA C m an in the s ervic e s tation. I'll get him .' On the way bac k to the m ain building, I s topped at the c oac h and explained the s ituation to Mis s B ridges and the bus driver. Neither s eem ed all that pleas ed. 'S o 'ow long are we going to be waiting 'ere?' as ked Mr Mitc hell, puffing out his c heeks and looking heavenwards with a m artyred expres s ion. 'I've got a s c hedule to keep.' 'A nd the girls ' parents will get worried if we are not bac k on tim e,' added Mis s B ridges . 'Y es , yes , I know,' I told them . 'T his will only take a m om ent. I'll get the RA C m an and leave him to s ort it out.' If only it had been that s im ple. T he RA C m an and his young c olleague s c rutinis ed the loc k. 'Y ou've broken the key off,' the older one c onc luded. 'Y es , yes , I know,' I s aid. I felt like s aying, thank you for telling m e the blindingly bloody obvious . 'Oh yes , s napped c lean off. It's no good being heavy-handed with keys , you know,' he told m e, like a headteac her c has tis ing a naughty s c hoolboy. 'T hes e m ec hanis m s are very delic ate.' 'A nd T oyota c ars are the devil's own job to get into,' added his young c om panion. 'Can you get into the c ar?' I as ked. 'Oh, I c an get into the vehic le all right,' s aid the older m an, s m iling. 'T hank goodnes s for that,' I s ighed. 'Y ou s hould have c om e to m e in the firs t plac e.' He s tared at the loc k for what felt like an inordinate am ount of tim e. 'T here is , of c ours e, the s m all problem of needing the key to drive and you broke it off.' 'Oh dear, yes ,' I s aid. 'Y ou s hould have c om e to us firs t thing,' s aid his c om panion, 'then this wouldn't have happened. A re you a m em ber of the RA C, by the way?' 'Y es , I am ,' I replied. 'A nd are you fully c overed for roads ide rec overy and for hom e as s is tanc e?' 'Y es , I am .' 'Could I s ee your m em bers hip c ard, pleas e s ir? I do need to m ake a note of the num ber.' 'B ut this is not m y c ar,' I explained. 'It's m ine,' piped up the wom an, who up to this point had been watc hing the proc eedings in s ilenc e with a doom -laden expres s ion on her fac e. 'I jus t as ked this gentlem an to help. I wis h I hadn't now.' 'S om e help, breaking the key off,' m um bled the older m an. 'A re you in the RA C, m adam ?' as ked the younger m an. 'No, I'm not,' s he replied, 'I've always m eant to join but -' 'T he tim es we've heard that, eh, J ac k?' s aid his c olleague, s haking his head. 'It's only in em ergenc ies like this that people wis hed they were in the RA C. S ave them a whole lot of tim e, grief, trouble and m oney if they had joined in the firs t plac e.' 'Look,' I s aid, 'c ould you s ort this out? I am with a party of thirty s c hoolgirls and really have to -' A t this point, two traffic polic em en arrived. 'W hat's the problem ?' as ked the taller of the two. 'W e're trying to get in this c ar,' explained the older RA C m an. 'B loke here broke off the key in the loc k.' 'W ho broke the key off in the loc k?' as ked the taller polic em an. 'I did but -' I s tarted. 'I told him ,' s aid the RA C m an, 'that it's no good being heavy-handed. He s hould have c om e to m e in the firs t plac e, then this wouldn't have happened.' 'It's eas y to s ay that after the event,' piped up the wom an. 'A re you s ure it's the right key?' the other polic em an as ked m e. 'It's not m y c ar,' I s aid. 'Not your c ar?' he repeated. 'W ell, what were you doing trying to get into it?' He reac hed for his poc ket book. 'It's this lady's c ar,' I s aid. 'Y es , it's m y c ar,' explained the wom an. 'A nd this m an was trying to get into your c ar, was he, m adam ?' 'Y es , that's right,' s he replied. 'I s ee.' T he polic em an flipped open the c overs of his little blac k book. 'No, no, you don't s ee,' I s pluttered. 'T his lady s topped m e as I was c om ing out of the s ervic e s tation and as ked m e to help her. S he c ouldn't get into her c ar. T he key wouldn't work.' T he s ituation was rapidly des c ending into farc e. T hen the greas y bus driver arrived. 'Look,' he s aid to m e, 'c an we get m oving? I've got a s c hedule to keep.' 'A nd who m ight you be?' as ked the s m aller of the two polic em en. 'I'm 'is driver. T here's thirty girls waiting for 'im .' T he c rowd whic h s urrounded the s m all red c ar was now joined by an elderly c ouple. T hey looked worried and c onfus ed. 'W hat's wrong?' as ked the old m an. 'T his m an's broken the key off in this lady's c ar,' s aid the older of the RA C m en. 'Her c ar?' exc laim ed the old m an. 'It's my c ar! ' Out c am e the polic em an's notebook again and as he flic ked it open there was a s ort of s hriek from behind us . 'Oh, m y goodnes s ! ' c ried the young wom an. 'It's the wrong c ar. W e've been trying to get into the wrong c ar.' S he pointed to an identic al s m all red T oyota parked further down the line of c ars . 'T hat's m ine. I rec ognis e the radio aerial.' T hen with a weak s m ile s he s aid to the s em i-c irc le, 'I'm awfully s orry. I feel s uc h a fool.' 'If you'd all like to ac c om pany m e into the s ervic e s tation,' s aid a s olem n-fac ed polic em an. 'I'll need to take s om e s tatem ents .' 'S o did you have a nic e tim e?' as ked Chris tine when I s taggered through the door later that evening. 'It was m em orable,' I told her. 'Mem orable.'
15 'W ell I think it's very s trange, very s trange indeed,' s aid S idney, twis ting a large paper c lip out of s hape. 'I c annot rec all any other oc c as ion, in all m y tim e in the s c hool ins pec torate, when this has happened. It is without prec edent.' It was Friday afternoon and Harold had c alled a m eeting for all the team at the S taff Developm ent Centre to c ons ider a new initiative from the Minis try of E duc ation. Dis c us s ion, however, c entred on the appointm ent of the new S enior Ins pec tor. 'I m us t adm it,' agreed David, who rarely endors ed anything S idney had to s ay, 'I think it is highly unus ual for an appointm ent to be m ade and not tell us who it is .' 'T he appointm ent has not been m ade,' s aid Harold. 'T he pos ition has been offered but the pers on involved has as ked for tim e to think about it and c ons ult the pres ent em ployer.' 'W ell, he s houldn't have applied for the pos t in the firs t plac e, if he was n't s ure that he wanted it,' s aid S idney, leaning bac k on his c hair. 'It's far m ore c om plic ated that that,' s aid Harold. 'T here are one or two things the s uc c es s ful c andidate wants c larifying and c ertain c onditions to be agreed by the E duc ation Com m ittee before the pers on in ques tion is prepared to take up the pos t.' 'Conditions ! ' s pluttered S idney. 'I hardly think a c andidate for a job is in a pos ition to lay down c onditions .' 'It's not that unus ual,' s aid Gerry. 'I was onc e offered a job at a univers ity and as ked for m ore generous re-loc ation expens es and to be higher up the s alary s c ale. If that hadn't been agreed, I would have withdrawn. On another oc c as ion I was offered a job and as ked for tim e to think about it. No, it's not that unus ual.' 'Y ou aren't the m ys tery c andidate are you, Geraldine?' as ked David, peering over the top of his s pec tac les . Gerry threw her head bac k and laughed. 'No! I think I have quite enough to do at the m om ent without taking on Harold's job.' 'A nd don't s tart looking at m e,' I s aid. 'A s I've told you, I didn't apply.' 'W ell, I s inc erely hope they m ake a better job of it than the las t tim e,' s aid David. 'T hat S im on Carter was a c om plete and utter dis as ter.' 'Hear, hear,' s aid S idney. 'A nd why weren't we involved?' as ked David. 'W e are always as ked for our opinions when a new c olleague is appointed. T he interviews were at County Hall - all s ec retive and c los eted away - ins tead of here at the S DC. W e never had a c hanc e to m eet the c andidates and you have told us prec ious little, Harold, about who was in for the job.' 'Y ou s hould have put in for it, Gervas e,' s aid S idney. 'I think you would have had a s trong c hanc e this tim e. J us t bec aus e you weren't s uc c es s ful before -' 'Oh, pleas e, don't s tart all that again,' I told him wearily. 'Look! ' s aid Harold, c ons ulting his watc h. 'W e really m us t pres s on. Y ou will know who it is after Chris tm as . Now, c an we addres s the tas k in hand?' 'Chris tm as ! ' s pluttered S idney. 'T he pers on appointed does not take over until E as ter, S idney, as you well know,' s aid Harold, 's o there is no m as s ive urgenc y. W e want to get it right this tim e. Now pleas e, c an we m ake a s tart? T he new initiative from the Minis try of E duc ation is c alled "S pirituality in the Curric ulum ".' 'Oh glory be,' s ighed S idney, tilting the c hair bac k even further. 'W here do they dream thes e things up from ? I'm s ure there are better things to oc c upy our tim e than this , Harold.' 'Like it or not, S idney,' Harold replied, s huffling a large m ound of papers before him , 'we are obliged to c ons ider this new direc tive when we ins pec t s c hools as from the firs t of J anuary. It is not optional, it is s tatutory.' 'B ut what, pray, has it got to do with art and des ign?' as ked S idney, s tifling a yawn. 'It has a relevanc e to all as pec ts of the c urric ulum ,' s aid Harold, 'inc luding art and des ign, and the whole point of this m eeting today is to dis c us s it, dec ide what we have to do and go through the proc edures . S o, if you would bear with m e?' 'A nd when is s he c om ing?' as ked S idney, who had now taken to twis ting an elas tic band around his fingers . 'I have as ked Mis s de la Mare,' replied Harold, glanc ing at his watc h again, 'to join our dis c us s ions when s he has finis hed a m eeting with Counc illor P eters on at County Hall.' 'T hat will be about Hawks rill,' s aid S idney. 'It's a s plendid opportunity,' c ontinued Harold, ignoring the interruption, 'while s he is in the c ounty, to pic k her brains .' 'Is there any further news on Hawks rill?' I as ked. 'No, no,' s aid Harold. 'T he S ub-Com m ittee are determ ined to pres s ahead and c los e the s c hool but there's been quite a lot of pres s ure from s o m any different groups . I believe the headteac her and her deputy are now joining the fray, threatening not to res ign if the s c hool c los es . T he MP, the rural dean, paris h c ounc illors , parents , governors - they're all queuing up to objec t. It's all m os t unfortunate and very tim e-c ons um ing.' 'Didn't I hear that your dear wife is s tirring things up?' S idney as ked m e, as blunt as ever. 'Let's not go into all that, S idney,' I pleaded. 'W ell, you did rais e the m atter.' 'No, I did not,' I s aid. 'Y ou were the firs t to m ention Hawks rill.' 'Let m e know if Chris tine s tarts c haining hers elf to the s c hool railings and burning her bra,' s aid S idney, tipping bac k on his c hair to a dangerous angle, 'and I s hall c om e out and give her s om e s upport - m oral, of c ours e. I have always thought -' 'T hat's rather a s exis t c om m ent, S idney -' began Gerry. 'Look, c an we get on,' interrupted Harold tes tily. 'A s I was s aying, Mis s de la Mare will be joining us jus t as s oon as the m eeting with Counc illor P eters on has ended.' 'W ell, if s he's c los eted with George "Gas bag" P eters on we c ould be here all night,' m oaned David. T here was an im patient intake of breath from the S enior Ins pec tor. 'A ll the m ore reas on to m ake a s tart,' s aid Harold. 'S o, before her arrival, c olleagues , I really would like to get to grips with the doc um ent whic h I hope everyone has read.' He looked at S idney s c eptic ally. 'Mis s de la Mare will then, hopefully, c larify anything we are uns ure about.' I knew the form idable W inifred de la Mare, Her Majes ty's P rinc ipal Divis ional Ins pec tor of S c hools , pretty well. My firs t enc ounter with her had been a few m onths after I had been appointed as a s c hool ins pec tor. Dr Gore had as ked m e to c o-ordinate the vis it of the Minis ter of E duc ation to the c ounty and liais e with the HMI res pons ible - Mis s de la Mare. P rior to m eeting her, I had im agined a s trapping great wom an in heavy tweeds and large brogues , with s avagely c ropped, s teely-grey hair, s m all s evere m outh and glittery eyes . S he would be entirely hum ourles s , exc eptionally c ritic al and very s hort-tem pered - the s ort of pers on to put the fear of God into anyone. In the event, Mis s de la Mare turned out to be the very oppos ite and her bark was far wors e than her bite. W hen s he had vis ited the c ounty as part of the National A rts in S c hool S urvey, s he had been s o im pres s ed with what s he had obs erved, s he had invited S idney and m e to c ontribute to a c ours e s he was direc ting in Oxford. S o, I had s een quite a lot of Mis s de la Mare over the las t three years . 'I'm s orry, Harold,' s aid S idney now, 'but I really do feel I have quite enough on m y plate without taking on yet another c oc k-eyed projec t from London, involving another m ountain of paperwork. Do we really have to do this wretc hed thing?' 'Look,' s aid Harold im patiently, 'I am not an apologis t for this Minis try of E duc ation initiative. I did not devis e it and I, like all of you, have quite enough on m y own plate at the m om ent without yet m ore work. B ut we s hall be im plem enting it, and that is an end to the m atter. W e need today to get c lear in our own m inds what it is all about before taking it to s c hools , s o c an we pleas e get on? Y ou will refer to the papers I have produc ed and handed round.' T he initiative was c alled 'S pirituality in the Curric ulum '. T he Minis try of E duc ation had as ked ins pec tors to c ons ider on eac h of their vis its , the s c hool's s trengths and weaknes s es in its provis ion of s piritual developm ent in the different s ubjec ts . Ins pec tors were as ked to evaluate how eac h s ubjec t area provided c hildren with an unders tanding of and an ins ight into m oral values and beliefs and how teac hers equipped young people to think deeply about their experienc es and feelings in s uc h a way that it developed s piritual awarenes s . E ac h vis it would be followed by a s eries of training c ours es for thos e teac hers who it was felt needed to 'inc reas e their awarenes s ' and 'im prove their c las s room prac tic e'. S idney flic ked through the papers dis m is s ively, s hook his head, leaned bac k on his c hair and yawned. Harold ignored him . 'It s ays here,' he s aid, reading from the doc um ent before him , 'that "effec tive s piritual developm ent enables young people to apprec iate, through their own thoughts and em otions , s om ething of their own life and that of others . It develops their feelings , enables them to c ope with their anxieties and fears , enc ourages them to apprec iate the divers ity of c ultures , religions and beliefs in s oc iety and helps them to know the differenc e between right and wrong." ' 'B ut s urely this is the provinc e of religious educ ation,' s aid S idney who, having inves tigated the legs of his c hair, had returned to an upright pos ition. 'I c an't s ee it has any relevanc e to art and des ign or, for that m atter, to m athem atic s or s c ienc e or m us ic or E nglis h.' 'W ould you not s ay, S idney,' s aid Geraldine who, up to this point, had been her c harac teris tic ally s ilent s elf, 'that there is m ore to art and des ign than jus t getting c hildren to draw, paint and c ons truc t?' 'I am very wary of ques tions like that, Geraldine,' replied S idney. 'I s ens e that there is s om e s ort of trap being s et.' 'S urely art is not jus t about produc ing c rafts m en or c om petent prac titioners ,' s he c ontinued. 'Does n't art als o involve reflec tion, im agination, feeling, c reativity, s ens itivity? Don't you want young people to apprec iate painting and s c ulpture and arc hitec ture? Is n't there s om ething s piritual in the Mona Lis a, in a beautiful, c arved figure by Mic helangelo, in a V an Gogh c anvas full of vibrant c olour, in a photograph of a newborn baby or a vas t panoram a? W hat about the s pirituality of the interior of Y ork Mins ter or Ripon Cathedral?' 'W ell,' c onc eded S idney, 'I s uppos e, yes , there is s om e art whic h touc hes the s oul, m oves one to a s ort of awe and wonder, and I would hope that youngs ters c om e to unders tand and apprec iate this .' 'W ell, it's the s am e in s c ienc e,' c ontinued Gerry. 'A s c ientis t us es his or her brain to s ee c aus e and effec t, gather the available evidenc e, s elec t the appropriate m aterials , follow a s eries of logic al s teps , reas on and infer and then reac h a c onc lus ion. T hat proc es s has provided the m eans for s c ientis ts to produc e s erum s to s top dis eas es , inventions to m ake our lives eas ier and happier, and m edic al treatm ents to allow c hildles s c ouples to have c hildren. It is the intellec tual s ide of our being, to do with logic , intelligenc e and thought. T here is no m oral ques tion here, no right or wrong in this . It is a m erely a s c ientific proc es s . B ut s c ienc e does n't end at this point. T here is an ethic al res pons ibility. To what us e do we put all thes e advanc es in s c ienc e? Do we us e that s erum to s ave lives or to produc e a killer virus ? Do we us e an invention like the aeroplane to m ake people's lives eas ier and m ore enjoyable or to m aim and kill them ? Do we us e our knowledge of fertility to help a des perate c ouple have a baby or to produc e c lones ? T hat is where s pirituality c om es in. It helps us dec ide. It has m ore to do with the heart than the brain. It's about right and wrong, about feelings , fears , joys , loves and hates and that is why it is im portant to fos ter it in the educ ation of young people.' 'My, m y,' s aid S idney, c lapping his hands together s ilently. 'I'm m os t im pres s ed, Geraldine. T hat was a bravura perform anc e.' 'May I join you?' W e all s wivelled around on our c hairs to find a plum p, c heerful-looking wom an with neatly bobbed s ilver hair. S he was dres s ed in a c oat as red as a pillar-box with blac k P ers ian lam b c ollar and c uffs , and s ported a bright yellow s c arf. Mis s de la Mare was not noted for her dres s s ens e. T he rem ainder of the afternoon was s pent in lively dis c us s ion. T he HMI had obvious ly been in the room to hear Gerry's im pas s ioned defenc e of s pirituality in the c urric ulum and c ons tantly referred to her, bringing her into the dis c us s ions on a num ber of oc c as ions . 'Dr Mullarkey,' s he s aid, 'has really got to the nub of things . I am s ure you would all agree that educ ation is not about filling em pty ves s els with a few arid fac ts . W hils t it's c ertainly about enc ouraging young people to have lively, enquiring m inds and the ability to ques tion and argue, it is als o about fos tering their s ens itivities and em otions . Could I jus t as k you for a m om ent, c olleagues , to c ons ider the bes t teac her you had and the wors t? W hat was it about thos e two teac hers that was s o different? W hat m ade one s o m uc h better than the other? Mr P ritc hard, what about you? W ho was your wors t teac her?' 'Oh, that would have to be Mr S ewell, head of his tory at the W els h gram m ar s c hool I attended,' replied David. 'He had a s kull-s haped head, big hooked nos e, a m ournful expres s ion and a s m ile like a s hark. Tailor-m ade to be an undertaker. He c ouldn't help the way he looked, of c ours e, but he c ould help the way he treated us boys . T errible m an he was - pom pous , s arc as tic , c ruel as well, dis paraging, hum ourles s .' 'Don't beat about the bus h, David,' s aid S idney, pulling a fac e. 'T ell us what you really think about him .' 'I hated that m an, that's what,' David told us , pluc king his s pec tac les from his nos e. 'He'd m ake fun of our valley ac c ents , ridic ule our efforts and c ritic is e our parents - never direc tly but in a s neaky, unpleas ant s ort of way. V ery nas ty piec e of work was "S m iler".' 'S o did you dis like his tory?' queried the HMI, with a s m ile of gentle benevolenc e. 'Hated it. I rec all him c reeping into the room in his gown like a great blac k beetle and telling us before the his tory exam ination: "W hen it s ays on the paper, 'Us e your own words ', us e m ine! I don't want any boy trying to be c lever! " S urely the whole point of educ ation is to try and get youngs ters to be c lever. He gave us m odel ans wers to learn off pat. I know them to this day: "Feudalis m and the m anorial s ys tem c annot be s aid to be the m ain c aus e of T he P eas ants ' Revolt bec aus e, by the end of the fourteenth c entury, feudalis m was in dec line. T he m anorial s ys tem required people to be s tatic , but dis turbing elem ents s uc h as the Crus ades , the inc es s ant wars , the growth of c om m erc e, did not m ake pos s ible a s tatic c ondition in s oc iety, et c etera, et c etera." I c ould go on, but I won't bore you.' 'T hank goodnes s for s m all m erc ies ,' m um bled S idney. 'You talk about filling em pty ves s els with arid fac ts , Mis s de la Mare,' c ontinued David. 'W ell, that is exac tly what went on in Mr S ewell's room . W e learnt fac ts off by heart like parrots . Of c ours e, I hadn't the firs t idea what I was c om m itting to m em ory. W e learnt the W ars of the Ros es , the S panis h A rm ada, Mary Queen of S c ots , the A c c es s ion of J am es I and the c aus es of the E nglis h Civil W ar. Of c ours e, nothing about W els h his tory. T hen s urpris e! s urpris e! A ll the topic s we had learned c am e up on the paper.' David s m iled wryly. 'Mind you, the fac t that Mr S ewell was a Chief E xam iner m ight have had s om ething to do with it.' 'T hat, I think, is what is c alled the irritating s uc c es s of the wrong m ethod,' I obs erved. 'W hat about your his tory teac her, Mr Clam p?' as ked Mis s de la Mare, inc lining her head s lightly in S idney's direc tion. 'V ery different,' s aid S idney. 'He was an ec c entric little m an with a bald pate and a twitc h. He was c alled B abc oc k, and he was a world away from David's m ons ter. He was jus t an out-and-out enthus ias t. B ags of energy, fired ques tions like a m ac hine gun and had a great s ens e of hum our. He loved his s ubjec t, enjoyed the c om pany of young people and m ade his tory c om e alive. He us ed to tell the m os t fas c inating s tories , anec dotes and fac ts about the c harac ters in his tory. I often talk about T revor B abc oc k on m y c ours es . W e s tudied Mary Queen of S c ots as well, but we looked at c opies of the letters s he s ent, the s ec ret c odes us ed in the various plots , and we trac ed her long journey from S c otland to Fotheringay Cas tle where s he m et her end. A very c om plex wom an. S he was renowned for this wonderful head of hair, you know, but when her head was c hopped off it turned out to be a wig. I always rem em ber that.' 'My bes t teac her was Mis s W ainwright,' I told everyone when Mis s de la Mare turned to m e, 'who taught m e E nglis h. A c tually, I s tudied for m y "A " level E nglis h in a girls ' s c hool.' 'However did you m anage to wangle that?' as ked S idney. 'W ell, our E nglis h teac her at the boys ' gram m ar was off with s om e s ort of long-term illnes s and there was no one els e to teac h the s ubjec t. S o the s even of us boys s tudying E nglis h went down to the girls ' high.' 'Did you have to wear the uniform ?' as ked S idney m is c hievous ly. 'I bet you c ut quite a das h in blac k s toc kings and a pinafore dres s .' 'Of c ours e, but it was the knic ker elas tic whic h was the wors t. Cut right into the tender parts .' S idney and David hooted with laughter, and Mis s de la Mare rais ed an elegant eyebrow. 'W e were taught by a rem arkable wom an, Mis s W ainwright. W hen we great lum bering youths arrived for the firs t les s on, we s tood before her to be ins pec ted. Mis s W ainwright peered up at us . "I've never taught boys ," s he s aid, and then after a long paus e and with a twinkle in her dark eyes added, "but I've heard of them ."' E ven Mis s de la Mare laughed. 'I as s um e s he was able to teac h you lads s om ething or you wouldn't have ended up as an Ins pec tor of E nglis h here?' 'Indeed, s he did. S he was warm , s upportive, good-hum oured, res pec tful and pas s ionate about her s ubjec t. S he lifted S hakes peare off the page. "He is not a novelis t," s he onc e told us . "He is a poet and a dram atis t and the greates t writer that has ever lived."' 'A m en to that,' rem arked Mis s de la Mare. 'W ell, what thes e good teac hers had in c om m on,' s he s aid, 'was an enthus ias m for learning and als o a des ire to help their s tudents apprec iate and explore the s ubjec ts they taught, m ore profoundly. W hat this Minis try initiative is trying to do is to get teac hers to c ons ider the deeper, s piritual s ide of educ ation a little m ore in all s ubjec ts . J us t as Dr Mullarkey s aid earlier, it is im portant to teac h the various s kills but als o to develop the s piritual and the m oral elem ents as well. In the teac hing of reading, for exam ple, the appropriate m aterials are s elec ted. T he teac her follows a s eries of logic al s teps , teac hing the m ec hanic al proc es s of how to dec ode thos e blac k m arks on the paper. Children c an then reas on, infer and apply their knowledge to reading. B ut the teac her's job does not end there. S he develops enjoym ent in reading and introduc es c hildren to s tories and poem s whic h am us e, provoke, entertain, touc h their feelings . In m us ic , c hildren learn the m ec hanic s on the piano but us e this knowledge to play or to s ing to lift our s pirits , m ake us feel happy or s ad. In his tory les s ons they c an perhaps em pathis e with a lonely S c ottis h queen hated by m os t of her s ubjec ts and im pris oned for m os t of her life. T hat is the underlying philos ophy behind this initiative. I hope I have put it in s om e s ort of c ontext for you.' 'W ell,' s aid Harold, s m iling widely and s howing his s et of tom bs tone teeth, 'I think we have explored this in enough depth. A fter a tea break we c an m ove on to the prac tic alities .' 'Y ou've c ertainly c hanged your tune, S idney,' I rem arked over m y c up of tea and one of Connie's Garibaldi bis c uits . S idney, David and I were in the s taff room ; Harold and Gerry were s till in deep c onvers ation with Mis s de la Mare. 'W ell,' replied m y c olleague, s tirring his tea vigorous ly, 'I'm nothing if not open-m inded.' 'Huh,' res ponded David. 'T he danger of being open-m inded, S idney, is that your brains m ight fall out.' 'I am , at heart, a very flexible thinker,' c ontinued S idney, undaunted. 'If an argum ent is put s im ply, effec tively and c onvinc ingly, as I feel it was this afternoon, I will willingly c ons ider it. A nd I do have to c onc ede that there m ay very well be s om ething in this s pirituality thing. It's jus t all the paperwork whic h I do s o abhor.' 'W ell, don't get too keen,' I warned him . 'T here is nothing s o fears om e as a c onvert. T hey bec om e unbearably zealous , tires om e in the extrem e and entirely s ingle-m inded. W e c ertainly don't want you pros elytis ing all over the offic e, S idney.' 'Certainly not,' agreed David. 'I m us t s ay, though,' s aid S idney, paus ing to take a great gulp of tea, 'our pale Iris h beauty c ontinues to be a bit of a dark hors e, does n't s he? S he s its there for ages without a word but when s he gets s tarted there's no s topping her. I've never s een her s o anim ated and voc iferous . To be hones t, I c annot rec all having heard her s peak m ore than a few words in the offic e and then this afternoon s he launc hes into a lec ture whic h would not have dis grac ed a pres entation on the podium of the Royal S oc iety of A rts .' 'S he was very im pres s ive,' I agreed. 'Do you think s he w as trying to im pres s ?' as ked David. 'I jus t wonder whether s he did put in for Harold's job,' s aid S idney. 'Y ou m ay very well be right,' s aid David. 'S he didn't s ound all that c onvinc ing to m e when s he denied that s he had applied.' 'T hen there were her c om m ents about applying for that univers ity pos t,' s aid S idney, 'and as king for tim e to think about it.' 'A nd why is s he with Harold and that HMI now?' as ked David. 'W hy are they c los eted together and what are they talking about?' 'Have you got a thing about c los ets , David?' I as ked. 'T hat's the third oc c as ion you've m entioned them this afternoon.' David ignored m e. 'I think s he m ay very well be our next S enior Ins pec tor. E verything is pointing to it.' 'I'm not s ure,' I s aid. 'I c an't im agine Gerry taking on Harold's job and all it entails . S he has J am ie to look after, for one thing.' 'T here's another m ys tery,' m us ed S idney. 'S he never m entioned that until it was dis c overed. A dark hors e indeed is Dr Mullarkey. S he never talks about the father of her c hild. Do you know any m ore, Gervas e? Does n't Chris tine s om etim es look after the s on?' 'Y es , but s he has n't s aid anything to m e,' I s aid. 'S he s teers well c lear of the s ubjec t.' 'He c ould be s om e politic ian or m edia pers onality,' m us ed S idney. 'Does J am ie res em ble anybody?' 'Oh, for goodnes s s ake, S idney, will you let it drop! ' I exc laim ed. 'If Geraldine wanted people to know who the father is , s he'd tell them . Clearly s he does not, s o that's the end of the m atter.' 'Mys terious , though,' pers is ted S idney. 'A nyway, as I s aid, s he was m os t im pres s ive this afternoon. Y ou m ight be s orry you did not put in for Harold's job, old c hap. I agree with David. I think Geraldine m ight well be our new bos s .' 'S he's welc om e to it,' I s aid. 'Geraldine wouldn't be all that bad,' s aid David. 'No,' agreed S idney, rais ing the m ug to his lips . 'I c ould live with it.' 'My, m y,' I s aid, 'this m us t be a rec ord. Y ou two agreeing for m ore than an hour.' Further dis c us s ion was c urtailed by Connie entering the room . S he was wearing the fam iliar s him m ering-pink overall and holding a c lipboard like a gam e-s how hos t. 'Good afternoon,' s he s aid, c as ting a c ritic al glanc e around the room to m ake s ure everything was as it s hould be. 'Good afternoon, Connie,' we c horus ed. 'I've been doing m y m onthly s toc k c hec k and things have gone m is s ing.' W ithout waiting for a res pons e s he c ons ulted her c lipboard. 'T here's s om eone been s tealing toilet rolls from the gentlem en's lavatory. Can I as k you to keep your eyes peeled when you run your c ours es ?' 'Y es , Connie,' we replied. 'I put four rolls in there las t week and they've all gone,' s he s aid. 'Do you want us to fris k people on their way out?' as ked S idney. 'Make c ertain they don't have a toilet roll c onc ealed about their pers on?' 'Y ou get wors e,' s he told him .
'W hen I was at s c hool, you know, Connie,' rem arked David, 'when we wanted to go to the toilet, we had to as k the teac her for a piec e of toilet paper. He gave us a regulation two s egm ents of that rather s m elly, pale-brown, s hiny variety. It c ertainly m ade s ure there was no extravagant us e.' 'W ell, it's a thought,' s aid Connie, 'but I don't want to go that far.' I c ould s ee from her expres s ion, however, that a s eed of an idea had obvious ly been planted in her head. T he very notion of teac hers having to c ollec t a toilet roll from the c aretaker prior to paying a vis it brought a s m ile to m y lips . 'A nd have any of you s een m y pair of s teps - the s m all wooden ones whic h I keep in the s toreroom ? T hey've gone walkabout again.' 'No, Connie,' we c horus ed. 'W ell, s om ebody's got them . T hey don't jus t dis appear. T hey haven't got legs . I need them next week when they're c om ing from the P arks Departm ent to c ut bac k that ivy what's c reeping all over the plac e. T hey c ut it las t year but the thing's gone bers erk again. If it was up to m e I'd c ut that c reeper, whatever you c all it, down.' 'Clem atis ,' s aid S idney. 'W hat is ?' 'T he ivy that's c reeping all over the plac e. It's c alled c lem atis .' 'Y es , well, I'm not s ure if I believe you,' s aid Connie, waving her c lipboard towards S idney. 'I well rem em ber you telling m e that red flower what grew in the tub was a variegated flam ing alopec ia and then I found out that was a s c alp c ondition.' 'It is a c lem atis , Connie,' I s aid. 'W ell, whatever it's c alled, it wants pruning and I need thos e ladders . A re you s ure you haven't had them , Mr Clam p, for when you do your m ounting?' S idney arc hed an eyebrow. 'I have not, Connie, but if I had borrowed your s teps , I s hould have m ade s ure they were put bac k in the s toreroom .' 'Mm m m m ,' s he hum m ed. 'W hat about you, Mr P ritc hard? Have you been us ing them on your P .E . c ours e for c lim bing ac tivities ?' David rolled his eyes . 'No, Connie, I haven't touc hed them .' 'Mr P hinn?' 'S orry, Connie,' I s aid. 'I haven't s een them .' 'Have you as ked Dr Mullarkey?' as ked S idney. 'S he wouldn't have them ,' s aid Connie. 'S he's the only one of you ins pec tors who puts everything bac k and leaves the room as s he finds it.' 'A nother fan,' m urm ured S idney. 'It's a m ys tery to m e where they've gone,' m oaned Connie. S he s c ribbled on her c lipboard before adding, 'W ell, if they're not bac k next week, s teps will be taken.' 'I thought that they already had been, Connie,' rem arked S idney, keeping a deadpan expres s ion. 'W hat?' s he s napped. 'T aken the s teps , that is .' 'Y ou m ight think it am us ing, Mr Clam p, but I have to ac c ount for all m y equipm ent and it's no laughing m atter. Y ou'll s oon be c om plaining if the top s urfac es are dirty bec aus e I c an't reac h to do m y dus ting bec aus e m y s teps have gone m is s ing.' 'Could it be the vic ar, Connie?' I as ked. 'He us es the Centre, does n't he?' 'I hardly think a m an of the c loth would walk off with m y s tepladder. A nyway, what would the vic ar be doing c lim bing up ladders ?' 'T aking the m oral high ground?' s ugges ted S idney, grinning at his own m irth. 'W hat about the pens ioners who us e the Centre on Fridays ?' as ked David. 'T hey have enough trouble with their zim m ers , never m ind c lam bering up a s et of s teps . S om e of them are very dodgy on their legs . Mos t of them have to us e the ram p to get in the Centre. S teps are too s teep for them . T he Counc il has had to rem ove thos e s tiles on the Dales W alk footpath and replac e them with gates bec aus e the old people jus t c an't get their leg over.' S idney rais ed an eyebrow again. 'Y ou don't s ay?' 'A nyway, I s hall take up the m atter of m y m is s ing s teps with Dr Y eats jus t as s oon as he's finis hed talking to that m ulti-c oloured ins pec tor. Oh, and Mr Clam p, how long are thos e nudes going to be up on the wall?' 'Don't you like them , Connie?' as ked S idney. 'No, I do not! ' s he s napped. 'I've never s een anything s o horrible in all m y life.' 'Y ou will be relieved to know then, Connie,' s aid S idney, 'that I s hall be c hanging the dis play next week. Oh, and s peaking of things going m is s ing, have you any idea where the portrait of Mrs Os baldis ton has gone? S om ebody s eem s to have walked off with her.' Connie gave m e a knowing look. 'No idea,' s he s aid, before departing with the c lipboard tuc ked under her arm .
16 T he s c enery was at its bes t the bright early Dec em ber m orning when I vis ited S haptonhall P rim ary S c hool. A s Harold had as ked, we were to vis it a num ber of s c hools as part of the initiative on s pirituality to s ee how teac hers prom oted c hildren's s piritual developm ent in our partic ular s ubjec t area. Mis s de la Mare had als o enc ouraged us to obs erve s om e s c hool as s em blies whic h s he felt played a s ignific ant part in extending pupils ' m oral and ethic al ins ights , s o I had arranged a s eries of m orning vis its . S haptonhall was top of m y lis t. I was a little early s o I drove at a leis urely rate along twis ting narrow roads , bordered by blac k hawthorn hedges or walls of s quare, deep s tone, m arvelling at the boundles s views whic h s tretc hed around m e: tawny green pas tures c ropped by a few vagrant s heep and only interrupted by little c ops es and s c attered farm s teads , s weeping up to the s welling c ontours of the dis tant winds wept s um m its . In the s c hool as s em bly the headteac her, Mr Greenaway, a s m all m an with large expres s ive hands and a deep res onant voic e, related the parable of the P rodigal S on. 'T here was onc e a farm er who had two s ons ,' he boom ed. 'One day, the younger s on s aid to him : "Father, will you give m e m y s hare of your property?" T he father agreed and divided all he owned and gave half to his s on. T he young m an s old it and left hom e with a bulging purs e and a light heart.' T he headteac her c ontinued with the s tory, telling the c hildren how the younger s on had s quandered all this m oney and then had returned hom e penniles s , as ham ed and repentant, with his head held low. He told them how the father, with great happines s in his heart and with tears of joy in his eyes , had run to m eet his s on and how he had put his fines t robe around his s houlders , s ent his s ervant for his bes t s andals and ordered the fatted c alf to be killed for a s plendid feas t to c elebrate his s on's hom ec om ing. He paus ed m om entarily, then c ontinued, loudly and dram atic ally: 'A nd when the elder s on heard the s ound of the m us ic and laughter and the news that his brother had returned, he was not pleas ed and would not enter the hous e. His father was s addened about this but his elder s on told him angrily, "I have worked like a s lave all thes e years for you, yet you have never even offered m e s o m uc h as a goat for a feas t with m y friends . Now m y good-for-nothing brother, who has s pent all your m oney, turns up and you kill the fatted c alf for him ." T he father had replied, "My s on, you are with m e all the tim e and everything I have is yours . Is it wrong that we s hould c elebrate your brother's hom ec om ing? My s on was dead but now he is alive, he was los t but now he is found." ' Mr Greenaway s pread wide his arm s . 'Now c hildren,' he s aid, 'who do you think was the happies t of all?' T here was a fores t of hands . He pic ked a s m all girl in the front row. 'T he father! ' s he c ried. 'T hat's right, K aty, and who do you think was the s addes t and m os t dis appointed about the s on's return?' B efore he c ould pic k anyone, a large boy at the bac k s houted out, 'W ell, I rec kon t'fatted c alf c an't 'ave been too 'appy.' T he next s c hool on m y itinerary was S t Margaret's Churc h of E ngland P rim ary S c hool, in the pic tures que village of Hut-ton-with-B rans ton. T his dis c rete, grey s tone building with a red tiled roof s tood adjac ent to the old c hurc h and fac ed the village green. T he Chairm an of Governors , the Reverend Feathers tone, whom I had arranged to interview, was a dour-looking individual with a large hawkis h nos e, grey wis py hair and heavy-lidded eyes . 'I'm afraid we live in a s ec ular s oc iety, Mr P hinn,' he told m e, s troking his long nos e, 'a world of fas t food, televis ion and fanc y holidays . T here's prec ious little s pirituality in the world thes e days . My S unday S c hool teac her read the s tory of David and Goliath las t week and as ked the c hildren who beat the P hilis tines . One c hild replied that he didn't know bec aus e he didn't follow the m inor leagues .' T he c leric s hook his head wearily. 'I am s addened that c hildren's biblic al knowledge thes e days leaves a lot to be des ired. I've had c hildren tell m e about Mos es going up Mount Cyanide to rec eive the Ten Com m andm ents , and S olom on with his three hundred wives and s even hundred porc upines . Do you find this lac k of biblic al awarenes s on your travels , Mr P hinn?' 'I'm afraid s o,' I told him . 'S c ripture is n't taught a great deal in s c hools thes e days , unles s of c ours e it's a c hurc h s c hool.' 'W ell, this is a c hurc h s c hool,' he rem inded m e. 'I c annot s ay that the c hildren here are any m ore ac quainted with the B ible than in any other s c hool. My c urate ques tioned a c las s only las t week about the Garden of E den and as ked the nam e of the pers on who s tole the apple from the tree and a c hild prom ptly told him that it was n't him bec aus e he didn't like fruit. It does n't help, of c ours e, when parents thes e days take it into their heads to c all their c hildren all s orts of weird and wonderful nam es . Gone are the fine biblic al nam es like Hannah and S im on. Ins tead, they are nam ed after pop s ingers and film s tars , footballers and -' 'E xotic drinks ,' I added, thinking of T equila B raithwaite. 'I've had reques ts for J ezebel and S alom e and Delilah,' bem oaned the vic ar. 'It's very diffic ult explaining to the parents who thes e wom en were and what their line of work was . One c hild very nearly went through life with the exotic nam e of Onac ardie. I as ked the parents at the c hris tening: "A nd what do you nam e this c hild?" T he m other replied loudly, "Onac ardie." I had jus t begun s prinkling the water over the baby's head and intoning: "I c hris ten this c hild Onac ardie," only to be quic kly interrupted by the irate m other. "No, no, vic ar! " s he his s ed. "On 'er c ardy. T he nam e's written on her c ardigan. W e want her to be c alled S iobhan." ' I was rem inded all too forc efully of the Reverend Feather-s tone and our dis c us s ion about c hildren's lac k of biblic al knowledge when I vis ited High Rus ton-c um -Riddles wade E ndowed Churc h of E ngland County P aroc hial J unior and Infant S c hool later that week. It was there that I m et E lizabeth. S he was a tall girl of about eleven, with pink-fram ed glas s es and a rather earnes t expres s ion.' 'A re you looking forward to Chris tm as ?' I realis e it was a rather inane ques tion whic h I as ked her but s he ans wered pleas antly and with a s m all s m ile. 'Oh yes , it's a lovely tim e of year,' s he s aid. 'I love the s m ells of m inc e pies and fir trees and all the lights twinkling. A nd I like the Chris tm as m orning s ervic e, the c arols and the readings . T he c hurc h is always full and everyone is friendly and happy.' 'W ell, Chris tm as is the m os t im portant tim e in the Chris tian year, is n't it?' I s aid c as ually. 'No,' s he replied. 'I don't think you will find it is .' 'P ardon?' 'I s aid, no, it is n't. Chris tm as is not the m os t im portant tim e in the Chris tian year.' 'Oh.' I was quite taken abac k. 'It's E as ter, Mr P hinn,' s he told m e. 'T hat's when J es us s uffered on the c ros s , died for our s ins and ros e from the dead.' 'Y es , of c ours e,' I s aid hurriedly. 'T he only one to do s o.' 'W hat?' 'Ris e from the dead.' 'No, that's not right either.' Oh dear, I thought. A walking biblic al enc yc lopaedia. 'T here was Mary and Martha's brother.' 'W ho?' 'Lazarus .' 'Oh, yes ,' I s aid. 'I'd forgotten about Lazarus .' 'A nd don't forget J airus 's daughter. J es us told him that s he was n't dead but s leeping and s aid, "Little m aid, aris e."' 'Oh yes , of c ours e. How c ould I have forgotten J airus 's daughter?' 'Mr P hinn,' s aid the girl, s c rutinis ing m e through the pink fram es of her s pec tac les , 'your biblic al knowledge is not all that good, is it?' Later that m orning the headteac her es c orted m e to the door. 'I gather you had an interes ting c onvers ation with E lizabeth?' 'V ery interes ting,' I replied s im ply, not wis hing to elaborate. 'S he's a delightful girl and very bright. E lizabeth is the granddaughter of one of our governors . I believe you've m et Reverend B raybrook, the Rural Dean.' A t Holm dale J unior and Infant S c hool, s ituated deep in a s ec luded dale in the heart of the North Y ork Moors and s urrounded on all s ides by rugged m oorland, the loc al B aptis t m inis ter, an evangelic al young m an wearing a T -s hirt with 'Fight truth dec ay - s tudy the B ible every day' on the front, re-told the parable of T he Los t S heep. I had onc e rec ounted this s tory m ys elf in an as s em bly at W innery Nook Nurs ery and Infants S c hool. In fac t, Chris tine - the s c hool's headteac her - has never let m e forget and burs ts into laughter every tim e it is m entioned. I was therefore interes ted to s ee how the young m an would get on. He s tarted well, im m ediately c apturing the c hildren's interes t. T he great m ajority of his audienc e c am e from farm ing fam ilies s o at the m ention of s heep all ears pric ked up. 'W hen J es us was alive,' he told them , 's heep were very im portant in the lives of people.' 'T hey s till are,' s aid one ros y-c heeked girl, s itting near the front. 'Y es , indeed,' c ontinued the m inis ter. 'A nd in thos e days , s heep provided m eat and m ilk and c hees e. B ut pas ture was poor on the hills -' 'Not too good up here, either,' s aid the girl. 'No,' agreed the m inis ter. 'S o pas ture was poor on the hills and the s hepherd had to m ove his floc k from plac e to plac e to find gras s for his s heep. Unlike today, the s hepherd at the tim e when J es us lived, did not drive his floc k in front of him but led it and he knew eac h of his s heep pers onally and they ans wered to his c all.' T here were s everal s c eptic al looks and furrowed brows at this point. 'How m any would he have in his floc k, then?' as ked a boy of about ten or eleven with a s hoc k of red hair. 'W ell, in the parable I'm going to tell you in a m inute, the s hepherd has a hundred s heep,' replied the m inis ter. 'He's not likely to know an 'undred s heep pers onally,' obs erved the boy. 'Cows , m ebbe, but not s heep.' 'W ell, I... the s hepherd... he probably would have known his s heep very well.' 'B ut not an 'undred! ' 'Let's m ake a s tart on the s tory and then we c an talk about it afterwards , s hall we?' s aid the m inis ter, looking a little uneas y. I c ould s ee from his expres s ion that he was unus ed to m em bers of his c ongregation s houting out and c om m enting at every turn. T his was c learly not his us ual c aptive audienc e. 'Now, if any of thos e s heep s trayed, the s hepherd would s earc h for them until he found them .' 'He wanted a good c ollie-dog,' s aid the red-haired boy. 'S ave a lot o' tim e and trouble.' 'A ye,' nodded a few of his c om panions . T he m inis ter c arried on regardles s and s peeded up his delivery, hoping by doing s o to dis c ourage any further interruptions . 'T he s hepherd protec ted his s heep from wild anim als and thieves by us ing a c atapult and a wooden c lub -' 'S hotgun would 'ave been better,' rem arked a c hild. 'A nd at night,' c ontinued the m inis ter, ignoring the obs ervation, 'the s hepherd kept his floc k in a s tone-walled s heepfold topped with thorns and he would bloc k the entranc e by lying ac ros s it.' 'I c an't s ee m y dad doing that,' s aid the girl at the front, laughing. 'Now this parable is c alled T he Los t S heep and it was told by J es us nearly two thous and years ago.' T he m inis ter took a deep breath, rubbed his hands , s m iled and began. 'T here was onc e a s hepherd and he had a hundred s heep. One day he dis c overed that one of the s heep had s trayed. He c ould have s aid, "A h well, I have ninety-nine s o why s hould I bother s earc hing high and low, hither and thither, for jus t one s heep? If I leave the other s heep they will be at the m erc y of wolves and thieves . A nyway, the los t s heep m ight be dead by now." B ut the s hepherd did not s ay this , for every s ingle one of his s heep was prec ious to him . S o he went in s earc h of the one los t s heep.' 'Hardly worth the effort, pric e of lam b being what it is at t'm om ent,' c om m ented the ros y-fac ed girl. 'T his was quite a long tim e ago,' the m inis ter inform ed her, s till m anaging to retain his s m ile. 'S o, the s hepherd left the ninety-nine and went in s earc h of the one los t s heep.' 'W hat breed o' s heep were they, then?' as ked the girl. 'B reed?' repeated the m inis ter. 'A ye, what breed?' 'W ell, does it m ake a differenc e?' he as ked. 'It m akes an 'ell of a lot o' differenc e. S om e s heep are doc ile, others are reight fris ky. If you're talking 'erdwic ks , they never s hift, they'll s top where they are till t'c ows c om e hom e. W e've got 'erdwic ks . T hey m ay be s m all but they're a tough breed and eat owt that's going - gras s , heather, c ouc h gras s - owt. Now, if t's hepherd left a floc k of 'erdwic ks , he'd s till find 'em theer when he got bac k.' 'I s ee,' s aid the m inis ter lam ely and wrinkling his forehead into a frown. 'W ell, I s houldn't im agine that the s heep were Herdwic ks .' 'B ut if you're talking Leic es ters ,' c ontinued the girl, 'they'll be leaping all ovver t's how. T hey'd be off as s oon as s hepherd's turned 'is bac k.' 'T hat's why tha needs a good c ollie-dog,' ins is ted the boy with the red hair. 'S o what breed were they?' as ked the girl. 'W ell,' s aid the m inis ter, having a s udden flas h of ins piration, 'thes e were P ales tine B lues , a very lively breed.' 'Never 'eard of them ,' c om m ented the girl s ulkily. 'W hat do they look like?' 'Oh, big and woolly and white,' began the m inis ter feebly. He pres s ed on quic kly to prevent any further interruptions and awkward ques tions . 'W hat joy the s hepherd felt when he found his los t s heep. He put it on his s houlders and hurried bac k to tell everyone his good news and invite his friends to s hare his happines s .' 'A nd were his other s heep s till there?' as ked the boy with the red hair. 'Indeed, they were, and the s hepherd was very happy. Now, in the s am e way, there is greater rejoic ing in heaven over one s inner who turns bac k to God than over ninety-nine people who s ee no reas on to repent. Rem em ber, c hildren, none of us is a los t s heep in the eyes of God. Did you enjoy that s tory?' he as ked, fac ing the s ea of little fac es . T here was a long paus e. T hen the little boy with the red hair gave a great heaving s igh. 'It were rubbis h,' he s aid s im ply. 'Nowt 'appened. I like a s tory wi' a bit o' ac tion.' 'Mos t s heep are big and woolly and white,' s tarted the ros y-c heeked girl s itting at the front. 'W hat I want to know, is this . A re thes e P ales tine B lues -' W ithout paus ing, the m inis ter c las ped his hands together and s aid very quic kly, 'Let us pray,' thus putting a s top to any m ore c om m ents from the s heep experts in the hall. 'I think I'll pic k Matthew 10 for the next as s em bly,' rem arked the m inis ter later in the s taff-room . 'Y ou m ight rec all the words of J es us about the s heep am ong the wolves . I was eaten alive in that as s em bly, was n't I?' 'If I m ay offer a little advic e, m inis ter,' I s aid, 'to s om eone new to the c ounty. S tay away from s tories about s heep. W hen I onc e related the s am e parable, at the s c hool where m y wife is the headteac her, I as ked the c hildren the ques tion: "W hy do you think the s hepherd ris ked los ing all his other s heep jus t for the one whic h was los t?" and s om e bright s park replied, "'A ppen it were t'tup." ' T he las t s c hool on m y program m e was S t B artholom ew's S c hool. T he headteac her, S is ter B rendan, was m os t intrigued by the initiative and quizzed m e unm erc ifully about it. 'A nd how does one go about as s es s ing s om ething as intangible as s pirituality?' s he as ked, fixing m e with her s m all, dark eyes . 'S urely, like a love of poetry or an apprec iation of m us ic , it is s om ething whic h is im pos s ible to evaluate.' 'W ell, it is diffic ult, S is ter, but -' I s tarted. 'It's rather like the ques tion on m y niec e's rec ent religious educ ation exam ination: "E xplain the c onc ept of the T rinity." T heologians have argued about that for c enturies . I s hould im agine that the P ope him s elf has s om e problem s explaining that one. I'm s o s orry, Mr P hinn, do go on. You were about to eluc idate jus t how you are to ins pec t s pirituality.' I endeavoured to explain but felt on very s haky ground. E ventually, I extric ated m ys elf from her room , having prevailed upon her to let m e s it in on the rehears al for the s c hool play on the life of S t J ohn the B aptis t. S is ter B rendan's as s is tant teac her, Mrs W ebb, was in full flow when I entered the hall. On s tage a large, s haven-headed boy holding a paper c rown and a large plas tic s word was s taring im pas s ively at the teac her. 'Now, Herod,' s aid the teac her, 'when S alom e brings on J ohn the B aptis t's head, you look very s ad. You really didn't want to have him killed but had to keep your prom is e to S alom e that s he c ould have anything s he wanted.' T he teac her c aught s ight of a s m all boy at the s ide of the hall, holding a large papierm ac he plate. 'J ohn,' s he s aid irritably, 'where is the head?' 'P ardon, m is s ?' as ked the c hild. 'W here is J ohn the B aptis t's head? It s hould be on the platter.' 'I haven't got it, m is s ,' replied the c hild. 'No one has given it to m e.' 'P eter,' the teac her ins truc ted another c hild, 'go to the s taff room and fetc h the bleeding head.' T he boy returned m om ents later with S is ter B rendan. 'Did you wis h to s ee m e, Mrs W ebb?' as ked the nun. Dr S adler exam ined the knee. 'Quite a nas ty knoc k,' he s aid. 'W hatever were you doing?' I explained. 'Have you banged this knee before?' he as ked. 'Y es ,' I replied, 'but that was s om e years ago when I us ed to play rugby.' 'A nd it's been fine s inc e?' 'W ell,' I told him , 'I have had a few twinges and it ac hes a bit when I've been on m y feet for a long tim e.' My heart s ank when he s aid, 'W ell, I think I need to refer you to a s pec ialis t. T he s welling s hould have gone down by this tim e. I'll give you a pres c ription for an elas tic s toc king. In the m eantim e, try and take the weight off it as m uc h as you c an and don't s tand for long periods .' Chanc e would be a fine thing. T hat very evening I was to s peak at the Farm ers ' Dinner. A ll s pruc ed up, I was lim ping for the c ar when I c aught s ight of Harry Cotton taking his terrier for her c ons titutional. T here was an ic y wind blowing in m y fac e but I jus t c ould not wait to tell him about the c hapel. 'Good evening, Harry,' I c alled out. 'E venin',' he replied. He gazed up at the s ky. 'Gerrin a bit nippy, in't it? W hen t'badgers get theer beddin' out, t'weather'll be m ild. T hat's what m y owld dad us ed to s ay. W ell, they haven't got it out s o I rec kons we're in for a s pot of c owld.' 'Y ou know the Methodis t c hapel you were telling m e about -' I s tarted. 'S ee that holly tree,' he s aid, pointing at a little tree in the nearby hedge. 'No berries . If there were berries on t'holly tree, we'd be bound for a s oft winter 'c os t'birds only feed off t'berries if there's c owld weather a'c om in'. I'll tell thee what -' 'Harry,' I s aid, 'the building at the bac k of the c ottage was n't a Methodis t c hapel, after all.' I rather expec ted him to dis pute this and then I would have the pleas ure of putting him right and relating m y c onvers ation with J as per P erkins . 'A ye, I know,' he s aid to m y s urpris e. 'Y ou know?' 'A ye, I know. I was goin' to pop up and tell thee. I got it wrong. I was talkin' to A lbert T atters all las t week in t'Golden B all and 'e put m e right.' 'W ell, we all m ake m is takes ,' I s aid. I felt pretty s m ug. 'No, it weren't a Methodis t c hapel at all. It were Quaker. I knew it were s um m at of t's ooart. B uilt in s eventeen 'undred and s um m at, m ebbe earlier ac c ording to Harry. T hem A m eric ans I was telling you about, dropping in to t'village to 'ave a look at it, they was Quakers not Methodis ts . V ery pac ific people are your Quakers , c an't be doin' wi' violenc e and the like. I rem em ber in t'war they were c ons c ientious objec tors . S om e of 'em were loc ked up in Ric hm ond Cas tle, tha knaas . I allus res pec ted 'em . Nic e people they were. S o, it's jus t as well for you that they're a peac eful lot bec aus e they'll not be dead c huffed to s ee what thy's gone and done to their m eeting 'ous e. A nyroad, it were not W es ley what preac hed 'ere, it was a m an c alled Fox and on t'annivers ary of 'is death, this m inis ter from York and not Reverend J es s op, 'eld a s ervic e up 'ere. T hat there building you dem olis hed were a Quaker m eeting 'ous e, even rarer than a Methodis t c hapel, s o A lbert T atters all were telling m e.' I was los t for words . 'I 'eard from yer m is s is that you 'ad a bit of an ac c ident when you were dem olis hin' it.' 'Y es ,' I s ighed, 'I did.' 'S till lim pin', I s ee.' 'Y es , s till lim ping.'
'Could be divine providenc e that,' s aid Harry, am bling off. ''A ve a nic e evenin'.' I was really not in the m ood to give an am us ing after-dinner talk that evening but c heered up when I s aw J ac ob B annis ter waiting to greet m e outs ide T he Marric k A rm s , a great beam ing s m ile on his fac e. He was a s m all, wrinkled individual with wis ps of white wiry hair c om bed ac ros s his otherwis e bald pate. 'E e, it's grand to s ee thee,' he s houted at m e as if I was a good dis tanc e away. 'Find us all reight, then?' 'No problem ,' I s aid. 'Com e on in an' I'll s ooart thee out wi' a drink.' I followed him through a nois y throng of largely s tout, red-c heeked, healthy-looking m en until we arrived at the bar where I was introduc ed to J ac ob's c ous in, 'our B arry'. 'T his is t's peaker, B arry! ' roared J ac ob, looking up at the round red fac e. 'Oh aye,' replied his c ous in. I had never s een any other hum an being as large as 'our B arry'. He was m ountainous : s ix foot s ix at leas t, broad as a barn door, arm s like tree trunks and a huge round pudding fac e. T he pint glas s looked like a thim ble in his m as s ive hand. 'W hat are you 'avin', Mes ter P hinn?' s houted J ac ob. 'J us t a half of bitter, pleas e,' I replied. J ac ob roared down the bar m aking the glas s es rattle. "A rf o' bitter 'ere, J ac k, for t's peaker an' another pint for our B arry and one for m e! ' He then turned round, nudged m e with his elbow and looked up at his c ous in.' 'E 's a big bloke, in't 'e, our B arry?' he as ked. 'He is ,' I agreed. "Is m other, m i A untie B etty, were a big wom an, wunt s he, our B arry?' 'A ye,' replied the huge m an. 'W onderful wom an, s he were. 'E art o' gowld, do owt for anybody, wunt s he, our B arry?' 'A ye,' nodded B arry, before polis hing off half the pint in one great gulp. 'S he nivver m is s ed a s ervic e at t'c hurc h. Com e rain or s hine s he'd walk all t'way from Durdeyfield Farm up to t'village. One winter, it were thic k wi' s now, drifts up to ten foot deep, rooads like ic ing rinks , wind that 'ud c ut thee like a s harpened s c ythe but s he m ade it up t'c hurc h. Cooars e, vic ar were not expec tin' anybody and then m i A untie B etty turns up. Only one theer, s he were, s itting in t'front pew as large as life. A nyroad, vic ar as ks 'er if 'e s hould c arry on wi' s ervic e like, s eeing as s he were t'only one in t'c hurc h. "Look 'ere, vic ar," s he tells 'im , "I c an't tell thee what tha s hould do, but if I went out of a m orning to feed t'c ows and only one on 'em 'ad tekken trouble to turn up, I'd feed it." He were nonplus s ed at this , was t'vic ar. "Do you know," he s ays , "yer right." A nd he went ahead with t's ervic e and give one of thes e long s erm ons jus t for m i A untie B etty's benefit. He were pretty pleas ed wi' his s en afterwards . "I hope you felt it were worth the walk through all that s now, Mis s is B annis ter," he tells 'er. "Look 'ere, vic ar," s he replies , "I don't rec kon I know all that m uc h about s erm ons and the like, but if I went out of a m ornin' to feed t'c ows and only one 'ad tekken trouble to s how up, I'd not be likely to give it t'whole lot of feed." ' 'It's a nic e s tory, that -' I began. 'S he pas s ed on a c ouple of years bac k did A untie B etty, di'n't s he, our B arry?' 'A ye, s he did.' T he beer arrived, was paid for and J ac ob c ontinued. 'W hen s he died, they 'ad to 'ave a s pec ial c offin m ade for 'er, s he were that big, and t'grave diggers were paid extra 'c os o' s ize of t'hole. A nd it were a reight c arry on at t'funeral. T hey'd jus t lowered 'er deep into t'ground and t'vic ar were s tartin' up wi' 'is as hes to as hes bit, when one of t'undertakers pipes up. "It'll 'ave to c om e up, vic ar." "It's jus t gone down," s ays t'vic ar. "I know," s ays t'undertaker, "but it'll 'ave to c om e up. I've dropped m i glas s es down t'ole and they're on top o' t'c offin." It were a job and an 'alf gerrin 'er up. Coffin were up and down like a bloody yo-yo, weren't it, our B arry?' 'A ye, it were.' 'A nyroad, later on t'vic ar s ays to m i Unc le S tan, that's our B arry's dad, he s ays , "You'll m is s your wife and no m is take, won't you, Mes ter B annis ter?" "I will that," he s ays . "Fifty-two year o' m arriage and not a c us s word. I s hall m is s 'er m os t in bed at neets tha knaas ," he goes on. "Hold on," s ays t'vic ar, "this is not t'tim e nor t'plac e to hear about that s ort of thing." "Nay, vic ar," s ays m i Unc le S tan, "I don't m ean what you're a-thinkin'. On a c owld winter's neet, when wind's whis tling through c rac ks in t'winder and there's a reight draught under t'door, s he were like a bield wall, m y m is s us , like a bield wall." Does tha follow m i drift theer, Mis ter P hinn? Does tha knaw what a bield wall's fer?' 'I do,' I replied, laughing. I had been told exac tly what a bield wall was the previous year by a s m all boy. It is a s hort s tretc h of wall, s tarting nowhere, ending nowhere, for the s heep to s helter behind in wet and windy weather - a s ort of windbreak. 'Now, m i Unc le S tan were a c harac ter and no m is take, wa'n't 'e, our B arry?' c ontinued J ac ob B annis ter. 'A ye, 'e were,' replied his c ous in, finis hing the s ec ond pint of beer in a great gulp. 'I was jus t wondering -' I began. 'Onc e m i Unc le S tan goes and buys this tup - that's a ram , tha knaas - from B entham m arket.' T here was no way I was going to get a word in. 'Lovely looking c reature it were. Texel. S quare as a box, four s olid legs , beautiful fleec e. A nyroad, he puts it in t'field wi' yows - them are t'ewes - and s its bac k to watc h 'im do what nature intended 'im to do, if you follow m i drift. W ell nowt 'appens . T up jus t s tands theer, then does a bit o' walking, a bit o' grazin', but he's not interes ted in any o' yows . T hey s tand theer waiting for 'im to m ek a m ove but 'e's jus t not interes ted. W ell, m i unc le s c ratc hes 'is 'ead and dunt know what's up. 'E 's nivver s een the like afoor. S o, he s ends for t'vet. T 'vet's puzzled an' all. "I s hall tell thee what I'll do, Mes ter B annis ter," he s ays , "I've got this 'ere Dutc h m edic ine whic h m ight jus t do the tric k. J us t c om e on t'm arket." A nd he tells m i Unc le S tan to give t'tup one o' thes e pills in t'm ornin'. V et gus bac k on t'T hurs day and 'e as ks 'ow things are goin'. "Cham pion," s ays m i Unc le S tan. "I've nivver s een the like. T hem theer pills c ertainly did t'tric k. T up's gone m ad. Chas ing anything that m oves . S ex m ad 'e is . Nothing's s afe in t'field wi' 'im ." W e were talking about it in t'pub later that day and I s ays to m i Unc le S tan, I s ays , "I wonder what was in them theer pills what t'vet give t'tup." "I don't know," s ays 'e, "but they tas te of pepperm int."' T he s peaker threw his head bac k and roared with laughter and a s m ile even c am e to the lips of his c ous in. 'It's a good un, that one, in't it, our B arry?' 'A ye, it is ,' s aid his c ous in. J ac ob put his hand on m y s houlder. 'W ell, it's about tim e to get 'em in for t'dinner. P rim e beef toneet, Mes ter P hinn, wi' Yorks hire puddin' an' onion gravy.' A s I finis hed the half pint, he s aid, 'I s ay, I 'opes tha's goin' to be a bit m ore talkative like, wi' yer after-dinner s peec h. You've s aid nobbut a few words in t'las t 'alf hour.' B arry looked down at m e, gave m e a knowing look and winked.
17 My favourite tim e in the s c hool year is Chris tm as . It is then that teac hers m ake a m as s ive effort to c reate the m agic al atm os phere of this very s pec ial s eas on. S c hools at Chris tm as -tim e are ablaze with c olour. Fat Father Chris tm as es , their s ilver s leighs pulled by team s of pranc ing brown reindeer, gallop ac ros s the walls . Fir trees twinkle in entranc e halls , and c orridors are fes tooned with bright dec orations . E ac h c las s room has a c rib c ram m ed with little wooden figures c rowding around the m anger. Chris tm as is a tim e for c hildren. Of all the ac tivities whic h take plac e at Chris tm as it is the infant Nativity play to whic h I m os t look forward. Innoc ent c hildren re-enac ting one of the greates t s tories of all tim e c apture the es s enc e of Chris tm as . To s ee Mary, aged s ix, draped in pale blue and tightly c lutc hing B aby J es us (us ually a large plas tic doll) to her c hes t, never fails to bring a tear to the eye. To s ee J os eph, a thic k m ultic oloured towel draped over his head (us ually held in plac e by an elas tic belt with a s nake c las p) and attired in a dres s ing gown and red s oc ks , never fails to bring a s ym pathetic s m ile to the lips . A nd then there are the s hepherds (us ually a m otley group of little boys who s c ratc h, fidget and pic k their nos es throughout the perform anc e), the T hree W is e Men (who invariably forget their lines or drop the gifts ), the adoring angels c lad in white s heets with bits of tins el s tapled to the bottom and unc om fortable-looking c ardboard wings s trapped to their bac ks and, of c ours e, there's the grum py Innkeeper, who very often s teals the s how. T here is s om ething very s pec ial and heart-warm ing about the infant Nativity. T he firs t Nativity play this year took plac e at W illingforth P rim ary S c hool. W illingforth was s om ething of a s howpiec e s c hool and the headteac her, the form idable Mis s P ilkington, was one of the m os t highly regarded educ ationalis ts in the c ounty. S o I antic ipated that the perform anc e would be rather s pec ial, and indeed it was . From the outs ide, the elegant grey s tone building, with high leaded windows and im pos ing oak door, res em bled a s ubs tantial, im m ac ulately m aintained private res idenc e. Ins ide, there was jus t the one large airy c las s room . It was an im pres s ively dec orated room , blue being the dom inant c olour - pale blue walls , navy blue and c ream c eiling beam s and s upports , and blue floral c urtains . T he Reading Corner was attrac tively inviting with blue c arpet and c us hions . I rec alled thinking on m y firs t vis it that it was the firs t c olour-c o-ordinated c las s room I had s een. T he s c hool looked partic ularly warm and c heerful that c old Dec em ber afternoon. Greens and reds , gold and s ilver m ade the room look very bright and fes tive. Us ing tis s ue paper of varying c olours , the c hildren had trans form ed the windows into the m os t wonderful s tained glas s , depic ting s c enes in the early life of the Holy Fam ily. On a table in one c orner there was a s m all c rib with delic ate porc elain figures . In the Reading Corner s tood a m odes t Chris tm as tree. For the Nativity play, the des ks had been rem oved and replac ed with rows of c hairs . B y the tim e I arrived the plac e was pac ked with m um s and dads , grandparents and governors all fac ing a m akes hift s tage. A s I m ade m y way to m y res erved s eat in the front row, a figure a few rows bac k s tood up and waved at m e. It was Connie, alm os t unrec ognis able without her bright pink nylon overall. S he had told m e the week before that, s inc e there were no c ours es on at the Centre that day, s he was taking the afternoon off. S he was determ ined that this year s he was not going to m is s the Nativity play in whic h one of her grandc hildren, little Luc y, had a s tarring role. Mis s P ilkington, a tall, elegant wom an, opened proc eedings by welc om ing everyone. T hen the Chairm an of Governors , Canon S hepherd, a jolly little m an with ruffled hair and flabby c heeks , read in a deep s onorous voic e a pas s age from Luke: 'T he A ngel S alutes the V irgin Mary'. A s the c hildren s ang 'A way in a Manger', a pretty little girl playing Mary entered, ac c om panied by a s m all boy in the regulation brown dres s ing gown. Des pite the m ultic oloured towel draped over his head, I rec ognis ed Terry the Terror, the boy who had alm os t c aus ed a riot at the s c hool the previous year. Forget about the m irac le of Chris tm as ! A m odern m irac le had been perform ed at the s c hool and I was undoubtedly now looking at Terry the Tam ed. Mary and J os eph knoc ked on the inn door, found there was no room and were s hown to the s table. T hings went like c loc kwork until the T hree K ings arrived on the s c ene. T he firs t little boy, c arrying a golden box and dres s ed in a red velvet c loak m ade from c urtains and s porting a c ardboard c rown whic h c overed half his fac e, announc ed loudly: I am Melc hior and gold I bring, In hom age of our new born king. I have travelled from afar, Following yon twinkling s tar. T he s ec ond W is e Man s trode onto the s tage c arrying a blue box. He too boom ed out his words : I am Gas par. Frankinc ens e I bring, In hom age of our new born king. I have travelled through the night, Following yon s tar whic h s hines s o bright. T he third W is e Man entered c arrying a green box. He s huffled nervous ly to the c entre of the s tage and s tared around him wide-eyed and frightened as if los t in a bus y s hopping s treet. T here was a pregnant s ilenc e. T he c hild s niffed, then his s m all s houlders heaved and great tears rolled down his s m all red c heeks . S uddenly he let out a m os t des perate and plaintive c ry: 'I don't know who I am . W ill s om eone tell m e who I am ?' 'Y ou're B althazar, Gavin,' Mis s P ilkington s aid in a loud s tage whis per, from the s ide of the room , 'and you've brought B aby J es us a s pec ial pres ent of m yrrh.' 'I don't know who I am ,' the c hild whim pered again. 'W ill s om eone tell m e who I am ?' 'B althazar! ' the audienc e c horus ed. 'I don't want to do it! ' he wailed. 'I don't want to do it.' T he headteac her m oved forward, helped the little boy plac e the box before Mary and J os eph, gave him a c uddle and, taking his hand, led him off the s tage. W e all applauded loudly. It was wonderful dram a. I had watc hed a very s im ilar s c ene when I had ac c om panied the teac hers and s tudents of T he Lady Cavendis h High S c hool on that fateful s c hool trip. During the produc tion of K ing Lear, the ac tor playing the lead had entered jus t as the s m all c hild had done that afternoon, looking los t and alone and frightened. P oor, deranged Lear, he had pluc ked at his hair, thrown out his arm s and appealed to the heavens : 'W ho is it that c an tell m e who I am ?' It is one of the s addes t lines of S hakes peare. On that oc c as ion there had been no Mis s P ilkington to help out. E very infant headteac her has a s tory to tell about the Chris tm as Nativity play. T here was the tim e the Innkeeper, when as ked if there was any room in the inn ans wered, 'P lenty,' and us hered the s tartled Holy Fam ily ins ide; the oc c as ion when Mary had dropped B aby J es us , im m ediately burs ting into floods of tears as the pink doll rolled off the s tage; the tim e that the A rc hangel Gabriel had inform ed Mary that he 'had tidings of great joy to bring' but had c om pletely forgotten what they were; the oc c as ion when a frightened little girl dec ided to announc e, 'W elc om e to our Harves t Fes tival' bec aus e s he was fed up with being teas ed bec aus e s he c ouldn't s ay the word 'Nativity'; the m em orable tim e when the large c ardboard and wooden s tar whic h had been s us pended on a wire above the s tage, had fallen onto J os eph who, very m uc h out of c harac ter, had rubbed his head and exc laim ed, 'B loody 'ell! ' In one s c hool I had eaves dropped on a c onvers ation between a parent and the teac her c onc erning the Nativity play. 'S o what's this play about, then?' as ked the m other in all s erious nes s . In another s c hool I had heard a father c om plain that, 'You allus do t's am e play every Chris tm as . T ha wants to do s um m at different.' Infant Nativities are rarely without inc ident and the one at T upton Road P rim ary S c hool the following week was no exc eption. W hen I rec eived an invitation from the headteac her to join the gues ts , I readily ac c epted. T he headteac her, Mrs W ils on, wended her way through the throng of parents and governors to greet m e at the entranc e. 'Rather a different rec eption this tim e, Mr P hinn,' s he s aid, extending a long white hand and s m iling broadly. 'Yes , indeed,' I replied rather s heepis hly and wis hing s he hadn't rem inded m e of a rather em barras s ing inc ident the previous year when I had been apprehended by the loc al polic em an who had been tipped off by a loc al res ident that I was a s us pic ious c harac ter loitering outs ide the s c hool. A ll I had been doing was writing up s om e notes prior to m y vis it, for whic h I had arrived early. Mrs W ils on was a tall, pas ty-fac ed wom an with s hort, dyed blac k hair and heavy m ake-up. It had oc c urred to m e on m y previous vis it, and I was rem inded of it now, how very like a rac oon s he looked with her pale fac e and large dark eyes nes tling in heavy blac k eye-s hadow. Fus s y Mrs T hic kett, a m ous y-haired, s harp-fac ed wom an, was at her s ide nodding nervous ly. T he play opened in the traditional fas hion with Mary and J os eph s etting off for B ethlehem . J os eph, a c onfident little boy in large glas s es , s poke his lines c learly and loudly. Holding Mary's hand he gently led her ac ros s the s m all m akes hift s tage. T hings didn't go s o well when the Innkeeper appeared. He was a s turdily built c hild with s piky ginger hair and his two front teeth m is s ing. It was c lear he had a num ber of fam ily m em bers pres ent that afternoon for there were adoring 'Oohs ' and 'A ahs ' whenever he opened his m outh. B efore J os eph c ould even enquire whether there m ight be room at the inn, the little bruis er, arm s folded tightly over his c hes t and c hin jutting out like a m iniature Mus s olini, announc ed: 'T here's no room ! ' 'B ut we have travelled far and -' began J os eph. 'T here's no room ,' repeated the innkeeper even louder. 'B ut -' s tarted J os eph. 'Did you not hear m e?' T he innkeeper bellowed. 'I s aid there was no room . Y ou c an go round the bac k in the barn.' 'A barn?' repeated Mary. 'W e c an't go in a barn.' 'T here's nowhere els e,' s aid the innkeeper. 'T ake it or leave it.' A t this point the little boy c aught s ight of an elderly wom an in the m iddle of the front row. It was obvious ly his granny. He grinned m aniac ally and tinkled the air with his fingers . T he old lady, rather unhelpfully, s m iled and waved bac k. T his c ontinued for what appeared an age. 'S hane! ' c am e the teac her's dis em bodied voic e from offs tage. 'S hane! Com e off! ' T he Innkeeper c ontinued to s m ile and wave. T he voic e from the wings was now m ore ins is tent. 'S hane Merryweather, get off that s tage right now! ' T he c hild was finally prevailed upon to exit s tage left but did s o in a flouris h, s m iling and waving, like a fam ous ac tor rec eiving the plaudits of a s m itten audienc e. T hings then went s m oothly until the arrival of the T hree W is e Men. 'I bring you gold,' s aid the firs t c hild, laying a s m all golden box at Mary's feet and bowing low. 'I bring you m yrrh,' s aid the s ec ond, laying a c oloured jar at Mary's feet and bowing low. 'A nd I bring you frankinc ens e,' s aid the third king, laying down his gift. 'B ow! ' c am e the dis em bodied voic e from the wings . 'B ow! ' T he third king looked perplexed. He s tared around him like a rabbit c aught in the headlight's glare. 'J as on! ' c am e the voic e again. 'B ow! B ow! ' T he little boy looked firs t at the audienc e and then at Mary. 'W oof! ' he s aid. 'W oof! W oof! ' I was s till c huc kling to m ys elf when I arrived for m y next appointm ent at S t B artholom ew's S c hool. S is ter B rendan greeted m e in the entranc e hall and us hered m e into her room . W ith her blac k habit, dark, darting eyes and a s harp little beak of a nos e, s he always rem inded m e of a hungry blac kbird. 'I do s o love Chris tm as ,' s he trilled. 'It's s uc h a joyous tim e. S uc h a great fes tival in the Chris tian c alendar - the birth of Our Lord.' 'B ut not as great as E as ter, S is ter?' I s aid m is c hievous ly, rec alling m y c onvers ation with E lizabeth. 'Is n't that the greates t fes tival in the Chris tian c alendar, when J es us s uffered on the c ros s , died for our s ins and ros e from the dead?' 'W hy, Mr P hinn,' c ried the nun, her s m all eyes widening in am azem ent, 'I never knew you were a bible s c holar.' T his would be the las t vis it to thos e s c hools involved in the 'S pirituality in the Curric ulum ' initiative. During the Chris tm as holidays I would have a lengthy report to c om pos e but I had s een a large num ber of les s ons , obs erved c ountles s as s em blies and had had a range of lively dis c us s ions with headteac hers and teac hers s o I had a c lear idea of what I was going to write. 'Mrs W ebb is all ready for you,' explained S is ter B rendan, a s m all s m ile appearing on her lips . 'A little nervous , I have to s ay, after the las t rather em barras s ing oc c as ion. T his afternoon you'll be joining her for s tory-tim e, whic h, hopefully, will be without inc ident.' E ven nuns , as I s oon dis c overed, c an s om etim es be wrong. T he s tory Mrs W ebb began reading that afternoon was the deeply m oving ac c ount about the woodc arver. He had been a happy, good-natured m an until his wife and c hild had died, then he c eas ed to s m ile and bec am e bitter and unpleas ant to anyone who c am e near him . One c old winter's day a widow and her s m all s on c alled on him and as ked him to c arve a s et of Nativity figures and that's when a Chris tm as m irac le happened. Mrs W ebb had arrived at the m os t poignant part of the s tory, when the woodc arver, having tried again and again to c arve the fac es of Mary and her baby but without s uc c es s , finally reac hes into a drawer and takes out the c harc oal s ketc h of a young wom an s itting in a roc king c hair c radling a tiny baby. It was of his wife and c hild. W ith tears s treaking down his fac e, he c arves Mary in her rough woollen s hawl looking down lovingly at her prec ious baby. A t this point Mrs W ebb s topped reading and a tangible s ilenc e fell. S he put her hand to her fac e and began to c ry. I was at a los s what to do. Never, in all the years I had been obs erving teac hers , had I ever s een a teac her break down like this in front of her c las s . S he took a handkerc hief from her handbag, dabbed her eyes and c ontinued to weep. 'I'm s orry,' s he s obbed. 'I'm s orry, I jus t c an't read any m ore.' I felt a lum p c om e into m y throat and m y eyes began to fill up too. T hen P eter, the s m all boy who had been ins truc ted to go to the s taff room and get 'the bleeding head', s tood up and s trode to the front of the c las s . He took the book from the teac her's hand, gently patted her on the arm and s aid gently, 'You s it down, Mis s , I'll finis h the s tory.' Mrs W ebb was not alone in c rying that afternoon. I had witnes s ed exac tly what the 'S pirituality in the Curric ulum ' initiative was all about. I had s een awe and wonder in Mrs W ebb's c las s room that c old Dec em ber day. A t break-tim e I s ought out the boy. He was in the playground s liding with his friends on the ic y s urfac e. 'W hat you did today,' I told him , 'was a noble deed.' He looked up at m e s erious ly. 'P ardon, s ir?' 'It was a very kind and thoughtful thing to do, helping Mrs W ebb out like that.' His s m ile s tretc hed from one ear to the other. 'Oh, that,' he told m e c heerfully, 'I often have to do it.' I c alled in at Crom pton P rim ary S c hool a few days later, jus t prior to the s c hool breaking up for the Chris tm as holidays . Mrs Gardiner's room was s o c ram m ed full of brightly-wrapped Chris tm as pac kages that there was hardly any room for m e to get in. 'S orry about this , Mr P hinn,' apologis ed the headteac her, c lam bering around the piles of parc els . 'W e don't want the c hildren to s ee them and m y room is the s afes t plac e.' 'A re thes e all for the c hildren?' I as ked, am azed by the s pec tac le before m e. 'Indeed, they are,' the headteac her replied. 'W e like to give eac h c hild a s m all gift at Chris tm as . A lways a book. Nurs ery rhym es or fairy tales for the infants , a poetry anthology or c hildren's novel for the older ones .' 'W hat a lovely idea,' I s aid. 'B ut however c an you afford it?' 'W ell, the Rotary Club and the Lions help out,' explained Mrs Gardiner, 'and we have raffles during the year, bingo s es s ions and other fund-rais ing ac tivities . It rais es jus t about enough. Y ou s ee, s om e of our c hildren m ight have wonderful televis ions at hom e but no books at all, not a one. T hey get lots of toys and s weets and bic yc les on Chris tm as m orning but s eldom a book. T hey never vis it the library and are rarely s een in a books hop. S o I think it's im portant for them to have a reading book. T hen there are other c hildren in the s c hool who will get prec ious little at all for Chris tm as . Our book m ight be one of the few things they get. Little Matty, for exam ple. Y ou rem em ber Matty, the boy who s tole the pound c oin? W ell, his m other told him las t year that Father Chris tm as had run out of pres ents when he got to him . S ad, is n't it?' 'It is ,' I agreed. 'Y ou're pas s ionate about reading, aren't you, Mrs Gardiner?' 'Y es , I s uppos e I am ,' s he replied. 'I always have been. I get it from m y parents . My father us ed to s ay that books are the arc hitec ture of a c ivilis ed s oc iety and reading the m os t im portant tool of learning.' 'He was a wis e m an,' I s aid. 'Taught for forty years , did m y father,' s aid Mrs Gardiner proudly. 'My m other read to m e every night until I was well into m y teens , and s he bought m e a book every birthday and every Chris tm as and always ins c ribed it with a little m es s age. T hos e books are m y treas ured pos s es s ions . I rem em ber when I firs t bec am e headteac her here at Crom pton and as ked a c hild what books he had at hom e. I have to adm it I was s hoc ked by the ans wer. A fter thinking a bit, he replied that they did have one - a big, thic k, yellow book whic h they kept underneath the telephone. I feel that c hildren s hould own books and build up a little pers onal library, s o we buy them one eac h Chris tm as and put a bookplate in the front with their nam e and the date. Reading is s o im portant. If parents would jus t s pend fifteen m inutes eac h evening with their c hildren, talking about the words and the pic tures and m aking reading enjoyable, what a differenc e it would m ake to their learning.' 'I c ouldn't agree m ore,' I told her. 'A nd do you know, s om e of the c hildren c om ing into this s c hool at five have never had a s tory read to them at bedtim e or heard a nurs ery rhym e. S om e parents jus t don't s eem to bother thes e days . T he c hildren know all the pop s ong lyric s , of c ours e, but few of the traditional rhym es . W e have to teac h them about J ac k and J ill and Hum pty Dum pty and Little J ac k Horner.' 'W ell, I think it's a s plendid idea to buy the c hildren books , I really do.' 'T here's only one problem ,' s aid the headteac her. 'Oh?' 'Father Chris tm as .' 'W hy?' I as ked. 'W hat has Father Chris tm as done?' 'He has n't done anything,' s aid Mrs Gardiner. 'It's jus t that we haven't got one. T he c ros s ing patrol warden took on the part las t year but ended up nearly having a nervous breakdown. He s aid he'd rather fac e a roadful of c areering traffic than the hall full of exc ited c hildren again. I have to s ay they did give him a bit of a hard tim e. Tequila interrogated him as to why s he hadn't rec eived the pres ents s he had as ked for the previous year, another c hild told him he was n't the real Father Chris tm as and one little girl got c om pletely c arried away, fas tened onto him like a W hitby lim pet and jus t would not let go. S he s c ream ed and yelled and when we finally m anaged to pris e her off s he threw a m os t dis grac eful tantrum . T hen Father Chris tm as 's beard kept s lipping and he forgot the nam es of the reindeers .' T he headteac her paus ed for a m om ent and gave m e a s ly s ort of look. 'Now, I've jus t had a thought. Mr P hinn. Y ou don't fanc y -' I c ut her off, throwing up m y hands as though to fend her off. 'No, no, Mrs Gardiner, I've played Father Chris tm as before and it is not fals e m odes ty when I tell you that I was an unm itigated dis as ter.' 'A h well,' s he s aid, 'I s hall jus t have to twis t m y hus band's arm .' A t that m om ent there was a loud rap on the door. 'E xc us e m e, Mr P hinn,' s aid the headteac her. Outs ide s he was c onfronted by a round, s hapeles s wom an with bright frizzy blonde hair, an im pres s ive s et of double c hins and im m ens e hips . S he had a ruddy c om plexion, heavy s leepy eyes and a m outh whic h turned downwards as if in perpetual hos tility. 'Can I 'ave a word, Mrs Gardiner,' s he s aid angrily. 'I am a little bus y at the m inute, Mrs B raithwaite,' replied the headteac her. 'Y es , well you m ight be, but this is him portant.' 'It always is , Mrs B raithwaite,' s ighed Mrs Gardiner. 'E h?' 'W hat s eem s to be the problem this tim e?' 'Our T equila c am e 'om e yes terday wi'out 'er Chris tm as bobbles . S he had 'em in 'er 'air yes terday m orning when s he c om e to s c hool and s he c om e 'om e wi'out 'em . S om ebody's gone an' nic ked 'em off of 'er.' 'W e c an't be c ertain about that,' replied the headteac her. 'T hey m ight have fallen out when s he was running around in the playground.' 'No, they didn't! ' s napped T equila's m other. 'I tied 'em on right tight. S he c om e 'om e wi'out 'em , rooarin' 'er eyes out. T hey was new, them bobbles . J us t bought 'em from t'm arket.' 'A nd what do thes e Chris tm as bobbles look like?' enquired Mrs Gardiner. 'W ell, they was red Father Chris tm as es wi' winking eyes . I didn't s hell out good m oney to 'ave 'em nic ked.' 'W e will have a good look round for them , Mrs B raithwaite, and now if you will exc us e m e, I am rather bus y.' 'No! ' c ried T equila's m other. 'T hat won't do. It won't do at all. S om ebody's nic ked 'er bobbles and I want 'em findin'. It's 'appened before. My T equila's c om e 'om e without other things whic h 'ave gone m is s ing like her Mic key Mous e knic kers for one thing.' 'Mrs B raithwaite,' s aid the headteac her s harply. 'Leave the m atter with m e and I will m ake inquiries . Now I really m us t as k you -' T he wom an was not to be put off. 'W ell, I wants to know what you are going to do.' 'W ell, let m e s ee,' s aid Mrs Gardiner c alm ly. 'Tom orrow, I s hall get the teac hers , the c las s room as s is tants , the dinner ladies , the m id-day s upervis ors , the c leaners , the lollipop lady, the c aretaker and all the c hildren to s earc h for Tequila's Chris tm as bobbles whic h m us t have c os t you all of two pounds . W e will s top all the les s ons to look high and low and we will leave no s tone unturned until we have found them .'
Mrs B raithwaite paus ed for a m om ent before replying, 'A re you taking the pis s ?' In the infant c las s room the c hildren were bus y c olouring in Chris tm as c ards . 'J us t put your penc ils down for a m om ent pleas e, c hildren,' s aid the teac her, 'and look this way. Now, do any of you rem em ber Mr P hinn? He c am e into our s c hool earlier this year.' A m ids t the s ea of fac es I notic ed Matty obs erving m e from his des k in the c orner of the room , a truc ulent expres s ion on his little fac e. I felt c ertain he rem em bered m e. I c ertainly rem em bered him . 'I know who 'e is ,' s aid a large and very voluble infant with a plum p fac e, frizzy hair in huge bunc hes (m inus the Chris tm as bobbles ) and great wide eyes . I knew it wouldn't be long before T equila m ade her pres enc e felt. 'It were 'im what told us about that c at.' 'T hat's right,' I s aid. 'Lazy T om .' 'W e m ight be gettin' another c at for Chris tm as ,' T equila told m e. 'I thought your granny didn't like c ats ,' I s aid. 'S he dunt, but s he dunt live wi' us any m ore. S he's in an 'om e.' 'W ell, I am very s orry to hear it,' I s aid. 'My dad's not,' s aid the c hild. 'He s aid it were t'bes t plac e for 'er. Mi granny dribbles in 'er knic kers and s he -' 'Y es , you told m e before,' I s aid. 'T hat's enough now, T equila,' s aid the teac her. 'B ut I were tellin' 'im about m i granny.' 'Y es , I know you were,' s aid the teac her s harply, 'and we've heard quite enough. Now, I'm s ure Mr P hinn would like to s ee our c rib.' 'V ery m uc h,' I s aid. T he c rib was a large but extrem ely s orry-looking affair with dull s trips of wood s tuc k together haphazardly, s c raps of faded hay and huge figures whic h had c learly s een better days . T he white paint had flaked off the B aby J es us giving Him an unhealthy grey appearanc e. J os eph had los t an arm and the angels their haloes , the three kings looked like down-and-outs and the ox and the as s were c hipped beyond rec ognition. S om eone had tried to brighten up the V irgin Mary by repainting her with long yellow tres s es , bright red lips , c rim s on c heeks and an elec tric blue c ape. S he had a s trange, rather alluring s m ile on her fac e. Looking at her, the adjec tive 'virgin' was the las t word that c am e to m ind. 'T hey've gorra m uc h nic er one in Fettles ham ,' T equila inform ed m e. 'Ours is really tatty.' 'B ut that's what it probably would have looked like,' I told her. 'B aby J es us was born in a s table, a c attle s hed, and he had a m anger for a bed. It wouldn't have been nic e and c lean and bright like the c rib in Fettles ham . T he s table B aby J es us was born in would have been full of rather s m elly anim als and dirty hay. T here was no room in the inn, you s ee, s o Mary and J os eph had to s tay in the s table and it didn't have lovely furniture and c arpets and c entral heating.' 'W ell, they s hould 'ave booked in advanc e,' pronounc ed T equila. 'It allus gets bus y at Chris tm as .' 'Mary had to have her baby in a c old, dark barn,' I c ontinued. 'He had no nic e new c lothes , no toys , no c ot. He c am e into the world with nothing. He was one of the poor and m ean and lowly.' Matty, who had been watc hing with eyes like s auc ers , s hook his head s lowly and s aid quietly but with feeling, 'P oor little bugger.'
18 One evening, jus t after the s c hools had broken up for Chris tm as , Chris tine and I were s nuggled up on the s ofa in front of a blazing fire. 'I c an't rem em ber when we las t did this ,' s he s aid. 'W ell, we've both been s o bus y,' I replied. 'T his has been s uc h a hec tic term , not one I would c are to repeat.' 'I hope I s hall s ee m ore of you when the baby arrives ,' Chris tine s aid. 'W hen our c hild s tarts to talk, I don't want him or her as king who that s trange m an is who dis appears early in the m orning and arrives hom e late at night with his big blac k bag.' 'Y ou m ake m e s ound like Dr Crippen,' I s aid. 'W ell, we'll want to s ee m ore of you. Y ou'll have fam ily c om m itm ents .' 'Y ou will,' I s aid. 'I'm determ ined to have m ore nights in and try to get hom e earlier. I want to s nuggle up with m y little girl and read to her every night.' 'A nd what about the baby?' as ked Chris tine m is c hievous ly. 'I'll read to her as well.' I was thinking of Mrs Gardiner and her rem arkable father. S he was right, of c ours e: one of the m os t im portant things parents c an do for their c hildren is read with them - not to them or at them , but w ith them , m aking reading a pleas ure. 'Y ou are really c ertain it's going to be a girl, aren't you?' as ked Chris tine. 'Of c ours e, I am ,' I s aid. 'T he eldes t c hild in every P hinn fam ily as far as we c an rem em ber has been a girl and it's been the s am e with the B entleys on your s ide. Little Lizzie will be blonde, blue-eyed and beautiful, jus t like her m other. A nd s he'll be c lever, too. E lizabeth Gas kell, E lizabeth B arrett B rowning, E lizabeth P hinn - it's the nam e of a great writer. A nd if it's a boy he'll be c alled Fred and play c ric ket for Y orks hire.' 'I thought we had dec ided on Matthew,' s aid Chris tine. 'I think Matthew for s on num ber two. A firs t born s on s hould have his father's nam es .' 'Certainly not! ' exc laim ed Chris tine. 'One Gervas e in the fam ily is m ore than enough.' 'If it's a boy, what about nam ing him Ric hard, then, after m y father?' 'Or Les lie, after m ine?' 'Or Ric hard Les lie?' 'Or Les lie Ric hard?' 'T his is all ac adem ic , Chris tine,' I s aid, 'bec aus e it will be a girl - little Lizzie P hinn.' W e s at in s ilenc e for a while, watc hing the flic kering flam es and feeling the warm th of the open fire. 'T his is the life,' I s aid at las t. I was well and truly in the Chris tm as s pirit. T he m ain reas on I was feeling partic ularly pleas ed with life c onc erned Harold's job and m y dec is ion not to apply. It was as if a huge weight had been lifted from m y s houlders . Had I been elevated to the S enior Ins pec tor's pos ition, I would have had even les s tim e to s pend with m y fam ily and when I w as at hom e I'd no doubt be as grum py as a bulldog with toothac he. It had c ros s ed m y m ind that Geraldine m ight have put in for the job. W ith the us ual veil of s ec rec y that s he wrapped hers elf in s he had given nothing away, but whoever had been offered the job was taking a very long tim e to m ake up his or her m ind. T he offic e would c los e for Chris tm as the following week and we were s till in the dark as to who Harold's s uc c es s or would be. S ec ret m eetings had taken plac e at County Hall whic h even J ulie and her network of inform ants c ould not penetrate. It all s eem ed very m ys terious . A nother reas on for m y good hum our was the Quaker m eeting hous e. T he nightm are s c enario of m y s tanding at the gate of P eewit Cottage fac ing a c oac hload of A m eric an Quakers who had c om e to s ee the fam ous his toric building had faded like the bad dream that it was . In fac t, Harry had not referred to the s ubjec t on any of his frequent vis its , nor had it been m entioned by anyone in the village. It was a great weight off m y m ind. T here was reas on to feel a little optim is tic c onc erning the propos ed c los ure of Hawks rill S c hool as well. E verything had gone unc harac teris tic ally quiet at County Hall but J ulie's inform ants had told her that, largely due to the fus s the A c tion Group had c aus ed, the plans for c los ure had apparently been delayed. Of c ours e, s he was told, s he m us tn't breathe a word. S o that was s om ething els e to m ake m e feel happy about. T hen there was the gam m y knee. A lthough it s till ac hed after a long day, it was feeling a whole lot better. Chris tine was not enam oured by the fles h-c oloured elas tic s toc king whic h I perm anently wore, but it had c ertainly helped relieve the pain. Dr S adler had arranged, within a week, for m e to s ee a s pec ialis t at Fettles ham Royal Infirm ary. 'I'm very im pres s ed with the s peed with whic h you've been able to s ee m e,' I had told the S enior Regis trar, as he prodded and poked m y kneec ap. 'I thought I'd have to wait weeks to s ee a s pec ialis t.' He had s m iled like a hungry vam pire. 'W e s ee patients pretty prom ptly, Mr P hinn,' he had told m e, 'but you will probably have to wait s om e tim e until we c an operate. Months , rather than weeks , I'm afraid.' 'P ardon?' 'Y ou'll be on the waiting lis t for an operation. Y our knee problem is not life-threatening, you s ee, s o it m ay be quite s om e tim e before we get around to s orting it out.' 'W ell, I gues s I c an live with that,' I had s aid. 'I'm afraid you'll have to,' he had replied, not letting the s m ile s lip. 'W hat are you thinking about?' Chris tine as ked now. 'Oh, jus t how luc ky I am .' W e s at there jus t enjoying the warm th and c los enes s of eac h other. 'Y ou know what this room needs ?' s he s aid s uddenly. 'W hat?' 'T he tic king of a c loc k.' 'A c loc k?' 'Yes , and I don't jus t m ean a c loc k on the m antelpiec e, but a grandfather c loc k. My grandparents had one, and on its fac e was an old-fas hioned s ailing s hip - you know, fully rigged - whic h went up and down on the waves as the c loc k tic k-toc ked. I us ed to watc h it for hours . A grandfather c loc k would look jus t right in the c orner. It would tic k away reas s uringly.' 'A nd s trike in the m iddle of the night and wake up little Lizzie,' I added. 'No, our baby will s leep like a top.' 'I don't think we c an afford a grandfather c loc k at the m om ent, darling,' I told her. 'Maybe in a c ouple of years .' 'Y es ,' s he s ighed. 'It was jus t a thought.' It was a thought, however, whic h firm ly planted its elf in m y head. I, too, liked the idea of a grandfather c loc k but I was n't going to adm it it to Chris tine. It would be a s urpris e. S he would wake up on Chris tm as m orning with a grandfather c loc k tic k-toc king and c him ing in the c orner. T he following S aturday, on the pretext of c om pleting an urgent report at the offic e, I s et off for Roper's S ales room in Collington to look for a grandfather c loc k. I always enjoyed brows ing around auc tion hous es , running m y hand along the s m ooth oak tables and m ahogany c hes ts of drawers , s itting in beautifullyc arved balloon-bac k c hairs , breathing in the s m ell of old furniture and bees wax, and watc hing the dealers pric ing up the furniture and bargain hunters rootling through the boxes of bric -a-brac . S om etim es I jus t s at there, being buoyed up by watc hing other people bid agains t eac h other. I never bought anything expens ive - jus t a box of old letters , s om e faded photographs , a dus ty book given as a prize on s om e s peec h day in the dim and dis tant pas t, a c ouple of old-fas hioned fountain pens , a hands om e inkwell (dam aged). Onc e I bought, for a pound, a dog-eared exerc is e book with hard blac k c overs , written by a s oldier fighting in the trenc hes in the Firs t W orld W ar. T here are tender poem s , vivid ac c ounts and horrific des c riptions . It is a gem . B ooks s uc h as this , of no real value in its elf, tells the s tory of a s oldier now dead and gone and probably forgotten. T here is no nam e, no details of his regim ent, jus t page after page of c opperplate handwriting. One would have thought that s uc h a poignant rec ord of his experienc es would have been treas ured by his fam ily ins tead of ending up as part of a job lot at an auc tion hous e. A s I turn the yellowing pages of the book, I think with s adnes s of that young m an and of the horrors he had experienc ed, and I wonder if he ever did return hom e to the young wom an in his poem s , the girl he loved. I had another reas on for being rather s entim ental about Roper's S ales room , of c ours e. It was where, three years earlier, I had c aught s ight of the pers on I would c om e to love - the s tunning young wom an with s oft blonde hair and dazzling blue eyes who was now m y wife. T he s ales room now was full of pros pec tive buyers hoping to buy one or m ore of the piec es of the elegant and expens ive-looking furniture on dis play. P erhaps s om eone had the wall-s pac e for one of the huge oil paintings of s olem n-fac ed individuals or dark lands c apes in ornate gold fram es : s om e were as big as the end wall in our s itting-room . T here were s c ulptured bronzes , s him m ering c rys tal and delic ate porc elain but none of that interes ted m e this tim e. My eye was im m ediately c aught by two grandfather c loc ks whic h looked as if they had c om e s traight out of the palac e at V ers ailles . I read the c atalogue des c ription of the firs t: 'A Georgian eight-day long-c as e c loc k in exquis ite c ondition, the twelve-inc h bras s arc hed dial having a s ilvered c hapter ring with s ubs idiary s ec onds ring and c alendar aperture inc orporated into the unus ual m atted c entre. T he arc hed top is c entred by a c onvex s ilvered plaque ins c ribed by the m as ter c rafts m an W ilfred Dows on of T ic khill and flanked by s c rolling dolphin m ounts with ornate s pandrels to the c orners and engraved bands of im bric ated leaves to the borders . T he pagoda hood, s urm ounted by globe finials , has fluted c olum ns A nd s o it went on for another three paragraphs . It was all gobbledegook to m e. I jus t wanted a plain grandfather c loc k that worked. 'It's a beautiful piec e, is n't it?' s aid a dis tinguis hed-looking m an s tanding next to m e. He wore an expens ive woollen overc oat hanging from his s houlders ; beneath I c ould s ee an equally expens ive blac k-s tripe s uit and a red-and-white s potted s ilk bow tie. 'Interes ted are you?' 'Y es ,' I replied. 'W hat age do you think it is ?' 'I'm afraid I've no idea,' I replied. 'I'm no expert on c loc ks , but it is s plendid.' T he m an, who was obvious ly interes ted in the piec e him s elf, c learly thought that I was intending to m ake a bid for the c loc k. He realis ed now that I pos ed no threat. 'I s hould s ay c irc a1775,' he inform ed m e. 'More late Georgian than early. I'm looking for a c om panion for m y flam e m ahogany long-c as e. T he one I have has a painted m oon roller with phas es of the m oon.' 'Y ou don't s ay! ' 'W ith Roc oc o s c roll s pandrels and dentil m oulded hood.' My c om panion obvious ly knew his c loc ks and was intent on dem ons trating as m uc h to m e. 'How m uc h do you think this c loc k will fetc h?' I as ked him . He s uc ked in his breath. 'Oh, anything between two and three, I s hould think.' 'Hundred?' He wagged his index finger at m e and c hortled. 'Y ou're a teas e.' 'Y ou m ean thous ands ?' 'Of c ours e,' he replied. 'It's way beyond m y poc ket,' I told him . 'I jus t want a plain, ordinary grandfather c loc k.' 'T hey're c alled long-c as e c loc ks , to be c orrec t, and I think you will find there are very, very few whic h are plain and ordinary. E ac h one is unique. T hey didn't c om e off a produc tion line, you know. However, you m ight try the new s hop that's jus t opened in S tation P arade in B rindc liffe. I bought a very attrac tive oakc as ed brac ket c loc k from there only las t week. V ery reas onable pric es . T he c hap deals m os tly in m antel c loc ks but I did notic e he has a long-c as e, a little the wors e for wear but it m ight be the thing you're looking for. Might have gone by now, of c ours e. If it is s till for s ale, jus t m ake s ure it's not been c obbled together. Y ou know, the top of one, the bottom of another, the workings of a third. He s eem ed a dec ent enough s ort, helpful and all that, but jus t m ake s ure.' 'T hank you, thank you very m uc h,' I s aid, 'I'll pop along there now.' A s I m ade m y way out of the c rowded s howroom I heard an unm is takably s trident voic e. A wom an with a florid fac e and bright c opper-c oloured perm was haranguing the poor young m an behind the c ounter, who was trying to deal with pros pec tive bidders . It was Connie, and I s topped to lis ten. 'W hat I want to know is why thes e m edals are s o s m all?' Connie dem anded. 'W hy didn't m y father get big ones like everybody els e?' 'He would have done, m adam ,' the young m an told her. 'T hes e are m iniatures .' 'W ell, why are they m iniatures ?' s napped Connie. 'W hy aren't they full s ize?' 'If I m ight explain,' s ighed the m an. 'Y our father will have been awarded the m edals full s ize but he would wear the m iniature vers ions for form al oc c as ions , like regim ental dinners and s uc h.' 'Oh, I s ee,' s aid Connie, m ollified. 'S o they're not his proper m edals ?' 'No, m adam , jus t s m aller vers ions .' 'Now I c om e to think of it,' s aid Connie, 'he did have s om e others , bigger ones . I think they're in a drawer at hom e. I m us t look them out.' 'I s ee here he was awarded the Military Medal,' s aid the young m an. 'He was a brave m an, m y father,' s aid Connie. 'He lived in a c ellar for a week at Dunkirk with nothing but a pound of s ugar and rain water.' 'Really?' s aid the young m an. 'A nd are you interes ted in s elling the m edals , m adam ?' 'W hat?' 'P ut them in the auc tion?' 'I m os t c ertainly am not! ' c ried Connie. 'S ell m y father's m edals ! Over m y dead body.' W ith that s he s c ooped up the item s in ques tion and headed for the door. 'Hello, Connie,' I s aid, c om ing up behind her. 'Oh, it's you. Did you hear what he s aid about m e s elling m y father's m edals ? I only c am e in to s ee what they were and how m uc h they m ight be worth and he nearly had them out of m y hand.' 'S om e people have to s ell them ,' I s aid. 'It's s ad, but they need the m oney.' 'I'd s ooner live on bread and water than part with Dad's m edals ,' s he replied. 'T he very thought! ' 'Can I give you a lift?' I as ked. 'I have to go through the town c entre to get to B rindc liffe. I'm looking for a c loc k for Chris tine.' S he c learly was n't lis tening. 'S ell m y father's m edals indeed! ' s he m um bled to hers elf, and I had to repeat m y offer. 'Oh well, thanks , if I'm not putting you out.' T hen, as we walked to the c ar park, s he s aid, 'I'm glad I've bum ped into you.' 'Not in trouble, am I?' I as ked. 'No, it's m e what's got problem s ,' s he told m e. S he tried not to look c onc erned but s he c learly was . 'I was n't going to s ay anything but m y T ed s aid I ought to m ention it. It's been on m y m ind for quite s om e tim e now.' 'W hatever is it, Connie?' I as ked. 'S erious allegations have been m ade about m e,' s he s aid. 'I beg your pardon?' 'A llegations that I went s wanning off on holiday to Franc e and had not got proper perm is s ion. I got bac k after trying to s c atter Dad's as hes , in m y highly peturberant s tate of m ind, to find this very unpleas ant letter waiting for m e. S om e nas ty piec e of work had words down at the E duc ation Offic e, m aking allegations , and I got this written warning from them in P ers onnel.' 'B ut that's over two m onths ago! ' I exc laim ed, knowing all too well who was behind it. 'W hy didn't you s ay anything earlier?' 'A s I've s aid, I've been thinking things over. B rooding, m y T ed s ays . Dealing with Dad's m edals jus t now has brought it all bac k. I rec kon it's about tim e I pac ked in the c aretaking at the Centre. I'm not getting any younger and rec eiving nas ty letters like that, after all I do, is very ups etting.' 'Don't be too has ty about pac king in the job, Connie,' I s aid. 'W e'll get it s orted out. I'm s ure that when Dr Gore knows why you went to Franc e and -' 'Oh, I've written to him . A fter brooding about it for a bit, I s ent a letter jus t this las t week. S peak to the organ-grinder not the m onkey is what Dad always us ed to s ay. I've told him that they c an s tic k the job. T hey jus t don't apprec iate the hours I put in at the Centre.' 'B ut we do, Connie,' I s aid reas s uringly. 'W e think you do a brilliant job.' 'Not s o s ure about that,' s he s aid through tight lips . 'I rec kon it was Mr Clam p what reported m e after all that c arry-on with the nudes .' 'No, Connie,' I s aid. 'Mr Clam p m ight be diffic ult and untidy, and lots of other things bes ides , but he wouldn't do s uc h a m ean-m inded thing as reporting you.' 'W ell, s om ebody's been m aking s erious allegations about m e,' s aid Connie, 'and I'll tell you this , when I find out who the alligator is I s hall give them a real piec e of m y m ind.' J us t Cloc ks was s andwic hed between a health food s hop and a dry c leaners on S tation P arade. Its newly painted front, dark green with gold lettering above the door, s tood out from the res t of the s hops in the arc ade. In the window a s ingle c loc k was dis played - a large and im pres s ive gilt m etal m antel c loc k, inlaid with m other-of-pearl and s tanding on a blac k m arble bas e. A s I turned the door handle, I res igned m ys elf to the fac t that the long-c as e c loc k I had c om e to view would be way out of m y pric e range. B ut I had c om e all this way, s o nothing ventured... T he bell tinkled dis c reetly as I entered and then a voic e c am e from the bac k. 'I'll be with you in one m om ent.' I s topped in m y trac ks . I had heard that voic e before. It was dis tinc tive: deep, res onant, authoritative. B efore I c ould es c ape, a lean, s allow-c om plexioned m an with heavy-lidded eyes and blac k, c arefullyparted hair em erged from behind the red velvet c urtain whic h s eparated the s howroom from the bac k of the s hop. It was like the entranc e of the villain at a pantom im e. 'Mr Frobis her! ' I gas ped. 'Mr P hinn,' he s aid c alm ly. W e s tood s taring at eac h other for a m om ent and then we s poke together. 'I was -' I s tarted. 'I hope -' he s tarted. W e were s aved further em barras s m ent by the bell as another c us tom er entered, a s m all wom an in a bright heads c arf and large furry boots . 'I'm looking for a c loc k?' s he s aid. 'I'll jus t have a look round,' I s aid to Mr Frobis her, relieved by the interruption. 'P leas e go ahead and deal with this c us tom er.' T he thought entered m y head that I c ould wander c as ually to the door, pretending to look at the nearby c loc ks and exit quietly, but that would be c owardly, s o I c ros s ed the room to peer at the fine s elec tion of tim epiec es on dis play. T here were bronze m antel c loc ks , intric ately inlaid brac ket c loc ks , portic o c loc ks under glas s dom es , enam elled table c loc ks , m ahogany-c as ed c loc ks , c him ing brac ket c loc ks , round wooden wall c loc ks , s m all bras s c arriage c loc ks , lantern c loc ks , c loc ks of every s ize and s hape and c olour. Des pite m y genuine interes t, m y m ind was buzzing with wondering what I would s ay to the m an who I had driven out of teac hing. 'I want a c loc k for m y niec e who's getting m arried,' the wom an s aid. 'W edding pres ent. S om ething a bit different but nothing too big and c ertainly not too pric ey. T hat pink and gold one in the window is a bit too fanc y for m y tas te but I like the s hape.' 'A h, yes , the Frenc h m antel c loc k,' s aid Mr Frobis her, s m iling s lightly. 'Y es , it is rather ornate and not to everyone's tas te. P erhaps a trifle expens ive, too.'
T he wom an pointed to an exquis ite bronze and m arble tim epiec e. 'T hat's quite nic e. How m uc h is that one?' s he as ked. 'Four hundred and twenty pounds .' 'W hat?' s he gas ped. 'Four hundred and twenty pounds ?' 'Y ou will find, m adam ,' s aid Mr Frobis her, 'that thes e are fine quality antique tim epiec es and, as s uc h, are expens ive.' 'I'll try the Co-op,' s he s aid bluntly and left. Mr Frobis her then turned his attention to m e. 'Now then,' he s aid, looking m e s traight in the eye. 'How are you?' I as ked. It s ounded s o feeble. 'W ell, as you s ee, I'm pretty well.' 'It's a lovely s hop.' 'Y es , it is .' I c oughed nervous ly. T his was a nightm are. 'I did ring the s c hool a c ouple of tim es to have a word with you, but you were not available. I m eant to s ay -' 'P leas e, pleas e, Mr P hinn, don't look s o abas hed. Y ou really don't need to s ay anything.' 'I wanted to explain -' 'Y our vis it to K ing Henry's College was quite pos s ibly one of the bes t things that c ould have happened to m e.' 'Really?' 'In a s trange and rather unexpec ted s ort of way, that is ,' he added. 'No teac her likes to be told he is not up to s c ratc h. I have to adm it at firs t I was hurt, very hurt by your report and by what I c ons idered to be s om e quite unfounded c om m ents . T hen I thought to m ys elf, it was only the judgem ent of one pers on who had obs erved jus t one les s on, one pers on who has not had a great deal of experienc e in s c hool ins pec tion. T hen I bec am e angry, partic ularly when Mr Nels on s eem ed to ac c ept without ques tion what you had s aid. He had s poken to m e a few tim es about m y work but nothing of any c ons equenc e. I rather thought that he would s pring to m y defenc e but, s adly, he did not, no m ore than m em bers of the E nglis h Fac ulty or m y union repres entative. I found that the hardes t. You really c om e to know who your friends are in s ituations like that. I know I was not the bes t teac her in the world, Mr P hinn, and, I have to adm it that over the pas t few years I have been ground down, like m any teac hers , I expec t, by the inc es s ant paperwork, the interferenc e of s o-c alled experts , negative m edia reports , objec tionable parents and the deteriorating behaviour of the pupils . However, I always thought I did a dec ent enough job. B ut that's by the by. W ater under the bridge, s o to s peak.' Mr Frobis her took out a large blue handkerc hief and blew his nos e nois ily. 'W hen I was offered early retirem ent with a pens ion enhanc em ent and a lum p s um , I got to thinking that perhaps all this was for the bes t. Did I really want to go on for a few m ore years quite dem oralis ed and depres s ed? I had toyed with the idea of opening a s hop for s om e tim e. My father was a great c ollec tor of tim epiec es and I, too, am fas c inated by them . Indeed, the pros pec t of c learing out all the c loc ks from the hous e was very attrac tive, not leas t to m y wife.' He paus ed for a m om ent and took a long, deep breath. 'My wife is not a well wom an, and retiring early m eant I c ould s pend m ore tim e with her. T im e is very prec ious for one who has a lim ited am ount. S o why, I thought, s hould I not do s om ething I really wanted to do and s pend m ore tim e at hom e? T he bank m anager was m os t helpful, the prem is es c am e up for rent and, as you s ee, here I am and I have never felt m ore c ontented.' 'W ell, I'm very pleas ed it has worked out for you, Mr Frobis her,' I s aid, and m eant it. 'A nd here you are,' he s aid. 'Not here to ins pec t m e again, I hope.' 'No, no,' I s aid has tily. 'I'm looking for a c loc k and I think I've s een jus t the one.' I turned in the direc tion of the grandfather c loc k in the c orner. 'A h, the long-c as e c loc k. Not very old. Nineteenth c entury. Quite plain but no les s attrac tive for all that. Unus ual painted dial, eight-day m ovem ent and s igned P erc y Farrington of Fettles ham . S om e s uperfic ial dam age to the c as e and at the top but the piec e is all original, I c an vouc h for that.' 'I was at Roper's S ales room earlier today looking at the c loc ks but they were a bit too expens ive and, to be hones t, rather too fanc y for m y tas te.' 'A h, you like plain things , Mr P hinn?' as ked Mr Frobis her. 'T his c loc k, in fac t, c am e from Roper's . I bought it a c ouple of years ago and it's been s tanding in m y lounge tic king away as regular as c loc kwork, if you will exc us e the c lic he. A c tually, it's not been in the s hop long. I have the provenanc e whic h is always of interes t to buyers . It was a young m an who s old it. A pparently he us ed to keep his c ric ket bats in it.' He looked at it alm os t lovingly. 'Y ou would have thought he would have wanted to keep the c loc k, wouldn't you.' It was a part of his life, his boyhood. It has m em ories . B ut there's no ac c ounting for people, is there?' 'No,' I replied. 'T here is n't.' 'Now, I expec t you wis h to know the pric e. Let m e s ee.' Mr Frobis her c ons ulted a ledger on the c ounter and ran a long finger down the page. 'Five hundred and fifty pounds . If you purc has e it, I would, of c ours e, deliver the c loc k and ens ure that it works well in its new hom e. Long-c as e c loc ks are a trifle tem peram ental, you know. Rather like people. A ll different, all with their own pers onalities .' He s troked the s ide gently as he m ight a treas ured pet. 'T hey have to be pos itioned c orrec tly, s tanding perfec tly upright. T hey have to be looked after. If they are c ared for, they will go on and on. I'll be s orry to s ee this c loc k go. It has a very c om panionable pres enc e.' T he m an had bec om e anim ated as he talked about his c loc ks . He ges tured with his hands . His eyes s hone. He s m iled. Had he only s hown the s am e enthus ias m with his pupils that he s howed for his c loc ks , I thought s adly, he would s till be teac hing.
19 It was a bitterly c old J anuary afternoon when I vis ited Mertonbec k P rim ary S c hool. T he overnight fros t was s till white on the ground. I drove deep into the dale along a narrow twis ting road with a great rolling fros ty expans e s tretc hing out before m e, and upwards to the c urving s hadowy woods and bare dis tant fells . A s I approac hed the village, the road ros e s teeply and took a s harp turn by an old s tone farm hous e drenc hed in a great m as s of twis ting ivy. I had jus t negotiated the bend when an anc ient trac tor trundled out through the farm gate, right into m y path. I s kidded to a halt and we ended up alm os t alongs ide eac h other. T he farm er, a m an with a red-roughened c om plexion and heavy grey s tubble, s urveyed m e for a m om ent, before s haking his head. I had s een that fac e c ountles s tim es before, a fac e s eas oned by the weather, lined like leather and full of c harac ter. I c ould im agine this m an s triding out for m iles ac ros s fields and m oors , negotiating walls and c ros s ing bec ks , living in the open, rain or s hine. Here was the arc hetypal Dales farm er - c raggy-fac ed, tough as old boots , with a bluntnes s , integrity and c heerful good hum our. T hat day, however, the good hum our was abs ent. "A s t there been a deeath, then?' he as ked, leaning forward and res ting his arm s on the s teering wheel. His dog, a lean blac k and white c ollie whic h was perc hed bes ide him , fixed m e with dark intelligent eyes . 'P ardon?' 'Is t's om ebody deead?' 'Not that I know of,' I replied. 'W ell, tha wants to s low down, otherwis e there will be. Rooads are treac herous at this tim e o'year. It's like a bloody ic e rink. W herever tha're off to, it'll s till be theer when tha gets theer. T ha not driving round P ic c adilly bloody Circ us , tha knaas .' 'Y es , I'm s orry, I w as driving too fas t.' 'T oo fas t! ' he c ac kled. 'T ha c am e round that c orner like a jac k rabbit wi' t'runs . It's a bad bend is that, an' ic y an' all. T here's s heep on thes e rooads and c attle and dogs . T hey don't us e zebra c ros s ings , tha knaas .' I felt like a naughty s c hoolboy being reprim anded by the headteac her. It did oc c ur to m e that the farm er c ould have c ons idered the pos s ibility that there jus t m ight be s om eone els e on the road and that he c ould have s ounded his horn as a warning to other road us ers or even s topped to c hec k that the road was c lear before pulling out, but I did not wis h to prolong the c onvers ation. 'Y es , I'm s orry. I'll take m ore c are in future.' T he farm er, s c ratc hing his s tubble, was c learly not going to let m e off s o lightly. 'Mi dog were killed on this rooad a c ouple o' years bac k,' he announc ed grim ly. 'T rying to get t's heep into yonder field. S he went bac k for a lazy yow and were knoc ked ovver by one of you s peedin' m otoris ts .' T he c ollie bes ide him c oc ked an ear as if lis tening. 'A ye, and s he were a c ham pion dog were Meg.' 'I'm very s orry,' I replied feebly. 'E r... I wonder if you m ight m ove your trac tor. I do have an appointm ent and I'm running a little late.' 'B etter late than deead,' he obs erved. 'Y es ,' I agreed. 'W ell, tek it eas y down t'hill or tha'll end up in t'watter.' He revers ed the trac tor s lowly and laborious ly bac k into the farm entranc e, and m an and dog watc hed m e as I drove off, at a s nail's pac e, down the hill and towards the village. I knew what he m eant by ending up 'in t'watter'. A head of m e lay the c lus tered village, beyond whic h a great blue expans e s him m ered in the c old afternoon s unlight. T he res ervoir was bounded by high fells c lothed in dark pine woods . W hat a plac e to live, I thought. I had vis ited Mertonbec k P rim ary S c hool three years before to tes t the c hildren's reading as part of a s urvey on s tandards of literac y. T he infant c hildren had joined m e one by one to talk a little about their reading interes ts , read a c ouple of pages from their books and to c om plete s om e word rec ognition tes ts . S tandards had been exc eptionally high and the s ubs equent report had been glowing. T hat afternoon I was there to s ee if thes e s tandards had been m aintained. I had inform ed the headteac her, a bright and enthus ias tic young wom an c alled J ean P otter, that I was partic ularly interes ted in the c hildren's s peaking and lis tening s kills . Mertonbec k P rim ary S c hool lay in the very heart of the village, a s m all s tone building with a dark grey s late roof, and enc los ed by s hiny iron railings . T he interior was typic al of m any s m all Dales s c hools : one large s quare room , a floor of well-worn, polis hed wooden bloc ks , a high beam ed c eiling and long m ullioned windows . Mrs P otter was watc hing for m y arrival and c am e down the path to greet m e. 'I'm s orry I'm a bit late, Mrs P otter,' I s aid. 'I had to go s lowly bec aus e of the treac herous road c onditions .' A s the words c am e out, I rem em bered the farm er's rem ons trations and felt a guilty flus h c reep up m y fac e. Luc kily Mrs P otter didn't notic e as s he was leading the way into the c las s room . 'I thought that by the afternoon the fros t would have gone.' 'Oh, Mr P hinn,' c huc kled the headteac her, 'you s till have a lot to learn about the weather in the Dales , you really do.' S itting quietly with folded arm s and s traight bac ks was a c las s of healthy-looking, bright-eyed c hildren. 'W e've had quite a few c hanges s inc e you were las t here,' explained the headteac her. 'If you rec all, we were then all in the one room , infants and juniors together, but our little num ber has inc reas ed s o m uc h in the las t c ouple of years that we now have a s eparate c las s room , only tem porary, at the bac k. You won't know Mrs Cooper. S he was appointed las t S eptem ber, on a tem porary c ontrac t, to teac h the infants this year. S he c am e with exc ellent referenc es and apparently has had a great deal of experienc e. You'll be s eeing her later.' I c ould tell by a s light edge in her voic e that the headteac her was not overly im pres s ed with her new c olleague. Mrs P otter turned to the c hildren who were s till s itting m otionles s and s ilent, and s aid in a loud and c heerful voic e, 'S hall we all s ay a nic e big "Good afternoon" to Mr P hinn, c hildren, and m ake him feel really welc om e.' 'Good afternoon, Mr P hinn,' c hanted the boys and girls . T his s eem ed to be a s ort of s ignal for them to relax, for they unfolded their arm s and s huffled in their c hairs . 'Good afternoon,' I replied, s m iling at them . 'W ell, Mr P hinn,' s aid Mrs P otter, 'if you would c are to m ake yours elf c om fortable on m y c hair, we'll get s tarted.' S he put her hand on the s houlder of a gangly boy with ears like c up handles , who was twirling his penc il between his thum b and forefinger. 'P enc il down, pleas e, Darren,' s he s aid, fixing him with a fac e whic h s aid 'B eware'. T he teac her's voic e was a little s harper in tone. 'Y ou m ight like to tell Mr P hinn what we have been doing.' T he boy turned and gave m e a tired look. 'Legends ,' he announc ed s om ewhat unenthus ias tic ally. 'W e've been writing about loc al legends and folklore.' 'S ounds very interes ting,' I s aid. 'A ye,' s aid the boy lac onic ally. 'A nd today we're reading out our final drafts to the whole c las s ,' added Mrs P otter, s m iling broadly, 'in a c onfident, c lear and interes ting way.' T he firs t s peaker, a plum p girl with a pale, heart-s haped fac e and large, round s pec tac les , c am e to the front c lutc hing a wodge of paper and announc ed with great as s uranc e, 'I'm going to tell you about the legend of "T he Los t V illage". It is a fam ous s tory told to m e by m y Nanna Harris on.' Here was a future teac her in the m aking, I thought, as s he looked over the top of her s pec tac les , c leared her throat, paus ed for effec t and then began. 'Many, m any years ago, there was a beautiful village near here. It was s et deep in the dale, and all around were rolling green hills . T he village had little s tone hous es , a s hop, an old c hurc h with a tall, tall s pire, and a c obbled m arket plac e with a fountain. One day, a beggar c am e into the village. He had walked a long way and was hungry and thirs ty. He went from hous e to hous e, as king for s om ething to eat and drink, and s hoes for his poor s wollen feet. B ut everyone s lam m ed their doors agains t him . W hen the beggar went to drink from the fountain, the people s et their dogs on him . 'J us t outs ide the village, halfway up the hill, was an old s tone c ottage and here a wom an c alled S arah Merton lived. S he took pity on the beggar when s he s aw him lean over to drink from the m uddy s tream whic h ran outs ide her hous e, and gave him food and c lothes . He thanked her, but before s etting off again he turned and pointed down the hill to the beautiful little village. "Not one c up of water, Not one c rus t of bread, Not one pair of tattered s hoes , Nor a c ot to res t m y head. I plac e m y c urs e upon that town; Y e waters ris e, ye people drown." 'T he next day it began to rain, and for forty days and forty nights rain poured down. S tream s burs t their banks , gardens were s wept away, fields bec am e s wam ps and the road bec am e a foam ing river. W hen the rain s topped, the beautiful little village had dis appeared and in its plac e was a great lake. T he only hous e for m iles around was S arah Merton's c ottage, and it is s till there today.' T he girl paus ed for a m om ent, peered through the large s pec tac les and s aid, 'You m ay not think that is a true s tory, but s om etim es at dus k, if you lis ten c arefully, you will hear the dis tant m oaning and groaning of the drowned people. S om etim es when it has been very hot, and the s tream s have s hrivelled to a tric kle, you m ight s ee the top of the c hurc h s pire ris ing above the water. A nd m y Nanna s ays s he onc e heard the m uffled c langing of the c hurc h bell.' T here was total s ilenc e in the c las s room . 'T hat's it,' s he s aid, before folding her s heets of paper and returning to her des k. 'I think a round of applaus e is in order for that wonderful s tory,' s aid Mrs P otter, vigorous ly s m ac king her hands together. 'W ell done, S andra, that was a s plendid effort.' T he teac her pointed to a s turdy-looking boy with s hiny dark hair and large pale eyes . 'Now, J am es , your turn next. Let us hear your legend.' T he boy rather reluc tantly m ade his way to the front of the room and turned to fac e the c las s . He s huffled, huffed and puffed and began. 'T his is t'legend of B rave B es s . Mi granddad told m e this s tory and I wrote it down.' He s niffed, rubbed his c hin and, with brow furrowed in c onc entration, began to read. 'It was t'year of t'Great W inter. T 's now began to fall and s oon t'land were like a white blanket. B illy Goodwin, who were a bit owlder than m e at t'tim e, s et off early one raw m orning in a wuthering wind, with 'is father who were t's hepherd. 'Is father was a reight big s turdy m an, us ed to t'bitter winters but that winter were one o' t'wors t. Cours e 'e didn't like goin' out on s uc h a day but 'e 'ad to get 'is s heep in. T hey took with 'em B illy's dog, B es s .' 'I've heard this s tory, m is s ,' c ried a girl in the front des k. 'It's really good.' 'W ell, let J am es finis h it, J ade,' s aid the teac her. 'No m ore interruptions , pleas e.' 'S hall I go on, m is s ?' as ked the boy. T he teac her nodded. 'S now was falling fas t and t'ic y wind began to blow m ore fierc ely. T hey wanted t's heep in s afely afore a blizzard s et in. B y lunc htim e they 'ad gathered all t'floc k and were 'eading for 'om e when a s wirling m is t c om e down. A s they got lower down t'fell out o' t'm is t, they notic ed s om e s heep 'ad s trayed. B illy whis tled for B es s and s ent 'er bac k up t'fell into t'm is t after t'los t s heep. A fter a s hort while, s om e s heep c ould be s een joining t'floc k, but there were no s ign of B es s . B illy whis tled and whis tled but B es s were nowhere to be s een. T hey c arried on down t'fells ide until they were bac k at t'farm . W hen they c ounted t'floc k, they 'ad every las t s heep, but there were s till no B es s . "'Ow c an this be?" as ked t's hepherd. T hey waited and waited for B es s but s he nivver did c om e bac k. Nivver! T hat were t'las t B illy Goodwin's father s aw of 'er.' T he c hild paus ed dram atic ally and from the bac k of the c las s room c am e a faint s ob. 'B ut that's not t'end of t's tory,' s aid J am es hurriedly. 'Not by a long c halk. Many years later, and I'm talkin' ovver fifty or s ixty, B illy Goodwin was again up on t'fell on a raw winter's day jus t like t'one before, when t's now was falling thic k and fas t and an ic y wind were blowing. A nyroad, 'e told 'is s on to hurry on down wi' t's heep and 'e'd follow on behind as fas t as 'e c ould, but 'e were an old m an now and c ouldn't m ove s o fas t ac ros s t'rough ground. B efore 'e 'ad gone far, a thic k m is t s uddenly c om e down jus t like it'd done when 'e were a lad. 'E got c om pletely los t, not knowing whether to go right nor left. S oon, very c old and s hiverin', 'e 'uddled into a little roc ky hollow out of t'bitter wind and dec ided to wait for t'm is t to c lear. 'E 'ad 'ardly been c rouc hed there for a m inute when 'e s aw 'er. It were B es s , 'is s heepdog from long ago. 'E s tood up and went towards 'er but s he m oved away from 'im . "'E re, girl," 'e c alled to 'er but s he kept m oving on, jus t ahead of 'im . Following 'er through t'thic k m is t, 'e m ade 'is way down t'fell. W hen 'e dropped below t'm is t, B illy found 'im s elf jus t above t'farm but there were no s ign of B es s . S he 'ad dis appeared again. B illy realis ed that s he'd c om e to s how 'im t'way 'om e, that s he 'ad s aved 'im . A nd does tha know what?' 'No,' c horus ed the c las s , trans fixed. 'W hen 'e looked into s now, there were 'is footprints , as big as owt, but there weren't a s ign of any paw prints , not one.' Later, I found the opportunity to s peak to J am es . 'T hat was a rem arkable legend,' I told him . 'A ye, it's not bad, is it?' he s aid. 'Do you live on a farm ?' 'I do.' 'W ith lots of s heep?' 'A ye.' 'I rec kon you know quite a lot about s heep.' 'A ye, I rec kon I do.' 'A nd s heepdogs .' 'A ye.' Not a very c hatty lad, I thought, but I pers evered. 'A nd have you got a dog, like the boy in the legend?' 'No, but m i dad 'as .' 'A nd what's his nam e?' 'Mi dad or t'dog's ?' 'T he dog's nam e. W hat's he c alled?' 'S he. It's a bitc h c alled J es s . Five-year-old. W on quite a few trials afore s he were two-year.' I was about to as k another ques tion when J am es c ontinued. 'B itc hes are better than dogs , tha knaas , when it c om es to m anaging s heep, that is .' 'Really?' 'Oh, aye.' 'W hy is that, then?' I as ked, s taring into the large pale eyes . 'T hey lis ten better, work harder and are quieter. Mi grandm a rec kons it's t's am e with 'um ans but m i granddad wunt agree.' T he boy c hewed his thum b for a m om ent and s tared out of the window. He was in no hurry to c ontinue. I rem em bered what Harold had s aid to m e early on in m y c areer about giving c hildren breathing s pac e, not being too quic k to c om e in with another ques tion, s o I paus ed and took in the view. W e s at there together s taring at the expans e of fros ted greens , the dis tant hills c apped in grey c louds . 'Grand i'n't it?' obs erved the boy. 'A ye, you need a quiet dog. Can't 'ave an anim al that goes s nappin' and yappin' and barkin' and c has in' after t's heep, otherwis e they s pook 'em . Y ou need a dog who c an s ee well and lis ten well and be able to "eye" t's heep.' 'W hat does that m ean?' I as ked. 'T o "eye" a s heep?' 'W ell, keep 'em together, not let 'em wander off. Now, m i dad's dog, J es s , s he c an "eye" c ham pion. S he c an m anage a large floc k or a few s trays and pic k out a s heep belonging to another farm as eas y as owt. A ye, there's not m uc h s he c an't fettle. S he c an find a s heep buried deep down in t's now.' 'How does s he do that then?' 'W ell, s he s tops dead s till as s oon as s he s c ents owt. It's c alled "s ettin'". S he jus t freezes , yelps a little bit, and then we dig. S heep c an be as m uc h as ten or fifteen feet down but a good dog will find it.' 'S he s ounds a rem arkable anim al,' I s aid. 'A ye, took after 'er m other. Meg were jus t t's am e. K illed s he was at top o'rooad by a right s tupid s peedin' driver.' Later I joined Mrs Cooper in the tem porary infant c las s room at the bac k of the little s c hool. T he c las s room was an unattrac tive barn of a plac e and entirely out of keeping with the res t of the neat s tone building. P erc hed on s ix large c onc rete bloc ks and c ons truc ted of dark panelled wood the c olour of gravy, it looked like an old s hed. T he only differenc e was that this ugly c ons truc tion had huge s quare windows on all s ides . Mrs Cooper, a good-looking, m iddle-aged wom an with a hennis h bos om and bras s y blonde hair, had m ade little effort to m ake the interior of the hut bright and c heerful. T here were no dis plays of large, c oloured paintings , no glos s y pos ters , no c hildren's work on the wall s pac e that exis ted, jus t a few lis ts of words and rules of the c las s room . 'I wis h you c ould do s om ething about this hut, Mr P hinn,' s he told m e as we waited for the c hildren to c om e in after afternoon playtim e. 'It's like a furnac e in s um m er and a freezer in winter. W hat we need is a proper extens ion in keeping with the c harac ter of the s c hool.' 'I agree, Mrs Cooper,' I s aid, 'but, as in m os t things , it c om es down to m oney. T he c ounty has to m ake big c uts in the budget next year. For s om e s c hools that m eans c los ure. W ith your inc reas e in num bers there's no threat of that hanging over you but, you are right, an extens ion is needed.' I looked out of the window. 'A nd at leas t you've got the view.' S he glanc ed fleetingly at the m agnific ent lands c ape whic h lay beyond. A t this point, I notic ed that her des k was pos itioned s o it fac ed not the awes om e panoram a but a m uddy trac k leading to s om e dilapidated farm building whic h effec tively bloc ked out any view. 'W hy don't you have your des k fac ing the fells ?' I as ked. T he teac her s eem ed rather taken abac k. 'W ell... bec aus e I prefer it where it is .' 'B ut you c ould look out on s uc h beauty every day,' I foolis hly c ontinued, 'rather than onto a s om ewhat depres s ing s c ene.' 'I really don't think it's part of m y job, Mr P hinn, to s tare idly at the view all day. I have c hildren to teac h. I like m y des k where it is . Now, I believe this afternoon you are partic ularly interes ted in the c hildren's s peaking and lis tening s kills . W ell, I think you'll find we have no problem s in the s peaking area. T he lis tening is quite another m atter. It's s om etim es diffic ult to s hut them up. I m ight be old-fas hioned, Mr P hinn, but I think there is a tim e for c hildren to s peak and a tim e for them to s it s till and be quiet.' I s pent the firs t part of the les s on lis tening to the c hildren read, talking to them and looking at their books and I was not im pres s ed. W hen the teac her announc ed it was tim e for the s tory, I pos itioned m ys elf in the c orner to watc h the les s on. Mrs Cooper introduc ed m e without any fus s and then s ettled the c hildren down in a c irc le before her on a s quare of c arpet. 'It's s tory-tim e, Mr P hinn,' s he told m e. 'I feel it is im portant that c hildren learn to s it s till, c onc entrate and lis ten, don't you agree? David, will you s top wriggling about as if you have ants in your pants and, Gem m a, us e your handkerc hief, pleas e. It's not very ladylike to wipe your nos e where you are wiping it. You haven't got a handkerc hief? W ell, get a tis s ue from m y des k. A s I was s aying, Mr P hinn, s tory-tim e develops the c hildren's c onc entration and lis tening s kills and, of c ours e, introduc es them to new words and interes ting phras es .' I felt that Mrs Cooper s hould get on with the s tory and leave the jus tific ation of what s he was doing until later. T he c hildren were getting res tles s . David had s huffled off the c arpet and was polis hing the floor with his bottom . Gem m a had returned to wiping her nos e on the s leeve of her c ardigan. 'Now, before I s tart,' s aid Mrs Cooper, 'c an we all s it up nic ely. S traight bac ks , pleas e. A ll eyes this way. Onto the c arpet, pleas e, David. Gem m a, I won't tell you again! Have you got a tis s ue? W ell, will you us e it, pleas e? J ohn, I did not s ay lie on your bac k as if you're s unbathing. S it up. Right, I think we are all ready.' T he teac her paus ed for effec t and began to read the s tory from a rather s habby-looking pic ture book. 'Onc e upon a tim e, c hildren, long long ago there lived a -' 'B ig ugly m ons ter, m is s ?' It was David, the wriggler, who was waving his hand m adly in the air like a palm tree in a tornado. 'No, David, not a big ugly m ons ter. It was a beautiful princ es s c alled Im elda. P rinc es s Im elda had eyes as bright and as green as s parkling em eralds . S he had hair whic h fell down her bac k like a golden waterfall. Her hands were long and thin and her s kin was as white as -' 'A ghos t's , m is s ?' volunteered David. 'No, not a ghos t's , David,' replied the teac her, putting on an overly patient voic e. 'Her s kin was as white as the s now whic h c overed the fields . Her lips were as red as -' 'B lood, m is s ! ' piped up the c hild. 'David! W ill you lis ten, pleas e? Y ou are s poiling our s tory with your interruptions . It was not blood. P rinc es s Im elda's lips were as red as the c herries whic h c overed the trees in her garden.' Gem m a c eas ed her nos e-wiping for a m om ent to obs erve, 'Mis s , there wouldn't be c herries on the trees if it was winter.' 'T here would in this c ountry, Gem m a,' replied the teac her firm ly. 'It was a m agic c ountry where fruit grew all the year round. B ut P rinc es s Im elda was lonely. How s he longed for s om eone with whom to play. Great tears rolled down her s oft s kin. "A h m e, ah m e," s he s ighed s adly, "if only I had s om eone to play with and be m y friend. It's s o lonely being a princ es s ."' 'Mis s , I'd like to be a princ es s ,' Gem m a inform ed the c las s . 'I'm s ure you would, but princ es s es don't wipe their nos es on the s leeves of their c ardigans . Get another tis s ue, will you, pleas e.'
T he c hild s c urried to the front, pluc ked a tis s ue from the box on the teac her's des k and returned to her pos ition on the c arpet. 'Give your nos e a good blow, Gem m a. Now, where were we? A h, yes . B ut the days pas s ed and P rinc es s Im elda grew s adder and s adder, s itting all alone watc hing from her tall tower. T hen one day s om ething happened -' 'Did s he fall out, m is s ?' as ked David. T he teac her c los ed her eyes for a m om ent then took another breath. 'No, s he did not fall out, David. S he s aw in the dis tanc e a great c loud of s m oke.' 'A fire-eating dragon c om e to eat her up! ' 'David! ' s napped the teac her. 'Com e down here and s it at the front and lis ten! T hank you. Y ou know, Mr P hinn,' obs erved Mrs Cooper, looking over the c hildren's heads in m y direc tion, 's om etim es the c hildren get s o involved in the s tory that they c an't c ontain them s elves .' I c ould not im agine anyone getting exc ited about the ins ipid P rinc es s Im elda s itting at the top of her c as tle feeling s orry for hers elf all day. W hat a tires om e s tory c om pared to the legends I had heard the older c hildren read that afternoon. I s tayed for a while after s c hool to talk to the two teac hers individually and give an overview of what I had s een. In the firs t m eeting with Mrs P otter I was able to reas s ure the headteac her that s tandards in the junior departm ent were s till very high and the s ubs equent report would be pos itive. T he s ec ond interview, with the s tony-fac ed Mrs Cooper, proved to be m uc h m ore diffic ult. I began by inform ing the teac her in ques tion that the s tandard of work and the quality of the teac hing in the infants were jus t about s atis fac tory but that there was room for m ajor im provem ents . If the look Mrs Cooper gave m e c ould m aim , I would have left the s c hool on c rutc hes . B efore I c ould c ontinue s he launc hed into a diatribe. 'In fac t,' s he c onc luded, 'I s ugges t you have a go at teac hing them , Mr P hinn. It's all very well m aking all thes e c ritic al c om m ents . Y ou don't have the c hildren, day in and day out. T hes e farm ing c hildren c an be very diffic ult and dem anding. T hey have far too m uc h to s ay for them s elves , in m y opinion. Y es , indeed, you want to try teac hing them . A s m y hus band, who happens to be a headteac her, always s ays about s c hool ins pec tors , they are like eunuc hs . T hey would like to do it, but they c an't. T hey are jus t good with the advic e. A nd now I have a hom e to go to.' S he s tood, brus hed the c reas es out of her s kirt and m ade for the door. 'E xc us e m e, Mrs Cooper,' I s aid, as pleas antly as pos s ible, 'I have done you the c ourtes y of lis tening to what you have had to s ay. P leas e allow m e the s am e c ons ideration.' S he looked s tartled and then plonked hers elf bac k down on the c hair and s tared m alevolently in m y direc tion. 'T hank you,' I s aid and c ontinued with the report. A s Mrs P otter and I walked to m y c ar a little while later, the headteac her s aid, 'Mrs Cooper won't be with us m uc h longer. I think I m entioned s he is on a tem porary c ontrac t, thank goodnes s , and it will not be renewed.' 'I think I got off on the wrong foot with her,' I s aid. 'I quite innoc ently m entioned that I thought it was a s ham e to have her des k where s he c an't s ee the m agnific ent view of the fells , but s he bit m y head off' Mrs P otter rais ed a hand to s uppres s a s m ile, c huc kled to hers elf and then looked behind her. 'S he has the des k there for a reas on,' s he whis pered. 'Mrs Cooper does n't think anyone knows , but s he's having a bit of a fling with a loc al farm er. He drives his trac tor up and down that trac k during the day and if it's on for the evening, he gives her the thum bs up. I s hould think everybody in the village knows about the rom anc e, well... exc ept for Mr Cooper and the farm er's wife.'
20 T he Royal Infirm ary was a s quare, featureles s , redbric k building on the outs kirts of Fettles ham . From the rec eption des k, I was direc ted to Men's S urgic al. T here were four tubular m etal beds in Room 15 of W ard 6, three of whic h were oc c upied. B y the window, an extrem ely large and heavily-tattooed m an with a bullet-s haped bald head and a nec k as thic k as a pit bull terrier's , s at propped up, reading a news paper. He nodded in m y direc tion as I entered. A c ros s from him lay an em ac iated individual with a deathly pallor, pained expres s ion and c los ed eyes . He looked for all the world like a c orps e. In the third bed was a round-fac ed m an with c heeks s o red and s hiny they looked as if they had jus t been s c rubbed. I had never s een anyone look quite as healthy. He watc hed m e c ritic ally as I m ade m y way to the bed oppos ite and s tarted to put m y various pers onal item s in the s m all beds ide c abinet. 'How do,' he s aid. 'Oh, hello,' I replied. 'A nother for the butc her's knife then?' 'Y es .' 'W hat you in for?' 'A n operation on m y leg,' I told him . 'V aric os e veins ?' 'No, knee.' 'I've had varic os e veins - in both legs , m ind. S tripped 'em out, they did, a c ouple of year bac k. T hic k as ropes , they were. My legs looked like a road m ap of London, there were s o m any blue lines . Doc tor s aid it was a m irac le I c ould walk before the operation. T wenty-three s titc hes in eac h leg, I had, not c ounting the ones around the groin. W hat's up with your knee, then?' 'A n old rugby ac c ident.' 'V ery tric ky things are knees . I've heard it's a bit of a hit and m is s with knees . My c ous in, S tan, had an operation on his knee and lim ped for the res t of his life. Had to give up his ballroom danc ing. Never c lim bed a ladder again. Like hips are knees . T ric ky. T hey'll probably put a plas tic kneec ap in. You s ee, your joints c an be very problem atic al.' 'Really.' 'I'm in with haem orrhoids m ys elf. B y the hec k, you know what pain is with haem orrhoids . Do you know, fifty per c ent of the population have had haem orrhoids by the age of fifty.' 'Really.' 'It's a fac t. Haem orrhoids are enlarged blood ves s els in your anal pas s age.' 'Y es , I know.' 'Do you know why they're c alled piles ?' 'I have no idea,' I s aid, 'but I expec t you're going to tell m e.' 'B ec aus e the Latin word pila m eans ball,' he explained, m im ing a huge ball with his hands . 'I like to go into m y m edic al c ondition in s om e detail before I c om es into hos pital. Read up on it, know the fac ts . T hey pays m ore attention to you if they think you're in the know, you know. I find the doc tors are very s urpris ed when they realis e I'm genned up about m y c ondition.' 'Fas c inating,' I s aid. 'I've tried everything for m y haem orrhoids but they are unus ually s tubborn, as m y doc tor s aid. In fac t, in all his years of prac tis ing m edic ine he's never s een anything like them . I m ay very well be in a m edic al textbook. I've tried c ream s , s uppos itories , ic e pac ks . Have you had 'em ?' 'No, I haven't,' I s aid. 'T he itc hing's indes c ribable and when you go to the toilet it's like pas s ing glas s .' 'W hy don't you put a bleeding s oc k in it! ' s aid the bullet-headed individual. 'Y ou've been going on and on about your bleeding haem orrhoids all m orning. Y ou're like a bleeding gram ophone rec ord.' 'W ho rattled your c age then?' as ked the haem orrhoids . 'I'll c om e and rattle your bleeding haem orrhoids in a m inute. A nd as for pain, you don't know what pain is . Y ou have an 'ernia, m ate, then you'll know what pain is .' I c lim bed into bed. T he vis it to Fettles ham Royal Infirm ary was going to be an experienc e and no m is take. 'Hernia! ' s norted the haem orrhoids . 'I've had a hernia. Not one, but two, m ind, and they were both s trangulated. Double hernia. T wic e the pain. A nd as for the operation, piec e of c ake, it's over in a m inute. Now, you take the operation for haem orrhoids , I c an't begin to des c ribe -' 'W ell don't,' retorted the hernia. T he haem orrhoids c arried on regardles s . 'T hey tied rubber bands around m y haem orrhoids to c ut off the blood s upply but that didn't work. T hen they injec ted 'em and that didn't work, neither. Now I'm having 'em rem oved s urgic ally. T hey put a las er gun up your bac ks ide and zap 'em . Mind you, when it's over you c an kis s your haem orrhoids goodbye.' 'Could we c hange the rec ord?' as ked the hernia loudly. 'Y ou're like a bleeding m edic al dic tionary.' A t this point the em ac iated individual with the pained expres s ion opened his eyes and yawned widely. 'T he S leeping B eauty awakes ,' rem arked the haem orrhoids . 'I jus t nodded off,' he s aid. 'Never m ind, "nodded off",' rem arked the haem orrhoids , 'we thought you'd popped off! ' 'Did I m is s the tea trolley?' 'Y ou look as if you need an undertaker's trolley, s tate you're in, s quire.' 'Do you know,' s aid the hernia s lowly and with m alic e, 'you really are a pain in the ars e.' 'Y ou never did s ay what you was in for,' s aid the haem orrhoids , addres s ing the prone figure next to him . 'No, I didn't,' replied the m an, s itting up. 'W ell, c om e on then, what's your problem ?' 'I'd rather not s ay,' replied the m an in a deeply m ournful tone of voic e. 'Com e on,' urged the haem orrhoids , 'you're am ong friends .' 'It's of a very pers onal nature.' 'V as ec tom y?' 'No.' 'Circ um c is ion?' 'No, nothing like that.' 'Look, you c an't get m uc h m ore pers onal than haem orrhoids or m ore painful.' 'Oh, yes you c an,' replied the m an. 'Oh, yes you c an.' 'For God's s ake tell him ,' s napped the hernia, 'and s hut the bugger up.' 'I've got an anal ulc er,' announc ed the m an without any glos s . T he haem orrhoids s uc ked in his breath nois ily. 'Oooooh,' he groaned. 'Nas ty.' He didn't open his m outh again for the next ten m inutes . During the welc om e period of quiet, I m anaged to get on with s om e work. A fter the c ons ultation with the s pec ialis t, I had expec ted to wait for quite s om e tim e for the operation but a c anc ellation m eant I was c alled into hos pital at s hort notic e, whic h s uited m e fine. T he s ooner the knee was s orted out the better. W hen I had inform ed Harold that I was to go into hos pital for the operation, he had as ked m e, rather tentatively, if it would be at all pos s ible for m e to c hec k the reports I had written over Chris tm as for the 'S pirituality in the Curric ulum ' initiative before they were des patc hed to s c hools . 'If m y m em ory s erves m e c orrec tly,' he had s aid, 'you have a day prior to the s urgery when they c arry out various tes ts - blood pres s ure, c holes terol level, that s ort of thing. It's a tim e to s ettle in, to relax and prepare for the operation. I was jus t wondering if you m ight be able to glanc e through the reports you have written. It m ight take your m ind off the big event.' 'Of c ours e,' I had replied and had arrived at the hos pital with a large red folder with the words 'S T RICT LY CONFIDE NT IA L' and 'T HE INS P E CT ORS ' DIV IS ION' written in bold blac k letters on the c over. It was the papers in the folder that I now began reading. I s oon s ens ed that I was being watc hed and, looking up, found the haem orrhoids s taring intently at m e. 'Y ou're an ins pec tor then?' he rem arked. 'T hat's right,' I replied. 'P olic e?' 'No.' 'T ax?' 'No, not a tax ins pec tor.' 'P ublic health?' 'No.' 'V A T ?' 'No.' 'Com e on, it's not a bloody quiz s how. W hat s ort of ins pec tor are you?' 'I'm not allowed to s ay,' I told him , putting a finger to m y lips . 'W hy not?' 'It's s tric tly c onfidential.' 'Com e on, what s ort of ins pec tor are you?' he pers is ted. 'I really c an't tell you,' I s aid. 'It's m ore than m y job's worth.' 'S uit yours elf,' he s aid peevis hly. T hen addres s ing him s elf, he obs erved, 'Y ou try and be friendly and that's all the thanks you get.' 'A ll right,' I s aid in a hus hed voic e, 'I'll tell you, but you m us t prom is e m e not to breathe a word to anyone in the hos pital.' 'Com e on, then.' 'I c an't s hout it ac ros s the ward,' I s aid. 'It's s tric tly c onfidential.' T he haem orrhoids c lam bered out of bed and, c ons idering his m edic al c ondition, m oved with rem arkable s peed to m y s ide. 'W ell -' I began. A t this point the tea trolley arrived. 'I'll tell you later,' I whis pered. T he tea trolley had barely left the room than the haem orrhoids was at m y s ide again, leaning over the bed, his ear in m y fac e. 'Com e on, then,' he s aid, 's pill the beans . W hat s ort of ins pec tor are you?' 'Y ou really have to keep it to yours elf,' I told him . 'Cours e I will,' he agreed. 'It's very hus h-hus h.' 'A ll right, all right.' A t this point, a nurs e, in a dark blue uniform with pris tine white c ollar and c uffs , entered. 'I'll tell you later,' I whis pered. 'Mr P rout! ' exc laim ed the nurs e. 'W hatever are you doing out of bed? Do you want to end up in here for another week?' T he haem orrhoids s huffled bac k to his bed s heepis hly and c lam bered in. B ut as s oon as the nurs e had departed he was bac k at m y s ide. 'Y ou're like a bleeding s huttlec oc k,' rem arked the hernia. 'B ac kwards and forwards .' 'I'm a hos pital ins pec tor,' I whis pered c ons piratorially in the haem orrhoids ' ear, 'but you m us tn't s ay anything. I wis h to rem ain inc ognito, s ort of under-c over.' 'Hos pital ins pec tor?' s aid the haem orrhoids for all to hear. 'W hat's that when it's at hom e?' 'He ins pec ts hos pitals ,' s aid the hernia. 'W hat do you think it m eans ?' 'B ut you're here for an operation, aren't you?' 'T hat's right,' I s aid. 'S tric tly s peaking, I'm off duty. I do need this operation, of c ours e, and it's only a m inor one, but it will give m e the opportunity of gaining an ins ide pic ture of how the hos pital is perform ing. B ut I am s ure you unders tand that I would rather no one knows m y identity s o c ould we keep things to ours elves .' 'Y ou m ight as well have given him a bleeding m egaphone,' s aid the hernia. 'Y ou s ee,' I c ontinued, keeping a s traight fac e, 'it's a c hanc e to experienc e things at firs t hand, s ee the whole of the proc es s from beginning to end.' 'Get on,' s norted the haem orrhoids , s huffling bac k to his bed. 'Y ou m us t think m y brains are m ade of porridge. Hos pital ins pec tor. Huh.' 'W ell you did as k,' I s aid, returning to the reports . * 'Y ou're c aus ing quite a s tir,' s aid the nurs e later that m orning when s he c am e to take m y blood pres s ure. 'Really?' I replied innoc ently. 'T elling them you're a hos pital ins pec tor indeed.' 'P eople will believe anything, nurs e,' I s aid, s m iling. S he c aught s ight of the red folder on m y beds ide c abinet. 'S o, what s ort of ins pec tor are you then?' s he as ked c as ually. 'I'm afraid I'm not at liberty to s ay, nurs e,' I replied. 'It's s tric tly c onfidential.' A s s he leaned over to attac h the flap of blac k m aterial to m y arm to take m y blood pres s ure, I s c rutinis ed the badge pinned to her bos om . 'S taff Nurs e R. Leac h,' I s aid. 'T hat's right.' 'A rather appropriate nam e for s om eone taking blood pres s ure.' 'P ardon?' 'Leac h, although your nam e is s pelt with an a, is n't it?' S he began to pum p the m ac hine. 'T hat's right.' 'Is that Rowena?' 'P ardon?' 'Y our firs t nam e?' 'Robyn.' 'W ith an i?' 'W ith a y .' 'Lovely nam e. A nd how long have you worked at Fettles ham Royal Infirm ary, Nurs e Leac h?' S he s topped pum ping. 'Y ou do as k a lot of ques tions .' 'It's the nature of m y job.' 'S o what s ort of ins pec tor are you?' s he as ked again. 'I'm afraid I'm not at liberty to s ay,' I replied. 'It's s tric tly c onfidential.' J us t before lunc h, whic h was the highlight of the day for m y three c om panions , Mr Todd, the s urgeon, arrived, ac c om panied by the ward s is ter in a s m art blue uniform c om plete with blac k belt and s ilver buc kle, and a group of m edic al s tudents in white c oats and the obligatory s tethos c opes draped around their nec ks . Mr T odd was a dis tinguis hed-looking m an of about s ixty with s teel grey hair and a s potted bow tie. 'A nd how are we, today, Mr S iddall?' he as ked the hernia.
'W e're not too bad, thank you, Mr T odd,' replied the hernia. 'E xc ellent.' T he s urgeon turned to the s tudents who were watc hing his every m ove. 'Hernia,' he rem arked dis m is s ively, 'very s traightforward c as e, no c om plic ations ,' and he s wiftly m oved on. 'A nd how are you, Mr P rout?' he as ked the haem orrhoids . 'Mus tn't grum ble,' replied the ros y-c heeked c hatterer. 'Chanc e'd be a fine thing,' c om m ented the hernia, not quite under his breath. 'B ut now you as k, Mr T odd -' began the haem orrhoids , s itting upright quic kly and bec om ing very anim ated. 'Haem orrhoids ,' interrupted the s urgeon, turning to his young c olleagues . 'I will s ave you the ordeal of an exam ination. A gain s traightforward. S im ple c as e, no c om plic ations . Have you bac k on your bic yc le in no tim e, Mr P rout.' 'I was about to s ay -' s tarted the haem orrhoids . Mr Todd was now at the bottom of the anal ulc er's bed. T he patient was s leeping peac efully. 'Little point in dis turbing Mr Quayle. A nal ulc er.' He then turned on his heel, looked m e full in the fac e and s m iled rather dis c onc ertingly. 'A nd that brings us to Mr P hinn.' A ll eyes s ettled on m e. 'Mr P hinn, who has a m os t interes ting, not to s ay intriguing, c ondition, the res ult of a rugby ac c ident when he was a youth. Do you play rugby, gentlem en?' he as ked two young m ale s tudents . B efore they c ould res pond he c ontinued. 'If you do, be aware that the injuries c om e bac k to haunt you when you get older.' He m ade m e feel anc ient. 'S c reens pleas e, s is ter,' he s aid. 'I would like thes e would-be m edic s to give m e their c ons idered opinions of Mr P hinn's c ondition.' T he s c reens were has tily pulled around m y bed and all the white c oats gathered round like dogs with a bone. 'It is the ankle, is n't it, Mr P hinn?' obs erved the s urgeon m is c hievous ly. 'No, no,' I s pluttered, 'the knee.' 'A h yes . T he right knee, is n't it?' 'T he left, it's the left knee,' I em phas is ed. 'Quite s o. J us t wanted to be s ure of the fac ts . It's always im portant to be aware of the fac ts . Now, what is all this I have been hearing from Nurs e Leac h about you being a hos pital ins pec tor?' 'I'm a s c hool ins pec tor,' I told him , s m iling pathetic ally like a naughty c hild c aught out by a teac her. 'Y our wife will vouc h for m e. I believe I ins pec ted her earlier this year.' 'Did you, by God?' he exc laim ed, laughing loudly. 'P rofes s ionally s peaking,' I s aid. T hen I added deferentially, 'I know nothing about hos pitals , but I m us t s ay that I'm getting five-s tar treatm ent.' 'I am s o glad to hear it,' s aid Mr T odd, s m iling like Drac ula about to s ink his teeth into a vic tim . 'W e aim to pleas e. Now, let us look at this troubles om e knee of yours .' 'I don't know what's s o s pec ial about a knee,' s aid the haem orrhoids after the s pec ialis t and his entourage had left. I c ould tell by his tone of voic e and his dem eanour that he was none too pleas ed about the attention I had rec eived earlier. 'W e've all got knees . T here's nothing unus ual about knees , but only a c hos en few have haem orrhoids and I've got piles of them . Didn't even exc hange the tim e of day with m e, that Mr T odd. J us t s ailed pas t m e as if -' 'W ill you put a bleeding s oc k in it! ' exc laim ed the hernia. 'I'm s ic k and tired of hearing about your bleeding haem orrhoids .' 'W ell, Ins pec tor Clous eau over there had half the m edic al s taff at the hos pital around his bed: S weeney Todd, the dem on s urgeon of Fleet S treet, S is ter E nem a and all the trainee s awbones . T hat s c reen was pulled round for a good ten m inutes . Laughing away they were. P referential treatm ent, that's what he got. I bet they all knew he was a hos pital ins pec tor.' 'A nd how would they know that?' I as ked. 'I never m entioned it, did I? A nd you didn't, did you?' 'No, no,' s aid the haem orrhoids has tily. 'Never breathed a word.' A t vis iting tim e, Chris tine arrived with an im m ens e bunc h of purple grapes whic h s he plac ed in a bowl on the beds ide c abinet. T he haem orrhoids ' vis itor, a s m all wizened wom an with a world-weary expres s ion, s at glum ly in s ilenc e, lis tening. I c ould hear the key words of his m onologue: 'pain', 'exc ruc iating', 'toilet', 's uffering', 'ac he', 'dis c om fort', 'agony', 'm is ery', 'torm ent'. P oor wom an, I thought. 'S idney phoned earlier this evening to wis h you well for tom orrow,' s aid Chris tine. 'He s aid word is out that the E duc ation Com m ittee is at las t going to announc e the appointm ent of the pers on to replac e Harold.' 'It's about tim e,' I s aid. 'It's dragged on for m onths .' 'Do you think it might be Geraldine?' 'W ell, if it is ,' I replied, 's he wants her head exam ining, that's all I c an s ay. How c an s he bring up J am ie as a s ingle parent and hold that job down?' 'S om e wom en hold down very dem anding jobs ,' s aid Chris tine, 'and bring up a fam ily and m anage very well. Y ou underes tim ate us .' 'W ell, let's not talk about it,' I s aid, 'but I have to s ay at onc e that I hope this is not your way of telling m e that you want to go bac k to work onc e little Lizzie is born. I hope we are s till agreed that you'll give up your job in February. You are not now wanting to take m aternity leave and go bac k to work afterwards , are you?' 'No,' s aid Chris tine. 'I want to watc h our c hild grow up and be there for him ... or her.' 'P hew! T hat's a relief! S o what els e did S idney s ay?' 'He s aid it was a great pity you didn't put in for Harold's job.' S he waited for a res pons e before c ontinuing. 'Y ou're not regretting it now, are you?' 'Not at all. It's a pois oned c halic e,' I s aid. 'I'm m uc h better off as I am .' S he s m iled. 'I'm glad.' 'A nd how are y ou feeling?' I as ked. 'Mother and baby doing fine. No s wollen ankles , no m ad c ravings . It was quiet without you las t night. I'll be glad when you're hom e.' 'Y ou've got the c loc k to keep you c om pany,' I s aid. Chris tine had been over the m oon when s he s aw the long-c as e c loc k on Chris tm as Day in pride of plac e in the s itting room . I had had the devil's own job keeping it a s urpris e - c ollec ting it from Mr Frobis her at J us t Cloc ks , hiding it in Harry Cotton's outbuilding, c reeping out late on Chris tm as E ve after Chris tine had gone to bed to c ollec t it, then trying to put it together and s et the pendulum going without waking her. Of c ours e, I had forgotten about the c him ing. Chris tine s aw her Chris tm as pres ent fifteen s ec onds after m idnight when the c loc k had s truc k the hour. T here was nothing I c ould do to s top its c him ing. Ins tead, I had intens e pleas ure watc hing Chris tine, tous led from s leep, c om e down the s tairs to find out whether the nois e had been in her dream s . S he loved the c loc k on the s pot. A t breakfas t on Chris tm as m orning, when I was telling her the s tory about m y buying the c loc k from Mr Frobis her and how he would be c om ing out in the New Year to m ake final adjus tm ents to it, Chris tine had gazed ac ros s at the c loc k. 'It is s im ply perfec t there,' s he had s aid. 'It looks abs olutely at hom e in that c orner.' T his turned out to be not very s urpris ing. On B oxing Day, Harry Cotton had c om e in for a glas s of s herry with us and, s eeing the c loc k in its c orner, had s uddenly realis ed that it had belonged to old Mrs Ollerans haw, the previous owner of P eewit Cottage. He rec ognis ed the m aker's nam e, P erc y Farrington of Fettles ham , on the c loc k's fac e. It had been s old at Roper's S ales room by Mrs Ollerans haw's nephew, along with the old wom an's other pos s es s ions when s he had died. A t that point, I had rem em bered the provenanc e whic h Mr Frobis her had given m e in an envelope. I fetc hed it from m y des k and it indeed c onfirm ed that the c loc k had returned hom e to where it had previous ly s tood for over a hundred years . 'Oh, the c loc k's lovely,' Chris tine s aid now, 'but I think we are going to have to as k Mr Frobis her to c om e bac k bec aus e jus t after you left for the hos pital it s topped. It was really s trange. I as ked Harry Cotton to have a look but he c ouldn't get it going. I had to laugh. He s aid the las t tim e it had s topped without any reas on was the night before old Mrs Ollerans haw died.' 'T hanks a bundle,' I s aid. 'Let's c hange the s ubjec t. A ny other news ?' 'Indeed there is ! ' replied Chris tine, beam ing. 'I heard jus t before c om ing out to s ee you that they're definitely deferring the c los ure of the s c hool. It does n't m ean that the s c hool won't c los e, of c ours e, but it's really pos itive news . W e'll go on c am paigning and m aybe we'll overturn the dec is ion offic ially.' 'Y ou've done a m agnific ent job,' I told her. 'It wouldn't have happened if you hadn't got involved.' 'W ell, I don't know about that,' s he s aid. 'A nyway, I m us t be off, darling. I've got s o m uc h to do before I leave W innery Nook. Good luc k tom orrow. I'll be s aying a prayer and I'll be thinking of you.' S he gave m e a great big hug and a kis s and left. 'Nic e-looking young wom an, your daughter,' obs erved the haem orrhoids as he watc hed Chris tine leave the ward. 'Is s he expec ting?' 'S he's m y wife ac tually and, yes , s he is .' 'It's a known fac t that wom en s uffer from piles during pregnanc y, you know, when the baby puts pres s ure on the c irc ulatory s ys tem . Has s he had problem s in that direc tion?' 'T hey'll be a bleeding problem in your direc tion in a m inute,' s aid the hernia, s tabbing the air with a finger. 'I'll c om e over there and s ort out them bleeding haem orrhoids for you and s ave the s urgeon a job.' It was five m inutes after vis iting tim e had finis hed when Harold breezed in, c arrying a large bunc h of purple grapes . He was looking very dis tinguis hed in a c harc oal-grey s uit and gleam ing white s hirt with his old c ollege tie. He was als o looking partic ularly pleas ed with him s elf. 'However did you m anage to get pas t the ward s is ter?' I as ked, when he reac hed m y bed. 'I'm told s he's a s tic kler for people keeping to the vis iting hours .' 'Charm , dear boy, c harm ,' s aid Harold, 'and a little help from this .' He tapped the badge on his c hes t whic h s aid in bold blac k lettering: 'Dr Harold J . Yeats '. 'I think the good s is ter as s um ed I was one of the m edic al fraternity and I didn't dis abus e her. You know, having a P hD s om etim es c om es in very us eful.' He put down the fruit. 'Y ou s eem to have a s urfeit of grapes .' T he haem orrhoids , who m us t have had teles c opic vis ion, had c aught s ight of the badge and m ade the s am e as s um ption as the ward s is ter. He s houted ac ros s the room , 'E vening, doc tor.' 'Oh, good evening,' replied Harold, s m iling and s howing his s et of tom bs tone teeth. 'Doing your rounds , are you?' as ked the haem orrhoids . Harold c learly m is unders tood, for he nodded. 'Yes , indeed.' T hen he turned his attention bac k to m e. 'I've s pent the day with Dr Gore and the pers on who will take over from m e in A pril, and I now have the go-ahead to releas e the nam e of the new S enior Ins pec tor. I've jus t c om e from telling your c olleagues but I wanted you to know as s oon as pos s ible who we've appointed.' 'Y es , I heard the news was im m inent, and am on tenterhooks to know,' I s aid. 'W ell, I think you will be s om ewhat s urpris ed but, I hope, extrem ely pleas ed when you hear whom we've appointed.' 'W hen you've got a m om ent, doc tor,' s houted the haem orrhoids , 'c ould you pop over? I'd like to have a word.' 'Y es , of c ours e,' s aid Harold. 'Now, Gervas e -' 'It's jus t that I'd like to dis c us s one or two things with you,' c ontinued the haem orrhoids . 'Ignore him , Harold,' I s aid. 'He's a pain in the... the bac ks ide. S o who is he?' 'I'm s orry?' 'T he new S enior Ins pec tor, who is he? W hat's he like?' 'S he,' replied Harold. 'It's a s he.' 'A s he?' I repeated. 'T hat's right,' s aid Harold, s m iling widely and s howing his s et of great tom bs tone teeth. 'It's not Geraldine, is it?' 'No, no, not Geraldine,' replied Harold. 'S he has n't quite got the experienc e. Geraldine m ight m ake a S enior Ins pec tor in the not too dis tant future, but s he told m e bac k in the autum n that s he was n't planning to apply bec aus e s he puts young J am ie before her job - and quite right too.' 'W ho is it, then, Harold?' I urged. 'Mis s de la Mare.' 'W hat?!' I c ried. 'W inifred de la Mare.' 'B ut s he's an HMI,' I s pluttered. 'Y es , I know.' 'W hy on earth would s he want the job?' 'S he's bec om e wearied with the hec tic life in London,' Harold told m e. 'A ll the paper pus hing, bureauc rac y, c ons tant new initiatives , travelling on the T ube every m orning and evening has taken its toll. S he's ready for a different s ort of c hallenge. Of c ours e, Dr Gore was very keen to appoint her. None of the other c andidates c ould hold a c andle to a s enior HMI. However, as you know, s he's a forc eful c harac ter and, before ac c epting the pos ition, there were c ertain c onditions s he wanted the E duc ation Com m ittee to agree to, inc luding that it would s upport c ertain innovations s he would wis h to put in plac e.' 'B ut why has it taken s o long, Harold?' I as ked. 'A h well, as s oon as the m andarins at the Minis try of E duc ation got wind of her pos s ible m ove, they exerted c ons iderable pres s ure for her to s tay. It was agreed that s he c ould have Chris tm as to think things over. S o, s he gets to live in Yorks hire, whic h c an't be bad, and has the opportunity of leading a team of c olleagues whom s he genuinely likes and res pec ts . I think s he'll be exc ellent.' 'T hat's wonderful,' I s aid. I s hook Harold's hand enthus ias tic ally. 'W onderful! ' 'Good news , is it?' c am e the voic e of the haem orrhoids . 'He does n't have to have the leg off then?' 'No,' s aid Harold over his s houlder. 'S o,' he s aid to m e, 'things have worked out pretty well. David and Geraldine are, of c ours e, delighted and S idney m ade s om e typic al c om m ent about "well, the devil you know". I feel I s hall be leaving the departm ent in very good hands . S he's jus t right for the job and has m as s es of experienc e.' 'A nd Chris tine tells m e the E duc ation S ub-Com m ittee is holding fire with the Hawks rill S c hool c los ure.' 'T hat's right,' s aid Harold, 'and I have a feeling nothing will happen in that direc tion for quite s om e tim e now. Counc illor P eters on has jus t about thrown in the towel, by all ac c ounts . He was unus ually quiet at the las t m eeting and, thank goodnes s for s m all m erc ies , was n't at the appointm ent for m y replac em ent. P res s ure of work, I was told. Now, I m us t let you get s om e res t. I prom is ed the ward s is ter five m inutes and no m ore. S he'll be having m y guts for garters if I s tay any longer. Oh, did you m anage to finis h reading through the reports ?' 'Y es , they're here,' I s aid, reac hing into m y beds ide c abinet. 'S plendid. I'll take them with m e. W ell, Gervas e, good luc k for tom orrow. A nd don't think of c om ing bac k to work until you are fully fit again.' 'T hanks for c alling in, Harold. I c an't tell you how pleas ed I am with the appointm ent. Oh, and thanks for the grapes .' A s Harold m ade for the door he was verbally waylaid by the haem orrhoids . 'If I c ould have a word, doc tor,' he s aid. 'W ell, I am in a bit of a hurry,' Harold told him pleas antly. 'I thought you m ight want a quic k look at m y haem orrhoids .' 'P ardon?' gas ped Harold. 'T o have a look at m y haem orrhoids .' 'No, no! ' s pluttered Harold. 'T hank you kindly for the offer but I really m us t dec line.' W ith that he s hot out of the door. 'W ell, what about that! ' c ried the haem orrhoids , addres s ing no one in partic ular. 'Not s o m uc h as a glanc e at m y c ondition. He s hot out of that door like a rat up a drainpipe.' He looked ac ros s at m e angrily. 'T hey'll be laying a red c arpet down to the operating theatre for you. You m ark m y words , you'll be in your own pers onal private room tom orrow with c oloured telly and J ac uzzi. W ell, I'm c om plaining. It's not right, hos pital ins pec tors getting preferential treatm ent.' I held up the big bunc h of purple grapes and s m iled s weetly. 'W ould you c are for a grape?' I as ked. * T he following m orning, the anaes thetis t arrived at s even-thirty prom pt to give m e an injec tion. A s I was wheeled out of the ward, feeling pleas antly drows y, the haem orrhoids got his own bac k, breaking into a loud and c heerful rendering of 'Y ou May Never W alk T his W ay A gain'.
21 'I'm looking for a m an! ' I rec ognis ed im m ediately the aris toc ratic tones of the Honourable Mrs Cleaver-Canning at the end of the line. T he previous year I had rec eived a telephone c all from the s aid 'honourable' lady inviting m e, on the s trength of a friend's rec om m endation, to s peak at the Totterdale and Clearwell Golf Club Chris tm as Ladies ' Night Dinner. Firs t, however, s he had wanted to m eet m e - to look m e over. S o I had duly pres ented m ys elf at the im pos ing Georgian res idenc e in P rinc e Regent Row, Fettles ham , to be V etted'. T he elderly s tooped figure with wis ps of s andy hair and an extravagant handlebar m ous tac he who ans wered the door, I had taken to be an old fam ily retainer. It turned out that the m an in ques tion was Mrs Cleaver-Canning's long-s uffering hus band. E veryone c alled him W inc o. Muc h to m y relief, m y talk about m y experienc es as a s c hool ins pec tor was well rec eived. T he audienc e, no doubt buoyed up by good food and wine, had been extrem ely warm and rec eptive and I had left with a generous c heque to s well S is ter B rendan's c harity appeal. Now, here was Mrs Cleaver-Canning on the telephone again, no doubt wanting m e to do a repeat perform anc e s om ewhere or other. 'Good m orning, Mrs Cleaver-Canning,' I s aid brightly. 'A nd how are you?' 'I'm extrem ely well, thank you, Mr P hinn,' s he replied, 'but I am des perate for a m an.' 'Really?' 'A nd you fit the bill. Y ou are exac tly what I am looking for.' 'I am c ertainly flattered,' I told her, 'but what about W inc o?' 'Oh, you are a one,' s he c hortled down the line. 'No, no, I want a m an for our m us ic al dram a. You m ay be aware that I am a leading light in the Fettles ham Literary P layers and next m onth we will be s taging The S ound of M us ic at the Civic T heatre in town. Unfortunately, one of the c as t, Mr Dutton of "Dutton's Carpets of Dis tinc tion" - you probably know his em porium in the High S treet - has dropped out. Literally, as a m atter of fac t. T he poor m an fell off the s tage at Cas tles nelling High S c hool where we hold our rehears als , and is in trac tion at the Royal Infirm ary. He tripped over a s ign whic h warned of projec ting s tage s ets and jus t dropped off the s tage like a s ac k of potatoes . Y ou m ay have heard the theatric al expres s ion "break a leg". W ell, Mr Dutton ac tually did. S o, how about it?' 'How about what?' I as ked. 'S tanding in for him .' 'Y ou m ean take his part?' 'If you would. W e only have s ix weeks to go and, as I s aid, I'm des perate.' 'I fear not,' I s aid has tily. 'I'm s o very bus y at the m om ent, Mrs Cleaver-Canning, and I've not long been out of hos pital m ys elf. I really c ouldn't c om m it m ys elf to -' 'Hos pital? Oh dear, I trus t it was n't s erious ?' 'No, no, a m inor operation on the knee.' 'I'm very pleas ed to hear it. W ell, the exerc is e will do it good. It's only a s m all walk-on part.' 'Nevertheles s -' 'Y ou would c om e on s tage in the las t ac t, s ay a c ouple of lines and walk off. Y ou would only need to attend a few rehears als , and on the nights of the perform anc e you would not be needed until 8.30 at the earlies t.' 'Y es , I apprec iate that, but -' 'A s I m entioned, I don't think you have got above two or three lines . It's the part of the S S Lieutenant who is purs uing Captain von T rapp. He only appears at the very end when the fam ily are m aking their es c ape ac ros s the m ountains . T here's no s inging or danc ing involved. It really wouldn't be at all onerous .' 'I am flattered to be as ked, Mrs Cleaver-Canning,' I began, 'but -' 'A fter your bravura perform anc e at T he Totterdale and Clearwell Chris tm as Ladies ' Night Dinner, I think you would be ideal. Clear, s trong voic e, exc ellent tim ing, c onfidenc e and that air of authority. A s I s aid to Raym ond, our produc er, you would be jus t perfec t for the part.' A s an S S offic er, I thought, s m iling to m ys elf. I as s um ed s he m eant her c om m ents about m e to be c om plim entary. 'W e are really des perate,' s he c ontinued. 'It's s o hard to get m en thes e days . A ll I as k is that you glanc e through the libretto before you give a definite thum bs down. W ill you do that?' 'W ell -' 'E xc ellent! W inc o will pop it in the pos t today.' W ith that the line went dead. 'W hy do you let yours elf be dragged into things ?' Chris tine appeared not at all pleas ed when I related the c onvers ation I had had with Mrs Cleaver-Canning. W e were s itting having a c offee after dinner that evening. 'Y ou are jus t out of hos pital, you have work to c atc h up on in the offic e, there are things to do in the hous e and you get dragooned into being in a play. I s hould have thought that you had quite enough on your plate at the m om ent.' 'I haven't ac tually agreed,' 1 s aid feebly. 'Y ou've as good as . W hy didn't you jus t s ay no and put the phone down. I rec kon you've got enough am ateur dram atic s at the ins pec tors ' offic e with S idney and David without looking for any m ore.' 'S he's a very pers uas ive wom an,' I began. 'A nd I'm not?' 'Of c ours e you are, but s he jus t wouldn't let m e get a word in. E very tim e I m ade an objec tion, s he had an ans wer. A nyway, it's only a few lines , not a m ajor role. It m ight be quite fun.' 'A nd what about the rehears als ?' 'S he s aid I only have to attend a few and appear on the nights of the perform anc e, of c ours e. I s im ply need to arrive for m y bit at the end of the play. I walk on, s ay a c ouple of lines and walk off.' 'Y ou really are infuriating at tim es , Gervas e P hinn,' s he s aid good-hum ouredly. 'Y ou take all thes e things on without a thought for the c om m itm ent. Haven't you forgotten what's happening in Marc h, whic h is next m onth, for heaven's s ake?' 'Of c ours e not, but the baby is n't due until the end of the m onth.' 'S uppos e it c om es early while you are goos e-s tepping ac ros s the s tage with the Fettles ham Literary P layers , s inging "E delweis s " and c lim bing up m ountains .' 'I c ouldn't be goos e-s tepping and c lim bing up m ountains at the s am e tim e, c ould I, and c ertainly not with this knee. A nyway, as I told you, I don't have any s inging or danc ing. It's jus t a walk-on part.' 'Y ou'll get this c offee over your head in a m inute.' 'A nyway, if little Lizzie does arrive early, I'll jus t have to goos e-s tep it down to the hos pital. T he Civic T heatre is n't that far. I c ould be there in ten m inutes . Look, Chris tine, if you are dead s et agains t it, I'll tell her I won't do it. I really don't want to argue with you about it.' Chris tine put down her c offee, leaned over to m e, s m iled and gave m e a pec k on the c heek. 'Neither do I. A c tually, you m ight look rather dis hy in the uniform .' T he letter from Mrs Cleaver-Canning, whic h ac c om panied the libretto of The S ound of M us ic , arrived through the letterbox that weekend. It was c lear from her c om m ents that s he as s um ed I had already agreed to take on the part and had s ent a lis t of rehears al dates with the ones I needed to attend - the firs t being the following T ues day. I pas s ed the letter over the breakfas t table to Chris tine. 'W hat did I s ay,' s he s aid, s haking her head. On the next T ues day, I m ade m y way through the m ain s c hool entranc e of Cas tles nelling High S c hool at the pres c ribed tim e. I was greeted (hardly the right word) by the c aretaker, an extrem ely thin m an with a baleful c ountenanc e. He was attired in grey overalls , s ported a rather greas y flat c ap and was ac c om panied by a fat, vic ious looking dog. A s I approac hed, he jangled an enorm ous s et of keys nois ily. 'I'm looking for the -' I began. 'T hey're in the hall,' he s aid in a voic e as dry as s awdus t. 'A nd watc h the floor on the c orridor. I've jus t buffed it.' P erhaps he had trained at the s am e College for W ould-be Caretakers as Connie, I m us ed. In the hall, a group of people was s tanding jus t below the s tage, one s m all m an waving his hands around and talking exc itedly. W hen I reac hed the gathering, I c oughed quietly. T he s m all m an - who wore a pair of extrem ely tight jeans and a T -s hirt em blazoned on the bac k with the m otif 'W rinkled W as Not One of the T hings I W anted to be W hen I Grew Up! ' s pun round. 'A h, and you m us t be Gervas e P hinn! ' I nodded. 'W elc om e, welc om e! ' he c ried, gras ping m y hand and s haking it vigorous ly. 'I'm Raym ond, but everyone c alls m e Ray. I'm your original drop of golden s un.' 'I'm s orry?' I s aid. 'Y ou know,' he replied, breaking into s ong: "Doe a deer, a fem ale deer. Ray a drop of golden s un." ' 'A h, indeed.' I s m iled weakly. 'Oh ye-es ! ' s aid Ray, s c rutinis ing m e as an art expert m ight an old m as ter. 'I c an jus t s ee you in blac k boots . You're ideal. Margot does have a knac k of pic king the right people. S he s aid you'd be perfec t and s he was right. I feel s ure you'll be a natural for the part. A nd I don't expec t you'll need m uc h direc tion s inc e I s uppos e that being a s c hool ins pec tor is not that far rem oved from that of an S S offic er, is it?' He s wung bac k to the group of people waiting patiently. 'T his is our little troupe of thes pians . A s per us ual, we have a s urfeit of nuns , an abundanc e of c hildren wanting to play the parts of the little von T rapps but we are, like all am ateur dram atic produc tions thes e days , bereft of young m en.' He s m iled and took m y arm . 'Do you know, I s pend s o m uc h tim e looking for young m en,' he added. 'Really?' I s aid. 'A nd this ,' announc ed Ray with a dram atic flouris h of his hands , 'is our replac em ent s torm trooper, Gervas e.' T here was a ripple of applaus e. 'Not the m os t c onvinc ing nam e for a s torm trooper, is it?' obs erved a large bearded individual s itting on the s tage. 'B ernard, really! ' s aid Ray before turning to m e and taking m y arm . 'You'll get to know us all in the c ours e of the evening, Gervas e, s o I will dis pens e with introduc tions . J us t take a pew and I'll let you know when I want you on s tage. Now, let us m ake a s tart, s o a bit of hus h everyone. I want to go through the s c ene with Lies l and Rolf again. It's s till not quite right.' I watc hed Lies l and Rolf going though their pac es with a s inking feeling in the pit of m y s tom ac h. W hy on earth had I let m ys elf be pres s -ganged into this ? I as ked m ys elf. I rec ognis ed the wom an playing the part of Lies l, Captain von T rapp's eldes t c hild. S he was the Head of Food Tec hnology at the s c hool in whos e hall we were rehears ing. S he was an extrem ely thin and intens e-looking wom an with large s taring eyes and long s traggly hair. I had las t s een her trip the boards two years before in Cas tles nelling High S c hool's produc tion of Oliv er! when s he had played the part of Nanc y and had had a rather unfortunate c onfrontation with the fears om e dog playing B ulls eye. Now, here s he was , taking on an entirely different role as the teenage von T rapp. 'Look, darling,' Ray told her now, 'it s ays in the libretto that Lies l in this s c ene is "awkward, naive and generally unknowing in the ways of s ophis tic ation". Do you think we c ould have a bit m ore of the innoc enc e and naivety. Im agine you are one of the girls you teac h.' 'I think the las t words to c om e to m ind when I think of the girls I teac h are "innoc enc e" and "naivety",' s aid the Head of Food T ec hnology, rais ing her eyebrows . 'J udging by the c onvers ations I hear in the c ookery room , m os t of them c ould tell us all a thing or two.' 'W ell, jus t try, darling, to be m ore unworldly,' s aid Ray. 'A nd Rolf, you are s uppos ed to be c om pletely bowled over by this beautiful young wom an in the firs t bloom of her youth. Could you look a little m ore enam oured with Lies l. Y ou look as if you have ac ute c ons tipation.' I took a s eat next to an elderly m an in a blac k s uit. 'I'm Zeller,' he told m e, without talking his eyes off the s tage. 'I'm Gervas e,' I replied. 'No, no! I'm Zeller in the play. Herr Zeller, the Gauleiter. I c om e to arres t Captain von T rapp. I'm really George Furnival of Furnival's Funeral P arlour in Collington. W e've been es tablis hed s inc e 1887.' He rootled in his poc ket and produc ed a blac k-edged c ard whic h he thrus t into m y hand. 'Here, in c as e there's a death in the fam ily. Y ou'll find us very dis c reet and res pec tful.' 'T hank you.' 'I s upplied the c offins for the s c hool's produc tion of Oliv er! the other year, you know,' he c ontinued. 'T here were quite a few favourable c om m ents about them .' T he m an was tailor-m ade for the part of a Ges tapo offic ial: long des pondent fac e, s hort blac k hair parted down the m iddle, c old eyes as grey as the autum n s ky and a vulpine m outh. His voic e was wonderfully whis pery and unnerving. I c ould jus t im agine him turning up at two o'c loc k in the m orning in a long blac k leather c oat. 'I don't know why I agreed to do this ,' he s aid. 'Neither do I,' I agreed. 'I s uppos e it's good for bus ines s ,' he told m e. 'Good for bus ines s ?' I repeated. 'A ye, getting your fac e known in the c om m unity, networking, m aking c ontac ts , c hanc e to prom ote your bus ines s . P ity there are no c offins in this produc tion. I did s ugges t to Raym ond that perhaps one of the nuns c ould c op it and I c ould provide a c offin or m aybe have the las t s c ene in a c rypt, but he's not one to be open to s ugges tions . T hes e artis tic types are very unpredic table. I had a tidy little ac knowledgem ent about m y c offins in the program m e when they did Oliv er! He paus ed and looked round at m e. 'W e very nearly had a fatality, you know. Old Mr Dutton of "Dutton's Carpets of Dis tinc tion", him who had your part, fell off the s tage and broke a leg. Could have broken his nec k. Y es , it c ould have been very nas ty.' He s ounded alm os t dis appointed. T he Head of Food T ec hnology had now launc hed into s ong with: 'I am s ixteen going on s eventeen, innoc ent as a ros e -' 'More like thirty going on forty, if you as k m e,' c om m ented Mr Furnival. 'Mind you, with a bit of s tage m ake-up, a long blonde wig and s ubdued s tage lights s he s hould be all right. It's am azing what a bit of m ake-up c an do. I do a lot of em balm ing, you know. It's quite an art form .' It s oon c am e to what Ray des c ribed as 'Gervas e's little s pot'. I s ounded like the ac ne of the produc tion. 'W atc h your s tep,' warned Mr Furnival, as I went forward to c lim b the s teps to the s tage. 'W e don't want another pers on breaking a leg.' 'Now,' s aid the produc er, 'this is the dram atic c lim ax of the dram a. W e are in the garden of Nonnberg A bbey. A gaggle of nuns is s tanding anxious ly by the door.' Ray paus ed in his narration. 'I'm not s ure what the c ollec tive noun is for nuns . A nyway, the nuns are s tanding anxious ly by the door. Could we look anxious , pleas e, nuns ? Y ou're not waiting for a num ber 9 bus . T he von T rapps enter nervous ly, c lutc hing their c as es . T hey hear a nois e and hide in the s hadows . Do try and look as if you're frightened, von T rapps . Clus ter, don't queue. Rolf enters . Gone are his lederhos en and T yrolean hat. He is now dres s ed in S S uniform . He s waggers onto the s tage. T he light from his torc h s weeps before him . It pic ks out Maria. S he gas ps . T hen it lights up the Captain. He s c owls . Don't overdo the s c owl, pleas e, B ernard. T he Captain walks towards Rolf. Rolf flas hes . Flas h, pleas e, Rolf. Now draw your pis tol. J us t us e your fingers for the tim e being, pleas e, Fras er. He c alls : "Lieutenant! " T hen he s ees Lies l. S he looks appealingly at him . W e hear the lieutenant's foots teps approac hing. Rolf c lic ks off the light. T he s ound draws nearer and nearer. T he lieutenant s truts onto the s tage. T his is you, Gervas e.' I lim ped onto the s tage. 'He looks around arrogantly,' c ontinued the produc er. 'He s hould have with him two or three s torm troopers ,' Ray explained, 'but we haven't got enough m en for the s torm troopers and, anyway, we c an't afford to hire all thos e uniform s , s o it'll jus t have to be you, Gervas e, looking nas ty and threatening.' His voic e bec am e s uddenly dram atic again. 'T hen Rolf c hanges his m ind and dec ides not to betray the von T rapps after all. He c alls : "No one out here, s ir! " "A ll right! " s narls the lieutenant. "Com e along."' W e tried the s c ene a c ouple of tim es and Ray s eem ed well s atis fied. 'Oh, I c ould feel the tens ion,' he s aid. 'My heart was in m y m outh. However, Gervas e, I'm not s o s ure that that lim p quite works . I was wanting m ore of a braggadoc io.' 'B raga-what-o?' I as ked, quite perplexed. 'A s trut. Can you s trut or s wagger, onto the s tage?' 'Diffic ult, really. I've jus t had a knee operation,' I told him . 'It's a real lim p, I'm afraid.' 'Oh well, we'll have to keep the lim p in then.' 'B ut I have a lim p! ' c alled Mr Furnival, who had been watc hing proc eedings intently. 'T here c an't be two of us with lim ps .' 'No, you are quite right, George,' s aid Ray. 'Dis pens e with yours .' 'Dis pens e with m ine! ' he retorted. 'I've taken ages perfec ting that lim p.' 'Y es , I know,' s ighed Ray, 'but yours is an artific ial lim p, Gervas e's is a real one.' A t nine o'c loc k prom pt the c aretaker arrived. 'Let's be having you,' he bellowed from the bac k of the hall, 'I want to loc k up.' 'Right, everyone,' announc ed Ray. 'Let's c all it a day. Next T ues day, pleas e, for thos e in the ball s c ene.' 'A nd s tac k the c hairs before you leave! ' s houted the c aretaker. 'S tac king c hairs ,' retorted Ray. 'A nd put your litter in the bins . T here were plas tic c ups all over m y floor las t week.' 'P ic king up litter,' Ray trilled bac k, retrieving a c ris p pac ket from the floor. 'A nd s om ebody's been tam pering with the elec tric s bac k s tage s o whoever it is , c an s top it.' 'A nd no tam pering with the c aretaker's elec tric s bac k s tage,' s aid the produc er, giving the s tic klike fellow an im m ens e s m ile. 'Is that everything c overed?' he as ked. 'I'm s ure there'll be other things ,' grum bled the c aretaker. 'T here always are.' 'Oh, I'm c ertain of it,' replied the produc er. It oc c urred to m e, as I obs erved the c aretaker s tom ping around the hall, that there was s om eone infinitely m ore s uitable than I to take on the role of the S S s torm trooper. It was c lear no one was going to argue with this m an, es pec ially s inc e he was ac c om panied by the fat brute of a dog with a body like a barrel and c old, grey eyes . I had im m ediately rec ognis ed the c reature when I had s et eyes on it in the s c hool entranc e. It had been B ill S ikes 's dog, B ulls eye, in the produc tion of Oliv er! but had ended up terrorizing Nanc y, alias the Head of Food Tec hnology, and I notic ed that the wom an was now giving the dog a wide berth as s he edged for the door. 'A re you the new rec ruit then?' as ked the c aretaker, jangling his keys nois ily, as he followed m e to the exit. T he dog followed behind us , rum bling like a dis tant train. 'Y es , I am .' 'W ell, I hope you know what you're letting yours elf in for.' 'It's only a s m all part,' I told him . 'It is this year, m ate,' he s aid, 'but you'll be the leading m an in the next produc tion, you m ark m y words . T hey s uc k you in. T hat's what they do. T hat big wom an, the fat nun with the plum m y ac c ent, takes no pris oners . S he won't take no for an ans wer. Nobody argues with her. I don't know what s he s aid to the Headm as ter but s he got round him to let them rehears e here in the s c hool hall. A nd no one bothered to as k m e, and it's all extra work for m e, you know - keeping the heating on, c leaning up afterwards , s topping late to loc k up.' A t that m om ent the wom an we had been dis c us s ing c ould be heard c om ing down the c orridor behind us , s inging a s natc h of 'Clim b E very Mountain'. 'Hold up,' s aid the c aretaker, 'here s he c om es .' His dog s topped, turned, c urled a lip, s howed an im pres s ive s et of s harp teeth and m oved towards her, growling m enac ingly. 'S hut up, you s illy c reature! ' ordered Mrs Cleaver-Canning. T he dog s tuc k its tail between its legs and lowered its head. It had m et its m atc h. 'Y ou were exc ellent, Gervas e,' s aid Mrs C-C as s he s ailed pas t. 'I think you're in for a m uc h bigger role in the next produc tion.' 'S ee what I m ean,' s aid the c aretaker, tapping the s ide of his nos e. 'How did it go?' as ked Chris tine when I lim ped through the door of P eewit Cottage later that evening. 'Fine. I only need to attend a c ouple m ore tim es and the dres s rehears al, of c ours e. I told you it wouldn't involve m uc h.' I flopped into the neares t c hair.
'If you had m et the produc er, Chris tine,' I told her, 'you would s ee why he would be the las t pers on to play the part of a nas ty S S offic er.' 'T oo nic e?' 'Far too nic e.' 'I'll put the kettle on,' Chris tine s aid. 'I'm s ure you c ould do with a c up of tea after all that goos e-s tepping. Y ou c an have a piec e of c ake as well.' 'Oh, you've been baking?' Chris tine c alled from the kitc hen. 'No, Mrs P os kitt c alled round with it. Y ou s hould try a piec e of her s ponge c ake. It's delic ious - "as light as a nun's kis s " as m y father would s ay.' 'T hat depends on the nun,' I m uttered to m ys elf, thinking of Mrs Cleaver-Canning. 'W hat did Mrs P os kitt want? I hope it was n't to give us one of her kittens .' 'S he's invited m e to the next W I m eeting.' 'Y ou are not thinking of joining the W om en's Ins titute, are you?' 'W hy not? It s ounds good fun. W hen I give up work, I don't intend s itting around all day by m ys elf, knitting, with no one to talk to. I know I've got the garden at the front to s ort out and s om e dec orating and I need to put up s om e s helves in the nurs ery and -' 'Not in your c ondition, you're not,' I told her. 'Digging and ham m ering and c lim bing up ladders -' 'I'm joking,' s he s aid. 'B ut I do want to keep oc c upied.' 'I s hould think that s c hool c los ure group you're involved with will take up m os t of your tim e.' 'A ah, that is where you are wrong,' s he s aid. 'Y ou've had a phone c all.' 'Go on.' 'From Harold. He had jus t c om e out of one of his late m eetings about the s c hool c los ures and he rang here s traightaway. He wanted us to be the firs t to know. He s aid he would ring you bac k. I don't s uppos e he s hould have told m e, but he was s o pleas ed with him s elf.' 'W ell, go on,' I s aid. 'Don't keep it to yours elf.' 'T he m eeting was for the E duc ation S ub-Com m ittee to c ons ider the res pons e from the Minis try of E duc ation about the s c hool c los ures . Y ou will never gues s . T hey've revers ed the dec is ion to c los e Haws krill S c hool.' 'W hat?' 'Is n't it fantas tic ! E vidently the Minis try, whic h has to m ake the final dec is ion, has bloc ked it. It's m arvellous news .' S he put her arm s around m e. 'S o you s ee, all our little efforts on the A c tion Com m ittee have paid off. I'll get the tea.' I didn't s ay anything to Chris tine, but I thought to m ys elf that there was far m ore here than a pres s ure group's efforts . I jus t wondered if our S enior Ins pec tor des ignate had a hand in the dec is ion. Mis s de la Mare had been the HMI s ent from London to look into the m atter and report bac k. Did s he delay her ac c eptanc e of the pos t until s he had s een this through? I wondered. Chris tine interrupted m y thoughts . 'He s aid he'd phone bac k about ten.' 'W ho?' 'Harold.' A t that very m om ent the telephone rang 'T hat'll be him now.' 'Hello, Harold -' I began. 'B eg pardon?' c am e an A m eric an voic e down the line. 'Oh, I am s orry,' I s aid. 'I was expec ting another c all.' 'Is this an inc onvenient tim e?' 'No no, go ahead.' 'Is that Mr Gervas e P hinn?' 'It is .' 'T he owner of P eewit Cottage?' 'T hat's right.' 'I'm truly s orry to dis turb you s o late, Mr P hinn,' s aid the m an, 'but your lady s ec retary at the offic e in Fettles ham did s ay I m ight phone you at hom e, bearing in m ind the nature of m y bus ines s . I do hope it's not inc onvenient.' 'No, it's fine,' I told him . 'Y ou're a s erious ly bus y guy, from what your s ec retary s aid. Let m e introduc e m ys elf. My nam e is B rews ter - J ohn K . B rews ter - and I'm with the US delegation of T he S oc iety of Friends .' 'Quakers ?' 'T hat is c orrec t. I and a group of c olleagues are over for the International Convention at Y ork. I wanted to get in touc h s traight away, to tell you the good news -' 'I'm s orry, Mr er, B rews ter,' I interrupted, 'but I am pretty c ertain in m y own beliefs and -' 'No, no, I'm not pros elytis ing.' 'W ell, how m ay I help you?' I as ked. 'T he thing is ,' he s aid, 'm y c olleague, Dr J am es L. B radford of the Univers ity of Irvine, California, Departm ent of Com parative T heology and Chris tology, c am e out to your village of Haws krill a c ouple of years bac k to vis it the Quaker m eeting hous e whic h I unders tand is on your land.' My heart s ank. 'T he m eeting hous e?' I m urm ured. 'T hat is c orrec t, the unique eighteenth-c entury m eeting hous e whic h is on your land. J us t a s hell, I believe, but of s uc h great his toric al s ignific anc e, partic ularly for we Quakers . J am es Fox him s elf preac hed there, but I am s ure you know that. I unders tand the delightful old lady who owned the land prior to you was s o very kind and allowed m y c olleague, Dr J am es L. B radford, and s om e friends to vis it the s ite. I am told it was quite a m oving event. T he elderly lady did not have the financ ial res ourc es to res tore the building but it always had a s pec ial plac e in her heart, as I'm s ure it does for you. To have s om ething s o s teeped in his tory is truly, truly awe-ins piring. W hen he returned to the S tates , Dr J am es L. B radford was quite fired up and s ugges ted we try to res tore the building.' 'Res tore it?' I whis pered. 'Re-build it. Now, I want to m ake a propos ition. W e are prepared, m y A m eric an Quaker c olleagues and I, to res tore the vitally im portant and unique m eeting hous e to its form er glory. W e s hall c over all c os ts . Now, what do you think of that, s ir?' I was s tuc k for words . How c ould I tell him the vitally im portant and unique eighteenth-c entury Quaker m eeting hous e was now a lowly wall. 'I'm s peec hles s ,' I m anaged to s ay. 'I gues s this news m us t have c om e as quite a s urpris e to you?' 'T hat's an unders tatem ent,' I replied under m y breath. 'Look, it's late and I c an tell from the s ound of your voic e, you're tired and a bit em otional. W ith your perm is s ion, I'll ring bac k later in the week and m aybe arrange for m e and m y c olleagues to c om e over next weekend to dis c us s the rebuilding plans . I have an appointm ent with a Mr J . P erkins of the County A rc hitec ts ' Departm ent in Fettles ham tom orrow m orning. I unders tand there's all s orts of planning perm is s ion, lis ted building regulations , that s ort of thing to s ort out. I'm s o exc ited,' he s aid, 'and I gues s you are too! God bles s you, and goodnight.' B efore I c ould reply, the phone went dead. 'I need a whis ky, a very large one,' I told a bem us ed Chris tine.
22 Mrs S avage s at s tiffly behind her im pres s ive des k, enthroned in her large s wivel c hair, looking haughtier than ever. T his was , I s inc erely hoped, the final m eeting with her to go over the details for the forthc om ing vis it of the foreign s c hool ins pec tors . S inc e Oc tober I had m et with her twic e to dis c us s the Minis try of E duc ation initiative and both tim es s he had s ent m e away with a thic k dos s ier of papers 'to perus e'. T he CE O's pers onal as s is tant was dres s ed in an elegant c hartreus e-c oloured s uit and plain c ream s ilk blous e and was adorned in her us ual as s ortm ent of heavy s ilver jewellery. A s S idney often rem arked, Mrs S avage was never knowingly underdres s ed and that m orning s he had really gone to town. Her m ake-up appeared flawles s , her long nails , as red as blood, were im pec c ably m anic ured and not a hair on her head was out of plac e. S he had adopted the E va P eron s tyle, with hair s c raped bac k and gathered im m ac ulately behind her head. I had to adm it s he looked quite m agnific ent. 'Good m orning, Mr P hinn,' s aid Mrs S avage, looking up from the papers before her and giving m e a s m all forc ed s m ile. 'Do take a s eat.' 'Good m orning, Mrs S avage,' I replied, s itting on the hard wooden c hair in front of her and plac ing m y briefc as e on the floor bes ide m e. 'I s ee your buzzer is working all right now.' 'I beg your pardon?' T here was an explos ive look in her eyes . 'T he buzzer on your door. T here was a point when all your little lights lit up.' T he s m all forc ed s m ile dis appeared. 'It is working perfec tly well, thank you, and it has been for s om e tim e. You m ight rec all you as ked m e about the buzzer the las t tim e we had a m eeting in m y room . Now, s hall we m ake a s tart? I have a briefing with Dr Gore later this m orning, s o we do need to knoc k on. T he CE O wants to touc h bas e and go through a few item s with m e regarding the new S enior Ins pec tor.' S he fluttered an eyelid. I knew, of c ours e, that it wouldn't be long before s he m entioned the S enior Ins pec tor's pos t. 'Y ou are, of c ours e, ac quainted with Mis s de la Mare.' 'Y es ,' I replied s im ply. 'It's about tim e they had m ore wom en in s enior pos itions in the A uthority,' s he obs erved, s huffling the papers on her des k. 'Y es .' 'I have to prepare a detailed dos s ier for Mis s de la Mare to ac quaint her with the workings of the departm ent.' 'Y ou have s uc h a big rem it, Mrs S avage,' I rem arked, taking s om e papers from m y briefc as e. 'I beg your pardon, Mr P hinn?' s he s aid s ourly. 'I was obs erving that you s eem to have m ore and m ore res pons ibilities thrus t upon your s houlders thes e days . P ers onnel is s ues , s ec retarial duties , the "Health and S afety" initiative, the E IE I. It's a wonder you have the tim e to fit everything in.' 'Oh,' s he s aid, oblivious of the s arc as m , 'I s ee what you m ean. Y es , I am indeed kept extrem ely bus y and that is why we need to expedite the bus ines s of the E IE I.' 'S o, s hall we do that?' I s ugges ted. S he flic ked open a file on her des k and tapped a red nail at the doc um ent ins ide. 'I have rec eived from you the nam es of s om e s uitable s c hools for the foreign ins pec tors to vis it but thes e need to be ratified, of c ours e, by Dr Gore. He would, I'm s ure, only want them to vis it our flags hip s c hools . T he ins pec tors will, no doubt, wis h to obs erve s om e les s ons and talk with teac hers to c om pare our s ys tem of educ ation with that in their own c ountry. I am told that they s peak very good E nglis h.' 'Y es , I know that, Mrs S avage,' I told her wearily, 'and all has been prepared. If you rem em ber, we went through what they would be doing when we m et at the S DC early las t term , the m orning you were m is taken for Mr Clam p's nude m odel.' Her m outh tightened. 'T he leas t s aid about that the better, Mr P hinn,' s he s aid. Her voic e was hard and c lipped. 'I did have a word with Dr Gore about that whole inc ident. I im agine he s poke to Mr Clam p.' 'Not to m y knowledge,' I inform ed her. 'A nd I als o c ontac ted P ers onnel about the janitor taking tim e off to holiday in Franc e without s eeking the required perm is s ion.' 'Yes , you s aid you would,' I replied. 'A c tually, Mrs S avage, Connie went to s c atter her father's as hes . I believe Dr Gore very kindly wrote to her expres s ing his c ondolenc es . Connie w as c ons idering res igning after rec eiving a rather unpleas ant letter from P ers onnel c ontaining a written warning, but Dr Gore pers uaded her to s tay on.' 'I do not rec all s eeing any letter from Dr Gore and I deal with all his c orres pondenc e.' 'B eing a letter of c ondolenc e and therefore pers onal, I expec t it was hand-written,' I s aid. 'Now s inc e, as you have pointed out, we need to expedite the bus ines s of the E IE I, Mrs S avage, s hall we do that? T he s c hools have been identified, the arrangem ents m ade, the vis its organis ed, whic h leaves little to be dealt with.' 'It does no harm to rec ap, Mr P hinn,' s he s aid in a patronis ing voic e. 'T hen we don't get c ros s ed wires . Dr Gore wis hes you to s et up a m eeting at the S DC with invited headteac hers and governors to talk about the educ ation s ys tem over here. He, of c ours e, will addres s them . If I m ight s ugges t -' 'T hat, too, has all been taken c are of, Mrs S avage,' I as s ured her in a deliberately im patient tone of voic e. S he was rather taken abac k. 'Really?' 'Y es , I've arranged all that as well.' 'Oh, then we c an m ove on.' 'If we m ight.' 'Now, if two of your c olleagues and yours elf,' s he s ugges ted, 'ac c om pany one of thes e foreign ins pec tors eac h for the two days and look after him or her, it would m ean that they would s ee a range of different s ubjec ts in a variety of s c hools .' 'I have taken c are of that, too, Mrs S avage,' I told her, gritting m y teeth. 'Mr Clam p and Mr P ritc hard are only too happy to be involved.' T here was a long s ilenc e before s he s aid, 'I take it, then, that Dr Y eats and Dr Mullarkey are not available?' Her voic e was lac onic . 'I don't know whether Dr Yeats and Dr Mullarkey are available or not,' I told her, m y voic e again taking on an exas perated edge. 'I didn't as k them .' A c tually I had had a word with Geraldine but s he was extrem ely bus y running a c ours e at that tim e as well as attending appointm ent panels during the week of the vis it. Harold, too, had s aid he had far too m uc h on. A fter the c hange of heart with regard to the c los ure of the s m all s c hools , a s eries of m eetings had been arranged to s ee where els e m oney c ould be s aved from the educ ation budget. Harold, of c ours e, was required to attend. 'I have s poken with both Mr Clam p and Mr P ritc hard and explained what will be required, and they would be very pleas ed to take part in the initiative.' 'Do you think that thos e two c olleagues are the m os t s uitable for this endeavour?' Mrs S avage as ked. 'E m inently.' 'I s ee,' s he s aid c urtly, after another long paus e. 'W ell that, of c ours e, is your dec is ion.' 'Y es , it is ,' I agreed. 'B ut it is im perative, Mr P hinn,' s he announc ed, s napping s hut the file in front of her and giving m e an ic y glare, 'that you liais e with m e at all tim es . I need to be kept fully inform ed.' 'Of c ours e,' I replied, wis hing that this totally unnec es s ary m eeting would end. 'S urely that is the point of this m eeting?' 'It m akes m y life s o m uc h eas ier if I am kept fully up to s peed,' s he c ontinued. 'I will, of c ours e, deal with all the adm inis tration, s end the foreign ins pec tors the relevant doc um entation, arrange their travel, s end them a detailed itinerary and program m e of events and s o forth, but there is one thing I would like you to do as a m atter of s om e urgenc y. I would apprec iate it if you c ould have a word, s ooner rather than later, with that janitor at the S taff Developm ent Centre - that wom an in the pink overall.' 'Connie,' I rem inded her. 'I have to s ay that I find her quite abras ive and diffic ult. S om etim es I don't think s he knows who I am and what pos ition I hold at County Hall. S he has a m os t offhand m anner. You will rec all that when we held the interviews for the S enior Ins pec tor's pos t, when that Mr Carter, he who gave bac k-word, was appointed, the wom an was m os t rude, very unhelpful and quite obs truc tive. I m erely as ked her for m ore tea and bis c uits and one would have thought that I had as ked her to lay down her life.' 'S o what's this m atter of s om e urgenc y that you wis h m e to deal with?' I as ked irritably. 'T he m atter of the c atering,' s he replied. 'T he c atering?' I as ked. 'A s we agreed, there will be a rec eption for our foreign vis itors at the S DC. T here will be nibbles and drinks , that s ort of thing.' S he c leared her throat. 'I c an s ee problem s with... with that wom an.' 'Connie?' 'Y es . If s he is unable to provide tea and bis c uits , how will s he c ope with a buffet? I really do not feel inc lined to liais e with her over the provis ion of the food and drink. A s I s aid, s he c an be very diffic ult.' T hat's ripe c om ing from her, I thought. 'W ell, this really is part of y our rem it,' I s aid. 'Not nec es s arily,' s he replied. T here was a s ofter tone to her voic e now. 'Y ou s pend far m ore tim e at the S DC. It oc c urred to m e that you m ight like to deal with that s ide of things .' I was beginning to enjoy this . 'No, not really,' I replied. 'I have quite enough on. I think the c atering is bes t dealt with by you.' 'Mr P hinn, do you want our E uropean c olleagues to return to their res pec tive c ountries with an unfavourable im pres s ion of E nglis h hos pitality?' 'Of c ours e not,' I replied, s tuffing the papers bac k in m y briefc as e and getting to m y feet. 'W ell, Mrs S avage, everything s eem s to have been dealt with. I will let you get to your briefing with Dr Gore and c om pile your detailed dos s ier. I'll give you a ring next week to c hec k on final details before the foreign ins pec tors ' vis it.' Mrs S avage twis ted a ring around on her long finger. 'Mr P hinn,' s he s aid, 'I would be very grateful if you c ould s ee fit to arrange the c atering. I would find it very helpful.' T here was another long paus e, then, 'P leas e.' 'I don't rec all your being partic ularly helpful, Mrs S avage,' I told her, 'when I wanted that report bac k. In fac t you were m os t unhelpful.' 'T hat was an entirely different m atter,' s he told m e. 'It was -' 'More than your job was worth? Y es , I rec all you telling m e.' I then added, 'V ery well, Mrs S avage, I will arrange the c atering.' 'T hank you,' s he s aid s im ply. On m y way out of County Hall, I kept a s harp eye open for a party of A m eric an Quakers heading for the County A rc hitec ts ' Departm ent. 'I'm s orry, S idney, but it is a well-known fac t that other E uropeans s peak their own language m uc h better than the E nglis h s peak theirs .' David was in one of his m ore s erious m oods and was holding forth about the vis it of the foreign ins pec tors . 'A nd furtherm ore, they are far m ore likely to s peak E nglis h than we are to s peak their language. T hes e three ins pec tors c om ing here, for exam ple, are all apparently fluent in E nglis h. How m any of us are fluent in Italian or S panis h or Frenc h? Y ou s ee, they m ake the effort and the E nglis h do not. Indeed, the E nglis hm an abroad expec ts the foreigners to s peak E nglis h. If no one unders tands him , he then goes up an oc tave and s tarts s houting. A nd, I would go further than that. T he foreigner very often has a better c om m and of the E nglis h language than the E nglis h have them s elves .' 'A nd upon what do you bas e thes e obs ervations about the s tate of our language?' enquired S idney. 'Have you done s om e s ort of detailed res earc h?' 'I don't need to do any detailed res earc h,' replied David. 'Y ou only have to look around to s ee how the us e of E nglis h has dec lined. P eople don't s eem able to s pell or punc tuate or expres s them s elves any m ore. J ulie, for exam ple, is forever m is plac ing a partic iple.' 'S he always was very forgetful,' rem arked S idney. 'I do hope s he found it.' 'A nd s plitting her infinitives ,' c ontinued David. 'Oooh, that s ounds painful,' s aid S idney, s c rewing up his fac e dram atic ally. David was in full flow by this tim e and not to be s topped. 'A nd when we had young Frank doing the letters , his s pellings were patently bizarre. He was a nic e enough young m an, but his E nglis h! I really don't know what they will m ake of him in Financ ial S ervic es . I hope he's better with num bers than he is with words . J ulie tries her bes t and I know s he is overworked but I have to c hec k everything s he writes .' 'Com e on, David,' I s aid. 'It's not that bad.' 'T hen there's Connie,' c ontinued m y c olleague. 'Don't m ention that wom an,' s pluttered S idney. 'S he is a prim e exam ple of how not to us e E nglis h. S he m angles and m urders the language with m alapropis m s and non s equiturs . I arrived at the S DC las t week and there was a notic e outs ide the Gents : "A ttention! W et floor! T his is not an ins truc tion! " I m ean, what do vis itors think?' 'Oh, for goodnes s s ake, David,' I s aid. 'Connie is a c leaner, and a dam n good c leaner as well, not a profes s or of linguis tic s . S he does n't need to have a perfec t c om m and of the E nglis h language to polis h and dus t and c lean the toilets .' 'A nd that is exac tly what s he s hould do,' s aid S idney, 'polis h and dus t and c lean the toilets . I c ouldn't c are les s how s he s peaks , it's what s he s ays that m akes m y blood boil.' He thought for a m om ent. 'I s ay, does that m ake s ens e? A nyway, you know what I m ean - it's her attitude.' 'T hen there's Mrs S avage with her m anagem ent gobbledegook,' David c ontinued, unabas hed. 'Let's hope thes e foreign ins pec tors don't m eet either of them . T hey'll be utterly c onfus ed by the one and totally c onfounded by the other. A t that wretc hed "Health and S afety" m eeting, it was as if Mrs S avage was - were,' he has tily c orrec ted him s elf, 's peaking a foreign language, flagging things up, getting up to s peed, thinking outs ide the box, c lim bing aboard, having thought s howers , finding windows in diaries . E ven Dr Gore is not guiltles s . "T he E duc ation Com m ittee have dec ided..." he wrote in the las t m em orandum . It s hould be, "T he E duc ation Com m ittee has dec ided".' 'Does it really m atter?' s ighed S idney. 'I m ean, aren't there m ore im portant things to oc c upy your tim e than s potting the odd s plit infinitive and m is plac ed partic iple? In the whole s c hem e of things , does it really, really m atter?' 'Of c ours e it m atters ! ' s napped David. 'It's jus t a s loppy us e of the language. It's part and parc el of the dec line in s tandards . I was in a s c hool las t week and a teac her had not only m is s pelt "parallelogram " on the m athem atic s exam ination paper but had inform ed the s tudents that "T his option is c om puls ory". I m ean, how c an an option be c om puls ory?' 'Oh, don't be s o pedantic , David,' s aid S idney. 'Y ou are an old m is ery-guts , m oaning and c om plaining. Y ou s hould be rejoic ing. Mis s de la Mare is taking over. S urely that s hould bring a s m ile to that little wizened W els h fac e of yours .' 'I am trying to have a s erious dis c us s ion here, S idney,' s aid David. 'I think Gervas e m ight run a few c ours es for educ ation em ployees on the effec tive us e of E nglis h.' 'No c hanc e! ' I s pluttered. 'I have enough on at the m om ent, thank you very m uc h.' 'W ell, I des pair at the flagrant m is us e of the language,' s aid David. 'W e all m ake m is takes ,' I s aid. 'A re you telling us , David, that you never ever m ake an error with your own writing?' 'Of c ours e not, but not in every other word.' 'E nglis h is a very tric ky and troubles om e language,' I c om m ented. 'It is full of m inefields . You tell m e a rule of s pelling, David, and I'll find you an exc eption. A nyway, I find thos e double m eanings are rather am us ing. I rem em ber a his tory es s ay we were as ked to do at s c hool: "T rac e the events leading up to the birth of Henry V III".' 'I rec kon your his tory teac her rec eived s om e very interes ting ans wers to that ques tion,' s m irked S idney. 'A nd talking of double entendres , have you s een that pric eles s s ign outs ide the new Dales V is itors ' Centre: "P leas e Leave Heather For A ll To E njoy". I s ugges ted to the m an at the des k that poor Heather m us t have been feeling rather the wors e for wear. He didn't apprec iate the wittic is m , I'm afraid.' 'Chris tine found s om e pric eles s advertis em ents for jobs las t week in the Fettles ham Gaz ette,' I s aid. 'S he always c uts them out for m e.' I extrac ted the little c lippings from m y notebook. 'One s aid: "A n opportunity to join an expanding c ontrac ting c om pany". A nother, "A re you going plac es in alum inium foil?" T hen there was "S treet lighting engineers - two pos ts ".' 'Quite a little treas ure trove you have there,' rem arked S idney. 'W hat on earth do you keep them for?' 'T hey are very us eful to lighten the atm os phere at s om e of the dinners I am as ked to s peak at,' I replied. 'Or s hould I s ay, at whic h I am as ked to s peak.' I glanc ed over in David's direc tion. 'Here's a headline from a c ouple of weeks ago,' I s aid, reading from another c lipping: '"Man battered in fis h s hop".' 'A h, well they do that deliberately,' s aid S idney, laughing. 'T he s ec ret of a c atc hy headline is to c onvey the greates t am biguity in the fewes t words . Here's s om e m ore that you c an add to your c ollec tion, Gervas e: "General Montgom ery flies bac k to front". "Captain Fuc hs off to A ntarc tic a". "B ody in garden is a plant, s ays wom an".' 'Y ou are m aking m y point prec is ely,' s aid David. 'News papers are s om e of the wors t offenders . T he Fettles ham Gaz ette is a prim e exam ple of s loppy E nglis h. T hey s hould be s etting a good exam ple. It is s om ething I feel very s trongly about.' 'A bout whic h I feel very s trongly,' s aid S idney and then, ignoring David's angry glare, c ontinued: 'I've told J ulie to go very c arefully with that lips tic k s he's us ing at pres ent. S he c ould be s everely inc apac itated s hould s he follow the ins truc tions printed on the s ide.' 'W hat does it s ay?' I as ked, intrigued. '"T ake off c ap and pus h up bottom ".' S idney and I c ac kled with laughter. David gave us a pitying look. 'It's no us e trying to have a s erious c onvers ation with you two s c hoolboys . I c ould have predic ted your res pons e, S idney, but I have to s ay, Gervas e, I rather expec ted a little m ore s upport from the E nglis h ins pec tor. W ell, I'm off.' 'Y es , I thought I c ould detec t a s trange, rather fis hy s m ell,' rem arked S idney as David s trode for the door. 'Y ou know,' s aid David, paus ing at the door, 'things will c hange when Mis s de la Mare takes over, I c an tell you. I bet s he's a s tic kler for c orrec t E nglis h.' W hen David had gone I turned to S idney. 'Y ou s houldn't rib him s o m uc h.' 'W ell, he's s o s erious thes e days . I s hould have thought with the appointm ent of Mis s de la Mare, he would be walking on c louds . W e c ould have been landed with that odious Mr Carter and his m anagem ent s peak.' A s was his wont, S idney leaned bac k expans ively on his c hair. 'Yes , indeed, I'm s o m uc h looking forward to working with dear W inifred. I love Harold dearly and will m is s him greatly, but W inifred will bring a breath of fres h air with her. W e have s o m uc h in c om m on.' He c aught s ight of the expres s ion on m y fac e. 'W hat are you grinning at?' S o m uc h in c om m on, I thought: the one a totally unpredic table, larger than life, m erc urial bear of a m an; the other, a prec is e, highly-organis ed wom an with a m ind as s harp as a razor. It would be very interes ting to s ee what our new S enior Ins pec tor m ade of the Ins pec tor for Creative and V is ual A rts . 'Nothing, S idney,' I s aid. 'Nothing at all.' W e worked on our reports and c orres pondenc e for the next hour in relative s ilenc e. W hen the c loc k on the County Hall tower s truc k s ix o'c loc k, S idney s tretc hed and s ighed. 'Governors ' m eeting for m e tonight at High Rus ton-c um -Riddles wade J unior and Infant S c hool, right out in the s tic ks . I do hope it does n't go on and on. T hat Mrs Dingle-S m ith and her s ide-kic k, the tires om e Mrs P owell (pronounc ed P ole), never s hut up. Like c hattering m onkeys . Of c ours e, they'll be delighted that their s c hool, whic h was on the lis t for c los ure, has been reprieved. I s uppos e that will be high on the agenda and it will be after ten before I get hom e. T his is the third late night this week. Oh, by the way, your Chris tine needs to be c ongratulated on her efforts to keep the s m all s c hools from c los ing.' 'Y es ,' I replied, 's he c aus ed a few waves .' 'W aves ! ' exc laim ed S idney. 'It was a veritable tidal deluge.' 'S he did very well,' I s aid. 'W onderful wom an. Y ou're a luc ky m an, Gervas e.' 'I know.' 'S o, where are you tonight then?' S idney as ked. 'It's Chris tine's leaving do at W innery Nook. Y ou were invited but -' 'Governors ' m eeting,' he s ighed. 'I know. In fac t,' he exc laim ed, s winging his c hair bac k into an upright pos ition with a c latter, 'that will be a perfec t exc us e to leave early, and then I will c om e on to the party.' 'E xc ellent! S he'd love to s ee you. A nyway, I m us t m ake trac ks ,' I told him . 'I s aid I'd pic k Connie up before s even.'
'Connie's going?' 'Of c ours e s he's going. S he's not that bad, you know, S idney. Her heart is in the right plac e, and s he's always had a s oft s pot for Chris tine.' 'T he right plac e for Connie's heart is on a kebab,' s aid S idney, violently jabbing a pile of paper on his des k with his paper-knife. 'T he wom an's an interfering, bad-tem pered, entirely unreas onable m enac e. I s hall be having words with our new S enior Ins pec tor. S he's jus t the pers on to put Connie in her plac e. S he forgets that I am a s enior m em ber of the E duc ation Departm ent. Connie s peaks to m e as if I were a naughty s c hoolboy.' 'Y ou s ound jus t like Mrs S avage, S idney,' I s aid. 'A pparently s he does n't think Connie knows who s he is . I als o rem em ber her s aying to Mrs Os baldis ton, the tim e s he was m is taken for your nude m odel, "Do you know who I am ?" ' 'Oh, well, I would never s ay that,' protes ted S idney. 'In fac t, I c annot abide people who s ay that. "Do you know who I am ?" No, no, I would never s ay that. I rem em ber reading onc e about this extrem ely rude and aggres s ive individual dres s ed in a bright c hec ked jac ket and dangling c am era who pus hed his way to the front of the queue at the airport and dem anded attention. He inform ed the airline attendant that he had to be c hec ked through firs t s inc e he was on the next flight. T he attendant as ked him very politely to wait his turn. No doubt, s he told him , he c ould s ee there was a long queue of other pas s engers ahead of him . A nyway, the m an banged his fis t on the c ounter, waved his bus ines s c las s tic ket in front of her fac e and s houted for all to hear, thos e ridic ulous words : "Do you know who I am ?" T he attendant s tared at him for a m om ent before pic king up the public addres s m ic rophone and announc ing c alm ly: "May I have your attention, pleas e. T here is a pas s enger in a rather loud jac ket who does not know who he is . Could anyone who m ay be able to identify him pleas e c om e to des k 9."' 'I rem em ber the oc c as ion when I was s itting for m y finals ,' I s aid, rem inded of an inc ident s im ilar to S idney's . 'T he invigilator was ins is tent that we s top writing im m ediately when he told us to do s o. He m ade a point of repeating a num ber of tim es that if anyone s till had a pen in his hand after he had told us "P ens down", then the paper would be invalidated. A nyhow, this pal of m ine, Derm ot Monaghan his nam e was , was writing his nam e on the top of his paper when the invigilator, or perhaps m ore appropriately as it turned out, the invalidator, c alled "P ens down". Derm ot c arried on writing and when he c am e to hand in his paper he was told it wouldn't be ac c epted.' 'T hat was rather petty and m ean-m inded,' s aid S idney. 'He s ounds like a m ale vers ion of Mrs S avage with her rules and proc edures .' 'S o Derm ot explained he was only writing his nam e, but the invigilator s till would not ac c ept the paper and s tarted s tac king this m as s ive pile of exam ination papers on his des k. Derm ot pleaded with him but to no avail. "You heard what I s aid," the invigilator told him . "I c annot ac c ept it." Derm ot drew him s elf up and looked the invigilator s traight in the eye. "Do you know who I am ?" he as ked in a really pom pous tone of voic e. "No," s aid the invigilator, "I have no idea who you are and telling m e anyway will not have the s lightes t effec t." "S o you don't know who I am ?" Derm ot as ked again. "No," replied the invigilator. "T hat's good," s aid Derm ot and, as fas t as lightning, s tuffed the paper right into the c entre of the pile.' 'I never know whether to believe your s tories , Gervas e,' s aid S idney, laughing. 'T hat's ripe c om ing from you,' I s aid. 'It's good that you c an laugh,' s aid S idney. 'I would have thought that you had little to find am us ing at the m om ent.' 'W hy's that?' 'Y ou m us t be feeling pretty awful about dem olis hing that old Quaker m eeting hous e, the one thos e A m eric ans want to res tore.' 'W ho told you about the A m eric an Quakers ?' I as ked. 'I took a c all for you yes terday. Delightful m an. W hat was his nam e? B rews ter, was it? He was wanting to get in touc h with you again. He s aid he'll ring you at hom e tonight. He wants to dis c us s the plans for the res toration.' 'Oh heavens ! Y ou didn't tell him I'd knoc ked it down, did you?' 'Of c ours e not.' 'T his is a nightm are,' I s aid. 'P erhaps I ought to go and s ee J as per P erkins . Get his advic e.' 'Old P erkins is on holiday. T he A m eric ans tried to s ee him but they were told he won't be bac k for a week. T here's a s troke of luc k for you.' 'Oh dear m e,' I s ighed. 'W hatever am I going to do?' 'I've told you, old boy,' s aid S idney, patting m e on the s houlder, 'blam e it on the vandals .'
23 S enor Carlos Itturiaga was a s m all, plum p, jolly m an with typic ally dark S panis h eyes , a friendly fac e and blac k lus trous hair s lic ked bac k in rippling waves . W earing a c rum pled linen s uit and c lutc hing a giant m ultic oloured um brella, he was waiting with his c om panions in the hotel lobby. W ith him were S ignor T oria, a very tall and thin ins pec tor from Florenc e, m os t am iable-looking and, her c urves s om ewhere between the two, a s tunning B rigitte B ardot look-alike from T ours c alled S im one. T he foreign ins pec tors had arrived late the previous evening and gone s traight to the hotel where they were s taying. S idney, David and I now arrived early the next m orning at the hotel to c ollec t them and take them round the s elec ted s c hools . Over the next two days , they would obs erve s om e teac hing, talk to teac hers and learn a little about the E nglis h educ ation s ys tem . Of c ours e, it was S idney who m ade a bee-line for the divine S im one and whis ked her off before we c ould dis c us s who was ac c om panying whom . It ended up with David P ritc hard taking tall, thin S ignor T oria, and m e with the plum p, little S paniard. Carlos Itturiaga talked all the way to the c ar like a revolving door: round and round he went, c hattering, c om m enting, laughing and as king ques tions and all the while s hrugging, ges tic ulating, rolling his eyes and waving his plum p-fingered hands in every direc tion. I had im agined that the initial c onvers ations with our foreign vis itors would be rather s tilted and form al and therefore I was greatly relieved to find s uc h a bubbly and uninhibited c om panion. B y the tim e we arrived at the firs t s c hool on our itinerary I had learnt all about V igo, the c ity where he lived, his fam ily, his interes ts , and I was pretty well c onvers ant with the whole of the S panis h educ ation s ys tem and his own views on teac hing and learning. From Fettles ham , I took the s c enic route to the firs t s c hool and wound m y way, in low gear, up a trac k whic h twis ted and turned like a c oiled s pring. I had travelled this narrow road m any tim es before and knew what an am azing panoram a we would s ee when we reac hed the brow of the very s teepes t hill. P res ently, I pulled over into a s m all lay-by s o m y c om panion c ould view the s erene beauty of the s c ene whic h lay below the bare lonely hills , largely treeles s and aus tere, the c raggy outc rops of roc k s tic king up out of the dead brac ken. S enor Itturiaga im m ediately c eas ed his c ons tant c hatter and s tared out of the c ar window. 'It ees very beautiful,' he s aid. 'Not at all as I expec ted. I was told E ngland ees very green, very flat, lots of trees and plenty of water.' 'Y ou are in Y orks hire, Carlos ,' I told him . 'T here is nothing quite like Y orks hire. It's c alled God's own c ountry.' 'A nd it ees c old,' he obs erved. 'It ees very c old for m e at thees tim e of the year.' 'Now in Y orks hire we would s ay you were "nes h".' 'Nes h?' He tilted his head quizzic ally. 'Rather s ens itive to the c old.' 'Nes h,' he repeated. 'Nes h. V ery interes ting.' B elow us s tretc hed a vas t c anvas of em pty grey m oorland, s c attered with great jags of roc k. It was a rugged and prim itive lands c ape, naked s ave for a few hardy, grubby-looking s heep whic h were foraging for food, and a s m all c ops e of s keletal trees c lawing for the s ky. In the far dis tanc e, pale purple hills s hrouded in a s m oky m is t ros e m ajes tic ally to a pale blue s ky. It was an awes om e s ight. Returning to the c ar, we dropped down into the village huddled round the old c hurc h in the bottom of the valley. Loxley Chas e was typic al of a Dales village s c hool: a s quare and s olid s tone building enc los ed by low, c raggy, lim es tone walls . W hile we were waiting for the headteac her, Mr Leatherboy, Carlos s tood looking out of a window at the m agnific ent view up to the fells beyond. Following a tour of the s c hool with Mr Leatherboy, Carlos and I joined a junior c las s and a group of twenty or s o s even-to eleven-year-olds . It was one of the healthies t groups of youngs ters I had ever s een: s turdy bodies , ros y-red c heeks , bright eyes and c lear c om plexions . T he c hildren obvious ly c am e from good farm ing s toc k and s pent a great deal of the tim e outdoors . 'W hy do the s heep on the hills have a red c olour on their bac ks ?' as ked Carlos of a s toc ky boy. 'T ha knaas .' 'P ardon?' as ked Carlos . 'I s aid tha knaas .' 'T ha knaas ?' repeated m y c olleague, appearing c om pletely flum m oxed. He looked appealingly in m y direc tion. 'T rans late, plees .' 'He is s ure you already know,' I replied. 'I'm afraid m y friend does n't know,' I told the boy, 'and, for that m atter, I don't either.' 'T ha does ,' c huc kled the boy. 'No, no, I don't.' 'Gerron wi' thee! T ha does .' 'Really,' I laughed. 'I don't know.' T he boy looked at m e with a wry s m ile on his fac e and a twinkle in his brown eyes whic h were s trangely s pec kled. He then glanc ed out of the window at the s heep lazily c ropping the gras s on the hills ide beyond. Many of the s heep were s plas hed with red at the end of their bac ks . 'A re tha 'avin' m e on,' he as ked, 'or dunt tha reeally knaa?' 'I'm not joking,' I told him . 'I really don't know. Is it to tell whic h s hepherd they belong to?' 'Nay,' s aid the lad. 'T hey all belong to t's am e s hepherd. T hey're ruddled.' 'Ruddled?' I repeated. 'A ye, in s om e dales they s ay "raddled" but up 'ere we s ays "ruddled".' Carlos looked at m e and repeated the word s lowly, 'Ruddled. V ery interes ting.' I s hrugged and turned bac k to the boy. 'I'm s till in the dark,' I told him . 'W ell, tha s ees ,' began the boy, 'on yer fells yonder is a goodly num ber of "yows " - them 's ewes - fem ale s heep, and one or two "tups " - ram s , m ale s heep. A re tha wi' m e s o far?' 'I am .' 'Reight then. T ha dunt need m any tups . Does tha know why?' 'Y es , I'm s till with you. Go on.' 'Reight then, t's hepherd puts an 'arnes s under yer tup's belly, s ooart o' leather s trap affair wi' a s ooart of big red wax c rayon in it. It 'angs down under 'im . A re tha s till wi' m e?' T he s c ales were falling from m y eyes . 'Y es . I've got the pic ture now, thank you very m uc h. I think I c an work the res t out for m ys elf. S hall we have a look at your writing book?' 'Naa then.' T he boy was not going to be s topped half way through his explanation, s o c arried on regardles s . 'W hen 'e's s erved a yow - does tha -' 'Y es , I know what that m eans ,' I interrupted. 'W ell, when 'e's s erved a yow, t'tup leaves 'is m ark on 'er bac k whic h m eans s he's been ruddled. Does tha follow m i drift?' 'Y es , I've got the idea,' I s aid. 'Cooars e, if there's no c olour on 'er bac k at all, then tha knaas t'tup's not been doin' what Nature's intended 'im to do, and 'e needs a bit o' enc ouragin' like. T 's hepherd knaas , tha s ees , that s he's not been s een to.' 'Fas c inating,' I s aid quic kly. 'S o, s hall we look at your book?' 'W hat language ees thees boy s peaking?' as ked Carlos , looking c om pletely dum bfounded. 'I thought m y E nglees h was quite good, but I have not unders tood a s eengle word.' 'It's "Y orks hire" - a variation of E nglis h,' I told him . 'Dialec t.' 'T hees "s een to",' he as ked, s till with a puzzled expres s ion on his round fac e. 'Could you explain thees "s een to" for m e, plees ?' 'It's rather c om plic ated,' I told him . 'I'll explain it later.' 'Now then, during s om e parts o' year,' c ontinued the boy, 'you don't want your tup bothering t'yows , s o you put 'er in 'er winter c louts . T hey're s ort of triangles of jute s ac king whic h you s titc h to your yow's bac k end to s top your tup from -' 'Y es , I've got the idea,' I interrupted. 'B ut why does n't the s hepherd jus t put the ram in a different field if he wants him away from the ewes ?' T he boy s hook his head. 'W e're talkin' S waledales , m es ter. Y our hardy, blac k-fac ed S waledales are at hooam on t'fells and m oorland. Y ou don't fenc e 'em in. T hey dooan't s top in t'fields all year round, tha knaas . T hey wander free and yer yows are only brought down to t'valley at lam bing tim e to give birth in t'fields near t'farm buildings . T hen they're driven bac k on t'hills . Now, with yer winter c louts -' I thought it appropriate at this point to try and c hange the s ubjec t again. 'Do you do m uc h poetry in c las s ?' I as ked. 'P oetry?' repeated the boy. 'A ye, we do s om e poetry. B ut I was tellin' you about t'winter c louts .' 'P erhaps another tim e,' I s aid. 'W aay,' s aid the boy, a flas h of anger in his eyes , 'it were your pal what brought it up. I were only anwerin' 'im , when 'e as ked about s heep bein' "ruddled".' W ith that, he s hook his head again and got on with his work. A t m orning break, while Carlos quizzed Mr Leatherboy about the E nglis h educ ation s ys tem , I s trolled around the front of the s c hool, breathing in the fres h air and m arvelling at the panoram a before m e. 'A dm irin' t'view?' I turned to find a s m all m an with a huge hawk-like nos e and the s m all down-turned m outh of a peevis h c hild. He was attired in a grey overall and c arried two long-handled s pades . 'Y es , it's beautiful,' I s aid. 'A re you the s c hool c aretaker?' 'S ite m anager,' he c orrec ted m e. 'Doing a bit of gardening?' 'I'm bloody not! ' he exc laim ed. 'I've got enough on looking after t'building wi'out goin' s earc hin' for work. I'm after t'rabbits this m ornin'. T here's 'undreds of 'em . I trap 'em , net 'em , gas 'em , pois on 'em , bloc k up their warrens . I've 'ad m i ferrets down their 'oles , m i J ac k Rus s ell c atc hing 'em but they go on breedin' like... like...' 'Rabbits ?' I ventured. 'A ye, they do. I'm after t'dis eas ed uns today, them wi' m yxom ytos is . I don't like rabbits , but it's a terrible s ight to s ee 'em all deform ed and c rippled. I wait until t'kiddies are in s c hool, then c om e out wi' m i s pades to dis pos e of 'em .' He lowered his voic e to a whis per. 'Look, there's a c ouple of 'em ovver by t'wall. Can you s ee 'em ?' T he c reatures he pointed out looked pathetic indeed, hunc hed up with their pale grey eyes s eeing nothing. 'Only 'um ane thing to do is to put 'em out of their m is ery. One s hort, s harp s m ac k wi' m i s pade and then I bury 'em in t'field yonder. If you leave 'em , they die a long and lingering death. Terrible dis eas e is m yxom ytos is . I wouldn't wis h it on any c reature, even on rabbits .' He looked around c ons piratorially. 'Of c ours e, I 'ave to be very dis c reet about it. I don't want t'c hildren peering out of t'c las s room windows to s ee m e flattening a rabbit wi' a s pade. It'd give 'em nightm ares . S o I wait till they're all in t'playground at t'other s ide of t's c hool and then I do what 'as to be done. Y ou s ee, if I don't dis pos e of 'em , kiddies m ight go up and touc h 'em and we c an't be 'avin' that, now c an we?' 'No, we c an't,' I agreed. T hen, before I c ould protes t, he thrus t a s pade into m y hand. 'Com e on,' he s aid. 'Y ou c an 'elp m e.' 'No, no, 'I s aid, 'I really c ouldn't.' 'I'll do t'dis pos in', you jus t m ake s ure they don't go bac k to their 'oles . Not that they look as if they're goin' anywhere.' I followed him c harily towards the poor c reatures and watc hed the exec utioner rais e his ins trum ent of death high above his head. He took a deep breath and was about to bring the s pade down with a s ic kening thud onto a s hivering little c reature, when Carlos and a group of c hattering c hildren appeared from around the s ide of the s c hool. T he s m all group froze in am azem ent. W ith great pres enc e of m ind, the c aretaker s kipped towards m e and tapped m y s pade handle with his . 'P retend we're m orris danc in',' he s aid, out of the c orner of his m outh. I was dis m ayed to learn from the headteac her later that m orning that Mrs S avage was to m ake an appearanc e. No doubt s he wanted to c hec k up on things and m ake her pres enc e felt. 'T here's a very nic e little pub in the village,' Mr Leatherboy told m e. 'I expec t the three of you will want to go out for s om ething to eat s o you c an dis c us s things .' Under no c irc um s tanc es was I having lunc h with Mrs S avage. 'Oh no,' I s aid. 'I always eat with the c hildren when I vis it s c hools . It's an exc ellent opportunity to m eet them inform ally and I always find they are far m ore relaxed and talkative over the dinner table. W e'll have s c hool lunc h here, if that is all right.' 'Of c ours e,' replied the headteac her, 'it's fis h fingers today.' Mrs S avage, res plendent in her early s pring ens em ble - a pale c ream s uit and m atc hing ac c es s ories - was all s m iles and jangling jewellery when s he s ailed pas t the s c hool s ec retary and through the headteac her's door. 'B uenos dias ,' s he s aid, holding out a m anic ured hand to the S panis h ins pec tor. 'A h, buenos dias , s enora,' replied Carlos . 'I'm afraid "B uenos dias " is about the extent of m y S panis h, S enor Itturiaga,' s aid Mrs S avage, giving him the m os t c harm ing of s m iles . 'I do s o love S pain. T he s uns hine, the c olours , the people, the wine. I am B renda S avage, P ers onal A s s is tant to Dr Gore, the Chief E duc ation Offic er, by the way. You'll be m eeting the CE O tom orrow evening, S enor Itturiaga, at our little rec eption.' 'Carlos , plees .' 'Carlos ,' s he s aid s om ewhat breathles s ly. If was as if the headteac her and I were invis ible. 'T his is Mr Leatherboy, the headteac her,' I s aid s tiffly. 'T his is Mrs S avage.' 'Good m orning,' s aid the headteac her. I c ould s ee he was rather put out by this wom an s wanning into his offic e without a word to him . 'I've jus t popped in to s ee how things are going,' s aid Mrs S avage, as if s he were in c om plete c harge of the whole undertaking. 'T hings are going very well,' I s aid. 'Y ou needn't have troubled yours elf.' 'Oh, it's really no trouble. A s you are aware, Dr Gore is partic ularly keen that this vis it from our E uropean friends s hould go well.' 'W ell, things are going extrem ely well,' s aid the headteac her. 'In fac t -' 'I'm very pleas ed to hear it.' S he looked at m e. 'A nd have you lunc hed?' s he as ked. 'W e were jus t about to eat,' I s aid, 'if you would c are to join us .' 'V ery m uc h,' s he trilled. 'T here's a very quaint and typic ally E nglis h c ountry inn in the village, T he Marquis of Granby, quite fam ous for its s eafood, I hear.' I c ut her s hort. 'W e're eating with the c hildren, Mrs S avage,' I s aid. 'W e always do when we vis it s c hools . I'm s ure you have no objec tion.' 'Oh,' s he replied, m aking a fac e. 'A c tually eating with the c hildren?' 'Y es , that's right,' I s aid, s uppres s ing a s m ile. 'T hat would be very nic e,' s he lied. 'A nd, as it s o happens , it's a s eafood delic ac y today,' I told her, giving the headteac her a s ideways glanc e. 'Really?' 'Y es , fis h fingers .' I very m uc h enjoyed watc hing Mrs S avage's dis c om fiture as s he s at on a long wooden benc h des igned for s m all c hildren, s andwic hed between two rather m es s y little infant eaters who c hattered without paus ing, liberally s pitting out food. Mrs S avage m anaged to forc e down half a fis h finger and two c hips before plac ing her knife and fork together. 'A re you 'avin' them fis h fingers ?' as ked the little girl on her right. 'No, dear, I'm not,' replied Mrs S avage. 'Can I have 'em ?' 'P leas e do.' 'A re you 'avin' yer c hips ?' 'No, dear.' 'Can I 'ave them , an' all?' 'Y es , you m ay.' 'A re you 'avin' your yoghurt?' as ked the c hild on her left. 'No.' 'Can I 'ave it?' 'P leas e do.' T he fis h fingers , c hips and the yoghurt were quic kly c om m andeered. 'W ell,' s aid Mrs S avage, 'if you will exc us e m e, I need to fres hen up.' S he turned to the c hild who had jus t s c ooped out a great s poonful of pink yoghurt. 'Could you tell m e, dear, where the s taff toilets are?' 'Over theer,' replied the c hild, waving the s poon in front of her and, in the proc es s , s pattering Mrs S avage with s trawberry yoghurt. Mrs S avage ros e s olem nly from the benc h with s urpris ing equanim ity, s tared for a m om ent at the thin pink line whic h ran ac ros s her pale c ream s uit with m atc hing ac c es s ories , and took a deep breath. 'T hank you, dear,' s he s aid, with a s our s m ile. 'T hank you s o very m uc h.' Carlos and I vis ited four s c hools during the two days and m y c olleague s eem ed im m ens ely im pres s ed with the high s tandard of work, the exc ellent teac hing, the ric h and c hallenging environm ents and the friendly c hildren, but he had s om e res ervations when it c am e to the educ ation of the s m all c hildren. 'Y ou know, Gervas e,' he s aid to m e as we drove bac k to Fettles ham at the end of the s ec ond afternoon, 'I do have to s ay that I think the c hildren s tart their form al educ ation in E ngland too early. S m all c hildren s hould be allowed to play. E verything in the world ees new and exc iting for s m all c hildren. W e s hould let them enjoy. Of c ours e, reading and writing and the m athem atic s are im portant, but s o are art and m us ic and dram a and playing with s and and water and everything that little ones s o love to do. I jus t wonder whether thees young c hildren ever get thos e little hands of theirs red with paint or c overed in s tic ky c lay, or if they ever build c as tles in the s and and fill up jars with water and go fis hing for leetle fees hes . It ees jus t a thought.' Carlos 's thoughts about early educ ation s tayed with m e m any weeks after he had returned to S pain. One thing that greatly im pres s ed Carlos was the quality of the educ ation in the s m all s c hools . He had expec ted the c urric ulum to be rather narrow and unadventurous and that the s tandards would be lower than in the larger s c hools . In fac t, he found the oppos ite and bec am e very anim ated. 'T he s m all s c hools are quite ex c eptional,' he told m e on the way bac k to Fettles ham . 'I am very m uc h in favour of the s m all s c hools . T hey are like fam ilies .'
I thought im m ediately of Hawks rill. 'Y ou m ight s hare your obs ervations with Dr Gore at the rec eption this evening,' I s aid. 'I am s ure he would be very interes ted to hear your views on the quality of s m all rural s c hools .' T he S taff Developm ent Centre was at its burnis hed bes t the evening of the rec eption for the foreign ins pec tors . Connie had s urpas s ed hers elf and the whole plac e s parkled. For the gues ts ' arrival, s he had abandoned the pink overall and feather dus ter in favour of a bright floral print dres s and lem on-c oloured c ardigan, enhanc ed by a rope of large orange beads and an extrem ely c olourful brooc h in the s hape of a parrot. Her hair had been rec ently perm ed and c oloured bright c opper. 'I didn't rec ognis e you without your feather dus ter, Connie,' rem arked S idney as he walked with David and m e into the entranc e where s he was s tanding s entinel. 'T o what are you alluring?' as ked Connie. 'I was m erely obs erving how very nic e you look this evening,' burbled S idney. 'T hat's as m ay be. A nyway, there's that S em en wom an looking for you,' s he told him . 'I beg your pardon?' 'T he Frenc h ins pec tor, S em en.' 'Her nam e, Connie, is S im one,' S idney inform ed her. 'S em en, S im one, whatever. I don't know why thes e foreigners have s uc h funny nam es .' S he huffed and turned to m e. 'I've put the food in the lounge area as per ins truc ted but there's no frogs ' legs , s nails , s m elly Frenc h c hees es and the like and there's no fanc y bagatelles , jus t plain Yorks hire baps . It's good s im ple E nglis h food what I've done. A s I s ay, nothing fanc y.' 'S potted Dic k?' enquired David m is c hievous ly. 'W hat?' as ked Connie. 'Good plain E nglis h fare. S potted Dic k? J am roly-poly? Y orks hire pudding? T ripe and onions ? Fis h and c hips ?' 'It's a buffet,' Connie told him , pronounc ing it 'buff-it', 'not a five-c ours e m eal.' T hen, s c owling at David, s he s aid, 'Y ou're getting as bad as him .' 'Ignore them , Connie,' I s aid. 'It s ounds s plendid.' A t this point Dr Gore, ac c om panied by Mrs S avage, joined us . Mrs S avage had c ertainly gone to town with her outfit. S he wore a c los e-fitting m ulberry-c oloured wool s uit, pale lilac c hem is e and m atc hing s ilk s c arf and c ourt s hoes . T he heavy s ilver jewellery s he was wont to wear had been abandoned in favour of delic ate peridot earrings and m atc hing pendant. S he als o wore a s pec tac ular ring s et with the pale green s tones . S he was , as always , im pec c ably m ade up. 'Good evening, good evening, everyone,' s aid the CE O, s m iling and rubbing his hands together. Connie, who had treated everyone in the s am e blunt m anner, m oved forward to welc om e him . He was now on her territory and s he did the greetings here. 'Hello, B rian,' s he s aid. I s aw Mrs S avage winc e. No one in the offic e referred to the Chief E duc ation Offic er by his firs t nam e. It jus t was not done. It was always Dr Gore or 's ir'. However, Connie's fam iliarity never s eem ed to bother Dr Gore. He c ontinued s m iling and rubbing his hands . 'A nd a good evening to you, Connie,' he s aid pleas antly. 'I was very s orry to have heard about the death of your father.' 'Y es , well, he had a good life. B y the way, thank you for your letter of c onvales c enc e. It was m uc h apprec iated.' I c as t Mrs S avage a s ideways glanc e. S he had pulled a fam iliar dis approving fac e. 'A nd how are you, Connie?' as ked the CE O. 'No m ore thoughts of leaving us , I hope?' B efore s he c ould ans wer, he s aid, to no one in partic ular, 'Connie here us ed to c lean m y offic e down in the A nnexe, when I was an educ ation offic er. A lways left it s potles s , did Connie.' 'W ell, it's nic e to be apprec iated,' s he s aid, looking knowingly in S idney's direc tion. 'A nd we were an untidy lot, were we not, Connie?' c ontinued Dr Gore. 'Not as untidy as s om e I c ould m ention,' s he s aid, looking at S idney again. 'W ell, Connie, the Centre is looking s plendid as us ual,' s aid the CE O, 'and I m uc h apprec iate that you have been able to arrange the refres hm ents and have given up an evening to help out.' 'It was m y bingo tonight,' Connie told him . 'I am indeed m os t grateful.' 'A s I was s aying to Mr P hinn, B rian, there's nothing fanc y.' It was Mrs S avage's turn now to rec eive the knowing look. 'Nothing fanc y at all. I c an't be doing with fanc y things .' 'I am s ure that the repas t you have provided, Connie, will be firs t c las s . Now s hall we go in and have a pre-prandial drink with the others ?' 'Oh dear, I've none of that,' s aid Connie quic kly. 'J us t wine, orange juic e or tea. Nobody s aid anything to m e about prandials .' T he evening was a s uc c es s . Dr Gore's addres s to the foreign ins pec tors and the invited headteac hers went down well, Connie's plain E nglis h food was c ons um ed with gus to, a good quantity of wine was drunk and the atm os phere was m os t c onvivial. 'S plendid evening,' enthus ed Dr Gore as he m ade ready to depart. 'Many thanks , Gervas e, for all your hard work and for your s terling efforts , too, B renda. Y ou m ake a form idable team .' I kept a deliberately s traight fac e. Mrs S avage rais ed an eyebrow. 'Our vis itors have been m os t c om plim entary and will return to their res pec tive c ountries , I am s ure, s uitably im pres s ed.' A t this point, Connie m aterialis ed. S he had put on her pink overall when s he had s erved the food - and it c las hed horribly with her new c opper hair-do. 'Many thanks , Connie, for your help,' s aid Dr Gore. 'A s effic ient as ever.' A s Connie blus hed prettily and preened a little, I c ould s ee out of the c orner of m y eye that Mrs S avage was looking thunderous . 'S orry to butt in,' s aid Connie, 'but I was jus t c om ing to tell Mr P hinn that m y s teps what'd gone m is s ing las t autum n have s uddenly turned up. You were right, Mr P hinn, the vic ar had them . He kept them to put up the Chris tm as dec orations in the c hurc h, and s om eone els e tidied them away into the bac k of the ves try.' 'T hat's good news , Connie,' I s aid. 'B ut a bit late for that c reeper to be pruned now.' 'No, it's all right. T he c hap from the P arks Departm ent c am e ages ago with his own s et of s teps , and he c ut that c litoris right bac k.' 'W ell, the E IE I vis it s eem ed to go very well,' s aid S idney. It was S aturday m orning and we were s itting in the lounge at the S taff Developm ent Centre having jus t s aid our farewells to the three ins pec tors . 'S ignor Toria was delightful,' s aid David, who looked a whole lot happier than he had done for weeks . 'He's invited m e over to Italy, you know, to s ee the s c hools there. Florenc e. Firenz e!' he s aid expans ively, waving his arm s in the air. 'He s aid the s tandard of num erac y was higher in our c ounty s c hools than in Italy. I m us t s ay I felt quite vindic ated. Yes , he was abs olutely delightful and s poke perfec t E nglis h. A fter W els h, I think that Italian is the m os t m ellifluous of languages . T hey don't have a problem with s pelling in Italy bec aus e Italian, bas ed on Latin, of c ours e, is a very logic al and phonetic language. V ery m uc h like W els h, you know. W hy c an't E nglis h be like that, Gervas e?' 'Oh, let's not go down that road again, pleas e,' begged S idney. 'A c tually, he felt very m uc h at hom e, did Mario,' s aid David. 'I took him to W illingforth P rim ary and he thought he had arrived at an Italian s c hool. T here was a c hild s houting out at the gate: "M ama mia! M ama mia!" I had s om e diffic ulty in explaining to him that the boy was not, in fac t, s peaking Italian but trying to get his m other's attention on the other s ide of the road where s he had jus t arrived. "Mum , I'm 'ere! Mum , I'm 'ere! " W e did laugh,' c huc kled David. 'I am delighted that you are bac k to your c heerful old s elf, David,' rem arked S idney. 'Y ou have been as m is erable as a joc key with haem orrhoids , lately.' 'P leas e, pleas e don't m ention haem orrhoids ,' I s aid, thinking of m y s tay in hos pital. 'Y ou haven't got what m y dear old W els h grandm other c alled "problem s in your parts of dis honour", have you, Gervas e?' as ked David. 'No, I haven't,' I s aid quic kly. 'T erribly painful are haem orrhoids ,' s aid S idney. I c hanged the s ubjec t. 'A nd how was S im one?' I as ked him . 'S he s eem ed very am iable.' 'A m iable? A m iable?' s c offed S idney. 'Hardly the m os t appropriate adjec tive to des c ribe a wom an of s uc h outs tanding beauty and c om pos ure. S im one was exquis ite.' 'A nd how did s he c ope with the Y orks hire dialec t?' I as ked. 'I had to trans late a great deal of what the teac hers s aid to her, let alone what the c hildren s aid,' S idney told us , leaning bac k on his c hair. 'T here were a num ber of little gem s , like the c hild who inform ed her that the c rayon s he wanted for her drawing was not in the tin: "T intintin." A t one point s he was as ked by a little lad if we were together: 'Oo are tha wi', are tha wi' 'im ?' S he jus t s tood and s hrugged in that Gallic way they have. In another s c hool, the teac her was des c ribing the death of A dm iral Nels on, how he was s hot by a Frenc h s niper and lay dying in Captain Hardy's arm s . One c hild piped up with the ques tion: "A nd 'ow did 'ardy die?" S he hadn't a c hanc e, poor Madem ois elle de Marbot.' 'Never m ind how s he got on with the language,' s aid David. 'How on earth did s he put up with you?' 'A c tually,' s aid S idney, 'we got on great guns , though I have to adm it s he did have a few diffic ulties apprec iating m y s ens e of hum our.' 'Does anyone apprec iate your s ens e of hum our, S idney?' as ked David. 'W ell, I c ertainty hope that Gervas e does ,' he replied. 'W hat do you m ean?' I as ked. 'Let m e introduc e you to s om eone, m y dear friend and c olleague,' he s aid. T hen, in a s trong A m eric an drawl, he c ontinued. 'T his is B rews ter - J ohn K . B rews ter - and I'm with a delegation of Quakers from the S tates for the International Convention at York. I'd like to m ake you a propos ition about the m eeting hous e on your land.' 'S idney! ' I s houted, the truth dawning. 'Y ou're a mons ter!'
24 'A re you s ure you'll be all right?' I as ked. It was the firs t night of The S ound of M us ic . Chris tine was intending to c om e with m e but had been feeling rather tired and the thought of two and a half hours in the s am e pos ition on a s m all s eat in a s tuffy theatre, lis tening to nuns c lim bing m ountains , was not that appealing to her. S he had told m e, patting her very large s tom ac h, that s he had her very own m ountain, without c lim bing any others . 'I'll be fine. Really,' s he s aid. 'B ut I will be happier s taying at hom e.' 'I don't s uppos e anybody would notic e if I don't m ake an appearanc e,' I s aid. 'A fter all, I only have a c ouple of lines . I s uppos e Ray c ould fill in although he would rather s wim in the uniform and, as I s aid before, I c an't quite s ee him as an S S offic er. A re you s ure you don't want m e to s tay?' 'No! ' s he s aid firm ly. 'From what you've told m e of your produc er, he would be in a real s tate if a m em ber of the c as t failed to turn up. I'm going to have a hot bath and go to bed with a c up of c oc oa and a rom antic novel.' 'If you're s ure.' 'Do you want m e to throw s om ething at you?' s he s aid. 'Go! I'll be fine.' A s it turned out, how wrong s he was . T he evening of the firs t perform anc e of The S ound of M us ic would bec om e a part of P hinn folklore. Des pite the fac t that all the c as t had arrived on tim e, the orc hes tra had its full c om plem ent and the Civic T heatre was beginning to fill up, Ray was in a panic , buzzing around like a jam -c razed was p. T he m otif on his T -s hirt s eem ed partic ularly apt for his s tate of m ind: 'I us ed to have a handle on life - then it broke off.' T hat evening, he s eem ed to have a handle on very little, and he trans m itted his twitc hy nerves to s om e m em bers of the c as t. W hen he s aw m y S S uniform , with a c hes t full of m edals , hanging up in the dres s ing room , the s hiny blac k boots and the frighteningly large Luger pis tol in a leather hols ter, next to his s habby blac k s uit and c rum pled trilby hat, Mr Furnival felt quite aggrieved. 'I don't s ee why I c an't have a uniform ,' he told the produc er. 'He's got a uniform and he's got a lot s m aller part than I have.' He s ounded like a petulant c hild. 'T hat's bec aus e you're a Gauleiter and Gervas e is an S S offic er,' explained Ray. 'I told you that at the dres s rehears al.' 'I think I would look a lot m ore threatening and s inis ter if I was in a blac k uniform ,' pers is ted Mr Furnival. 'I think you look quite threatening and s inis ter enough in the blac k s uit and hat,' s aid Ray. 'T his is what I wear for funerals ,' his vexed c om panion told him . 'E nough s aid,' rem arked Ray. 'I thought I'd be in uniform ,' c om plained Mr Furnival. 'I wear this blac k s uit every day of m y working life. I really do think I des erve a c hange.' 'Y ou are not wearing a uniform ,' s aid Raym ond angrily, 'and that is that! ' 'W ell, what about the gun? Can I have the gun?' 'No, you c an't.' 'Can I at leas t have a T yrolean hat ins tead of the trilby?' 'Look, George! ' s napped Ray. 'T he direc tions s ay quite s pec ific ally that Herr Zeller wears a blac k s uit with Nazi em blem on his lapel and not a uniform and he c ertainly wouldn't be wearing a T yrolean hat. How threatening do you think he would look in a T yrolean bloody hat?' 'W here's m y Nazi em blem for m y lapel, then? I haven't even got a Nazi em blem for m y lapel,' m oaned Mr Furnival, in no way m ollified. He pointed to m y uniform . 'He's got m ore m edals on his c hes t than General Montgom ery.' 'W ell, im provis e,' s ighed Ray. 'Im provis e. I'm s ure in your line of work there's a lot of im provis ation.' 'A nd what's that s uppos ed to m ean?' blus tered Mr Furnival. 'Us e your Rotary Club pin,' Ray told him . Mr Furnival ballooned with anger. 'Us e m y Rotary Club pin! Us e m y Rotary Club pin! You m us t be m ad. I'll have you know the Rotarians would have been the firs t to have been rounded up in this c ountry if Hitler had won. W e s tand for Fellows hip, Friends hip and S ervic e A bove S elf, not world dom ination. I'm not going on s tage with m y Rotary Club pin dis played for all to s ee. T here's the Dis tric t Governor in the audienc e. He'd have a s eizure.' 'S tic k a s was tika over the top, then,' s aid Ray. B efore Mr Furnival c ould res pond, a girl playing the part of a young nun arrived at the door of the dres s ing room with her c os tum e over her arm . S he was obvious ly very dis tres s ed. 'Com e along, B ernic e,' c hivvied Ray, 'you s hould be in c os tum e by now.' 'Mi m am s ays I c an't be in it,' replied the girl s adly. 'Can't be in it! ' exc laim ed Ray. 'W hat does s he m ean, you c an't be in it?' 'S he s ays I c an't be in it,' repeated the girl. 'S he has left it a trifle late, has n't s he,' s aid Ray. 'It's opening night.' 'It's when I told her what I was playing,' s aid the girl, c learly very em barras s ed. 'S he s aid s he didn't know there was any of them in The S ound of M us ic and s he does n't want m e playing that s ort of wom an.' 'W hat s ort of wom an?' enquired the produc er, m ys tified. 'T hat s ort,' replied the girl, looking dec idedly em barras s ed. 'B ernic e, darling,' s aid Raym ond, trying to keep c alm . 'I am not a m ind-reader. I c annot read your thoughts . W hat does s he m ean, "that s ort of wom an"? S he does n't want you to play a nun? Has s he s om e religious objec tion?' 'Y ou s aid I was to be' - at this point the girl whis pered theatric ally - 'a pros titute.' 'A pros titute! ' gas ped Ray. 'Has the world gone c om pletely m ad? W here in The S ound of M us ic is there a pros titute?' 'Y ou s aid I was one.' 'Read m y lips , B ernic e. I s aid you were a pos tulant, a c andidate for the religious life, a trainee nun, not a pros titute.' 'S o I'm not a pros titute?' as ked the girl. 'No, B ernic e, you are not a pros titute,' s aid Ray. 'Y ou are a pos tulant. Now, you ring your dear m other and tell her the good news and then get c hanged.' Ray flopped onto the c hair bes ide m e. 'W hatever next?' he as ked. He did not have long to wait. T he rather s potty young m an playing Rolf entered the fray. He waddled into the c hanging room s lowly and c arefully as if he had a ferret down his trous ers . 'Ray, do I hav e to wear thes e leather s horts ?' he as ked, s uc king in his breath as if he had ac ute indiges tion. 'T hey're c utting off m y c irc ulation.' T he produc er looked heavenwards and s ighed heavily. 'Y es , you have to wear the s horts , Fras er.' 'T hey are inc redibly tight. I c an hardly m ove.' 'T hey're lederhos en. T hey're s uppos ed to be tight.' 'It's like having two tourniquets around m y legs . I have diffic ulty walking in thes e s horts , never m ind danc ing. T hey really are very c ons tric ting and as for going to the toilet -' 'T hey'll give,' replied Ray. 'T hey're m ade of leather. J us t m ove about a bit and -' He s topped m id-s entenc e as Mrs Cleaver-Canning s ailed pas t the door in her c apac ious blac k Mother A bbes s c os tum e, hung with a huge s ilver c ros s . S he was like a galleon in full s ail with the wind behind it. Ray s m ac ked his hand to his forehead dram atic ally and looked as if he was about to s woon. 'Margot, darling, c ould I have a s m all word?' he s houted after her. Mrs Cleaver-Canning retrac ed her s teps and m ade a s tately entranc e. 'Y es , Raym ond?' s he as ked. 'W hat is it?' 'Oh m y! ' Ray exc laim ed. 'W hatever have you got on your fac e?' 'My m ake-up,' s he replied s im ply. 'W hat do you im agine I've got on m y fac e?' 'Don't you feel you've gone jus t a teens y-weens y bit overboard with the greas epaint?' 'Not at all.' 'Y ou c annot go on s tage with that fac e, Margot,' m oaned Ray. 'Y ou look like a Liverpool tart.' 'I beg your pardon, Raym ond! ' s he replied, giving him a lem on-s uc king grim ac e. 'Don't you feel, jus t a s m idgen, that s c arlet c upid-bow lips , bright blue eye-s hadow and c rim s on rouge are a touc h out of c harac ter for a nun? Y ou're s uppos ed to be the Mother A bbes s , not a wom an of ill-repute looking for s ailors on the doc ks ide.' 'I deeply res ent that analogy, Raym ond,' res ponded Mrs Cleaver-Canning. 'T his , for your inform ation, is m y norm al m ake-up, s lightly exaggerated for dram atic purpos es , and I have not the s lightes t intention of rem oving it. A nd another thing, there is no pos s ibility, no pos s ibility at all, of W inc o trim m ing his m ous tac he. It m ay look s om ewhat out of c harac ter, I have to adm it, for a Germ an adm iral, but he has had that handlebar s inc e he was a pilot offic er in the RA F and I don't -' 'Of c ours e, you don't! W hy s hould you?' s napped Ray petulantly. 'W hy s hould anyone lis ten to m e? I'm jus t the produc er after all. My opinion c ounts for nothing.' He then pus hed pas t her and s trutted off, c om plaining to him s elf. 'I've jus t about had enough.' 'He'll be fine, onc e the c urtain ris es ,' Mrs Cleaver-Canning told m e c alm ly, adjus ting her wim ple in the m irror. 'One has to m ake allowanc es . Opening night nerves , that's all. He was the s am e las t year when we did Carous el. Nearly fainted with the s tres s . It's always the c as e with thes e c reative people. T hey're terribly tem peram ental. Charles , in m y flower-arranging c lub, is jus t the s am e. If his arrangem ent is not exac tly right he nearly breaks a blood ves s el. Now, c om e along, Mr P hinn. Y ou m us t s ee W inc o in his Germ an adm iral's uniform . He looks quite das hing.' A lthough I s ay it m ys elf, the Fettles ham Literary P layers put on the perform anc e of their lives . Of c ours e, it was Mrs Cleaver-Canning who s tole the s how, filling the hall with her deep, res onant c ontralto voic e. Following the firs t rendering of 'Clim b E very Mountain', the wholly enthus ias tic audienc e dem anded a repris e to whic h s he grac ious ly ac c eded. E veryone joined the von T rapps with 'E delweis s ', they applauded loudly when the c hildren danc ed, c heered when the Nazis were foiled and, m uc h to Mr Furnival's delight, loudly his s ed the Gauleiter eac h tim e he m ade an appearanc e. W hen the c urtain fell Ray danc ed onto the s tage, ec s tatic . 'W onderful! Marvellous ! Magnific ent! S uperlative! Margot, you were a tour de forc e!' he c ried, em brac ing Mrs Cleaver-Canning - not that his little arm s reac hed round m ore than half her c ons iderable s ize. 'Oh m y dears , I think I'm going to c ry. You were all s o s o good.' A ll the players were m illing around on the s tage, re-living the perform anc e, exc hanging rec ollec tions , laughing, when the theatre m anager, a tall m an with a thic k blac k m ous tac he and dres s ed in a dinner jac ket and bow tie, appeared from the wings , like the pantom im e villain. 'Is there a Mr P in here?' he c alled loudly. 'W ho?' as ked Ray. 'A Mr P in? I was told there was a Mr P in in the c as t.' 'T here's a Mr P hinn.' I s aid. 'T hat's m e.' 'Is your wife having a baby?' 'Y es , s he is ,' I replied, m y heart beginning to pound. 'T here's been a phone c all.' 'A phone c all?' I repeated faintly. 'From your wife.' 'Oh Lord, what did s he s ay?' I as ked, m y s tom ac h c hurning. 'S he's gone to the hos pital.' 'W hat? W hen?' My s tom ac h was doing kangaroo jum ps . E veryone on the s tage was hus hed, lis tening to the little dram a. 'S he told m e to tell you not to worry. S he's all right but her waters have broken and would you get there as s oon as you c an.' 'W hen was this phone c all?' as ked Mrs Cleaver-Canning angrily, pus hing her way through people to where I was s tanding with the theatre m anager. 'A bout half an hour ago,' he told her c as ually. 'W hat! ' s he his s ed. T he m an s eem ed to quail in front of her vas t pres enc e. 'I... I... would have s aid s ... s ... s om ething but I didn't want to interfere with the p... p... perform anc e.' 'Y ou s illy m an! ' s napped Mrs Cleaver-Canning. 'Did it not enter your tiny little head that it was im portant? His wife's having a baby! ' 'I m us t go at onc e,' I s aid, feeling all hot and flus tered. Mrs Cleaver-Canning, res ting a c hubby hand on m y arm , s aid c alm ly, 'Now, c alma, Gervas e, deep breaths , deep breaths . W om en have had babies before. Your wife will be fine. Now, you are in no fit s tate to drive. W inc o will take you to the hos pital in the Merc edes . W inc o! ' s he bellowed. Her hus band appeared, as if on c ue, from behind a piec e of m ountain s c enery. 'Here,' he s houted bac k. 'B ring the c ar around. W e are taking Mr P hinn to the hos pital.' 'Oh dear, is he unwell?' Mrs Cleaver-Canning s ighed. 'J us t fetc h the c ar, W inc o.' 'Righto,' he replied. 'I had better c hange out of this c os tum e. I c an't very well -' 'T here's not enough tim e,' his wife interrupted. 'W e leave at onc e. Com e along W inc o. Get a m ove on.' W e had hardly c rawled out of the theatre c ar park, held up by people going hom e after the perform anc e, when Mrs Cleaver-Canning prodded W inc o in the bac k. 'P ut your foot down, for goodnes s s ake, W inc o,' s he c om m anded. 'Chop c hop! ' 'B ut you're always telling m e to s low down,' he growled. 'W ell, this tim e I'm telling you to get a m ove on and don't s pare the hors es .' 'Righto,' he replied, s lam m ing his foot down on the ac c elerator and s c reec hing away in a c loud of exhaus t s m oke. A nyone s harp-eyed enough to have c aught s ight of the oc c upants of the Merc edes that evening as it s ped through the c entre of Fettles ham in the direc tion of Fettles ham Royal Infirm ary would have thought they were halluc inating: an ageing Germ an adm iral with a handlebar m ous tac he was at the wheel of the c ar, a heavily bem edalled S S offic er was in the pas s enger s eat, and an overweight nun with c rim s on lips and s ky-blue eye-s hadow was s itting in the bac k ges tic ulating. W e hadn't long been on Infirm ary Road before we heard the s iren and s aw the flas hing blue light. 'P ull over, W inc o,' ordered Mrs Cleaver-Canning. 'A nd let m e do the talking.' 'Righto.' Mom ents later, a polic e patrolm an was at the driver's window. 'Good evening, offic er,' s aid Mrs Cleaver-Canning from the bac k s eat. 'A h! Good evening, S is ter,' replied the polic em an, trans ferring his offic ial gaze into the bac k of the c ar. If he was s urpris ed to s ee s uc h an extraordinary trio in the c ar, he c ertainly didn't s how it and m aintained a perfec tly s traight fac e. He m us t, I s uppos ed, have c om e ac ros s s om e pretty bizarre s ituations in his tim e. 'Mother A bbes s , in fac t. B ut we are in rather a hurry,' Mrs Cleaver-Canning explained. 'Y ou are indeed, Mother,' s aid the polic em an, with jus t a trac e of a s m irk on his fac e. He looked at W inc o. 'W orried that you m ight m is s the boat, A dm iral?' 'Offic er,' s aid Mrs Cleaver-Canning, a wide s m ile on her c rim s on lips , 'this gentlem an in the front is about to bec om e a father.' 'Congratulations ,' s aid the polic em an, taking a notebook from his poc ket. 'Have you c hildren, offic er?' s he as ked. 'I'm s orry, Mother?' E ac h tim e he us ed the word, he ac c entuated it a trifle. 'I s aid, have you any c hildren?' 'I have, yes . I have a little girl.' 'A nd were you pres ent when s he was born?' 'I was indeed, Mother, and a very happy oc c as ion it was , too,' he replied good-hum ouredly. 'W ell, the wife of the gentlem an in the blac k uniform is about to give birth, im m inently, in fac t, and he would very m uc h like to be there for the happy event.' I was getting agitated by the tim e that was being was ted. Y et I dared not interrupt for fear of turning the polic em an agains t us . 'I s ee,' s aid the polic em an. He turned his attention to W inc o. 'A re you aware, s ir, that the s peed lim it in this area of the town -' 'A nd that is why we were travelling at s peed,' c ontinued Mrs Cleaver-Canning, 'in order for him to get to the hos pital on tim e. His wife has already gone into labour. T he birth m ight be m om ents away. W e were aware of the s peed lim it but, as a father yours elf, I am s ure you c an unders tand, offic er, the urgenc y of getting to the hos pital.' 'I apprec iate that, Mother, but -' he began. 'A c tually, I'm not really a nun.'
'Y ou don't s ay,' s aid the polic em an. 'W e are m em bers of the c as t of The S ound of M us ic whic h is being perform ed at the Civic T heatre all this week. W e are in c os tum e bec aus e we hadn't the tim e to c hange when the c all c am e from the hos pital.' T he polic em an's fac e lit up. 'T hat's m y favourite m us ic al, The S ound of M us ic ,' he s aid. 'I was a von T rapp when we did it at s c hool.' 'Really,' s aid W inc o s uddenly. 'W ho did you play?' 'Never m ind that now, W inc o,' his wife s aid. 'W ith this offic er's perm is s ion, we really do need to be on our way to the hos pital without further delay.' 'If you would like to follow m e, s ir,' s aid the polic em an, 'I'll give you an es c ort.' 'T hank you s o m uc h,' s aid Mrs Cleaver-Canning. 'I am a pers onal friend of the Chief Cons table, you know, and I s hall m os t c ertainly m ention to him how very helpful you have been.' T he m aternity wing of Fettles ham Royal Infirm ary appeared partic ularly bus y when we arrived. T here were m en with flowers , wom en with fruit, over-exc ited c hildren who s hould have been in bed ages before, porters wheeling trolleys , doc tors with c lipboards , nurs es s c urrying hither and thither. It s eem ed that the whole c ounty was giving birth that night. Mrs Cleaver-Canning had s wept through the doors and into the m elee in a queenly m anner and headed for the rec eption des k, with m e following c los ely behind, W inc o bringing up the rear. It was c lear s he was in c harge. A ll c onvers ation c eas ed when the m ajes tic figure in a nun's habit s trode to the front of a s m all queue and announc ed, 'If you would be s o kind, this is an em ergenc y.' 'Y ou go ahead, S is ter,' s aid the elderly wom an at the front of the queue. 'I think you do a m arvellous job. I was taught by nuns .' 'T hank you s o m uc h,' s aid Mrs Cleaver-Canning. T hen, fac ing the s tartled m an behind the rec eption des k s he as ked, 'Could you tell us where Mrs P hinn is , pleas e? S he was brought in earlier this evening in labour.' T he rec eptionis t ran his finger down a lis t of nam es . 'No T hinnis here,' he s aid s haking his head. 'No, no! P hinn. T he nam e is P hinn! ' 'T here's no P hinn here either.' 'T here's no "f" in P hinn,' Mrs Cleaver-Canning told him . 'I beg your pardon, S is ter! ' he s pluttered. 'T here's really no need for that s ort of language.' 'W hen I s aid there is no letter "f" in P hinn,' s he told him , 'I m eant the nam e begins with a "ph" as in P hilip. P -H-I-N-N.' 'Oh, oh, I s ee,' he s aid, looking greatly relieved. 'P hinn with a "ph". Y es , here it is . Firs t nam e Chris tine. Chris tine P atric ia P hinn. S he c am e in earlier this evening. S he's in W ard 6.' 'Has the baby arrived yet?' I as ked, m y heart in m y m outh. T he m an s tared for a m om ent at the uniform . 'W hat?' he as ked. 'T he baby, has the baby arrived yet?' 'T his is the worried father,' Mrs Cleaver-Canning inform ed him . 'I c an't s ay,' the rec eptionis t told m e, s till eyeing the uniform . 'Y ou'd better go s traight down there now. W ard 6.' 'Y ou've been m arvellous ,' I told Mrs Cleaver-Canning and W inc o. 'T hank you s o m uc h. Y ou really don't need to wait.' 'Nons ens e! ' s aid Mrs Cleaver-Canning. 'W e would like to have a progres s report firs t. Y ou hurry off to s ee your wife. W inc o and I will wait.' 'Little S is ters of the P oor,' I heard the elderly wom an inform Mrs Cleaver-Canning as I headed in the direc tion of the wards . 'I was taught by Little S is ters of the P oor.' I jus t had tim e to hear the reply. 'My dear, I am not a nun but if I were to c ontem plate entering the religious life it would not be as a Little S is ter of the P oor. I am neither little nor, thank God, poor.' I was jus t in tim e. Chris tine was being wheeled to the delivery room when I rus hed down the c orridor in s earc h of W ard 6. I was in s uc h a panic , hot, flus tered, out of breath, that I ran s traight pas t her and only when I heard her voic e did I s top and retrac e m y s teps . 'I'm here! ' s he c ried. 'T hank God! ' I s aid, bending down and giving her a hug. 'A re you all right, darling?' 'S he's fine,' s aid the nurs e who was by the s ide of the trolley. 'T his is the hus band, I pres um e?' 'T his is the hus band,' Chris tine s aid. My panic fled as I looked down at the s m iling m other-to-be. S he looked c alm and s erene. Her blue eyes s hone, her blonde hair fell about her s houlders like a golden c urtain. S he looked ros y-c heeked and s o beautiful. I s queezed her hand. 'A re you ready?' I as ked. 'A s ready as I'll ever be,' s he replied s oftly. 'T ypic al m an,' s aid the nurs e. 'Leaves it to the las t m inute, when it's all over, bar the s houting. If only m en had to have babies . I s uppos e you want to be in at the birth.' 'Of c ours e,' I s aid. 'W ell, if you faint, nobody will bother with you. I've got a far m ore im portant pers on to deal with.' 'I won't faint,' I s aid c onfidently. 'A ye, bigger m en than you have s aid that.' S he c aught s ight of the uniform . 'Didn't anyone tell you the war is over? W hat on earth are you wearing? No, don't tell m e. I probably wouldn't believe you, anyway. J us t c over yours elf up or you'll frighten the nurs es . You need to get a gown and m as k before you c om e into the delivery room , and get thos e boots c overed up. I'll s how you where they are in a m om ent. A nd keep out of m y way.' 'Y es nurs e,' I s aid m eekly. A t ten-thirty, Ric hard Les lie P hinn was born, weighing in at 7 lbs 1 oz. A s I c radled him in the c rook of m y arm and s troked his little head, m y eyes began to fill. He was s o tiny and delic ate, red as a radis h, with a s m all round fac e, s oft wis ps of golden hair and great blue eyes . He was his m other's s on all right. 'Ric hard Les lie?' s aid the nurs e, giving m e a wry s m ile. 'Is that what you're c alling him ?' 'T hat's right,' I told her. 'Ric hard after m y father and Les lie after m y wife's .' 'Oh,' s he s aid, 'I thought you would c all him A dolf.' B ec aus e little Ric hard Les lie had arrived prem aturely, Chris tine s tayed in hos pital for the next few days . I vis ited her and m y s on every day that week, us ually in the early evening before I went down to the theatre for the evening perform anc e. Harold had im m ediately told m e to take s om e tim e off, but I was happy to work during the day while Chris tine was s till in the Royal Infirm ary, planning to be at hom e the week they returned. On the Friday, we s at together with our c hild between us , m arvelling at his tiny fingers and toes , his head of s oft s ilky blond hair and his great blue eyes . A lthough a little tired, Chris tine looked radiant. W e were both s o happy. 'Motherhood really s uits you,' I told her. 'I'd like another five, pleas e.' 'W e'll talk about that when we get hom e,' s he s aid. T he baby s tirred. 'He's a little tinker, this one,' s he s aid, s troking the baby's c heek. 'He c ries for his m ilk and then takes ages getting s tarted. T he nurs es are being very kind, and helping as m uc h as pos s ible, but it is hard work.' 'I'll have a s trong word with him ,' I s aid. 'W e s hould s tart as we m ean to go on.' I s troked the baby's head gently. 'A re you lis tening to m e, young m an,' I s aid. 'Y ou m us t drink plenty of m ilk. T hen you'll grow to be big and s trong.' T he baby s c rewed up his little fac e and gave a great burp. 'T here's your ans wer,' laughed Chris tine. 'I've already bought him a book,' I told her. 'A book! ' s he exc laim ed. 'W ell, we'll have to get him reading s oon. T hen he'll need s om e building bloc ks and a c olouring book and a paintbox and a s and pit in the garden and -' 'S o s peaks the s c hool ins pec tor,' s aid Chris tine, s m iling. 'I want our s on to have the very bes t s tart in life,' I s aid. 'T he very bes t.' A s I looked down at our baby, s nuggling up to his m other, I thought of little Matty and the other s ad, fragile c hildren whom I had c om e ac ros s on m y travels as a s c hool ins pec tor; c hildren who were neglec ted, dis paraged, dam aged and s om etim es abus ed, c hildren who would never know the warm th, enc ouragem ent and love of a good hom e. 'P enny for them ,' s aid Chris tine. 'I'm jus t thinking how very luc ky I am ,' I s aid, and kis s ed her m os t tenderly. 'I s ee you've been dem obbed,' s aid the ward s is ter, c om ing in at that m om ent. 'I'm s orry?' 'Out of uniform .' 'Oh, that. I'm in a play. I'm not really an S S offic er, you know.' 'Y ou do s urpris e m e,' s he s aid, exam ining the c hart at the foot of the bed. 'I'm a s c hool ins pec tor ac tually.' 'Oh, is there a differenc e?' s he s aid. 'I s han't res pond to that,' I told her. 'T he doc tor's been and everything is fine,' s aid the s is ter. 'Mother and baby are doing very well, s o you c an take them hom e when you're ready. Now, do try and pers evere with the breas t-feeding, Mrs P hinn. T ric ky Dic kie will s oon get a tas te for it and then there'll be no s topping him .' A s Chris tine was pac king the few things s he had in her beds ide c abinet, I pic ked the c lipboard off the bottom of the bed. T he s heet of paper attac hed to it read 'Fettles ham Royal Infirm ary/Maternity Unit'. B elow was 'B A B Y : Ric hard Les lie P hinn. W E IGHT: 7lbs 10z.' T hen, at the bottom was s pac e for 'DOCT OR'S COMME NT '. I was rem oving the s heet of paper when the ward s is ter c am e in and c aught m e red-handed. 'W hat are you up to?' s he as ked. 'May I have this , pleas e?' 'No, you m ay not. It's hos pital property.' 'Oh pleas e,' I begged. 'It's m ore than m y job's worth.' 'P leas e.' 'W hy do you want it, anyway?' 'I want to keep it until m y s on is twenty-one,' I told her s erious ly, 'and on that birthday I want to pres ent it to him in a gilt fram e, s aying: "W hen I am dead and gone, Ric hard, perhaps you m ight s om etim es look upon that s c rap of paper in the golden fram e and rem em ber this very s pec ial day, your c om ing of age, and I hope you m ight rem em ber a father and a m other who were s o very proud of you and loved you m ore than any other parents loved a s on. You s ee, it's the firs t thing anybody wrote about you." I s hall tell him , "It is the doc tor's c om m ent written during your firs t week of life." You s ee, s is ter, that is why I want to keep this s heet of paper.' 'Oh,' s aid the nurs e, who had lis tened open-m outhed to m y c om m entary. 'How lovely. Y ou're m aking m e c ry. A nd what does the doc tor s ay?' S m iling, I pas s ed over the piec e of paper s o s he c ould read what the doc tor had written: 'P oor s uc ker.'
A P arent's P ray er A lways believe in yours elf. P rom is e always to be c om pas s ionate. A pprec iate that you m ake m is takes . Rec ognis e that I do too. E ntrus t m e with your worries . Never doubt that I will s upport you when you need m e. T alk to m e about the things you find diffic ult. S hare your dream s . P leas e unders tand that I c an have m oods jus t like you. Rec eive a little advic e now and again. A c c ept that I s om etim es get things wrong. Y ou need to help m e to get things right. E njoy your life. Realis e that I love you without res ervation.