Christmas Journey
Christmas Journey
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Copyright Oggbashan December 2011
The author asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.
This is a work of fiction. The events described here are imaginary; the settings and characters are fictitious and are not intended to represent specific places or living persons.
It was the day before Christmas Eve in the mid 1960s. I was facing a boring Christmas sitting in my office in Devonport Dockyard waiting for something that probably wouldnât happen. I was the most junior civil servant who could be Duty Officer over the Christmas period. If something actually did happen the senior staff would be at the end of a telephone line and would appear to claim any credit while I did the work. That is the way organisations work.
I was unmarried. It was only fair that the married officers should be on leave with their families over Christmas and the single ones should be on duty. I was the only single officerâŚ
I was broke. I had spent all my spare money on presents for my family. The postage had been the hardest part. I didnât mind spending money on presents for my parents and sisters but getting the presents there had cost nearly as much as the presents. The overtime I would get for working over Christmas would revive my finances. Until then I might be able to afford a pint or two of beer on the evening of Boxing Day. That would be my celebration.
I was clearing my desk, locking the important files away when my immediate superior rushed in.
âGeoff! Youâre still here. Good.â
Of course I was still there. My period of normal duty didnât end for at least another thirty seconds.
âIâve just had a phone call from my wife. Sheâs stuck in Lincolnshire. The carâs broken down and she wonât be able to get it fixed until after Boxing Day. SoâŚâ
So? I thought. Surely he didnât mean?
âSo you donât need to be here. I can be Duty Officer and you can go home to your parents. Isnât that great?â
âButâŚâ
âNo buts. Go!â
âI need a travel warrant, Roger. Iâm broke.â
âYouâre entitled to three a year. Have you got one left?â
âYes, butâŚâ
âPass the book over. Iâll do it now.â
He did. He made out the warrant for travel from Plymouth Station via London to my home station and return. He signed it with a flourish and gave it to me.
âThank you, Roger,â I said.
âYou donât look as pleased as I thought you would be, Geoff. Whatâs wrong?â
âI said Iâm broke. I meant it.â
I emptied my pocket on to the desk. Two half-crowns and a few other smaller coins.
âThatâs it until pay day on the 31st. Iâll be fed at my lodgings and thatâs paid by allotment. OtherwiseâŚâ
âI see. You canât go home like that.â
He looked in his wallet.
âIâm going to the bank tomorrow. Have this.â
He gave me three one pound notes and a ten shilling note.
âItâs a Christmas gift. Not a loan.â
He knew I couldnât afford to repay him.
âThank you, Roger. That will be a great help. Can I ask why?â
âIâm celebrating. My wife was going to bring her mother for Christmas and we donât get on. Mother-in-law would complain the whole time that my wife wasnât doing Christmas properly. Now my mother-in-law canât come. When my wife and c***dren do get back we can celebrate quietly and enjoy ourselves â if Iâve got the time off. By working through Christmas I can have leave around the New Year. Iâll have a wonderful time and I was facing a dreadful ordeal. So â Go!â
âThank you, Roger. Enjoy your break, when you get it.â
I rushed off to my lodgings, packed a bag with the absolute minimum and rang my mother. She was delighted that I was coming and added the news that made my day even better. Cousin Clare would be staying. I liked Cousin Clare. Sheâs not a real cousin. Her mother was my motherâs best friend and chief bridesmaid but the families had lived close to each other all my life. I had called Clareâs mother âauntâ so Clare became âCousin Clareâ. The idea of Christmas and Boxing Day with Clare seemed like heaven.
Even my landlady was pleased. She would have made Christmas Dinner for me with her family but I would have been an embarrassment. Now she could have her family to herself. She kissed me and pushed something into my pocket âFor Christmasâ. I had left a present for her under her Christmas tree. I left happily. I walked through the well lit streets ignoring the light drizzle.
My happiness lasted until I got to Plymouthâs North Road Station. There was a crowd of unhappy people milling around. A notice stated that all trains were cancelled until further notice because of a signal failure near Newton Abbot. I asked a harassed porter when trains would be running.
âI donât reckon they will be this side of Christmas,â he replied mournfully. âThe signal failure was caused by a freight train derailment that has ripped up half the signalling equipment around Newton. If you can get to Exeter, trains are running beyond there, but the last train northabout Dartmoor has gone. They started engineering works on that line this morning before the accident.â
âItâs no use trying the bus station,â one woman added. âThey are fully booked and there are crowds waiting for a cancellation.â
I decided to aim for the A38 and perhaps hitch a lift. I turned and started walking.
âWhere are you going, mate?â
It was a middle-aged man dressed in overalls.
âI thought Iâd try hitching on the A38.â
âThat might work. Hang on a mo. One of my mates lives out by Plympton. He might take us there. Weâre on a building site just round the corner. Itâll only hold you up a couple of minutes and itâs worth a try.â
âWhere have you got to get to?â
âOnly to Ivybridge. If he can take me to Plympton Iâm half way home.â
âOK. Thanks.â
âSave your thanks until we see if heâs still there.â
He was. He was standing by his ancient upright Ford Anglia.
âHi Bert. Iâm stuck. The car wonât start andâŚâ
He looked at the steep slope leading out of the building site. Even with three of us we couldnât attempt pushing the car up that hill.
âWhy not try again, Jack?â Bert suggested.
It didnât start. The starter motor turned sluggishly before stopping with a dull clunk.
âHave you got the starting handle?â I asked.
âYes, Geoff. Itâs under the bonnet.â
âOK. Turn the ignition off and back on when I lift my hand. OK?â
Jack nodded. I unclipped and lifted the side of the carâs bonnet. I left the side up as I extracted the starting handle and fitted it at the front of the engine. I raised my hand. Keeping my thumb well out of the way in case of a backfire I swung the handle. The Anglia spluttered into life. I withdrew the starting handle, clipped it back in its holder across the engine compartment, and closed the side of the bonnet. I climbed into the car.
âLet it run for a couple of minutes before pulling away,â I suggested, âand use sidelights until we are beyond the street lights. The batteryâs cold and nearly flat.â
Jack nodded again. He watched the ammeter closely. It showed a bare charge.
âHave you got a battery charger?â
âYes, Geoff.â
âThen charge the battery over Christmas. Youâve probably done too much driving in the dark. My father used to have a Ford like this. He charged the battery every Saturday night during the winter months.â
âSounds like a good idea. Itâs been getting more difficult to start every day for the past month.â
We sat for a couple of minutes before he engaged gear and we chugged slowly out of Plymouth. There were long queues at every bus stop. On sidelights the ammeter was just nudging the positive. Beyond the streetlights the carâs headlights barely pierced the darkness and the ammeter showed a significant discharge. The windscreen wipers struggled to keep the water off the screen. On every hill the Anglia slowed down and stopped completely until the accelerator was blipped. The wipers responded for a few seconds before stopping again.
After about five miles the ammeter crawled towards neutral even with the headlights on.
Despite the conditions Jack decided to press on to Ivybridge where he delivered us to Bertâs family house a few yards off the main road. His Ford Anglia turned back towards Plympton.
âHang on a sec, Geoff, before setting off.â
I stood outside his house for a couple of minutes before he returned with a paper bag.
âThis is from me and my missus as thanks for getting my mateâs car going and me home. Happy Christmas and best of luck.â
I walked back to the main road. I darenât go beyond the street lights because no one would see me. I stood there in the increasing rain as the few cars sped past me. I was still there half an hour later when an ancient Austin wheezed to a stop beside me. The passenger door opened.
âGoing far?â The driver asked.
âExeter if possible, please?â I replied.
âNot going that far but I can take some of the way. Climb in.â
I wouldnât have accepted but for the half hour I had already waited had been depressing. The car sounded as if it was on its last legs.
I looked at the driver in the last of the street lights as we left Ivybridge.
âWhere are you going?â I asked.
âOut on to the moor. I farm there. Missus wanted some last things from the shops and my son had taken the decent car. This old relic should have been on the scrap heap. My new car should be delivered on New Yearâs Day. Then this one will be history.â
âIt seems to run OK,â I lied.
âSeems! It doesnât. It overheats when the sun comes out, leaks, as you may have noticed, when it rains, and lies down and dies when itâs important. The dealer wouldnât take it as a trade-in. Tainât worth more than half-a-crown.â
âIâd give half-a-crownâŚâ
âYou would? Yeâre daft!â
âIâm not. I need to get home for Christmas and there are no trains this side of Exeter. If I can get thereâŚâ
âAnd then what? Youâd abandon the car and Iâd get the blame.â
âNo. Iâd park it somewhere safe and collect it next week.â
âIf you would, itâs yours, for half a crown, when I get home. Youâll have to find your way back off the moors, though. Could you do that?â
âOf course,â I said confidently.
My confidence waned as he twisted and turned further and further down dark narrow lanes.
âYou still sure you can get back?â He laughed.
âNo.â
âNever mind. Once we get to the farm thereâs a better road leading back towards Exeter. Thatâs easy to follow.â
We turned into the farm approach. I leapt out to open the gate. He swung away from the farmyard and swept under a portico of a considerable mansion.
âHome,â He announced. âA bit pretentious but comfortable. Come in and dry off and Iâll find the carâs paperwork.â
His wife greeted him with a kiss. She looked at me with a smile.
âAnother stray youâve found?â She asked her husband.
âThis young man is trying to get to Exeter and then home to London,â He replied. âIâve agreed to sell him the old car for half-a-crown.â
âYou cheated him. It isnât worth more than sixpence. Never mind. Iâll make a pot of tea while you sort yourselves out.â
I helped unload the car. The back seat was so full that âsome last thingsâ must have emptied half a shop. I was puffing hard by the time the last of the goods were stacked in the hall.
âThe car should run better without all that, Geoff,â he announced. âIâm obliged to you, young man, for carrying. Iâll agree with me wife. Sixpence and the carâs yours.â
I put my hand into my coat pocket. The envelope my landlady had given me fell on to the floor. I picked it up and scrabbled a threepenny bit and three pennies from my change.
âDone.â I said.
âOK.â
I opened the envelope while the farmer was getting the paperwork. Inside were a pound and a ten shilling note. I now had a whole five pounds.
In the kitchen his wife produced tea, scones, butter, jam and clotted cream while we filled out the paperwork to transfer the car. The scones were delicious. My enjoyment was obvious and she pressed more on me.
I looked at the clock. It was half past ten. Even if I left now I might not reach Exeter in time for the last train to London. I said so.
âYou wonât need a train,â his wife said. âThat car may be old but itâll get you all the way there and back again, slowly mind, but steadily.â
âBut itâll need petrol and there arenât any petrol stations open at night.â
âThereâs an all-night one near Honiton,â he said, âbut youâll need a fill before then. Got another sixpence?â
I looked in my pocket. There was a sixpence among the pennies and halfpennies. I held it out. He took it.
âIâll fill the petrol tank and check the oil. Iâll put some more petrol in the can in the boot just in case you run out. You shouldnât if you drive carefully. A tankful should get you all the way home.â
âBut thatâs worth more than sixpenceâŚâ I protested.
âMaybe it is, but itâs nearly Christmas and you should be with your family, Geoff.â
âI donât know how to thank you,â I said.
âThen donât. Just repay me by being kind, when you can, to someone else who needs help.â
âI will. Thank you.â
He went off to fill the car. His wife found me some older maps that showed the route off Dartmoor and a 1950s road atlas.
âYouâll need a torch to see that. Thereâs an old one the k**s used to play with.â
She went out of the kitchen. I sipped my third cup of tea and cleared the few scone crumbs from my plate. She returned with an ex-army torch.
âThe batteries are OK. It should do. Now. The toilet is out there. You go and freshen yourself up and weâll soon have you on your way.â
When I returned she had a cardboard box on the kitchen table.
âIâve put a few things in to keep you going if the car breaks down. It wonât but just in caseâŚâ
âThank you.â
âJust get home safely to your parents, please Geoff.â
She kissed me.
They stood under the portico as I drove away. Without the heavy load in the back seat the car seemed much younger. Unlike the old Anglia the windscreen wipers worked constantly and the headlights made a reasonable try at lighting the road. The heater didnât work and water dripped on to my left ankle but I felt cosseted compared to standing beside the road in the rain. I fluffed the gear changes a few times before I acquired the knack. At thirty or thirty-five miles an hour the car and I were happy. Any faster than that and the steering and brakes were unable to cope and I was nervous.
A few miles down the more major road I was rounding a bend when a man leapt out of the bushes in front of me. I braked hard and swerved. He came running up to the driverâs door.
âGuvnor, Iâve had it!â he announced. âI give up. Take me in.â
âWhat are you blathering about?â
âIâm on the run and Iâve had enough. I surrender.â
âButâŚâ
âPlease take me to the nearest Police Station. Iâm cold. Iâm starving. I havenât eaten for three days and I want to give myself up.â
âOK. If thatâs what you want. Get in.â
He went round to the passenger door and sat down. Under the carâs interior light I could see that he was telling the truth. His prison clothes were soaked and torn. He was shivering. Even if he hadnât been I donât think he could have been a threat to me. He was slightly built and not in good condition. I thought of the presents I had been given. I took the torch and looked in the back seat of the car.
The first thing I found was an old tartan car blanket. I passed it to him. He wrapped it around himself. I opened the paper bag I had been given at Plympton. There was a large Cornish pasty and some small cakes. I gave him the whole bag. He mumbled his thanks and started eating slowly.
I started the car again.
âWhere is the nearest Police Station?â I asked.
âHow do I know?â he spluttered. âI was lost. I donât know Devon. It wasnât my idea to escape.â
He continued slowly eating the pasty as we passed through Bovey Tracey with no sign of an open Police Station. I could believe he was hungry. He was savouring every mouthful. I saw a signpost for Newton Abbot. There should be a Police Station there. There was. I pulled up in the forecourt with a squeal of brakes and a sk**. I had to help him out of the car and up the steps, still wrapped in the blanket. The Sergeant on duty seemed unsurprised to see the escapee.
âHello, Fingers,â he said. âWe expected you before this. Dartmoor in winter isnât like your usual haunts, is it?â
âIt was The Blokeâs idea, not mineâŚâ the prisoner mumbled.
âWe know. We caught him trying to steal a car. He wouldnât tell where heâd abandoned you.â
âI had to go with him. Heâd have snuffed me if I hadnât.â
âTell that to the Governor. Heâll probably believe you. Meanwhile we have a nice dry cell for you and a cup of tea.â
âThanks Sarge. And thanks to you too, young fella. That pasty was great.â
He was led away.
âAnd now, Sir, I should take a few details, but Iâd rather not. Itâs nearly Christmas. You donât want to spend it in Newton Abbot, do you?â
I shook my head.
âThen we shall assume that Fingers walked in here by himself, shall we? That way I wonât have to take your name and address, Mr. Owen, nor your car registration details, nor examine your car that from here might appear unroadworthyâŚâ
âThank you, Sergeant. Iâm on my way.â
âJust steer clear of Police Stations. Next time, if there is a next time, park around the corner and let Fingers walk the last few yards. Happy Christmas!â
I drove away from Newton Abbot as quietly as I could.
After I had passed Exeter I pulled into a lay-by to plot my route. I was feeling hungry and tired. Fingerâs enjoyment of that pasty was a reminder of what I had given away. There was the box the farmerâs wife had given meâŚ
Inside were several packages wrapped in greaseproof paper. I opened one at random. There were six Scotch Eggs. I ate two while I explored further. At the bottom of the box were three bottles cradled in corrugated cardboard. Two were labelled âAlcoholicâ. The other was labelled âApple Juiceâ. I opened the apple juice. After a few mouthfuls I decided to drive on while the roads were clear. A heavy truck pulled into the lay-by ahead of me. The driver came running back.
âCould you give me a lift to the next phone box? Iâve got a puncture and I canât fix it.â
âOK,â I said. âWhy not? Hop in.â
The nearest phone box was about five miles down the road. I couldnât leave him there at night so I waited to drive him back to his truck.
âTheyâll be out first thing in the morning. I can sleep in the cab but⌠have you got anything to eat or drink?â
I gave him the rest of the Scotch Eggs and the apple juice before driving away.
About dawn I was still on the A30 near the Wallops, Nether, Middle and Over. A car was pulled in to the side of the road. The driver, a young man about my age, flagged me down.
âMy wifeâs in labour and the carâs bust. Can youâŚâ
âOf course. Where to?â
âStockbridge maternity hospital. It isnât far.â
I made the old car go almost as fast as I dared. His wife was having contractions every two or three minutes. Every time she groaned I pressed the accelerator. We were doing almost forty-five miles an hour when we reached Stockbridge. At the maternity hospital his wife was surrounded by staff. Her husband and I sat smoking in the waiting room for at least a couple of hours. I didnât think I could leave him alone. He was so nervous.
A nurse poked her head around the door to tell him he had a son, their first c***d. He rushed off to see his wife and new son, asking me to wait a few minutes. It was a quarter of an hour before he was back. In the meantime one of the nurses had given me a welcome cup of tea.
He rushed back in.
âGeoff, do you mind if we give him your name as a second Christian name?â
âOf course not, butâŚâ
He rushed out again. When he came back he invited me to see his new son.
âThis is John Geoffrey,â he said, âand this is the proud mother Eileen. Iâm Michael.â
âPleased to meet you, especially John,â I said.
Eileen pulled my head down to kiss me.
âThank you, Geoff. I donât know what we would have done without you. It was cold waiting for someone to pass. I was afraid, not that Iâd have the baby in the car, but that he wouldnât survive long after the birth.â
I stammered expostulations that anyone would have stoppedâŚ
âThereâs one more thing we would like you to do,â Eileen said, âThe registry office is open this morning and then closed until after Christmas. Could you take Michael there to register Johnâs birth? He can make his own way back but he needs to be there within the hour.â
âOf course,â I said.
I drove Michael to the Registry Office. We had to wait a few minutes before the paperwork could be completed. Michael shook my hand and left the Registry Office to contact a cousin who might be able to help recover their car. I walked towards the old Austin. I was nearly there when a man rushed out of the Registry Office.
âCan you spare a few minutes of your time, please,â he wheezed. âIâve run out of options. Iâm getting married now and the family and witnesses havenât arrived. If I donât get married in the next half-hour weâll have to rebook. The Church wedding is this afternoon and everyone will be there, but the marriage wonât be legalâŚâ
âOf course,â I said, âlead onâŚâ
I was a witness at the marriage of Alan and Marion Smith of Stockbridge. One of the Registry clerks was the other witness. By the time I had kissed the bride it was nearly noon.
Back on the road I followed the A272 to Winchester and then the A31 towards Guildford. I stopped at a lay-by on the Hogâs Back to eat some lunch. Sitting in the car, I idly watched two young women hikers struggling up the slope towards the road. They seemed fit and active but tired and weighed down by their rucksacks. I got out to shake the crumbs off my trousers and despite the light drizzle I stood there as the two women reached the lay-by.
They walked directly towards me. I knew what was coming.
âAre you going towards Guildford?â She paused, âOr Reigate?â
I looked at both of them for a second.
âYes, and yes.â
âCould youâŚ?â
âGive you a lift? Of course. The car isnât much but it should get there.â
âThank you. Weâve got to be back home tonight and we hadnât appreciated how steep the hills are around here. Weâre tired out.â
I opened the back door of the car.
âLadies, your carriage awaits.â
They piled their rucksacks against the far door and climbed in. They were fairly crowded but their rucksacks wouldnât have fitted in the boot. I started the car and pulled away. There was still very little traffic even through Guildford and on the A25. As we drove along my companions introduced themselves as Mary and Janis, sisters from Reigate. They had been Youth Hostelling for a week but the bad weather had slowed them down. They had to dry their clothes each day and hadnât covered as many miles as they had intended. They had phoned their parents from the last Youth Hostel and had expected to catch a bus to Guildford and then a train home. The bus service had stopped running two years ago so they had to walk.
On the outskirts of Reigate I had to stop and wake them up to ask directions. I delivered them to the drive of their parentsâ house, a substantial villa in its own grounds. The younger sister, Janis, turned back to give me a wave as I drove off. Mary seemed barely able to walk the length of the drive. I followed the A25 to the edge of Redhill and joined the A23 towards Croydon. Half an hour after reaching Croydon I braked the car to a stop outside my family home.
I was stiff and tired. I might be the returning prodigal son but I wasnât bringing any gifts. I had sent them earlier. I opened the boot and took out the cardboard box that the farmerâs wife had given me with the car. I carried it up the front path and rang the doorbell with an awkward finger. My father opened the door, looked at me, lifted the box out of my arms and said:
âYou need a cup of tea, lad.â
I did. I stepped inside the hall to be nearly knocked flat by an excited Cousin Clare. She hugged and kissed me before dragging me into the kitchen. I had expected her to welcome me, but this was much more than I had dared dream. She made the tea while I sat at the kitchen table and told the story of my journey.
âGeoff,â Clare said diffidently, âdo you always wear that?â
She pointed at my chest. I looked down. My official dockyard pass was still obvious on my jacket pocket, complete with photograph, my name, my departmentâs address and my rank.
âNo,â I said, âI normally take it off as soon as Iâm outside the dockyard. Iâve been telling everyone who I am. No wonder complete strangers called me âGeoffââŚâ
âAnd named a baby after youâŚâ My mother said. âIâm proud of you. But were you right to accept the car?â
âIt would have been scrapped next week.â
âDid you insure it?â
âInsure?â
âYou didnât drive it all this way with no insurance?â
I nodded.
âRight lad. Get your jacket on. Weâre going down to the High Street now. The insurance can be a Christmas present.â
We found that the farmer had already added me as a named driver until the 31st, although whether that was valid since I now owned the Austin was doubtful. The insurance cost much more than the car. We guessed its value as twenty-five pounds. It was already taxed until March. My father insisted on including Clare as a named driver. I didnât know why but he was paying.
My Christmas was wonderful. Clare kissed me under the mistletoe at least six times. I wondered why until she told me that he boyfriend had dumped for another last week. I had always liked Clare. Now it seemed that she liked me too.
She talked to me while I tried to improve the car. Fixing the leaks with fibreglass was easy. Clare suggested that I try to bleed air out of the heater. She crawled under the dashboard to press the bleed valve while I revved the engine. After a few attempts the heater became warm then hot. The demister hoses needed repair with tape. Clareâs slim hands reached into places Iâd find almost inaccessible.
Dave, one of fatherâs ex-service friends, called on Boxing Day. Within minutes he was under the bonnet of my car. He found and fixed an air leak on the inlet manifold, adjusted the timing, took out the play on the steering box and made the brakes work properly. I gave him a bottle of the alcoholic drink Iâd been given. He and my father had to try it. Clare and I went for a short drive to see what difference the repairs had made.
We were dry, warm and the car steered and stopped. It also reached a speed of sixty-five miles an hour. Most of all it felt safe to drive. Clare drove for a while. She liked the car now it was repaired.
When we returned Dave and Dad were merry.
âWhere did you get this drink?â Dave asked.
âOn Dartmoor, near Bovey Tracey,â I replied.
âItâs great but i*****l,â Dave said. âItâs distilled, probably from g****s, and has a great taste. Are you driving any more today?â
I shook my head.
âThen have a taste. You too, Clare.â
Dave poured the amber liquid into shot glasses. I sniffed and then sipped cautiously. Clare tossed hers down and spluttered. It had a wonderful taste and a kick like a mule. We left Dave and my father sipping their drinks. In the kitchen Clare asked my mother if she needed help. Mother shook her head.
âNo thanks, Clare, but could you two get the living room fire going? Itâs laid and just needs a match and some coaxing.â
I lit the fire. Clare and I sat on the settee and watched as the fire struggled into life. I had to add some more kindling before it finally decided to burn properly. We sat back on the settee. Clare snuggled against my side. I eased an arm around her shoulder. Her head rested against me.
âWhy are you here, Clare?â I asked. âI like having you here but why arenât you with your parents at Christmas?â
âTheyâve gone to visit my brother and his wife. Theyâre expecting a baby any day now.â
âAnd you didnât want to go?â
Clare snuggled even closer to me.
âNo. There isnât room and I thought I might see youâŚâ
âBut I wasnât going to be hereâŚâ
âI know. But you would be here sometime. Iâm staying for a week or so and thenâŚâ
âThen what?â
âIâve got a new job starting in the first week of January. I hoped that you would be home before then so that you could help me.â
âHelp you? How?â
âHelp me move. The new jobâs in Plymouth.â
âIt is!â
âYes. Do you mind?â
Did I mind? The only response I could think of was to kiss Clare. The kiss lasted a long time. When it ended Clare was sitting on my lap with her arms around my neck.
âI assume that means you like the idea, Geoff?â
We kissed again. We seemed to spend the next few days kissing. Clare and I went around hand in hand or wrapped around each other. My parents seemed amused and pleased.
My five pounds paid for spares for the car, the petrol and a couple of meals on our return to Plymouth in a reliable car, loaded with Clareâs immediate needs. She stayed at my lodgings for a few days while she was flat hunting before we decided that looking for a flat to share between us would be cheaper.
We were told that Plymouth landlords wouldnât let a flat to two single people of opposite sexes. I proposed to Clare. She accepted. As an engaged couple we were acceptable tenants, even if we had to wait a few weeks before we could actually marry. We invited the people I had met on my journey home, and all except Fingers came.
Now weâre sharing more than a flat but the old Austin, now more reliable, is still our favourite possession.
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Copyright Oggbashan December 2011
The author asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.
This is a work of fiction. The events described here are imaginary; the settings and characters are fictitious and are not intended to represent specific places or living persons.
It was the day before Christmas Eve in the mid 1960s. I was facing a boring Christmas sitting in my office in Devonport Dockyard waiting for something that probably wouldnât happen. I was the most junior civil servant who could be Duty Officer over the Christmas period. If something actually did happen the senior staff would be at the end of a telephone line and would appear to claim any credit while I did the work. That is the way organisations work.
I was unmarried. It was only fair that the married officers should be on leave with their families over Christmas and the single ones should be on duty. I was the only single officerâŚ
I was broke. I had spent all my spare money on presents for my family. The postage had been the hardest part. I didnât mind spending money on presents for my parents and sisters but getting the presents there had cost nearly as much as the presents. The overtime I would get for working over Christmas would revive my finances. Until then I might be able to afford a pint or two of beer on the evening of Boxing Day. That would be my celebration.
I was clearing my desk, locking the important files away when my immediate superior rushed in.
âGeoff! Youâre still here. Good.â
Of course I was still there. My period of normal duty didnât end for at least another thirty seconds.
âIâve just had a phone call from my wife. Sheâs stuck in Lincolnshire. The carâs broken down and she wonât be able to get it fixed until after Boxing Day. SoâŚâ
So? I thought. Surely he didnât mean?
âSo you donât need to be here. I can be Duty Officer and you can go home to your parents. Isnât that great?â
âButâŚâ
âNo buts. Go!â
âI need a travel warrant, Roger. Iâm broke.â
âYouâre entitled to three a year. Have you got one left?â
âYes, butâŚâ
âPass the book over. Iâll do it now.â
He did. He made out the warrant for travel from Plymouth Station via London to my home station and return. He signed it with a flourish and gave it to me.
âThank you, Roger,â I said.
âYou donât look as pleased as I thought you would be, Geoff. Whatâs wrong?â
âI said Iâm broke. I meant it.â
I emptied my pocket on to the desk. Two half-crowns and a few other smaller coins.
âThatâs it until pay day on the 31st. Iâll be fed at my lodgings and thatâs paid by allotment. OtherwiseâŚâ
âI see. You canât go home like that.â
He looked in his wallet.
âIâm going to the bank tomorrow. Have this.â
He gave me three one pound notes and a ten shilling note.
âItâs a Christmas gift. Not a loan.â
He knew I couldnât afford to repay him.
âThank you, Roger. That will be a great help. Can I ask why?â
âIâm celebrating. My wife was going to bring her mother for Christmas and we donât get on. Mother-in-law would complain the whole time that my wife wasnât doing Christmas properly. Now my mother-in-law canât come. When my wife and c***dren do get back we can celebrate quietly and enjoy ourselves â if Iâve got the time off. By working through Christmas I can have leave around the New Year. Iâll have a wonderful time and I was facing a dreadful ordeal. So â Go!â
âThank you, Roger. Enjoy your break, when you get it.â
I rushed off to my lodgings, packed a bag with the absolute minimum and rang my mother. She was delighted that I was coming and added the news that made my day even better. Cousin Clare would be staying. I liked Cousin Clare. Sheâs not a real cousin. Her mother was my motherâs best friend and chief bridesmaid but the families had lived close to each other all my life. I had called Clareâs mother âauntâ so Clare became âCousin Clareâ. The idea of Christmas and Boxing Day with Clare seemed like heaven.
Even my landlady was pleased. She would have made Christmas Dinner for me with her family but I would have been an embarrassment. Now she could have her family to herself. She kissed me and pushed something into my pocket âFor Christmasâ. I had left a present for her under her Christmas tree. I left happily. I walked through the well lit streets ignoring the light drizzle.
My happiness lasted until I got to Plymouthâs North Road Station. There was a crowd of unhappy people milling around. A notice stated that all trains were cancelled until further notice because of a signal failure near Newton Abbot. I asked a harassed porter when trains would be running.
âI donât reckon they will be this side of Christmas,â he replied mournfully. âThe signal failure was caused by a freight train derailment that has ripped up half the signalling equipment around Newton. If you can get to Exeter, trains are running beyond there, but the last train northabout Dartmoor has gone. They started engineering works on that line this morning before the accident.â
âItâs no use trying the bus station,â one woman added. âThey are fully booked and there are crowds waiting for a cancellation.â
I decided to aim for the A38 and perhaps hitch a lift. I turned and started walking.
âWhere are you going, mate?â
It was a middle-aged man dressed in overalls.
âI thought Iâd try hitching on the A38.â
âThat might work. Hang on a mo. One of my mates lives out by Plympton. He might take us there. Weâre on a building site just round the corner. Itâll only hold you up a couple of minutes and itâs worth a try.â
âWhere have you got to get to?â
âOnly to Ivybridge. If he can take me to Plympton Iâm half way home.â
âOK. Thanks.â
âSave your thanks until we see if heâs still there.â
He was. He was standing by his ancient upright Ford Anglia.
âHi Bert. Iâm stuck. The car wonât start andâŚâ
He looked at the steep slope leading out of the building site. Even with three of us we couldnât attempt pushing the car up that hill.
âWhy not try again, Jack?â Bert suggested.
It didnât start. The starter motor turned sluggishly before stopping with a dull clunk.
âHave you got the starting handle?â I asked.
âYes, Geoff. Itâs under the bonnet.â
âOK. Turn the ignition off and back on when I lift my hand. OK?â
Jack nodded. I unclipped and lifted the side of the carâs bonnet. I left the side up as I extracted the starting handle and fitted it at the front of the engine. I raised my hand. Keeping my thumb well out of the way in case of a backfire I swung the handle. The Anglia spluttered into life. I withdrew the starting handle, clipped it back in its holder across the engine compartment, and closed the side of the bonnet. I climbed into the car.
âLet it run for a couple of minutes before pulling away,â I suggested, âand use sidelights until we are beyond the street lights. The batteryâs cold and nearly flat.â
Jack nodded again. He watched the ammeter closely. It showed a bare charge.
âHave you got a battery charger?â
âYes, Geoff.â
âThen charge the battery over Christmas. Youâve probably done too much driving in the dark. My father used to have a Ford like this. He charged the battery every Saturday night during the winter months.â
âSounds like a good idea. Itâs been getting more difficult to start every day for the past month.â
We sat for a couple of minutes before he engaged gear and we chugged slowly out of Plymouth. There were long queues at every bus stop. On sidelights the ammeter was just nudging the positive. Beyond the streetlights the carâs headlights barely pierced the darkness and the ammeter showed a significant discharge. The windscreen wipers struggled to keep the water off the screen. On every hill the Anglia slowed down and stopped completely until the accelerator was blipped. The wipers responded for a few seconds before stopping again.
After about five miles the ammeter crawled towards neutral even with the headlights on.
Despite the conditions Jack decided to press on to Ivybridge where he delivered us to Bertâs family house a few yards off the main road. His Ford Anglia turned back towards Plympton.
âHang on a sec, Geoff, before setting off.â
I stood outside his house for a couple of minutes before he returned with a paper bag.
âThis is from me and my missus as thanks for getting my mateâs car going and me home. Happy Christmas and best of luck.â
I walked back to the main road. I darenât go beyond the street lights because no one would see me. I stood there in the increasing rain as the few cars sped past me. I was still there half an hour later when an ancient Austin wheezed to a stop beside me. The passenger door opened.
âGoing far?â The driver asked.
âExeter if possible, please?â I replied.
âNot going that far but I can take some of the way. Climb in.â
I wouldnât have accepted but for the half hour I had already waited had been depressing. The car sounded as if it was on its last legs.
I looked at the driver in the last of the street lights as we left Ivybridge.
âWhere are you going?â I asked.
âOut on to the moor. I farm there. Missus wanted some last things from the shops and my son had taken the decent car. This old relic should have been on the scrap heap. My new car should be delivered on New Yearâs Day. Then this one will be history.â
âIt seems to run OK,â I lied.
âSeems! It doesnât. It overheats when the sun comes out, leaks, as you may have noticed, when it rains, and lies down and dies when itâs important. The dealer wouldnât take it as a trade-in. Tainât worth more than half-a-crown.â
âIâd give half-a-crownâŚâ
âYou would? Yeâre daft!â
âIâm not. I need to get home for Christmas and there are no trains this side of Exeter. If I can get thereâŚâ
âAnd then what? Youâd abandon the car and Iâd get the blame.â
âNo. Iâd park it somewhere safe and collect it next week.â
âIf you would, itâs yours, for half a crown, when I get home. Youâll have to find your way back off the moors, though. Could you do that?â
âOf course,â I said confidently.
My confidence waned as he twisted and turned further and further down dark narrow lanes.
âYou still sure you can get back?â He laughed.
âNo.â
âNever mind. Once we get to the farm thereâs a better road leading back towards Exeter. Thatâs easy to follow.â
We turned into the farm approach. I leapt out to open the gate. He swung away from the farmyard and swept under a portico of a considerable mansion.
âHome,â He announced. âA bit pretentious but comfortable. Come in and dry off and Iâll find the carâs paperwork.â
His wife greeted him with a kiss. She looked at me with a smile.
âAnother stray youâve found?â She asked her husband.
âThis young man is trying to get to Exeter and then home to London,â He replied. âIâve agreed to sell him the old car for half-a-crown.â
âYou cheated him. It isnât worth more than sixpence. Never mind. Iâll make a pot of tea while you sort yourselves out.â
I helped unload the car. The back seat was so full that âsome last thingsâ must have emptied half a shop. I was puffing hard by the time the last of the goods were stacked in the hall.
âThe car should run better without all that, Geoff,â he announced. âIâm obliged to you, young man, for carrying. Iâll agree with me wife. Sixpence and the carâs yours.â
I put my hand into my coat pocket. The envelope my landlady had given me fell on to the floor. I picked it up and scrabbled a threepenny bit and three pennies from my change.
âDone.â I said.
âOK.â
I opened the envelope while the farmer was getting the paperwork. Inside were a pound and a ten shilling note. I now had a whole five pounds.
In the kitchen his wife produced tea, scones, butter, jam and clotted cream while we filled out the paperwork to transfer the car. The scones were delicious. My enjoyment was obvious and she pressed more on me.
I looked at the clock. It was half past ten. Even if I left now I might not reach Exeter in time for the last train to London. I said so.
âYou wonât need a train,â his wife said. âThat car may be old but itâll get you all the way there and back again, slowly mind, but steadily.â
âBut itâll need petrol and there arenât any petrol stations open at night.â
âThereâs an all-night one near Honiton,â he said, âbut youâll need a fill before then. Got another sixpence?â
I looked in my pocket. There was a sixpence among the pennies and halfpennies. I held it out. He took it.
âIâll fill the petrol tank and check the oil. Iâll put some more petrol in the can in the boot just in case you run out. You shouldnât if you drive carefully. A tankful should get you all the way home.â
âBut thatâs worth more than sixpenceâŚâ I protested.
âMaybe it is, but itâs nearly Christmas and you should be with your family, Geoff.â
âI donât know how to thank you,â I said.
âThen donât. Just repay me by being kind, when you can, to someone else who needs help.â
âI will. Thank you.â
He went off to fill the car. His wife found me some older maps that showed the route off Dartmoor and a 1950s road atlas.
âYouâll need a torch to see that. Thereâs an old one the k**s used to play with.â
She went out of the kitchen. I sipped my third cup of tea and cleared the few scone crumbs from my plate. She returned with an ex-army torch.
âThe batteries are OK. It should do. Now. The toilet is out there. You go and freshen yourself up and weâll soon have you on your way.â
When I returned she had a cardboard box on the kitchen table.
âIâve put a few things in to keep you going if the car breaks down. It wonât but just in caseâŚâ
âThank you.â
âJust get home safely to your parents, please Geoff.â
She kissed me.
They stood under the portico as I drove away. Without the heavy load in the back seat the car seemed much younger. Unlike the old Anglia the windscreen wipers worked constantly and the headlights made a reasonable try at lighting the road. The heater didnât work and water dripped on to my left ankle but I felt cosseted compared to standing beside the road in the rain. I fluffed the gear changes a few times before I acquired the knack. At thirty or thirty-five miles an hour the car and I were happy. Any faster than that and the steering and brakes were unable to cope and I was nervous.
A few miles down the more major road I was rounding a bend when a man leapt out of the bushes in front of me. I braked hard and swerved. He came running up to the driverâs door.
âGuvnor, Iâve had it!â he announced. âI give up. Take me in.â
âWhat are you blathering about?â
âIâm on the run and Iâve had enough. I surrender.â
âButâŚâ
âPlease take me to the nearest Police Station. Iâm cold. Iâm starving. I havenât eaten for three days and I want to give myself up.â
âOK. If thatâs what you want. Get in.â
He went round to the passenger door and sat down. Under the carâs interior light I could see that he was telling the truth. His prison clothes were soaked and torn. He was shivering. Even if he hadnât been I donât think he could have been a threat to me. He was slightly built and not in good condition. I thought of the presents I had been given. I took the torch and looked in the back seat of the car.
The first thing I found was an old tartan car blanket. I passed it to him. He wrapped it around himself. I opened the paper bag I had been given at Plympton. There was a large Cornish pasty and some small cakes. I gave him the whole bag. He mumbled his thanks and started eating slowly.
I started the car again.
âWhere is the nearest Police Station?â I asked.
âHow do I know?â he spluttered. âI was lost. I donât know Devon. It wasnât my idea to escape.â
He continued slowly eating the pasty as we passed through Bovey Tracey with no sign of an open Police Station. I could believe he was hungry. He was savouring every mouthful. I saw a signpost for Newton Abbot. There should be a Police Station there. There was. I pulled up in the forecourt with a squeal of brakes and a sk**. I had to help him out of the car and up the steps, still wrapped in the blanket. The Sergeant on duty seemed unsurprised to see the escapee.
âHello, Fingers,â he said. âWe expected you before this. Dartmoor in winter isnât like your usual haunts, is it?â
âIt was The Blokeâs idea, not mineâŚâ the prisoner mumbled.
âWe know. We caught him trying to steal a car. He wouldnât tell where heâd abandoned you.â
âI had to go with him. Heâd have snuffed me if I hadnât.â
âTell that to the Governor. Heâll probably believe you. Meanwhile we have a nice dry cell for you and a cup of tea.â
âThanks Sarge. And thanks to you too, young fella. That pasty was great.â
He was led away.
âAnd now, Sir, I should take a few details, but Iâd rather not. Itâs nearly Christmas. You donât want to spend it in Newton Abbot, do you?â
I shook my head.
âThen we shall assume that Fingers walked in here by himself, shall we? That way I wonât have to take your name and address, Mr. Owen, nor your car registration details, nor examine your car that from here might appear unroadworthyâŚâ
âThank you, Sergeant. Iâm on my way.â
âJust steer clear of Police Stations. Next time, if there is a next time, park around the corner and let Fingers walk the last few yards. Happy Christmas!â
I drove away from Newton Abbot as quietly as I could.
After I had passed Exeter I pulled into a lay-by to plot my route. I was feeling hungry and tired. Fingerâs enjoyment of that pasty was a reminder of what I had given away. There was the box the farmerâs wife had given meâŚ
Inside were several packages wrapped in greaseproof paper. I opened one at random. There were six Scotch Eggs. I ate two while I explored further. At the bottom of the box were three bottles cradled in corrugated cardboard. Two were labelled âAlcoholicâ. The other was labelled âApple Juiceâ. I opened the apple juice. After a few mouthfuls I decided to drive on while the roads were clear. A heavy truck pulled into the lay-by ahead of me. The driver came running back.
âCould you give me a lift to the next phone box? Iâve got a puncture and I canât fix it.â
âOK,â I said. âWhy not? Hop in.â
The nearest phone box was about five miles down the road. I couldnât leave him there at night so I waited to drive him back to his truck.
âTheyâll be out first thing in the morning. I can sleep in the cab but⌠have you got anything to eat or drink?â
I gave him the rest of the Scotch Eggs and the apple juice before driving away.
About dawn I was still on the A30 near the Wallops, Nether, Middle and Over. A car was pulled in to the side of the road. The driver, a young man about my age, flagged me down.
âMy wifeâs in labour and the carâs bust. Can youâŚâ
âOf course. Where to?â
âStockbridge maternity hospital. It isnât far.â
I made the old car go almost as fast as I dared. His wife was having contractions every two or three minutes. Every time she groaned I pressed the accelerator. We were doing almost forty-five miles an hour when we reached Stockbridge. At the maternity hospital his wife was surrounded by staff. Her husband and I sat smoking in the waiting room for at least a couple of hours. I didnât think I could leave him alone. He was so nervous.
A nurse poked her head around the door to tell him he had a son, their first c***d. He rushed off to see his wife and new son, asking me to wait a few minutes. It was a quarter of an hour before he was back. In the meantime one of the nurses had given me a welcome cup of tea.
He rushed back in.
âGeoff, do you mind if we give him your name as a second Christian name?â
âOf course not, butâŚâ
He rushed out again. When he came back he invited me to see his new son.
âThis is John Geoffrey,â he said, âand this is the proud mother Eileen. Iâm Michael.â
âPleased to meet you, especially John,â I said.
Eileen pulled my head down to kiss me.
âThank you, Geoff. I donât know what we would have done without you. It was cold waiting for someone to pass. I was afraid, not that Iâd have the baby in the car, but that he wouldnât survive long after the birth.â
I stammered expostulations that anyone would have stoppedâŚ
âThereâs one more thing we would like you to do,â Eileen said, âThe registry office is open this morning and then closed until after Christmas. Could you take Michael there to register Johnâs birth? He can make his own way back but he needs to be there within the hour.â
âOf course,â I said.
I drove Michael to the Registry Office. We had to wait a few minutes before the paperwork could be completed. Michael shook my hand and left the Registry Office to contact a cousin who might be able to help recover their car. I walked towards the old Austin. I was nearly there when a man rushed out of the Registry Office.
âCan you spare a few minutes of your time, please,â he wheezed. âIâve run out of options. Iâm getting married now and the family and witnesses havenât arrived. If I donât get married in the next half-hour weâll have to rebook. The Church wedding is this afternoon and everyone will be there, but the marriage wonât be legalâŚâ
âOf course,â I said, âlead onâŚâ
I was a witness at the marriage of Alan and Marion Smith of Stockbridge. One of the Registry clerks was the other witness. By the time I had kissed the bride it was nearly noon.
Back on the road I followed the A272 to Winchester and then the A31 towards Guildford. I stopped at a lay-by on the Hogâs Back to eat some lunch. Sitting in the car, I idly watched two young women hikers struggling up the slope towards the road. They seemed fit and active but tired and weighed down by their rucksacks. I got out to shake the crumbs off my trousers and despite the light drizzle I stood there as the two women reached the lay-by.
They walked directly towards me. I knew what was coming.
âAre you going towards Guildford?â She paused, âOr Reigate?â
I looked at both of them for a second.
âYes, and yes.â
âCould youâŚ?â
âGive you a lift? Of course. The car isnât much but it should get there.â
âThank you. Weâve got to be back home tonight and we hadnât appreciated how steep the hills are around here. Weâre tired out.â
I opened the back door of the car.
âLadies, your carriage awaits.â
They piled their rucksacks against the far door and climbed in. They were fairly crowded but their rucksacks wouldnât have fitted in the boot. I started the car and pulled away. There was still very little traffic even through Guildford and on the A25. As we drove along my companions introduced themselves as Mary and Janis, sisters from Reigate. They had been Youth Hostelling for a week but the bad weather had slowed them down. They had to dry their clothes each day and hadnât covered as many miles as they had intended. They had phoned their parents from the last Youth Hostel and had expected to catch a bus to Guildford and then a train home. The bus service had stopped running two years ago so they had to walk.
On the outskirts of Reigate I had to stop and wake them up to ask directions. I delivered them to the drive of their parentsâ house, a substantial villa in its own grounds. The younger sister, Janis, turned back to give me a wave as I drove off. Mary seemed barely able to walk the length of the drive. I followed the A25 to the edge of Redhill and joined the A23 towards Croydon. Half an hour after reaching Croydon I braked the car to a stop outside my family home.
I was stiff and tired. I might be the returning prodigal son but I wasnât bringing any gifts. I had sent them earlier. I opened the boot and took out the cardboard box that the farmerâs wife had given me with the car. I carried it up the front path and rang the doorbell with an awkward finger. My father opened the door, looked at me, lifted the box out of my arms and said:
âYou need a cup of tea, lad.â
I did. I stepped inside the hall to be nearly knocked flat by an excited Cousin Clare. She hugged and kissed me before dragging me into the kitchen. I had expected her to welcome me, but this was much more than I had dared dream. She made the tea while I sat at the kitchen table and told the story of my journey.
âGeoff,â Clare said diffidently, âdo you always wear that?â
She pointed at my chest. I looked down. My official dockyard pass was still obvious on my jacket pocket, complete with photograph, my name, my departmentâs address and my rank.
âNo,â I said, âI normally take it off as soon as Iâm outside the dockyard. Iâve been telling everyone who I am. No wonder complete strangers called me âGeoffââŚâ
âAnd named a baby after youâŚâ My mother said. âIâm proud of you. But were you right to accept the car?â
âIt would have been scrapped next week.â
âDid you insure it?â
âInsure?â
âYou didnât drive it all this way with no insurance?â
I nodded.
âRight lad. Get your jacket on. Weâre going down to the High Street now. The insurance can be a Christmas present.â
We found that the farmer had already added me as a named driver until the 31st, although whether that was valid since I now owned the Austin was doubtful. The insurance cost much more than the car. We guessed its value as twenty-five pounds. It was already taxed until March. My father insisted on including Clare as a named driver. I didnât know why but he was paying.
My Christmas was wonderful. Clare kissed me under the mistletoe at least six times. I wondered why until she told me that he boyfriend had dumped for another last week. I had always liked Clare. Now it seemed that she liked me too.
She talked to me while I tried to improve the car. Fixing the leaks with fibreglass was easy. Clare suggested that I try to bleed air out of the heater. She crawled under the dashboard to press the bleed valve while I revved the engine. After a few attempts the heater became warm then hot. The demister hoses needed repair with tape. Clareâs slim hands reached into places Iâd find almost inaccessible.
Dave, one of fatherâs ex-service friends, called on Boxing Day. Within minutes he was under the bonnet of my car. He found and fixed an air leak on the inlet manifold, adjusted the timing, took out the play on the steering box and made the brakes work properly. I gave him a bottle of the alcoholic drink Iâd been given. He and my father had to try it. Clare and I went for a short drive to see what difference the repairs had made.
We were dry, warm and the car steered and stopped. It also reached a speed of sixty-five miles an hour. Most of all it felt safe to drive. Clare drove for a while. She liked the car now it was repaired.
When we returned Dave and Dad were merry.
âWhere did you get this drink?â Dave asked.
âOn Dartmoor, near Bovey Tracey,â I replied.
âItâs great but i*****l,â Dave said. âItâs distilled, probably from g****s, and has a great taste. Are you driving any more today?â
I shook my head.
âThen have a taste. You too, Clare.â
Dave poured the amber liquid into shot glasses. I sniffed and then sipped cautiously. Clare tossed hers down and spluttered. It had a wonderful taste and a kick like a mule. We left Dave and my father sipping their drinks. In the kitchen Clare asked my mother if she needed help. Mother shook her head.
âNo thanks, Clare, but could you two get the living room fire going? Itâs laid and just needs a match and some coaxing.â
I lit the fire. Clare and I sat on the settee and watched as the fire struggled into life. I had to add some more kindling before it finally decided to burn properly. We sat back on the settee. Clare snuggled against my side. I eased an arm around her shoulder. Her head rested against me.
âWhy are you here, Clare?â I asked. âI like having you here but why arenât you with your parents at Christmas?â
âTheyâve gone to visit my brother and his wife. Theyâre expecting a baby any day now.â
âAnd you didnât want to go?â
Clare snuggled even closer to me.
âNo. There isnât room and I thought I might see youâŚâ
âBut I wasnât going to be hereâŚâ
âI know. But you would be here sometime. Iâm staying for a week or so and thenâŚâ
âThen what?â
âIâve got a new job starting in the first week of January. I hoped that you would be home before then so that you could help me.â
âHelp you? How?â
âHelp me move. The new jobâs in Plymouth.â
âIt is!â
âYes. Do you mind?â
Did I mind? The only response I could think of was to kiss Clare. The kiss lasted a long time. When it ended Clare was sitting on my lap with her arms around my neck.
âI assume that means you like the idea, Geoff?â
We kissed again. We seemed to spend the next few days kissing. Clare and I went around hand in hand or wrapped around each other. My parents seemed amused and pleased.
My five pounds paid for spares for the car, the petrol and a couple of meals on our return to Plymouth in a reliable car, loaded with Clareâs immediate needs. She stayed at my lodgings for a few days while she was flat hunting before we decided that looking for a flat to share between us would be cheaper.
We were told that Plymouth landlords wouldnât let a flat to two single people of opposite sexes. I proposed to Clare. She accepted. As an engaged couple we were acceptable tenants, even if we had to wait a few weeks before we could actually marry. We invited the people I had met on my journey home, and all except Fingers came.
Now weâre sharing more than a flat but the old Austin, now more reliable, is still our favourite possession.
7 years ago