Thursday 24 November 2016

Our Road

Theirs was a typical road, a typical terraced road with certainly nothing special about it other than it was where they lived. OK the road surface was pitted and marked and the paving slabs cracked and uneven in places but it was their road.

Of course they complained, of course they wanted it to be better – they wanted their road to be repaired, lit better, have better services. And why shouldn’t they want that? It was their road

Then one day the people heard there road was going to be extended, new houses built but, and it was big but, as part of that work there was to be a new road surface, new paving, new lighting and extra money for local services paid for by the new homes. So, although they had their doubts they agreed and the new houses were built.

Then for a while everyone was happy. The older residents loved the improvements and although the people in the new houses ‘weren’t quite like us’ they seemed all right. And of course they were, because being different doesn't automatically create a problem if you try to understand and get along with each other.

But then it started. It was subtle at first. Just odd words, odd phrases, the introduction of them and us. Then the local newspaper started saying how much 'better off' the people at the new end of the road were.

Voices got louder – ‘moved into our road and start using our streetlights’, ‘walking on our pavement and wearing it out’. Soon the cry was heard regularly – ‘we want our road back’. The memories of how the road used to be had grown hazy, new stories of how ‘great’ it was were propagated. Life, quite simply, had been much better in the old days, before …….. well, just before.

And so a meeting was held and a plan hatched. Not everyone was for it, in fact it was just a handful of votes difference but it was decided that the plan would go ahead. They would set fire to the houses at the top of the road.

Now of course there were those whingeing voices that kept saying ‘but these are terraced houses, the fire could spread down to this end’ but the louder voices just kept saying everything would be ok, better in fact as they would get all the light and paving and services, oh and more.

But doubts persisted in some. The fire could destroy everything. They just wouldn’t accept they had lost the vote. Finally, the leader of the plan explained that everything would be ok because the wind would blow up the street and keep the flames at that end only. Voices of opposition saying you couldn’t control the wind were denounced as pessimists.

And so the plan was actioned and the fire started. The blaze, grew and grew and soon some of the old residents in the middle of the street began to mutter that the fire was getting awfully close. In fact it was getting too close and licking at the roofs of their houses.

‘What happened to the wind you promised?’ they shouted to the leader of the plan.

‘We never said there would be a wind,’ he answered with liar’s eyes.

Soon the sound of streetlights cracking was heard. ’You said we’d keep the lights!’ some shouted.

‘We never promised you lights,’ he answered with liar’s voice.

Slowly it became clear that the whole street would be destroyed and by morning all that was left was the charred remains of their homes, cracked paving, broken streetlights and pot marked surfaces.

As the residents turned to their leader they saw him getting into a lovely new car. ‘Now don’t you worry about me,’ he called out to them, I’ve been invited to move to a beautiful new town with people more like me. But look,’ he said pointing, ‘You’ve got your road back.’


And indeed they had



Monday 7 November 2016

Sharpened

He slid open the drawer and smiled. Waxing the runner had removed any friction and the way it glided pleased him more that it should. He stared at the tiny green baize compartments and a smile returned to his face. In each small cushioned rectangle was a treasure, his treasure, well, a treasure to him – his collection of pencil sharpeners.

When others at school had collected rubbers from the gift shops and school trips his passion had always been sharpeners. Even now, at an age when most had stopped their collections, he still searched online.

He had never understood the passion for rubbers. Why collect something that was created to remove, to hide, to cover up your mistakes and in doing the very act lose a bit of itself?

No, pencil sharpeners were infinitely preferable. They could take the blunt and give it a point, return precision and purpose to the run down. Bring life back to the broken.

In many ways pencil sharpeners were the perfect metaphor for his life. He slid the drawer back and locked the cabinet. His mind sharpened he was going to act.


Today he was going to, he was going to, he was going to try to leave the house. Well, we all have our point to prove.