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Authors: Kitty Aldridge

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BOOK: A Trick I Learned From Dead Men
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Good evening, Lee. On your walkabout?

That I am. How-do?

He bides his time. The silver blink once, twice, tells me he is thinking. Slippery customer. We have an understanding. People see Lee Hart, trainee undertaker, they think of death. People see Crow, deliverer of dark omens, they think of death. Reapers me and him both; nice to have something in common.

The field, the house, the pylons; she used to say if she were a painter she’d paint it. She wanted to leave something behind, once she knew she was dying. I wanted to say, You’re leaving me and him behind. But I didn’t.

I stop by the phone mast.

Buongiorno. How goes it?

Mast is busy getting people get connected. A job to do. Communication technology, excellent choice. This old grey pole has got them all talking. Natter natter natter. Me and mast stand there, silent like old friends.

I would have gone with a hammer to find him, the girl-chaser. As I understand it, no one has been apprehended as of yet. Across the fields towards the woods, I would have gone straight away, before her tears dried;
along
the east field set-aside, where you can’t be seen from the woods. Slip through the electric fence at the broken place. Quick as a flash. If I’d caught up with him, that would have been my day. Tock, tock. Job done. Arrivederci. He won’t be bothering anyone again, no more chasing with intent on our lane. No need to thank me, it was no problem. I realise he is unlikely to repeat his behaviour at the exact same location but if he does fancy a walk down memory lane, buenos dias, here I am. I don’t see it happening, but then who sees anything coming? Only after the fact when it’s too late. That’s the trouble, the future stands behind you, waiting to say boo.

I stroll up the woods; same old, but never the same sky, trees, wind. You have to pay attention. You can go through your life half asleep. You may never wake up. You may never realise you were even alive if you’re not careful. I am careful.

I walk the same way. Past the stumps by the fence then along a twisty path into the heart of the wood where it gets dark. Me and Ned used to play here. I used to sign him the names of things he should know: squirrel, pigeon, bra, knickers. Mum and me used to walk here, once upon a time. The three of us would watch the sunset through the trees. This earth is a beautiful place, she’d say. Don’t
waste
your lives. We won’t, I said. As if. I still collect sticks for kindling, short ones. Dry them in the kitchen, right size for the wood burner.

The last of the sun pulls the trees into thin shadows. Somewhere a fox is barking. Reminds me of our first ever trophy when we were kids. A dead fox flattened on the south-bound fast lane. A beauty. Ned’s mission was to collect. This was then, but it could be yesterday. I gave him his instructions. Speed was critical, I told him. So, trot-trot. Off he goes. Arms out. Hurry up. Look at him, dainty as. Watch me, Gog! he signs. Yes yes, get on with it. Taking his time. Come on. Peels it off the tarmac. Get a move on. For
fucks
. Sort it out. Here he comes. Better late than. Mad dash. Through the gap in the traffic. Took your time! Pleased with himself he was. Draped in his arms was our fox: twisted, innards swinging. Stinking to the highest. Then he wants to take it home. Talk about a few bricks short of a load. We bury it in a ditch by the flyover. Ned drops to his knees to pray, God knows where he saw that.

The sun is nearly gone. The last light turns the trees black. I sit down under the big beech. I wait. I don’t know what for.

It’s late when I lock up at night. Les watches TV till the early hours. I boil the kettle for Ned’s drink. I shouldn’t baby him, but. Helps him sleep. It’s only Tesco Value
Instant, not Cadbury’s. Calms him down. From the
landing window you can see plenty if the moon’s up. Woods, field, lane. The mast is a giant’s dagger plunged in. Magic could happen but it never does.

5

Rain will clear in the east, leaving a warm bright day, if changeable at times

FIVE THINGS GIRLS
Can’t Resist. For this article alone I buy the magazine. I have Lorelle in mind, in a nutshell. Anything that puts me ahead of the competition. Needs must. I am surprised by the five things, frankly. I was reckoning, cars, money, looks, usuals, but no. Number one is Romance. Girls like a romantic guy, it says. Romantic Guy brings her flowers, chocolates, gifts, it says. He gazes into her eyes, tells her she’s beautiful, blah blah blah, thank you very much, bish bash bosh, job done. I think about this. I am pretty romantic. Next is Confident Guy. This gent is totally secure and at ease with himself, it says. He gives off an aura of power and control. Tougher one, this, but not beyond the realms of whatever. Then there is artistic guy. Artistic Guy is spontaneous and lives for the moment. He uses his creativity to woo her. Woo her.
Can’t
say with authority if I am artistic or not. Not off the top of my head. I could ask, but who?

Lee?

Makes me jump. It’s Derek. I shove the magazine into my holdall. Spring out the door, like I’m busy. I shall think on.

I can’t help feeling sorry for Mr Delapoint in Chapel 1. He’s got a look on his face like he’s in trouble, though it’s not his fault. He had a single tooth at the front, the others were fakes. They lifted out on dental plates, like little horseshoes without the luck. His hands rest in his lap. His gold wedding ring shines under the work light. Till death do us. Irene calls him Mr Dela-pwan, like he’s Japanese. Says it’s the correct pronunciation, French. I go with what’s written down. I don’t think it’s fair, second-guessing. Mr Delapoint can’t answer back.

Howard puts his head in. Let me know, he says, when Monsieur Deelapwon is ready, would you, Lee?

Each to his own. Howard has his own perspective on things. That could be from pole vaulting, I don’t know. Apologies, Mr Delapoint, we are not what you’d call multilingual here. Lucky all Derek has to do is engrave it.

* * *

There’s an old lady crying in the foyer. I say foyer, it’s just two chairs and some dried ferns, but that’s what Howard calls it. I hurry over to her.

Everything OK? I ask. And then I think, Lee, you knob, obviously things are not OK.

Mrs Jenson, Let’s have a sit-down next door, shall we? Howard is at her side like he dropped through the ceiling, offering his elbow, speaking the words, showing the way. He guides her gently towards Relatives 1, with its thick carpet, padded settees, boxes of tissues. Lee will make you a lovely cup of tea, he says. We’ve got some shortbread today. Let’s take our time, shall we?

You learn this job as you go. You start at the kettle and work your way towards the funeral director’s desk. It doesn’t happen overnight.

Mrs Barry is a tad leaky at this stage. I plug where necessary, mouths are the worst offender. Remedy is to get wadding into the throat and raise the head. Once the nose is plugged you’re home and dry. I don’t know where we’d be without Webril Roll. I tuck a head block under Mrs Barry. There we go. She can relax while I get on.

Your needle must be long and curved like a half-moon otherwise you will go in but never come out. A closed mouth is hygienic and pleasant to look at. Who wants to peer inside a loved one’s gapery as you whisper your
final
goodbye? Calm and collected is the look, a little assistance is required, the dead don’t pose. Under the chin we go. Clever part is diving into the nose from the soft palette and back again through the lip so that when you pull the two ends together the mouth closes, like so, a drawstring purse. Lovely. On our way, Mrs Barry. Once you’ve got a nice relaxed Mona Lisa smile, you’re on; I’m quoting there. Eye caps prevent eye drift, we use perforated ones. Eyes and hands are important to the bereaved; it’s where they go to, the places that used to communicate, you’ve got to get it right. Eyes sink, fact, mouths gape, hands flop. We all require a little help to look our best, the dead are no different. These eye caps come clear or flesh-coloured, we use the clear. The perforations stop the eyelid sliding back, grip it in place. The dead are not supposed to stare, sneak a peek. Inwards is where they are looking, like Saints.

What have you got today, something nice?

Reen likes to know what everyone’s having. Reen herself sticks to Tupperware, as does Howard. Me and Derek prefer to experiment with wraps, baguettes, tortillas. Tesco do a range. Pricey but a treat, a bit cosmopolitan. Cheers you up. Plus you don’t have to decide the night before.

Brie and Cranberry.

Sounds nice.

I had that. I prefer Chicken Tikka.

What have you got then?

Ploughman’s Wedge.

Is that Healthy Living?

Dunno.

Doubt it.

Open a window, Irene.

Sorry.

That’s why I bring Tupperware.

The office doubles as a canteen. The phones go, even at 1 p.m. If Reen’s got her mouth full someone else has to pick it up, it’s Russian roulette. We only take thirty minutes for lunch as most funerals and cremations are between 2 and 3 p.m. It’s the nature of the beast, as Derek puts it.

After lunch I return to my Five Things Girls Can’t Resist. Here we go. Romantic, Confident, Artistic. OK, number four is Foreign Guy. Foreign Guy is foreign. Cheers. Ta. I read it anyway. Foreign Guy comes from a faraway country and probably has a cute accent, it says. His social customs and everyday behaviour might be a little quirky. He is uniquely charming, it says. For fucks. Whatever. Not to worry, four out of five’s not bad. Number five is Intelligent/Witty Guy. That’s two things. You have to be
both
in one? It says in the article Intelligent/Witty Guy instigates conversations that are intellectually stimulating. He makes her laugh with his clever sense of humour, it says. He is an intellectual athlete, springing from one topic to another with informed ease. He is never boring. I let out a lungful of air. That is the five things girls cannot resist in a guy. I roll up the mag. I feel depressed. I don’t know why. Not that I’m zero out of five, obviously I’m not. Just the tone of the thing, like yeah right, mate, sorry but nowhere here do it say: number six, Total Knob Guy.

Right. Stand back. Miracles are us. I can feel the force. Chop chop.

Derrick snaps on his gloves, spreads his arms. You’re no sooner sat down than you’re off again.

When they stop dying, Derek says, we’ll put our feet up, won’t we, Lee? Right. No time like the present, he says.

He points a right-hand finger at me, bends his knees. It’s one for the money. Two for the show. Three to get ready and …

He points his left-hand finger at me.

I don’t know what comes next. I wait, blank.

Come on!

Is it Elvis?

Derek straightens up, drops his pose, irritated. He sighs as he turns to dig inside his instrument box. Too late now. I have been slow on the uptake. Timing and general knowledge: two of my weaknesses. Elvis. If he’d sung ‘Love Me Tender’ I might possibly have caught on, but. The trouble with Derek is he has a temperamental streak, slightest thing can throw him, rub him up the wrong way. He was psyched in order to transform Mrs Barry, return her to her former glory; I let him down on the starting grid. Elvis Presley, before my time. In death, as in life, nothing’s perfect.

*

L
ETHAL
!
A SWIFT
half? No harm done. The Arms waiteth.

Ravester. You read my mind.

I enjoy these evening pints with Raven. I do not even bother to call them halves. Our usual seats. Vacant as per. Rave faces the door and tells me if someone comes in. We always sit the same old. I face the stuffed seven-foot bear and the toilets. Cosy in the corner, old Grizzly roaring over our heads.

Been busy?

Keith always asks that. He has been landlord here nigh on five years, but he always says the same thing.

Pretty busy, I say. Not as bad as this time last year. Run off our feet in the cold snap.

Keith tuts and shakes his head. He always does that.

Gatwick busy? he asks Raven.

Armageddon, he says.

Keith tuts and shakes his head.

You’d think he was flying the planes, I say to Keith.

Keith slides off with his cloth.

Rave necks his beer. A dagger of hair sticks out of his head. He is a proven exaggerator.

I saw a massive bee earlier, Rave says into his glass.

I do not reply. I was thinking we could discuss women and their foibles and my plans re Lorelle but I’ve changed my mind. In my head I have prepared a slam-dunk combo of Romantic/Confident/Intelligent/Witty and even Foreign guy all in one, just like that. Kerboom. This time next week I should be high-fiving. Livin’ la vida loca.

A man comes in rubbing his hands together. We sit up. We watch him. We look away before he speaks to us.

I’ve got gammon for tea, Rave says.

Raven’s mum does all his cooking and washing. I am tempted to point it out. One for the road? he says. He checks his watch. Before the clock tolleth?

It’s only twenty past nine, I say, double-checking. Go on then.

The gammon hangs in the air. I careth not. Things wear you down.

We just sit after that. Think on. The gammon floats off into the stratosphere.

*

I
FIND
L
ORELLE
on my mind almost all the time. When I am asleep she has a habit of creeping up behind me, putting her hands over my eyes. Guess who? I’m not one for games, even in dreams. I’m a big boy, a professional in trade. There are codes of conduct. I’m not up for this sort of thing generally, but. Needs must. Just make-believe of course, but still. When a girl like Lorelle kisses you without prior warning, you sit up and pay attention. And that’s when she makes her move. Nice one. Gobsmacking. Even when it’s all in your head. Not that I’m complaining.

My brain makes it up as it goes along. Game on. The girl from the chemist, for example, climbed in yesterday. Talk about awkward as. Hello, there, she says cheerily. What can I do for you today? Without waiting for an answer she disappears under the covers. She is very precise. Summer plums, six for a pound. Very reasonable. Methodical you could say, probably because she works in a chemist. For a moment I feel peaceful. I can hear the sea. Doesn’t last long. The light dims, a chill sets in. I listen to the click of my breathing.

BOOK: A Trick I Learned From Dead Men
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