CORTINA TRAP (SUSPICIOUS MINDS)
It was early evening as Henry entered Slough from the direction
of Iver, passing the dog stadium and driving along Bath Road with
The Queensmere on his right.
From the 1500's onwards Slough was the second stage for coaches
going west. In 1667 it took three days to reach Bath. In 1784,
Britain's first mail coach went through Slough taking 16 hours to
reach Bath. A highwayman calling himself Flying Hawkes was
notorious in the area, delaying many a traveller, though too
early to catch Henry, who in turn had arrived in Slough to soon
to see Tesco.
The thought uppermost in Henry's mind was of Janice, his
colleague at Barclays Bank, the only reason why he should forsake
a night at the pub with his mates and drive all the way to Slough
just to compete in an inter-bank darts contest.
At the age of nineteen he no longer considered himself young, but
he was aware that he had yet to discover his true personality.
Some things though were obviously not him. Things like the shirt
he had chosen to wear: the one that had seemed most appropriate
as he stood facing the bedroom mirror assessing the size of bulge
in his tight cream slacks, the light beige one with the antique
car pattern that his mother had been so pleased to buy him; That
shirt was definitely not "him".
He passed the Brunel Bus Garage behind which stands Slough
Station, built when Brunel's Great Western Railway arrived in
1838. The first train to Paddington departed on 31 May and took
thirty-four minutes. Over a century and a half later such has
been the march of progress that one might be tempted to allow
only half an hour for the very same journey.
The nearby canal on the other hand came late to Slough in 1879,
like a guest arriving at party where only the sherry remains
un-drunk.
As Henry searched for The Centre in Farnham Road, a huge building
only missable by someone whose whole being refused to accept the
obvious, he experimented with the number of buttons he could
afford to leave undone. He wanted to show his surprisingly hairy
chest to its best advantage. One thing he did know about Janice
was that she loved Gary Glitter. He wondered if maybe some kind
of medallion would have been appropriate and if he had doused
himself sufficiently with Brut splash-on antiperspirant, as
recommended by Henry Cooper.
Janice was rather boyish, which in Henry's eyes made her the
perfect starting point for what he hoped would prove to be a
heterosexual life. Seven years in the cloistered confines of an
all-boys school, and an illustrious career in the Scouts had left
him uncertain about the issue of gender. He'd known many boys
more effeminate than Janice, who, with her inability to look
convincing wearing makeup and her tendency to discuss sport,
represented in Henry's mind the nursery slopes of sexual
encounter; the practice ground before the slalom. The manager's
assistant had, rather uncouthly in Henry's opinion, only the day
before informed the assembled staff that Janice wore a Chelsea
bra........ loads of support but no cups. Henry was unsure about
couth (un- or otherwise), but he did feel uneasy that the
contents of a young girl's bra should be the subject of
middle-aged speculation. He felt a duty, as the only male member
of staff to find Janice in any way attractive, to stand up and
defend her maligned figure; to befriend her diminutive
protuberances and then perchance to take them home and play with
them, like pet rodents, or Play-Doh.
The AM radio in the beige Cortina was struggling to keep track of
Capital Radio.
'Little Nicky Horne.' The radio sang. The show was called
"Your Mother Wouldn't Like It".
'Here's Hall and Oates,' Little Nicky Horne almost sang.
'She's gone...oh ah, I'd pay the devil to replace her,' Hall and
Oates cried, just as they had so many times before.
'Geriatric nonsense.' Henry muttered as he reached for the off
switch. He wondered if it would be any use sending Capital a few
record tokens so they could play something different. They played
"She's Gone" so often you could measure the frequency
in Hertz, or maybe that should be hurts.
Things were looking up for Henry. He had been working for six
months at Barclays and the management was very impressed by his
performance. This in itself should have been vindication for
having been dropped, after six moths trial, from the staff of
Midland Bank who claimed his solemn and morose nature made him
unsuitable to confront the public, but he had only that morning
heard news from his old branch that had tempted him to believe in
divine retribution. The manager at Midland Bank in Hillingdon, Mr
Shitehouse (née Whitehouse), had a reputation for giving the
young male staff a hard time whilst being excessively friendly
and supportive to the young female staff. During the period that
he was writing bad reports on Henry, a young cashier named Kathy
was planning her impending wedding to Terry, a local car dealer.
Terry became well known at the bank and would often pop in just
before they all went to the pub at lunchtime. Being a forgetful
type he would ask if someone would print him up a temporary
cheque book as he had used up all his cheques and forgotten to
hand the slip in for a new book. They were "good old
Tel" who always stood his round, and bubbly Kath, salt of
the earth, 'ow's your father, just one sugar, 'Coz I'm sweet
enough'. No one wondered why Kathy was always the first to
arrive. She would sort the mail and start inputting into the
computer the cheques that had not gone through the automated
clearing, apparently just to kill time and help the computer
operator. The most common reason for cheques not going through
the clearing was that they were temporary cheques that only had
the account number printed and were not magnetically encoded.
Kathy and Terry got five years each for fraud after the bank
noticed that few of Terry's cheques had ever been debited from
his account. Henry was lost for words to describe his emotions on
hearing this news; schadenfreude would have been a good word, but
these were the unenlightened days of pre-Café Hag
advertisements.
Henry's future was assured. Bank clerks marry other bank clerks;
they get cheap mortgages and retire on a good pension. All he
would have to do is keep his more ludicrous ambitions locked up
in the guitar case under his bed.
To Northolt
To Harefield