Failing to Deliver
By Dominic Horton
I was
disappointed to not have the opportunity to read the Halesowen News this week after the errant paperboy failed to
deliver the publication to Codger Mansions.
The News fills in the gaps in
my knowledge of happenings in the parish that I do not hear about in the Flagon
& Gorses and as such it is a vital resource for a writer of a column such
as this, so its absence can be costly.
Mind you I can hardly complain as when I used to deliver the News as a boy I regularly overlooked
delivery to a house on the basis that it was a little way away from the other
dwellings on the round. The elderly
occupants of the house were always efficient in lodging their complaint to the News offices and I always used to wonder
why anyone would want to read such a boring local newspaper in the first
place. Karma has it that I am now in the
position of the pensioners in question and my keen anticipation of receipt of
the local newspaper means that unwittingly I have officially slipped into
middle age.
Paper
rounds then were effectively child slave labour (and I would imagine that the
position has not improved greatly in the intervening years) and lugging
hundreds of papers around in two bags over both shoulders was tantamount to
child abuse but in those days children did not have the luxury of getting on
the blower to Esther Rantzen. Things
took a drastic turn for the better though when the Poison Dwarf decided to quit
his Sunday morning paper round at Tasic’s newsagents on Shell Corner and he
bequeathed the round to me. The round
was seemingly so well paid that the Dwarf used to deliver the newspapers in his
car, him being seventeen and all, and I wondered how this could be so but soon
enough all was revealed.
The pay
for the paper round was the going-rate pittance but the key to its
profitability was the fact that you had to collect the money for the papers
plus the delivery fee off the punters as you walked the streets of your
round. Some customers were happy to
rise early and pay you in person once your knuckles had rapped their front
doors but others preferred a lie in and would leave the monies for their papers
in hidden, secretive nooks and crannies such as under a welcome mat or in a
plant pot in the porch.
At the
end of the run through of the round the Poison Dwarf had a pocket bulging with
the change that he had collected from the customers and he explained that Tasic
never counted the loot but simply slung it in the till. So the Dwarf advised me to continue with his
practice of relieving the pile of coins of all the gold nuggets and also of the
fifty pence pieces in an effort to supplement the meagre wages. This practice yielded such a fruitful return
that the overall remuneration for the round was such that eventually I
sub-contracted half of it out to my friend Scouse Stuey (who had a touch of the
James Dean’s about him). I didn’t have
a great deal of guilt about outwitting Tasic out of a few pennies as the Polish
newsagent was unscrupulous enough himself to sell a match and a fag combo to
underage smokers and besides I was a street kid from Shell Corner with a living
to hustle.
The
Dwarf also counselled me to get to the shop no later than 0630 hours to start
the round as at that time Tasic had not packed the paper bags so you could do
it yourself; Tasic was happy with this as it saved him a job but the benefit of
self-packing, continued the Dwarf, was that while Tasic was not looking you
could slip a few top shelf magazines into the bag and flog them at school to
make a few extra bob, which was a good little side-line. Things went awry on this front one Sunday
though when I had sneaked a copy of Razzle
between the pages of a Sunday Mercury
and subsequently forgot about the matter.
I unwittingly put the Mercury through
the letterbox of an old man who paid exclusively in pennies, which he left in a
pot in the porch; his front door was primarily made of glass and as the Mercury hit the ground on the other side
of the door to my horror the Razzle slid
out of the newspaper and came to rest besides it. I could hardly knock on the door and ask for
the magazine back so I chose to just let sleeping dogs lie. Luckily for me there was no complaint to the
shop and the old fella must have simply thought that the Sunday supplement was
unusually racy that week.
James Dean |
One
bloke always answered the door in a highly dishevelled state after having seen
off a gallon of beer the night before and it was clear that each week my knock
on the door had interrupted his restorative slumber; he always answered the
door in tight red briefs and if I was lucky he had hastily thrown a garment on
his potbellied upper body but more often than not he went bare chested. He would rifle through his wife’s purse
(after shouting to her up the stairs “where’s thee puss?”) for sufficient coins
to settle his bill while loudly imploring his kids to stop playing on the
Stannah stair lift behind him, which they used as a fairground ride. I suggested to the bloke that he could simply
put the monies under the doormat next week to save him having to arise from his
pit but he always decided against this option, offering apologies and promising
that he would be up in good time next Sunday.
This of course is the classic drinker’s deluded belief that everything
will change for the better and be different tomorrow, but of course it never
is.
The
last drop of my deliveries was to an elderly gentleman named Horace, who was a
disabled wheelchair user and I had to knock on his kitchen door which was
accessed via his garage. The garage
housed an immaculate Ford Granada in metallic gold and every week I checked the
mileage but it never increased and I wondered why Horace didn’t flog it off as
it would have fetched a few quid but maybe he secretly harboured a thought that
one day he might drive again but sadly that was never going to happen.
I would
always tap on Horace’s kitchen door but more often than not he failed to
respond. Through the frosted glass I
could see Horace sitting motionless in his wheelchair and I always feared that
he might have given up the ghost and shaken off his mortal coil. When banging harder on the door reaped no
dividends I would gingerly enter the kitchen, which would always smell like
death, and place a hand tentatively on Horace’s shoulder whence to my eternal
relief he would wake with a start before coming to the realisation that it was
only me and there was nothing to worry about.
Old H would then put the kettle on and he would always offer me a two
fingered Kit Kat (which made a pleasant change from a two fingered salute) and
we would chat about Saturday’s football results for half an hour or so, which
he seemed to appreciate given that he lived alone and seemed housebound.
I was
earning more on a Sunday morning than other kids at school who did a morning,
evening and Sunday paper round but eventually the halcyon days of the scams
came to an end after Tasic sold the shop to an Irish couple named Sean and
Mary, who introduced a record book to keep track of the money I collected. Sean never failed to be cheery, even before
dawn on cold mornings and Mary never failed to be miserable, even when Sean
tried to draw a smile out of her with his wisecracking blarney. By employing creative accounting I managed to
retain a cut of the collection monies for a while but eventually I realised
that the game was up after increasingly rigorous audits by Sean were introduced
so with a heavy heart I packed in the round as the reduced income was making my
position untenable.
On my
final Sunday I told Horace that I would not be visiting anymore and I
introduced him to the new paperboy and although he seemed to take it well
enough I could tell that underneath he was wistful and forlorn that our little
Sunday morning chats were coming to an end and in all honesty so was I, as I
enjoyed and looked forward to them. As
I was about to go Horace said, “follow me” and beckoned me into his front room
and there to my surprise and delight I found a magnificent fully working train
set that filled the whole of the room and Horace let me play with it for a
while. Eventually I departed with a fond
farewell, leaving behind Horace, the red pants man, Sean and Mary and it was
full steam ahead into my next dubious career.
© Dominic Horton, April 2014.
* EMAIL: lordhofr@gmail.com .
* Lowlife is dedicated to the memory of the late Jonathan Rendall.
Really enjoyed it again man, thank you.
ReplyDeleteThanks Danny, really appreciate it. Good luck Vs Arsenal, I'm looking forward to watching the game, it should be a cracker.
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