Wednesday 27 January 2010

Four

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from: martintrhiggins@acemail.com
to: richardvhirst@acemail.com
sent: 27.01.10 at 23.34 pm
subject: RE: Hello!

Hey Richard,

My god I'm stressed. Work is hell right now. And not in the good way. Mr Crumbgold is coming apart at the seams like a cheap pair of trousers. Last Thursday he made everyone go out after work to The Tulip and Laurence and it all went downhill very quickly. After drinking a whole bottle of Silly Mary whiskey, he insisted we all write down our mobile numbers on napkins and put them in his hat. Then he spent the rest of the night going through the napkins and throwing away all of them execpt the one with my number on it. I left around 10 pm and stumbled home to my traditional berating ritual from Veronica (incidentally, I tried calling her 'Ronnie' the other day for comic effect and she tried to force a bread roll through my face. I think you're right about her sense of humour) before drifting into a peaceful sleep on the sofa in front of one of my compilation videos of old Crimewatch reconstructions. I did not sleep for long though (although I did NOT have any nightmares, Nick Ross made sure of that) as my phone started buzzing indicating a text message had been recieved. It was from Mr. Crumbgold. It said "I WNT YOU 2 DESIGN A BIN THATT CAN SCREAM WHEN ITZ FULL AND NEEDS EMPTYIN". I read it three times and then, putting it down to his drunken state, went back to sleep. The next text came around 10 minutes later, it read "DO IT FLOPSY YOU MASSIVE POO!!!!" which was more than a little disturbing. I sent him a reply enquiring if he was alright, to which he replied "LOLZ!!!! URE GONNA DIE IN A BOAT U HUMAN SICK BUCKET!!!!! :) x". The texts continued to arrive all night, until eventually the last one appeared at 5.47 am which simply said "DWA dsssr jp LOOOL WA???? !".

The next day was dreadful. Friday, as you'll remember, is 'Foolish Belt Day' at Betterbins and so the mood in the office was playful at first (I wore a skipping rope again which made everyone smile). Then Crumbgold arrived. He seemed oblivious to the SMS assault he had put me through the night before when I finally nervously confronted him. He said I was "talking through my ears" and should "go to school again or something". Not long after I went back to my desk, he ran out of his office brandishing several empty beer bottles. He dragged old Mr. Trenderskill out of his chair and made him stand on a table in reception. Poor Bob, he's so old now his skin is almost see through. Crumbgold forced him to put his fingers into the bottles and wave them around. "LOOK" he bellowed, "IT'S BOBBY BOTTLEFINGERS!!!!". We stood in stunned silence as our great leader threw the complimentary oranges from the front desk at Bob for him to catch. Each time Bob's new glass digits fumbled the oranges to the ground, Crumbgold screeched "OOOOPS! BOTTLEFINGERS!!!" and laughed like a greasy Hyena. Urgh. It was a grim sight. What should I do Richard?? You always had a way of calming the boss, should I do something to help him? He's obviously not right.

Anyway, that's enough of my troubles. How's you? Glad to hear the novel is back on the go mate, the new opening chapter sounds much more 'mass appeal' than your first idea. As for Virgil, well you know how I feel about vagrants. Oh no wait, was that Cormorants I was talking about that time? Anyway, be careful. On a positive note, your new offices look very impressive! There must be at least 4 floors in that building!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I'll never understand architecture! :D And a new office romance eh? Agatha sounds nice dude, you should totally go for it. You have to stop pre-emptively ruining relationships by imagining which perversion the girl in question would be most disturbed by, it's just silly. You had a great thing brewing with Sally Boooon a while back and you wrecked it all by asking her out whilst stood on her doorstep wearing a gasmask and a paper dress. No one believed it was an asthma cure Rich, no one.

I better go, it's late and Veronica wants me to read her new John Grisham novel to her in my "stupid girly voice" before bed. God I love that woman! :)

Speak to you soon mate.














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Thursday 21 January 2010

Three

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from: richardvhirst@acemail.com
to: martintrhiggins@acemail.com
sent: 21.01.10 at 22:59 pm
subject: RE: Hello!

Hello, Martin!

Sorry it’s taken me a while to get back to you. I finally have broadband set up in the new flat. I’m emailing you from my the comfort of my own ‘desk’ (an ironing board) at home, the hustle-and-bustle sounds of the city emanating from below my window: people chattering away, sirens going off, thousands of volts of electricity being pumped into lifesize rubber dummies. Admittedly that doesn’t sound very romantically metropolitan, but my flat is above the police’s taser range, so I have to make do with what sounds I hear.

I’ve had quite a week. The new job, the new pad and all that. First of all though, I can’t believe you’re bringing up your uncle Patrick’s perimeter fence again! Let’s face facts: we both know there is no fence. There’s only your uncle Patrick’s extended hallucinations. The man’s patently insane. Sorry, that sounds harsher than it was meant to. I’ve no problem with your uncle Patrick so resolutely insisting on the existence of an imaginary perimeter fence. The fact that he seems to think it runs throughout his flat, forcing any visitors into a ridiculous pretence of clambering or hopping over it, is a bit much but just about manageable. But that he expects you and me to go over twice a month to go through the absurd charade of ‘painting’ the damn thing is really taking the biscuit. I didn’t like to say at the time, but don’t you feel a bit foolish, stood there, over an imaginary indoor perimeter fence, waggling a teaspoon (or ‘brush’) around and making ‘painting’ sounds for a full day? I know his crumpled little sack of a face always looks really chuffed with the brilliant job we do but, honestly, it’s just supporting your uncle Patrick in his fence-based madness. The fact that we had to be ‘supervised’ by ‘Melvin’, a giant talking egg in suspenders, only testifies to this.

Anyway, sorry. Ignore me. I’m not in the best of moods. I had a terrible night’s sleep: I had my usual dream in which David Blunkett is creeping about in my loft, dressed as a croissant and rubbing crushed Wotsits into his hair. So I got up and tried to start work on my novel - A Clown In The Circus Of Sadness - but I’ve felt pretty uninspired ever since you quite rightly pointed out that my original first chapter, where I had my hero sit down to play chess with Death on a beach, was a bit of a rip-off of the beginning of The Seventh Seal. I’ve now changed my novel so they’re no longer playing chess but Kerplunk; and it doesn’t take place on a beach any more but by the deep-end of an indoor swimming pool on the outskirts of Wigan; and it’s no longer Death but ex-Monkee Pete Tork who, gone mad, has dressed himself in tattered bin-liners and is demanding Ribena. This, I’m pretty sure you’ll agree, certainly makes for an arresting opening, but it’s a real bugger to think what should happen next, plot-wise.

Then there’s the constant night-time interruptions from Virgil. I know, before you say anything! He should have gone by now. I really should have just kicked him out. Don’t worry though, he should be gone soon - he’s just started a fantastic new job. Well, maybe not ‘fantastic’ actually, but a job’s a job. Well, I guess it’s not actually a job, per se. Basically, he’s decided to join a gang. I say ’decided’. Late last night he came back in a very distressed state, his hair and head covered in bright red paint. This, so I’m told, is what they do round here. He’d been ‘tagged’ by a gang and is now their ‘property’. I asked if they were called ‘The Red Heads’, which I thought was a gently amusing attempt to cheer him up. But no, apparently they’re called the ‘Cunt Fuckers’. Still, he gets paid. Apparently they deal everything round here these days: drugs, organs, novelty thimbles, anecdotes regarding Robocop actor Peter Weller, those fake glasses with a little plastic moustache attached to them. Still, he seems pretty upset about the whole ordeal, so I feel bad about kicking him out right away. Plus he’s the only one who can re-set the sound-settings on the tv (whenever I turn it on it’s always gone to the setting which makes every programme sound like it’s been filmed in a tin filled with screaming gulls). And he knows how to make carbonara sauce just the way I like, with bits of garibaldi biscuits and pineapple rind floating about in it. And he does this brilliant impression of George Alagiah - he’s all ‘Hello, I'm the news,’ and then he’s all ‘Coming up in the programme.’ It makes me laugh like this: HA HA HA HA HA HA HA. After which I make a sighing ‘Ahhhh…’ sound. Sometimes I start laughing again after this. You sort of have to see it. So yeah - it’s best he leaves but, for now, I’m letting him stay on the couch. I do with he’d put some clothes on once in a while though.

How’s life at Betterbins? Things sound much the same. Sorry to hear Mr Crumbgold has decided you’re the current ‘office chimp’. If it makes you feel any better, I’m pretty sure he does it to everyone once in a while. I was the chimp for a while. It’s with no small amount of shame that I recall how easily I caved in when he demanded I burst into his office and fling my dung around during Alan’s disciplinary meeting for stealing drawing pins. Poor Alan. I wonder if those surgeons ever managed to fully reconnect his retinas.

And I’m surprised you weren’t aware I was leaving. I assumed it was you who’d arranged the ‘Goodbye And Good Luck Richard, Love Martin’ party. I could have sworn I saw you gluing the tiles that spelled out the ‘X’ kiss onto the farewell mural on the side of your block of flats. And stitching the bunting with a photograph our smiling faces appliquéd onto each heart-shaped triangle of fabric which was hung throughout the town. Clearly, when I said my farewells just before leaving for the railway station and you dodged into the toilet muttering ‘Will you all excuse me, I’ve got something in my eyes’ it really was just your glaucoma playing up again. Ah well. There’s tons of things I miss about the old town, the month long festival period that led up to the Mocking of the Turnip being but one. Do you remember when Tall Gary beat Dog-Patter Geoff and Gaseous Trevor to win the Chip Peg Contest? That’s one of the things I don’t like about living in a city. If I tried to describe to the people here a competition that revolves around grown men picking chips out of a ditch with clothing pegs, in the nude, whilst being thrashed with nettles and urinated on, they’d probably think it backward.

I’ve attached a picture of my new offices at Benjamenta Insurance. My new job is okay, I suppose. A bit boring. Each morning I’m given a list of numbers, some in red ink, some in black. My job is to copy the numbers out - the ones in red into a spreadsheet titled ‘Red’, and the ones in black into a spreadsheet titled ‘Black’. There’s been some talk of adding some numbers in green ink to my list, and a corresponding spreadsheet (titled ‘Green’), but at the moment that’s all only crazy speculation. I’ve no idea what any of the figures mean. So, yeah - not brilliant, but it sure beats being in Betterbins, all that having to spend the morning swinging from the artificial ‘vines’ Mr Crumbgold had fitted to the ceiling in his office before giving him his ‘afternoon groom’. Plus the people here are nice and friendly, although they don’t show it as much as they do back in the old town. None of all that hugging, shaking hands, smiling, talking, making eye-contact or getting out of someone’s way here. No sir! We’re too dynamic to have time for all that sort of thing here in the city.

Actually, the one person in the office who I seem to have struck up a sort-of-friendship with is a woman called Agatha, who I’m thinking of asking out. She works in the office upstairs (where, it’s said, their spreadsheets are inked with all the colours of the rainbow) so I only really see her when she comes down to get things from the stationery cupboard or when I’m loitering about near the stairwell by the women’s disabled toilets hoping to get a glimpse of her. A glimpse of her in her office, I mean. You can just about see where she works from near the women’s disabled toilets. I didn’t mean I hang about trying to get a glimpse of her going to the bathroom or anything. I’m not some kind of disability-fixated wee-fetish peeping Tom. I mean, if it turned out she was into that sort of thing, I’d be willing to give it a try. Although I’d probably try to talk her out of it beforehand. And she’s not actually disabled. Not that there’d be anything wrong with that, of course. She just isn’t - I have no say in the matter. So, if having me spy on her whilst she relieves herself in a semi-public manner, any aspect involving disability - a set of crutches, for instance, or a whiplash-brace for her neck, maybe even a fully motorised wheelchair - would be purely cosmetic. Which is all a bit messed up, when you think about it. Borderline insane, really. Can you imagine what kind of issues someone like that must have? Jesus. I don’t want to get involved in all this. I think I’ll give Agatha a wide berth from now on. Thanks for warning me, mate.

Don’t mention Elizabeth Fraudenshoesen! You know that name sends shivers down my spine. And not the good kind, like sex-shivers. The bad kind of shiver, like when you see an elderly man spitting up a sandwich into a napkin. I don’t want to sound all appearance-ist or anything, but if you have to have two glass eyes, opting for a set of novelty ‘breast’ ones, with massively protruding nipples, is not a good day-to-day look. Lord only know who told her popping them into her mouth and sucking on them was seductive. And then there’s her hands, with the nails on the wrong sides of her fingers, all facing inwards. Have you ever watched her clench a fist? It’s like being on a bad ketamine trip.

I think we both know the reason me and Veronica never really got on: it was that incident. You know the one. I hate to write it down, to be honest. Whenever you see the sentence ‘I did a poo in her knicker drawer’ it just looks totally inexcusable. But I still maintain that if someone invites me round to their place to play a game of ‘hide and seek’ they shouldn’t just assume I know the rules. I hold your uncle Patrick half-responsible: insane or not, he knew when I asked him how wickedly bad the advice he gave me was. Veronica must know that I felt more ashamed and idiotic than I’ve ever felt in my entire life for the remainder of her grandparents’ anniversary party. Her calling me ‘an evil sex-lunatic’ and then fuming about it for the rest of the evening didn’t exactly make me feel any better. And it certainly killed the party mood: no matter how much go-go dancing I did afterwards no-one cracked a smile. Nonetheless, I forgave her. I can only hope one day she’ll look within herself and be big enough to do the same. Anyway, maybe she’ll relax a little now I’ve moved away.

I'd better stop writing this now. Virgil's carbonara's ready and the pineapple rind can go quite soft if it's left to stew too long. And I don't like that.

Bye for now,

Richard

Sunday 10 January 2010

Two

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from: martintrhiggins@acemail.com
to: richardvhirst@acemail.com
sent: 10.01.10 at 6:13 pm
subject: RE: Hello!

Dear Richard,

Great to hear from you mate, really great. I must say your move came as quite a surprise to me. I mean you’ve never seemed one for big changes and have often told me “I will never leave this place” when we have been sat in The Horseman’s Mistake of a evening, supping pints of Sailor’s Breath, but I think the main reason I'm so surprised is because you were supposed to be helping me paint my uncle Patrick’s perimeter fence yesterday and I had no idea you were leaving. Hey ho, never mind eh?

It all sounds very exciting, trains and everything. They have that one here that drives kids around MacDonalds but I don’t think it’s a ‘real’ train. I remember that time me, you, and Small Keith tried to rob it after a few too many drinks in The King’s Limb. Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha. Ha ha. Heh. Do you remember? Actually maybe you weren’t there. Someone your height was there though. I think you made the right choice defending the old people on the train from the kids, after all as Chris Rea once sang “I believe old people are the future / Give them sweets and all the rest”. I think it was him. Glad you made it there safely pal, wherever it is you have gone.

205 Hagenback Heights is such a romantic sounding place. It instantly brings to mind happy families barbecuing meat in the summer sun, playful snowball fights and sledging in the winter, conker fights and kicking leaves in autumn, and other stuff in spring. I can’t believe you saw some prostitutes right near your new flat, that’s amazing. Mind you I suppose that ‘Naughty Nora’ woman lives near me but she’s more of a slut than a professional sex worker. Apparently one of her boobs looks EXACTLY like John Suchet when he played Poirot but I’ve never had the opportunity to verify this. It was Billy Ballsacks told me that and you know what he’s like, a total bloody idiot. As for Chasing The Busker, it doesn’t sound any more odd than that Mocking The Turnip thing that all the men over forty seven have to do here every year over by the lake. Uncle Patrick won three years in a row using the same insult which I thought was a bit sly but I’m only 29 so what would I know about vegetable derision.

Sorry to hear about your unwanted lodger by the way, this Virgil chap sounds like trouble. I knew as soon as I started reading that paragraph that there was strife ahead and that as sure as grass is green, your blue mug with the elephant on it would be at the very centre of the whole shebang. I’ve always liked that mug. Of course I’ve only ever seen photos of it as you were always most insistent that it couldn’t be viewed ‘in person’ which I have to say mate, is a little overprotective. Now this Virgil prong seems to be getting his grubby mitts all over it and I’m pretty jealous. Shame that you are still having those ‘Blunkett Terrors’ Richard, I thought all that psychotherapy would have helped you. I know Doctor Bailey isn’t really a psychotherapist or even a doctor for that matter but a vet has to have gone to medical school too right? Even one that lies as much as Doctor Bailey. David Blunkett isn’t out to get you mate, he probably doesn’t even know who you are. You must defeat this phobia you know, they don’t stand for any of that nonsense in the city. It’s a sign of weakness.

I have no idea what an ‘Assistant Internal Resources Consultant’ does either I’m afraid. It sounds important though. It’s certainly better than ‘Office Chimp’ which is the title my boss insists on using for my position at Betterbins Wastepaper Baskets. It made sense when I was making tea and brushing the floors for them, it was even a little amusing, but I’m an assistant sales manager now for gods sake! He introduces me as ‘Bobo The Office Chimp’ to new clients and has Beryl the tea lady bring me bananas during meetings. I swear one day I’ll do something drastic and wipe the smile off Mister Betterbins once and for all. Actually talking of Betterbins, I suppose I should tell him you’ve left when I go in on Monday. You’ll be missed in the office. Especially by that Elizabeth Fraudenshoesen eh you sly devil? She was always making eyes at you. I know it could get a bit annoying when you were trying to work and they would roll down your desk but you have to admit some of them were very realistic so the girl obviously has talent. I’ll give her your email address anyway, I’m sure she’ll want to write to you.

I’m doing ok mate, you know, the usual. The same as last week really when I saw you in work. And you know very well it’s not Alice, it’s Veronica. Veronica. You should remember that as you spent the entire of her birthday party last year calling her ‘Purple Ronnie’ until she threw a plate of vol-au-vents at the wall and locked herself in the bathroom for 2 hours. I don’t know why you two never got on, you’re actually very similar. Not facially obviously, I made that mistake with Christine Frankells and I still have trouble looking either of you directly in the eye. Anyway, we are both still living together in our flat which is still the size of an average disabled toilet. Nothing has changed here Richard, apart from your presence here obviously. And now I know the reason behind that. Well, I have to go on now mate, Veronica says if I don’t watch Grand Designs with her she will bite off my nose and spit it down my throat. Hahaha. That’s my girl, what a character. All the best of luck at the new job Rich, I mean that. Stay in touch eh?















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One

from: richardvhirst@acemail.com
to: martintrhiggins@acemail.com
sent: 10.01.10 at 10.21am
subject: Hello!

Dear Martin,

Well, here I am! I thought I’d email you now I’ve moved to the city to let you know how I’m getting on in the city. I’m currently writing to you from a tiny place called ‘Krajewski’s Internet Café’. It would seem, even here in a massive city, internet cafés are considered a bit ‘late 1990’s’. This is the only place I could find for miles around: a small café populated, it would seem, almost exclusively with unfeasibly hostile foreigners of indeterminate nationality. I assume this while place is a front for an international people-trafficking ring. That might sound a bit racist, but there’s been a steady stream of pre-teen girls coming and going from a back room in varying degrees of distress.

I came down here by train yesterday. It’s literally been years since I was on a train. Have they always been scientifically designed to provoke feelings of existential despair in people like me or is that a fairly recent devel
opment? I felt like I was trapped in Guernica. My decision to take a seat next to the toilet was my own fault, I suppose. Although I can’t really be said to be responsible for the malfunctioning door which kept noisily sliding open and shut. Until you’ve witnessed the clumsily strobed nightmare of an drunken middle aged man with a teddy boy quiff slumped in a toilet cubicle, shitting and wanking at the same time, you’ve simply not known the true nature of disgust. Still, at least he seemed to be having a good time, of sorts, which is more than can be said for an elderly couple at the far end of the carriage who seemed to be being harassed by a gang of youths who kept flinging empty Coke bottles at them and telling them to ‘Fuck right off.’ I would’ve intervened, obviously, but, as I’m sure you’re aware, I get terrible motion sickness if I ever stand up on public transport when its in motion. So I gave the youths some very disapproving looks and, eventually, they stopped. Admittedly, this was when the elderly couple disembarked, but, as they past me, they both gave me a firm look - you could even call it a glare - which, I’m fairly sure, was intended as a kind of salutation between fellow experts in facial expressions of disapproval. I also like to think it said: ‘Thank you. Thank you for your censorious staring. It made our journey less unbearable.’

I arrived late at night. I’d arranged to have all my furniture and boxed-up possessions sent along ahead of me last week, with instructions to the apartment building supervisor to let the moving-van people bring my
stuff in. I got a taxi from the station to the block of flats (it’s 205 Hagenbeck Heights - I’ll let you know the postcode when I find it out). Despite being practically pitch black at the time, I’ll admit that, initially, I still wasn’t exactly over-impressed with the place: on my journey from the taxi to the outer door of the building I was approached for eye-poppingly cheap sex three times (twice by prostitutes, once by someone thinking I was a prostitute); heard shots being fired, some of which I’m pretty sure I felt ricochet through my fringe; and saw a one-man-band busker being chased by a gang of hooded youths. This last thing sounds amusing now I write it out, but believe me, it wasn’t: he was having trouble outrunning them with his all his instruments strapped to his body and with each hurried step he his kick-drum or kick-cymbal issued a loud and distinctive enough noise to let his pursuers know exactly where he was. Poor bastard. Again, I would’ve got involved but, as I’m sure you can understand, I’m in a new city. I don’t know the things that go on here. Chasing The Busker might well be a local tradition round these parts, or possibly a piece of Arts Council funded experimental musical theatre. Or possibly a local band shooting some wry social-commentary scenes for a music video. They wouldn’t want a confused outsider getting involved.

Anyway, the weirdest thing happened when I actually got into my flat: I found that all my things had been unpacked, cleaned and arranged. At first I thought the building supervisor or the haulage people had taken their remit a bit far. Or that maybe, by some freakish coincidence, I walked into the wrong flat, i
n which someone who happened to have the exact same possessions as me was living. I went into my new living room to find a thin, bearded man sitting on my new sofa with his feet up on the coffee table my gran left, watching late-night poker on my television, whilst at the same time listening to Bitches Brew on my stereo, and - the worst thing - drinking hot chocolate from my special blue mug with the picture of an elephant on it which, as you know, I allow no-one to use, not even me. After an initial flurry of aggressively posed questions of my part (I calmed considerably when he put the mug down) I got the truth: he was a tramp who’d been secretly squatting in the empty flat and, when some men delivered a flatload of furnishings, thought it was just an impossibly lucky ‘one of those things.’ He opened them all and made himself more at home. I flew off the handle a bit - is it considered acceptable to call tramps ‘tramps’ to their faces? - and threatened to ‘alert the proper authorities.’ However, when he picked the mug back up and made as if to take more sips with his homeless lips, I softened a little and told him he could collect whatever things were his and leave and that would be the end of it. Ten minutes later Virgil (he told me that was his name) was at the door, apologising repeatedly and saying thing like: ‘Guess I’ll be off then now. Don’t you worry about me… There’s a good bridge I know not too far from here… the ice isn’t too bad under there… there’s an ice-cream van which sometimes dumps its stale cones nearby…’ Whilst all this was going on I could still clearly hear gunfire going on outside, and was pretty sure I heard the distant parp as the unfortunate busker has his horn stamped on. Well, I’m not a total monster. I told him he could stay for a couple more nights at most on the sofa. He was very grateful. Even more grateful when, exhausted, I went to bed only to find he’d left what I can only call ‘his mark’ inside the sheets, and I decided to take the sofa myself. I slept uneasily: I have trouble relaxing in unfamiliar places at the best of times and I kept imagining I saw the shadowy figure of David Blunkett sneaking about the room, waving his limbs and dribbling with insanity, but, when I turned the lamp on, it invariably turned out to be a stack of unsorted books and dvds. Why do I fear David Blunkett so?

So, there you have it. My first night in the big city. I start work tomorrow. I passed the Benjamenta Insurance offices on the way here through the city: a monstrous concrete block of a building, with no lights on. I’ve still no idea what it is my job will actually entail. ‘Assistant Internal Resources Consultant’ - what the hell is that? I tried to ask during the interview but all they told me was that I’d be ‘assisting he Chief Internal Resources Consultant in his professional duties, of course.’ I wish I’d lied a little less on my CV. And during the interview. And when they gave me a suspicious look and asked me ‘Are these really your qualifications?’ That was my opportunity to come clean a
bout my claim to have ‘invented text messages’, really.

I should be more positive about things - new job, new city, new life and all that. Why am I still so depressed? I keep thinking about death and…

Actually, I’d better wrap this up. My internet time’s almost run out and I’m not sure I’m entirely welcome here: the guy behind the till keeps glaring first at me then at a large meat cleaver hacked upright into a chopping board on the counter. What about you? How’s life back there? Are you still with Alice? Was she called Alice? I’ll email you again once I get broadband installed in my new place. I asked Virgil to call BT whilst I was gone. He said he’d ring round the other service providers first as he’d heard bad things about BT and wanted to get me the best offer available. Then he made a joke which had ‘To BT or not to BT’ as the punchline. We laughed.


Right, farewell sir. I shall speak to you again soon.

Richard V. Hirst




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