The pale light struggles grimly to reveal itself as if
dragged from the firmaments like a teenager from his bed on a school morning.
Neville Vile refuses to fully open his eyes until this occurrence. Christmas
Eve and the rain spatters heavily on Scotmid's corrugated roof.
Soon he will shop for tinsel and a small Christmas pud,
maybe a bottle of whisky which will later send him off to sleep.
The woman in the flat below is a constant hooverer. Eight in
the morning she begins as if she’s working a shift. He can hear the click of
sucking appliances being fitted so she can click-click in the corners and along
the skirting boards. Maybe her man has a dust allergy or maybe it’s part of an
obsessive compulsion. Or maybe she’s merely a throwback to some ‘spic-and-span’
heritage when a housewife was spoken-ill of for ‘no’ keepin’ a clean hoose’.
Bloody annoying whatever it was. Neville suffered from some form of Phonophobia
or maybe Misophonia that was his own inheritance from his mother. ‘Noisy
neighbours’ didn’t have to be particularly noisy to rattle his cage. The
slightest hammering or ‘through the wall’ chattering was enough to ruin his
ideal of perfect quiet. He’d even stopped using the ‘Quiet Coach’ on the
inter-city because the absolute hush that he expected was never adhered to.
Better among the rowdies where at least he wouldn’t suffer the crushing
disappointment of his expectations.
He made himself tea and looked down upon the dismal morning.
People were being blown back by the fierce winds, umbrellas buckling under the
whoosh and swirl. Later he’d be ‘volunteering’ at the Salvation Army shelter
where at least he’d be warm. Maybe he’d even cheer up surrounded by folk doing
even worse in life than himself. Not a very selfless Christmas thought but it
would have to do.
He remembered volunteering at a ‘drinker’s shelter’ for the
homeless one Christmas when he was living in London. It was a drinker’s shelter
as it was pointless banning the stuff because what you’d end up with is an
empty building. What transpired was a multitude of pissed ‘guests’ and several
dozen staff who were stone-cold sober.
If you’ve never seen a very drunk man attempting to
break-dance around a tin of Kestral Extra then you may never have really lived.
The Karaoke was a joy to behold, far more entertaining than any X-Factor you’ve
ever watched. They should have drunk people on TV a lot more often.
As usual, Neville Vile felt far more at home among the
drink-sodden down-at-heels than he did among the worthies and exuberant
students that were his fellow volunteers. All Josh and Evangela’s no doubt
looking to ‘give something back’ or add a bit of mentoring to their CVs. Mind you! That Gabby Logan was there with
her bloke. Tiny, she was….
Neville Vile thought he didn’t like people; he almost prided
himself on this notion. Deliberately lugubrious and curmudgeonly, especially
around this ‘festive’ period, he saw it as all commercial and false bon homie. He defied any hope of a
Scrooge-like epiphany. No ghostly visitations would turn him into a
Cratchitt-saving reformist.
That is, until there was a loud knock on his front door……
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