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Ian Campbell
Ian Campbell was born in Belfast, has been a prolific writer for over twenty years and has had work published in Southern Ireland, Northern Ireland, England and Scotland. He has won many prizes for his work and was also a WEA creative writing tutor for two years. Ian is a member of Ards Writers and participates regularly in performance readings - his most recent project being the literary aspect of the Festival of the Peninsula 2004 in conjunction with Donegal, Dumfries and Galloway.
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A Stitch in Time by Ian
Campbell
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At the other end of the street, among the odd numbers,
lived Mr and Mrs Green. They lived in neatly-painted comfort
– carpet in the bedrooms and never a broken pay. They
holidayed in the Isle of Man every other year - foreign
travel to the neighbours.
Their house was neat, as if they were awaiting the arrival
of a doctor or church visit. The furniture was never rearranged,
the ornaments glued in place. Their showhouse had never
been upset by children. They either had no relations or
ignored them. They never had friends in and never went out
together. Their front door usually closed. Their house was
an island moored in our street.
Mr Green was a red leader in the shipyard. Because of the
almost luminous quality of the bright orange paint on his
only set of overalls, Mr Green glowed softly in long winter
evenings. The second coat of paint gave a guide to Mrs Green’s
colour scheme. The pink spattering around his shoulders
was the bedroom ceiling. The cream streaks at his elbow
the scullery walls, white gloss on each thigh from painting
the window frames. White speckles on the peak of his cap
appeared when he whitewashed the backyard. In the shipyard
he was known as The Walking Colour Card. A quiet man, working
all his life at the mouth of the lough, the bitter winter
wind had given him a core of granite and a quick temper.
Mrs Green passed up and down the street only as her shopping
dictated. She nodded shyly to those who spoke to her first.
She never stopped in a neighbour’s doorway for a chat.
She had no scandal to pass on, no gossip to exchange, never
spoke ill of the dead. She was not worth talking to. She
was one of the few women who never chased playing children
from her door. Not a word about the hopscotch marked out
in chalked squares on the scrubbed flagstones at her doorstep.
She always paid well to those lucky enough to run a message
for her. Always a soft word for children. The same could
not be said of Mr Green.
In the alcove beside the fireplace sat a singer sewing machine
with a treadle. A latticework of black metal, with the singer
motif standing out in relief, supported the bench top. The
mahogany surface burnished to a deep, warm shine. The red
grain swirled over the length before turning back on itself.
At the bobbin end, the French polish was worn and lighter
in colour, where Mrs Green’s mother had pushed through
countless yards of material.
The black spokes of the flywheel had not moved since her
mother’s death. It was polished once a week and dusted
every day with reverence. Mrs Green’s memories were
enshrined there deeper than the cross grain of the hardwood
top.
No-one knew the reasons for the rows – rare as they
were – probably something small and uninteresting.
The neighbours decided it wouldn’t be worthwhile holding
a glass to the wall.
The first sign that all was not well would be the sound
of Mr Green’s voice rising through walls which were
so thin, one alarm clock could serve the whole street. Spaces
were Mrs Green’s answers, the silent commas in Mr
Green’s sentences.
‘Why don’t you leave?’
‘If you’re not happy here, go!’
‘To Hell with the neighbours!’
‘There are no bars on the doors.’
‘I’m not holding you against your will!’
Then Mr Green would go public. The outside door would smash
open and the picture fall off the wall next door. Mr Green
would step from the lighted kitchen onto the wet pavement
of our darkening street.
‘Well, make up your mind in front of witnesses. You
can stay or go.’
The witnesses would be hungry for more evidence. In the
following silence, Mr Green would make his way back to the
door.
‘You can’t say you didn’t have a choice.’
But that night he was about to step into the hall when Mrs
Green met him at the threshold. She had on her Sunday coat,
hat, black patent shoes and handbag. She held his eyes for
a moment, stepped past him into the street and walked away.
The growing audience trying to work out the plot as the
curtain went up on the second act.
Mr Green disappeared back into the house, the people next
door held their picture waiting for the door to slam. It
never happened. Mr Green came back into view behind the
sewing machine, guiding it roughly through the door frame
on squealing castor feet, cursing as the corner chipped
his neat paintwork to the bare wood. Then the Singer bounced
irreverently onto the chalk-stained flagstones.
Mrs Green stopped at the sound but did not turn around.
There was no need. Mr Green pushed the machine down the
street, shouting all the time. Backs of heads became profiles.
‘Take this with you.’
‘I want nothing in my house I didn’t pay for.’
‘I’ll not be accused of anything!’
Latecomers peeked round the edge of their curtains. He gave
the machine a final push and stood defiant as it skidded
across the pavement, slowed down and nuzzled into the silent
form of Mrs Green. He turned and went back into the house.
The picture was held next door, but the Greens’ door
remained open.
With resignation, Mrs Green, put her handbag on the polished
top of the Singer and pushed it back up the street. As the
singer crossed the flagstones, it mimicked a train over
points. She stepped inside the hall and pulled the front
wheels up and over the threshold, the black castors followed
with a bump. She manoeuvred the machine into its place in
the alcove. Before removing her Sunday coat, she took a
cloth and rubbed the dampness from the polished top.
Mr Green’s slammed and bolted the outside door. Next
door, they picked the picture off the floor again.
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