Village of fading dreams (5)

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VILLAGE OF FADING DREAMS (5) For seven long weeks the swimming pool was closed, boarded up, out of bounds. DANGEROROUS WORK SITE blared the notice on the outside door. KEEP OUT strung up on a metal hurdle doubling as buffer inside. Even the keyhole was taped over, as if Jurgen the caretaker suspected someone, Maxwell in particular, might discover some chink in his defences. Then one evening, while snooping around, Maxwell detected only one sign bearing WORK IN PROGRESS on a sawhorse. Yet obviously there was no work being carried out there and then. So perhaps when the workmen had signed out, they were unaware that some residents might be desperate to test the waters. Besides, Jurgen would have knocked off already, about 4.30. The Intrepid One tried the door handle cautiously. Unlocked! Cautiously entering the pool area, he noticed the extension of the freshly painted cream panoply above the uncovered water. Kneeling down on the decking as if giving thanks, he lowered his hand into the water. Warm, good-o! Without further ado, he jumped at the chance to get changed – Bugger management! When Emergency Relief Assistant Marion went to check on the wellbeing of the rarely sighted Marg Barlow, who latterly had attained centenarian status, but still regarded by her close neighbours as an infamous chronic smoker, she found the shrunken old biddy sitting huddled up on her shallow ground-floor balcony wrapped snugly around in a fawn-coloured shawl over her shabby pale blue dressing gown down to carpet slippers a crusty greyish brown. In her trembling, knotty, stained fingers, she was clasping a cigarette. ‘Now, Marg, you oughtened to be out in this cold weather, you’ll catch your death.’ ‘Just leave me alone,’ muttered the wizened oldie, with a curt dismissive wave. ‘I’m dying to finish this ciggie. That’s all I want.’ Yez, case of gaspers’ heaven. And she’s got away with it all these years. Good luck to ‘er! ‘Here, let me bring you a blanket.’ ‘Just leave it!’ Marg snapped, staring through the wisps of retreating smoke at the grey clouds shrouding the skyline. ‘All I wanna do is finish this liddle bewdie in peace.’ ‘I do worry about you. You know that, don’t you.’ ‘I wish you’d stop being so daft and sentimental.’ Marg spat something distasteful or imaginary, then snatched another drag. ‘I know you know me for a bit of a sook,’ said Marion, unable to resist spreading a selvedge of shawl round Marg’s back. ‘Merry Christmas, Marg! Have you got family coming to visit?’


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