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I sit in a bar with Miss Pinkie; her son, who is a copper, is getting the drinks. She looks at me and says: we are just friends if he asks (as if I was going to tell him I was rogering his mother) and don't talk politics or say you write poetry. I will be the perfect gentleman, I reply. Her son comes with the drinks: a whiskey for his mother, a beer for me and a lemonade for himself; he sits down and gazes at me. So, Benedict, what do you do for a living? I'm a nurse, I work with your mum. He looks at Miss Pinkie, then at me. What do you do? I ask, giving him the Mr Innocence stare. I'm a police officer; aiming for C.I.D. He sits upright in the chair, brushing a hand over his dark hair. What do you think of the IRA? Miss Pinkie stares at me as if I'd let wind go in public. They're a murderous lot, he says; you don't support them do you? No, I don't support them; I agree with their objectives, but not their methods of achieving those objectives. He looks at Miss Pinkie and she looks at us both as if she didn't know who we were. Both their objectives and methods are objectionable. He takes a sip of his lemonade as if the very words were distasteful in his mouth; I sip my beer; his mother gulps her whiskey. What do you do when you're not being a nurse and involved in “leftist” politics? I listen to music: Wagner, Delius and Mahler, and that crowd. High-Brow stuff; I like Johnny Mathis myself. He wears a smug expression and looks at his mother; she looks at her glass. What else do you do apart from listening to music? he asks. I write poems and read books. You're not a queer are you? He stares at me suspiciously, then looks at his mother. Would I be with your mum if I were? Miss Pinkie looks at me; her blue eyes are large as a cow's. What do you mean? he says. Another drink? I say, another lemonade? He means, Miss Pinkie says, we're good friends, and he's not that way inclined. He stares at me with a hard glare, but I don't mind.
0
Dec 19, 2014
Dec 19, 2014 at 1:58 AM UTC
MEETING MISS PINKIE'S SON. 1974.
I sit in a bar with Miss Pinkie; her son, who is a copper, is getting the drinks. She looks at me and says: we are just friends if he asks (as if I was going to tell him I was rogering his mother) and don't talk politics or say you write poetry. I will be the perfect gentleman, I reply. Her son comes with the drinks: a whiskey for his mother, a beer for me and a lemonade for himself; he sits down and gazes at me. So, Benedict, what do you do for a living? I'm a nurse, I work with your mum. He looks at Miss Pinkie, then at me. What do you do? I ask, giving him the Mr Innocence stare. I'm a police officer; aiming for C.I.D. He sits upright in the chair, brushing a hand over his dark hair. What do you think of the IRA? Miss Pinkie stares at me as if I'd let wind go in public. They're a murderous lot, he says; you don't support them do you? No, I don't support them; I agree with their objectives, but not their methods of achieving those objectives. He looks at Miss Pinkie and she looks at us both as if she didn't know who we were. Both their objectives and methods are objectionable. He takes a sip of his lemonade as if the very words were distasteful in his mouth; I sip my beer; his mother gulps her whiskey. What do you do when you're not being a nurse and involved in “leftist” politics? I listen to music: Wagner, Delius and Mahler, and that crowd. High-Brow stuff; I like Johnny Mathis myself. He wears a smug expression and looks at his mother; she looks at her glass. What else do you do apart from listening to music? he asks. I write poems and read books. You're not a queer are you? He stares at me suspiciously, then looks at his mother. Would I be with your mum if I were? Miss Pinkie looks at me; her blue eyes are large as a cow's. What do you mean? he says. Another drink? I say, another lemonade? He means, Miss Pinkie says, we're good friends, and he's not that way inclined. He stares at me with a hard glare, but I don't mind.
ON A MEETING BETWEEN A YOUNG MAN AND HIS LOVER'S SON IN 1974.
terry-collett
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Dec 19, 2014
Dec 19, 2014 at 1:58 AM UTC
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