Junction X Erastes (best motivational books of all time TXT) š
- Author: Erastes
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By the time I reached my front door, my nerves were about as tightly-stretched as they could be, but when I opened the front door, I found I was coming home to a completely different house than the one Iād left.
Valerie floated up the hall, a vision in something diaphanous in a colour she called āEau de Nil,ā her hair piled in Grecian layers on her head.
āDarling,ā she said, scaring me senseless, āhow tired you look.ā She took my hat, briefcase and umbrella from me gently, wafting Chanel No. 5 with every movement of her body. I frowned, wary of this new camouflage. āCome and meet the new neighbours,ā she said. āIāve invited them for dinner to save them struggling with the packing cases for their pots and pans.ā
It was, frankly, the last thing I wanted. I knew that Iād have to greet the new neighbours eventually, but Iād planned to be out in the garden, casually passing the time of day. I resented them for being in my house when I wasnāt there and I resented them for living in Philās house. Forced and unexpected dinner parties I could do without. With the day Iād had, all I really wanted was to down a swift couple of whiskies and then to immerse myself in Maigret on the television.
However, when Valerie entertains, itās a stronger man than I that can resist her. She led me into the sitting room. āHere he is,ā she said brightly, giving the impression that sheād been talking about me before I arrived. āDarling, this is Mr. and Mrs. Charles. And this is Ed.ā
āAlbert,ā said the man who stood and held out his hand. āAlbert and Sheila, please.ā
I shook his hand, dutifully; he was a short and dusty-looking man, with thinning blond hair and a mouse-like expression, as if he were constantly on the alert for the snap of a trap. Sheila was plumpish, all in cherry-red and white, with a nervous little smile. I think both of them were terrified of Valerie in full āHostess-with-the-Mostestā mode. I couldnāt blame them; she was like a battleship on crudities once she got going.
āAnd this is their son, Alec.ā
And there he was. Gangly, taller than both of his parents, with a face that said āboredomā as clearly as if heād shouted it. He had on clothes that spoke eloquently of who he was and where heād come from. Dark black trousers, with a shiny white shirt, slightly too big, and a maroon jumper which did nothing for his colouring at all. I guessed that they were school clothes, worn because they were āsmart,ā and I was right.
I wish, oh, I really wish, that I could say it happened then, that it was love at first sight. I wish that I could say that I looked at him and the world disappeared, or something poetic like that. But I canāt. I was annoyed at my evening being interrupted, I was smarting from Philās behaviour, and I was on edge that Valerie would revert to her cold war after the guests left. So I didnāt take much notice of him. He was at the back of the room and he said nothing much all evening, so he was easy to overlook.
After the greetings were over, I made my excuses and went to change. I returned, with a fixed smile and a resolve to use the evening to please Valerie, hoping that perfect behaviour would substitute for flowers. I poured us all drinks and sat down.
āValerie tells me you work in the city,ā Alfred said. āBeen telling us all how successful you are.ā
āNot that we couldnāt tell,ā Sheila added. I was to get used to the way they spoke, in sequence, not quite finishing each otherās sentences but still managing a coherent whole. āYou being so young in a lovely house like this, and your lovely wife, and cars.ā
The Bentley and the Wolseley were in the garage and I felt a rush of irritation that Valerie had shown them off. It seemed like boasting to strangers.
āItās not as glamorous as it sounds,ā I said. āHonestly. What is it that you do?ā
āIām an engineer at the car plant.ā
āBeen there twenty-five years, got a lovely commemoration gift,ā Sheila finished for him. I remember smiling and feeling like my face was aching. āI work at the hospital,ā she continued. āIām a sister in the geriatric wards.ā
āKeeps them all under control, donāt you, dear?ā Alfred said.
āThat must be very rewarding,ā I said automatically. I was surprised, though, and I wondered how they would fit in with the City brigade and the housewife Mafia. I couldnāt think of one other man on The Avenue who worked with his hands or one other woman who worked, full stop. I turned my attention to Alex at last. He was staring out of the window, if I remember, his feet kicking at Valerieās precious Ercol chairs. āAndā¦ā I had forgotten his name.
āAlec,ā his father said. āHeās the reason we moved. To get him into St. Peterās.ā
Then I understood. The children both went, of course. If you lived in The Avenue and you wanted the best grounding for your children, and if you could afford it, then there wasnāt any other choice. Living so close, of course, meant the twins didnāt have to board, so that cut down on St. Peterās considerable fees a great deal. Even with both of the Charleses working, I reckoned in my head that they must have been on a tight budget to manage. It made sense to move, too. The catchment area was strict; if you didnāt live in the area, it was very unlikely youād get in, and people wanted their children to get into St. Peterās. It was the school that produced Oxbridge students, year after year.
āHeās bright, then,ā I said, speaking of him as if he wasnāt in the room.
āOh
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