Friday, July 19, 2019

so what on earth is this fiction about?

I saw a picture of a rather tasty and bad-boy-looking vicar in a magazine and words flowed into my head.  I have a chapter's worth, and some ideas - some immediate ideas.  The thing is, I have no idea where this is going, or even what genre it is going to be.
So I present it here for any suggestions and ideas where to take it.  Should it be a modern Don Camillo?  or should it be a vicar-as-detective?  or should it just be a soap opera?


Judge not lest ye be judged

Mrs. Hadley considered that she was the guardian of public morals, especially since old Reverend Shaw had died, and a new vicar had not yet been appointed. She saw herself as a one-woman neighbourhood watch, since her efforts to raise a community effort had been met with apathy or outright resistance.
She would have been genuinely astounded had she realised the rest of the village secretly referrer to her as the ‘neighbourhood witch’, and not in a way which was kindly meant.
“She’s one o’ them wimmin with too much time on her hands and a nose long enough to pry between courting couples to see how many buttons are undone,” said Old Tom as he drank down the last of his second pint in The Thrasher.
“And let’s just hope the new vicar won’t think her wonderful like Shaw did,” agreed Tony Blake, the publican.

Mrs. Hadley was horrified to see a huge motorcycle roar down the road, and actually stop outside the vicarage.  The driver got off.  He was clad in a full-face helmet and black leather jacket, with jeans.
“You! Hey, you! Be on your way; Lingley doesn’t need your sort!” cried Mrs. Hadley.
“No?” the young man took off his helmet to reveal a devastatingly handsome face, topped with untidy blond hair and blue eyes dancing with merriment.  “Well, I’m afraid my boss doesn’t agree, and I’m going to be here for some time. Good morning to you.” He pushed open the vicarage gate.
“You can’t go in there!” gasped Mrs. Hadley. “That’s the vicarage!  And there is nobody in residence at the moment.”
“Yes there is,” said the young man.  “Me.” He continued up the path, ignoring Mrs. Hadley’s cries that she was going to call the police.

It was quite an hour before a single police car arrived; the police came from Collingham, the market town which served Lingley, and though it was only four miles away, the Collingham constables knew Mrs. Hadley of old.
“Well, there is a bike, Pete,” said Constable 233, Timothy Cotton.
“Yes, and there might even be a biker,” agreed Constable 167, Pete Noakes.  “I suppose we ought to knock at the vicarage door.”
Their knock was answered by a dog-collared individual in full regalia, topped with a handsome face and partially tamed blond hair.
“Can I help you?” he said.
“We ... er, we had a complaint about a squatter, reverend,” said Timothy.
“Oh, from a, er, lady in a tweed twinset and pearls improbably teamed with blue hair of the colour I would have envied ten years ago in my Goth period?” said the vicar.  “I’m the Reverend Charles Cunningham but you can call me Rev Chaz, everyone does.”
The two constables exchanged a look.
“Did ... er, did you arrive in leather and jeans?” asked Pete.
“Of course; one doesn’t ride a bike in ecclesiastical robes,” said Chaz.  “And most of the time I will continue to wear jeans, but with a dog-collar of course.  I was putting on the uniform to read myself in at the church as you might say.”
“Silly old besom,” said Pete. “False alarm, again.”
“I suppose one should consider the story of the boy who cried wolf, if one is charitable,” said Chaz.  “One day she might be right and be murdered in her bed if you lads were dilatory about getting here, though for my part, I’m glad not to be found in my lucky underwear when I changed.  Poor thing, is she lonely?”
“She’s bored,” said Timothy.  “Rich widow, employs gardeners and a girl every morning in the house.  My girl, as it happens, Patty Raikes, and Mrs. Hadley runs her finger over the tops of the doors, and never let a cup be put down on any surface, even easy-clean, without a coaster! If she had to do her own work, she wouldn’t interfere with the work of others,” he added resentfully.
“Well, officer, do you think she is spreading the story of the leather-clad hooligan about the village?”
“Undoubtedly,” said Timothy.
“Then hubris will find her when I give my sermon on Sunday on the theme of ‘Judge not, lest ye be judged,” said Chaz.  “And it is one reason I dress down; to see what milk of human kindness there is.  I plan to go sit in the bus shelter later, with a scarf over my dog-collar in old jeans and a t-shirt looking a bit scuzzy.  It should give me a very good introduction to my parishioners.”
“I’ll warn the sergeant,” said Timothy, grinning.  “For when he gets outraged phone calls.”
There was the sound of an engine outside.
“Oh, good, that’s Dave with my stuff,” said Chaz.   “He’s part of a small pop group and they transport their stuff to gigs in the van.  I expect it will cause outrage.”
“Psychodelic?” asked Pete.
“It’s all good Biblical imagery,” said Chaz. “But very few people know their Revelations well enough to associate it, and the group name, ‘Apocalypse,’ with anything but the modern idea of post-nuclear holocaust devastation and dystopia.  It has a whacking great dragon painted wrapped around the van.”
“Nice,” said Pete, who liked rock music.
They went outside, and the colourful transit had parked in the layby outside the church, opposite the vicarage.
“Here you are, mate; shall we just take it in and leave you to sort it?” said the brawny, leather-clad man with long hair.
“Thanks, Dave, mate, that’ll be grand,” said Chaz. Dave’s girlfriend had come along as well, a diminutive, violet-haired girl in cropped trousers, corset, and a dog collar which was more appropriate to a mastiff than to a vicar, though she would be changing the one for another when she had finished her Divinity degree.  Chaz wondered what Mrs. Hadley would make of  Lily-Kate, had she been a couple of years further on in her studies, and if she had been the vicar sent.  He grinned.
“I’ll be making tea for Dave and Lily, will you be joining us?” Chaz asked the officers.
They exchanged looks.
“Probably better not,” said Pete. “The sergeant will be wondering what kept us if we stay.  As it is he’ll be irritated it was a false alarm.”
“Oh, but think how useful for you to now know the new vicar, and be aware that the vagrant reports are going to be spurious,” said Chaz.  “I brought cakes in my saddle bag as well as tea, milk and sugar.  And they are home-made.”
The officers exchanged another look.
“Oh, well, we could help you unpack and write our reports in the kitchen,” said Timothy.

Shortly thereafter the two musicians, Chaz, and the officers were enjoying lemon curd fairy cakes, maids of honour and treacle tart.
“Your maker of homemade cakes is very good,” said Pete. “I bet you’ll miss this source.”
Chaz laughed.
“Oh, I make my own,” he said.  “My mother taught me to cook when I was small, and I’ve never regretted it.  I don’t do fancy stuff, but good plain cooking and baking suits me fine.”
“If you want a cleaner in exchange for lessons, I’ll have a word with Patty,” said Timothy.
“Well, that could work nicely,” said Chaz.  “Let me have her number, and I’ll contact her.”
The police went on their way, replete, ignoring Mrs. Hadley, who was pointedly hanging about in her front garden.  As Dave and Lily-Kate also left, and Chaz had moved his bike when she was not looking out, she smiled in grim satisfaction.  Doubtless these undesirable elements had planned a ... a Happening, or whatever they called these things nowadays, and had been forcibly moved on.
She would have been less happy had she seen Chaz setting up his music centre in the vicarage, and heading out to the church to find his way around and ‘read himself in’ as he put it.

The church was a fine mid fifteenth-century example of a wool church, larger than the needs of the current congregation, but with, Chaz was delighted to find, perfect acoustics. He was less happy about the bells, which had been described to him by the Bishop as poorly-founded and known to anyone who had ever heard them as ‘Dung, Clang and Pip’. Someone over-zealous in the war office had taken the former bells to melt down during  the first world war, to little avail to the war effort, and offending the inhabitants more than the intended effect of inspiring them.  Chaz was an enthusiastic campanologist and longed to raise the money to purchase a peal of six so he could at least ring rudimentary changes. He was independently wealthy, but buying six bells would be an excess of generosity.  The villagers had to want them.
It was what his sound system was for.
On Sunday, it would be playing the sound of bells as they should sound, with borrowed amplifiers from ‘Apocalypse.’  Dave had installed the amplifier for him in the bell tower and all Chaz had to do was to hook up his music centre and the recording of the bells of St, Stephen’s in Upper Crevington where Chaz had grown up.

Chaz took long enough to appreciate the cherubim on the hammer beams, and playful misericords in the choir, and after his prayers at the altar took himself back to the vicarage. Here he changed into jeans, a faded Iron Maiden t-shirt, base-ball cap and left the dog-collar off.  He strolled into the village. It was a pretty place full of timber-framed cottages, white-washed or painted the distinctive pink achieved in medieval times with bull’s blood and ochre, and in modern times owed more to the chemicals associated with an old English sheepdog.  Some later buildings of red brick were still sufficiently picturesque, with bow-fronted windows downstairs, with bullseye glass in some of the panes.  The old forge now had petrol pumps outside, but the main workshop was hidden under a traditional-looking barn, even if it was an interwar tin shed on the inside.  The village was very nearly twee.  Hanging floral baskets decorated it, and the green and cricket ground next to it were beautifully manicured.  Even the bus shelter was stockbroker Tudor, like the few modern houses, rather than the usual brick-built or metal and glass edifices.  Chaz thought this was taking things a little too far, but on the other hand it was weather-tight, and the bench was broad and comfortable.  He got out a lurid-looking paperback, and sat with his feet up.  Every now and then he drank from a bottle in a paper bag.
It was a bottle of water, but he saw no need to advertise that.
A man with a dog saw him first, hesitated, and came over.
“Look, my friend, there are some elements in this village who will not be happy to see you,” he said.  “I’m Tony; I run the pub.  If you’d like to help me with the washing up, I’ll give you a meal in the evening, but you’ll have to find your own place to stay.  I have my licence to think of.  And be sober, too.”
Chaz regarded Tony.
“Thanks, mate; and thanks for the warning, too,” he said. “There’s one Christian soul here to go with the fine church.”
“Yes, well ... don’t make me regret the offer,” said Tony.  “Fang here likes you, and that’s good enough for me.”
The dog – Chaz thought it some cross between a bulldog, a poodle and some species of terrier – had shoved his hand into Chaz’s to demand caresses.  Chaz poured some of his water into his hand and Fang, who seemed inappropriately named, lapped happily.
“Hey!” said Tony.
“It’s water,” said Chaz. “I like a pint from time to time but I never have liked hard liquor.  My father was an alcoholic.”
Tony’s nose was fine tuned to any alcohol, and he could smell that Chaz was telling the truth.  He looked suspiciously at Chaz.
“Are you an undercover cop or something?” he asked.
“Or something,” said Chaz.  “And I do appreciate the offer, though I will admit to not needing to take you up on it.  I’ll drop in for a pint, though.”
“I’ll have a pie and chips waiting for you anyway;  I am going to enjoy Mrs. Hadley’s face when whatever you are really doing comes out,” said Tony.
“Cheers,” said Chaz, who did not relish the idea of pub pie and chips, but then it would be impolite to refuse.  And maybe the Thrasher had a better cuisine than he feared and served real food not microwaveable fast meals.
He was not going to hold his breath, though.
Fang snuffled off happily, and Chaz sat back to await the next development.

26 comments:

  1. How amusing! I think if you have more it could make a very enjoyable stand-alone story.

    If it's not rude to say so from a non-expert standpoint, I think your writing improves all the time.

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    1. It wants to grow ...

      thank you very much! I do think I am learning and improving all the time.

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  2. This is great fun. Like Chaz I await the next development. A bit too soon to judge but so far I am feeling more Don Camillo, one of my all time favourite characters. You really are so very very good. Regards Kim

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    1. I think you might be right. In which case I need a balancing quasi antagonist to fulfill the sort of role Peppone has; I don't think Mrs Hadley fills those shoes.

      and thank you very much!

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  3. The driver got off.

    You ride a motorcycle, not drive it. So it should be 'The rider got off.'

    What a delightful description of Mrs Hadley (“She’s one o’ them wimmin with too much time on her hands and a nose long enough to pry between courting couples to see how many buttons are undone,”).

    I can see that a lot of fun could be got from this such as if in about 5 years time the Rev Chaz is hospitalized and Lily-Kate is sent to stand in for him.

    Dave Penney

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    1. I dunno, I used to drive my motorbike. You ride a pushbike but a motorcycle is powered so you drive it. Ok, quick poll from other people?

      ooooo....now that's an image to play with. I know a bit more about Chaz, his education was Eton, Sandhurst, Afghanistan and Oxford.

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    2. In Australia a drivers license is for a car and a riders license is for a motorbike.

      Dave Penney

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    3. Now that's interesting; here it's just a driver's licence and you have it ticked for what you can drive, whether that's a car, motorbike, track-laying vehicle, HGV, PSV or whatever. Our two countries are less separated by a common tongue than Britain and America, however, so I don't tend to look for it.

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  4. The dog – Chaz thought it some cross between a bulldog, a poodle and some species of terrier – had shoved his hand into Chaz’s to demand caresses.

    Interesting dog if it has a hand rather than a paw!

    Dave Penney

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  5. I like the concept whichever way you take it. I do like your descriptions.

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  6. I really enjoyed this ‘opening chapter’. Perhaps any antagonist might appear in one of the other villages Chaz has to cover. As I understand it most country vicars have to cover at least 3-4 parishes these days and spend much of their time on the road so the motor bike will become a familiar sight. ‘Thrasher’ sounds an odd name for a pub!

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    1. thank you. Yes, that is possible.

      Thrasher is a common name for a pub, because of thrashing the wheat for the grain, and then going to the pub after harvest. Down south they call it threshing and further north it's Troshing

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    2. I’m ‘Thresher’ country. Thank you.

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    3. LOL! I'm border but was born in 'Thrasher' country and there's a 'Thrasher' not far from me ..I don't know if they Trosh any more, but I have hear supposed locals pronouncing Happisburg 'Happy's Burg' not 'Haysbruh'

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  7. That’s a great start! Chaz is a bit mischievous, isn’t he?

    I would love a Don Camillo-like story, but wherever the story wants to go, I am sure it will be fun.

    Do you think there will be a Peppone-like character, too?

    There’s a comma instead of a full stop after St in “Saint Stephen’s”

    > The village was very nearly twee

    What does twee mean?

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    1. thank you. Yes, he has a reprehensible sense of humour.

      I am not sure who is coming in, but we will see; it has written another chapter for me which I will post in a moment.

      Twee is over-the-top chocolate-box-pretty and too 'naice' to be true

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  8. She would have been genuinely astounded had she realised the rest of the village secretly referrer to her as the ‘neighbourhood witch’

    I think that you meant 'referred'

    Dave Penney.

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  9. It has a whacking great dragon painted wrapped around the van.

    I think that we have 2 choices here, 'painting wrapped' or 'painted wrapping'.

    Dave Penney

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    1. hehe unedited remember... and the second needs a comma perhaps, dragon, painted wrapped ...

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  10. It was a pretty place full of timber-framed cottages, white-washed or painted the distinctive pink achieved in medieval times with bull’s blood and ochre, and in modern times owed more to the chemicals associated with an old English sheepdog.

    I am wondering what is associated with an old English sheepdog?

    Dave Penney

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    1. maybe you don't have those ads in Australia, of the OE Sheepdog bounding about in the meadow and all the flowers and shades of blue of the sky and greens and children with kites etc etc being shown matched with their colour swatches

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    2. It's a rarity for me to even think of watching the idiot box, having had it available since just after the war, from our roof we could see Alexandra Palace, I only came out here in 1971.

      Many thanks

      Dave Penney

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    3. heh, I grew up aware of the dog even without having a TV; big hoarding boards and also cardboard dogs in hardware stores

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