Friday, 22 February 2019

Looking for cranes on the Somerset Levels

Novel-writing

I’m taking a break from novel-writing at the moment as it’s a very intense activity.

On the Somerset Levels

Yesterday Frog, Dog and I went for a walk on the Somerset Levels, looking for the reintroduced cranes.* We didn’t find any cranes but we found lots of other things. Here are some of them.

There was mistletoe everywhere. This apple tree is almost giving up.

Strange fruit  (Spot the dog.)
Reflections in the River Parrett
A burst of new hawthorn leaves
Wild cherry blossom (or blackthorn?)
Periwinkle

Cranes

Cranes once lived in great numbers all over the UK, giving their name to places (eg Cranbrook, Cranford), food (eg cranberries) and plants (eg cranesbill). They became extinct as a breeding bird in this country at the start of the seventeenth century through being hunted for food and as the marshland where they lived was drained. 

In 1979 however three migrant birds set up home on the Norfolk Broads and in 2010-14 another group of birds was reintroduced to the Somerset Levels. Both groups are doing well.

They are big grey birds like herons but look different in flight. They are related not to herons but to moorhens and coots.



(Thanks to thegreatcraneproject.org.uk  for the information and picture above.)



* Thanks to Roselle Angwin and her blog for reminding me about the Somerset cranes

Tuesday, 12 February 2019

The Banker's Niece 18: Lethal weapon

New Year’s Day 1980

Jane stirred the mince that was browning in the frying-pan. The smell turned her stomach and she wondered not for the first time whether she should look into becoming vegetarian. Perhaps that would help her mysterious ‘heads’.
    She could hear bangings and crashings in the barn underneath the flat where Rick kept the Mini and his motorbike. He’d bought this in the summer so that he and Jane had independent transport. With all his comings and goings it had become impossible for her to rely on him to give her lifts to and from work and he became resentful when she tried to pin him down. She was surprised he allowed her to drive the Mini, but needs must she supposed.
    She hated to think what he was doing to the vehicles. He’d been down there all day, not even reappearing to grab his usual lunchtime cheese sandwich or make himself one of the many cups of tea that punctuated his days. She kept tensing, thinking she heard his feet thudding on the outdoor steps, and then relaxing when the noise turned out to be nothing more than the wood creaking in the breeze.
    Only one more evening to get through and then she would be back at her job and Rick would vanish into his packed programme of work, rehearsals and gigs.
   
Except for the Saturday before Christmas when Minotaur had a concert in Bristol and they all stayed overnight with a friend of Dougie’s, and Christmas itself which she and Rick had spent with their respective parents, the two of them had passed the entire holiday period together. Jane could hardly remember when they’d last had such a long time alone with each other. Christmas the year before probably and that hadn’t been great either, now she thought about it.
    It wasn’t a deliberate choice but both the university where Rick worked and the publisher where Jane worked had shut down for the festive period and they didn’t realise what this would mean until it was too late.
    Rick’s working life had of course been transformed by this new postgraduate, Chris. Unlike the other – male – academics, he said, she treated him as a human being. Instead of barking out orders from the door and then complaining, she had apparently come right into his workshop, stepping over all the pieces of equipment-in-transit (of which there were many), introduced herself, explained about her work and then with great deference asked if he might have time to help her. He’d spent most of the summer, it seemed, driving her around the coast and helping her take samples of seawater.
    Jane had met her once when she descended to Rick’s workshop herself, something she’d done often when she was working odd hours as a waitress but couldn’t do once she’d started her proper job in January, except on the occasional day off. Rick and Chris had been drinking tea together, sitting on high stools. Both had jumped up when she appeared and fallen over each other to make her a cup of tea too. The atmosphere was slightly strange but she put it down to Rick’s natural guilty conscience as Chris wasn’t pretty at all. She was tiny and very thin with short spiky hair. She looked more like a boy than a girl.

Jane lifted the frying-pan off the heat and tipped the mince into a large heavy saucepan. Then she took some onions, carrots and celery from the fridge and a knife from the drawer.
    It was getting dark. The sun was disappearing behind the folds of the hills in an orange glow. The sheep in the field below the window were still bleating lustily however, still nibbling at the grass. Did they ever stop? How on earth did they keep warm in the long cold winter nights?
    The banging down below had stopped and she noticed for the first time the faint strains of music from the transistor radio that Rick took with him everywhere. So he must still be there, but what was he doing?
    Was he holding his breath like her, trying to work out what she was doing?

She’d fallen into her job almost by accident. She’d written to all sorts of companies fifteen months earlier when looking for a proper job, and attended several interviews, but Peninsula Books was the only place that offered her a position.
    ‘It’s your secretarial experience that sets you apart,’ said Graham, the Editorial Manager, leaning back in his chair and patting his large stomach. ‘Lots of our girls can’t type and of course, when you’re dealing with manuscripts and authors, typing looks so much more professional.’
    Jane didn’t see any typewriter on Graham’s desk, nor any sign of manuscripts or letters to authors. In fact, there wasn’t much on his desk at all. She wondered what he did.
    The mention of typing upset her. She’d had enough of that in London. Had she really spent three years at university, only to be relegated to typing again?
    ‘Do you do fiction?’ she asked to cheer herself up.
    She’d discovered the company in the Yellow Pages under ‘Publishers’ but didn’t know anything about them until she picked up their catalogue in reception as she waited for Graham (who was half an hour late). All she could find in the catalogue was dull non-fiction books – political biographies, manuals about car repair and carpentry, cricket facts, guides to buying wine.
    Graham flushed. ‘No.’
    ‘Never mind,’ said Jane, hastily backtracking. What had she said wrong?
    ‘All you girls want to work in fiction,’ he snapped.
    In spite of Graham and the subject matter of the books, the job turned out all right. It suited her skills, both her photographic memory for spellings and her degree in French and Spanish which meant she knew about grammar and the precise meanings of words. People began to praise her, which made a pleasant change.
    But the best part of the job was Alison with whom she shared an office. Alison was three years older than Jane (being twenty-seven) and much wiser and such a good listener.
   
Jane chopped the vegetables and put them into the frying-pan to brown.

At least her latest ‘head’ had gone, the one that had come on after the visit to her parents - alone as always, but what else could she do? Well, she called the attacks ‘heads’, but the piercing pain in her right temple was the least of the problems. What she hated even more was the vomiting.
    If only humans could be like dogs. They just opened their mouths and out it came. But perhaps they didn’t like the sensation either. She remembered Bunty, her parents’ gardener’s dog. She used to walk around with her back arched like a hyena for several minutes before settling down to a good retch. And then, so as to avoid all that tedious clearing up, she consumed the results. So clever.
    At first, about twelve months ago when the attacks started, she’d thought they were hangovers and expected each one to be the last, so long as she was careful. But now she didn’t, and they were making her depressed. Alison thought they might be migraines.
   
Jane tipped the browned vegetables out of the frying-pan and into the saucepan with the mince, adding two tins of tomatoes and two beef stock cubes and leaving the mixture to simmer.
    That was suppers for the week sorted. Vats of mixtures were what she did these days, now that she and Rick didn’t eat together. Each could heat up as much as they wanted when they wanted, adding potatoes, pasta or bread depending on how much time they had.

The music stopped and a footstep thudded on the outdoor steps. He was definitely coming up.
    Quickly, she slid the knife under a tea-towel – or ‘drying-up towel’ as her mother would call it. It would never do to leave a lethal weapon on show. The imprints of Rick’s fist on the wall above their bed and the shards of glass on the floor where Jane threw her water-tumblers were warning enough of that.


Tuesday, 5 February 2019

The Banker's Niece 17: The concert

June 1979

You sit in the front with Dougie,’ said Rick.
    ‘No, no, it’s OK,’ said Jane. ‘I’ll be fine.’
    Actually, she wouldn’t. She hated squashing in the back of the van. It made her travel-sick, there were no seats so she had to sit on the floor which was awkward if she was wearing a skirt, she couldn’t see out as there were no windows, all the band’s equipment – their ‘gear’ as they called it – had sharp edges that dug into her, and every time the van went round a corner she slid into Johno and Steve, both of whom looked at her as if it was her fault.
    But she was there under sufferance, and she didn’t want to make things worse by taking Rick’s place in the passenger seat. He was the leader after all. He couldn’t slum it in the back.
    And she’d thought that attending the concert was such a good idea when she woke up that morning. It was the band’s biggest yet, part of an end-of-year, end-of-exams celebration at the university, and she hadn’t been to one of their concerts for months.

She had tried to be involved with the band, really she had.
    Right at the very start, back in January, it was she who’d come up with the band’s name. It was Saturday and the ‘boys’, as she called them, had all ended up in the flat for a cup of tea after their first rehearsal in one of the farm’s unused barns.
    She’d just started her new job as Editorial Trainee at a local publisher and was working on a book of Greek myths. The name Minotaur had popped into her mind and she couldn’t resist blurting it out, even though she’d played no part in the conversation up until then and was meeting Johno and Steve for the first time so had no idea what would appeal to them.
    Rick nodded sagely, which meant either that he was thinking over her suggestion or that he was desperately trying to remember what ‘Minotaur’ meant.
    Steve, the bass guitarist, who was only seventeen, looked blank.
    ‘Hmm,’ said Johno, keyboards and harmony vocals, who was ‘classically trained’ according to Rick and worked as a music teacher. ‘It might fit in with the band’s ethos.’
    ‘And then,’ said Jane excitedly, ‘you could call your first album “Ariadne’s thread”.’
    That was obviously a step too far. The boys stared into their mugs of tea and went back to talking about ‘chord progressions’ and ‘bridges’ and ‘hooks’.
    So when she had the idea for Rick’s stage surname, his real surname ‘Beer’ being liable to misinterpretation as well as too Devonian and too prosaic, she saved it up for when she and Rick were alone together and awake, which wasn’t often.
    ‘Rockford,’ she said, ‘like Jim Rockford in the Rockford Files.’
    It was mostly Jane who watched the programme as Rick was nearly always out in the evenings, but she knew Rick had seen it once or twice and enjoyed it.
    ‘It sounds so good with your first name and the “Rock” bit fits in with the band’s ethos.’
    ‘No it doesn’t,’ snapped Rick. ‘We don’t have an ethos. Music’s music. I hate categories.’
    Jane dropped the subject. She didn’t want to set off a rant, ‘categories’ being one of Rick’s bêtes noires. But she knew she was right.
    She’d been enthusiastic initially at the prospect of attending the band’s concerts or ‘gigs’ but they turned out to be in such seedy places and she had to sit on her own and men kept trying to pick her up. She always explained that she was ‘with the band’ but that simply made them leer all the more. She couldn’t stand it.
    She’d even gone to rehearsals to start with but that hadn’t lasted. The barn was filthy and freezing cold. The band never played anything through from beginning to end - they kept stopping, or playing the same bits over and over, or sticking in new bits they’d just invented. And they never asked her opinion or took any notice of her whatsoever. She might as well have not been there.
    But perhaps she hadn’t tried hard enough. Perhaps it was her fault she and Rick lived separate lives these days. Perhaps she should have another go.

‘I might come to the concert this evening,’ she'd said at breakfast as she ate her muesli at the table.
    Rick was tearing round the flat sorting out equipment, occasionally taking a slurp from a mug of tea in the kitchen.
    ‘Oh,’ he said, stopping dead. ‘No. That’s not a good idea. Not at all.’
    ‘Whyever not?’ She didn’t understand. She thought he’d be pleased.
    ‘The, um, the lads wouldn’t like it.’
    ‘But I would,’ she said in a small voice.

Dougie climbed into the back of the van and gave her a hand up.
    ‘Thanks,’ she said as she scrambled in.
    She’d known Dougie, Rick’s old schoolfriend, since the year before when he and Rick first had the idea for the band. He may not have been the best looking of the band members – to tell the truth, he was the only one of the band members who wasn’t good-looking, but then as drummer he was hidden at the back so it didn’t matter – but he was always kind to her. He noticed her at least.
    When not in use, the van lived in safety in his parents’ garden in a respectable area of  the city and he did all the driving. Jane was glad about that. She wouldn’t have trusted any of the others, least of all Rick.
    Dougie gave her a funny lopsided smile. She wondered if he’d been to the dentist.
    As she tried to make herself comfortable on the floor of the van, she could hear the boys talking in low voices outside.
    ‘Are you sure you’ve told her?’ asked Dougie.
    ‘Of course I have,’ said Rick irritably.
    ‘Well so long as she's not coming. We don’t want any trouble,’ said Johno in his pompous way.
    'No we don't,' said Steve, who always agreed with Johno.
    ‘Look,’ said Rick, sounding really cross. ‘It’s my business. It’s my life. It’s all under control.’
    Rick was cross all the time now. That was why she didn’t complain about him never being there. It was so much easier at home on her own. She wondered what it was he was supposed to have told her and what outing she was being excluded from.
    Dougie parked the van behind Exe House, the main university building, and the boys fell immediately into a well-ordered machine, hefting boxes out of the van and trundling them into the building. Jane didn’t bother offering to help; she suspected she wouldn't get an answer.
    Instead, she walked on her own round to the front, to the row of glass swing-doors that led to the examination halls and the official entrance to the Great Hall where the concert was to be held.
    Rick had asked her if she wanted to watch from ‘back stage’ but he sounded so grudging she’d declined the offer.
    ‘I’ll see and hear better from the front,’ she’d said.
    The evening sun bounced off the glass. Students strode about in shorts carrying tennis rackets and hockey sticks. She knew that if she looked hard enough at a certain spot on the horizon she’d be able to glimpse the sea.
    The university touted the campus, with its woods, lakes and shrubs, as one of the most beautiful in the country. People visited from all over. She however hadn’t been here since she finished her finals almost exactly a year earlier. She hadn’t wanted to return. She hadn’t wanted to be reminded of that time last summer.
    Not because of the exams, strangely, even though they’d required a monumental effort.
    Because of everything else.
    She supposed she did the right thing. What else could she have done to keep everyone happy? At least she and Rick were still together and at least she still saw her parents – on her own of course.
    It was just that . . . just that when she thought of her life these days all she saw was a grey cloud.
   
She sat on the floor against one of the side walls, nursing the plastic tumbler of warm white wine she’d bought from the bar. She knew the Hall well. She and Rick used to come here a lot to listen to bands. Except around the balcony there were never any chairs. Those near the stage danced and everyone else stood.
    People dribbled in and the air filled with smoke. Jane started to feel a little dizzy. She wasn’t a fan of cannabis. It reawakened things.
    Noise levels rose. There was a good crowd forming and she was glad for the band’s sake. She stood up and pushed her way to the stage. She didn’t know if she’d dance but she wanted to be in the vanguard.
   
At last, when her legs were starting to ache and she'd given up hope of ever seeing the band, the Hall lights went out and everyone stopped talking at once. The curtains drew back and the stage exploded with light, movement and sound. Rick was at the front – in purple bell-bottoms she didn’t recognise – singing and wielding his guitar like a machine-gun.
    Her throat locked. She didn’t know him. He didn’t belong to her any more. He was making love to every woman in the world. Every woman, that is, except her.