Staying Alive. Matt Beaumont
Чтение книги онлайн.
Читать онлайн книгу Staying Alive - Matt Beaumont страница 10
1. Pony trek up Andean spine of S America
I should point out that the only horse I’ve ever ridden was pink and had a slot for the fifty-pence piece…But, you know, think Big and all that.
2. Write Bill Bryson-ish book of pony trek (drawing attention to plight of indigenous peoples, threatened tree frogs, etc.)
3. Return Elgin Marbles (NB: check first)
The NB was a reminder to check whether it was Elgin that had stolen them or Elgin that wanted them back. I was pretty sure that Elgin had nicked them, but you know how these things can go pear-shaped for lack of basic groundwork.
4. Buy old bus. Refurb as mobile drug rehab unit (double-decker/make it residential?)
5. Mobile soup kitchen?
6. Mobile potage kitchen? (Sell lobster bisque/vichyssoise to City workers at £7 per portion)
Because it was clearly getting pretty stupid at this point, I took a coffee break. That was when I noticed my kitchen hygiene was slipping below its usual operating theatre standard and wrote:
7. Clean kitchen cupboards
8. Ditto hob
9. Mr Muscle Kitchen Spray
10. Cif Cream (lemon)
11. Flash Wipes
12. Plain digestives
13. Gold Blend (decaf)
I probably needn’t add that items seven to thirteen were made reality within hours, whereas numbers one to six have yet to progress from back-of-an-envelope status.
‘I’m fine, Megan,’ I say now. ‘I’ve got all sorts of things in the pipeline.’
‘I hope so. Just don’t leave them in there too long.’
She turns to go and I ask, ‘Do you want a lift?’
Now, why did you say that, because it’s only going to lead to her asking you…
‘You’ve finally had the car fixed?’
See what I mean?
‘Um…No…But I could call a minicab.’
‘It’s OK. I’ll get the tube.’
I follow her to the front door. She opens it and says, ‘Bye, then. I’ll give you a call if there’s anything else.’ She dips forward clumsily and kisses me on the cheek.
Then she’s gone.
I return to the living room and open a chink in the curtain. I watch her cross the road and walk in the direction of the tube station. But she stops fifty yards away beside a gleaming red Bentley and climbs in.
The woman I was meant to be with.
Megan and Murray.
Mamp;M.
Two little peanuts nestling in their chocolate and candy shells.
Gone forever.
(Unless she comes back for the garlic crusher.)
Now it’s Megan and Sandy.
Mamp;S.
Two items of sensible cotton underwear nestling in a…
It really doesn’t bear thinking about.
And she doesn’t even know that I wanted—want—to marry her.
And that there is a statistically slight (according to Stump, who hardly seems the reliable type) yet distinct possibility that I have a disease that begins with C and has been known to kill people.
I listen to the sound of fireworks fizzing and popping all over South Woodford. It’s as if they’re celebrating the fairy-tale union of Meg ’n’ Sand.
God, this self-pity. Megan was right. I have got to do something with myself.
Well, I can take care of that right now. I start with the magazines, adjusting them so they are once again in perfect alignment with the table’s edge.
9:17 p.m.
I switch off the vacuum cleaner and turn on the stereo. Solace in song. A disc is already in the slot so I press play. It’s Caesars. ‘Sort It Out’. A nice, bouncy tune. And, now I listen to it, lyrically apt.
I’m gonna smoke crack
’Cause you’re never coming back
I’m gonna shoot speedballs
Bang my head against the walls
I wanna sniff glue
’Cause I can’t get over you.
Yes, that is sooooo…not me. If, on the other hand, it went, I’m gonna spring clean, Wanna spray some Mister Sheen…
monday 10 november / 8.57 a.m.
I wake up and the first thing I think—apart, obviously, from Damn, forgot to set the alarm—is that it has been five days since Megan came for her stuff. I wonder why she hasn’t been in touch about the ring. Or the garlic crusher. I tip myself out of bed and make a coffee. Then, still in my pyjama bottoms, I head downstairs to the hall and grab my post. No Jiffy Bag containing a jewellery-box-shaped lump. Just the usual crap.
Back in my flat I sit on my sofa and open…taran-tara!…a Barclaycard statement:
BALANCE FROM PREVIOUS STATEMENT | £977.74 |
PAYMENT RECEIVED—THANK YOU | 30.00 |
JP STEIN OF HATTON GARDEN | 6,499.00 |
MONTHLY INTEREST AT 1.385% | 13.12 |
NEW BALANCE | £7,459.86 |
Bugger.
I’ve