From With One Lousy
Free Packet of Seed
Chapter 1
Not having a hand free for a more dignified entrance, Osborne gave the swing
door a mighty push with his foot, so that it boomed and echoed where it struck
the wall beyond. ‘Bugger,’ he said, and shuffled awkwardly through the gap,
sliding his back along the door to keep it open. He was distinctly overladen.
From each wrist dangled various coloured string bags, bulging with parcels,
fruit and scarves; and across his chest (as though to break an expected fall)
he wore an old BOAC airline bag stuffed thick with dog-eared papers.
The subdued brown
editorial offices of Come Into the Garden, though accustomed to having their
peace-and-quiet vacuum broken by this weekly intrusion, gave a collective wince
at Osborne’s rough approach. The sudden draught of air that sucked the venetian
blinds away from the windows and plucked the last rusting leaves from the
parched, spindly weeping figs was like a sharp exasperated huff of disapproval.
Someone once said you should never trust a doctor whose office plants had died.
For some reason this dictum came back to haunt Osborne each week when he made
his entrance. By the same token, you see, perhaps you should not pay too much
attention to a weekly gardening magazine which looks as though it has just
received a visit from Agent Orange.
‘Ah,’ he said (by way of
greeting) to Lillian, the editor’s secretary, but she made no reply. Her head
thrown back at a tricky angle, Lillian was engrossed in savouring the last
dregs of a cup-soup, tapping the vertical mug with a practised hand so that the
last shards of soggy crošton came sliding and tumbling mouthwards, like rocks
down a mountainside. Osborne knew from experience that there was no point
expecting a response from Lillian while a single iota of monosodium glutamate
remained at large. To judge from the distinctive aroma that hung like an iron
curtain across the office, today’s flavour was celery.
‘Lillian?’ A phone was
ringing, and Osborne wondered vaguely whether someone should answer it.
‘Lillian?’
‘Ngh,’ said Lillian,
preoccupied with running her tongue around the inside of the mug.
‘Shall I answer this?’
‘Ngh, ngh,’ replied
Lillian.
‘Right you are, then,’
said Osborne cheerfully, and left it to ring.
Heaping his string bags
on a free desk, he felt strangely happy. Come Into the Garden had always felt a bit
like home to Osborne, a shelter where he was welcome and beloved. As a regular
contributor, blown in weekly from the cold, he felt tended, nurtured—like a
special potted geranium brought indoors by a caring husbandman at the first sharp
sting of autumn frost. What colour geranium? you might ask, if you were a
gardening person. Well, Osborne was not dogmatic on the subject, but in his
mind’s eye he leaned towards cerise. But the colour was largely immaterial. The
point was that though he might be hibernating (professionally speaking) at Come
Into the Garden, at
least he was not in imminent danger of rusting, wilting, perishing, or being
hoicked out and shredded for compost. And occasionally—to push the geranium
analogy to its furthest limit—a colleague with a kind heart and advanced ideas
might even take the trouble to stop beside his desk and encourage him with a
few kind words.
So every Wednesday
Osborne came to the office to compose his time-honoured ‘Me and My Shed’ column
and soak up the atmosphere. These pieces could equally well be written at home,
really (in fact, the idea had been suggested to him more than once), but
throughout his career he had always written in offices, from his early days as
a staff reporter on a South Coast evening paper, and all through his time as a
second-string drama critic in the sixties, so it was how he felt most
comfortable. Physically, being a large, broad-shouldered person, he looked
slightly out of place at an office desk, as if when he stood up he would tip it
over. But Osborne merely felt cosy. He warmed to the very mottoes on the
walls—‘Ne’er cast a clout till May be out’; ‘It is not spring until you can
plant your foot upon twelve daisies’—and thought of the parable of the seed on
fertile ground. Also, not for the first time, he wondered whether anyone on the
staff actually had a garden.
A man who has been
buffeted by life needs a place where he can lay down his string bags. He needs
a place where he can sit at an old Tipp-Ex-spattered Adler, treat himself to a
free cup of tea, miss his deadline by hours, stand helpless at the photocopier
until someone rescues him, fill his pockets at the stationery cupboard, and
make hour-long surreptitious phone calls to old journo muckers in faraway
foreign parts. Come Into the Garden was that place for Osborne.
Today, however, it
seemed there was no one about. Osborne removed a few thick, dank layers of
navy-blue outdoor garment (the month was November) and hung them on a coat
stand, which promptly collapsed under the weight. ‘Bugger,’ he said, and ran
his fingers through his short, grey hair. Where was everybody? He looked around
for clues. A half-empty mail-sack lay limp in the middle of Reception, but he
was aware that little could be deduced from this. Lillian (who had now
disappeared) famously claimed to have a medical problem with sorting the post,
due to a rare neurotic-compulsive fear of envelopes. Such a condition was
obviously unfortunate in a secretary (almost a disqualification, you might
think), but there you were.
This unfortunate and
improbable malady meant that post sorting was an all-day process, with a
half-empty mail-sack permanently dumped on the floor as a kind of endless
reproach, and most of the editorial staff sensibly steering well clear and
simply learning never to depend too heavily on the prompt dispersal of
correspondence. Lillian’s wont was to stoop and sigh over a heap of letters,
laboriously examining each one with the aid of tongs, and stopping chance
passers-by with faux-naif questions evidently calculated to drive them
mad. ‘Look, this says "John Mainwaring, Editor",’ she might say, waving the
ironware in a wild, threatening manner, ‘but the editor’s name is James Mainwaring.’ Here she
would pause to ascertain what reaction she was getting (usually uneasy
silence). ‘What do you think? Shall I send it back, or pitch it in the bin?’ No
one ever knew what to say to this sort of thing; after all, you don’t argue
with mad people, especially when they are equipped to clock you with a pair of
tongs. So Lillian got away with it, as she got away with everything else. And
in between these bouts of petty tyranny, she would sit quietly at her desk,
ignoring the phones, and give her full attention to the smoking of a cigarette—on
the grounds, presumably, that if a thing is worth doing, it is worth doing
well.
It seemed odd to be in
the office on his own. Osborne was assailed by an understandable fear that he
had forgotten an important appointment elsewhere—an appoint-ment that his
green-ink-fingered friends had evidently all remembered. Even the tireless
sub-editors were missing from their work stations, and Osborne marvelled when
he peered into their little book-lined room and saw their four empty chairs—a
sight, he realized, that few people other than night cleaners had ever
previously witnessed. The fabric on one of the chairs turned out to be a jaunty
rich tartan—but no wonder he had never suspected it, when a sub-editor’s drab,
grey jumper and unkempt shirt (not to mention his drab, grey, unkempt body) had
always blocked the view.
Like many writers,
Osborne was afraid of sub-editors, the trouble being that they had a disarming
habit of changing his prose automatically, without telling him. ‘Ah, the
further musings of the giant intellect,’ the chief sub-editor might say, with
gratuitous cruelty, as she took his copy each week; and then, the moment he had
left the room, she fell on it savagely with a thick blue pen, taking out all
the bits he was most proud of. In his more gloomy moments, he wondered why he
bothered to write the piece in the first place, when the subsequent
contribution of the sub-editor so often outweighed his own. He had been known
to quote the lament of Macduff (‘What, all my little chicks?’) at the thought
of his innocents, massacred. And you couldn’t blame him. ‘Not in my back yard’
he had once confidently typed in a piece about a politician, only to discover,
a few days later, in the printed magazine, that it had been rewritten as ‘Not
on my patio’, which was not quite the same.
In the stealthy,
unnatural quiet of the sub-editors’ room, dictionaries and half-corrected
proofs lay open on abandoned desks. Osborne tiptoed guiltily, like a schoolboy
finding himself alone in an after-hours classroom when everyone has gone home.
To stay his nerves, he helped himself to an Extra Strong Mint from a roll next
to the chief sub-editor’s typewriter (careful not to disarrange her impressive
selection of nail varnishes), and peered from an awkward position at the proof
she had been correcting, which was covered in tiny blue marks and explanatory
notes circled with a feminine flourish. ‘note
to typesetter,’ he read, upside-down,
Far be it
from me etcetera, but it seems to me that despite our best efforts a twinge of
confusion remains in your mind between ‘forbear’—a verb meaning ‘abstain or
refrain from’—and ‘forebear’—a noun denoting an ancestor. May we bid adieu to
these intrusive ‘e’s? I hope this clears things up. I have mentioned this
before, of course; but how can you be expected to remember? You lead such busy
lives, and Radio 1 must absorb a lot of your attention. I do understand. Sorry
to take up your valuable time. And far be it from me, etcetera. Michelle
Osborne gulped in
amazement at such erudition, which was an unfortunate thing to do. For the
Extra Strong Mint promptly closed over his windpipe, like a manhole cover over
an orifice in the road.
Thus it was that when
the three subs re-entered the room in wordless single file a few moments later,
they discovered their ‘Me and My Shed’ columnist bent double with a gun-metal
litter-bin held to his face, making mysterious amplified strangling noises.
Since nothing louder than the whisper of a nail file was usually to be heard in
this room, they naturally flashed their specs in annoyance. However, having all
received the statutory sub-editor’s training (involving, one suspects, the same
kind of rigorous football-rattle personality testing undergone by the horses of
riot police), they simply resumed their solemn work of skewering other people’s
chicks with their thick blue pens.
‘Are you in
difficulties, mon cher?’ asked Michelle, the chief sub-editor, archly,
adjusting an embroidered collar and seating herself carefully so as not to
rumple her dirndl skirt. Osborne shook his head (and litter-bin) emphatically,
to indicate that any difficulties were of only passing significance. The
sub-editors swapped glances (or did they signal Morse code with those specs?)
and sighed. Osborne discharged the mint with a loud ptang-yang sound and fled red-faced
from the room, and all was peace again.
It was quite some time
before Osborne discovered the reason for the empty office; obviously, if he had
asked a few questions, there and then, he might have been saved a lot of the
palaver of the ensuing week. Unfortunately, however, he did not. The fact was,
there had been a crisis meeting. The magazine had been sold to a new
proprietor; a new editor had been mentioned, along with a rationalization of
the staff. He did not yet know it, but a cold wind was blowing at Come Into
the Garden; his
shelter had been torn up and blown away, like so much matchwood.
However, since nobody
had yet informed him of this, Osborne merely dragged his airline bag to his
favourite corner, and from a safe distance waved hello again to Lillian. She
was flicking through a mail order catalogue now, turning each page with a practised
insouciant finger-technique not involving the thumb, while a motorbike
messenger stood in front of her desk, waiting for her to look up. Above her
head, Osborne noticed, there was a new sign. It said, ‘What did your last slave
die of?’
He produced his
notebook, flipped a few pages and attempted to compose his thoughts. Now,
Osborne, old buddy, who have you got for us this week? He typed the words me and my shed at the top of a sheet of
paper, and added a colon.
ME
AND MY SHED:
A name ought to follow,
but for some reason it failed to come. Osborne frowned. Every week he
interviewed a famous person about their shed—Me and My Shed: Melvyn Bragg;
Me and My Shed: Stirling Moss. He had been doing it for years. In certain
professional quarters people still raved about his Me and My Shed: David
Essex; it
was said that for anyone interested in the art of celebrity outhouse
interviewing, it had represented the absolute ‘last word’. Osborne treasured
this praise, while in general being modest about his job, deflecting the envy
of non-journalists by saying merely that he had seen the insides of some classy
sheds in his time. But today, despite remembering a bus journey to Highgate on
Monday morning—despite, moreover, remembering the interior fittings of the shed
in some considerable detail—it was only the classiness of the shed that stuck
in his mind. He just could not put a classy face to it. The words
ME
AND MY SHED:
looked up accusingly
from the typewriter. Especially the colon on the end.
He flicked through his
notes again, but they offered little help. After twelve years of writing ‘Me
and My Shed’ he had come to the unsurprising conclusion that all sheds are
alike in the dark. Even when the column’s remit had been extended, in the
mid-198os, to include greenhouses and any other temporary garden structures
(such as the ivy-covered car-port), the interviews had always required a
masterly touch to bring them alive. Here, for example, was a sample of this
week’s notes:
Had shed
since bght house. Quite good sh. Spend time in sh. obv. Also gd 4 keeping thngs
in. Never done anythng to sh, particrly. Cat got locked in sh once, qu funny.
Don’t thnk abt sh often. Take sh for grantd. Sorry. Not v interstng. House
interestng. Sh not.
Time was pressing, The
official deadline was 2.30, and it was now a quarter past twelve. Osborne typed
a few words, hoping that the act of writing might jog his memory. He looked out
of the window and tried to free-associate about Highgate, but curiously found
himself thinking about Marmite sandwiches on a windswept beach, so gave it up.
The experience of thirty years in journalism, a dozen of them in sheds, seemed
to have deserted him.
In fact, he was just
beginning to consider turning the column into a kind of mystery slot this week,
calling it ‘Who and Whose Shed?’, when Tim, the deputy editor, ambled past,
carrying a page proof towards the subs’ room. Tim was one of those
aforementioned people who sometimes dropped a few encouraging words in the
direction of a torpid geranium, and he did so now. But it was no big deal,
actually. Tim was a thin, aloof young fellow (twenty-four, twenty-five?) with a
generally abstracted air, tight pullovers and bottle-thick kick-me specs; a
young man whose emotional thermostat had been set too low at an early age, and
was now too stiff to budge. Now he stopped at Osborne’s side and crouched down
to read on the typewriter ‘Me and My Shed’s’ recently composed opening
sentence:
When the cat
got stuck in the shed for 24 hours last year, there were red faces all round at
a certain house in Highgate.
Tim wrinkled his nose
and chewed his biro. ‘So?’ he asked. ‘How did things go with Angela Farmer?’
Osborne thought for a
second. Angela Farmer?
‘Quite a coup getting
her, I thought,’ continued Tim. ‘In fact, I made a note somewhere. I think
we’ll splash it. Nice to have your name on the front of the magazine again
before—’
Tim stopped abruptly,
but Osborne didn’t notice. He was experiencing a strange sense of
weightlessness. Was it possible to meet Angela Farmer, glamorous middle-aged
American star of a thousand British sitcoms, and have no recollection of it? He
tried picturing the scene at the door, the handshake, the famous smoky voice of
Ms Farmer barking, ‘C’min! What’re ya waitin for? Applause?’ but nothing came.
His mind was a blank; it was as though he had never met her. Panic welled in his
chest, and in a split second his entire career as a celebrity interviewer
flashed before his eyes.
‘So what was she like?’
‘Is it hot in here?’
‘Yes, a bit. But what
was she like?’
Osborne decided to
bluff.
‘Angela Farmer? Oh,
fine. Fine, Angela Farmer, yes. Very’—here he consulted his notes—‘interesting.
Very American, of course.’
Tim nodded
encouragingly.
‘Good shed, was it?’
‘Angela Farmer’s shed,
you mean? Yes, oh yes. Ms Farmer has a surprisingly good shed.’
‘Did you ask about those
hilarious gerbils in the shed in From This Day Forward?’
‘Did I? Oh yes, I’m sure
I did.’
‘And I think I read
somewhere that she was actually proposed to in a shed by her second
husband—whatsisname, the man who plays the shed builder in For Ever and Ever
Amen—but
that they broke up after a row about weather-proofing.’
‘All true, mate. All
true.’
‘Should make an
interesting piece, then.’
‘I’ll say.’
They both paused,
staring into the middle distance, pondering the interesting piece. ‘The cat got
stuck in the shed overnight once, too.’
‘What’s that?’
‘The cat. Got stuck in
the shed. Overnight. She said it was quite funny.’
The deputy editor
wrinkled his nose again, and changed the subject.
‘Oh, and you ought to
mention the Angela Farmer rose. Smash hit of last year’s Chelsea. No doubt
propagated in a shed, of course, ha ha. But I expect you covered all that.’
Osborne gave a brave
smile.
‘Well, mustn’t hold you
up.’
‘No.’
‘See you later.’
‘Yes.’
‘Don’t you ever get
tired of sheds, Osborne?’
‘Never.’
‘Unlike some,’ said the
deputy editor darkly, and girded himself to do battle with the subs.
* * *
Waiting for Osborne’s
column later that evening, after everyone else had gone home, Michelle donned
her pastry-cuffs, strapped a spotless pinny over her outfit, and tackled the
reference books, rearranging them in strict alphabetical order, fixing them in
a perpendicular position, and drawing them neatly to the extreme edge of the
shelves. Having accomplished this, she scoured the coffee machine and dusted
the venetian blinds, in the course of which activity she deliberately elbowed a
large economy packet of Lillian’s cup-soups into a bin. Then she sat down at
her typewriter and wrote some much-needed letters for the ‘Dear Donald’ page.
She loved this task. Few
bona fide readers were writing to the magazine these days, and Michelle’s
particular joy was to write the bogus letters ungrammatically and then correct
them afterwards. Subbing was a great passion of Michelle’s; it was like making
a plant grow straight and tall. ‘Dear Donald,’ she would type with a thrill.
‘As an old age pensioner, my Buddleia has grown too big for me to comfortably
cut it back myself . . .’ She could barely prevent herself from ripping it
straight out of the machine, to prune those dangling modifiers, stake those
split infinitives. How quickly the time passed when you were having fun. The only
thing that stumped her—as it always did—was the invention of fake names and
addresses, because she could never see why one fake name sounded more authentic
than any other. ‘G. Clarke, Honiton, Devon’ was how she signed each one of
today’s batch, hoping that inspiration would strike later. She often chose G.
Clarke of Honiton. She’d never been there, but she fancied that’s where all the
readers lived.
Time to check up on
Osborne, she thought, when ten letters from G. Clarke were complete,
photocopied and subbed within an inch of their lives. She dialled Osborne’s
number on the internal phone. It rang on his desk and startled him, so that he
dropped an open bottle of Tipp-Ex on to his shoes.
‘Bugger,’ he said, as he
answered the phone.
‘Going well, oh great
wordsmith?’
Kneading his face,
Osborne watched in helpless alarm as the correcting fluid seeped into the
leather uppers of his only decent footwear.
‘Anything wrong?’
‘No, no. Nearly there,
actually. Just got to think of the pay-off.’
‘Oh marvellous.’ Michelle
sounded ironic, the way she often did on Wednesday nights. ‘That’s dandy.’
There was a pause.
‘Far be it from me,’ she
said sweetly, ‘but have you mentioned that he writes in his shed? And that this
explains the repeated use of weed-killer as a murder weapon in the books? You
know what I mean: he looks up from his rude desk of logs for inspiration, and
there’s the weed-killer, next to the bone-meal. In the one I took on holiday
last year, he killed off the prime suspect with a garden rake. One blow to the
back of the neck, and that was it. Nasty. In the latest book, I understand,
someone is dealt the death-blow with a pair of shears.’
‘What are you talking
about? Who do you mean?’
‘Trent Carmichael. This
week’s "Me and My Shed". The crime writer.’
Osborne thought a
minute, thought another minute, remembered everything—in particular the
bestselling author laughing apologetically, ‘Well, er, the cat got locked in
the shed once, but no foul play was suspected!’—and said, ‘I’ll call you back.’
Things were looking bad.
He unlaced his shoes, took them off, and on bended knee started to scrub them
upside down on the carpet, hoping to remove the worst of the whitener while
deciding what to do next. He looked up to see Michelle standing beside him.
‘No, you’ve got it
wrong,’ he said, keeping his eyes on the floor, his pulse pounding in his neck.
‘Trent Carmichael is next week. You wouldn’t know whether this stuff washes
out, would you?’
‘So who is it this
week?’
‘Angela Farmer,’ he
mumbled.
‘Who?’
‘Angela Farmer.’
‘No. Are you sure?’
‘Of course I’m sure.’
‘That’s very odd.’
‘No, I met her on
Monday. Not odd at all. Nice woman.’
Michelle narrowed her
eyes as though to contest the point, and then decided not to bother. She
stretched her arms instead; this conversation clearly had nowhere to go.
‘How nice,’ she said.
‘I’d better not hold you up, then. Have you mentioned she’s got a tulip named
after her?’
‘I thought it was a
rose.’
‘No, tulip.’
Osborne looked like he
might be sick.
‘Tell you what,’ said
Michelle. ‘It’s been a hard day, I’ll look it up for you.’
Osborne sat in his
stockinged feet, stroking the keys of his typewriter and staring into space. In
all his years as a journalist, he had never before written up an interview that
had not taken place. Why ever had he believed Tim? Tim didn’t know. How, moreover, could he
extricate himself now he had gone so far? Not only had he cast all Trent
Carmichael’s faint and unamusing witticisms into a broad American slang, but he
was now also stuck with sentences referring to (a) love being like a red red
tulip, and (b) a woman who viewed the world through tulip-tinted spectacles.
In fact, he was so
absorbed in his confusion and dismay that he did not hear the phone ringing,
nor hear Michelle answer it. What he did hear, however (and quite distinctly),
was Michelle informing him that it had been Angela Farmer phoning to apologize.
She would have to postpone their appointment for the following Monday, making
it Tuesday instead. She suggested that since she lived in the West Country, he
might like to use Monday as a travelling day and stay overnight at a local
hotel, details of which she had passed on to Michelle.
‘She sounded very nice,’
said Michelle, studying Osborne’s pole-axed expression.
‘That’s lovely,’ said
Osborne.
‘Oh, and she hoped it
wasn’t too inconvenient—to ring so late in the day.’
Reprinted
from The Lynne Truss Treasury by
Lynne Truss by permission of Gotham Books, a division of
Penguin Group (USA). Copyright © 2005 by Lynne Truss.
All rights reserved. Originally published by Penguin UK in
1994, reprinted by Profile in June 2004. This excerpt, or
any parts thereof, may not be reproduced without permission.
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