The Simple Things

THE VOYAGERS

- A short story by LISA BLOWER Lisa Blower teaches creative writing at Bangor University and has been the writer in residence at Shrewsbury Museum and Art Gallery: she’s the author of two novels and a collection of shot stories, It’s Gone Dark Over Bill’s

He told me he drove the Seven Nation bus. Could say ‘Good Morning’ in seven different languages. Back in the 70s – his name Jack Bright on the streets of Wolverhamp­ton, and he’s in his shirtsleev­es but still wears a tie as he drops off, picks up the workers at Goodyear. And it’s a good year, this year. A Caribbean sun some folks left behind, and he agrees: curry does taste better in the heat. He accepts it in Tupperware, along with Halva and Jerk chicken, crowds his family around an old pasting table in the street and smiles as his wife smooths out a tablecloth. “Now sit,” she tells the kids as Jack sizzles Polish sausages over a camping stove with a spatula: laughs when his wife butters a chapati and second helpings are passed around.

They come together in the sun. Sit on doorsteps, chew the fat, try this with a fork, try that with a spoon, dip and lick their fingers, talk of lives they’ve had and these new ones now; laughing at Jack’s wife slathering sun-lotion on his bare-naked children. She has a queue forming. Everyone wants to know what it feels like and those tyre-skinned kids squeal because it’s slippery and cold. Here’s the ice-cream van, and money’s pooled: Jack notes that everyone’s tongue is the same colour. His wife tells him – “You’ve got raspberry ripple on your chin, cocker.” The midday sun now and he has an idea.

The depot on the Cleveland Road is not far. Jack counts 12 kids and thinks of them as doctors and nurses, teachers and engineers, of little Sanjay’s way with animals, Florence’s knack to fashion a skirt. He drives a double-decker, navy-blue and cream with jolly headlights and leather seats, and the hoses in the yard are over 50-foot long. There’s nothing more satisfying than washing a bus and he divides the children into teams.

Team A, you’ll hose down this side. Team B, the other. He gives Keith, with his long arms, the extendable mop, and tasks him with the windscreen. One, two, three and Jack turns on the tap and the hoses gush alive.

He wishes he had a video camera. He has seen them in shop windows, but memories will be enough. These 12 kids and their fathers now, playing tug-o-war with those hoses; Jack wishes he could bottle all that shrieking and laughter, sprinkle it in dark times like summer rain.

He takes to the driver’s seat and one-by-one, takes a child on his lap and offers them the wheel. Laps of the yard, it’s like a fairground ride. The girls take turns in ringing the bell and play conductors. Where to? They ask. The seaside!

Single or return? They paddle in the puddles left behind, catch the rainbows in the sunbeams, pebbles become shells, and they find water-spiders in the pools. Then they go back to all those tables pulled together in the street, the rum talking long into the night.

In later life, when retired and telling all this to his grandson, Jack can still smell the sun on the tarmac, taste the raspberry ripple on his skin. It became a thing on scorching days to troop the kids to the yard to hose down the buses, where they found Jamaican beaches and built castles on Indian sand. And then the next day bidding good morning – dzień dobry – Śubha savēra – Subah Bakhair – Mi deh yah – Buna dimineata – Salām – Ow do, Bostin’ fettle last night – and still in his shirtsleev­es feeling as if he’d travelled the world.

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