Dont touch my spectacles! screeched the ex-friend, Edith. Keep your eyes to yourself! Do I look blind to you? I know exactly who youre ogling.
Are you jealous or something? Tamara Brown asked, eyes wide in mock surprise. I see who youre pining for! I know what to give you for Christmas: a lip-rolling machine!
May as well keep it for yourself, Edith shot back, acid in her tone. Or are your lips too stubborn for any machine now? Dyou think I dont notice?
Lady Tamara swung her legs off the ancient brass bed and hobbled over to her makeshift mantel, tiny candle flickering beside porcelain figurines, to mutter her morning prayers.
She wasnt overly religiousthere had to be something Up Above orchestrating this lopsided stage-set, right? Perhaps a cosmic caretaker, some Prime Mover, or maybe just dear old God with his snowy beard, perched on a cloud and pondering the mess below.
Tamara was edging near seventy now, a hill she was sure shed crest any moment. At that age, it was better not to fall out with the Almighty: if Hes fiction, shes lost nothing. If Hes fact, the non-believers lose it all.
After her morning liturgy, Tamara always added a few stray requestsritual complete, soul lighter. Now the day could begin.
Two perpetual plagues stalked Tamaras days, and no, not foolish folk or bumpy roadsthose were too obvious. Hers were her neighbour Edith and her own wayward grandchildren.
The grandchildren were a known quantity: a modern lot allergic to domestic work. But they had their own parents to contend with, thankfully.
Edith, thoughEdith seemed intent on dying Tamaras nerves woolly pink. She did it with the persistence of a soap opera diva.
Funny how on telly, quarrels between grand dames look lovable, almost comedic. In real life, it was raw, mundane, and unsettlingespecially when the complaints made no sense.
Tamara had an old friend, too, a chap everyone called Percy Scooter. His full name was Percival Edwin Cosgrovewhat a ring! The nickname was obvious: in his youth, Percy had loved nothing more than zipping round the village on his battered scooter. Over time, Percy Scooter just became Scootereven after the poor vehicle rusted to bits in his toolshed.
Theyd once been family friendsthe Scooters and the Browns. But both their spouses had long since decamped to the village cemetery, so Tamara kept nattering with Percy out of habit. After all, shed known him since school, and he made a good friend.
They were a trio back then: Tamara, Edith, and Percynever a whisper of romance, just the sturdy scaffolding of childhood camaraderie. They strolled the lanes arm-in-armPercy central, the girls matching, like a two-handled teacup sturdy against slips. Just in case.
But friendship, like old photos, yellows and peels. Edith, in particular, curdled into outright spite after her husbands passing. People change: a tight-fisted person grows downright stingy; the chatty, a bore; the jealous, shredded by envy.
Edith did have things to envy. Tamara, even past sixty, retained her figure while Edith had settled into a proper moundno waist in sight. The old schoolmate Percy had lately warmed more to spirited Tamara, sharing in-jokes and laughter with their heads close, while Edith got the cold nod.
He popped round to Tamaras house more often, tooEdith had to beg him for a visit. Maybe she wasnt so clever, or funny for that matter. Percy, however, had always enjoyed a joke.
In English, wed call Edith a moaning Minnieshed pick a fight over tea going tepid. First, it was the location of Tamaras outdoor loo, and how it wafted unpleasant odours her way.
Theres a pong coming from your bog! Edith shouted.
Well, really! Its been there for a hundred years! Not noticed till now? Tamara chuckled, refusing to let it go: By the way, those glasses of yoursyou got them for free on the NHS, didnt you? Nothing good comes for nothing!
Dont touch my spectacles! Edith roared. Mind your own eyes! Dont think I dont see who youre gawping at!
What, are you jealous? Tamara repeated, dry as burnt toast. I know just the gadget to give you for Christmasto roll back your pouty lips!
Keep it for yourself! Edith glared, lips pursed. Or, are your lips beyond help? Dont think I dont notice!
Oh, she noticed, all right. She had howled before. Percy, amused by the drama, suggested Tamara brick up her loo and put a new one indoors. Tamaras grown children chipped in, and Cupboard W.C. was installed, with dear Percy shovelling earth over the old pit outside. Take that, Edith! Go sniff somewhere else.
But Ediths grumbles didnt abate, just shifted. Now her complaint concerned the pear trees branchesthose reaching over into Tamaras plot. Tamaras grandkids, she claimed, were stealing her pears.
They probably thought it was ours, Tamara tried to explain. In truth, the pears hung untouched. But see, your chickens dig up my marrows too, and I dont squawk!
Chickens are witless! Edith squabbled. But children need raising, not giggling all day with gentlemen callers, Grandma!
And so it went, round and round. Now, Edith accused Tamaras lot of damaging the trees branches.
Where? Show me! Tamara demandedshe could see nothing amiss, not a split or a scratch.
There! And there! Edith jabbed at the air with knobbly fingersthough Tamaras own hands were slimmer, more elegant, which added to Ediths private tally of grievances. Hands, after all, are a womans visiting card, even in the countryside.
Percy piped upCut those branches back! Theyre on your side, you can do what you like!
Shell holler! Tamara fretted.
Bet she wont. Ill keep an eye out, Percy winked.
Sure enough, Edith witnessed the pruning and not a peep escaped her lips. That score, at least, was settled.
But soon Tamara had her own beefEdiths chickens, a newer, bolder breed this year, were now gleefully destroying her veg patches.
Keep them on your side! Tamara implored, but Edith just sneered, as though daring her: Go on, then. What are you going to do?
Tamara could have raided and roasted a couple of the hens as an act of revenge, but she wasnt vindictive.
Percy came up with a cunning ploygleaned from the webplacing supermarket eggs in Tamaras patch at night and ostentatiously gathering them in the morning, pretending the chickens had done the laying.
It worked. Edith was dumbstruck, frozen on the spot, gawping as Tamara gathered the mysterious eggs. After that dayno more chicken raids.
So, peace at last? Tamara wondered. Edith, surely we can stop this wrangling?
No chance. Now Edith resented the smoke and aroma of Tamaras kitchen in the gardencomplains it disturbed her delicate nose and probably cited some new regulation from Westminster about open-air cooking.
You see a barbecue anywhere? Tamara protested. Give those glasses a clean, my dearif you can see through the smudges!
Tamara, generally patient and polite, was running dry on forbearance. Edith had truly lost the plotas they say. She simply couldnt be appeased.
Perhaps shes ripe for medical experiments, Tamara muttered wistfully over tea with Percy. Shell chew me up, bones and all, I swear it.
The strain showed; Tamara had grown gaunt and palea parting gift from constant feuding.
Shell choke first! And I wont let her lay a finger on you, Percy vowed, brow arched. Butgot a new idea!
A few days later, Tamara woke to a strange melody: Tammy, Tammycome out and play! sung from her doorstep.
There stood Percy, grinning, clutching a battered crash helmet. Hed finally fixed up his beloved scooter.
Know why I was always glum? Scooter was broken! he announced. Well, hop on, beautylets relive our glory days!
Tamara hopped on, because Parliament had just officially declared retirement a mytheveryone over sixty-five was now an active pensioner. Off they whizzed, into the real and metaphorical sunset.
And soon enough, Tamara became Mrs. CosgrovePercy had proposed!
Puzzle pieces fell into place. Tamara packed up her things and moved in with him. And Edith?
Edith remained lonesome, cross, and plumpa fresh batch of envy ever-bubbling on her stove. Without Tamara around, she had only her own shadow to quarrel with.
So, take care, Tammy, and dont leave the house! Who knows whats next? Life in an English village is always a curious song, a bit off-tune, but as surreal as any dream. And all that fuss, just for an indoor loo…












