Tangled Up in Black

An embarrassing thing such as this could happen to anyone…

And something odd could always happen to someone in this particular location…

But for this thing to happen, in this particular location, I think you really need to be ‘me’.

Holy Communion Day, ‘Sunday before last, and the Armstrong Family Unit were not technically late but we were meant to be in our seats a whole 30 minutes before the event kicked off and we were the-hell-and-gone from being a half an hour early.

On the long walk up to the church door, we got trapped behind a slow moving family and couldn’t get past. I like to move fast when I move… whoosh, that was me. Eventually I got by. I accelerated up the gravel and looked back triumphantly. My family had not got by. Drat.

So I stood in the church porch and waited for my clan to catch up. As I waited, the slow family brushed past me – slowly – and headed up the centre aisle of the church.

So, reunited with family, here I was again, behind the leisurely family, looking for another opening to get past. Half way up the main aisle of the now packed church, I saw my gap and went for it.

I squeezed past and it felt like I got three yards onward up the aisle before some immense force stopped me in my tracks and hauled me back the way I came…

I should say that the family I was trying to get past were a Traveller family and the girls in the entourage were dressed up, as is customary, in bright, modern and somewhat revealing clothes. I should also add, for those who do not know, that Traveller families in Ireland, generally live quiet, socially separate lives from the so-called ‘settled’ community. A proud traveller girl, it is safe to say, wouldn’t really want anything to do with a damn-fool settled fella in a suit… particularly not today and particularly not here.

So, yes, I was hauled back.

In passing this youthfully-dressed twenty-something traveller girl, a button of my nice jacket had somehow become entangled in a stray thread from her black bra. The engineering of said bra was sufficient to yank me, Sam Peckinpah-like, back down the aisle and then there we were – this girl and me – all tangled up together in the aisle of the church on First Communion Day.

And if there is a single word to describe us both, it was this: Inextricable.

I think we were bound together for over three minutes as I tried in vain to get the bra-thread off my suit. I wound the thread one way and it started getting longer and longer, obviously coming loose. But then it would reach a critical point and start getting shorter and shorter again until we were back where we started off.

I would like to tell you about the hilarious reaction of the congregation, the cameras clicking, the older folk tut-tutting but the truth is, I know nothing of these things. Upon getting snagged I entered, as I often do in times of crisis, a highly-focused-shiny-forehead state of intense concentration upon which nothing intruded. There was only me and the bra-strap-thread… oh, and the girl.

With much respect to her, the girl was dignity personified. During the whole tangle-debacle, she spoke not one syllable to me. She stood tall and statuesque while I fiddled with her boobs in the church.

“I’m really sorry,” I said as I wound my thread. “Shall I just snap it?” There was no response, so I deduced from this that I shouldn’t and kept winding.

Trish, I now realised, was at my shoulder, giving customary support.

“You’ve got it now,” she said encouragingly. But I hadn’t got it, I was still a full 67 seconds away from that happy moment.

Neither Trish nor I mentioned the incident all day long – there were priests to stand beside, relatives to feed and cash money to commandeer.

That evening though, we had a Donnie Darko moment on the couch.

“How about that bra?” was all I said.

And we both laughed and laughed…

The Visibility - Script Extract

Thanks for all your nice feedback on a story I posted last year. Rachel Fox mentioned in her comment that it might make a good TV Play. Funnily enough, I have spent some time working it up as a short film script.

So I thought it might be fun to also show you just a few pages of that.

Some of the original script-formatting has been lost on the way to the blog-page.

Oh, can I also just warn you that there is quite a bit of strong language in this extract. So if that sort of thing bugs you, perhaps you might call back next time.

I promise I'll be better behaved then.




FADE IN:

Int--night--driving in a car.


The windscreen wipers are going fast. Lots of rain is coming down.

The headlights are on full beam but still they hardly put a dent in the gloomy road unfolding before the car.

Maurice (V.O. Darkness)
I knew I had to kill him. I just didn't know how...


Int--day--The Confessional


It is dark.

A panel slides back revealing the dimly-lit silhouette of the priest in the next booth.

Priest
Yes?

Maurice
Bless me father, I have sinned.

Priest
Yes?

Maurice
It is twenty-seven years since my last confession.

An awkward silence.

Priest
Yes?

Maurice
I've forgotten the 'Act of Contrition', father.

Priest
I'm sure we'll find a way around that, Maurice.

Maurice
You know who I am.

Priest
It's only a bit of chicken-wire that's between us.

Maurice
And the seal of confession.

Priest
That too. Tell God your sins.

Maurice struggles inwardly.

Maurice
I killed a man.

Priest
Now Maurice, we all know that was an accident...

Maurice
Are you my priest or my fuckin' judge?

Priest
Carry on so.

Maurice
He was my neighbour. I knew I had to kill him. I just didn't know how.

Ext--day--A pasture--running down to a river

A beautiful summer's day. The grass is long and the fast-flowing river looks cool and inviting.

Maurice (v.o.)
I had all the land I needed, except for the river pasture.

Int-- evening --the pub

CLOSE UP of a tattered old Ordnance Survey map being slammed onto the beer-soaked bar counter.

Maurice (o.s.)
One Two five. Final word.

LUDLOW looks up from his pint and into Maurice's eyes.

Ludlow
Sure it's not worth half that.

Maurice
Still and all. It's a one time offer. Take it or leave it.

Ludlow sups his pint.

Ludlow
I'll leave it so.

The bar echoes with quiet laughter. All the customers have been listening.

Maurice
Why won't you sell? You don't use it for anything.

Ludlow drapes a comradely arm around Maurice's shoulder.

Ludlow
I'm an old man, Maurice, I've few pleasures left to me.

He leans in conspiratorially.

Ludlow (cont'd)
Watching you fuckin' squirmin' is one of them.

Maurice gets up storms off to the toilet. A young man, MILES, leaves the table of guys he was drinking with and follows Maurice out.

Int--evening --the toilet

MAURICE is having a piss against the stainless steel urinal.

MILES comes and stands beside him. He unzips.

Miles
He's an old prick.

Maurice
He is.

Miles
He coughs and chokes all night these nights.

Maurice
Does he?

Miles
When he dies, I'll sell it to you.

Maurice
Will you?

Miles
I will. For the price you mentioned.

Maurice
Right. Good man.

Miles
It'll have to be index linked though.

Maurice
What?

Miles
The price, index linked, yeah?

Maurice
What's that?

Miles
I don't know.

Maurice
Index linked it'll be so.

He extends a hand. Miles eyes it warily.

Miles
Maybe we'll have a bit of a wash first.

Int--day--the doctor's surgery

MAURICE has his shirt up around his neck while McQUAID, the doctor, listens to his chest.

McQuaid
Smoke?

Maurice
Yeah.

McQuaid
Drink?

Maurice
Yeah.

McQuaid
How many units?

Maurice
Seven pints or so.

McQuaid
A week?

Maurice looks at him as if he is mad.

McQuaid
Christ.

He motions for Maurice to dress himself.

McQuaid
You're as well as you can hope for.

Maurice turns his back while tucking in his trousers.

Maurice
Better than old Ludlow so.

McQuaid
Who?

Maurice
Ludlow. I heard he was bad.

McQuaid shakes his head.

McQuaid
The man's an ox. He'll bury us all.


(c) Ken Armstrong

The Lure of the Inside Pocket

My youngest boy made his First Holy Communion yesterday. It was a great day and everything went really well – apart from yet another one of my patented mortifying incidents which I shall report to you as soon as I figure out exactly how to write it. I know… just write it.

Anyway, during the ceremony-thingie, one of the young guys made a throwaway gesture which hurled me right back to my own First Communion about thirty-eight years ago.

It was something that I had completely forgotten about until I saw this be-suited young fellow doing what he did.

What did he do? Well, he did it over and over again actually and his unconscious gesture was definitely something I was doing myself on that day many years before… over and over again too.

It was no big deal really. All that he kept doing was thrusting his hand into the inside pocket of his natty new suit. Plunging it in and taking it out, plunging it in and taking it out…

But that was enough to take me back to my own new suit of some many years ago and my own big day.

It was reversible… my suit, that is, not the Communion. The ‘side less used’ was a blue and white check while the main event was… okay, truth, I can’t remember what colour it was – brown I think.

It came all the way from America and the reversible aspect of it was really very cool – if I’d been cleverer I could probably have gone up for my First Communion twice but I wasn’t so very calculating back in those days.

That was cool but it was the inside pocket that held the real attraction. I had always wanted an inside pocket and, for my First Communion, I got one.

There’s no mystery to it. Inside pockets were cool because the cool guys used them in the movies and on TV. They reached in and pulled things out of them. Particularly guns. I was a bit too young for Bond but I've seen since that Connery did seem to draw his Walther/Beretta out of his inside pocket from time-to-time and Illya Kuryakin certainly did it quite regularly.

And then I got to do it too. My gun was actually very nifty. You could stick the front of it into a potato and it would extract a little nubbin of spud which could then be fired at unsuspecting dogs… and grannys.

Was this a particularly Irish toy – the potato gun? I could see how it might well be…

Of course, I've learned now that guns are actually very heavy and would ruin the cut of your reversible communion suit. The well dressed gunslinger sports a Berns Martin Triple Draw holster. Dead posh, I'm sure, but I favoured the inside pocket option and I'm still here, yeah?

If I’m to be honest, I was still infatuated with the idea of an inside pocket even after I became a teenager. I realise that’s sad but it also true.

Real Truth? I’m actually still pretty excited about my inside pocket.

I mean, how could anyone not be?