It was during the final movement of Schubert’s Ninth
symphony in C Major, that I decided I would have to kill him. Once again, his
cough was loud and persistent, ruining the concert for me and I am sure for all
the other music lovers who had packed the Liverpool Philharmonic to hear some of
the greatest music ever written, not some old fool coughing and spluttering.
It had been at the Christmas Concert that I first
noticed him. I am not a Christmassy person but the older I get the more
sentimental I have become so when ordering tickets for the new season I
included this one as a guilty pleasure. The Phil had more children than usual,
but they seemed well mannered and quiet, and so I sat back to enjoy some seasonal
cheer and remember my childhood. And at first it was as fun as I thought it
would be; some carols I remembered from school and couple of more popular
numbers; I am not a snob and enjoy all sorts of music, at least in moderation.
But then – oh irony – during Silent Night, I heard a
distinct cough from a couple of rows behind me; there had been a few coughs and
sneezes throughout the first half; after all it was December and there were
lots of children there, but for some reason this cough was particularly
noticeable; a high pitched noise, and only half finished, as if there was still
phlegm in the man’s throat, and yes it definitely was a man’s cough. And as the
concert headed towards the interval whoever it was coughed again and again.
I hoped that he would take the opportunity to have a
drink or take a cough sweet – the Philharmonic used to supply cough sweets at
the entrance which I thought was an excellent idea, but have not done so for
awhile -. But no sooner had everybody resumed their seats and the orchestra
burst into some Motown Christmas schmaltz than there was that awful cough again,
at least once per every song or movement.
I could not concentrate on the music and peered in
front of me trying to see who it was making such an unpleasant noise, perhaps
by mind control I could get him to stop. After awhile I realised who it was; a
man in his late fifties I would say, smartly dressed and with a shiny bald
patch. Every so often his head would bob slightly and that was when he coughed.
I guessed he was on his own, as the two people next to him were a young couple
who clearly had nothing to do with him, and were probably incredibly annoyed at
having such a unpleasant neighbour.
The concert finished and He strode past me, just as
I stood up, not caring that he had ruined the concert for me and presumably for
most of the audience. I tutted at him, and for a moment he paused before
carrying on out of the auditorium and into Liverpool. I hoped he got run over
on the busy road outside the Philharmonic and that his death was very slow and
very unpleasant.
But alas he must have reached home unscathed,
because a fortnight later he was there again and so was his cough. It was an
all Mozart programme; the 22nd Piano Concerto, the overture to The
Marriage of Figaro and his Clarinet concerto. All great stuff, but the opening
notes of the overture were only just sounding out when I heard that familiar
cough, and there was that man again, in the same seat looking pleased with
himself and clearly enjoying himself hugely, and causing misery to all around
him.
The concert was ruined; when I couldn’t hear him
coughing I was waiting for it, so that I could not concentrate. And the music
just passed me by, and I love Mozart and had been looking forward to the
concert hugely since I bought the tickets last summer, it was going to be one
of the highlights of the season. What upset me was that when I had bought my
tickets they were always the same seat, in the middle with a good view of the
orchestra but unfortunately also a few rows behind this ghastly man.
I wondered who he was; a widower perhaps whose
quiet, and subservient wife died quickly and perhaps with some relief; escaping
the noise of her pompous and loud husband. I imagined him laying down the law
with his relatives, when they forced themselves to visit him. Or going out for
his usual constitutional, his neighbours avoiding him so that they did not have
to listen to his blather.
At the interval I stepped outside and looked across
at the Victorian monstrosity that is the Anglican cathedral and shivered in the
cold, smelling the damp and cigarettes from the smokers who had escaped for a
quick fag.
And then, for the first time ever, I decided not to
go back in; I just could not bear the thought of sitting through another hour
of listening to this man cough, ruining this lovely music. I left the hall and
jumped a bus back home to Childwall, one of the more congenial parts of
Liverpool. Halfway home when a man got on and started coughing I almost got up
and bludgeoned him to death, but restrained myself, and anyway it was soon my
stop and I left giving the man a baleful glare as I did so.
As you can imagine I was not especially looking
forward to the next concert, and in fact considered not going. It was a
selection of English music; songs and incidental music by Purcell and various
pieces by the likes of lesser-known composers such as Henry Lawes, Matthew
Locke and William Boyce. Ordinary I would normally would have looked forward to
it but I did not want to listen Him coughing all the way through such lovely
music. But in the end habit got the better of me and at the usual time after a
light dinner I got on the bus and headed to the city centre.
And lo and behold as I sat down and watched the
orchestra settle down and tune their instruments there was no coughing, and
when I looked over and in front the Cougher was not there, his seat empty;
perhaps he had died of whatever it was that was causing him to cough; consumption
or something equally unpleasant….I did hope so.
The orchestra began with Purcell’s most famous piece
of music, his Abdelazer Suite, and I settled down to enjoy it, although
naturally I was on edge, just waiting for that cough, but it didn’t happen, and
I began to relax.
And then Abdelazer came to an end, and as I
applauded, there was the sound of someone running down the aisle, and there was
The Cougher looking apologetically at those around him, before sitting down in
his usual seat and joining in the applause and – of course – giving a cough,
just to make sure we all knew that he had arrived.
At first I thought I would walk out, perhaps I could
start going to the Bridgewater Hall in Manchester; it would mean getting a
hotel for the night, and taking the odd day off work, but it would be worth it
to be able to enjoy live music in peace once again. But then I thought, why
should I have my leisure time ruined by a selfish old duffer, and I determined
to do something more practical.
What surprised me, was that nobody else seemed
particularly bothered. There were a couple of middle-aged women sat next to him
and they seemed to be enjoyed the concert despite their neighbour’s noise and
the fierce looking man sat immediately behind him, had not tapped him on the
shoulder, there were no glares or tutting. Perhaps it was something about the
pitch of his cough that particularly annoyed me, but it was more than that; it
was so often; every few minutes a partial clearing of the throat and then the
cough, so loud and harsh before ending with a little gulp. And then before you
knew it, he was starting the whole routine again.
As the concert ended I waited for The Cougher to
leave and then followed him out; he was going at my usual pace, so it was not
difficult to keep up. He headed down Hardman Street and then Bold Street and
towards Liverpool Central Station, which was what I had been dreading as I
thought I would lose him; fortunately the ticket office was empty so I was able
to quickly purchase a day ticket (“are you sure sir, wouldn’t it be cheaper to
buy a single to wherever you are going; it is almost ten”).
I had seen The Cougher heading towards the Wirral
line, and fortunately he was still there as I reached the platform; I could
hear his cough echo along the tunnel. He got on the first train that came along
and I followed Him on and sat at the other end of the carriage, pretending to
be engrossed in my book, but watching him all the time. He was not on the train
for very long; once we had gone through the tunnel and into what used to be
Cheshire he got off at Birkenhead Park and I followed him out of the station.
He headed through the park, which was dark and
quiet, and I quickly caught him up.
“Hello”.
He smiled at me, “hello to you.”
“You were at the concert at the Phil weren’t you?”
He smiled, any momentary fear gone, “yes indeed a
lovely concert don’t you think?”
I was seething with anger, meeting my enemy had not
helped, “it would have been if I had not been disturbed by this awful
coughing.”
“Oh indeed” the Cougher answered, “I must say I was
so engrossed in the music I did not hear anything.”
And that was enough; I pushed him as hard as I could
and he fell and then I kicked him again and again. Someone could have come at
any time but I did not care; I doubted that even if they had I would have
stopped my assault, but it was a cold night and nobody seemed to be about to
interrupt me. And at last The Cougher, was lying dead in front of me; giving
one final, pitiful cough as he breathed his last.
I left him there, as a warning to others and hurried
back to the station and tidied myself up in the bathroom before heading back
into Liverpool and then home; fortunately I live alone and my neighbours are
elderly, so I doubt anybody noticed my late return (gone midnight). I should
have felt guilty or scared after what I had done, but truth to tell I didn’t.
He was dead and I was glad.
Even over the next few days I did not worry about
what I had done. I bought the Liverpool Echo and sure enough the following
evening it was headline news about a Mr Harris found dead in Birkenhead Park
and the Local MP bemoaning how unsafe Birkenhead had become. They talked a
little about Mr Harris; a retired solicitor and – as I had thought – a widower,
loved by all who knew him, although not by those who had to sit near him at
concert. By the end of the week the story had disappeared from the newspaper
and I stopped buying the Echo.
By the next time of the next concert, three weeks
later, I had almost forgotten about what I had done; it was as if I had dreamed
it and I cannot remember feeling as happy going to a concert as I did that
evening. It was not even a particularly good one; something by Brahms and
Dvorak’s New World Symphony. But the thought of being able to listen without
being disturbed made me very happy.
And so it started; I sat back and relaxed, until I
realised my throat was somewhat sore; I tried to swallow it but there was this
tickle, and eventually I gave a couple of coughs in the hope of clearing it but
the tickle remained. At the end of the first movement I gave a very loud cough
to the clear annoyance of the couple next to me; but what could I do. And
throughout the rest of the concerto it was a constant battle to stop coughing
or at least not cough too loud.
At the interval I hurried to the bar, and bought an
orange juice, and for a moment I felt relief, as it eased my throat; I really
should have ordered another one because by the time I got back to my seat my
throat felt as sore as ever. And throughout the New World my torments
continued, as I struggled not to cough or gulp, and of course I saw the irony
but at least I was trying to do something about it; if only I had some cough
sweets or a bottle of water with me.
I felt eyes upon me as I struggled, a young man who
was sat with his girlfriend a couple of rows in front of me, kept turning to
look at me, so I smiled in apology, but he did not seem impressed. Next time I
would bring lozengers and water. It must have been nerves, because once I left
the auditorium my throat felt fine and I did not cough once for the rest of the
evening.
A week later, I went to a concert at the Music Room
behind the main concert hall; this was a complete performance of Bach’s Cello
Suites, one of my very favourite pieces of music. I felt fine as I sat down but
had my cough sweets to hand just in case and a bottle of water.
I like the Music Room; it is more intimate; and
there is a sense that you are sitting with the real lovers of music, not just
those who like a tune you can whistle, and who don’t know their Messiaen from
their Mahler. I am truly not a snob, but here, with a hundred or kindred
spirits I felt at home.
As the orchestra’s cellist sat down and started to
play suddenly I felt as if there was something lodged in my throat, and I had a
desperate need to cough it out. I grabbed a sweet, but it got stuck in my
jacket pocket, but eventually, after some tugging, I got it out and then
unwrapped it; my god it was noisy, and then as it came out of the wrapping the
sweet fell to the floor but desperate now I picked it up, and tried to pick off
the dust from the floor.
Then I popped it into my mouth, aware that my
exhibition was causing consternation. And so nervous was I that I gulped at the
sweet and for a moment it stuck in my throat and I could not breathe, I hyperventilated
briefly before I grabbed my water and swallowed some and fortunately after a
heart stopping moment or two, the sweet disappeared down my throat. As I recovered
myself, I realised that the concert had stopped and that everyone was looking
at me, not only the cellist, who after giving me a glare resumed playing, but a
pair of angry eyes which I recognised from the last concert.
As soon the cellist had bowed and put down his bow,
I walked out as quickly as I could, never having felt so embarrassed and
ashamed in all my life. I had ruined a fine performance by such an exhibition,
and I wondered if I could ever attend a concert again.
Even on the bus home, I felt as if somebody was
watching me; somehow having heard of my antics at the concert. Feeling even
more ashamed, I got off the bus and headed home; it is a thirty minute walk
from the stop, but usually I enjoy thinking about the music and enjoying the
peace and quiet, but this time I felt an idiot, a bumbling old fool, and for
the first time felt guilty about what I had done a few weeks ago.
And then I
realised that there were footsteps behind me, coming fast, as if to catch up with
me,,…and then a voice young and cultured but with a touch of Scouse.
“Excuse me, weren’t you at the concert….?”
I turned around to answer, but before I could do so,
I felt a tremendous bang on my head and the sound of a thousand drums echoing
in my brain.
Bio:
Andrew was born many years ago in Yorkshire England,
but now lives in Cheshire where he writes stories and works with prisoners out
on licence.
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