WILLIAM
Roger Noons
Old-fashioned Lemonade
William visits us twice each
week, on a Tuesday and a Friday. He brings milk, cream and cheese, from a dairy
at a farm on the other side of the village. My mother says ‘he’s not quite the
thing’, but he is always polite and respectful: touches his cap when he bids us
good day and farewell. He is profuse with his thanks when my mother hands him
the two shillings, and adds, ‘there’s a threepenny bit for yourself
William.’
I have no idea how old he is,
but I have never seen him near the school. He is taller than me, but exhibits no
sign as yet, that he has begun to scrape a razor over his chin. On the rare
occasions I catch sight of him in the village, he is alone, and seems intent on
his mission: head down and walking at a brisk pace.
I encountered him one Saturday
morning. Having been set a project by my teacher, I visited the lake, two
meadows beyond the Hall. Walking slowly and quietly along the pathway, I looked
up and there through the reeds and mace, saw William seated on a basket, fishing
rod in his hands. I waved, but he was not distracted.
I made my way around to him and
as I approached, spoke his name in little over a whisper. He looked up, smiled
and cast his eyes back down to the bulbous, scarlet float which bobbed on the
surface of the water, some five yards from where he sat.
‘Any luck?’ I asked, again
quietly.
His head shook furiously, but he
did not turn towards me.
‘What bait are you
using?’
He proffered a tin containing a
wriggling of white and cream maggots, red and brown pupae, amid a modicum of
sawdust.
‘Well I hope it improves,’ I
said and carefully slipped away to rejoin the path and continue my
circumnavigation of the pool.
My task was to visit a ‘stretch’
of water - an apt description, as this morning the surface had an apparent
elasticity - and write either a poem, or a composition, about what I saw, heard,
smelled or touched. Taste had been steadfastly ignored, as no doubt Miss Robbins
was nervous, lest one of her pupils ingest some poisonous plant
material.
When I reached a point almost
opposite William’s position, I sat on an old stump, took out my notebook and
pencil, and screwed up my eyes, the better to contemplate the view. The sun was
concentrating its rays on burning through a thin layer of cloud, creating a
pale, but warming spotlight, on a clump of reeds to my left. As I wrote, I was
distracted by a clumsy heron, who flew unconvincingly up to his ramshackle
residence atop a swaying sycamore. In profile, I spied a fish without his beak,
as he delivered the sustenance to his partner.
Above the surface of the water,
insects were dancing, St. Vitas style, to the hum of wasps and a distant
tractor. I heard a ‘plop’ as no doubt a small mammal chose a watery pathway, to
avoid a two footed creature who was trespassing on it’s beat. I closed my eyes,
the best to use my nose, but little arrived, except the sweetness associated
with warming grasses and accompanying vegetation. I changed to my ears, and on
concentrating, located a myriad of birdsong. Alas, though I had been trained by
Collins, it was my eyes only that afforded recognition.
I stood, meaning to continue my
journey and observed William. He was now standing, his rod uplifted and the line
taut, seemingly attempting to drag him from the bank. I ran back to where he was
and grasped him, around the waist, as he teetered on the edge. The line broke
and we fell, me on top, and we rolled into a bed of nettles. I scrambled to my
feet.
‘Are you alright
William?’
He looked dazed, his face bright
red, his right hand still gripping the fishing rod. ‘Yes,’ he said, ‘thank you
Gloria.’
BIO - Roger Noons began writing in 2006, when he completed a screenplay, for a friend who is an amateur film maker. After the film was made, he wrote further scripts, then began short stories and poems. He occasionally produces non fiction, particularly memoirs from his long career in Environmental Health.
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