By Janet Howson
Charitea
She decided to dress in
a comfortable fashion, if there was such a thing as a comfortable fashion but
she liked the word comfortable. It evoked childhood memories. “Are you sitting
comfortably? Then we will begin.” From that iconic children’s radio programme.
Or, “make yourself comfortable” her mother’s final words before leaving the
house to prevent unnecessary toilet stops. So comfortable was how she had
dressed.
She chose a blue skirt;
she had toyed with the idea of wearing trousers, she wasn’t even sure what her
role was going to be. They might decide to put her out the back of the shop (out
of harm’s way) sorting the mountainous black plastic bags overflowing with the
general public’s detritus. She hoped not. When she had seen the advertisement
discreetly placed on the entrance door window “Volunteers required, please apply
within” she had pictured herself smiling benevolently and welcoming customers as
they entered the shop. Ringing up their purchases and asking them if they
required a bag. Still time would tell.
She had decided on a
white blouse that she often wore when she was working, paid work that is, not
the voluntary type she was involved with now. She decided against the jacket she
used to wear with the blue skirt, opting for a blue cardigan instead. When she
retired she put all her suit jackets in a black bin liner and took them along to
a charity shop similar to the one she would be volunteering at later. She knew
she would never wear them again and they were only a painful reminder of past
times.
Her earrings matched the
blue outfit. She always felt naked without earrings. She used to say at work
that she couldn’t leave the house without her lipstick and earrings. She wasn’t
a vain person. Not like the young girls in the office who appeared to preen
themselves most of the day talking in high pitched voices of the conquests they
had made at the weekend. She knew they thought she was a dinosaur wearing what
she wore but she didn’t care what they thought. She kept herself to herself.
Shoes had proved to be a problem. She wasn’t sure if
boots would be appropriate or just sensible shoes. No teetering heels with thin
straps, like the girls used to wear but choosing flat brogues that would be kind
to her bunions.
One last look in the
mirror before she donned her coat. She called it her “duvet coat” as it was so
thick and warm and had a fur lined hood.
Oh, she nearly forgot.
Her umbrella. She never went anywhere without her umbrella. Another legacy of her mother. The sky looked
threatening, she might be glad of it later.
She had decided to walk.
The shop shut at 4.30pm but she might be required to tidy up, sweep round or
wash up the tea cups – she presumed there would be a cup of tea sometime during
the afternoon? It would be far too long to leave her car in a car park. She
objected to paying for a car park ticket. Once she had been 3 minutes late
returning to pick up her car and was horrified to discover a yellow bag on the
front windscreen announcing the parking penalty
The walk normally took
her 20 minutes into the centre of town. The charity shop was favourably placed
being next to the main shops in the High Street. She had always made a beeline
for a charity shop after doing the main stores first
When she arrived at the
shop. A wave of nerves hit her. She almost turned back. However, she took a deep
breath and entered. There were a few customers sorting through the hand rails
and an elderly man standing behind the till, endeavouring with obvious
difficulty to keep his eyes open. She assumed
he was the morning shift. She also spotted a lady with her back to her sorting
out the DVDs. She thought it would be wisest to approach the morning shift so
donning a smile she approached the till.
“Hello, I am here for my
Induction Day. I was told George Forbes would be going through everything with
me. Do you know where I could find him?”
The man at the till was
now wide- awake eyeing her suspiciously. After a moment he seemed to get a grip
of the situation. “Wait here….” He was about to leave his sentry post by the
till when something made him stop. “Can’t leave the shop floor. Things get
nicked, you’d be surprised how much stuff gets nicked. You wouldn’t think people
would be so callous as to steal from a charity shop.”
He pulled out a rather
grimy handkerchief and blew his nose loudly. “Once they have exhausted our shop
they are on to the next. Nothing better to do.
I once suggested to one lady who had been in the shop over an hour that she
become a volunteer. I might as well have suggested she abseiled down the side of
the Shard!” He chuckled at his own joke.
She wondered how long he
would carry on with his rather off- putting tales when a young man appeared from
the back of the shop. He looked rather frazzled. On seeing her he weaved his way
to the till through the customers. She put on her smile that she thought looked
confident. There was an awkward moment when she thought he was going to shake
her hand and brought hers up to meet his. However, he was merely scratching his
head, a habit she would witness repeating itself during the afternoon.
Embarrassed, she put her arm down by her side.
“So glad you could make
it. We only spoke briefly the other day when you popped in. We have been very
short of staff today but I am sure Alan is very capable of holding the fort
whilst we go out the back for the induction talk, aren’t you Alan?” Alan looked
anything but, in fact, she thought, she would be surprised if Alan was still
there on their return. She found herself following the young man, who she
assumed was George Forbes, although he had not actually introduced himself.
Dodging round the customers, she found herself in a room filled with boxes,
clothes rails towering piles of books and general organised chaos.
“Let's sit here and go
through Health and Safety and Accident prevention Strategies. “It was obvious he
had repeated these ad nauseum and the words tripped off his tongue without the
necessity of looking at a pamphlet or brochure. It was all common sense to her
and she gradually began to feel less apprehensive, allowing herself to relax a
bit. She interjected with the odd “yes” and “I see” or “I can manage that.” in
the appropriate places. He sprung up at one point, like a jack in a box,
returning with a pair of white rubber gloves. “These are to sort through the
clothes with,” he explained, “You would be horrified at the amount of dirty
clothing we receive, even underwear.” She inwardly recoiled at this, although it
did not really surprise her at all. Some people’s standards were very low.
He had sprung up again,
returning this time with a gun, not the firearm type, she smiled to herself at
the thought of that, but a clothes- labelling gun that thrust a spike through
each item affixing a price tag to it. He demonstrated on a dress that had
obviously been spiked on numerous occasions to explain the technique to new
recruits. Well, that all seemed fairly simple. She was allowed to have a few
trail spikes and eventually mastered the task, handing the gun back to George,
who again was scratching his head, triumphantly.
Once again, she saw him
catapulting from his seat returning with a curious object that she did not
recognise. “The steam wand,” he explained, “We hang up the suits, dresses,
skirts and trousers and steam the creases out.
A wonderful invention, saves all that tedious ironing.” She attempted to
put an expression of being truly impressed on her face. Well, perhaps she was,
just a little bit.
Having finished the
backroom induction talk, he guided her back to the shop floor and showed her how
the clothing was hung on the rails, sized and grouped into colour ranges. She
liked that. She appreciated order. She felt it was all straight forward and was
about to say so when she realised George had made a bee line for the till. She
quickly followed him. Here he went into intricate detail with accompanying head
scratches, about the Gift Aid, Pink Stickers, World Cancer Day, stand up to
Cancer Day and finally, with apologetic tones, introduced the topic of “shaking
the bucket”. This was a periodic stint of standing with a tin in the High Street
collecting donations from often reluctant, over busy pedestrians who had not
quite perfected the ability to avoid eye contact. “It can be quite cold, “he
explained, “so we do not ask you to do it often.” He quickly added.
“Would you like to start
on the till or in the store room?” George had obviously finished the
induction.
“The till please, “she
replied, “If you think I’d manage all right?”
“You won’t know ‘till’
you try!” he roared with laughter at his own joke. She responded as well as she
could with a short chuckle but her mind was already on the daunting task of
being in sole charge of the incoming money. Alan had long since disappeared,
having completed the morning shift and she couldn’t see any sign of the lady who
had been filling shelves.
“Break a leg.” shouted
George as she watched his retreating back disappear into the stockroom. It
wasn’t until then that she realised that she still had her coat on and her
handbag was still on her arm. Too embarrassed to call George back she put them
both under the counter. “Needs must.” she thought to herself.
Then she waited. She
wondered how long it would be before she could test out her newly acquired shop
skills. There were six people all together, roaming around, picking up pieces of
memorabilia, reading the first chapter of a book, sifting through the CD and DVD
rack, holding up clothes to the light or against their body for size. No
movement towards the till though.
“Excuse me.” She was shaken out of her reverie by a
voice that seemed to come from nowhere. She then realised it was a child of
about five years old whose head hardly rose above the height of the counter.” I
want this.” The voice continued.
She leaned over and
extracted a large fluffy rabbit from the hands of the infant purchaser and was
about to look at the price label attached to said animals ear, when a much
larger hand extracted it from her grip removing the infant simultaneously. “She
don’t want that, little so and so, she can’t keep her hands off anything. She’s
got too many toys as it is, ‘er dad spoils ‘er rotten.” With that she strode out
of the shop steering a now grizzling child in front of her.
She felt quite deflated.
Her first sale and it turned out not to be a sale. Still, she put that down to
beginner’s bad luck.
“How much?” A strident voice matching a strident woman was
standing at the counter. She pulled herself together. She examined the black
gloves as the customer rummaged through her purse. She realised there was no
price tag on them. Thinking on her feet she calculated how much the gloves would
be worth. “£2.50 please, is that O.K?” she ventured.
“Those are my bleeding
gloves, this is what I am buying.” The customer pushed a set of soaps in a box
towards her from the place it had been positioned, though she excused herself
with the fact that it was further away than the gloves, it didn’t make her feel
any less stupid.
“Do you need a bag?” she
asked.
“You flaming charge for
them now don’t you. Bleeding disgrace, if you ask me. No, I’ll stick ‘em in me
‘andbag.” At which she did exactly that, paid the required £1.50 and disappeared
out of the shop.
She contemplated on
this. One no sale and one sale, eventually happening after her initial mistake.
Not a brilliant record up to now. It could only get better surely.
She checked her watch.
3.35pm. Just under an hour to closing. Still no offer of a cup of tea. She was
just weighing up the pros and cons of trying to locate George when a group of
secondary school pupils pushed through the shop door and descended on the
handbags.
“This all you’ve
got?” One of them shouted across to her
through a mouth of chewing gum, repositioning her school bag on her
back.
She panicked. She didn’t
know if they had any more handbags or not. She would have to call for
George.
“What is it you are
looking for?”
“Don’t know ‘till I see
‘em do I?”
She thought about this
for a moment.
“I will ask if we have
anything out the back. Won’t be long.”
She hurried into the
storeroom and called George. He hurried out at a pace applicable to responding
to a fire alarm.
“What is it? Is there
something wrong?” His head scratching became quite manic. He seemed a
bit irritable, which she thought was rather unfair as it was her first
day.
She explained the
situation to him. He eyed up the group of girls. “Only what you see on the
shelves. We haven’t priced and labelled the rest yet.”
“Load of rubbish if you
ask me.” One of the girls exclaimed as she tossed a bag she was examining back
on the pile. “Get one cheaper at
Primark.”
“Could I suggest you
take your loud voices and rude remarks and go to Primark then!” She couldn’t
believe she had said it. Perhaps it was the tensions of the whole day getting
the better of her. She blushed, not knowing quite what to do. Apologise?
“Oh charming!” this came
from the gum chewer.
“Oh, come on Sophie,
silly cow can do one!” one of the others shouted.
“We aint coming in here
again, smells of sweaty trainers anyway!” one of the others joined
in.
At that they all left
the shop as loudly as they had entered it.
Quite what “do one”
meant she wasn’t really sure and did not really want to find out. More important was the fact that George had been
witness to her being dismissive of potential customers. This was her third
failure on her first day. She felt quite
despondent. She turned around expecting George to be scowling at the least,
instead he was beaming from ear to ear.
“I have wanted to say
something similar to those girls for months. They come in here about three times
a week, demanding we go out the back to look for stock and disappear, probably
with a good selection of the produce. I have never been able to catch them and I
have never confronted them. Well done, hopefully that is the last we shall see
of them.” He paused savouring the thought.
“Now how about I make
you a nice cup of tea and you make yourself comfortable in the back room for ten
minutes whilst you drink it. I will lock the doors and get ready to go. My bus
is in twenty minutes but we have time for a quick chat.”
Comfortable…. she smiled
at the use of her favourite word. So, feeling quite proud of herself that she
had triumphed over the rude girls, she bent down to retrieve her handbag from
under the counter.
The handbag wasn’t
there. She searched deeper under the counter with a sinking heart and a deflated
self- esteem.
“Oh well, “she thought
“those girls did find a handbag to suit them after all.”
About the Author
I taught Drama and
English for 35 years, directing a lot of plays, some of which I wrote myself. I
have been spurred to start writing again having found a folder of poetry I had
written over the years. I am now enjoying writing short stories with the aim of
turning some of them into scripts. I feel I am at the start of an adventure and
feel very excited about it.
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