Authors: Bob Servant
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Neil Forsyth is an author and journalist. A fellow Dundonian and friend to Bob Servant for over twenty years, his
Delete This At Your Peril â The Bob Servant Emails
is now available from Birlinn in a newly expanded edition. Forsyth is also author of
Other People's Money
, the biography of fraudster Elliot Castro, and a novel,
Let Them Come Through
.
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Also by Neil Forsyth
Delete This at Your Peril â The Bob Servant Emails
Non Fiction
Other People's Money â The Rise and Fall of Britain's Most Audacious Fraudster
(with Elliot Castro)
Fiction
Let Them Come Through
Neil Forsyth
First published in
2010
by
Birlinn Limited
West Newington House
10
Newington Road
Edinburgh
EH9 1QS
Copyright © Neil Forsyth
2010
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored or transmitted in any form without the express written permission of the publisher.
ISBN:
978 1 84158 920 6
eBook ISBN:
978 0 85790 001 2
The moral right of Neil Forsyth to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Photographs on pp. xvii, 31, 52, 57, 59, 60, 61, 64, 82, 89, 93, 108, 124 © Jim Gove; photograph on p. xx reproduced by permission of Getty Images
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Typeset by Brinnoven, Livingston
Printed and bound by Cox and Wyman Ltd, Reading
For my wee sister Carol,
with love.
A Big âHello' From Bob Servant
1Â Â Â Â The Lone Ranger Being a Lot of Bollocks
3Â Â Â Â Teachers Not Appreciating My Help
6Â Â Â Â Joining the Merchant Navy
8Â Â Â Â Not Joining the Merchant Navy
9Â Â Â Â Not Having Any Black Pals
11Â Â Â Â Chappy Williams and Tommy Peanuts
12Â Â Â Â The Great Skirt Hunt
13Â Â Â Â Women Not Saying What They Mean
15Â Â Â Â Frank's Mum Going to Live in the Nursing Home
17Â Â Â Â Hiding Not Being an Olympic Sport
18Â Â Â Â Making Frank My Number Two
20Â Â Â Â Bringing Cruncher On Board
21Â Â Â Â Frank Recruiting Halfwits Like Him
22Â Â Â Â Selling Up to Buckets Bennett
24Â Â Â Â Mum Having to Cough It for Me to Get My Dream House
25Â Â Â Â The First Day of the Cheeseburger Wars
26Â Â Â Â People Talking About the Wild West But Forgetting About the Quicksand
27Â Â Â Â The Failure of the Bank of Scotland's Executive Winners Club
28Â Â Â Â The Cheeseburger Civil War
29Â Â Â Â The Cheeseburger World War
30Â Â Â Â Building the Anything Goes Annexe to Bob's Palace
31Â Â Â Â The Failure of Hands Across The Water
32Â Â Â Â Saving Father O'Neill from the Vice-like Grip of God and Jesus
33Â Â Â Â Accepting There's a Possibility That It's Just Me and Frank
35Â Â Â Â Not Hearing Fuck All Back on the Football Jobs
36Â Â Â Â Dr Wilkie Stitching Me Up Like a Kipper
37Â Â Â Â Not Trusting Frank With My Funeral Masterplan
38Â Â Â Â Liking Dundee Too Much
by Neil Forsyth
It's a great privilege to stand sentry over another offering from Dundee's own Bob Servant and what an occasion it is. If you had suggested to me a few years ago that Bob would write his autobiography with my assistance I would have been surprised. If you'd told me a few months ago I would have been astonished for the book you hold has been a labour of love. This is not my story of course but perhaps, through my experience, you can catch an early glimpse of your companion for the next hundred or so pages. I can certainly offer a window to a fascinating mind.
I met Bob Servant twenty years ago, when I was twelve and he was a glamorous local personality. Since then we have built a friendship based on football, distrust and the bars of our shared hometown of Broughty Ferry, Dundee.
Two years ago I edited a book for Bob and it wasn't an altogether unpleasant experience. I was therefore interested when he approached me to edit his memoirs. For his many faults Bob has lived a fascinating life and he was offering to âopen cans of worms' on various matters that I felt could have a wide audience. Dundee's Cheeseburger Wars of the 1980s (in which Bob played a dominant role) are often described by social commentators as the closest a British city has come to anarchy in modern history, while I felt Bob's knowledge of local government corruption could be a damning indictment on the traditional flaws of localised political control.
Although living in America, I agreed to return to Dundee for six months and help shape Bob's memories. From there we swiftly entered the realms of disaster. It must appear churlish for an autobiography's lowly editor to open a book by denigrating the book's subject but it is hard for me to do otherwise when the horrors of the experience
are so fresh in my mind. Editing a book is a demanding task at the best of times. When it is conducted against a backdrop of committed insanity it becomes truly torturous.
The initial problem was finding Bob. After greeting my arrival in Dundee with the promise of âgoing at it hammer and tongs' we then began an exhausting cat and mouse existence. Ever since selling his cheeseburger van business and before that his window-cleaning enterprise for large, possibly untaxed, sums Bob has lived a life predictable only through commitment to whims and flights of fancy. Every day for weeks I'd spend long hours trying to track him down after another appointment went unmet. When I found him I'd be given an elaborate cover story backed by evident falsehood
1
and the assurance that âtomorrow is D-Day'. I realised with horror that the only way I could get the book finished was to move into Bob's house.
I needed to move anyway. I'd been staying at my family home but Bob had effortlessly managed to strain my relationship with my parents. Bob rarely calls mobile phones because he believes they are âa fiver a minute' so got my parents' number from the phone book and called the house directly. Unfortunately Bob enjoys beginning phone calls to associates by impersonating a police officer reporting a misdemeanour. With my parents of retirement age it was an exhausting and often traumatic experience to continually assure them I had not committed the various crimes Bob would suggest in those opening, comic stages of his calls.
With immediate regret I took up residence, and ultimately refuge, in Bob's spare room. He would wake me in the morning in a variety of ways. If he'd enjoyed a night of revelry he'd come in wearing his pyjamas, sit at the end of my bed and relate the previous evening in studied detail. Many times I would have been with Bob for the duration of the evening in question and yet he would show no hesitation in reporting an entirely different set of events to which I had witnessed. There would be exaggeration or even outright fabrication with regards
to the physical attraction any females had felt towards Bob, while his memory would often fail him in recounting how successful any jokes he'd made during the night had been.
On other occasions Bob would generously incorporate my bedroom into his morning grooming routine. If I was lucky, I would wake up to Bob whistling and brushing his hair into shape beside my bed. Other times I was less fortunate. I will, sadly, never lose the memory of the morning that Bob walked calmly into my bedroom wearing only a towel. He'd been in the bath when he had remembered an admittedly interesting biographical note that he thought I should have âhot off the press'. Bob then proceeded to tell me this story while drying himself.
At first he simply lifted one foot to a chair and, side on to my nervous presence, began to dry his undercarriage with a see sawing effect. His left thigh hid the engine room of his fading build but in many ways this was worse. While he spoke energetically of an event from the early 1970s I found it hard not to imagine the effects of his coarse towelling. My imagination was soon no longer required.
In a spectacular alignment, as if matching a physical crescendo to that of the conversation, Bob coquettishly dropped his left foot to the floor. With the morning sunlight that peeked through the blinds showing as stripes across his flesh, Bob hunched and held the towel taut between his legs. I had seconds to come to terms with what was about to happen and it wasn't enough. Bob's hands set off, the towel once more began it's see-saw swing and with every flick, what he refers to with dedication as Bobby Junior bounced into the air in a small lunge towards me.
Of course now I wish (often, if not daily) that I had shown the necessary sharpness to pull my cover over my eyes. Yet half asleep and near-frozen with horror I found myself uncomfortably transfixed. I remember only how it ended. âAnd that,' said Bob calmly as mayhem reigned around his midriff, âis why you shouldn't trust a golfer.' He walked with great certainty from the room.
* * *
Compared to the towel incident, other irritations with Bob probably seem more innocent. There was his gleeful discovery of my dictaphone which was closely followed by the âjokes' he'd leave on it for me. Sometimes he'd be a dog, sometimes he would be a child calling
for help because they were âtrapped in the machine', sometimes a high-pitched woman saying she'd âseen me on the bus' and would I like to give her âthe good stuff'?
I began to get a feel for Bob's monumental mood swings which belong on a scale all of their own. Great, victorious breakfasts could be followed by afternoons when he huddled in his armchair, muttering darkly about a perceived slight from a local shopkeeper or the postman. Bob thrives on company and reacts poorly when he lacks it. If I went to bed at what he saw as an overly early time, for example, he would wait an hour then burst into my room dressed as a âghost'.
The cumulative effect of all this was that I had what I am not too proud to call a minor breakdown. Two months before the book was to be delivered all Bob had achieved was to reduce me to a nervous, insomniac wreck with a phobia of the male genitals. Through the tweaking of key lifestyle choices, I could have achieved all that without leaving America.
To his credit, Bob was sufficiently shocked by my reaction to begin writing. For several weeks he worked religiously on an opus that grew around him while I watched with pride. âNot yet,' he'd say with a wink when I tried to steal an early look at his work, followed by a range of comments regarding omelettes, eggs and, cryptically, ducks.
I therefore had at least some lingering hope when Bob finally gave me his work. Any literary ambitions I had were instantly swiped. I had developed giddy visions of working with material that could be pitched somewhere between Samuel Pepys and Charles Pooter. What I was handed belonged more fittingly between Adrian Mole and the
Beano
. Admittedly I greatly enjoyed Bob's memories with their raw fury and ambition, but then the editing process started and Bob had his final joke at my expense.