Read The Meltdown of a Banker's Wife Online
Authors: Gill Davy-Bowker
7
âWe're going to Aphid World! We're going to Aphid World! Na Na Nee Na Na!' whooped Amy triumphantly, dancing like a maniac around a subdued Michael.
âMummy ⦠can we do something I like too?'
âCourse sweetie. We'll go to the fair orâ¦'
âCould we go to the museum tomorrow, Mummy?'
âThe museum?? Oh yes ⦠OK.'
Museum?! This is amazing, thought Mel. But then Michael liked watching old
Open University
programmes presented by beardy men in tank tops, so perhaps she shouldn't have been so surprised.
Kelly was already standing at the end of her drive with Matilda and Ivan. Ivan was four, the same age as Michael; Amy and Matilda, at seven years old, shared the same Year 3 classroom and teacher, Miss Beastley. The two mothers were hoping that these four children would make perfect playmates in the darkest days of half-term holiday week. Kelly dived at the car, pulling her two offspring behind her. Matilda and Ivan looked as though they had been sleeping in the bushes. They all got into the people carrier and Kelly let out an audible gasp of relief.
âYou just don't know how much I've needed to see another adult! Bloody Robert doesn't come home till God knows when every night and I'm going slowly mad!' Kelly visibly relaxed in a âmelting into the car seat' sort of a way. Well, that was the ice broken. Kelly was also finding it difficult; in fact, so difficult and stressful that once the dam of her silence had broken, she could not stop the flood of words from pouring out.
âMatida's been experimenting with vinegar and bicarbonate of soda bombs and Ivan has a cap gun. It's like bloody Palestine in our house!' It was evident that Kelly was getting very little sleep. Her eyes were red-rimmed with dark circles underneath. Meanwhile, the children in the back were eerily quiet.
âWell, let's have a good day out today,' she said brightly. âI've brought a big picnic. Do you remember when we were students and picnics meant baguettes, Camembert, strawberries and champagne?'
âNo,' replied Kelly curtly.
âOh.'
8
They drove along the motorway, leaving at the exit indicated by the brown sign as being the way to Aphid World. Every so often, Mel peeked at the mirror to witness amazingly quiet children. Kelly closed her eyes and went to sleep.
âAre we nearly there yet?' asked Michael.
That started it.
âI'm bored!'
âAre we nearly there yet?'
The mantra began, all the children joining in. Kelly carried on sleeping. Lucky Kelly.
âIt's not far now,' she soothed; but it's impossible to explain time to children of seven and under. Have you tried it? It's either,
âWe are there now.'
or,
âWe are there never.'
Nothing in between.
Ivan started squealing. âThe poo's coming out of my bottom! I can't hold it in!'
Come to think of it, there was a bit of a farty smell. Typical ⦠miles away from any facility, not even a hidden bush and Ivan was touching cloth.
âOh come on, Aphid World,' begged Mel out loud. âI'm sure you weren't this far away last time!'
Feverishly she hunted the road for signs, going over little bridges, around hair-pin bends and up and down hump-back hills. Amy and Matilda appreciated the hills, squealing with tickly delight. Amy actually sounded like a little girly girl!
Mel started to relax and forget about the imminent faecal explosion when suddenly there was explosion of a different, but equally revolting kind. Michael vomited in a huge parabolic, projectile stream, which landed straight on her head.
âOh God! Oh God!' She swerved to the side of the road and stopped. Vomit dripped down her face and warmly oozed into her ears. But would you believe it? Kelly was still asleep. Mel went around to the back doors of the car and opened the one near the road's verge. Assorted children fell out. Michael looked green and had a small amount of vomit speckled on his trousers. Most of it was all over Mel and down the back of the driver's seat, dripping gloopily like lumpy oil onto the newly-valeted carpet. Meanwhile, Ivan ran around in circles, bent slightly forward, thighs together and bottom poking out at a 30-degree angle.
âToilet!' he cried. She looked desperately around for some leaves and some cover and settled for the grass verge which was shielded from view of the road by the wings of the open car doors. She found some wet wipes and told Ivan not to worry as poo was totally biodegradable. Kelly was still asleep. All hell was breaking loose and Kelly snoozed through the lot! What was she on? Mel wished she could have some.
âOh, you're awake then!' Mel exclaimed as Kelly opened both eyes wide and blinked in a lizardly sort of way. Kelly slowly became aware of her surroundings â the smell in particular.
âEeugh! What's that smell?'
âLook at me, Kelly,' suggested Mel quietly. âLook at my hair. What do you see?'
âOh my God! Is that puke in your hair? Oh my God!'
âIndeed,' nodded Mel wisely. âI really don't know what to do now. We're nearly at Aphid World but we can't very well go in like this, can we?'
âHave you got some wet wipes?' Kelly enquired weakly.
âBeen there. Done that. No more wet wipes.'
Kelly had just found Ivan's little offering on the grass verge and Ivan was busy scrubbing away at his bottom with a dock leaf.
âI know!' smiled Kelly in a Eureka sort of way. âLet's go to one of those motel places and have a shower!'
Mel regarded her friend for a while, wondering which planet she had hailed from.
âYou have noticed that we're on a B road? We left the motorway nearly an hour ago.'
âNo!' gasped Kelly. âIt's not that far from the motorway to Aphid World!?'
âThat's what I thought. But I was horribly mistaken. We've been in the Twilight Zone for an eternity.'
âHow about a river? Isn't that a stream down there?'
It was quite a warm day, so it was within the realms of possibility to go and wash down in the stream. Mel felt so revolting that embarrassment and practicality had gone straight out of the window.
âBrilliant idea! Then we could wash and and have a picnic in the field! You're so clever!'
Mel's relief was infectious. The children jumped up and down wanting buckets and spades and swimming costumes. In the end they closed the doors to the smelly, dripping car and set off towards the babbling brook. There were cow pats in the field but no actual cows, luckily. Being city people, it was doubtful they could have survived an onslaught of cows. The bank of the stream was a bit muddy, but both women had flat pumps on, as did the children. But as they mulched closer to the water the mud became more tenacious, yielding very grudgingly to their efforts to pull their feet out of it and, one by one, they decided it best to remove their shoes and go barefoot. They weren't going to give up now. The kids were enjoying the adventure immensely; even Michael, who normally hated getting dirty. Finally, red in the face, they found some dry bits of grassy bank not churned up by
large farm animals and sat down. Quite how Mel was going to get the sick out of her hair, she didn't know, but it would feel great, she was sure, just to put her head under the clean, bubbling water. In fact, she was beginning to feel quite the âI am at one with nature' earth mother type. âThis is the life!' she thought. âWho needs all the trappings of civilisation?'
They all took their outer layers of clothing off and tiptoed carefully across the stony river bed. It was very cold as they started splashing each other but it felt brilliant.
âKelly, could you pour some water over my head and try to get the sick out, do you think?'
And so this went on until they smelt rather sweeter and felt cooler. Finally they climbed out and discovered that they would just have to put their clothes on without getting dry, because one never has a towel when one needs one. And strangely, Michael and Amy had forgotten completely about vampire water, so that was another problem solved.
Soggily, Mel turned and scrambled up the bank, Kelly and the children behind her. She was suddenly aware of warm breath on the back of her neck and a slappy-tongue noise. Slowly she raised her head to come eye-to-nose with a cow. The cow eyed her placidly, licking its nose. Mel felt sweat ooze from every one of her pores; her throat tightened and the hairs on the back of her neck tingled as they stood themselves on end. She felt just like a startled spikey cat. The children behind her began to make noises and Kelly quietly caught her breath. There were things she had heard about how to deal with a cow or a horse. Something about not running away, not letting them smell your fear ⦠that sort of thing. Was the best thing to lie on the ground in front of it? She couldn't remember because she didn't meet many large herbivores in her part of Kingston-upon-Thames. The seconds seemed like hours as she and the cow looked at each other. Was that an angry look in its eye now? Sweat poured from her armpits and dripped down the back of her
neck. The stench of fear must have been all-pervading she was sure, but the more she tried to stop herself sweating, the worse it got. Amy broke the silent impasse. âMummy, it's all right. She's a nice cow. Just walk past her.' Trust Amy to act more maturely than her mother! But she was glad for this little voice of reason and slowly she began to move in as dignified a fashion as she was able, given that her feet were sinking in mud and she felt she was about to wet herself.
âAll right, Daisy,' comforted Amy as she and the others followed Mel past the cow. Mel could see the field between them and the car now. There were an awful lot of cows in the field. Young cows. The kind that get excited and chase you!
âSplit!' she semi-whispered. Kelly, Ivan and Matilda went one way and Mel, Amy and Michael went the other, in the hope of meeting at the car. Feeling every cow's eyes on them they staggered through the field barefoot, hardly noticing the thistles and stones. Every hoof fall threatened. As they all converged at the gate by the car, they could hear low and ominous mooing and several sets of hooves very close behind. Just getting over the gate, the troupe turned to see a whole field of cows right behind them staring wildly, it appeared, at their bottoms. Just in time, they left the field and realised that today was not the day to complete their journey to Aphid World. They looked at each other â it was like a scene from
Tenko
. Even the children didn't argue when Mel suggested they just went home. The smell in the car was such that they kept the windows open all the way, but never mind. They had lived to fight another day.
9
âMel!' exclaimed Alan the next morning. âWhat the hell happened to my car? It looks like a swamp! I'm supposed to be picking up the boss in that later.'
âI'll clean it up! I'm sorry, bit of an accident,' replied Mel lamely.
Just once, she thought, just bloody once I'd like to have a lovely calm day out. I bet Kelly never agrees to come with us anywhere ever again.
A few hours later, the car still smelt a bit but there was nothing more to offend the eyes. So Alan was bringing his boss back for dinner. Great! It would have been nice to have been warned. It would have been nice to actually be consulted. Well, if he thought she was going to go into domestic goddess mode, he had another thing coming. She was toying with the idea of serving beans on toast or a Pot Noodle. That would teach him not to take her for granted ⦠But on second thoughts, Alan had seemed pretty preoccupied recently and there seemed to be some trouble at work. Still, was that her fault? Oooh, I could scream, she thought. Finally, she hit upon a brilliant compromise ⦠She would order in food from a takeaway and pass it off as her own! But what would they be expecting? What did this boss of Alan's actually eat? He hadn't told her anything! She felt like leaving the disaster for him to discover when he marched into the house with his boss later, but thought better of this idea. She phoned him at work to which he had travelled by Tube that morning. He was using the car as a taxi service for a probable drunken boss that evening.
âHello, Alan Simkins,' he answered his office phone.
âAlan â what does your boss expect me to cook tonight? What does he eat?' wailed Mel.
âOh love, I'm sorry. I hadn't thought about that! ⦠Um ⦠he likes seafood ⦠I think.'
âSeafood ⦠What ⦠prawns? That sort of thing?'
âOh yes. I'm sure prawns would be fine.'
âWhat shall I do with the prawns, Alan? Does he like Thai, Chinese, Indian, French, Spanish, Italian? I mean, which ball park are we aiming for here?'
âOoh. French sounds about right, I think. What do you think?'
âAre you sure that he'll be OK with that?' she asked, getting out the Yellow Pages and a couple of recipe books.
âMummy! Are we making cakes!?' shouted the children as they leapt on her from behind.
âYes darling. I'm sure French prawns will be just what the doctor ordered,' reassured a rather distracted-sounding Alan. âI'll see you about six. Oh! Can you pick me up from the office?'
âPick you up! For goodness sake, why didn't you say all this before?' Oh, he really was too much! Was she supposed to wipe his bottom for him as well!?
âThanks, love. See you later!'
The phone was put down at the other end whilst Mel was left to wrestle with the children and save Alan's career single-handedly. She only had (she looked at her watch in dismay) another six hours to do it in because she'd have to leave the house at four-thirty to get to his office by six o'clock at that time of day and she'd have to sort out the bloody congestion charge.
âOh pants!' she shouted out loud.
10
The trip around the supermarket with two children was the usual nightmare and then some. It was hot and humid and everyone in the place seemed to either have trolley rage or was getting in the way. This was made all the more difficult by the fact that Michael wanted to sit in the trolley seat but was really too big for it now. Amy tried to get in the seat before him. The trolley was seriously unbalanced and since all its wheels spun in different directions at the best of times, it was like something out of one of these impossible feat shows from Japan trying to get through the amply-sized beckoning supermarket portal. Mel's hair clung to her head and sweat dripped off the end of her nose as Amy bent the trolley seat and Michael pulled the shopping scanner off the wall and tried to zap her with it. He was flicking the scanner this way and that â one woman cried out in pain as the red laser light flashed in her eyes. She felt the security guard's gaze boring disapprovingly into the back of her head and she wished she could just crawl into an empty box in the middle of the aisle. It always struck her as amazing that more people didn't abandon all hope and just sit down in the aisle and start rocking and sucking their thumbs. No one seemed in the brightest of moods. They were either miserable, stupid, bloody-minded or a combination of all three possibilities.
She really had intended to buy fresh ingredients and make the meal from scratch ⦠honestly ⦠but in the end, she was beaten by Amy who fished a large spider out of her little velvet pouch purse and was having a vivid conversation with it. She didn't notice until someone screamed. Mel grabbed some ready
meals from the freezer cabinet and shot to the scan-it-yourself till. Normally she avoided these things like the plague; it said things loudly and repeatedly so that everyone in the shop would know how much it despised and loathed her.
âUnexpected item on the till!'
âUnexpected item on the till!'
âPlease remove and start again!'
âPlease remove and start again!'
No sooner had she got the hang of it than Michael was helpfully plonking sweets on the conveyor belt, which didn't help. She grabbed Michael by the hand, pulled him over to her side and removed all the sweets. She had just started to get some order into her scanning when Michael started wailing and dribbling out of his nose.
âI want some sweets! Waaa!' screamed Michael as he hung off her arm and then proceeded to lie on the floor kicking his feet. Michael had never had a tantrum before. She had always dealt with Amy's by ignoring them so she went with that plan. People started tutting and staring. She heard one woman say to another,
âHonestly, children these days! They're so spoilt. I blame the parents. They're so busy having careers and swanning around pampering themselves.'
âYes, I agree with you, Gladys. A lot of these mothers are either on drugs or drinking all the time. Poor little thing! Look at her ⦠she's totally ignoring him!'
âLook at her hands, Mavis ⦠They're shaking! And her eyes ⦠Ooh! Don't like the look of them. Poor little devils having a mother like that!'
Gladys approached Michael. âAah, you poor dear. Would you like a sweetie?'
Michael quietened down a bit in the hope of a reward. Mel felt like she would have to spontaneously combust at any moment and Amy showed the two kind elderly ladies her pet spider.
âLook Willy ⦠these are two nice old ladies. Come and say hello.' She shoved the spider right under Gladys's nose and the latter went cross-eyed behind her varifocals.
âAagh! You little swine! Ooh! Mavis, get me my spray! I'm having an attack!'
Mel turned to look at the two ladies, relieved that she had been saved from having to murder them. Gladys seemed very energetic and noisy, shouting at the top of her voice and dramatically fanning herself with a shrink-wrapped mackerel. She looked rather too energetic to be at death's door, Mel thought. And Mel was a trained nurse, after all, so she should know! Meanwhile the manager of the shop hurried forth and offered chairs to the ladies in a quiet area. He also offered them both a cup of tea and relieved Gladys of her mackerel.
âWhat appears to be the problem, ladies?' he enquired. Mavis slowly raised an accusing finger and pointed it at Amy. âThat dreadful little girl has a venomous creature in this shop and she threatened Gladys with it.'
Amy promptly went red and started to cry, hugging her little velvet pouch to her chest.
âYou are horrible ladies! He's my pet and he's kind and much, much cleverer than you! He didn't scream at you, did he!?'
Michael had completely forgotten about his tantrum and was sitting on the floor watching the show, as was everybody else in the store, it seemed. Gladys looked Mel up and down.
âIt's not surprising that the child is mad with a mother like that! She looks completely insane!'
âDon't you talk to my mummy like that!' said Amy, smacking Gladys on the arm.
âYes!' agreed Michael. âOur mummy is the best mummy in the world!'
Mel couldn't help the tears as they escaped down her cheeks and she gave both her wonderful, loyal, loving, clever children a hug and a wet kiss.
Paramedics turned up to check on Gladys with her imminent heart attack.
âHi Mel! How goes it?' asked one of them. Turning, she recognised Brian. She'd had many a handover in A+E from Brian when she was in the working world. She was so relieved to see a friendly face. The face of someone who would know that she wasn't on alcohol or drugs and wasn't mad. Someone who knew her as Mel The Nurse and The Person and not just the wife and mother.
âBrian!' she trilled. âHow lovely to see you!'
âWhat have you been doing? Causing trouble again, are you?' he grinned.
âThanks for the support Bri! I promise to do the same for you one day!' she warned, eyes glinting mischievously.
âWhen are you coming back to work?' he asked.
âOoh! This lady caused it all. She's mad ⦠she should be locked up,' piped up Mavis. âMy poor friend was just concerned for the children and â¦'
âNow why don't we all have a seat, a cup of tea and calm down?' suggested the manager.
âThat sounds like a good idea, once I've checked her over,' replied Brian, sitting Gladys down and checking her blood pressure and pulse. He took her into the ambulance. Gladys was now fine although he advised her to go with them to the hospital to be on the safe side.
âHonestly Brian ⦠we did nothing. Michael was having a tantrum and â¦'
âDon't worry, pet!' soothed a woman in the queue next to them. âI saw everything. They were being very unpleasant, those ladies. I would have thumped them!' And with that, several others came forward to agree.
âI'll pack your bag for you, love,' said an assistant, patting Mel on the arm. âThen you can come and rest for a bit. OK?'
Mel was so grateful. At that moment, she realised the world
wasn't entirely created out of a huge pile of poo. There were actually decent people in it. It was all she needed to get her through this horrendous ordeal.
âThanks so much,' she breathed.
âHope to see you soon in work!' winked Brian as he placed the insistent Mavis in the back of the ambulance with her friend.