Skip to main content

G-Dog Advises Me to Go Big on the Blackberries - a Tommy & Moon Story

It was a few weeks into autumn and I hadn’t had a hair cut since before the summer solstice.  My beard, long and straggly and in desperate need of trimming, was a week away from having birds nest in it.  I unpolished my boots and wore some old jeans that were ripped at the knees and dirty from digging a deep hole on a particularly wet day in Highgate Cemetery.  Hanging loosely over the top of those was a baggy grey jumper I spilt half a bottle of bleach over about three years ago.  I looked a bit of a state, but there was a method to my madness.  Today was the day I was going to ask Moon for a pay rise and I wanted to look as if I’d been trod on.

On the morning I was due to ask him, my bike got a puncture not twenty yards down the road from my house. It wasn’t a polite slow puncture so that I might finish my journey on a squidgy but rideable front tyre; the thorn tore through that poor inner tube like a javelin through jelly and it had me riding on a steel rim within seconds.  I turned back, wheeled my bike into the garage and walked to work.  I muttered obscenities under my breath, knowing that now I’d be late for work, on the very day I’d planned to ask for a pay rise.  But I didn’t know at the time what that thorn would do for me.

But I was pleased with my dishevelled look.  I’d considered eating nothing but soup for two weeks so that my jumper might hang a little looser on The Big Day.  I wanted to give the appearance I wasn’t eating, or couldn’t afford to eat, but there was a problem: I liked eating, and I could afford to eat.  The theory behind dieting was magnificent, and I tried my best to enter into it, deciding that biscuits were my downfall and by far my biggest weakness.  Attempts were made to eliminate them from my diet altogether, and it worked for two and a half hours, until elevenses came a-knocking.  I compromised: I managed to cut down by a quarter of a Hobnob biscuit per day, from three to almost three.  But the only way I could do that was by switching from plain Hobnobs to Chocolate Hobnobs.  So you can see how any attempt at looking emaciated was riddled with acts of self-sabotage and ultimately futile - signed Yours Truly, The Biscuit Monster. 

As I was thinking about this, quick-stepping it down the lane towards work, I bumped into G-Dog quick-stepping it in the same direction with her Springer Spaniel.    

I secretly called her G-Dog because her name was Gertie and she came with a dog.  She didn’t like the name Gertie so she insisted on her childhood nickname of Diddy or Doddy or Doody but I could never remember which one it was.  She lived in the next village and was a partner in a local firm of estate agents.  Her husband was a carpenter and had built Moon a greenhouse using the glass, door and doorframe of the previous one that had blown down in a storm.  Her dog’s name was either Dido or Dodi.  G-Dog was a prolific blackberry picker, as was I, and we had crossed paths several times over the years as we both went about picking at hedgerows around the perimeter of one particularly fruitful field close by.  We liked nothing more than free food.  And talking about blackberries.    

‘No bike?’ G-Dog said.

‘Puncture.  Shanks’ Pony for me today.’ 

‘Bad luck.’

‘Picking many blackberries?’

‘It’s a good crop this year.  I made some blackberry bread last night.  It’s delicious.’

‘How’s work?’

‘Hellish,’ she said.  ‘I don’t want to talk about it.  How’s the carving going?’

‘It’s going well.  Getting faster.  I’m thinking of asking for a pay rise today.’ 

‘Great!  Go big.’

‘Go big?’

‘Yeah, go big.  It’s the only way to go.’

‘How big?’

‘Pick a number on the blackberry scale.  Nought to one hundred.’

‘Nought being no pay rise and one hundred being my dream pay rise?’

‘Yep.’

‘I was thinking of maybe forty blackberries.’

‘No!’ She shouted.  It made Dido or Dodi jump. 

‘No?’

‘If you ask for forty, Moon will offer twenty and then you’ll settle on thirty little shrivelled old blackberries.  That’s not a lot.  It won’t be worth getting out of bed for.  Be ambitious.  Try again.’

‘If I ask for eighty blackberries, I’d wonder which one of his children’s mouths I’m taking food out of.’

‘No!  Be bold.  I’ve seen your work and I know what you do for him.’ 

‘Am I even worth a hundred blackberries?’ 

‘Who’s to say you’re not worth a hundred and fifty blackberries?  Remember: once you’ve given a number, you can’t negotiate up.  You can only negotiate down.’

‘I can’t ask anything over ninety.  That’d be rude.’

‘Balls!  Go big on the blackberries.  Ask for a hundred and ten.  He’ll offer ninety.  Split the difference at hundred.  He’ll think he’s got a bargain and you’ve got your dream pay rise.  But can I offer a bit of advice?’

‘Go ahead.'   

‘Promise me you’ll get a good hair cut before you ask him.’    

Comments

  1. Did you get the haircut 💇

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks for reading and leaving a comment! There's more on the way! As for the hair cut, I think I would have taken G-Dog's advice if those events actually took place and G-Dog existed.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Laugh out loud funny sir, perhaps because thats a familiar conversation! ':-)

    ReplyDelete
  4. Thanks Gem! Xxx

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Samsa & Shabeezi

Samsa was now a human.  He’d recently become a human after his architect decided to put a human heart in him and give him feelings.  The five litres of blood that now pumped around his body warmed him up.  It made for incredible nose bleeds, spasms, cramps and bruising, to name o nly a small fraction of the symptoms, but his architect assured him that it would all be worth it and that he'd feel normal very soon.  He didn't know what normal was, but he knew it wasn't puking and shitting and bleeding all over the place for the first two months and then just feeling terrible for several weeks after that.  Human life is agony, he thought, but he trusted the process.  One day, a little over twelve weeks after the operation, he woke up from his first good night's sleep and was able to open the curtains without the light splitting his skull in two.  Samsa had known Shabeezi before she became a human woman.   All they had done was fight.   Samsa especially liked doing flying

When I Needed a Winter Project, I Turned to Dylan Thomas - a Tommy & Moon Story

Before the snow came the smell of cinnamon. I wanted to track it all the way back to its source, to see who gave it flight. I imagine a woman, seventy-five, making herself a cappuccino next to an open window. The air is cold and sharp but she needs a quick blast of late autumn’s best before she gets out with the whippet. Wisp is looking at her from her basket, scanning for indications from mum that her walk is coming. Don’t worry, Wisp: walkies is imminent - but then a song comes on the radio that she hasn’t heard in fifty years. The Serge Gainsbourg ballad throws her into a deep dream-state, a reverie that takes her all the way back to Paris. She walks to the cupboard to find the cinnamon shaker, brushing shoulders with actors and actresses who’d worked with Godard and Truffaut and Antonioni. She remembers the time she once saw Jane Birkin at a party and witnessed first-hand the effect her beauty had on all the men in the room. I was two miles away from home, running at an easy, stead

The Angel of Death - a Tommy & Moon Story

I cannot - for reasons that will soon become clear - tell you exactly where we were working.   What I can say is that it was an Arts & Crafts church somewhere in the south of England.  Given the number of non-Arts & Crafts churches across the country, this detail narrows it down tremendously.  I will also say that it’s one of the finest examples of a church built in response to that movement that exists today.  I would like to say I shed a small tear of joy when I first saw it, but I didn’t.  I probably said to Moon ‘Blimey O’Reilly, that’s a bit nice, ennit?’, or words to that effect as we walked through the lychgate. I also wouldn’t like to tell you the poem we were carving in the churchyard for fear of narrowing down the possible churches even further.   Suffice it to say, it was a lovely poem, and more than worthy of being carved beside one of the most beautiful churches I’ve ever seen in my life.   The poem and the experience of carving it with Moon left such an impressio