Chickens, Mules and Two Old Fools

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Chickens, Mules and Two Old Fools Page 8

by Victoria Twead


  4 fresh bay leaves

  Salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste

  Heat 5 tablespoons of oil in a large saucepan. Add the onion and pinch of salt. Cook slowly on a lowish to medium heat for 20 - 30 minutes. Stir frequently until onion is golden brown and soft.

  Add the peppers, garlic and bay leaves. Cook for another 15 minutes.

  Meanwhile, chop the potatoes and salt lightly.

  When the peppers are soft, add the remaining oil. Ensure the oil is hot before adding the potato chunks. Simmer gently for 20 -30 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the potatoes are soft.

  Drain using a slotted spoon or colander.

  Serve with fresh crusty bread, or as an accompaniment with roast pork or lamb.

  Judith phoned many times, usually just to check if all was well. And there was always some drama or crisis in her life to relate.

  “Vicky! It's Judith!” Dogs barked loudly in the background.

  “Hello, Judith!"

  “How are you coping on your own?” Bethina next door could have heard her through the metre thick wall.

  “Fine, thank you. Everything’s fine,” I replied. “How are you and Mother?”

  “I’m top hole. Couldn’t be better, m’dear. But poor Mother’s been through the bloody wars lately.”

  “Oh, I’m sorry to hear that. What happened?”

  “Fell over one of the bloody cats, dear! Nasty fall. Lucky she didn't break anything. Ghastly bruises, though. Really shook her up. Called the bloody Spanish doctor in to check her over, and would you believe it? He was off on some bloody conference and we had to make do with the locum!”

  “Oh dear, was he no good?”

  “Turned out to be a bloody woman, dear! Said Mother was fine, just shaken and bruised. Said regular glasses of red wine would help, and gave her a spliff!”

  “A what?”

  “A spliff, dear. A joint! Bloody marijuana!”

  “You're joking!”

  “Nope! A bloody spliff!”

  “So what did you do?”

  “Well, Mother tried it and said it sorted her out a treat. Said she felt very relaxed. Cheered her up no end. Surprised me, though, I can tell you! Fancy the locum being a bloody woman!”

  So that was okay then. Another crisis averted.

  Telephone calls with Judith were never boring, and often very enlightening. The next call from her would leave me squirming and pink with embarrassment.

  CHAPTER 10

  THE ECO-WARRIORS

  “Bloody Hoover’s packed up, dear,” Judith lamented. “And we’ve got visitors coming over from England on Wednesday. Our charlady, Ana, is in a real tizz. Get DOWN, Tyson. Curly, be quiet!”

  “Well, why don’t you borrow my Dyson?” I said. “I’m in all day if you want to pick it up.” Secretly I sympathised with Ana. Cleaning that house must have been an uphill task.

  “Marvelous idea! Mother? MOTHER! Vicky’s going to lend us her Dyson!” Her shout set the dogs barking again. “I’ll pop round later and get it. Tyson! Leave Fluffy alone - she’s not interested. Now, m’dear, what have you been doing since Joe went back to England?”

  “Oh, just stuff on the house. And Paco and Bethina took me up to their cortijo for grape pressing.”

  “God’s teeth, Tyson, STOP IT! Fluffy doesn’t want to do that… Sorry, Vicky, were you talking about Paco and Carmen?” She sounded puzzled.

  “Paco and his wife, Bethina,” I repeated.

  “Your next door neighbours, Paco and his wife Carmen, with Sofía and Little Paco?” Judith knew everyone in both villages, so I was confused.

  “Oh,” I said, “we call her ‘Bethina’. Paco introduced her as Bethina when we first met, ages ago. Has she got two names?”

  There was a short silence as she thought about that, then a huge guffaw erupted, setting the dogs off again.

  “Vicky! Are you sure he didn’t say ‘vecina’?” she roared, choking on more laughter. She explained that in Andalucía, ‘v’ is pronounced ‘b’ and that a ‘c’ in the middle of a word is said with a lisp, sounding like ‘th’. Thus ‘vecina’, meaning neighbour, became Bethina. Understanding dawned. That first day, Paco had said, pointing to himself, “Soy Paco.” (I am Paco) and when he had introduced Carmen, he had pointed at her and described her as ‘vecina’ (neighbour). I was mortified. We had been calling Carmen ‘neighbour’ for many months. Joe sometimes even called her Beth, or Betty for short.

  I couldn’t apologise enough to Carmen when I saw her next.

  “No pasa nada,” she said, round cheeks dimpling. “It doesn’t matter. I thought that is how people call each other in England.”

  Judith borrowed the Dyson and returned it the next day after Ana, her cleaner, had finished with it. It was stuffed full with enough animal hair to reconstitute a decent sized dog, but at least her house was ready for the expected visitors.

  The Dyson had done a very thorough job. When I emptied it, several odd things fell out. A dog tag, a black lace garter, a guitar plectrum and a small but important looking key.

  I phoned Judith to report the key find. I didn’t mention the black lace garter.

  “Good Lord, Vicky. Awfully well done, m’dear! We’ve been looking everywhere for that wretched key!”

  “Oh, is it important?”

  “Important, dear? It’s bloody vital! It’s the key to the drinks cabinet. We were just trying to pick the lock with Mother’s nail file when you phoned.”

  ∞∞∞

  September brought my first visitors. Knowing they were coming sent me into a flurry of preparation and panic. I frantically sorted out a bedroom. I assembled the double bed, found suitable furniture, evicted families of geckos and swept the dirt floor until I exploded into sneezing and coughing fits from dust inhalation. The result wasn’t too bad. The roof didn’t leak in that room and the mountain views (if you could force the ancient shutters open) were magnificent.

  Although the bedroom was just about acceptable, there was nothing I could do about the bathroom. Or the fact we had no kitchen. Until Joe returned in December any major renovations were out of the question.

  However, I comforted myself that my sister Caroline and her husband Nicholas had spent time in Africa doing voluntary work, and assumed they were probably used to basic accommodation.

  Caroline and I look alike, but there the resemblance ends. She is confident and lively. I am quiet and circumspect. She speaks seven languages fluently - including Spanish. I still struggle with Spanish. She is scathing of television and cars (she and Nicholas choose to have neither), whereas I love my TV and couldn’t be without a car. They never buy new if they can make do with the old. Any necessary purchase is weighed up and rigorously discussed before the shared purse sees the light of day. I am the opposite; if something breaks down, I usually buy a new one rather than trying to get it fixed. Both Caroline and Nicholas’s passion in life is the Environment and Saving the Planet. I try to do my bit but don’t get much further than throwing paper and wine bottles into the recycling skip.

  In spite of their foibles, they are incredibly thoughtful and generous. They arrived carrying only backpacks and still managed to bring presents for me: books, candles and bread-making flour for my bread-making machine.

  I needn’t have worried about the house, they slotted into the way of life perfectly. Not even the washing facilities bothered them. In fact, washing became a ritual and masterclass in conservation.

  It went like this: Caroline would announce she was having a shower. She would take her shower swiftly, mindful of economising on water, leaving the plug in the bath so every drop was saved. Then Nicholas would use this water to take his bath, even though it was only a few inches deep. Next they would bring their clothes to the bathroom and wash them in the same water. Finally, the now grey water was scooped out and used to water the grapevine. I was filled with wonder.

  I had never met a couple who shared so many things. Apart from bath water, they also shared a t
owel. They refused my offer of big, fluffy bath towels, preferring instead to share a threadbare remnant that I probably wouldn’t even use to clean the car. They shared a toothbrush and comb. They shared a tea-bag, then shared it again for a second cup. They shared food from their plates like new lovers, and being small in stature, even sat together in an armchair like Tweedledum and Tweedledee.

  Most days they would set out on a trek up the mountains. First they plastered each other with total block sun-cream. Then they donned their sun hats, complete with flap to protect the back of the neck. Their water carrier, which closely resembled a colostomy bag, yellowing and floppy, was filled. Final check - binoculars, compass, camera, glucose sweets. Because of their fascination with all things natural, they avoided tracks and paths. They preferred to scramble up the most rugged terrain in search of rare lichen or indigenous succulents. From our garden, they looked like tiny insects clambering up a compost heap.

  When they returned, they proudly showed me the photos they had taken. Frame after frame of close-up studies of plants. Nicholas, usually silent, transformed into an enthusiastic instructor, describing the plant species, using the Latin terms, almost stuttering in his excitement. And there was plenty of flora and fauna for him to study. The geckos I had evicted earlier had returned to the bedroom, much to his delight, and our overgrown garden was another rich vein of botanical discoveries.

  One day Nicholas went missing for a couple of hours and I asked Caroline where he was. She merely pointed to the garden. Barely visible, crouched in the scrub, Nicholas was motionless. He was in a world of his own, binoculars trained on a wasps’ nest in the garden wall. I am ashamed to admit that a few months later, we interred that same wasps’ nest with cement.

  On another occasion we had been shopping down in the town. An exhausting business when your companions need to discuss every purchase at length. The longest delay was at the fish counter. There was just too much choice. The display was a work of art, fish of every shape and hue reposing on beds of ice. Caroline and Nicholas tested the poor assistant to distraction, changing their minds about which fish to buy for the evening barbecue.

  “We don’t need two, we can share one,” said Nicholas.

  “But will that be enough?” Caroline worried.

  “Well, we can choose a big one.” Then, to the assistant, “That one, please. No, the one behind it. Oh, that’s bigger than I thought - maybe the one on the left, no, perhaps the next one...”

  And so it continued until they were both finally satisfied and the weighed, wrapped fish was handed over like a newborn baby. The assistant and I were united in relief. I sped the trolley away before they could change their minds again.

  It was a beautiful evening. The swallows overhead were replaced by bats. The cicadas chirped their evening choruses before falling silent. A fox barked some distance away. We felt totally at peace. Nicholas had lit the barbecue and the precious fish, now wrapped in foil, was sizzling appetisingly. Nicholas and Caroline shared salad duties and were engrossed in chopping and slicing. The telephone rang, Joe’s daily call from England, and I left the peaceful domestic scene to go inside and answer it.

  As I finished the call and put the receiver down, an agonised howl from the garden split the air. I shot outside and was met by chaos. Chairs were overturned, Caroline stood frozen to the spot, mouth hanging open, while Nicholas was shaking with fury, his fist clenched. Then I saw the cause of the debacle.

  High on the garden wall sat one of the village cats. She was one of our favourites, part Siamese, part tabby, very beautiful. Although feral, she was slightly tamer than the other cats and often snoozed in our garden. We fed her scraps occasionally but had never named her. Clamped between her teeth was a large hunk of fish, complete with aluminium foil.

  Nicholas’s love of wildlife seemed to have evaporated. And his eagerness to share was also under question.

  “Damn cat! How dare you! That was our bloody supper!”

  Caroline was more philosophical. “Well, there's quite a lot left,” she said. “If we just cut the end off...”

  Nicholas was having none of it, literally. Teeth clenched, he flashed her a glare that nearly turned our wine to vinegar and stomped off to bed refusing any supper, even though it was only nine o’clock.

  And the cat? She dined well that night. I later named her Thief Cat and she continued to ornament our garden with her graceful form, dozing, but always with one china blue eye slightly open, no doubt waiting for that perfect opportunity to return.

  I was sorry when Caroline and Nicholas left. They were good company. Caroline spoke perfect Spanish and had been a great help to me. Nicholas had taught me how to identify fascinating creatures, like the carpenter bee which, like a huge, harmless, purple torpedo, blundered round the garden in search of rotten wood to build its home. He showed me the busy little shield beetles and identified birdsong.

  But, to this day, none of us have ever mentioned the incident of Thief Cat and the stolen fish again.

  However, my next set of visitors turned out to be even livelier than the last...

  Barbecued Sardines

  8 medium to large sardines

  Handful fresh parsley

  Salt to season

  Clean the sardines and remove the heads, then wash under running water.

  Cook on a barbecue or under the grill for a few minutes each side until cooked through.

  Season with salt and garnish with a squeeze of lemon juice and fresh chopped parsley

  CHAPTER 11

  MULES AND STORMS

  By October, there were very few people living in the village during the week. In fact I was shocked to learn that there were but five souls in total. By now I knew them all well. Marcia and Old Sancho at the shop, Geronimo with his three dogs, Paco’s ancient Uncle Felix. And me.

  I saw Marcia and Old Sancho every day as she set aside a loaf of bread to save me listening out for the bread van's hoot. If I was waiting for a letter I would pop into the shop as Marcia’s was also the unofficial Post Office. We had hung a smart new shiny black mailbox outside our house, but it was ignored by the postman. The only thing I ever found in it was dust, and once a dead carpenter bee that must have blundered in by mistake. All village post was dumped at Marcia’s for collection.

  The weather was still warm enough for Old Sancho and his cat to doze outside the shop, and Geronimo was often there too. I always greeted them with “¿Qué tal?” (How's things?) and the reply was always the same. Old Sancho just smiled in his simple way. The cat would arch her back to be stroked. Geronimo would shake his head grimly, long hair swinging, and answer, “Malo!” (bad) before taking another swig from his beer.

  Sometimes Uncle Felix sat with them. His clothes were as ancient as himself and hung off his wiry frame like a sack thrown over a nail. His flat cap was threadbare and pulled down to shade his eyes. He had only two teeth, one upper, one lower. Uncle Felix had been a shepherd all his life and could neither read nor write. Nor had he ever visited a doctor or dentist, and Paco once whispered to Joe that Uncle Felix had ‘never had a woman’.

  Paco told us that during the reign of the Spanish dictator, General Franco, Uncle Felix, like all young men, had been conscripted. Never having left the village before, his family pinned a label on his back with his name and destination, and left him at the railway station. Felix served his time, and when his tour of duty ended, the army once again pinned his name and address on his back and put him on a train home.

  Uncle Felix lived in a two-roomed cottage in the village. One room was his, and the other was home to his mule and two chickens. The mule was a glossy beauty and clearly adored Uncle Felix. He would tether her on patches of waste ground to graze, but she had only one thing on her mind - Felix. Countless times we saw her trotting through the streets, rope trailing, often still attached to the stake she had managed to wrench from the ground. Ears alert, eyes bright, she was on a mission - find her beloved master.

  Her ability to fin
d him was unerring. As she rounded a street corner and caught sight of him, she would break into a canter. She had found him! Whinnying happily, she lovingly nuzzled the object of her affections. It was a never-ending source of amusement to the villagers.

  I once patted the mule and asked Uncle Felix what her name was. He looked at me with scorn. “Mule, of course,” he replied. Of course. Silly me.

  ∞∞∞

  Although our new mailbox was always empty, my inbox was being bombarded with emails. Back in Sussex, my two friends from school, Juliet and Sue, were preparing for their first visit out to me. The Gin Twins were coming for four days during their half term and they were full of questions. What shall we bring? What clothes do we need? Is gin cheap?

  I made it as clear as I could how basic their accommodation would be, even sending photographs so that they wouldn’t be disappointed. I told them how they needed to bring only shorts and maybe jeans if we went out to eat. No posh clothes, no high heels. And, yes, gin was cheap.

  Much as I loved the solitude in the village, it was wonderful to see them. They brimmed with hilarious stories from the staff-room and juicy morsels of gossip from my former life. They brought gifts, like books and bayonet-type light bulbs for my English lamps, as Spanish bulbs are different. For my part, I made sure there was plenty of gin in the cupboard.

  A word about my lovely friends. Juliet is blonde, dizzy and a coiled spring. Unable to keep still, she lives off nervous energy, exhausting all around her. However, she was the best teaching assistant I had ever had, the sort that knows what you need even before you do. Juliet is up for everything, including representing England in the International Marbles Tournament.

 

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