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A memory of Africa in the 60’s.

POSTAGE

“Will you get the mail please, Susan? Take Clement with you. And the gun.”

I stood up, shoulders back. “I can drive myself. I’ve got my license now.”

Clement Ngoma loomed in front – a no-argument smile on his face. This was the late 60’s and our country’s struggle before independence still impacted everything we did.

“Madam, the boss, he doesn’t want you going into town by yourself and your Spitfire is too much low – too much difficult to get out.”

With ungrateful resignation, I bent down to open the right hand drawer of the desk and remove the small pistol. It slid into my London-bought sunshine yellow patent leather handbag. I straightened my black ‘wet look’ skirt and checked my matching sunshine yellow patent leather buckled platform shoes.

Newly returned from a working holiday, I had shocked my mother with my ‘bumblebee’ Carnaby Street fashion. Looking good was important if only to collect the post. You never knew who just happened to be collecting his company’s mail too!

“All right we’ll use the van. But I’m driving – OK?”

Kitwe was the Hub of the Copperbelt in Northern Rhodesia. The Post Office was on the main street tucked between Lentin’s the Jewellers on the North corner of the block and Bata Shoe stores on the South corner, near the now deserted Astra Cinema.

Later, the cinema would become infectiously noisy with white grins and sweaty excitement. I missed going but night-time excursions were unwise. Sometimes even lunch-time excursions…

Twenty-four hours a day the jewellers hide their reduced display behind double layers of metal weave. This is a small town and the smiling, nervous owners know everyone who’s anyone – who gave what to whom for birthday/anniversary/Valentine’s. One of the few European ways left to splurge the monthly paycheck is to buy a new ring.

The only descent dress shop wasn’t receiving their full consignments – pilfering was rife and only garish unflattering frocks in larger sizes are available now. I often pop in at lunchtime, but decided not to today. Most of us either made our own; had frequent overseas holidays or a good dressmaker.

Newly returned from a working holiday, I had shocked my mother with my ‘bumblebee’ Carnaby Street fashion.

Delivery day always put Mrs Brown in a foul mood so Mondays was not a good day to dress shop.

Unless your style was Chitenge – there was a huge range available in OK Bazaars.

Mum has so many broaches bought from there. They sell extra cheap everything from Nshima to cast iron cooking pots. I loved the place as a kid. My two shillings pocket money seemed to go farther and farther every Christmas and Birthday. The more glitter and glass the better, all faithfully worn by Mum to family gatherings.

As we got into the company delivery van, both Clement and I automatically locked our doors from the inside. Standard practice. It took 15 minutes to drive from the industrial area into town. Perhaps I drove a little too fast down Edinburgh Avenue because Clement seemed to be trying to push his foot through the floor.

“There’s a policeman!”

“What’s up – don’t you like the way I drive?”

“Well, you do seem to put your foot down very hard on the pedals. Maybe it is stuck? Would you like me…?”

There’s a rule here: Don’t stop for anything! Even if you run someone over – just keep going. I’d heard recently of a piccanin who ran straight in front of someone’s car. It was night so they stopped, of course, and were stoned to death. But the accident wasn’t his fault.

“Can’t understand why you’re so nervous. You taught me! And, you’re not exactly a slow driver yourself!”

“Perhaps it is different to be passenger.”

“We’ll stop at Bamford’s Bakery first.”

“Yes – is Friday and the boys, they gave me a list of lunches.”

“A chocolate éclair and a curry pie will do me. I know Mum needs bread too.”

BANG! We both jumped at the stone kicked up by the large TanZam truck speeding to overtake before the dip. Both hands automatically reached up to hold the windscreen as smaller gravel splattered threatening to shatter the glass. I hoped it hadn’t made too bad a dent in the paintwork. These things always happen when I borrow the car.

The remainder of the trip into town was in silence, both of us shaken for different reasons. Clement probably remembering the voting trucks speeding through the compounds demanding attendance with shots fired into the air.

Me? I was thinking about a friend who was decapitated as his sports car disappeared under a truck stopped on the road. Again, it was night and the driver needed a kip. There were no warning – no markers save for a few tree branches on the road – it just loomed out of the dark too late. He had two small children.

Luckily we managed to park right in front of the Post Office entrance.

Clement made to get out. “Give me the post box keys – I’ll go in.”

“No – you sit here and finish your pie. Guard the lunches.”

“But…”

“Clement– you can see me, OK? I’ll only be a moment.”

Still wary after the stone – the hairs on the back of my neck were raised when I walked into the cool shade of the post box area. Two smartly dressed African men appeared to linger.

I almost turned around to return to the car and let Clement collect the post. But then why should he, when it was my responsibility?

I held my breath and stood still at the yawning entrance chastising myself about my prejudices. One of the men casually opened up a box and removed his mail. I had my hand inside my bag and my fingers found the gun and relaxed a fraction.

Courage let me walk forward, into the dark, right to the end… and open number 1694. This was a familiar routine. The other chap started to walk out too jingling keys.

Hot breath oozed slowly from my lips as I bent my head low to retrieve letters from the back, scooping them forward quickly with one hand. A quick glimpse up to the entrance and I bent down again, focused on that last slip, way to the back.

A sharp tug on my bag and a shove sideways, my platform shoe buckle caught onto my stockings as I turned, then I tripped. Unable to stop my fall, there was nothing to grab onto, I prepared to hit the floor yelling.

A brief rush of air and the smell of strong sweat seemed to take my breath away as I first hit the wall with my legs like jelly. Hands scratched at my clothes and bag. I felt the cold metal of the gun still in my hand, then fell toward the floor.

My elbow shattered when it hit hard, shiny concrete, the impact almost forcing me to let go. But I didn’t – I shut my eyes and fired instead, ears ringing in the echo chamber of empty metal post boxes. Screams finally caught up with my open mouth and within seconds Clement was helping me stand. I resisted before I recognised him, then blabbered. “He’s gone. Did you see him? Oh, I still have my bag… my purse has gone though, hasn’t it?” My fingers clutching, tried to pick up the paraphernalia I’d dropped but I felt faint. So Clement took the gun out of my hand and put it into his trouser pocket and carelessly scooped the stuff into the open yellow mouth. He wrestled my bag out of my vice-like grip and slung it over his shoulder.

He walked me slowly and determinedly out into the main street holding hard onto my good arm. Without saying a word.

The sunshine hurt my eyes and I stumbled. But the warmth was a comfort just like the arm, now gently around my shoulders, protecting me, guiding me back to the van through a gathered crowd of curious African workers.

My shocked gaze searched the surrounding area for a guilty face. I saw none. Even the policeman seemed disappointed that it wasn’t more serious – just an attempted bag snatch. There was no blood. No bullet holes. No arrest to be made. No gruesome reason to take the incident further.

The bored crowd agreed and dispersed without their blood-lust satiated.

A very subdued Clement drove back to the office.

He broke the silence first. “Thank Goodness for the starters pistol.”

THE END

Frances Macaulay Forde © 2006

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This is an example of why I look forward to receiving my copy of the latest  Crannog Magazine.  I also submit short stories and poetry, hoping one day to find a piece of my own nestled between the gems I enjoy in each issue.

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It’s inspiring to discover new (to me) writers.  I am now a fan of Maggie Breen and will have to add “Other Things I Didn’t Tell” to my wish list

#FrancesMacaulayForde  #Crannog36  #IrishMagazine  #Poretry  #ShortStories   #MaggieBreen  #OtherThingsIDidntTell

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Book 2 in my Short Stories series is “E-Males”   Meet ‘Anna Karenina’ of the Australian suburbs:

After seven years of marriage, Michelle began to question her love ~ not her husband Barry’s ~ his adoration was as solid and steady as a rock.  No, she questioned her state. 

Was this all she could expect?  She yearned for more  ~ or perhaps a different ethereal mist of feeling which engulfs like a warm blanket of bright colours, flapping every now and then in the breeze of life. 

“Damn those blasted fairy tales! Where’s my prince?  Why doesn’t Barry come home in the middle of the day and whisk me off to Paris for coffee?” 

She day-dreams he’s sitting in his high rise office, gazing out across the Swan River, thinking of her in a flowing white peignoir, hair carefully styled, just risen from their marriage bed to meet her love. 

Full lips ready to receive his kiss, his embrace strong but gentle he smiles down at her, with one arm to support her swooning, body trembling with unspoken ardor. 

Frances Macaulay Forde © 2014

If you’d care to read the rest, you’re welcome to buy or lend a KINDLE copy of  “E-Males”  or Book 1:  “Meeting Mr X”  directly from Amazon.

(Hope you do…)

 

#FrancesMacaulayForde  #McAlpineBellPublishing  #MeetingMrX  #KINDLEbooks  #E-Males”

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Ultimate Book Coach – KINDLE NINJA 30 day Challenge

This is my latest challenge:  I’ve got 30 days to publish a KINDLE book and Kirsten Eckstein the Ultimate Book Coach and KINDLE  NINJA  is going to show me how to do it!

It’s only the first week, so at the moment I’m trying to decide what to do first.

I have so many manuscripts and ideas but need to focus on one, then the next, then the next.

Kirsten makes it seem easy and so far, with the insider help of a well-published and successful KINDLE NINJA, I think I’ve got this!

My problem has always been to focus on one thing and get it done.  Kristen gives you easy steps to do just that – focus and get it done.  

It’s exciting to find out what other participants are already putting ‘out there’ for comment.

For my first attempt I’m thinking of doing one of these:

1.  A children’s series of stories which at the moment are in the form of scripts for a TV Series.

2.  Should I publish a series of my short stories?

3.  The one which keeps nagging me – a DIY book to test the waters, ‘Dressing My Princess’.

What do you think?

 

#FrancesMacaulayForde  #KindleNinja  #UltimateBookCoach   #DressingMyPrincess #MrPandaLivesNextDoor

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CRANNOG Spring 2014 Journal

A free subscription was included with entry into their competition, so I’ve just received my copy of  ‘CRANNOG Spring 2014’.

Wish I’d read it before entering…    The book feels slim but the 88 page volume is packed with clever writing.

The Galway editorial board did a superb job of choosing short stories and poems which affect the reader – and they did.

Like “Worship”  by Ruth Quinlan:  Your white shoes aren’t white at all.  They’re just cream pretending to be white and when you hold them against the Communion dress they look old and discoloured  even though you know they’re new.   

The words put put me right into the moment of my own Holy Communion (which I haven’t thought about since) remembering the crisp feel of new material and the smell of polished shoes.  Wonderful writing.

Or Breda Wall Ryan’s  “Crushie” poem:  The rain has stopped. Sunlight/veneers a table set between windows. /The year turns.   

The journal CRANNOG Spring 2014  is available for Kindle fans or surprisingly cheaper as a printed version.

Certainly well worth the few dollars to enjoy such gifted authors.

 

#FrancesMacaulayForde  #CrannogSpring2014  #RuthQuinlan  #BredaWallRyan

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‘Urban Scrawl’ an anthology of member’s stories published in 2000 by Peter Cowan Writer’s Centre.

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The illustration for my story ‘Write to Romance’.

 

“Write to Romance” appeared in ‘Urban Scrawl’, a collection of member’s writing put together by Peter Cowan Writers Centre in 2000 and was the first of my short stories published in Australia.

As I have quite a few snippets of story on my computer ‘shelves’ I’m very interested in putting together a collection for an eBook to publish online as soon as possible.

Watch this space.

 

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Just watched most of the Oscars.  All the way through I expected Sandra Bulloch to win best Actress for ‘Gravity’ because of the many cut-aways and the film won so many other awards and I’m sure she was good.  (I can’t comment on films I haven’t seen so will stick to those I have.)

The camera didn’t cut-away to Cate Blanchette once while I watched, so I thought she had decided not to go – what with all the controversy over ‘Blue Jasmin”s director.  (No, I just can’t bring myself to say his name…)   I presumed she wasn’t there – like Judi Dench and was disappointed.

So glad ‘Frozen’ won best Animated and best song.  So many layers to that film, most unfortunately will be lost on it’s young audience.  (My 4 year old granddaughter loved it – so did I! )

And a huge shout-out to Catherine Martin who became the 1st Aussie to win 4 Oscars for her amazing set design and costumes in ‘The Great Gatsby’ this year and a few years ago for ‘Moulin Rouge!’  

You can usually tell who the academy favorites are by how many times they ‘show’ in cut-away, the ‘star’ in the audience – case in point Best Picture:  ’12 years a slave’ (which I didn’t agree with).   Sure it was a good movie but ‘Captain Phillips’ was better all ’round and should have at the very least won Adapted Screenplay, so was ‘Philomena’ (both mentioned in my top 1o), – Hell! even ‘The Railway Man’ was better.

But I have to say the fashions were beautiful – as expected (expect for Ellen).

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Apart from the name (although there’s no ‘e’…) when I saw he was a guest at the 2003 Cork International Short Story Festival, I booked my place to hear him read.  What a treat that was – both being in Ireland and being able to attend in person!  I learned a lot about short story construction and writing in general.  

Wish I could have attended the  Munster Literature Centre  – Cork Spring Poetry Festival last week too!

What a writer: Happy 70th Birthday  Richard Ford   (a very good interview).

Now to order his latest…

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Although I was invited to the inaugural Avon Valley Writer’s Festival last year, to speak and workshop with my screenwriter’s hat on, I wanted something tangible for the audience to purchase so (as mentioned previously) self-published three small books.

Since writing the poems in 1998-2000 on the train between the Northern Suburbs, to the City of Perth then on to University in Mt Lawley, they appeared in my first book published in Ireland ‘Hidden Capacity ~ a poet’s journey’ and more recently re-assessed and ‘tweaked’ to appear in the stand-alone chapbook for sale.  Some pieces have also appeared variously in publications and on the net.

Now I’m hoping to give it yet another life, to convert the chapbook to an e-book for purchase on-line.  Any suggestions?  The service at Amazon has been recommended although I’ve been told not to expect ‘many dollars’ it’s a chance for many to see the poems and a whole new experience for me so I’ll have a look at it.  As I’m not really clever technically, I’m looking for something laywoman easy 😮

Meantime I thought I’d share a story and poem from the book just in case you wanted to investigate further either by purchasing a hard copy from me  or perhaps later an e-book from Blurb, Issuu or Amazon.  These are the first couple of pages:

Edgewater Station, 7.45am.

 The first time I climbed the ramp to cross the empty freeway I thanked my daughter’s advice for nervous, first-time train-travel.

“Don’t make eye-contact and take something to read.”

Embarrassingly unfit; I was truly unworthy of riding to city steeples and naked greed.  However, I was able to slow my breathing before reaching the platform, populated by corporate black.

Like others in smart casual I waited unprepared, searching and praying that I had correct change.  No way would I approach anyone to help if my Target Special revealed only notes.  An extra minute to read the zones and I felt their impatience stab my shoulder blades.

First rule: be prepared.  Why doesn’t someone press the ‘Next Train to Perth’ button?  How long have I got?  Finally, the clunking use of coins and metal spit of ticket, loudly confirmed my lack of railway sophistication.

As I claimed my waiting spot, the gentle morning sun warmed my arms and I began to relax.

My head moved left to spy an approaching train. Then swung right, to relax the tension.  The violent clash of eyes focussed on the anticipated train, brought heat and colour flooding to my face.  Have I broken another rule?

I turned away. Moved left and slid around to a corner bench, hiding under graffiti steps.

A cleaner diligently wiped the dead remains of habit from a shiny steel surface.  As our eyes met, she smiled in understanding. My isolation lifted with the corners of my mouth. “Good morning.”

A distant sparkle from Joondalup Tunnel caught my attention.  Although I had lost my place for the central carriages, I joined the stragglers just as the last door swept toward my flat comfortable-s.

The unsmiling silent wave surged toward the precipice, eager to rest their feet or continue sleep.  We were swallowed with a whoosh.

All around people take off their Sunnis and don clear glass, casually opening their oft-thumbed pages: Time magazine, corporate handouts, New Idea, ‘Bondage – a love story’ the latest Patricia Cornwell…

I am starting my own new adventure – a new life.

No husband ~ he’s decided to share his bacon with a younger model.

No children to care for – they’ve all moved out, no-one who needs me, just me.

So I’m dealing with the empty nest, taking my new life into a different direction ~ a city job direction.

The first day of my new life: new job; new me.  Is it obvious?

No one speaks, except the odd un-sophisticate, who broadcasts gossip as if it elevates them.

I lose myself in Harry Potter and block out the other occupants, cocooned against intimidation.

Priority Seating.

Chivalry’s not dead.

Young man offers an older

person his seat, but

not the young lady. He stands

silently, matching her sway.

 

Freeway Sprawl.

relaxed – half asleep

compassionately floating past

overheated motors crawling

without air-conditioned silence

forced to queue as road workers

widen a future path.

Frances Macaulay Forde © 2013

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I’ve used ABC Tales to publish many of my stories and poems which are already part of the public domain.  It helps to have somewhere central for them but it’s also facinating to see how many people read your stories and poems and which they choose.

By far my most popular story has been ’25 minute Journey’ about travelling between Perth City and the Northern Suburbs, an amalgamation of shorter pieces which appeared in my first book ‘Hidden Capacity ~ a poet’s journey’.

I’m currently adapting the story ’25 Minute Journey’ for the screen.

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