Tuesday, April 9, 2019

13 - A #1 BESTSELLER on Amazon!

13 
My new book about FOUR events that happened to me in 1977! 
Already a #1 BESTSELLER in #SwissTravel on Amazon 


13 - The 70's - A True Story

Chapter One 

Teacher’s Pet
It was a typical Sunday morning as I sat on the leather three-seater sofa which was pressed against the main wall in the living room. I casually thumbed my way through the pages of a tabloid newspaper, The News of the World to be precise, the occasional article catching my eye; ‘Suicide bomber kills twelve in Iraq’, ‘Superwoman Nicola Horlick splits from husband’, ‘Goldman secretary gets seven years in jail.’ In a world such as it was in 2004, there was nothing hugely out of the ordinary, not until I turned page five and in one heart-stopping moment, came face to face with something that brought my whole world to a complete standstill, rendering me completely motionless.
The faint whistle of a kettle coming to the boil in the adjacent kitchen was the only sound penetrating the otherwise silent room, but the Sunday morning tranquillity had already been shattered by the thundering in my head as I stared in disbelief at the page in front of me, while the pages of my past were torn apart by the revelations it contained.
It was the main headline on page seven, normally a lucky number for me.
Not just the headline though, it was the accompanying image, of a man with guilt engraved on his face, that lured me in. The face of a man who had lured in many, apparently. A face that was instantly recognisable to me. A face from my past. A face I thought I’d forgotten.
“Fuck.” I whispered to myself, as my body sank deep into the worn leather. I tried to swallow the silence, as the words I’d just read took a moment to sink in.
An array of multiple four-letter expletives exploded from inside me, as the story in front of me catapulted me back to 1977 and brought blurred fragments of my past into sharp focus.
“Fuck. Fuck. Fuck.” I repeated out loud, thumping my bare right foot against the wooden floorboards in unison with my curses.
“Baby, what is it?” An anxious voice came from the narrow modern fitted kitchen where Kate, my girlfriend of six months, had been preparing coffee and buttering croissants for a very late breakfast. As she stepped out into the equally narrow hallway and walked towards me, I noticed out of the corner of my eye, her shoulder length blonde hair flicking from one side to the other across her makeup- less face. She wore a pink track suit, but my eyes were transfixed by what I was reading in black and white in front of me. I was vaguely aware of the aroma of the freshly painted magnolia walls which seemed, at that moment, to be closing in on me. I suddenly felt as though I was suffocating as I continued to stare in disbelief at the letters, words, sentences and paragraphs before me.
“Baby, what is it, what’s happened?” Her troubled voice spread through me like a knife slicing butter, but so disturbed was I by what I was reading, I didn’t answer, I couldn’t reply.
No words would come, I was still trying to absorb what I’d just read.
“Baby, what’s wrong?” Kate’s concern escalated to another level as she tried to grab my attention, sitting next to me on the sofa and taking my right hand in both of hers. But again, nothing from me in return.
I released my hand from hers, spitting the word “Shit!” into my palms, as I covered my eyes with both hands and pulled them back hard over my shaved head.
“Baby. Baby,” she repeated. “Answer me, please. Please answer me, what is it?”
I said nothing. I didn’t answer. I couldn’t, even though my mouth was ajar, nothing escaped, apart from the words ‘fuck’ and ‘shit.’

“Please what is it?” She tried again to prise a response from me. But I couldn’t reply. It wasn’t that I was being rude or that I didn’t want to respond, I was quite simply struck dumb with the shock of what I’d read. Face down. Hands on my head. Elbows on my knees. I couldn’t move. Staring at what was before me. It felt like I was paralysed from the neck up, with ‘fuck’ and ‘shit’ being the only four-letter words that intermittently spewed from my mouth.
“Baby, are you okay, please answer me, please.” Kate’s tone became sterner, but with more concern in her voice than anger.
Terror spread through me as the words I’d read sank in and brought back memories which had been lost to me, events which I’d forgotten, or had tried to forget. A period of my life, twenty-seven years earlier, flashed in front of me, replayed in a new and extremely disturbing light, and it was terrifying.
At that moment I was completely overwhelmed by fear. Fear of what had been and in light of what I’d just read, terror at what could have been.
Kate, ten years younger than me, and a lookalike for actress Alicia Silverston, friends and strangers alike were constantly telling her so, was startled by the sound of skin to leather as I punched the sofa’s green fabric several times with my right fist, leaving an indentation in the cushion and a red smear across my knuckles. It was the beginning of summer. June 5th.
The sun beamed its way across the slightly overgrown garden and through the open patio doors. The temperature was now a notch or two higher inside the two-bedroom, mid-terrace property I’d been renting for the past month in Exeter, Devon. The quaint little house situated in a cul-de-sac, was among several similar properties on a new development, established approximately fifteen months before.
It was the second house I’d rented since I’d moved out, thirteen months before, from the family home in a small village, three miles away. Divorce had been on the cards for several years. I’d stayed because of the children, my three beautiful children, but the relationship with my wife had been at boiling point and I didn’t want the frosty atmosphere to spill over to the children. I’d stayed in the area, so I could still see the kids, my business was there too and that’s how I’d met Kate. She lived on the road in which my office was situated, close to a large park, on the corner of a residential tree-lined road, but adjacent to a busy roundabout called the Clock Tower.
I’d moved there three months previously, from a smaller office that was within a period building, on an attractive cobbled alleyway, a little further up in the centre of Exeter. Kate had to walk past my new spacious, double-aspect windowed premises every day, as she went to work in the city at the Royal Clarence Hotel, overlooking the cathedral and the green. So, every morning at around nine fifteen and each evening at around five forty-five, like clockwork, I would relocate from my own office at the back, into the front area, to sit at one of the window desks. I would act like I was busy, you know, trying not to be too desperate, and we would glance at each other, have a little more eye contact, together with a little more of a smile, a little conversation outside and then inside the office, and so began a little friendship, which soon blossomed in to a relationship.
“Sorry baby. I'm so sorry, it’s just, just that I'm reading something, and I can’t believe what I’m reading,” I replied to her eventually, still in shock. She was happy for that, and I continued, shaking my head with disbelief. “And I c-can’t, can’t believe it and c-can’t believe that its him, or c-can I? I don’t know.” I continued with a slight stutter. A stutter that I’d grown up with after hitting my teenage years. A speech impediment I thought I’d left behind decades ago, but at that very moment it was another thing that came back to haunt me.
“Reading what and who, what do you mean, him? Who are you talking about baby, what are you talking about?” Kate quizzed, waiting for an answer from me, but carrying on before I could reply. “Look at you, you’ve gone as white as a sheet, like you’ve seen a ghost or something.”
I took a deep breath and blew out my cheeks, exasperated.
“It definitely feels like my past has come back to haunt me.” I murmured as I turned to look into her crystal blue eyes.
Since we’d been together most of our Sunday mornings had followed the ritual of waking up later than usual, especially after a night out, which to be honest happened most Saturday nights, grab a few kisses and cuddles, and eventually stumble out of bed at around eleven.
Once up, we would usually spend an hour or two reading the papers, purchased from the local newsagent a stroll away on the corner of the road. We’d have breakfast and then wander alongside the canal, pop into one of the many inviting pubs for a drink and maybe for a spot of lunch and sit outside if the weather was kind. The weather was kind today, but this particular Sunday turned out to be anything but kind, or usual.
“What do you mean, your past? What about your past? Please tell me baby.” She insisted with a puzzled expression on her face.
“My past from when I was at school.” I answered, clenching my fists, with the right fist still displaying a red glow across the knuckles.
“Reading what, tell me, tell me, what. What is it?” Her voice now also contained some anger, but I couldn’t really blame her, all she wanted was an explanation.
“Hold on. Hold on. I’ve just got to read it again.”
As I read the article for the second or third time, shaking as I did, still not believing what I was reading, small droplets of sweat trickled from my brow and splattered onto the paper that was spread out on the carved oak coffee table. Kate went back into the kitchen and returned with two mugs of coffee and a plate of croissants that we’d bought earlier, along with the Sunday newspapers.
Totally oblivious to what was hiding inside them.
By now I had completely lost my appetite.
Taking a sip of much needed coffee, Kate tenderly massaged the top of my hand and then interlocked her left hand within my right, holding it tightly.
“Is this what you’re reading baby, this?” She said looking at the police mugshot of a man in his late sixties.
“Yes. Yes, I am.” I replied with an additional nod of the head, still trembling all over.
She noticed.
“God, you’re shaking all over baby.” She turned to look at me.
“Do you know him?”
I took a deep breath,
“Yes. Yes, I do.”
There was a pause for a moment or two as Kate read the story in silence, in the biggest selling Sunday newspaper in the UK. As she read, her facial expressions registered and reflected every word, every sentence and every paragraph.
“Fuck! Baby!” was her first reaction.
“I know. Fuck indeed.”
“How do you know this bastard?”
“Well.” I swallowed and paused again for a second, “He was my music teacher.”
“What!” She squealed as she let go of my hand and turned to look at me again.
“Like I said, he was my music teacher. At school. From the age of around eleven till I left at sixteen, well fifteen and a half actually, where I grew up, in Edgware.”
“Your music teacher?”
“Yes baby, my music teacher.”
“Really?”
“Yes, really.”
She clasped her hand back into mine.
“Shit. And he did this?”
“Well, I guess so, it’s there in black and white, his name, the name of the school and everything.” I replied, nodding towards the paper. His pasty, wide-eyed face stared back at me with a look that made my skin crawl.
"But it says that he was popular, well respected and everyone liked him, did you?"
"I liked him as my teacher. I respected him for his music. I mean, he was on tour with an opera company. He was highly thought of in his field, and he did take me under his wing, so to speak."
"What do you mean?"
"Well, he always wanted me to sit next to him at his desk in the class during the lessons, or by his side when he was playing the piano in the music room."
"What, like a teacher’s pet?"
"I guess so."
Removing my hand from hers, I smothered my face with both of mine, at the same time closing my eyes, to try and erase this moment, pressing into the sockets with the tips of my fingers, not quite believing what I’d just read. I pressed harder, clenching my eyes tighter, pushing them deeper within my skull, until darkness took over, and a second or two later, a black and white light show dazzled me. I became dizzy and unaware of my surroundings, but then I felt Kate's manicured hand comforting my naked thigh. Her touch made me tingle. I needed her comfort at that precise moment. She huddled closer to me on the sofa. I sensed her morning breath, with a hint of coffee seducing the side of my face, and as she turned to me, she whispered.
“Baby are you okay?”
Removing my hands away from my face, my eyes still closed, mesmerised by the diminishing light show before me, I nodded.

But I was far from okay.
“Did anything, you know, did anything happen to you. Did he touch you or something?” Kate questioned.
Taking another deep breath and releasing my eyes, with the remains of the light show fading before me, I tried to focus through blurred vision on the photo of this pathetic, but once extremely well-respected teacher and pianist. His wide, shallow, glazed eyes, hollow and riddled with guilt, no longer hiding his secret. Looking deep into his pupils as they gaped at me in return, I reflected on my time at school, in his office, in his lessons and most of all, the school trip to Switzerland.
“Baby talk to me, please. I'm here for you, you know that, don’t you?”
Of course, I knew she was, she had been for the past few months, but it was impossible to know how to respond to her in this situation and I didn’t answer, I couldn’t. She didn’t know what had happened. I hadn’t told her.
In fact, I hadn’t told anyone.
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