Easy As Falling Off A Bike pt 839.

Printer-friendly version
Wuthering Dormice
(aka Bike)
Part 839
by Angharad
  
-Dormouse-001.jpg

Saturday morning arrived and I was up early although I felt tired and yawned all through breakfast. “Careful, Mummy, you nearly swallowed my dish then,” said Trish with a serious expression but her eyes were sparkling.

“You cheeky little maggot, any more out of you and I’ll send you to Wantage with the other children from that home.”

Livvie’s jaw dropped. “You wouldn’t send Trish away would you?”

“Don’t send Twish away–nasty Mummy,” said Mima only hearing part of the conversation because she was trying to force feed cornflakes to a reluctant doll.

“Does Trish look worried?” I asked, she was smirking, knowing too well that I’d never send her away–except to university, and we had a few years to go before that.

“Oh don’t send me away, I’ll be good and eat all my greens...” Trish was camping it up.

“You eat them all anyway.”

“Don’t send me out into the cold and wet.”

“It isn’t raining, is it?”

“No, Mummy,” said Mima now growing tired of the game. She wandered off to the lounge which was when the doorbell rang. She came back a moment later and said, “Mummy, there’s a bwack man wants you.” Stella who’d come down for a fresh coffee nearly choked to death and the other two girls were looking shocked.

“Ask him in, Mima.” She ran off to do so, and moments later led him back to the kitchen. He came in looking very cold.

“This, everyone, is Leon, he’s going to be doing some gardening and odd-jobs for me at the weekends.” I introduced the rest of them to him and added, “So if anyone has anything they think Leon can do for them, please ask him–that’s okay isn’t it, Leon?” He nodded and I offered him a cup of coffee.

“Can you make my dowwies eat veir food?” asked Meems, holding the doll up to the youth who towered over her. The other two thought it was hilarious and I’m sure he was blushing, although I doubt Mima intended to embarrass him.

“Meems, I meant things like cleaning their bikes or tidying the shed.”

“Can you clean my bike for me?” immediately spouted Trish.

Before Leon could answer–he was having a sip, well okay a gulp, of coffee–I interrupted. “Leon can help by supervising you cleaning your own bike, he’s not here to do things that you should do.”

“So he can’t clean the bedroom either, then?” sighed Livvie, getting in on the act.

“Certainly not you lazy lot, just for that you three will go and tidy your bedroom now, go on–off you go.” We watched the three of them grumble as they traipsed upstairs. Stella smirked–“And don’t you start, or I’ll make you tidy yours too.”

“Yes, Mummy,” said Stella and grinned while Leon had no idea where to look and he continued pretending to drink his coffee from an empty cup.

“You look cold, how did you get here?”

“Bike,” he sort of grunted back at me.

“I didn’t know you cycled?”

“Mum bought it for me yesterday.”

“Mountain bike?”

“Yeah, a cheapo one from ‘alfords.”

“It’s still quicker than walking.” I chided, “Are you going to pay her back?”

“Yeah, a tenner a mumph.”

“Okay, I’m glad to hear that, how’s your Mum?”

“Okay.” He shrugged looking embarrassed again, like all youths do before older women.

“Did you bring anything to eat for lunch?” I asked and he shook his head.

“Din’t know I was sa-posed to,” he mumbled.

“That’s okay, you can eat with us, you’re not veggie are you?”

“No, ma’am.”

“Not that it would matter today, I’m doing a vegetable curry, you okay with that?” I asked the gangly youth and he nodded.

“Curry?” said Stella, “You don’t like curry.”

“I know, but I want the girls to be able to eat most things.”

“You’ll eat it, to make them do the same?”

“Not make them, but encourage them.”

“Cor, I’m seriously impressed,” said Stella with eyes dancing.

“Oh go and tidy your bedroom,” I snapped back.

“At once, Mummy.” She scuttled away giggling to herself while I blushed pretending not to be embarrassed by her.

I heard a car pull into the drive and watched Tom get out of a brand new Mondeo estate car. It was a sort of deep metallic red and he stood a few feet away and admired it. He’d bought himself a new car, about time too. He trudged up the drive and came in the back door.

“Daddy, this is Leon; Leon, this is Professor Agnew.”

They shook hands and Tom asked, “Are ye the laddie wha’s gaen’ tae dae the gerden?” Leon looked completely bemused. Tom looked at me, “Dis he no unnerstaun’ English?”

“Yes, but you don’t speak it very often.”

Tom looked incensed, “I’ll hae ye ken the purest English comes frae Scotland.”

“Absolutely,” I said while Leon stood grinning and baffled.

“Dinna werry, ladddie, ye’ll pick it up as ye go alon’.” Tom was smiling at the confused youth.

“I’m going to ask Leon to rub down and paint the old shed, before it falls down,” I told Tom.

“Aye, aricht. I’ll hae a coffee an’ be oot in a mo to show ye whit tae dae.” Leon looked totally ignorant of what Tom had said.

“He speaks English as well as Lallans,” I told the boy as I led him outside. At his questioning look, I said, “Lowland Scots dialect.” He nodded but was probably confused.

“Like Mel Gibson–Brave’eart?” he asked.

“Indeed, Wallace was from Paisley near Glasgow, so he’d be a lowlander. Well done kiddo, Daddy will be impressed.” Leon’s face split to reveal a huge white toothed smile. “Only don’t mention it too much, because he reckons the film was rubbish and Mel Gibson’s accent was the pits. He talked like a Highlander, or Heelander as Daddy would say it.”

“’Ighlander, now vats a good film.” Said Leon. I nodded we might just have a channel open for communication. “Your dad don’t wear no skirt, do ‘e?”

“Only when he’s about to go out slaying Englishmen, why?”

“Only, Mel Gibson did in Brave’eart.”

“Don’t think too much about it, kiddo, it’s called a kilt not a skirt, and not many Scots wear them except for ceremonial purposes, like formal dances.”

“What, vey go to dances in skirts, bleedin’ weird if you ask me?” Fortunately, nobody was.

05Dolce_Red_l_0.jpg

up
161 users have voted.
If you liked this post, you can leave a comment and/or a kudos! Click the "Thumbs Up!" button above to leave a Kudos

Comments

Looks like

Cathy might have a challenge getting useful work out of Leon. Still, his education should improve over the next few visits.

Let's see; 3 children, 1 husband, 1 sister-in-law, 1 niece, one subsitute father, 1 waif and stray, 1 dog... Sure likes a challenge, doesn't she?

Susie

Leon Has Entered The Cathy Zone ;-)

Where he must larn tha' dialec' o' tha' peepul, especially a sartan professer.

    Stanman
May Your Light Forever Shine
    Stanman
May Your Light Forever Shine

The Language Barrier

jengrl's picture

I was amused at how Tom's Scottish accent confused Leon. It might be called The United Kingdom, but Scotland,Wales and Ireland all have their own language and fierce pride of individuality and set anyone straight that calls them English. I was also amused at Mima trying to feed cornflakes to her doll and asking if Leon could get her dolls to eat. Funny chapter!

PICT0013_1_0.jpg

Bloody Englishman

While in Norway I worked with a Scotsman who insisted on referring to me as a "Yank". Even after politely informing him I wasn't a "Yank" he continued to do so. In retaliation I started referring to him as being English and calling him a "Limey". I could see the steam building each time, and finally he blew. "I'm no bloody Englishman, I'm Scots!" he thundered. To which I replied with a smile, "And I'm not a Yank." He got it then.

But he still talked funny. ;-)

KJT

"Being a girl is wonderful and to torture someone into that would be like the exact opposite of what it's like. I don’t know how anyone could act that way." College Girl - poetheather


"Life is not measured by the breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.”
George Carlin

You are quite correct...

...with one minor addition. The Welsh no longer speak Gaelige and haven't in quite some time. The young are, however, beginning to relearn it slowly, but surely.

Meaghan Tracey

I'm Interested in Learning Gaelic

jengrl's picture

I'm actually interested in learning Gaelic and have been looking at language learning programs. I want to connect with my ancestry in a deeper way. I am descended from Scottish Highland Clans and I have been fascinated with learning the ancient phrases that appear in old texts of that time in Scottish history.

PICT0013_1_0.jpg

Y Cymro...

Angharad's picture

...siarad Cymraeg.

Angharad

Angharad

Kids can be very literal about what they hear

I didn't like Cathy even teasing about sending Trish "back" and obviously, neither did the kids. Guess they get distracted quickly but I have to wonder if some kernel doesn't stick in their minds when something disturbs them like that.

Leon seems pretty tame so far. Guess between Cathy and his mother it shouldn't be a surprise.

Now i know things

are getting back to normal.....Cathy is talking about food again.....Vegetable Curry...Yum!!

Kirri

British Humor

I'll have to confess that my Southern England housemate, had me crying in anguish a couple times. "You bloody Americans just can't handle it."

Still, she'd be quite welcome at my home anytime.

Gwen

Leon

May be a major asset with the other two kids coming. Odds are he'll be another one of Cathy's kids, though maybe not officially. While teens can be frustrating, they can also be good people, and be fun to be around.