Wednesday 12 March 2014

Scenes from A Czech Pub

He was perfectly suited to the role of pivovar barman, a belly far too big for his t-shirt, his arms strong from carrying 4 beers in each hand and a permascowl on his face that let you know just who was in charge.  He plonked the beer down on my beermat, slopping some of it on to the table. There was no point in complaining; he was long gone.

The girl Sashayed passed me, a walk far too grandiose for a trip to the pub toilets. It was designed for a catwalk in Milan, practised for hours in front of a bedroom mirror.. She reminded me of a long forgotten knot Id learnt in Scouts, left over right, right over left; her legs crossing as she walked; thrown across and out landing far outside the span of her body. She was wasted in here, but exclusive to here. 
A tap on my shoulder and a camera in my face told me that the 3 lads behind me wanted me to take their photo. A reunion, three friends from school, two back from pastures, new one left behind in the hometown. The phone belonged to the local boy whose face shone with happiness that his two friends were back. The two friends were not so enthusiastic to be back in their teenage haunts. There were no ‘now take one on mine,’ just one halfhearted make sure you send it to me and one even less enthusiastic hm tag me on Facebook. 

Why is she smoking? The cigarette looks about as alien in her hands as a gun in the hands of a toddler.
She looks like a goody two shoes, a butter wouldnt melt in her mouth type, a straight A student. Everything about her suggests she should be at home with a book not in a pub with a fag. No make up, no hair product, short pleated skirt just too long to be sexy but too short to be stylish. So why? Was it to show here friends she wasn't a teacher's pet? Or to show her dad she was no longer his little girl? It just didn’t add up.



The second barman appeared from nowhere and the first question that sprung to mind was were they wearing each other's t-shirts? He's slim and his shirt wass like a tent, engulfing his skinny body. But he too wore a permascowl and threw beer-filled glasses at startled customers. It must be in the job description. 

Maggie’s Milkman, my novel is 
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2 comments:

  1. The way you describe the details no one else would notice is great:)

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    Replies
    1. In Maggie's Milkman even better ;-)

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